Title 14 PUBLIC SERVICES
Chapter 14.78 IMPACT FEES FOR TRAFFIC AND ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS IN PAIA-HAIKU, MAUI, HAWAII
14.78.010 Preamble.
14.78.020 Definitions.
14.78.030 Impact fees.
14.78.040 Conformity with Paia-Haiku community plan.
14.78.050 Paia-Haiku transportation plan.
14.78.060 Enactment.
14.78.070 Cost recovery.
14.78.080 Paia-Haiku roadway improvement fund.
14.78.090 Administrative costs.
14.78.100 Hearing and appeal procedures.
14.78.110 Return of fees.
14.78.120 Exemptions and credits.
14.78.010 Preamble.
The Maui County general plan and Paia-Haiku community plan recognize that
the County will experience continued growth and development of the Paia-Haiku
region for, among other uses, resort, commercial and residential use.
It
is recognized that present and future development of the Paia-Haiku region will
place severe burdens on existing public infrastructure such as major arterials
and collector streets which are heavily used and at capacity levels. The County
has determined that to maintain an acceptable level of road service and to
preserve the quality of life in the region, a system of financing traffic and
roadway improvements is needed to assess, on a pro-rata share basis, the
reasonably anticipated costs of improving or expanding roadway and traffic
facilities necessitated by new land development activity.
Pursuant to
part VIII, chapter 46, HRS, this chapter is intended to promote public health,
safety and welfare by providing a fair and equitable method of sharing the
growth-related costs incurred by the County for road and traffic infrastructure
improvements made necessary by expanded population levels and increased economic
activity as provided for under the Maui County general plan and the Paia-Haiku
community plan.
This chapter sets forth a regulatory scheme for the
assessment and collection of impact fees to be borne on a pro-rata share basis
by landowners and developers who directly contribute to expanding the population
and increasing economic activity in the Paia-Haiku area through new land
development activities. This chapter is intended to recover only a portion of
the governmental expenditures related to growth. Existing residents will still
be required to bear their appropriate share of the cost of the road network
system.
It is also the intent of this chapter that the impact fee
structure be reasonable, understandable and adaptable to changes in policies and
conditions. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.020 Definitions.
For the purpose of this chapter, unless it is plainly evident from the
context that a different meaning is intended, certain words and phrases used in
this chapter are defined as follows:
“Applicant” means an
individual, partnership, corporation, trust or agent having the requisite
authority, who has applied for a building permit or final subdivision
approval.
“Arterial road” means a road which is a main
traffic artery carrying relatively high traffic volumes for relatively long
distances. This classification includes all roads which function above the level
of a collector road.
“Base year road network system” means a
study prepared by a qualified professional engineer licensed in the State of
Hawaii which determines the vehicular impact new development will have upon the
road network system. This study includes, but is not limited to: determination
of trip generation, trip distribution, traffic assignment, capacity analysis,
and improvements to the road system necessitated by the new development activity
such as required new roads, additional laneage and
signalization.
“Building” shall have the same meaning as
defined in the uniform building code as adopted and amended by the County of
Maui.
“Building permit” means an official document or
certificate issue by the County authorizing the construction of any building or
structure.
“Capacity” means the maximum number of vehicles
for a given time period which a road can safely and efficiently carry, usually
expressed in terms of vehicles per hour.
“Collector road”
means a road which carries vehicular traffic from local roads to arterial roads.
Collector roads have more continuity, carry higher vehicular traffic volumes,
and may provide less access than local roads.
“Dwelling”
shall have the meaning defined in the Maui County comprehensive zoning code,
section 19.04.040, as amended.
“External trip” means any
trip which either has its origins from or its destination to the development
site and which impacts the major road network system.
“HRS”
means Hawaii Revised Statutes.
“Internal trip” means a trip
which has both its origin and destination within the development
site.
“Local road” means a road designed and maintained
primarily to provide access to abutting property. A local road is of limited
continuity and is not for through vehicular traffic.
“New land
development activity” means the carrying out of any building activity or
the making of any material change in the use or appearance of any structure or
land that attracts or produces vehicular trip(s) over and above that produced by
the existing use of the land; provided, that this term shall not include uses
which are of a duration not exceeding ninety days.
“Paia-Haiku
region” means the geographical area defined in the Paia-Haiku community
plan.
“Paia-Haiku transportation plan” shall be the
collective term for the transportation planning model, base year road network
system and roadway master plan for Paia-Haiku.
“Road network
system” means all arterial and collector roads within the Paia-Haiku
region, including new arterial and collector roads necessitated by land
developments.
“Site related improvements” means road
construction or road improvements at or near the development site which are
necessary to interface the development’s external trips with the major
road network system or which are necessary to interface the development’s
internal trips with the major road network system where a portion of the major
road network system is included within the development.
“Square
foot” is computed by determining the total floor area under
roof.
“Subdivision approval” means the approval for final
plat recordation given by the County of Maui pursuant to title 18 of this
code.
“Trip” means a one-way movement of vehicular travel
from an origin point (one trip end) to a destination point (the other trip end).
For the purposes of this ordinance, trip shall have the meaning which it has in
commonly accepted traffic engineering practice and which is substantially the
same as that definition in the previous sentence.
“Trip
generation” means the attraction or production of trips caused by a given
type of land development. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.030 Impact fees.
Impact fees shall be charged and assessed for all new land development
activities which create a need for additional roadway capacities. Impact fees
shall be assessed in accordance with section 14.78.070, and shall be paid to the
County upon issuance of any building permit. The collection of impact fees may
be deferred by the director of finance for a specified period of time, not to
exceed one year, provided that the applicant file with the County a surety bond
or other security in the amount of the fee to assure payment to the County. If
such deferral is granted by the director of finance, the director of finance
shall report to the council on the period of deferral, the nature of security
received from the developer and the justification for said deferral. (Ord. 3432
§ 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.040 Conformity with Paia-Haiku community plan.
Under the Paia-Haiku community plan, new land development activity shall
be coordinated with future provisions for adequate public services and
facilities to ensure that infrastructure development such as roadways, are able
to keep pace with population growth.
To promote orderly growth under the
Paia-Haiku community plan, new land development activities should not be allowed
to proceed without providing for necessary traffic improvements caused by such
land developments. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.050 Paia-Haiku transportation plan.
The Paia-Haiku transportation plan shall be comprised of the following
parts:
A. Transportation Planning Model. A transportation planning model
study shall be established by a licensed professional engineer and made a part
of this chapter. The transportation planning model shall be reviewed by the
County department of planning not later than upon the fifth year from its
adoption by resolution of the County council and every five years thereafter.
The model shall be updated every five years or as needed. The transportation
planning model is not intended as a prediction device. It is to provide a fair
and equitable method of sharing growth-related costs of roadway improvement and
to form the basis for a roadway master plan. The components of the
transportation planning model utilized in this chapter shall contain the
following parts:
1. Baseline data to assess the quality of traffic
operations on the existing road network in Paia-Haiku region. Information
required includes roadway geometrics, intersection geometrics, number of
vehicular travel lanes, traffic volumes, travel times, and traffic flow
patterns;
2. Land use data, including the Maui County general plan,
Paia-Haiku community plan, proposed new developments and amendments to the Maui
County general plan and Paia-Haiku community plan, and the areas in which the
existing zoning is not in conformity with the Paia-Haiku community
plan;
3. Trip generation computation based on the number of vehicular
trips generated by types of land uses and land developments based on standards
adopted by the institute of transportation engineers, as may be adjusted for
local conditions;
4. Trip distribution which breaks region into
definable traffic zones for purposes of determining the number of trips
distributed among various zones; and
5. Trip assignment or the
assignment of trips for various zones on the specific roadways or
routes.
B. Base Year Road Network System. The plan shall also establish
a road network system to satisfactorily accommodate the traffic demand for the
base year at a quality of operation of level of service “D,” as
defined in “Highway Capacity Manual, Special Report 209” 1985,
prepared by the Transportation Research Board, National Research Council,
Washington, D.C.
C. Roadway Master Plan for Paia-Haiku. There shall be
prepared a roadway master plan for Paia-Haiku which shall be made a part of this
chapter, and shall include the following information:
1. All existing
arterial highways, streets, local roads and collector roads, including
rights-of-way;
2. Description of all new roadway rights-of-way widths
and number of travel lanes;
3. Description of all new intersection
improvements, including left turn storage lanes, right turn lanes, and traffic
signal systems; and
4. Description of all new roadway facilities (i.e.,
circulation patterns and routes).
The objective of the roadway master
plan for Paia-Haiku shall be to attain, at a minimum, an operating roadway
capacity level of service “D,” on all major roads within the
Paia-Haiku region.
Both the roadway master plan for Paia-Haiku and base
year road network system shall be reviewed by the County department of planning
annually during the month of January. Both the plan and road system shall be
amended, if necessary, to conform with the Paia-Haiku community plan and shall
be a projection of traffic and roadway improvements to the year 2015. The review
shall consider recent trip generation rates, and construction costs for work
constructed by the State of Hawaii or County of Maui, or both, for roadway
improvements on the island of Maui. The review should analyze the effects of
inflation on the costs of roadway construction and ensure the impact fees
charged are reasonably related to the need for roads generated by such activity.
Amendments to the roadway master plan for Paia-Haiku and the base year road
network system shall be incorporated in the Paia-Haiku transportation plan
through amendment of the ordinance adopting the Paia-Haiku transportation plan,
as set forth in section 14.78.060. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.060 Enactment.
The council shall initiate the development of the Paia-Haiku
transportation plan upon the effective date of the ordinance codified in this
chapter. The Paia-Haiku transportation plan shall be completed and submitted to
the council within one year from the date the contract for said plan is awarded
to a qualified professional engineer licensed to practice within the State of
Hawaii and shall be incorporated as part of title 14, article 4 of this code,
upon adoption by separate ordinance. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.070 Cost recovery.
Impact fees shall be based on the following factors:
A. Impact of
New Development. Vehicle trips generated by the new land development activity in
excess of the rated capacity of the impacted roadway section(s) according to the
transportation planning model and the base year road network
system.
B. Overcapacity. A determination that a particular affected
roadway section is at overcapacity shall be made when traffic demand exceeds
capacity, based on the base year road network system. For purposes of this
section, overcapacity shall mean the sum of:
1. The existing traffic on
the road section; and
2. The estimated traffic on the road section due
to new land development activity and developments approved on the Paia-Haiku
community plan.
C. Master Plan Improvements. Impact fees may be
collected only for roadway improvements included in the roadway master plan for
Paia-Haiku.
D. Assessment of Cost. A schedule for determining traffic
impact fees shall be established by the Paia-Haiku transportation plan. The fee
rates will vary from zone to zone according to each zone’s cumulative
impact on the roadway network.
The department of finance shall compute
and collect impact fees from applicants upon issuance of building
permits.
The director of finance may adopt rules to carry out the
responsibilities under this section.
The following categories of uses
shall serve as the basis for a fee schedule. This fee schedule may be modified
by ordinance to reflect changes to the roadway master plan for
Paia-Haiku.
1. Residential development:
a. Single-family
dwelling;
b. Multi-family units (rental units);
c. Multi-family
units (owner-occupant);
d. Retirement
community.
2. Nonresidential development:
a. General business
office:
i. Less than or equal to one hundred thousand sq.
ft.,
ii. One hundred thousand one through one hundred ninety-nine
thousand nine hundred ninety-nine sq. ft.,
iii. Greater than two hundred
thousand sq. ft.;
b. Medical office
building;
c. Hospital;
d. Nursing home;
e. General
recreation;
f. General light industrial;
g. General heavy
industrial;
h. General commercial (retail);
i. Shopping
center:
i. Under fifty thousand sq. ft.,
ii. Fifty thousand
through ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine sq. ft.,
iii. One
hundred thousand through one hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred
ninety-nine sq. ft.,
iv. Two hundred thousand through two hundred
ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine sq. ft.,
v. Three hundred
thousand through three hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine sq.
ft.,
vi. Four hundred thousand through four hundred ninety-nine thousand
nine hundred ninety-nine sq. ft.,
vii. Five hundred thousand through
nine hundred ninety-nine thousand nine hundred ninety-nine sq.
ft.;
viii. One million through one million two hundred fifty thousand
sq. ft.,
ix. Over one million two hundred fifty thousand sq.
ft.;
j. Restaurant:
k. Resort - hotel;
l. Resort -
condominium;
m. Motel/hotel
(nonresort);
n. Banks;
o. Service station.
(Ord. 3432
§ 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.080 Paia-Haiku roadway improvement fund.
There shall be created a special fund entitled the “Paia-Haiku
roadway improvement fund” which shall serve as the exclusive depository of
all funds collected pursuant to this chapter. All moneys from this fund shall be
designated and used for traffic and roadway improvements and shall include, but
not be limited to, increasing the safety, efficiency and capacity of arterial
and collector roads; construction of left and right turn lanes; construction and
expansion of bridges; design, construction and/or plan preparation; right-of-way
acquisition; relocating utilities to accommodate new roadway construction;
addition of public parking areas; improving traffic circulation patterns to
accommodate mass transit use; improvements to traffic signalization and
patterns; studies and plans to further the above stated purposes. Funds
collected and deposited are to be used specifically for roadway and traffic
improvements in the Paia-Haiku region and not for other general revenue
purposes. Funds can be made available to the State for State highway or traffic
improvements; provided, that such funds are used only in the Paia-Haiku region
and a written agreement is reached between the County and State to this effect.
It is not the purpose of this chapter to assess or collect moneys from any new
land development activity generating traffic in excess of the actual amount
necessary to affect the demand on the major roadway network caused by such new
land development activity. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.090 Administrative costs.
In carrying out its responsibilities, the department of finance may retain
two per cent of the total funds collected to offset costs associated with the
collection of these funds. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.100 Hearing and appeal procedures.
A. Within fifteen days after receiving a written notice, the applicant
affected or the owner of the land development activity generating traffic may
challenge the department of finance fee determination and request a hearing from
the Maui planning commission. After receiving a written request, the Maui
planning commission shall schedule a hearing and provide the affected building
permittee or owner with advanced written notice, by certified mail, of the time
and place of the hearing. The applicant or landowner challenging the fee may
provide the Maui planning commission with an independent traffic study. If the
building permittee requesting the hearing is not the owner of the land
development activity, notice of the hearing shall also be provided to the owner.
The Maui planning commission shall conduct the hearing according to its rules of
practice and procedure and other applicable rules. The hearings shall be
governed under chapters 91 and 92, HRS.
B. The hearing shall be designed
to obtain all information and evidence relevant to the impact fee assessed and
the dispute concerning it. After the hearing, the Maui planning commission shall
make a determination in writing stating the reasons for the decision regarding
any matters in dispute. A copy of the written determination shall be sent by
certified mail, return receipt requested to the applicant affected, the present
owner, and the director of finance. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.110 Return of fees.
The fees collected pursuant to this chapter shall be returned to the
applicant if they have not been spent or encumbered by the end of the calendar
quarter immediately following six years from the date paid; provided, that the
following procedures are complied with:
A. The applicant must petition
the director of finance for the refund within one year following the end of the
sixth year from the date on which the fee was paid.
B. The petition must
be submitted to the department of finance and must contain:
1. A
notarized sworn statement that the petitioner is the payor or is otherwise
authorized to collect the fees;
2. A copy of the dated receipt issued
for payment of the fee;
3. A certified copy of a deed or other document
showing current ownership or right to possession of the land on which the
development was proposed; and
4. A copy of the most recent real property
tax bill.
C. Within one month from the date of receipt of a petition for
refund, the director of finance shall advise the petitioner of the status of the
fee requested for refund. For the purposes of this section, fees collected shall
be deemed to be spent (encumbered) on the basis of the first fee in shall be the
first fee out. In other words, the first money placed in a trust fund account
shall be the first money taken out of that account when withdrawals have been
made. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part), 2007)
14.78.120 Exemptions and credits.
A. The following shall be exempted from payment of the impact
fee:
1. Alterations or expansion of an existing dwelling unit where no
additional units are created and the use is not changed;
2. The
construction of accessory buildings or structures, as defined in chapter 19.04
of this code, which will not increase the traffic counts;
3. The
replacement of an existing building or structure with a new building or
structure of the same size and use which will not increase the traffic
counts;
4. The construction of publicly owned governmental buildings;
or
5. The construction of government-sponsored affordable housing
projects.
B. Credits.
1. In lieu of paying the impact fee, a
landowner or developer may elect, in addition to site-related improvements, to
construct part of the road network system or dedicate lanes for roadway
improvements. The developer shall submit a proposal and a cost estimate,
certified by an architect or engineer licensed to practice in the State of
Hawaii, to the department of finance. The director of finance in consultation
with the County departments of planning and public works and environmental
management shall evaluate whether the proposed construction is an appropriate
substitute for the impact fee assessed. If appropriate, the director of finance
shall recommend to the council the amount of credit to be accepted and the
timetable for completion of the proposed construction. Acceptance of the
recommendation of the director of finance shall be by resolution of the council.
If a developer has dedicated lands, an appraisal shall be submitted to the
department of finance indicating the fair market value of said
lands.
2. Credit for construction costs given to the applicant shall be
repaid by the County from new land development activities coming on line in the
future.
3. Credit for transportation management systems which alleviate
the need for additional roadway capacities or traffic improvements shall also be
recognized and given the applicant. (Ord. 3432 § 1 (part),
2007)
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