Summary:
Building Industry Association of Central California
v. City of Patterson
Holds that Affordable Housing In Lieu Fees
Must Be "Reasonably Related" to the "Deleterious Impact"
Caused by New Housing
Although the specific question raised in Building Industry Association
of Central California v. City of Patterson involved the interpretation
of a development agreement ("DA"), the Court's answer could have far
reaching implications for the collection of affordable housing in lieu fees
throughout the State. In this case, developers and the City of Patterson entered
into a DA for two residential subdivisions in the City. At the time the DA was
entered, the City's affordable housing in lieu fee was $734 per unit. The DA,
however, recognized that the City was updating its affordable housing in lieu
fee and the developer agreed to pay the updated fee so long as the updated fee
was "reasonably justified."
Three years later, the City raised the affordable housing in lieu fee to $20,934
per unit. The developer refused to pay, arguing that the challenged as not "reasonably
justified." In interpreting the term "reasonably justified" from
the DA, the Court held that the term meant that any increase in the affordable
housing in-lieu fee would conform to "existing law." The Court then
examined the new in lieu fee under the rubric of San Remo Hotel v. City
and County of San Francisco (2002) 27 Cal.4th 643 and the Mitigation Fee
Act (Government Code section 66000 et seq .) and determined that the
new in lieu fee did not conform to existing law because the new in lieu fees
did not show a reasonable relationship between the amount of the fee imposed
and the deleterious public impact caused by the development of new housing in
the City. Specifically, the Patterson fees had divided the projected cost of
developing the City's share of the regional affordable housing needs by the
total number of unentitled housing units in the City, with the result being
a per unit fee of $20,946. While the Court stopped short of applying a Nolan/Dolan
nexus test to the in lieu fees, the Court did hold that this method of calculation
did not support a finding that the in lieu fees imposed on the developer's project
bore any reasonable relationship to any deleterious impact associated with the
project.
It is not clear at this time exactly how far this decision will reach. However,
to avoid potential challenge, local agencies who are revising in lieu fees should
be careful not to engage in the type of calculation used by the City of Patterson,
and should take care to supply evidence that new in lieu fees meet the Patterson
test and bear a reasonable relationship to the impact of new development. Additionally,
it may be advisable for local agencies to prepare in lieu fee studies similar
to those prepared for fees adopted under the Mitigation Fee Act to aid in the
defense of challenged in lieu fees.
For more information about this case or other development agreement matters,
contact the authors Julia Bond, Dawn
McIntosh or Ed Grutzmacher
510.808.2000.
Meyers Nave's Land Use Practice Group is chaired by Steve
Mattas.
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