I. Nature of the Case
The City of Lewiston (“City”) enacted Ordinance No. 4512, creating a stormwater utility and stormwater fee for the operation and maintenance of the City’s stormwater system. Five government entities
1
(“Entities”) subject to the stormwater fee brought suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the fee was an unconstitutional tax requiring authorization by the Legislature. The Entities thereafter filed their motion for summary judgment. The City filed its cross-motion for summary judgment asserting that the stormwater fee was authorized pursuant to the City’s police powers, the Revenue Bond Act, the Local Improvement District Code, and various other provisions of the Idaho Code. Relying primarily on
Brewster v. City of Pocatello,
II. Factual and Procedural Background
The City’s stormwater system consists of stormwater pipes, curbs, gutters, drainage ditches, detention ponds, and stormwater treatment facilities. In order to eliminate non-stormwater and pollutant discharge, the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1342(p)(l)-(6) (2008) requires municipalities discharging stormwater into the receiving waters of the United States to obtain a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit (“NPDES permit”). The City’s NPDES draft permit required it to undertake comprehensive management of its stormwater system to reduce pollutant loads from entering the receiving waters of the United States.
In response to these regulatory mandates, on August 11, 2008, the Lewiston City Council (“Council”) enacted Ordinance No. 4512 (“Ordinance”) creating the City’s Stormwater Utility (“Stormwater Utility”) and authorizing the imposition of a Stormwater Utility fee (“stormwater fee”) to fund the Stormwater Utility’s functions. Citing its police powers, 3 the Ordinance asserts that the purposes of the Stormwater Utility and the stormwater fee were to reduce the effects of storm-water runoff from impervious surfaces in the City, including reducing property damage, preventing the flow of pollutants, and preserving the integrity of streets. The Ordinance also permitted the City to free-up $700,000 from its Street Maintenance Program 4 by rolling part of its street sweeping and stormwater maintenance budget into the Stormwater Utility.
Recognizing that owners and possessors of property with impervious surfaces contribute to the total run-off, the Ordinance provides that “[t]he owner, agent, occupant, lessee, tenant, contract purchaser, or other person having possession or control of property or supervision of an improvement on the property” (“owners”) are responsible for the stormwater fee. The rates provided in the Ordinance vary according to whether the property is classified as residential or nonresidential. Residential property owners pay the same rate based on the number of “equivalent residential units” (“ERUs”) that they own. An ERU is residential property with an impervious surface area of 4,000 square feet. Non-residential property owners’ fees vary according to a sliding scale in which the number of ERUs is calculated based on a site-specific quantification of impervious surfaces utilizing aerial photography or personal observation.
As a result of the rate structures applying to all owners of property, there are many properties with impervious surfaces whose owners are charged by the Stormwater Utility, but whose runoff does not enter the stormwater drain because they have their own stormwater systems or because their neighborhoods are not connected to the stormwater system. 5 The only exemptions from the stormwater fee are if the property is less than 2000 square feet as identified in the Nez Perce County property database, the *803 property is classified as undeveloped, or the owner qualifies for “circuit breaker” status. 6
In addition to the rates, the Ordinance provides an organization structure 7 for the Stormwater Utility and an appeal process by which a landowner may challenge a fee as unwarranted or based on improper calculation of impervious surfaces or other aspect of the rate structure. The Ordinance also provides an enterprise fund in which all fees would be collected and separated from the general revenue. The revenues collected for the enterprise fund are to be used only for payment of the costs of “maintenance, operation, upkeep and repair and capital outlay of the stormwater system, including the payment of bonds issued to finance such capital outlay.” 8
To implement the Ordinance, the Council adopted Resolution No.2008-55 on October 27, 2008. Resolution 2008-55 set the base rate charge per ERU at $6 and assigned all residential parcels a value of one ERU to be paid at 100% of the base rate. The Resolution also phased-in the charge over a three year period, assessing 50% of the fee the first year (October 1, 2008 to September 30, 2009), 75% of the fee the second year (October 1, 2009 to September 30, 2010), and 100% of the fee after October 1, 2010.
The Council later adopted Resolution No. 2009-68 amending Resolution No. 2008-55 and extending the 50% phase-in rate for an additional year (from October 1, 2009 through September 30, 2010) and limiting the expenditure of “[a]ll Storm Water Utility Fees collected ... to [the] maintenance], operation] or enhance[ment] [of] the Storm Water Utility system of the City of Lewiston.”
In practice, the revenues generated from the stormwater fees are divided between the City’s street sweeping and maintenance of the stormwater system. 9 The remaining 10% to 15% of the budget is allocated to NPDES compliance. As per its maintenance of the stormwater system, the City currently uses or intends on using stormwater utility revenue for what it defines as “stormwater activities,” 10 including street surface repair, winter sanding and rock cleanup on roads, seal coat cleanup, street sweep training and equipment, shoulder guard curb work, curb and gutter patching, trash and debris clean up, road shoulder grading and ditching, weed control clean up, oil spill clean-up, tree and limb removal, hauling debris, and other interdepartmental charges assessed by the Street Maintenance Department and other departments and divisions. 11 Before the *804 adoption of the Ordinance, most of these activities were paid out of the general revenue fund as part of the Street Maintenance Department’s budget.
The City began billing its residential and non-residential property owners for storm-water fees on October 1, 2008. The Entities filed suit on September 28, 2009, seeking a declaratory judgment that the City acted outside of its constitutional authority in assessing an unauthorized tax, injunctive relief, a writ of prohibition, and a writ of mandate to stop the City from collecting the stormwater fee. The Entities thereafter filed their motion for summary judgment on April 2, 2010. The City filed its cross-motion for summary judgment on April 30, 2010, contending that the stormwater fee is authorized pursuant to the City’s police powers, the Revenue Bond Act, the Local Improvement District Code, and various other statutory provisions under Title 50 of the Idaho Code. The district court issued its Memorandum Decision and Order on July 16, 2010, which granted summary judgment for the Entities’ declaratory judgment claim and denied the City’s cross-motion for summary judgment. The district court, thereafter, issued its Order for Entry of Final Judgment on the declaratory judgment claim on August 23, 2010.
III.Issue on Appeal
1. Whether the district court erred in granting the Entities’ summary judgment motion alleging that the City’s stormwater fee is an unauthorized tax?
IV.Standard of Review
WTien this Court reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment, it uses the same standard properly employed by the district court originally ruling on the motion.
Lowder v. Minidoka Cnty. Joint Sch. Dist. No. 331,
V.Analysis
A. The Stormwater Fee Is an Unauthorized Tax, Not Reasonably Related to a Regulatory Purpose
The Idaho Constitution provides that “[a]ny county or incorporated city or town may make and enforce, within its limits, all such local police, sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with its charter or with the general laws.” Idaho Const, art. XII, 2. Police powers consist of government conduct that has “for its object the public health, safety, morality or welfare.”
Potts Constr. Co. v. N. Kootenai Water Dist.,
In
Loomis v. City of Hailey,
1. The Stormwater Fee Is a Tax
It is apparent that Ordinance 4512
14
is a revenue generating tax created to benefit the general public by charging all property owners for the privilege of using the City’s preexisting stormwater system, regardless of whether they are using the stormwater system or not.
See Brewster,
The planning process for Ordinance 4512 further highlights this objective. In refer *806 ring to the Council’s motives for the storm-water fee, Thomas Deehert, Stormwater Program Coordinator, who was part of the planning process for the Stormwater Utility, elaborated that the stormwater fee is like “police services” in that it “benefits the public generally.” Dechert’s proposal to the Council for the stormwater system asserts the main virtue of the stormwater fee as providing a solution for the Street Maintenance Department’s funding concerns by freeing up $700,000 annually in general tax revenue. 15 Literature composed by the City for public dissemination posed in question and answer format further extols this theme. The document posits:
All of my stormwater stays on my lot. Why should I have to pay more money now? The fee will go towards fixing, building, and maintaining the stormwater system that benefits the whole City. Just like streets or the wastewater system, it’s part of what we pay for as a community. We want to ensure that stormwater discharged to the rivers and creeks from the City meets water quality standards to maintain the fish and wildlife we value.
This document strongly suggests that even the City recognizes that this fee is a tax to provide community services to the general public.
Ordinance 4512 contains no provisions of regulation and is not incidental to regulation. As a result, the stormwater fee is indistinguishable from the street restoration and maintenance fee in
Brewster,
The Stormwater Utility provides no product and renders no seivice based on user consumption of a commodity.
See Brewster,
The administration of the Stormwater Utility further suggests that the stormwater fee is a tax used for the non-regulatory function of cleaning, maintaining, and expanding the City’s streets and stormwater infrastructure.
Brewster,
Furthermore, the stormwater activities that the City’s Street Maintenance Department bills to the Stormwater Utility are broad and seem to incorporate any service that Keith Bingman, Street Maintenance Manager, declares to be “storm related” or “stormwater maintenance related----” Keith Bingman’s stormwater activity list suggests that the City has shifted its Street Maintenance Program into the Stormwater Utility in order to free up its general revenues. Much like its method of budgeting and accounting, the Stormwater Utility has an ad hoe structure, which looks a lot like the Street Maintenance Department. As a result, there is no sure means to control how the stormwater revenue is spent contrary to
Idaho Building Contractors Ass’n,
2. This Court Does Not Need to Address Whether the Stormwater Fee Is Reasonably Related to a Regulatory Purpose Under Brewster Because the Stormwater Fee Is a Tax with No Regulatory Purpose
The City argues that the stormwater fee is reasonably related to the regulated activity. Because the Ordinance, no matter how rationally and reasonably drafted, imposes a tax and not a regulatory fee, this Court “[need] not ever reach the second part of the
Loomis
test set forth above.”
Idaho Bldg. Contractors Ass’n,
3. The Facts in Waters Garbage, Kootenai County, and Loomis Are Distinguishable Because They Involved Interpretations of Statutes
The Entities’ reliance on
Waters Garbage v. Shoshone County,
*808
Similarly, the City’s reliance on
Kootenai County Property Ass’n v. Kootenai County,
Although useful in establishing the two-part test under
Brewster,
the facts in
Loom-is,
I. The City Has No Statutory, Constitutional, or Police Power Authority to Enact the Stormwater Utility Fee Under Any of the Statutes that the City Cites
The City attempts to appeal the denial of its cross-motion for summary judgment citing I.A.R. 11(a)(1) in its Notice of Appeal. “This Court does not review denials of summary judgment after a judgment is made on the merits.”
Grover v. Wadsworth,
The City contends that the stormwater fee was enacted pursuant to valid police power authority under the Revenue Bond Act, the Local Improvement District Code, and numerous provisions of Title 50 of the Idaho Code. The City does not provide any arguments for how those provisions authorize a fee; neither does the City refer to the specific sections on which it relies. The only argument that the City makes is that the storm-water fee is valid under the Revenue Bond Act, I.C. § 50-1027, et seq. That issue, however, is not before this Court because the City did not proceed under the Revenue Bond Act.
Regarding the Local Improvement District Code and the various Title 50 provisions of the Idaho Code, the City failed to provide argument or authority addressing these issues. The failure to support an alleged error with argument and authority is deemed a waiver of the issue.
Bach v. Bagley,
VI. Conclusion
This Court finds that the first step of the analysis leads to the conclusion that the assessment is a tax, not a regulatory fee. As per the second step, it is clear that the revenue to be collected from the stormwater *809 utility fee has no rational relationship to a regulatory purpose because the stormwater fee is a tax. The stormwater fee is used to generate funds for the non-regulatory function of repairing, maintaining, and expanding the City’s preexisting stormwater system and streets under Brewster. Ordinance 4512 is, therefore, an unauthorized tax intended to free-up the City’s general revenues. It is for the Idaho Legislature to authorize such a tax.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed with costs awarded to the Entities. Neither side has requested attorney’s fees.
Notes
. The five government entities who brought suit are Lewiston Independent School District # 1, Lewis-Clark State College, Nez Perce County, Port of Lewiston, and Lewiston Orchards Irrigation District.
. In regard to the City’s cross-motion for summary judgment, the district court held that there was no express or implied statutory or constitutional authority granting the City the power to tax in this context. The district court held that the City may only exercise those powers granted to it by statute or the Idaho Constitution.
See
*802
Caesar v. State,
. Ordinance 4512 also cites "I.C. 50-1027 et seq., I.C. 50-304, I.C. 50-315, I.C. 50-332, and I.C. 50-33” as authority in establishing the Stormwater Utility.
. Thomas Dechert, Stormwater Program Coordinator, uses the term "street division” and "transportation division” interchangeably in describing the Street Program, Street Maintenance Department, and the Street Maintenance Department’s budget.
.The Stormwater Business Plan composed by the City indicates "that the number of ERUs actually discharging to the City’s stormwater system is probably at least 30% less than the totals given” and that "as much as 20% of the nonresidential ERUs might be public or institutional property that could be exempted from fees.”
. Circuit breaker status refers to a term used by the Idaho State Tax Commission for its Property Tax Reduction Program, which reduces property taxes for qualified applicants based on age and income, among other factors. 2011 Property Tax Reduction Program, Idaho Tax Commission, 2011, http://tax.idaho.gov/pubs/EBR00135_l 1-17-2010.pdf.
. Although Ordinance 4512 purports to establish the Stormwater Utility to finance stormwater maintenance, it is unclear whether the Council has adopted a distinct Stormwater Utility structure separate from the Street Maintenance Department.
. In practice, stormwater fees are commingled with the City’s general funds in the City’s primary checking account.
. As per the City’s Stormwater Utility Business Plan, the Stormwater Utility has a $1,201 million yearly base cost. In estimating how the revenues from the stormwater fee are allocated, Thomas Dechert, Stormwater Program Coordinator, stated that $90,000 to $100,000 is allocated for NPDES compliance; $332,470 is allocated to street sweeping, debris cleanup, and pollution control; and $301,750 is allocated to the City’s stormwater system operations. This estimate was based off of the City's 2009 budget.
. In generating his stormwater activity list, Keith Bingman, Street Maintenance Manager, makes an ad hoc determination as to what constitutes interdepartmental stormwater activities assessing whether the activity is "storm related” or "stormwater maintenance related” and then bills the Stormwater Utility for work done by the Street Maintenance Department. Thus, as Bingman related, in referring to his budgeting methodology, if a tree limb blows onto the street, it is billed as street maintenance; if, on the other hand, the limb washes onto the street, it is billed to the Stormwater Utility. In this sense, anything related to the cleaning and maintenance of streets that affects the quality of the City’s storm-water, including street sweeping, has the potential to be deemed "stormwater maintenance related.”
. In the future, the City asserts that the storm-water fee also will be used to fund the City’s Capital Improvement Plan, which will be used to update various drainage channels and pipes, re *804 build streets, build and rebuild stormwater systems, build detention and retention ponds, among others. Some stormwater basins in the City will not receive any capital improvements.
. Although the Idaho Constitution prohibits a municipality from imposing a tax on other government entities, a municipality may charge a fee on government entities so long as it is specifically authorized by the Idaho Constitution or the Legislature.
See Brewster,
. In interpreting the
Loomis
test,
Idaho Building Contractors Ass’n,
.City of Coeur d’Alene has a stormwater utility. Ordinance 4512 is based on City of Coeur d’Alene’s Ordinance.
. This figure includes $280,016 in street sweeping costs and $228,787 in stormwater operations and maintenance costs.
. The City concedes the Revenue Bond Act is inapplicable because there were no revenue bonds issued.
.The NPDES draft permit does not mandate the creation of the Stormwater Utility. Regardless, only 10% to 15% of the stormwater fee is used for NPDES compliance.
. In
Idaho Building Contractors Ass’n,
