The Honorable David Bisbee State Senator 14068 Pyramid Drive Rogers, AR 72758-0116
Dear Senator Bisbee:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion concerning A.C.A. §
It is my understanding in at least one locality there is a practice of charging an "access fee" for the physical connection of water and sewer lines, and of charging a "utility hookup fee" that is used to generate revenues and is not related to services. It appears to me that this second charge is exactly what the legislation [A.C.A. §
14-56-103 (a)(3)(B)(iii)] intended to regulate.
You then ask:
RESPONSEDoes the phrase "utility hookup fees or access fees" allow a municipality or municipal service agency to charge two separate fees, one for making the physical connection and one to generate revenues?
In my opinion, A.C.A. §
As you note in your letter requesting an opinion in this matter, the term "development impact fee" is defined under A.C.A. §
. . . a fee or charge imposed by a municipality or by a municipal service agency upon or against a development in order to generate revenue for funding or for recouping expenditures of the municipality or municipal service agency that are reasonably attributable to the use and occupancy of the development.
Id. at (a)(3)(A).1
Your specific question pertains to subsection (a)(3)(B) of section
"Development impact fee" shall not include:
(i) Any ad valorem real property taxes;
(ii) Any special assessments for an improvement district;
(iii) Any utility hookup fees or access fees; or
(iv) Any fees for filing development plats or plans for building permits or for construction permits assessed by a municipality or a municipal service that are approximately equal to the cost of the plat, plan, or permit review process to the municipality or the municipal service agency[.]
A.C.A. §
It may be helpful in addressing your question concerning these exclusions to discuss the purpose of "development impact fees" and the related procedural requirements. These fees may be assessed, collected, and expended only under a "development impact fee ordinance" that contains, inter alia, a statement of the public facilities and capital improvements that are to be financed by the fees (id. at (e)(3)(A)), and only after the municipality or municipal service agency has adopted a "capital plan and level of service standards for all of the public facilities that are to be so financed." Id. at (e)(1) and (2). A "capital plan" means "a description of new public facilities or of new capital improvements to existing public facilities or of previous capital improvements to public facilities that continue to provide capacity available for new development that includes cost estimates and capacity available to serve new development." Id. at (a)(1). Funds collected under the ordinance are deposited into a special interest-bearing account and no other revenues may be placed in this account. Id. at (g)(1) and (3).
The legislature's intent in enacting the exclusions under A.C.A. §
It should perhaps also be noted as a general matter that state law does not address the issue of water and sewer fees, other than to grant cities the authority to establish fees for the use of municipal water and sewer systems. See A.C.A. §§
"The distinction between a tax and a fee is that government imposes a tax for general revenue purposes, but a fee is imposed in the government's exercise of its police powers." City of Marion v. Baioni,
312 Ark. 423 ,425 ,850 S.W.2d 1 ,2 (1993) (citing City of North Little Rock v. Graham,278 Ark. 547 ,647 S.W.2d 452 (1983)). A city may assess a fee for providing a service without obtaining public approval; however, a city cannot levy a tax unless it has received approval by the taxpayers. Barnhart v. City of Fayetteville,321 Ark. 197 ,900 S.W.2d 539 (1995) (citing Ark. Code Ann. §26-73-103 (a) (1987)). A governmental levy of a fee, in order not to be denominated a tax by the courts, must be fair and reasonable and bear a reasonable relationship to the benefits conferred on those receiving the services. Id.; Baioni,312 Ark. 423 ,850 S.W.2d 1 .
Harris v. City of Little Rock,
The Arkansas Supreme Court in City of Marion v. Baioni,
An example of a fee charged in the exercise of the city's police power is found in Holman v. City of Dierks,
217 Ark. 677 ,233 S.W.2d 392 (1950). There, the court held that an `annual sanitation charge' of $4.00 per business and residence which was to pay for fogging the city with insecticide three times a year was a fee, not a tax, for services to be rendered. On the other hand, the Graham court considered the validity of a North Little Rock ordinance which imposed a $3.00 per month `public safety fee' on the water bill of each household, business and apartment resident for the purpose of increasing the salaries of the city policemen and firemen and held such a fee was in actuality a tax because the so-called fee was for the cost of maintaining a traditional governmental function and services already in effect and not for a special service as was the case in the Holman case.278 Ark. at 549 ,647 S.W.2d at 453 . As is illustrated by the Graham decision, this court in determining whether a governmental charge, assessment or fee is a tax is not bound by how the enactment or levy labels it. See also City of Hot Springs v. Vapors,298 Ark. 444 ,769 S.W.2d 1 (1989); cf. Rainwater v. Haynes,244 Ark. 1191 ,428 S.W.2d 254 (1968).
City of Marion v. Baioni,
I am unable to opine regarding how, if at all, these general propositions of law might bear upon the particular circumstances that prompted your question. Only a court acquainted with all of the pertinent facts could determine whether the true character of a certain levy is a tax.
Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL
Attorney General
