Fayetteville City Council Meeting – Work Session

Fayetteville City Council
Work Session

January 6, 2013

What Happened:  The City Council discussed lowering the interst rate for sewer assessments to Public Works Commission customers who are required to pay for sewer installation due to annexation.  The Council would like for PWC to bring 3 interest rate scenarios (listed below)  back to the council for consideration.

Background: Homeowners are assessed $5,000 after sewer construction.  The City of Fayetteville and PWC pays the remainder.

Interest rates to be considered:
1. current 8% interest rate
2. 6% interest rate
3. prime (5.25%) +2%

History of the sewer assessment:

PWC funds are currently not required to extend sewer
City Council capped the assessment to property owners @ $5,000
No property will be assessed more than $5,000

Interest information:

8% is the maximum allowed by law
A common interest rate was set to treat all property owners fairly
PWC waived (FIF) fees to customers – $720 for sewer and $540 for water
Fayetteville is the only city in NC that waives these fees

Sewer Assessments from other cities:

Charlotte – property owners pay upfront (no financing)
Raleigh – 6%
Greensboro – 6%
Durham – 7.5%
Winston Salem – 5.25% (prime + 2%)
Cary – 6%

What Was Said:

Councilman McDougald – “Any city made changes due to the economy”

Mark Brown (PWC) – “I am not aware of any.”

Mayor Robertson – “PWC will have options on the 13th (January) on lowering the interest rate.”

Councilman Wright – “You want us to make a decision on the rate when?”

Robertson – “At the next regular meeting.  We can’t delay for a long time.”

Councilman Colvin – “It takes time to look at these numbers.  Are there other options for funding this all at once?”

PWC – “You’d have to borrow the money and raise water and sewer rates to pay for the debt.”

Robertson – “If you float bonds…how soon? how long?”

Brown – “Under the current plan there are 8 years left with few complaints.  The failing septic tanks are done and now we are surveying customers that don’t want sewer installed yet.  We are repriortizing projects.”

Councilman Crisp – “With an accelerated schedule…we’re also trying to do stormwater improvements.  I do think we need to look at a bond.  I’m hearing hundreds of complaints about time.  Five hundered homes is a manageable number but doen’t satisfy other people waiting for it.”

Councilman Arp – “You’re also asking people who’ve already paid for theirs to pay for others….could be a problem.”

Crisp – “We should examine the bond as a possibility.”

Wright – “We need to make it so the average citizen can understand it.”

Arp – “Would there be any reprocity to the people that paid for it?”

Brown – “Those who have financed…consider a credit.”

What’s Next:  City Council will review the above interest rates at the January 13th regular council meeting.  The public hearing has already been held and the Council could vote on the rate.

 

City of Fayetteville – New Stormwater Fee Incentive Program

The following memo is from the City of Fayetteville.  If you have further questions regarding this incentive program you can call the city’s Stormwater Division @ (910) 433-1613

As of January 3, 2014

Commercial, industrial and multifamily property owners in Fayetteville may be credited a portion of their City stormwater fee if they manage their stormwater runoff through onsite water quality or quantity structural Best Management Practices. Some owners may be eligible to receive as much as an 80 percent fee credit if they meet one, two or all of three requirements.
Requirements include:

• Having an onsite stormwater detention or retention pond that reduces the quantity of stormwater runoff from the property that is designed and maintained according to the standards of the City of Fayetteville’s Stormwater Control Ordinance

• Having an onsite Best Management Practice (BMP) that reduces the impact of pollution on water quality and meets the design and maintenance standards in the City of Fayetteville’s Stormwater Control Ordinance. A BMP temporarily stores and/or treats urban stormwater runoff to reduce flooding, remove pollutants and provides other amenities

• Being classified as industrial and is covered by either an individual or general National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) industrial permit.

Industrial property owners can get up to an 80 percent credit by complying with all three requirements. Commercial and multifamily property owners can receive as much as a 60 percent credit on their stormwater fees.

In order to receive the fee credit, owners must apply for the incentive by April 15 and have a completed, functioning stormwater facility. The facility will be inspected by the City to ensure it meets regulations. Facilities must be designed and certified by a professional engineer licensed in N.C. To ensure that the engineer is licensed, owners can log onto www.ncbels.org and go to license lookup.

Upon approval of the stormwater facility and application, the credit will be reflected in the annual billing of the stormwater fee in August. The fee credit is available annually as long as the BMP is properly maintained and continues to meet City criteria.

Individuals or businesses wishing to apply for the incentive can stop by the Engineering & Infrastructure desk on the first floor of City Hall, located at 433 Hay Street, or by visiting www.cityoffayetteville.org/stormwater , clicking on “All Stormwater Related Downloads” then “Stormwater Credit Manual for City Users.” For more information, please contact staff with the Stormwater Division at 433-1613

Southwest Cumberland Land Use Plan – plan tabled until joint meeting

Southwest Cumberland Land Use Plan (Town of Hope Mills)

The Town of  Hope Mills Board of Commissioners tabled the vote on the Southwest Cumberland LUP.  An upcoming meeting (TBA) will be held with the Commissioners and the Cumberland County Joint Planning Board.  The joint meeting will be open to the public.

The Plan covers an area bounded by Robeson County, Hoke County, City of Fayetteville, U.S. 301 South and Interstate 95, and includes the Town of Hope Mills.

Below is a link to the proposed plan↓

 http://www.co.cumberland.nc.us/Planning/Downloads/land_use/SWC_Study_Area_Land_Use_Plan.pdf

 

NCDOT Update – Tom Starling Road

 

 NCDOT Proposed Road Improvements
December 12, 2013
Public Comment Meeting

Location: Tom Starling Road – between U.S. 301 and N.C. 87

Project Description:  NCDOT plans to widen Tom Starling Road by 2 feet from U.S. 301 to N.C. 87.  Additional right of way will be needed to construct two curve realignments.  No additional right of way will be needed for the new left turn lane at Corporation Drive or to widen Tom Starling Road along the length of the corridor.

Length of project:  4.5 miles

Schedule:  Right-of-Way – May 2014
Construction – May 2015

(from NCDOT) Right-of-way procedures:  After decisions are made regarding the final design, the proposed right-of-way limits will be staked in the ground.  If you are an affected property owner, a Right-of-Way Agent will contact you and arrange a meeting.

 

 

Regional Land Use Advisory Commission – Fort. Bragg Construction Update

November 21, 2013

Background on RLUAC – The Regional Land Use Advisory Commission (RLUAC) is a non-profit 501(C)3 membership based organization located in the Sandhills of North Carolina consisting of twenty units of local government: eight counties and twelve municipalities.  The twenty year old organization was the first regional group established in the country to coordinate land use decisions between the military and the local governments.  Today, the primary mission of RLUAC is to balance the following three key objectives through facilitating regional planning and development reviews, communication and coordination:

  • Protect the Civilian Population from negative military impacts;
  • Protect the Long Leaf Pine Ecosystem from destruction;and
  • Protect the Military Training Mission from incompatible development.

What Happened:  Greg Bean (Director of Fort Bragg Public Works) gave an update on current construction projects on the base.

To view the power point in its entirety please follow the link below

http://www.rluac.com/images/images/Millitary%20Construction%20Update%20(RLUAC)–15%20Nov%2012%20Rev.pdf

  • Fort Bragg buildable square feet has expanded from 30 million to an anticipated 52.4 million
  • $800 million in projects have been awarded on the base
  • By 2014, the 82nd Airborne Division will be completely renovated with a cost of $1 billion
  • Fort Bragg will soon become the largest military base in the U.S. regarding population
  • Around 300 buildings are being renovated

82nd Airborne Division Area

Division Headquarters – 53M, completed September 2013
BCT Administration – 83M, completion date June 2014
Almost all buildings  used by the 82nd will be renovated

Campus Master Plan

Intelligence Training Center – 27M, completion date 2016
Regional Studies and Education Center – 53.7M, completion date 2014
Special Operation Forces – 46.7M, completion date 2015JFK Campus – Intel Center, 1st Special Warfare Training

Base Schools

Older Fort Bragg schools will be renovated
A new elementary school will open next year for the children located in the Linden Oaks subdivision (1,492 homes)

 Roads

The NC DOT will award the financing next year for the expansion of the outer loop (I295) from Cliffdale Road to Raeford Road

Next Meeting:

February 20, 2014

 

National Association of Realtors® Press Release – GSE Loan Limits

Realtors® Applaud DeMarco for Heeding Warnings,

Leaving GSE Loan Limits As Is

Media Contact: Jenny Werwa / 202-383-1193 /  Email

WASHINGTON (November 26, 2013) – The following is a statement by National Association of Realtors® President Steve Brown:

“Realtors® welcome today’s announcement from the Federal Housing Finance Agency that the current limits on conforming loans will remain in effect until further notice. As the leading voice for homeownership, NAR opposes lowering the ceiling on loans eligible for backing by the government-sponsored enterprises. Lower loan limits would increase costs for consumers and reduce their access to conventional mortgages.

“In September, when reports surfaced that FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco was considering using conservator authority to lower loan limits, NAR cautioned that such an experiment would jeopardize homeownership for many creditworthy buyers, especially first-time home buyers who are often less likely to meet the 20 percent minimum down payment requirement.

“There is already enough turbulence in the regulatory environment for mortgage lending. In January 2014, many changes stemming from the Dodd-Frank Act will go into effect, including the ability-to-repay requirement. In addition, risk retention regulations remain in flux, including the definition of a Qualified Residential Mortgage. Lowering loan limits at this time would create even more confusion and uncertainty, and we would run the risk of reversing the progress that’s been made in the economic recovery.”

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.