Oklahoma Code § 62-895

Title 62. Public Finance: Municipal development fees
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A.  Municipalities that adopt ordinances, resolutions, or
regulations for the implementation and collection of development
fees shall provide that such development fees are adopted and
governed pursuant to the provisions of this section.  As used in
this section:
1.  “Development fee” means any payment of money imposed, in
whole or in part, as a condition of approval of any building permit,
plat approval, or zoning change, to the extent the fee is to pay for
public infrastructure systems that are attributable to new
development or to expand or modify existing development;
2.  “Expanded or modified development” is one in which the
expansion or modification results in an increased demand or
increased impact upon the public infrastructure system as compared
to the demand or impact prior to the expansion or modifications;
3.  “Public infrastructure system” includes any real property
improvement, fixture, or accession that is included within, but not
limited to, any of the following categories of public systems:
a. water systems, including supply, production,
treatment, and distribution facilities,
b. wastewater systems, including collection, treatment,
and disposal facilities,
c. street systems, including roads, streets, boulevards,
bridges, sidewalks, bicycle routes, drainage, traffic
signals and systems, traffic control devices and
signage, traffic calming devices, landscaping
associated with street rights-of-way, and any local
components of county, state, or federal highways to
the extent and to the proportionate cost that the
local components are not funded by state or federal
grants or other state or federal permanent funding
sources,
d. storm water systems, including collection, retention,
detention, treatment, channelization, disposal,
discharge, flood control, and bank and shoreline
protection facilities,

e. parks systems, including parks, open spaces, trails,
bicycle paths, and natural recreation areas and
related facilities,
f. public safety systems, including police, fire,
emergency medical, and rescue facilities,
g. solid waste systems, including facilities,
h. public transportation systems, including facilities,
and
i. public capital improvement communications facilities;
and
4.  “Public infrastructure system costs” means capital
improvements that have a projected useful life of at least ten (10)
years or more, and that result in an increase or expansion to the
functional service capacity of that public infrastructure system.
B.  New development and expanded or modified existing
development may only be charged the development fee for capital
improvement costs for increases or expansion to the capacity of
public infrastructure systems attributable to that development.
1.  Development fees shall not exceed a clear, ascertainable,
and reasonably determined proportionate share of the cost of capital
improvement to the public infrastructure system attributable to the
expansion or increase in functional service capacity generated, or
to be generated by, the development being charged the fee.  There
shall be a clearly established functional nexus between the purpose
and amount of the development fee being charged and the development
against which the fee is charged.  In determining the development
fee, the municipality shall make a documented effort to quantify the
projected impact from development and determine that the proposed
development fee is reasonably and roughly proportional to the nature
and extent of the impact of development.
2.  Development fees cannot be adopted or used to fund repairs,
maintenance, restorations, refurbishments, alterations,
improvements, or fixes to existing public infrastructure systems in
any way that does not result in an increase or expansion in the
functional service capacity of the system which is available to
serve new or expanded existing growth and development in the
applicable service area.
3.  The development fees shall be based on actual system
improvement costs or reliable, ascertainable and reasonable
projected estimates of the costs.  Any estimates of costs shall be
based upon factual and historically realized costs for similar
system capital improvements.
4.  Development fees may only be imposed to recover or fund the
costs of public infrastructure system capital improvements,
including, but not limited to, the cost of real property interest
acquisitions, rights-of-ways, capital improvements, design,
construction, inspection, and capital improvement construction

administration, related to one or more public infrastructure
systems.
C.  A municipal development fee ordinance, resolution, or
regulation shall provide for the following:
1.  A schedule of development fees specifying the development
fee for various land uses per unit of development, the purpose for
the development fee, and termination of the development fee when the
applicable public infrastructure system has been fully funded and
the expanded or modified development has no additional impact on the
public infrastructure system; and
2.  A component capital improvement plan that:
a. lists public infrastructure system capital projects or
facility expansions that are necessitated by
development of various land uses in designated areas,
b. provides reasonable notice to developers of specific
public infrastructure system impacts from development
of various land uses within the area of the
development, and
c. delineates the property locations that are clearly
served by the public infrastructure system that will
be funded through the development fee.
In the alternative, a municipality may establish one or more
service areas for the collection of development fees.  As used in
this section, “service area” means a geographic area defined by a
municipality in which a defined public infrastructure system
provides service to developments within that service area.  Service
areas shall be carefully drawn so as to include only property
locations that are clearly served by the cost of capital
improvements that increase or expand the functional service capacity
of the public infrastructure system that will be funded through the
development fee that is associated with the service area.  The
determinations regarding the establishment of one or more service
areas will be a matter of legislative determination and discretion.
Different public infrastructure systems may have different and
separately defined service areas unique to each system’s coverage.
The development fees within a particular service area may be
different as applied to different types of land uses; and
3.  An adoption process that provides for at least the following
before any development fees, capital improvement plan, service plan,
or creation of service areas shall become effective:
a. a public hearing before the municipal planning
commission.  Notice of the time, date and place of the
hearing shall be published in a newspaper of general
circulation in the municipality at least fifteen (15)
days prior to the hearing,
b. a subsequent public hearing before the municipal
governing body.  Notice of the time, date and place of

the hearing shall be published in a newspaper of
general circulation in the municipality at least
fifteen (15) days prior to the hearing.
All duly enacted ordinances, resolutions, or regulations
existing at the time of the effective date of this section shall
remain in full force and effect; provided, no existing impact or
development fees shall be amended, modified, or renewed except in
accordance with this act.
D.  The development fees collected pursuant to a component
capital improvement plan or within a service area, and any interest
on the funds, shall be spent only for capital improvements that
expand or increase the functional service capacity of that
particular public infrastructure system to serve the area
encompassing the development or only within that service area from
which the funds were collected.
1.  Every assessment of a development fee shall be in writing
and a copy shall be provided to the developer and property owner(s)
affected, as such names and addresses of the property owner(s) are
provided by the developer.  The assessment shall specify the purpose
or service area for which the development fee is being collected,
the basis for calculation of the assessment, and the amount of the
assessment.  No development fee collected for one purpose shall be
devoted to another purpose except as hereinafter provided.
2.  If the purpose, component capital improvement plan,  or
service area is changed or redrawn, or if a development spans more
than one component capital improvement plan or service area, the
development fees collected prior to the change shall be spent
proportionately pursuant to the new purpose or within the new
component capital improvement plan or service area or areas that
encompass the development at the time of expenditure from which the
fee was originally collected.  Any change or expansion in a purpose,
component capital improvement plan, or service area shall be done
through the full hearing process as set forth in paragraph 3 of
subsection C of this section.
E.  Each municipality shall present an annual report to its
governing body on:
1.  The collection, investment, and expenditure of development-
fee funds as separately reported upon for each development capital
project or service area, and each public infrastructure system for
each development capital project or in each service area;
2.  The recovery of costs from development-fee revenues; and
3.  Estimates of the timing of system-capacity-expansion
improvements, as such construction is funded by development fees.
If the municipality determines that the development fees as
collected within a service area are no longer needed or desired for
the purpose for which they were collected, the municipality may
either refund the collected fees to the current owners of the

property within the development for which the fees were paid, or
proceed through the hearing process as set forth in paragraph 3 of
subsection C of this section in order to adopt a new purpose for the
fees.
F.  Municipalities may establish a process for the collection of
development fees to occur at a point in time no earlier than the
issuance of a building permit.
G.  Municipalities may enter into written agreements with
developers to construct capital improvements to expand or increase
the functional service capacity of a public infrastructure system
within the designated development area or to serve a service area
and provide a credit against or an adjustment to payment of all or
part of the development fee for that system and that development.
The credit or adjustment may not exceed the cost of the capital
improvement or the amount of the development fee that would have
been collected from that developer for the development and that
system.  No credit or adjustment will be carried over or transferred
to a different development, a subsequent development, a subsequent
change to that development, or against a development fee for a
different system.
H.  Nothing in this section will:
1.  Preclude a municipality from requiring the developer to
donate or dedicate real property or capital improvements, or to
install, construct, operate, maintain, or repair capital
improvements; or
2.  Require a credit against or an adjustment to a development
fee for contribution of, or to the cost of, any real property or
capital improvement provided by a developer if the direct cost of
the specific contribution is not specifically and directly included
in the calculation of the applicable development fees.
I.  No credit or adjustment shall be carried over from one
development to a development at a different location.  No credit or
adjustment will be carried over from one development to a subsequent
development at the same location, unless the development fee
collected previously is for the same purpose, making any subsequent
collection a repeat charge for the same purpose.
J.  Development fees shall be deemed dedicated and restricted
revenues and therefore shall require accounting for development
proceeds as restricted funds.  Interest earned on development fees
shall be considered funds of the account on which it is earned and
shall be subject to all restrictions placed on the use of
development fees under the provisions of this section.  The
accounting records and details thereof shall be maintained as public
records of the municipality, be accessible to the public through
open records requests, and include at least the following
information, as relates both to each development capital project or

service area and each public infrastructure system for each
development capital project or within each service area:
1.  The receipt of development fees;
2.  The development capital project or service area from which
the development fee was collected;
3.  The accumulation of interest on the development fee funds;
4.  The type of public infrastructure system for which the funds
were collected;
5.  The cost of the capital improvements to which the
development fees were applied; and
6.  The dates when development fee funds were expended to fund,
or applied to reimburse, the cost of capital improvements to public
infrastructure systems.
K.  Any ordinance, resolution, or regulation adopted in
compliance with this section which is thereafter challenged in any
future court action shall be reviewed through rational-basis
scrutiny, such that it shall be upheld if it substantially complies
with this section and if the municipality documented reasonably
conceivable facts that provided a rational basis for the adoption.
L.  No municipality is required to adopt development fees and it
is within the discretion of the municipality as to whether
development fees should be considered for adoption.  Any municipal
development fee ordinance, resolution, or regulation may provide for
appeal to the governing body for exemption of all or part of
particular development projects from development fees if:
1.  The projects are determined to create desirable economic
development, quality jobs, a type of desirable land use that is in
short supply within the municipality, or affordable housing; or
2.  The exempt development project's proportionate share of the
system expansion improvements is funded through a revenue source
other than development fees.
M.  Any payment of a development fee by a payor shall not be
deemed to have waived the standing or rights of the payor to later
challenge or protest the payment as being invalid and not required.
N.  A municipality may not recover the public infrastructure
system costs as a development fee by way of connection fees, hook-up
fees or other fees in any manner that results in charges beyond the
public infrastructure system cost that the development fee already
collected.  Any connection fees, hook-up fees or any other fees
charged by a municipality as related to the cost of capital
improvements necessary to increase or expand the functional service
capacity of public infrastructure systems shall be determined
relative to the functional service capacity actually being provided
or made available to the fee payor, and any amounts in excess
thereof shall be considered development fees and may only be applied
if put forth in accordance with this section.  Nothing herein shall
prevent a municipality to separately impose and collect connection

fees, hook-up fees or any other fees that are reasonably related in
character and amount charged to the costs of regulation of the
activities for which the fees were enacted or enforcement of
municipal health or safety codes.
O.  This section shall not prohibit municipalities from self-
funding capital improvements by use of pay-back agreements utilizing
recoupment districts or lease-purchase agreements in order to
finance improvements to public infrastructure systems, by borrowing
or on a cash basis, so long as such procedures are utilized in a
manner that is consistent with the requirements of this section to
the extent such procedures pertain to development fees.  Nothing in
this section shall limit, regulate, or prohibit a municipality from
investing public resources in public infrastructure systems in
anticipation of development, recovering those public resources
through proportional reimbursement payments equal to the total cost
of the public investment in those public infrastructure systems, and
subsequently expending the proceeds from those reimbursement
payments for any purpose determined by the jurisdiction.

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