Haw. Code R. § 15-215-64 - Dedication of public facilities
(a) Applicability.
This section shall apply to any new development or improvement project, master
plan, or existing development or improvement project within the Kalaeloa CDD
that increases the existing floor area by more than twenty-five per cent as
compared to the floor area existing on OCT 27 2014 or at the time the
development permit or improvement permit was issued, excluding proposed
demolitions, whichever is less; provided, however, that this section shall not
apply to any development or improvement project undertaken by an eleemosynary
organization, development or improvement project for public uses, public
project, floor area related to reserved housing, or new buildings or structures
with a floor area of less than two hundred square feet.
(b) Dedication requirement. As a condition
precedent to the issuance of an improvement permit or development permit, the
developer shall dedicate land for public facilities. The dedication of land for
public facilities shall be subject to the maximum ceiling in land or money in
lieu thereof calculated in accordance with the formula designated in
subsections (d) to (f) herein.
(c)
In-lieu fee payments. As an alternative to the land dedication requirement of
section 15-215-64(b), an in-lieu fee payment may be authorized as follows:
(1) For improvement permit applications, the
executive director may authorize a developer to pay an in-lieu fee equal to the
value of land which would otherwise have had to be dedicated, or combine the
payment of fee with land to be dedicated. The total value of such combination
shall be not less than the value of land which would otherwise have had to be
dedicated; and
(2) For development
permit applications, the authority may authorize a developer to pay a fee equal
to the value of land which would otherwise have had to be dedicated, or combine
the payment of fee with land to be dedicated. The total value of such
combination shall be not less than the value of land which would otherwise have
had to be dedicated.
(d)
Minimum dedication requirements. Land dedication requirements are:
(1) Three per cent of the total commercial or
industrial floor area;
(2) Four per
cent of the total residential floor area exclusive of floor area devoted to
reserved housing units and their associated common areas in proportion with the
floor area of other uses; and
(3)
If the area of land approved for dedication is less than the land area required
under subsection (d)(1) and (2) above, the developer shall be required to pay a
fee equal to the fair market value of the land area which is the difference
between the land area dedicated and the land area required under subsection
(d)(1) and (2) above.
(e) Payment timing and use of funds:
(1) Authorized in-lieu fees shall be payable
prior to the issuance of the initial certificate of occupancy and secured by
the developer with a financial guaranty bond from a surety company authorized
to do business in Hawaii, an acceptable construction set-aside letter, or other
acceptable means prior to the issuance of the initial building permit;
and
(2) Payment of fees shall be
made to the authority for deposit in the authority's revolving fund established
under section
206E-195,
HRS.
(f) Valuation
methodology. Valuation of land when authorized in-lieu fees are to be paid
shall be determined as follows:
(1) Valuation
shall be based upon the fair market value of the land as though vacant and
unimproved on the date the developer's application for an improvement permit or
development permit is deemed complete pursuant to section 15-215-83 (completeness review), as agreed to by the developer and the executive director
if an improvement permit, or the developer and authority if a development
permit; and
(2) In the event that a
fair market value cannot be agreed on, the fair market value of the land as
though vacant and unimproved shall be fixed and established by majority vote of
three real estate appraisers whose decision shall be final, conclusive, and
binding; one shall be appointed by the developer, one appointed by the
executive director in the case of improvement permits or the authority in the
case of development permits, and the third shall be appointed by the first two
appraisers. In the event a party shall fail to appoint an appraiser within ten
days following the appointment of the first appraiser, the party who appointed
the first appraiser may apply to the person sitting as the administrative judge
of the circuit court of the first circuit of Hawaii, if any, or if none, to any
judge in service of said court, for the appointment of the second appraiser;
provided, however, that if the developer is the party who has failed to appoint
an appraiser within ten days following the executive director's or authority's
appointment of the first appraiser, the executive director or authority, as the
case may be, may deny the developer's request to pay a monetary fee in lieu of
dedicating land. The two appraisers shall appoint a third appraiser, and in
case of their failure to do so within ten days after appointment of the second
appraiser, either party may apply to the person sitting as the administrative
judge of the circuit court of the first circuit of Hawaii, if any, or if none,
to any judge in service of said court, for the appointment of the third
appraiser. The appraisers shall determine the fair market value of the land as
though vacant and unimproved on the date the developer's application for an
improvement permit or development permit is deemed complete pursuant to section
15-215-83 (completeness review). All appraisers shall have had a minimum of
five years of training and experience in real estate appraisal work in the
state of Hawaii. The appraisers shall be governed in their determination by the
provisions of chapter
658A, HRS. The fees and costs of
each appraiser and all other appraisal costs shall, with exception of each
party's attorneys' fees and costs and witnesses' fees, shall be borne equally
by both parties.
(g)
Dedication instrument. For land dedication pursuant to this section, the
developer shall record the necessary conveyance instrument, free and clear of
all encumbrances, in the bureau of conveyances, state of Hawaii, and shall file
copies of the recorded conveyance instrument with the authority. The authority
may require the developer to maintain the dedicated area until such time that
notice is given by the authority to accept ownership and control of the
area.
(h) Relationship to existing
or future improvement districts. Nothing contained in this section shall
preclude the creation of any improvement district for public facilities, or the
imposition of assessments against properties specially benefited within the
district.
Notes
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