South Florida is a desirable place to-live, judging by the immigration of people to the region over the years. Florida in-general is somewhere that lures Rust Belt residents south. I was one of them. With that migration come many infrastructure costs, and is one of the ways by-which such development occurs. Having worked as a planner in south Florida, I saw how the processes occur in the development management division of the second most-populous county in Florida.
Impact fees allow the infrastructure costs to be collected when the process of platting the land happens, when it is developed for its intended uses, and when individual parcels are sold to the end-user. All those reasons why government happens, drive the collection of development and impact fees.
An example: you buy a house built as a MCM (mid-century modern) which usually means here in south Florida a ranch-style single family detached dwelling (SFR-single family residential). Assuming you haven't taken-on the trying task of doing this in a "historic preservation" area, your procedure is fairly-straightforward. Submit your plans, sealed with wind-load calcs for wall forces and uplift, foundation (soil tests) and meeting the zoning requirements, etc., and you should get your permits to build. However, let's say that between the time you purchase the 'tear-down' SFR and do raze the parcel, leaving a bare-lot of record, which is taxed at a lower rate than a developed lot, the economy has a 'hiccup,' and you decide
not to-build, what has happened? The jurisdiction has lost a higher-taxed developed property off the tax rolls. The neighborhood has an empty parcel where previously a family could live. The school system has fewer potential students, fewer wage-earners are contributing taxes of all-sorts to the local economy. No income taxes, lower property taxes, no fees for usage of government-operated facilities by the now-absent residents, less usage of utilities, despite the costs of installing them.
The developer says, "we're going to ride this recession out," meaning, he's not going to develop in a real-property downturn market. He's waiting until the market returns, when property values are on the rise, when people have money to spend on homes with more amenities, and his profit margin is better.
I believe the timeframe for impact costs being forgiven is 18 months, from time of demolition. Get a building permit in that timeframe for that replacement new dwelling on the SFR 'tear-down' parcel, and you don't have to pay impact fees. This can provide the developer with considerable savings. Overshoot that window of 'forgiven' impact fees and the impact fees are due at a rate which is probably five-figures by-now, and which will of-course be passed-along to the final purchaser of the new home. Impact and concurrency fees are due
before plans are approved.
http://www.broward.org/Planning/Development/FAQs/Pages/Impact-and-Concurrency-Fees.aspx
When you live in an area of nearly seven million residents (US Census Bureau estimate 2018) Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach Counties), which has a population total of more-than many states, there are a lot of governmental services to pay-for. That is where the impact and concurrency fees help to maintain the infrastructure, and to pay for improvements.
Personally, I would rather deal-with the possibility of windstorms a few times a year, than to sit inside for months getting 'cabin-fever,' and hoping that Punxsutawney Phil sees his shadow, that spring happens early, freeing us from frigid record temperatures, snow, ice, and heating bills.
As a licensed plans examiner and a Life Safety Code inspector, I am familiar with the purposes of the codes in-place to protect the population. I would rather live with-them, than live without them, because of the safety which comes with compliance. The fees are part of the package. With enough input to local officials the fees may be modified.
As-to large-scale developments, it's not uncommon for the local governmental jurisdiction to assemble a package of infrastructure improvements to entice a developer to choose a site for their project. Utilities, roadways, water management, lighting, essential services, all and more are areas where the local government may make 'in-kind' contributions to see a developer complete a prospective project.
However, if the local government doesn't pay-attention to what they agree-to, the developer may take-advantage of the lack of oversight and take compensation beyond what the government intended. Every step of the way, the review of the development process needs to be carefully monitored, lest the taxpayers lose-out to the cunning developer. Here's one local development in southeast Florida that recently sold for $190,000,000 where a "loan" of $23,000,000 to be repaid to the city (and its taxpayers) became a "grant" during some point in the signing of the contract, leaving the money not-repaid. Another $5,000,000 was involved for improvements at the site, also not to-be reimbursed. The contract called for the developer to pay 5% of the profits to the city upon a sale, and after the sale, he claimed there were no profits, so he owed nothing to the city. He supposedly has "walked-back" that claim, and I believe the amount to be delivered to the municipality is under negotiation. I suppose this is where the accountants and the accounting principles, and the law of contracts are exercised to their greatest-good.
Whose "greatest good" remains to be determined, but at this time the developer is probably pretty-happy.
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/...le-hollywood-money-pay-up-20181016-story.html