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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCOUNCIL - AGENDA ITEM - 12/17/2013 - SECOND READING OF ORDINANCE NO. 171, 2013, AMENDINAgenda Item 6 Item # 6 Page 1 AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY December 17, 2013 City Council STAFF Donnie Dustin, Water Resources Manager SUBJECT Second Reading of Ordinance No. 171, 2013, Amending Article III of Chapter 26 of the City Code to Eliminate Water Rights Banking by the City's Water Utility. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This Ordinance, unanimously adopted on First Reading on December 3, 2013, amends City Code to discontinue the practice of water right banking. In order to meet the water needs of new development or redevelopment within the Water Utility service area, developers are assessed a Raw Water Requirement (RWR). Current City Code allows water rights to be submitted to the Water Utility even when no water service permit is needed, in exchange for credit that can be used for later satisfaction of the RWR. Although this banking practice was helpful in the past, it is less helpful now and makes managing these water rights difficult. The proposed City Code changes discontinue the practice of banking water right credits, but continue to allow the practice of conveying acceptable water rights for developments at the time a RWR is assessed. STAFF RECOMMENDATION Staff recommends adoption of the Ordinance on Second Reading. ATTACHMENTS 1. First Reading Agenda Item Summary, December 3, 2013 (PDF) 2. Ordinance No. 171, 2013 (PDF) Agenda Item 9 Item # 9 Page 1 AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY December 3, 2013 City Council STAFF Donnie Dustin, Water Resources Manager SUBJECT First Reading of Ordinance No. 171, 2013, Amending Article III of Chapter 26 of the City Code to Eliminate Water Rights Banking by the City's Water Utility. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of this item is to discontinue the practice of water right banking. In order to meet the water needs of new development or redevelopment within the Water Utility service area, developers are assessed a Raw Water Requirement (RWR). Current City Code allows water rights to be submitted to the Water Utility even when no water service permit is needed in exchange for credit that can be used for later satisfaction of the RWR. Although this banking practice was helpful in the past, it is less helpful now and makes managing these water rights difficult. The proposed City Code changes would discontinue the practice of banking water right credits, but continue to allow the practice of conveying acceptable water rights for developments at the time a RWR is assessed. STAFF RECOMMENDATION Staff recommends adoption of the Ordinance on First Reading. BACKGROUND / DISCUSSION When new development or redevelopment occurs within the Water Utility service area, the development is assessed a Raw Water Requirement (RWR) that is structured to provide the Water Utility with the necessary raw water to meet the treated water needs of the development. RWR may be paid in shares of irrigation companies which convey a portion of the irrigation companies’ water rights to the Water Utility, or may be paid in cash. Section 26-150(b) of the City Code states: The satisfaction of the minimum RWR shall be made no later than the time of issuance of the water service permit. An owner of water rights or City certificates may submit acceptable water rights and/or City certificates to the City, whether or not an application for a water service permit is pending, and be credited accordingly for raw water value. Such credit may then be used to satisfy, in whole or in part, assessed RWR on subsequent application for a water service permit. Upon request, the City will convert such credit into a City water certificate in any desired amount not to exceed the amount of credit being carried by the City and issue such certificate to the owner. Once the credits have been designated to a particular premises in satisfaction of the RWR for water service, they shall not be transferred to another property. A portion of this City Code allows irrigation company shareholders to submit their shares whether or not a water service permit is pending and be credited accordingly. This provision allows those shares to essentially be banked for later satisfaction of RWR. The banked water shares can be either credited to Agenda Item 9 Item # 9 Page 2 the former shareholder or converted into a City certificate, which provides documentation of the credit that may be bought and sold as a commodity. The practice of banking these irrigation company shares has been mutually beneficial to the Water Utility and the individual shareholder. The shareholder relinquished their control on the associated water from an irrigation company in exchange for no longer having to pay the annual shareholder assessments while still receiving transferrable credit for that water toward satisfying the City’s RWR for future development. The Water Utility benefited from these transactions by being able to bundle the banked shares along with others to manage them, including changing them from irrigation use to municipal use as a group in state water court. Typically, Colorado water law allows municipalities to convert only the shares owned at the time of the change of use application. The Water Utility has acquired many of the accepted shares over the last several decades and has taken most of them through the water court conversion process. A second block of Southside Ditch shares (which include shares in the following irrigation companies: Arthur, Larimer County Canal No. 2, New Mercer and Warren Lake Reservoir) is nearly finalized through the conversion process. Since the water court process is lengthy and expensive and the Water Utility only anticipates the need for a final change case near build-out in about 25 years, the Water Utility no longer benefits by acquiring additional shares ahead of when they are needed. The cost to the Water Utility has been the burden of paying the annual shareholder assessments on the banked shares, and a reduced ability to control the way in which future development provides raw water in connection with treated water service. The Water Utility regularly evaluates its water right portfolio to adapt to changes in demand and changing supply conditions. As irrigation company shares are turned in, the Water Utility assesses the increase in firm yield those shares provide. By their nature, irrigation company shares cannot provide year-round water supply without coupling them with storage accessible to the Water Utility to regulate those rights throughout the year. Since the acquisition of shares has continued while no additional storage has been obtained, the marginal benefit provided by newly acquired shares is diminished. The Water Utility service area has a limited growth potential since it is surrounded by other water districts. As the Water Utility approaches build-out, accepting irrigation company shares in advance of development is not optimal in managing water rights for the future. Thus, as written, the current City Code provision would require the Water Utility to continue to accept irrigation company shares to an extent that may not be needed and may not be beneficial to Fort Collins Utilities. The Water Utility currently has approximately 2,200 acre-feet of RWR in the credit system compared to the average annual RWR of about 350 acre-feet over the past five years. The Water Utility must pay annual assessments to the various irrigation companies for ownership of these shares. Using an average of assessment cost per acre-foot of $25, the total annual assessments for these credits is approximately $55,000 per year. For the reasons outlined above, the Water Utility recommends amending the City Code to discontinue the practice of water right banking. Developers will still be able to provide acceptable irrigation company shares to satisfy the RWR, but only at the time a water service permit is required. Existing RWR credits and City certificates can still be used toward water service permits at the appropriate time. Also, if necessary, credits can still be transferred into City certificates and vice versa. FINANCIAL / ECONOMIC IMPACT By discontinuing the practice of water right banking, Utilities ratepayers will benefit financially by reducing potential future annual ditch company assessments from shares that might have been turned in for credit ahead of when they were needed. Agenda Item 9 Item # 9 Page 3 BOARD / COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION The proposed Code change was discussed with Water Board at its November 21, 2013 meeting. The Water Board unanimously recommended that the City Council discontinue the practice of water right banking. PUBLIC OUTREACH The proposed City Code change is an internal Utilities operational change and is intended to have minimal impact on the public. The only group potentially affected by this change would be water right shareholders who want to turn in their water rights to the City to avoid the annual assessment fees on them but who do not currently have any development in the permitting process to apply those water rights toward. There should be little to no impact to these entities since they will still be able to provide acceptable irrigation company shares to satisfy the RWR at the time a water service permit is required. ATTACHMENTS 1. FINAL Recommendation on Water Right Credits from Unapproved Water Board Minutes (DOCX) - 1 - ORDINANCE NO. 171, 2013 OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS AMENDING ARTICLE III OF CHAPTER 26 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS TO ELIMINATE WATER RIGHTS BANKING BY THE CITY’S WATER UTILITY WHEREAS, Article III of Chapter 26 of the City Code establishes terms and conditions related to the operation of the City’s Water Utility, including terms and conditions for water service and the rates, fees, charges and other requirements associated with obtaining, or increasing the level of, water service; and WHEREAS, included among the requirements in Article III are provisions related to the delivery of water rights, or cash in-lieu of water rights, to the Water Utility in connection with new or increased water service (the “Raw Water Requirement”); and WHEREAS, as part of that Article, City Code Section 26-150 provides that an owner of water rights may submit those rights to the Water Utility and obtain either credit or a City water certificate to document a transferable credit, both of which may be used to meet a future Raw Water Requirement, a practice referred to as “banking;” and WHEREAS, while there has been benefit to the Water Utility in the past of banking water rights, the continued unlimited acceptance of water rights as a credit for future, unspecified use transfers the financial obligation of water right ownership without any significant benefit to existing rate payers and interferes with the ability of the Water Utility to make changes to its raw water practices as it relates to managing its water supply; and WHEREAS, banking of water rights results in an increased cost to the Water Utility because the Water Utility becomes responsible for irrigation company annual assessments and other costs associated with banked shares; and WHEREAS, the elimination of water rights banking will not affect the Raw Water Requirement that applies to new and increased water service; and WHEREAS, the City Manager and staff have recommended to the City Council that City Code Section 26-150 be amended to eliminate the banking of water rights; and WHEREAS, based on the foregoing, it is the desire of the City Council to amend City Code Section 26-150 as set forth herein. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS that subsection (b) of Section 26-150 of the Code of the City of Fort Collins is hereby amended to read as follows: - 2 - Sec. 26-150. Raw water requirements; satisfaction. . . . (b) The satisfaction of the minimum RWR shall be made no later than the time of issuance of the water service permit. An owner of water rights or City-issued water certificates may submit acceptable water rights and/or City-issued water certificates to the City together with an application for a water service permit, and will be credited accordingly for raw water value to satisfy, in whole or in part, assessed RWR on such application for a water service permit. Once the water rights or City-issued water certificate have been designated to satisfy the RWR for water service for a particular premises, they shall not be transferred to another property. . . . Introduced and considered favorably on first reading, and ordered published this 3rd day of December, A.D. 2013, and to be presented for final passage on the 17th day of December, A.D. 2013. _________________________________ Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ City Clerk Passed and adopted on final reading on the 17th day of December, A.D. 2013. ___________________________________ Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ City Clerk