Lafayette’s City Council unanimously approved an amendment on Tuesday increasing the amount of public land mandated for future developments — a proposal that has carried with it a wave of public support as residents fear declining open space could transform the once-rural community.
“In May of 2016 I stood before you and spoke about the big picture,” resident Karen Norback said Tuesday night, “…(about) how we could preserve more open space. I urged the planning commission to vote yes on these no-brainer changes and I ask you to do the same tonight.”
Stipulations for public land dedication — in which a developer seeking to build a project on “x” amount of acres must give the city a percentage of that parcel to use for public land — has been increasingly used throughout east Boulder County to stave off overly-dense growth.
Lafayette’s code requires public land dedication for 12 percent of a residential site and 6 percent for a commercial or industrial site, according to the city’s website.
Under the current regulations, the cost for cash-in-lieu equates to roughly $2 per square foot — a “fairly outdated” sum, city planning manager Paul Rayl said Tuesday.
Additionally, an option exists for developers to pay cash-in-lieu if the parcel allocated for public lands is too small to support anything more substantial than a “pocket park.”
The amendment, which was approved on first reading Tuesday, adjusts the amount of dedicated public land to 15 percent for residential and to 12 percent for commercial Tempobet or industrial.
More notably, the cost for the cash-in-lieu alternative would rise to a market rate value, according to the ordinance’s language.
Neighboring municipalities have looked to such a tool as public land dedication in recent years as a useful resource in buffering development from one another.
Currently, a minimum of 12 percent for nonresidential subdivisions of the total land area of the tract being subdivided must be dedicated for a park, school or other public purposes in Lafayette’s neighboring municipality, Louisville, according to the city’s website. A minimum of 15 percent is required for residential subdivisions.
Every annexation, subdivision or residential or commercial development that comes through Lafayette requires the dedication of certain sites for parks and recreation use, according to the city’s municipal code, and also requires reservation of sites for school and other public purposes.
Planning commissioners last month were overwhelmingly in favor of such an amendment. However, a facet of the plan they recommended that would include a build-in approved list of appraisers was nixed by the City Council on Tuesday.
“We can find costs that are real so that (developers) can’t just fib us into a low number,” City Administrator Gary Klaphake said. “The appraisal market is very slow and we would just spend it out the backdoor on appraisers.”
Anthony Hahn: 303-473-1422, hahna@dailycamera.com or twitter.com/_anthonyhahn
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