[HISTORY: Adopted by the City Council of the City of Northampton 3-20-2014. Amendments
noted where applicable.]
GENERAL REFERENCES
Fees — See Ch. 174.
Stormwater management — See Ch. 281.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
There is hereby established within the Department of Public
Works a utility known as the "Stormwater and Flood Control Utility"
under the day-to-day supervision of the Director of Public Works.
The Stormwater and Flood Control Utility shall administer the
stormwater management and flood control programs of the City. It shall
be funded by revenue collected through the Stormwater and Flood Control
Utility fee and such other funds as may, from time to time, be appropriated
or obtained through grants and low-interest loans. The stormwater
management program is designed to promote the health and safety of
the public, to protect property from flooding and the damage caused
by stormwater runoff, and to protect and manage water quality by controlling
the level of pollutants in stormwater runoff and the flow of water
as conveyed by man-made and by natural stormwater management systems
and facilities, whether publicly or privately owned. The flood control
program is designed to maintain, operate, modify, construct or replace
flood control systems in the City that protect the City from flooding
from the Mill River and Connecticut River systems.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
This chapter is adopted in accordance with the authority granted,
inter alia, by Amendment Article 89 to Amendment Article 2 of the
Massachusetts Constitution, MGL c. 83, §§ 1 through
24, and such other powers as granted to cities in the General Laws.
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this chapter,
shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
A reduction in the amount of a Stormwater and Flood Control
Utility fee charge to a particular property.
The costs incurred in the operation and maintenance of the
stormwater and flood control system as reflected in the Stormwater
and Flood Control Enterprise Fund budget.
Natural and man-made channels, swales, ditches, swamps, rivers,
streams, brooks, creeks, wetlands, branches, reservoirs, ponds, drainageways,
drainage structures, conveyances, storm drains, catch basins, inlets,
gutters, pipes, culverts, bridges, head walls, storm sewers, lakes,
and other physical works, properties, and improvements that collect,
transport, transfer, control, pump, treat, convey, dispose of, or
otherwise influence the movement of stormwater runoff.
The individual, private premises contained in any building
intended, whether occupied or not, as the residence for one household,
regardless of the number of individuals in the household. A building
may contain more than one dwelling unit.
Man-made levees, flood walls, pump stations, stop-log structures,
and other flood protection improvements.
The General Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
The sum of the impervious and pervious areas as modified
by runoff coefficients.
Those areas which prevent or impede the infiltration of stormwater
into the soil in the manner in which it entered the soil, in natural
conditions, prior to development. Common impervious surfaces include,
but are not limited to, rooftops, buildings or structures, sidewalks,
walkways, patio areas, decks, driveways, parking lots, storage areas,
compacted gravel and soil surfaces, awnings and other fabric or plastic
coverings, and other surfaces which prevent or impede the natural
infiltration of stormwater runoff which existed prior to development.
The costs incurred in the operation and maintenance of the
stormwater and flood control system appropriated as part of the General
Fund operating budget and allocated to the Stormwater and Flood Control
Enterprise Fund budget. An example of an indirect cost would be the
value of time spent by General Fund employees in the Collector's
office processing Enterprise Fund user payments.
Improved property containing apartments, or condominiums
with four or more dwelling units and rooming and boarding houses.
Large residential properties shall not include improved property containing
structures used primarily for nonresidential purposes (i.e., hotels,
motels, retirement centers, nursing homes or assisted living homes
or properties designated as "mixed use" properties by the Board of
Assessors).
Property that is not residential property as defined herein,
including, but not limited to, such property as commercial and office
buildings, public buildings and structures, industrial and manufacturing
buildings, storage buildings and storage areas, parking lots, roadways,
driveways, parks, recreation properties, tennis courts, swimming pools,
public and private schools and universities, research facilities and
stations, hospitals and convalescent centers, airports, agricultural
uses, water and wastewater treatment plants, hotels, motels, retirement
centers, nursing homes or assisted living homes, properties designated
as "mixed use" properties by the Board of Assessors, and any other
form of use not otherwise mentioned which is not a residential property.
Those areas that allow the unimpeded infiltration of stormwater
into the soil. Common pervious surfaces include, but are not limited
to, lawn area, forest land, agricultural lands, meadows and other
undeveloped land. In determining utility fee calculations, all land
on a parcel of property not defined as impervious land will be considered
to be pervious.
A condominium, cooperative, or other form of ownership, whether
residential, commercial or multiple-use, in which fees are divided
among multiple record title owners by instrument recorded in the Hampshire
Registry of Deeds or Hampshire Land Court.
[Added 3-19-2015]
A factor that is used to estimate the percentage of precipitation
that results in surface water runoff. Runoff coefficients are values
between zero and one commonly used in stormwater runoff calculations
as part of standard engineering methodologies and practices. Runoff
coefficients are used as a means to approximate a property's
impact on the City's stormwater and flood control systems.
Improved property containing one, two or three dwelling units.
Small residential properties shall not include improved property containing
structures used primarily for nonresidential purposes (i.e., hotels,
motels, retirement centers, nursing homes or assisted living homes
or properties designated as "mixed use" properties by the Board of
Assessors).
The surface water runoff from precipitation.
The periodic user fee imposed pursuant to this chapter by
the City of Northampton for providing stormwater management and flood
control services.
All services provided by the City which relate to the:
Transfer, control, conveyance, treatment or movement of stormwater
runoff through the City;
Maintenance, repair and replacement of existing stormwater management
and flood control systems and facilities;
Planning, development, design and construction of additional
stormwater management and flood control systems and facilities to
meet current and anticipated needs;
Regulation of the use of stormwater management services, systems
and facilities; and
Compliance with applicable local, state and federal stormwater
management and flood control regulations, permit requirements, and
mandates.
Stormwater management services may address the quality of stormwater
runoff as well as the quantity thereof.
Those natural and man-made channels, swales, ditches, rivers,
streams, brooks, creeks, wetlands, branches, reservoirs, ponds, drainageways,
drainage structures, conveyances, storm drains, catch basins, inlets,
gutters, pipes, culverts, bridges, head walls, storm sewers, lakes,
and other physical works, properties, and improvements that collect,
transport, transfer, control, pump, treat, convey, detain, retain,
dispose of, or otherwise influence the movement of stormwater runoff.
All land that is not altered from its natural state.
A.
Pursuant to MGL c. 83, § 16, the City hereby establishes
a charge for the use of the stormwater management and flood control
services of the City to be known as the "Stormwater and Flood Control
Utility fee."
B.
The Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee is imposed on each parcel
of residential property and each parcel of nonresidential property,
whether occupied or not. The fee shall be billed in advance on a quarterly
basis to the record title owner of the property. The quarterly billing
shall be consolidated in the same bill as is sent to said property
owner for other services provided by the City supported by fees, including
water service and sanitary sewer use. If the property does not receive
a water/sewer bill from the City, a bill for only the stormwater and
flood control fee will be sent.
C.
Receipts generated from the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility
fee shall be deposited to a special revenue account to be known as
the "stormwater management and flood control account" set up in accordance
with the authority granted by MGL c. 44, § 53F 1/2.
The funds deposited to this account shall be used to fund the stormwater
management and flood control program of the City.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
A.
The Director of Public Works shall recommend an annual budget for
stormwater management and flood control services to the Mayor. The
Mayor shall include a proposed annual budget for the stormwater management
and flood control services in the proposed operating budget submitted
to the City Council in accordance with Section 7-3 of the Charter
of the City of Northampton. The budget submitted by the Mayor and
approved by the City Council shall set the annual budget at an amount
that will be sufficient to provide for a balanced operating and capital
improvement budget for the stormwater management and flood control
services.
B.
For the first five fiscal years of the utility operation, the Director
of Public Works shall recommend a budget for each year with revenue
raised by the utility that shall not exceed $2,000,000 per year unless
the Director shall state with specificity the reasons for its recommendation
of a budget with revenue in excess of $2,000,000.
C.
Beginning in the sixth year, the Director of Public Works shall recommend
a budget for each year with revenue raised by the utility that shall
not exceed $2,000,000 per year plus the cost of inflation as determined
by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index unless
the Director shall state with specificity the reasons for its recommendation
of a budget with revenue in excess of the limitation set forth in
this subsection.
D.
The rate model for billing shall be based on:
(1)
The impervious surface area on a parcel multiplied by a runoff coefficient
of 0.95
(2)
The pervious area on a parcel multiplied by a runoff coefficient
of 0.1. The maximum billable pervious area for any one property shall
be one acre.
(3)
The sum of the impervious and pervious areas as modified by the runoff
coefficients described above is the hydraulic acreage for each parcel.
E.
A billing rate per square foot of hydraulic acreage will be calculated
by the Department of Public Works each year by dividing the approved
annual budget as described above by the total hydraulic acreage to
be billed in the City of Northampton. The rate shall be on file in
the office of the Department of Public Works of the City of Northampton.
F.
Small residential properties shall be divided in approximately equal
numbers into four groups based on ascending amounts of impervious
area. The Department of Public Works shall determine the range of
impervious area used for defining each group. All properties within
each group shall receive the same bill. The bill for each group shall
be calculated based on the average impervious and pervious areas of
properties that fall within each group.
G.
Bills for large residential property and nonresidential property
shall be determined based on the estimated areas of impervious and
pervious surface on the property. Property owners who own multiple
undeveloped parcels with protected status (protected for open space
by fee or less-than-fee ownership by methods including but not limited
to Mass. Constitution 97th Article of Amendment, MGL c. 8C, MGL c.
44B, MGL c. 45, MGL c. 61, MGL c. 61A, MGL c. 61B, MGL c. 184, or
held by a nonprofit land trust) shall be assessed as if their multiple
parcels were all part of a single larger parcel.
I.
Any impervious areas within the federal, state, county, and City-owned
right-of-way used by the traveling public will not be attributed to
the parcel and will not be considered as part of the total impervious
area of the parcel.
J.
Property associations may submit to the Department of Public Works
a copy of the instrument recorded in the Hampshire Registry of Deeds
or Hampshire Land Court that defines the percentage of common ownership
attributable to each unit thereof. Upon receipt of a copy of such
instrument, the Department shall cause each individual owner to be
billed separately for the percentage attributable to such unit.
[Added 3-19-2015]
A.
The City shall be responsible for all costs to operate, maintain,
improve and access those stormwater management and flood control systems
and facilities which are located:
(1)
Within public road rights-of-way;
(2)
On private property but within easements granted to, and accepted
by, the City of Northampton, or which are otherwise permitted to be
located on such private property by written agreements for rights-of-entry,
rights-of-access, rights-of-use or such other lawful means to allow
for operation, maintenance, improvement and access to the stormwater
management system facilities located thereon;
(3)
On public land which is owned by the City and/or land of another
governmental entity upon which the City has agreements providing for
the operation, maintenance, improvement and access to the stormwater
management and flood control systems and facilities located thereon.
B.
Operation, maintenance and/or improvement of stormwater management
and flood control systems and facilities which are located on private
or public property not owned by the City, and for which the City lacks
a lawful right of entry, shall be and remain the legal responsibility
of the property owner, except as otherwise provided for by state and
federal laws and regulations.
The Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee shall only be used for the direct and indirect costs of the Utility to provide stormwater management and flood control services as defined in § 280-4 and also includes the following:
A.
The acquisition by gift, purchase or condemnation of real and personal
property, and interests therein, necessary to construct, operate,
and maintain stormwater management and flood control systems and facilities.
B.
All costs of administration and implementation of the stormwater
management and flood control programs, including the cost of labor
attributable to the stormwater management and flood control programs
and the establishment of reasonable operating and capital reserves
to meet unanticipated or emergency stormwater management and flood
control requirements.
C.
Engineering and design, debt service and related financing expenses,
construction costs for new facilities, and enlargement or improvement
of existing facilities.
D.
Operation and maintenance of the stormwater and flood control systems.
E.
Capital projects for stormwater management and flood control. The
Department of Public Works shall be strongly encouraged to bear witness
to the needs of bicyclists, pedestrians, and people using mobility
devices, and shall further be encouraged to consider their needs on
an equitable basis in conjunction with the needs of motorists, business
owners, and others, both during the construction of any projects funded
in whole or in part by the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility and
in regard to the design of the finished product.
F.
Illicit discharge detection and elimination.
G.
Monitoring, surveillance, and inspection of stormwater control devices.
H.
Water quality monitoring and water quality programs.
I.
Retrofitting developed areas for pollution control.
J.
Inspection and enforcement activities.
K.
Billing and related administrative costs.
L.
Other activities which are reasonably necessary, including costs
related to regulatory compliance.
A.
The City finds that all real property in the City contributes to
runoff and either uses or benefits from the maintenance of the stormwater
system. Therefore, except as provided in this section or otherwise
provided by law, no public property, including public property funded
by taxpayers of the City of Northampton, or private property located
in the City of Northampton shall be exempt from the Stormwater and
Flood Control Utility fee charges.
B.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the City establishes exemptions to
the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee as follows:
(1)
Public streets, highways and rights-of-way. However, maintenance
buildings and/or other improved property used for road maintenance
purposes shall not be exempt from Stormwater and Flood Control Utility
fee charges. All other state, federal, and county properties are subject
to the user fee charges on the same basis as private properties.
A.
The Department of Public Works shall annually develop a proposed
Stormwater Management and Flood Control Utility Credit Policy ("Credit
Policy"). The Director shall submit the proposed Credit Policy to
the Mayor, who may approve, modify and approve, or disapprove the
Credit Policy. The Credit Policy as approved by the Mayor shall be
submitted by the Mayor to the City Council for approval. The City
Council may approve or disapprove the Credit Policy as submitted.
The Stormwater Management and Flood Control Utility Credit Policy
will define potential credits or adjustments such as: for stormwater
improvements, undeveloped land with protected status, multiple undeveloped
parcels under single ownership, seniors, low income, educational programs,
and others. The Stormwater Management and Flood Control Utility Credit
Policy shall be available for inspection by the public at the Department
of Public Works and on the City website.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
B.
The Department of Public Works is hereby authorized to grant credits
to property owners to be applied against the Stormwater and Flood
Control Utility fee based on the technical and procedural criteria
set forth in the Stormwater Management and Flood Control Utility Credit
Policy.
C.
Any credit allowed against the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility
fee charge shall be conditioned on continuing compliance with the
City's design and performance standards as stated in the Stormwater
Management and Flood Control Utility Credit Policy and/or upon continuing
provision of the controls, systems, facilities, services, and activities
provided, operated, and maintained by the property owner or owners
upon which the credit is based. The Department of Public Works may
revoke a credit at any time for noncompliance with applicable standards
and criteria as established in the Stormwater Management and Flood
Control Utility Credit Policy or this chapter.
D.
In order to obtain a credit, the property owner must make application
to the City on forms provided by the Department of Public Works for
such purpose, the application to be fully completed in accordance
with the procedures outlined in the Stormwater Management and Flood
Control Utility Credit Policy.
E.
When an application for a credit is deemed complete by the Department
of Public Works, the Director of Public Works shall have 30 days from
the date the complete application is accepted to either grant the
credit in whole, grant the credit in part, or deny the credit. Credits
applied for by the property owner and granted in whole or in part
shall apply to all Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee charges
in accordance with the terms defined in the Stormwater Management
and Flood Control Utility Credit Policy.
A.
Failure of the City to send a bill for Stormwater and Flood Control
Utility shall not relieve the property owner of record from the obligation
to pay for such utility. If a property is unbilled, or if no bill
is sent for a particular parcel of land, the City may back bill for
the fees as applicable for a period not to exceed one year of charges,
but no late fees or delinquency charges of any kind shall be charged
or recovered from any property owner so back billed.
B.
Stormwater and Flood Control Utility bills shall be managed by the
Department of Public Works for collection. The Northampton Tax Collector
shall keep records of all paid and unpaid stormwater utility bills
and maintain financial records for the utility.
C.
If a bill for Stormwater and Flood Control Utility bill is not paid
in full by the 30th day from the date the bill is mailed, interest
at the rate of 14% per annum shall accrue on any unpaid balance. Interest
shall accrue from the date of mailing of the bill.
D.
At any time after interest begins to accrue on an unpaid account,
the Northampton City Collector may serve on the party assessed a statement
of the amount due, including interest, with a demand for payment.
A charge as set forth in Chapter 174, Fees, shall be made for such
demand. If the amount due remains unpaid 14 days after mailing of
said demand, the Northampton City Collector shall commit the amount
to the Board of Assessors for inclusion on the next annual property
tax bill. Upon inclusion of the unpaid amount on an annual property
tax bill, the amount due shall be a lien on the property, which shall
have priority over all other liens except municipal liens and mortgages
of record prior to the recording of a notice of lien.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
E.
In the event that a property owner believes the Stormwater and Flood
Control Utility fee is improperly calculated or is otherwise incorrect,
the property owner may, within 30 days from the date of issuance of
the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility bill, and after payment of
the bill in full, apply to the Department of Public Works for an abatement.
The application for abatement shall be supported by such information
as is necessary for a reasonable person to conclude that it is more
likely than not that the billing is in error. The Department of Public
Works shall have 60 days to consider the request for abatement and
render a written decision, which may deny the abatement, grant the
abatement in full or grant the abatement in part.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
A.
In the event that a property owner is aggrieved by a written decision
from the Department of Public Works denying an application for abatement
in whole or in part, or denying an application for a credit, in whole
or in part, the property owner shall have 30 days from the date of
the written decision to file an appeal to the Mayor. The appeal shall
be in writing and shall specify the grounds thereof. Upon the filing
of the notice of appeal with the Department of Public Works, the Department
shall forthwith transmit to the Mayor all documents constituting the
record upon which the particular decision was made. The Mayor shall
set a date for hearing which shall be within 90 days of the date of
the filing of the appeal, and notice thereof setting forth the place,
date and time of hearing shall be sent to the property owner no less
than 10 days prior to the hearing date. The Mayor shall render a written
decision within 10 days of the conclusion of the hearing affirming
the action of the Department or reversing the action. If reversing
the denial of an abatement, the decision shall specify the sum to
be abated, which shall not exceed the amounts paid. If reversing the
denial of a credit, the decision shall specify the credit to be applied
prospectively against future charges unless the property owner has
paid the full amount of the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee
as charged and has also requested an abatement.
B.
In the event that a property owner fails to pay the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility fee as charged and the City utilizes the process set forth in MGL c. 83, §§ 16A through 16F, to collect the unpaid charges, the property owner shall have the right to seek an abatement by filing an application for abatement with the Department of Public Works in accordance with the remedy specified in MGL c. 83, § 16E, with a copy delivered to the Board of Assessors. The application for abatement shall conform to the requirements for a notice of appeal as set forth in Subsection A, above, and the process for a hearing before the Mayor, including the applicable time limits, shall be as set forth therein. In the event that the Mayor denies the abatement, in whole or in part, it shall, in its written decision, include a statement notifying the property owner of the right to seek a review of the decision by the filing of an appeal with the Appellate Tax Board of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts within three months of the date of the decision of the Mayor. As the right to Appellate Tax Board review under this Subsection B is derived from applicable sections of the General Laws as contained in Chapters 59 and 83 thereof; to the extent that the terms of this chapter conflict with the terms specified therein, the terms specified in the General Laws control.
[Amended 12-4-2014]
The Department of Public Works will make an annual presentation
to the City Council providing information relating to the work and
projects financed by the Stormwater and Flood Control Utility in the
previous year, including, to the extent practicable, an account of
expenditures from the stormwater management and flood control account
and projected future expenditures. The Department will also present
this information in a written report accessible on the City website.