06 LC 18
5489ERS
The
House Committee on Ways and Means offers the following substitute to HB
1323:
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Title 36 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to local
government, so as to provide for a comprehensive program for the creation of
infrastructure development districts; to provide for a short title; to provide
for definitions; to provide for the powers, duties, and authority of
infrastructure development districts; to provide for a board to administer
infrastructure development districts; to provide for appointment or election of
members of an infrastructure development district board; to provide for levying
taxes, fees, and assessments; to provide for the debt of infrastructure
development districts; to provide for bonds, notes, and other obligations of
infrastructure development districts; to provide for the form of bonds; to
provide for consolidation, termination, or dissolution of infrastructure
development districts; to provide for notice of the creation of the district; to
amend Chapter 5 of Title 12 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating
to water resources, so as to change certain provisions regarding permits for
discharging pollutants into waters; to change certain provisions regarding
permits for surface water withdrawal, diversion, or impoundment; to change
certain provisions regarding permits for withdrawing, obtaining, or using ground
water; to provide for related matters; to provide a contingent effective date;
to provide for automatic repeal under certain circumstances; to repeal
conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
Title
36 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to local government, is
amended by adding a new chapter at the end thereof, to be designated as Chapter
93, to read as follows:
"CHAPTER
93
36-93-1.
This
chapter shall be known and may be cited as the 'Georgia Smart Infrastructure
Growth Act of 2006.'
36-93-2.
As
used in this chapter, the term:
(1)
'Additional projects' means district projects beyond those generally identified
in the petition for creation of the district.
(2)
'Appropriate local government' means:
(A)
The county governing authority, if the district is located wholly in the
unincorporated part of the county;
(B)
The municipal governing authority, if the district is located wholly within a
municipality; or
(C)
The county governing authority and each municipal governing authority, if the
district is located partially in the unincorporated area of a county and
partially within one or more municipalities
that
created the district. For the purposes of this chapter, the term 'appropriate
local government' may be read as the singular or plural.
(3)
'Assessable improvements' means, without limitation, any and all public
improvements, infrastructure, and community facilities that a district is
empowered to provide in accordance with this chapter.
(4)
'Board' means the governing board of a district or, if the board has been
abolished, the board, body, or commission succeeding to the principal functions
of the board.
(5)
'Bond' means any bonds of a district which are authorized to be issued under the
Constitution and laws of this state, but shall not include notes or other
obligations of the district.
(6)
'Cost,' when used with reference to any project, includes, but is not limited
to:
(A)
The expense of determining the feasibility or practicability of acquisition,
construction, or reconstruction;
(B)
The cost of surveys, estimates, plans, and specifications;
(C)
The cost of improvements and of insuring such improvements;
(D)
Engineering, fiscal assessment, and legal expenses and charges;
(E)
The cost of all labor, materials, machinery, and equipment;
(F)
The cost of all lands, properties, rights, easements, and franchises
acquired;
(G)
Financing charges;
(H)
The creation of operation and maintenance reserve funds, debt service reserve
funds, repair and replacement reserve funds, and debt service
funds;
(I)
Working capital;
(J)
Interest charges incurred or estimated to be incurred on money borrowed prior to
and during construction and acquisition and for such reasonable period of time
after completion of construction or acquisition as the board may
determine;
(K)
The cost of issuance of bonds pursuant to this chapter, including
advertisements, printing, and credit enhancement and related interest rate
swaps, hedges, or similar items, whether incurred in connection with the
issuance of or after the issuance of bonds;
(L)
The cost of any election held pursuant to this chapter;
(M)
The discount, if any, on the sale or exchange of bonds;
(N)
Administrative expenses;
(O)
Such other expenses as may be necessary or incidental to the acquisition,
construction, or reconstruction of any project or to the financing of any
project, or to the development of any lands within a district; and
(P)
Payments, contributions, and dedications required as a condition to receive any
government approval or permit necessary to accomplish any district purpose or
the exercise of any district power.
(7)
'Deed restrictions' means those covenants, conditions, and restrictions
contained in any applicable deeds, agreements, or declarations of covenants and
restrictions that govern the use and operation of real property within the
district and, for such covenants, conditions, and restrictions, there is no
homeownerś
association or property
ownerś
association having respective enforcement powers.
(8)
'District' means an infrastructure development district.
(9)
'District roads' means highways, streets, roads, alleys, sidewalks, bridges, and
thoroughfares of all kinds and descriptions within a district, including any
landscaping and storm drains associated therewith.
(10)
'Elector' means a landowner.
(11)
'Government member' means a member of the board named by a local
government.
(12)
'Infrastructure development district' means a geographic area of development
created pursuant to this chapter and limited to the performance of those
specialized functions authorized by this chapter; the governing body of which is
a board created and authorized to function specifically as prescribed in this
chapter for the delivery of projects and the formation, powers, operation,
duration, accountability, requirements for disclosure, and termination of which
are as required by this chapter.
(13)
'Initial costs' means costs related to district projects generally identified in
the petition for creation of the district.
(14)
'Landowner' means any entity or person shown as a taxpayer for one or more
parcels of real estate in a district as reflected on the most recent ad valorem
tax records in the county or counties that have jurisdiction over the property
included in the district as certified by the tax commissioner of the county or
counties.
(15)
'Petitioner member' means a member of the board named by the
petitioner.
(16)
'Petitioner' means an entity, person, or group of persons who intends to create
a district.
(17)
'Project' means any development, improvement, property, utility, facility,
works, enterprise, or service existing on January 1, 2007, or thereafter
undertaken or established under this chapter.
(18)
'Qualified electors for additional projects of the district,' as used in Code
Section 36-93-13, means landowners within the district who, at the time the
district was created, were not shown as a taxpayer for one or more parcels of
real estate within the district on the ad valorem tax records of the county or
counties that have jurisdiction over the property included in the
district.
(19)
'Revenues' means the proceeds of taxes, assessments, rates, fees, rentals, or
other charges prescribed, fixed, established, and collected by the board for the
projects furnished by the district.
(20)
'Sewer system' means any plant, system, facility, or property serving a
district, and any additions, extensions, and improvements constructed or
acquired as part of the system, useful or necessary or having the present
capacity for future use in connection with the collection, treatment,
purification, or disposal of sewage, including, without limitation, industrial
wastes resulting from any process of industry, manufacture, trade, or business
or from the development of any natural resource. Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, the term 'sewer system' includes treatment plants,
pumping stations, lift stations, valves, force mains, intercepting sewers,
laterals, pressure lines, mains, and all necessary appurtenances and equipment;
all sewer mains, laterals, and other devices for the reception and collection of
sewage from premises connected to the devices; and all real and personal
property and any interest in all real and personal property, rights, easements,
and franchises of any nature relating to any such system and necessary or
convenient for the operation of the system.
(21)
'Short-term borrowing' means a debt obligation of the district in the form of
loan, note, warrant, or other evidence with a maturity not to exceed five
years.
(22)
'Water management and control facilities' means any lakes, canals, ditches,
reservoirs, dams, levees, sluiceways, floodways, pumping stations, or any other
works, structures, or facilities for the conservation, control, development,
utilization, and disposal of water, and any purposes appurtenant, necessary, or
incidental to the facility serving a district. The term 'water management and
control facilities' includes all real and personal property and any interest in
the property, rights, easements, and franchises of any nature relating to any
such water management and control facilities necessary or convenient for the
acquisition, construction, reconstruction, operation, or maintenance of the
water management and control facilities.
(23)
'Water system' means a system for the provision of piped water for human
consumption within a district. Such term includes but is not limited to any
collection, treatment, storage, and distribution facilities under the control of
the operator of a water system and used primarily in connection with a water
system and any collection or pretreatment storage facilities not under such
control which are used primarily in connection with a water system. The term
'water system' includes all real and personal property and any interest in the
property, rights, easements, and franchises of any nature relating to any such
water system necessary or convenient for the acquisition, construction,
reconstruction, operation, or maintenance of the water system.
36-93-3.
(a)
An appropriate local government may exercise its authority under this chapter
after holding a public hearing on this chapter and approving a resolution or
ordinance that authorizes the local government to create and regulate districts
as provided under this chapter.
(b)
A petitioner who proposes to create a district within the jurisdiction of an
appropriate local government that has authorized the creation and regulation of
districts under this chapter shall file with the appropriate local government a
petition requesting creation. The petition shall be signed by all holders of
title of the taxable land within the proposed district, as determined by the
most recent approved county ad valorem tax digest or documentation demonstrating
that the petitioner has control, including but not limited to by deed, trust
agreement, or contract, of the taxable land.
(c)
The petition shall:
(1)
Describe the boundaries of the proposed district by metes and bounds or by lot
and block number if there is a recorded map or plat and survey of the
area;
(2)
Generally identify the proposed projects to be undertaken according to the
petitioneŕs
master plan for the district, the necessity for the projects, and the cost of
the projects as then estimated by the petitioner;
(3)
Include a name of the proposed district which shall be generally descriptive of
the locale of the proposed district followed by the words 'Infrastructure
Development District,' or if a district is located within one county, it may be
designated '____ County Infrastructure Development District No. ______';
provided, however, that the proposed district shall not have the same name as
any other district in the same county;
(4)
Include a designation of four persons to be the initial petitioner members of
the board who shall serve in that office until replaced by elected members as
provided in this chapter;
(5)
Include a map of the proposed district showing current major trunk water mains
and sewer interceptors and outfalls, if any;
(6)
Based upon available data, include the proposed timetable for construction of
the district services and the estimated cost of constructing the proposed
services; these estimates shall be submitted in good faith but shall not be
binding and may be subject to change; and
(7)
Include a designation of the future general distribution, location, and extent
of public and private uses of land proposed for the area within the district as
shown on the county land use plan, if one has been adopted.
36-93-4.
(a)
The petitioner shall submit a copy of the petition to the governing authority of
the appropriate local government, the boundaries of which are contiguous with,
or contain all or a portion of, the land within the external boundaries of the
proposed district.
(b)
A public hearing on the petition shall be conducted by the governing authority
of the appropriate local government which has jurisdiction over the land to be
included in the proposed district. The hearing shall include oral and written
comments on the petition pertinent to the proposed district, including the
factors specified in subsection (c) of this Code section. The hearing shall be
held at an accessible location in the county or counties in which the district
is to be located. The petitioner shall cause a notice of the hearing to be
published in the legal organ of the county or municipality wherein the
district́s
land lies at least once a week for the four successive weeks immediately prior
to the hearing. The notice shall give the time and place for the hearing, a
description of the area to be included in the district, and any other relevant
information which the governing authority of the appropriate local government
may require. All affected local governments and the general public shall be
given an opportunity to appear at the hearing and present oral or written
comments on the petition.
(c)
The appropriate local government which has jurisdiction over the land to be
included in the district shall consider the entire record of the applicable
hearing, the transcript of the hearing, and applicable factors and shall make a
determination to grant or deny the petition for the establishment of a district.
Such applicable factors shall include but are not limited to:
(1)
Whether the statements contained within the petition have been found to be true
and correct;
(2)
Whether the area of land within the proposed district is of sufficient size,
sufficiently compact, and sufficiently contiguous to be developed as one
functional interrelated community;
(3)
Whether creation of the district is a reasonable alternative for delivering
community infrastructure and facilities to the area that will be served by the
district;
(4)
Whether the community infrastructure and facilities of the district will be
compatible with the capacity and uses of existing local and regional community
services and facilities;
(5)
Whether the proposed district projects are consistent with any applicable
element or portion of the county comprehensive plan;
(6)
Whether the district is compatible with the appropriate local government in
general and will supplement rather than be a detriment to the general
population; and
(7)
Whether the district will result in an increase in taxes paid by existing
taxpayers in the county or municipality residing outside the
district.
(d)
The governing authority of the appropriate local government which has
jurisdiction over the land to be included in the district shall not adopt any
resolution or ordinance which would expand, modify, or delete any provision of
this chapter. A resolution or ordinance establishing a district
shall:
(1)
Describe the external boundaries of the district and any real property within
the boundaries of the district which is to be excluded;
(2)
Name the persons designated to be the initial members of the board as described
in Code Section 36-93-5;
(3)
Name the district; and
(4)
Include other information required or authorized by this chapter.
(e)(1)
The creation of a district pursuant to this chapter and the exercise of powers
by or through a district as authorized by this chapter shall not be subject to
Article 2 of Chapter 70 of this title.
(2)
A district created pursuant to this chapter is not a general purpose local
government and specifically shall not be included in the term 'local government'
as that term is defined in paragraph (5.2) of Code Section 36-70-2.
(3)
The powers granted to a district pursuant to this chapter may be exercised by
the board upon execution of an agreement between the board and the appropriate
local government. Such agreements shall describe the services and facilities to
be provided within the district and the source of funding for such services and
facilities and may be amended at any time by mutual consent of the parties to
the agreement.
36-93-5.
(a)
The powers granted to a district pursuant to this chapter shall be exercised by
the board. Except as provided in this Code section, the board shall consist of
at least five members, and each member shall hold office for a term of four
years and until a successor is appointed or elected and qualified. All members
of the board must be at least 18 years old, a resident of this state, and a
citizen of the United States. It shall not be a conflict of interest under the
Constitution or any laws of this state or its political subdivisions for board
members, employees, or officers of the district to be a landowner or a
stockholder, officer, director, partner, member, or employee of a landowner in
the district. As provided in this Code section, board members may also be
required to be residents of the district.
(b)
Unless expanded pursuant to this Code section, the initial board named under the
resolution or ordinance establishing the district pursuant to Code Section
36-93-4 shall be comprised of four members named by the petitioner and one
member chosen by each appropriate local government that issues a resolution or
ordinance creating the district. In the event a district is created by a
resolution or ordinance by more than one local government, each appropriate
local government may appoint one member to the board and the petitioner may
appoint one additional petitioner member per additional government
member.
(c)(1)
Members of the board shall stand for election by electors pursuant to the
following schedule:
(A)
All government members shall stand for election within six months of the sale to
the general public of land representing 20 percent of the geographic area within
the boundaries of the district. If any residents reside within the district at
the time of the election, only a resident of the district may qualify for
election to this seat;
(B)
The first petitioner member shall stand for election within six months of the
sale to the general public of land representing 50 percent of the geographic
area within the boundaries of the district. If any residents reside within the
district at the time of the election, only a resident of the district may
qualify for election to this seat;
(C)
The second petitioner member shall stand for election within six months of the
sale to the general public of land representing 80 percent of the geographic
area within the boundaries of the district. If any residents reside within the
district at the time of the election, only a resident of the district may
qualify for election to this seat;
(D)
The third petitioner member shall stand for election within six months of the
sale to the general public of land representing 90 percent of the geographic
area within the boundaries of the district. If any residents reside within the
district at the time of the election, only a resident of the district may
qualify for election to this seat; and
(E)
All remaining petitioner members shall stand for election within six months of
the sale to the general public of land representing 95 percent of the geographic
area within the boundaries of the district or within ten years after the
effective date of the resolution or ordinance establishing the district,
whichever is sooner. If any residents reside within the district at the time of
the election, only a resident of the district may qualify for election to this
seat.
(2)
The board shall organize district elections which shall be held at a meeting of
the electors of the district. Notice of the meeting and the election of board
members shall be published once a week for two consecutive weeks in the legal
organ of the county or municipality wherein the
district́s
land lies, and the last day of such publication shall be not fewer than 14 days
nor more than 28 days before the meeting. The chairperson of the board shall
conduct the meeting. If the chairperson is an elector or proxy holder for an
elector, he or she may nominate candidates and make and second
motions.
(3)
At a district election, each elector shall be entitled to cast one vote per acre
of land owned by him or her and located within the district for each member to
be elected. An elector may vote in person or by a properly executed written
proxy. Each proxy must be signed by one of the landowners of the property for
which the vote is cast and must contain the typed or printed name of the
individual who signed the proxy; the street address, legal description of the
property, or tax parcel identification number; and the number of authorized
votes. If the proxy authorizes more than one vote, each property must be listed
and the number of acres of each property must be included. The signature on a
proxy need not be notarized. A fraction of an acre shall be treated as one
acre, entitling the elector to one vote with respect thereto. Nominees for the
board are elected by a majority of votes cast in accordance with this
paragraph.
(4)
On or before June 1 of each year, the board shall determine the amount of land
sold within the district to the general public and the proportion of that land
sold relative to the overall amount of land within the district boundary for
purposes of determining whether any seats of the board shall be contested by
election pursuant to this Code section. Such determination shall be made at a
meeting of the board and shall become part of the official minutes of the
district. Such calculation shall not consider land currently used or identified
for future use of district facilities, infrastructure, or other
district-specific purposes.
(5)
Elections of board members shall be nonpartisan. Board members shall assume
their office immediately upon their election.
(d)(1)
Members of the board shall hold office for the terms for which they were elected
or appointed and until their successors are chosen and qualified. If, during the
term of office, a vacancy occurs, the remaining members of the board shall fill
the vacancy by an appointment for the remainder of the unexpired
term.
(2)
Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection, a board may not appoint a
person to fill a vacancy on the board if the person:
(A)
Resigned from the board:
(i)
In the two years preceding the vacancy date; or
(ii)
On or after the vacancy date but before the vacancy is filled; or
(B)
Was defeated in a board election held by the district in the two years preceding
the vacancy date.
(e)
A majority of the members of the board constitutes a quorum for the purposes of
conducting its business and exercising its powers and for all other purposes.
Action taken by the district shall be upon a vote of a majority of the members
present unless general law or a rule of the district requires a greater
number.
(f)
As soon as practicable after each election or appointment, the board shall
organize by electing one of its members as chairperson and by electing a
secretary, who need not be a member of the board, and such other officers as the
board may deem necessary.
(g)
The board shall keep a permanent record book entitled 'Record of Proceedings of
(name of district) Infrastructure Development District,' in which shall be
recorded minutes of all meetings, resolutions, proceedings, certificates, and
any and all corporate acts. The record book shall be open to inspection at a
reasonable time and place. The record book shall be kept at the district
office.
(h)
All meetings of the board shall be open to the public and governed by the
provisions of Code Section 50-14-1. The board shall hold at least one annual
meeting on the same date every year, such date to be published as part of the
resolution or ordinance creating the district. The meeting shall address issues
related to the district, including but not limited to current projects, district
finances, and potential future projects. In addition, the board shall also make
available to any person on an annual basis upon request a report of the names
and contact information of the board members, their employers, and their
relationships to other members of the board and to any officer or employee of
the developer. The requirements for such report shall terminate upon the
election of the majority of the board by the qualified electors of the
district.
(i)
The district and the board shall enjoy the same rights and responsibilities of
sovereign immunity as the state and its departments and agencies.
36-93-6.
(a)
The board shall designate a resident of this state as treasurer of the district
who shall have charge of the funds of the district. Such funds shall be
disbursed only upon the order, or pursuant to the resolution, of the board. The
board may give the treasurer additional powers and duties as the board may deem
appropriate and may fix his or her compensation. The board may require the
treasurer to give a bond in such amount, on such terms, and with such sureties
as may be deemed satisfactory to the board to secure the performance by the
treasurer of his or her powers and duties. The financial records of the board
shall be audited by an independent certified public accountant at least once a
year. The results of such audit shall be recorded in the
district́s
record book and made available to the public pursuant to subsection (g) of Code
Section 36-93-5.
(b)
The board is authorized to select as a depository for its funds any commercial
bank or trust company, mutual savings bank, savings and loan association, or
building and loan association existing under the laws of this state or of the
United States upon such terms and conditions as to the payment of interest by
such depository upon the funds so deposited as the board may deem just and
reasonable.
(c)
The treasurer shall not be a current member of the board.
36-93-7.
(a)
A district board shall set its fiscal year.
(b)
At least 60 days prior to the adoption of the annual budget for the district,
the treasurer shall prepare a proposed budget for the ensuing fiscal year to be
submitted to the board for board approval. The proposed budget shall include at
the direction of the board an estimate of all necessary expenditures of the
district for the ensuing fiscal year and an estimate of income of the district
from the taxes and assessments provided in this chapter. The board shall
consider the proposed budget item by item and may either approve the budget as
proposed by the treasurer or modify the same in part or in whole. The board
shall indicate its approval of the budget by resolution that shall provide for a
hearing on the budget as approved. Notice of the hearing on the budget shall be
published in the legal organ of the county in which the district is located once
a week for two consecutive weeks immediately preceding the date of the hearing.
The notice shall further contain a designation of the date, time, and place of
the public hearing. At the time and place designated in the notice, the board
shall hear all objections to the budget as proposed and may make such changes as
the board deems necessary. At the conclusion of the budget hearing, the board
shall, by resolution, adopt the budget as finally approved by the board. The
budget for the next fiscal year shall be adopted no less than three months
before end of the
district́s
fiscal year.
(c)
At least 60 days prior to adoption of the annual budget for the district, the
board shall submit to the appropriate local government, for purposes of
disclosure and information only, the proposed annual budget for the ensuing
fiscal year and any proposed long-term financial plan or program of the district
for future operations. The appropriate local government may review the proposed
annual budget and any long-term financial plan or program and may submit written
comments to the board for its assistance and information in adopting its annual
budget and long-term financial plan or program.
36-93-8.
The
district shall have, and the board may exercise, the following general
powers:
(1)
To sue and be sued in the name of the district; to adopt and use a seal and
authorize the use of a facsimile thereof; and to acquire, by purchase, devise,
or otherwise, and to dispose of real and personal property or any estate
therein; however, pursuant to the provisions of Code Section 36-93-9, the
district shall not acquire property through eminent domain;
(2)
To make and execute contracts and other instruments necessary or convenient to
the exercise of its powers. All public works contracts shall be made in
accordance with the provisions of Chapter 91 of this title. All contracts let
by the board for any goods, supplies, or materials to be purchased exceeding
$100,000.00 shall require a notice of bids be advertised twice in the legal
organ of the county allowing a reasonable amount of time for responsive bids to
be submitted and shall be subject to this Code section. The bid of the lowest
responsive and responsible bidder for contracts for purchase of any goods,
supplies, or materials shall be accepted unless all bids are rejected because
the bids are too high or the board determines it is in the best interests of the
district to reject all bids. The board may require such bidders to furnish bond
with a responsible surety to be approved by the board. Contracts for the
operation, maintenance, and management of district projects shall contain the
following provisions:
(A)
The contract shall terminate absolutely and without further obligation on the
part of the district at the close of the calendar year in which it was executed
and at the close of each succeeding calendar year for which it may be renewed as
provided in this Code section; and
(B)
The contract may provide for automatic renewal unless positive action is taken
by the district to terminate such contract, and the nature of such action shall
be determined by the district and specified in the contract;
(3)
To borrow money and issue bonds, bond anticipation notes, certificates,
warrants, notes, or other evidence of indebtedness to fund any project or
portion thereof or cost incident thereto as provided in this chapter; to levy
such tax and special assessments as may be authorized in conformity with the
requirements of Code Sections 48-5-32 and 48-5-32.1; to charge, collect, and
enforce fees and other user charges; to apply for and use grants or loans of
money or other property from the United States, this state, a unit of local
government, or any person for any district purposes and enter into agreements
required in connection therewith; and to hold, use, and dispose of such moneys
or property for any district purposes in accordance with the terms of the gift,
grant, loan, or agreement relating thereto. The district may incur debt without
regard to the requirements of Article IX, Section V of the Constitution or any
other provision of law prohibiting or restricting the borrowing of money or the
creation of debt by political subdivisions of this state, which debt may be
backed by the full faith, credit, and taxing power of the district but shall not
be an obligation of this state, the local government or governments that
approved the district, or any other unit of government of this
state;
(4)
To adopt resolutions and orders prescribing the powers, duties, and functions of
the officers of the district; the conduct of the business of the district; and
the maintenance of records of the district. The board may also adopt resolutions
with respect to any of the projects of the district and define the area to be
included therein. The board may also adopt resolutions which may be necessary
for the conduct of district business;
(5)
To maintain an office at such place or places as it may designate within the
district;
(6)
To hold, control, and acquire by donation or purchase, or dispose of, any public
easements, dedications to public use, platted reservations for public purposes,
or any other easements, dedications, or reservations for those purposes
authorized by this chapter and to make use of such easements, dedications, or
reservations for any of the purposes authorized by this chapter;
(7)
To lease as lessor or lessee to or from any person, firm, corporation,
association, or body, public or private, any projects of the type that the
district is authorized to undertake and facilities or property of any nature for
the use of the district to carry out any of the purposes authorized by this
chapter;
(8)
To raise, by user charges or fees authorized by resolution of the board, amounts
of money which are necessary for the conduct of district activities and upkeep
of district facilities and to enforce their receipt and collection in the manner
prescribed by resolution not inconsistent with law.
(A)
The board is authorized to prescribe, fix, establish, and collect rates, fees,
rentals, or other charges, and to revise the same from time to time, for the
projects furnished by the district, including, but not limited to, recreational
facilities, water management and control facilities, and water and sewer
systems; to recover the costs of making connection with any district facility or
system; and to provide for reasonable penalties against any user or property for
any such rates, fees, rentals, or other charges that are
delinquent.
(B)
A copy of the schedule or schedules of such rates, fees, rentals, or charges
shall be kept on file in the district office. The rates, fees, rentals, or
charges so fixed for any class of users or property served shall be extended to
cover any additional users or properties thereafter served which shall fall in
the same class, without the necessity of any notice or hearing. Such rates may
only be raised by the board.
(C)
Rates, fees, rentals, and charges shall be just and equitable and uniform for
users of the same class and when appropriate may be based or computed either
upon the amount of service furnished, upon the number of average number of
persons residing or working in or otherwise occupying the premises served, upon
any other factor affecting the use of the facilities furnished, or upon any
combination of the foregoing factors as may be determined by the board on an
equitable basis.
(D)
The rates, fees, rentals, or other charges prescribed shall be such as will
produce revenues, together with any other assessments, taxes, revenues, or funds
available or pledged for such purpose, at least sufficient to provide for
following:
(i)
All expenses of, including reserves for, the operation and maintenance of
projects;
(ii)
Payment when due of all bonds and interest thereon and costs related thereto for
the payment of which revenues are, or shall have been, pledged or encumbered,
including reserves for such purpose; and
(iii)
Any other funds which may be required under the resolution or resolutions
authorizing the issuance of bonds pursuant to this chapter.
(E)
The board shall have the power to enter into contracts for the use of the
projects of the district and with respect to the services and facilities
furnished or to be furnished by the district;
(9)
To cooperate with, or contract with, governmental agencies as may be necessary,
convenient, incidental, or proper in connection with any of the powers, duties,
or purposes authorized by this chapter;
(10)
To assess and impose upon lands in the district ad valorem taxes and assessments
as provided by this chapter;
(11)
To finance, fund, plan, establish, acquire, construct or reconstruct, enlarge or
extend, equip, operate, and maintain systems, facilities, and basic
infrastructures for the following:
(A)
Water management and control facilities for the lands within the district and to
connect some or any of such facilities with roads and bridges;
(B)
Water supply, sewer, and waste-water management, reclamation, and reuse or any
combination thereof, and to construct and operate connecting intercepting or
outlet sewers and sewer mains and pipes and water mains, conduits, or pipelines
in, along, and under any street, alley, highway, or other public place or ways;
and to dispose of any effluent, residue, or other byproducts of such system or
sewer system. Such sewer or sewer system shall have the same rights, duties,
and obligations as publicly owned treatment works that discharge treated waste
water; provided, however, that such water supply, sewer, and waste-water
management, reclamation, and resuse systems shall be built to the specifications
approved by this state for the local government in which such projects are
located;
(C)
Bridges or culverts that may be needed across any drain, ditch, canal, floodway,
holding basin, excavation, public highway, tract, grade, fill, or cut and
roadways over levees and embankments; and to construct any and all of such works
and improvements across, through, or over any public right of way, highway,
grade, fill, or cut;
(D)(i)
District roads equal to or exceeding the specifications of the county in which
such district roads are located;
(ii)
Street lights; and
(iii)
Buses, trolleys, transit shelters, ridesharing facilities and services, parking
improvements, and related signage;
(E)
Investigation and remediation costs associated with the cleanup of actual or
perceived environmental contamination within the district under the supervision
or direction of a competent governmental authority, unless the expenditure of
investigation and remediation costs benefit any person who is a landowner within
the district and who caused or contributed to the contamination;
(F)
Conservation areas, mitigation areas, and wildlife habitat, including the
maintenance of any plant or animal species, and any related interest in real or
personal property, including green spaces and common areas;
(G)
Security, including, but not limited to, guardhouses, fences and gates,
electronic intrusion detection systems, and patrol cars, when authorized by
proper governmental agencies, except that the district may not exercise any
police power, but may contract with the appropriate local government agencies
for an increased level of such services within the district
boundaries;
(H)
Indoor and outdoor recreational, cultural, and educational uses;
and
(I)
Any other project within or outside the boundaries of a district consistent with
the local government comprehensive plan of the appropriate local
government;
(12)
To finance, plan, establish, acquire, construct or reconstruct, enlarge or
extend, equip, and maintain additional facilities for:
(A)
Fire prevention and control, including fire stations, water mains and plugs,
fire trucks, and other vehicles and equipment when authorized by the appropriate
local government;
(B)
School buildings and related structures, which may be leased, sold, or donated
for use in the public educational system when authorized by the local school
board;
(C)
Control and elimination of pests of public health importance; and
(D)
Waste collection and disposal;
(13)
To adopt and enforce appropriate resolutions in connection with the provision of
one or more services through its projects;
(14)(A)
To impose and enforce certain deed restrictions pertaining to the use and
operation of real property within the district. The district may impose all or
certain portions of the deed restrictions that:
(i)
Relate to limitations or prohibitions that apply only to external structures and
are deemed by the district to be generally beneficial for the
district́s
landowners and for which enforcement by the district is appropriate, as
determined by the
district́s
board; or
(ii)
Are consistent with the requirements of a development order or regulatory agency
permit.
(B)
The board may vote to adopt deed restrictions only when all of the following
conditions exist:
(i)
The
district́s
geographic area contains no
homeownerś
associations;
(ii)
The majority of the board has been elected by electors pursuant to this chapter;
and
(iii)
The declarant or other party establishing such deed restrictions has provided
the board with a written agreement that such deed restrictions may be adopted by
the district. A memorandum of the agreement shall be recorded in the public
records.
(C)
Within 60 days after such deed restrictions take effect, the district shall
cause to be recorded in the property records in the county in which the district
is located the deed restrictions, stating generally what deed restrictions were
adopted and where a copy of the deed restrictions may be obtained. Districts may
impose fines for violations of such deed restrictions and enforce such deed
restrictions and fines through injunctive relief; and
(15)
To exercise all of the powers necessary, convenient, incidental, or proper in
connection with any of the powers, duties, or purposes authorized by this
chapter, including any power granted by the laws of this state to public or
private corporations which is not in conflict with the purposes of the
district.
36-93-9.
A
district formed under this chapter shall not have the power of eminent domain
and nothing in this chapter shall be construed to give a district such
power.
36-93-10.
A
district may adopt and enforce reasonable rules and regulations to:
(1)
Secure and maintain safe, sanitary, and adequate plumbing installations,
connections, and appurtenances as subsidiary parts of its sanitary sewer
system;
(2)
Preserve the sanitary condition of all water controlled by the
district;
(3)
Prevent waste or the unauthorized use of water controlled by the
district;
(4)
Provide and regulate a safe and adequate freshwater distribution system;
and
(5)
Regulate activities on any land or any easement owned or controlled by the
district; provided, however, the appropriate local government shall retain all
zoning powers and land use control rights under this Code section.
36-93-11.
(a)
In addition to the other powers provided for in this chapter, and not in
limitation thereof, the district shall have the power to issue from time to time
notes in anticipation of bonds and to renew from time to time any such notes by
the issuance of new notes, whether the notes to be renewed have or have not
matured. The district may issue such bond anticipation notes only to provide
funds which otherwise would be provided by the issuance of the bonds. Bond
anticipation notes may be authorized, sold, executed, and delivered in the same
manner as bonds. As with its bonds, the district may sell notes at public or
private sale. Any resolution or resolutions authorizing notes of the district or
any issue thereof may contain any provisions which the district is authorized to
include in any resolution or resolutions authorizing bonds of the district or
any issue thereof and which the district is authorized to include in any bonds.
Bond anticipation notes shall not be issued in an amount exceeding the par value
of the bonds in anticipation of which they are to be issued.
(b)
The district may, at any time, obtain loans for other short-term borrowing, in
such amounts and on such terms and conditions as the board may approve for the
purpose of paying any of the expenses of the district or any cost incurred or
that may be incurred in connection with any of the projects of the district and
related operation and maintenance costs of the projects of the district. Such
loans shall bear interest as the board may determine and may be payable from and
secured by a pledge of such funds, revenues, taxes, and assessments as the board
may determine.
36-93-12.
(a)
Bonds, notes, or other obligations issued by the district shall be paid from
revenues and other property pledged to pay such bonds, notes, or other
obligations. In the event the district defaults on its obligations, landowners
within the district shall only be responsible for such obligations that are
associated with their property and not the obligations of the district as a
whole or the obligations of any other landowner. Landowners of the district
shall have the right to satisfy or make arrangements to satisfy the
proportionate share of obligations related to the district and any related
reasonable interest as determined by the calculation provided in subsection (i)
of Code Section 36-93-15 on their property.
(b)
All bonds, notes, and other obligations of the district shall be authorized by
resolution of its board. The board may incur debt for initial costs upon
creation of the district by the appropriate local government and adoption of a
resolution by the board. Debt for additional projects may be incurred after the
board has complied with the requirements of Code Section 36-93-13.
(c)
Bonds, notes, or other obligations shall bear such date or dates, shall mature
at such time or times not more than 40 years from their respective dates, shall
bear interest at such rate or rates which may be fixed or may fluctuate or
otherwise change from time to time, may be subject to interest rate hedge
arrangements, shall be subject to redemption on such terms, and shall contain
such other terms, provisions, covenants, assignments, and conditions as the
resolution authorizing the issuance of such bonds, notes, or other obligations
may permit or provide. The resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds may
delegate to such officers charged with the responsibility of issuing such bonds
the authority to set the final terms, conditions, and details thereof, including
the interest rate or rates and maturity, within reasonable parameters
established and set forth in such resolution.
(d)
The board shall have power from time to time and whenever it deems it expedient
to refund any bonds by the issuance of new bonds, whether or not the bonds to be
refunded have matured. The board may issue bonds partly to refund bonds then
outstanding and partly for any other purpose permitted under this chapter. The
refunding bonds may be exchanged for the bonds to be refunded, with such cash
adjustments as may be agreed upon, or may be sold and the proceeds applied to
the purchase or redemption of the bonds to be refunded.
(e)
There shall be no limitation upon the interest rates of any maximum interest
rate or rates on any bonds, notes, or other obligations of the district; and the
usury laws of this state shall not apply to bonds, notes, or other obligations
of the district.
(f)
Bonds issued by the district may be in such form, either coupon or fully
registered, or both coupon and fully registered, and may be subject to such
exchangeability and transferability provisions as the bond resolution
authorizing the issuance of such bonds or any indenture or trust agreement may
provide.
(g)
Bonds shall bear a certificate of validation. In the case where property within
the district is within multiple jurisdictions, validation shall occur in the
jurisdiction within which the majority of the property lies. The signature of
the clerk of the superior court may be made on the certificate of validation of
such bonds by facsimile or by manual execution, stating the date on which such
bonds were validated; and such entry shall be original evidence in any court of
this state.
(h)
In lieu of specifying the rate or rates of interest which such bonds are to bear
and the principal amount and maturities of such bonds, the notice to the
district attorney, the notice to the public of the time, place, and date of the
validation hearing, and the petition and complaint for validation may state that
the bonds when issued will bear interest at a rate not exceeding a maximum per
annum rate of interest which may be fixed or may fluctuate or otherwise change
from time to time, and that the principal amount will not exceed an amount
specified in and the final maturity date will not be later than a date specified
in such notices, petition, and complaint or may state that, in the event the
bonds are to bear different rates of interest for different maturity dates, none
of such rates will exceed the maximum rate so specified which may be fixed or
may fluctuate or otherwise change from time to time; provided, however, that
nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting or restricting the
right of the board to sell such bonds at a discount, even if in doing so the
effective interest cost resulting therefrom would exceed the maximum per annum
interest rate specified in such notices and in the petition and complaint.
(i)
The terms 'cost' and 'project,' when used in the phrases 'cost of the project'
and 'cost of any project' in bond resolutions of the board, in bonds, notes, or
other obligations of the district, or in notices of proceedings to validate such
bonds, notes, or other obligations of the district, shall have the same meanings
as provided in paragraphs (6) and (17) of Code Section 36-93-2.
(j)
Pursuant to this chapter, all bonds, notes, and other obligations issued under
this chapter and interest paid and all fees, charges, and other revenues derived
by the district from the projects provided by this chapter are exempt from all
taxes of the state or of any political subdivision, agency, or instrumentality
thereof.
(k)
All bonds issued under this chapter shall be validated pursuant to the
procedures set forth in this title.
36-93-13.
(a)(1)
When any district desires to undertake any additional project, an election shall
be called and held in accordance with this Code section to approve such project
and any debt to be incurred.
(2)
Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection, the district shall be
authorized to make reasonable expenditures related to studying the feasibility,
costs, and maintenance of such additional projects and the hearing and election
required by this Code section.
(b)
A public hearing on the proposed additional project shall be conducted by the
board. The board shall present information related to the proposed additional
project, including but not limited to the estimated costs to construct, operate,
and maintain the additional project; planned financing mechanisms to be used by
the district to pay for the additional project; and the estimated cost per
parcel for the additional project. The hearing shall be open to the public and
provide opportunity for oral and written comments on the additional project by
the landowners of the district and the appropriate local government. The
hearing shall be held at an accessible location in the county in which the
district is located. The board shall cause a notice of the hearing to be
published in the legal organ of each county or municipality having jurisdiction
over the district at least once a week for the four successive weeks immediately
prior to the hearing. The notice shall give the time and place for the hearing
and a description of the additional project, including but not limited to the
estimated costs to construct, operate, and maintain the additional project;
planned financing mechanisms to be used by the district to pay for the
additional project; and the maximum cost per parcel for the additional project.
(c)
During the public hearing required in subsection (b) of this Code section, the
board shall establish a date to hold an election on the issue of the additional
project by the qualified electors of the district, such date to be no more than
six weeks following the public hearing. The board shall give notice for not
less than 21 days immediately preceding the day of the election in the legal
organ of each county or municipality having jurisdiction over the district,
notifying the qualified electors of the district that on the day named an
election will be held to determine the question of whether to undertake the
additional project. The notice shall describe the additional project, including
but not limited to the estimated costs to construct, operate, and maintain the
additional project; the planned financing mechanisms to be used by the district
to pay for the additional project; and the maximum cost per parcel for the
additional project.
(d)
The election provided for in this Code section shall be conducted by the board.
Qualified electors of the district may vote in the same manner as elections for
board members pursuant to Code Section 36-93-5. If a majority of those
qualified electors of the district voting at the election approve the additional
project, then the board shall be authorized to construct the additional project
and to incur debt to finance the additional project. If the additional project
has been approved, the board shall amend the public disclosures required in Code
Sections 36-93-25 and 36-93-26 to reflect the new maximum amount of fees and
assessments related to initial costs and additional projects using the same
calculation for determining initial costs per parcel.
(e)
No violation of this Code section shall affect the validity of any bonds issued
under this Code section.
36-93-14.
Any
issue of bonds may be secured by a trust agreement by and between the district
and a corporate trustee or trustees, which may be any trust company or bank
having the powers of a trust company within or outside the state. The resolution
authorizing the issuance of the bonds or trust agreement may provide for the
pledge of the revenues to be received from any projects of the district and may
contain such provisions for protecting and enforcing the rights and remedies of
the bondholders as the board may approve, including, without limitation,
covenants setting forth the duties of the district in relation to: the
acquisition, construction, reconstruction, improvement, maintenance, repair,
operation, and insurance of any projects; the fixing and revising of the rates,
fees, and charges; and the custody, safeguarding, and application of all moneys
and for the employment of consulting engineers in connection with such
acquisition, construction, reconstruction, improvement, maintenance, repair, or
operation. It shall be lawful for any bank or trust company within or outside
the state which may act as a depository of the proceeds of bonds or of revenues
to furnish such indemnifying bonds or to pledge such securities as may be
required by the district. The resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds
or trust agreement may set forth the rights and remedies of the bondholders and
of the trustee, if any, and may restrict the individual right of action by
bondholders. The board may provide for the payment of proceeds of the sale of
the bonds and the revenues of any project to such officer, board, or depository
as it may designate for the custody thereof and may provide for the method of
disbursement thereof with such safeguards and restrictions as it may determine.
All expenses incurred in carrying out the provisions of such resolution or trust
agreement may be treated as part of the cost of the project to which such trust
agreement pertains.
36-93-15.
(a)
The board shall have the power to levy and assess an ad valorem tax on all the
taxable property in the district to construct and maintain projects; to pay the
principal of, and interest on, any bonds of the district; and to provide for any
sinking or other funds established in connection with any such bonds. The ad
valorem tax provided for by this chapter shall be in addition to all other ad
valorem taxes provided for by law.
(b)
The board may levy a maintenance special assessment to construct, reconstruct,
acquire, maintain, operate, or preserve the facilities and projects of the
district; to pay the principal of, and interest on, any bonds of the district;
and to provide for any sinking or other funds established in connection with any
such bonds. Maintenance special assessments shall not include costs associated
with fee-for-services arrangements, such as payments for utility or water
service. This assessment may be evidenced to and certified to the appropriate
tax authority of the local government by the board not later than June 15 of
each year and shall be entered by the appropriate tax authority of the local
government on the county tax rolls and shall be collected and enforced, and the
proceeds therefrom shall be paid to the district, as provided for in this Code
section. Maintenance special assessments shall be a lien on the property against
which assessed until paid and shall be enforceable in like manner as county
taxes. The amount of the maintenance special assessment for the exercise of the
district́s
powers under this chapter shall be determined and assessed by the board upon
such lands, which may be all of the lands within the district benefited by the
maintenance thereof, apportioned between the benefited lands in proportion to
the benefits received by each tract of land.
(c)
Any tax, fee, or assessment levied pursuant to this Code section for maintenance
special assessments shall not exceed five mills on each dollar of the assessed
value of all such real property. Except for specially designated property as
provided for in Code Section 36-93-26, the taxes, fees, and assessments levied
by the board upon the properties shall be equitably apportioned among the
properties according to the need for infrastructure created by the degree of
density of development within the district and not for the purpose of providing
infrastructure that would primarily benefit the county or municipality as a
whole. Any tax, fee, or assessment so levied shall be collected by the county
in which the property is located using the methods and procedures as designated
by the county commission. Delinquent taxes, fees, and assessments shall bear
the same interest and penalties as ad valorem taxes of the county in which the
property is located and may be enforced and collected in the same manner. The
county in which the property is located may retain a fee to reimburse the actual
increased costs, if any, of preparing and mailing notices to collect such taxes,
fees, and assessments for the board. The remaining proceeds shall be
transmitted by the county to the board and shall be expended by the board only
for the purposes authorized in this chapter.
(d)
The board shall levy the taxes and assessments provided for in this Code section
between January 1 and June 1 of each calendar year and shall notify in writing
the appropriate tax authority of the county in which the property is located by
June 15 each year so the county may include the levy on the
countýs
regular ad valorem tax bills. The board shall base the taxes and assessments on
the tax digest approved by the appropriate local government.
(e)
If a parcel of real property is removed from the district or otherwise becomes
nontaxable, it shall continue to bear its tax millage then extant upon such
event for bonded indebtedness of the district then outstanding until any bonded
indebtedness then outstanding is paid or refunded.
(f)
Each property for which there is paid taxes, fees, or assessments levied by the
board for any project shall receive a credit equal to the present value of all
such taxes, fees, and assessments toward any impact fee as may be levied by the
county against said property for system improvements which are in the same
category as said public facility in accordance with Chapter 71 of this title,
the 'Georgia Development Impact Fee Act.'
(g)
All bonds, notes, and other obligations issued according to this chapter and
interest paid and all fees, charges, and other revenues derived by the district
from the projects provided by this chapter are exempt from all taxes of the
state or of any political subdivision, agency, or instrumentality
thereof.
(h)
With the exception of maintenance special assessments, district assessments may
be made payable in no more than 40 yearly installments.
(i)
Before selling any property to the general public, the board shall determine the
projected initial costs to be repaid by landowners through taxes and
assessments. These initial costs shall be apportioned among the parcels to be
sold to the general public, and the amount of such apportionment shall be
disclosed as required by this chapter.
36-93-16.
All
taxes and assessments of the district provided for in this chapter, together
with all penalties for default in the payment of the same and all costs in
collecting the same, including a reasonable
attorneýs
fee fixed by the court and taxed as a cost in the action brought to enforce
payment, shall, from January 1 for each year the property is liable to
assessment and until paid, constitute a lien of equal dignity, notwithstanding
the provisions of Code Section 48-2-56, with the liens for municipal taxes and
other taxes of equal dignity with municipal taxes upon all the lands against
which such taxes shall be levied. A sale of any of the real property within the
district for state, county, or other taxes shall not operate to relieve or
release the property so sold from the lien for subsequent district taxes or
installments of district taxes, which lien may be enforced against such property
as though no such sale thereof had been made. Nothing in this Code section
shall affect the rights of lien holders for municipal taxes.
36-93-17.
(a)
The district has the right to:
(1)
Pay any delinquent state, county, district, municipal, or other tax or
assessment upon lands located wholly or partially within the boundaries of the
district; and
(2)
Redeem or purchase any tax sales certificates issued or sold on account of any
state, county, district, municipal, or other taxes or assessments upon lands
located wholly or partially within the boundaries of the district.
(b)
Delinquent taxes paid, or tax sales certificates redeemed or purchased, by the
district, together with all penalties for the default in payment of the same and
all costs in collecting the same and a reasonable
attorneýs
fee, shall constitute a lien in favor of the district of equal dignity,
notwithstanding the provisions of Code Section 48-2-56, with the liens of
municipal taxes and other taxes of equal dignity with municipal taxes upon all
the real property against which the taxes were levied.
(c)
In any sale of land, the district may certify to the clerk of the superior court
of the county holding such sale the amount of taxes due to the district upon the
lands sought to be sold; and the district shall share in the disbursement of the
sales proceeds in accordance with the provisions of this chapter and other laws
of the state.
36-93-18.
To
the full extent permitted by law, the district may require all lands, buildings,
premises, persons, firms, and corporations within the district to use the water
management and control facilities and water and sewer facilities of the district
or any other facility or service of the district when the district relies on the
collection of any rates, fees, or charges to provide said facility or service or
to pay principal and interest on debt obligations secured by a pledge of
revenues generated by the collection of such rates, fees, and
charges.
36-93-19.
In
the event that any rates, fees, rentals, charges, or delinquent penalties are
not paid when due and are in default for 60 days or more, the unpaid balance
thereof and all interest accrued thereon, together with reasonable
attorneýs
fees and costs, may be recovered by the district in a civil action.
36-93-20.
In
the event the fees, rentals, or other charges for water and sewer services, or
either of them, are not paid when due, the board shall have the power, under
such reasonable rules and regulations as the board may adopt, to discontinue and
shut off both water and sewer services until such fees, rentals, or other
charges, including interest, penalties, and charges for the shutting off and
discontinuance and the restoration of such water and sewer services or both, are
fully paid; and, for such purposes, the board may enter on any lands, waters, or
premises of any person, firm, corporation, or body, public or private, within
the district limits. Delinquent fees, rentals, or other charges, together with
interest, penalties, and charges for the shutting off and discontinuance and the
restoration of services and facilities and reasonable
attorneýs
fees and other expenses, may be recovered by the district, which may also
enforce payment of delinquent fees, rentals, or other charges by any other
lawful method of enforcement.
36-93-21.
The
board or any aggrieved person may have recourse to such remedies in law and at
equity as may be necessary to ensure compliance with the provisions of this
chapter, including injunctive relief to enjoin or restrain any person from
violating the provisions of this chapter or any bylaws, resolutions,
regulations, rules, codes, or orders adopted under this chapter. In case any
building or structure is erected, constructed, reconstructed, altered, repaired,
converted, or maintained, or any building, structure, land, or water is used, in
violation of this chapter or of any code, order, resolution, or other regulation
made by the board under authority conferred by this chapter or under law, the
board, any landowner, or any citizen residing in the district may institute any
appropriate action or proceeding to prevent such unlawful erection,
construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, conversion, maintenance, or
use; to restrain, correct, or prevent such violation; to prevent the occupancy
of such building, structure, land, or water; and to prevent any illegal act,
conduct, business, or use in or about such premises, land, or
water.
36-93-22.
Any
suit or action brought or maintained against the district for damages arising
out of tort, including, without limitation, any claim arising from an act
causing an injury or loss of property, personal injury, or death, shall be
subject to the limitations provided in Code Section 50-21-29.
36-93-23.
Property,
real or personal, that belongs to or is owned by the district, or in which the
district has an interest, shall be exempt from levy and sale by virtue of an
execution; and no execution or other judicial process shall issue against such
property, nor shall any judgment against the district be a charge or lien on its
property or revenues; however, nothing contained herein shall apply to or limit
the rights of bondholders to pursue any remedy for the enforcement of any lien
or pledge given by the district in connection with any of the bonds or
obligations of the district.
36-93-24.
(a)
The board may petition to contract or expand the boundaries of a district in the
following manner:
(1)
The petition to contract or expand the boundaries of a district shall contain
the same information required for a petition for creation pursuant to Code
Section 36-93-3. In addition, if the petitioner seeks to expand the district,
the petition shall describe the proposed timetable for construction of any
district projects in the area, the estimated cost of constructing the proposed
projects, and the designation of the future general distribution, location, and
extent of public and private uses of land proposed for the area by the future
land use plan element of the local government comprehensive plan currently in
force. If the petitioner seeks to contract the district, the petition shall
describe what projects are currently provided by the district to the area being
removed, and the designation of the future general distribution, location, and
extent of public and private uses of land proposed for the area by the future
land element of the adopted local government comprehensive plan;
and
(2)
A public hearing shall be held in the same manner and with the same public
notice as required for creation of a new district pursuant to this chapter. The
appropriate local government shall consider the record of the public hearing and
the factors set forth in Code Section 36-93-3 in making its determination to
grant or deny the petition.
(b)
The district shall remain in existence unless:
(1)
The district is merged with another district as provided by subsection (c) of
this Code section;
(2)
All of the specific community development systems, facilities, and services that
it is authorized to perform have been transferred to the appropriate local
government; or
(3)
The district is dissolved as provided by subsection (e) of this Code
section.
(c)
The district may merge with other districts upon filing a petition, which shall
contain the same information required for a petition for creation pursuant to
Code Section 36-93-3. The new district formed by a merger involving existing
districts shall assume all indebtedness of, and receive title to, all property
owned by the preexisting districts. Prior to filing a petition for merger, the
districts desiring to merge shall enter into a merger agreement and shall
provide for the proper allocation of the indebtedness so assumed and the manner
in which the assumed debt shall be retired. The approval of the merger
agreement by the board of each district shall constitute consent of the
landowners within the district.
(d)
Upon the request of the board of the district, the appropriate local government
within which the district lies may adopt a resolution or ordinance providing for
a plan for the transfer of a specific district service or infrastructure from a
district to the appropriate local government. The plan must provide for the
assumption and guarantee of the district debt that is related to the service or
infrastructure by the appropriate local government.
(e)(1)
Dissolution of the district may be allowed under the following
circumstances:
(A)
Upon the transfer of all of the community development services of the district
to the appropriate local government, the district shall be dissolved in
accordance with a plan of dissolution adopted by the board and filed with the
clerk of the superior court;
(B)
If, within five years after the effective date of the resolution or ordinance
establishing the district, a landowner has not received a building permit
authorizing construction of a building or structure within the district, then
the district shall be automatically dissolved; or
(C)
If a district has no outstanding financial obligations and no operating or
maintenance responsibilities, upon the petition of the district, the district
may be dissolved by a resolution or ordinance of the appropriate local
government.
(2)
Prior to any dissolution, debts and other obligations of the district must be
fully paid or payment otherwise provided for.
36-93-25.
(a)
The district shall take affirmative steps to provide for the full disclosure of
information relating to the public financing and maintenance of improvements to
real property undertaken by the district. The required information shall be made
available to all existing residents, and to all prospective residents, of the
district. The district shall furnish each developer of a development within the
district with sufficient copies of that information to provide a copy to each
prospective initial purchaser of property in that development; and any developer
of a development within the district, when required by law to provide a public
offering statement, shall include a copy of information relating to the public
financing and maintenance of improvements in the public offering
statement.
(b)
Subsequent to the establishment of a district under this chapter, each contract
for the initial sale of a parcel of real property, each contract for the initial
sale of a residential unit, and each lease agreement for the rental of a
residential unit within the district shall include, immediately prior to the
space reserved in the contract for the signature of the purchaser, the following
disclosure statement in boldface and conspicuous type which is larger than the
type in the remaining text of the contract: 'THE PROPERTY YOU ARE ABOUT TO
PURCHASE OR LEASE IS WITHIN THE (Name of District) INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
DISTRICT. THE (Name of District) INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT MAY IMPOSE
AND LEVY TAXES OR ASSESSMENTS, OR BOTH TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS, ON THIS PROPERTY.
CERTAIN OF THESE TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS PAY THE INITIAL COSTS OF THE DISTRICT AND
THE COSTS OF ADDITIONAL PROJECTS. ALTHOUGH SUBJECT TO SOME FLUCTUATION, THESE
TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS FOR INITIAL COSTS AND ADDITIONAL PROJECTS SHALL NOT EXCEED
$________ PER YEAR. ADDITIONAL TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS MAY PAY THE OPERATION AND
MAINTENANCE OF DISTRICT PROJECTS, AND SUCH COSTS ARE CAPPED BY LAW. DISTRICT
TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS ARE IN ADDITION TO COUNTY AND OTHER LOCAL GOVERNMENTAL
TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS AND ALL OTHER TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS PROVIDED FOR BY
LAW.'
(c)
The limit on taxes and assessments for initial costs and additional projects
costs shall be determined as provided for in subsection (i) of Code Section
36-93-15.
(d)
Within 30 days after the effective date of a resolution or ordinance
establishing a district under this chapter, the district shall cause to be
recorded in the property records in the county in which it is located a 'Notice
of Establishment of the ______ Infrastructure Development District.' The notice
shall, at a minimum, include the legal description of the district and a copy of
the disclosure statement specified in subsection (b) of this Code
section.
36-93-26.
(a)
A district that is composed of at least 1,500 acres may define areas or
designate certain property of the district to pay for improvements, facilities,
or services that primarily benefit that designated area or property and do not
generally and directly benefit the district as a whole.
(b)
The board shall state in its designation the physical and economic reasons, the
particular diverse local needs, or the comparative potential benefits of the
defined areas or designated property in the district that make it necessary or
equitable to levy all or part of the tax on a defined area or designated
property of the district.
(c)(1)
The board shall adopt a proposed plan that defines the particular area to be
taxed by metes and bounds or designates the property to be served, affected, and
taxed.
(2)
The board shall adopt a proposed plan for improvements in the defined area or to
serve the designated property.
(3)
The board shall adopt a proposed plan of taxation to apply to the defined area
or designated property that may or may not be in addition to other taxes imposed
by the district on the same area or property.
(d)
After adoption of the plans as provided for in this Code section, the district,
under the limitations of this Code section, may apply separately, differently,
equitably, and specifically its taxing and assessment powers and lien authority
to the defined area or designated property to provide funds to construct,
administer, maintain, and operate improvements and facilities that primarily
benefit the defined area or designated property.
(e)
After adoption of the plans as provided for in this Code section, the district
may issue its bonds to provide the specific projects included in the plans
adopted for the defined area or to serve the designated property, and shall
provide the improvements and facilities.
(f)
The district may issue bonds that pledge only the faith and credit based on the
property values in the defined area and may not pledge the full faith and credit
of the district.
(g)
In lieu of the general notice required under Code Section 36-93-25, a person who
sells or conveys real property located within the defined area or designated
property of the district shall provide the following prescribed notice, which
shall be disclosed in the same manner as notice required under Code Section
36-93-25: 'THE PROPERTY YOU ARE ABOUT TO PURCHASE OR LEASE IS WITHIN THE (Name
of District) INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT. THE (Name of District)
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT MAY IMPOSE AND LEVY TAXES OR ASSESSMENTS, OR
BOTH TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS, ON THIS PROPERTY. CERTAIN OF THESE TAXES AND
ASSESSMENTS PAY THE INITIAL COSTS OF THE DISTRICT AND THE COSTS OF ADDITIONAL
PROJECTS. ALTHOUGH SUBJECT TO SOME FLUCTUATION, THESE TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS FOR
INITIAL COSTS AND ADDITIONAL PROJECTS SHALL NOT EXCEED $________ PER YEAR.
ADDITIONAL TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS PAY THE OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE COSTS OF
DISTRICT PROJECTS, AND SUCH COSTS ARE CAPPED BY LAW. DISTRICT TAXES AND
ASSESSMENTS ARE IN ADDITION TO COUNTY AND OTHER LOCAL GOVERNMENTAL TAXES AND
ASSESSMENTS AND ALL OTHER TAXES AND ASSESSMENTS PROVIDED FOR BY
LAW.
'FURTHERMORE,
THE PROPERTY YOU ARE ABOUT TO PURCHASE OR LEASE IS WITHIN A DESIGNATED AREA OF
THE (Name of District) INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT AND YOUR LAND WILL BE
SUBJECT TO HIGHER TAXES THAN OTHER LAND WITHIN THE DISTRICT. YOUR RATE OF TAXES
WILL BE HIGHER BY $_____ ON EACH $1,000.00 OF ASSESSED VALUATION THAN LAND NOT
WITHIN THE DESIGNATED AREA.'
(h)
The limit on taxes and assessments for initial costs and costs for additional
projects shall be determined as provided for in subsection (i) of Code Section
36-93-15.
36-93-27.
(a)
Article 2 of Chapter 70 of this title shall not apply to districts established
under this chapter; provided, however, that a local government or local
government authority that is the designated provider of a service for the area
in which a district is to be located pursuant to an agreement governed by
Article 2 of Chapter 70 of this title or Article IX, Section III, Paragraph I of
the Constitution shall receive a copy of the petition filed with the appropriate
local government within five days of submission by the petitioner to the
appropriate local government and shall have the right of first refusal to
provide the service to the district. Such right of first refusal shall be
exercised within 30 days of receipt of the petition and such decision shall be
communicated to the appropriate local government no fewer than ten days before
its public hearing on the petition. If the local government or local government
authority exercises its right to serve the district, it shall enter a contract
with the district, such contract to include the requirement that the local
government or local government authority provide its service within the district
in conformity with the timetable of construction that the petitioner provided to
the appropriate local government under Code Section 36-93-3. A local
government́s
or local government
authoritýs
requirement that the district pay the costs of infrastructure necessary to
connect the local
government́s
or local government
authoritýs
existing infrastructure to district infrastructure as well as any requirements
that the infrastructure meet the existing standards of the service provider used
within the jurisdiction shall not constitute refusal by the local government or
local government authority to provide the service.
(b)
Water or sewer fees charged to customers located outside the geographic
boundaries of a service provider and within the boundaries of a district shall
not be higher than the fees charged to similarly situated customers receiving
such service which are located within the geographic boundaries of the service
provider.
(c)
If a district board disputes the reasonableness of water and sewer rate
differentials imposed within the district by the designated service provider,
the district board may hold a public hearing for the purpose of reviewing the
rate differential. Following the preparation of a rate study by a qualified
engineer, the district board may challenge the arbitrary rate differentials on
behalf of its residents in a court of competent jurisdiction. Prior to such
challenge, the dispute shall be submitted to some form of alternative dispute
resolution.
36-93-28.
(a)
The Department of Community Affairs shall have the authority to study and review
all districts created pursuant to this chapter and shall report its findings to
the General Assembly, the Senate Committee on Economic Development, and the
House Committee on Economic Development and Tourism by January 31 of each
year.
(b)
This Code section shall stand repealed on January 31,
2011."
SECTION
2.
Chapter
5 of Title 12 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to water
resources, is amended by striking subsection (a) of Code Section 12-5-30,
relating to permits for construction, modification, or operation of facilities
which discharge pollutants into waters, and inserting in lieu thereof a new
subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a)
Any person who owns or operates a facility of any type or who desires to erect,
modify, alter, or commence operation of a facility of any type which results or
will result in the discharge of pollutants from a point source into the waters
of the state shall obtain from the director a permit to make such discharge. Any
person desiring to erect, modify, alter, or commence operation of a facility
which will result in such discharge but which is not discharging such pollutants
as of July 1, 1974, must obtain such permit prior to the discharge of same. Any
person who is operating a facility which results in such discharge as of July 1,
1974, may continue to make such discharge pending final action by the director
on the application for such discharge permit, provided that such application has
been filed with the director by September 29, 1974; and provided, further, that
such discharge does not present an immediate health hazard to the public. The
director, under the conditions he
or
she prescribes, may require the submission
of such plans, specifications, and other information as he
or
she deems relevant in connection with the
issuance of such permits. The director may, after public notice and opportunity
for public hearing, issue a permit which authorizes the person to make such
discharge, upon condition that such discharge meets or will meet, pursuant to
any schedule of compliance included in such permit, all water quality standards,
effluent limitations, and all other requirements established pursuant to this
article. The
director shall give preference to existing permits or modification of existing
permits in conformity with existing service delivery strategy agreements
required in Chapter 70 of Title
36."
SECTION
3.
Said
chapter is further amended by striking subsection (f) of Code Section 12-5-31,
relating to permits for withdrawal, diversion, or impoundment of surface waters,
and inserting in lieu thereof a new subsection (f) to read as
follows:
"(f)
In the event two or more competing applicants or users qualify equally under
subsection (e) of this Code section, the director is authorized to grant permits
to applicants or modify the existing permits of users for use of specified
quantities of surface waters on a prorated or other reasonable basis in those
situations where such action is feasible; provided, however, the director shall
give preference to an existing use over an initial
application,
including preference to existing permits or modification of existing permits in
conformity with existing service delivery strategy agreements required in
Chapter 70 of Title
36."
SECTION
4.
Said
chapter is further amended by striking subsection (b) of Code Section 12-5-96,
relating to permits to withdraw, obtain, or use ground water, and inserting in
lieu thereof a new subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b)
When sufficient evidence is provided by the applicant that the water withdrawn
or used from the ground is not consumptively used, a permit therefor shall be
issued by the division without a hearing and without the conditions provided in
subsection (c) of this Code section. Applications for such permits shall set
forth such facts as the division shall deem necessary to enable it to establish
and maintain adequate records of all water uses.
The director
shall give preference to existing permits or modification of existing permits in
conformity with existing service delivery strategy agreements required in
Chapter 70 of Title
36."
SECTION
5.
This
Act shall become effective on January 1, 2007; provided, however, that this Act
shall only become effective on January 1, 2007, upon the ratification of a
resolution at the November 2006 state-wide general election that amends the
Constitution so as to authorize the General Assembly to provide by general law
for the creation and comprehensive regulation of infrastructure development
districts. If such resolution is not so ratified, this Act shall not become
effective and shall stand repealed in its entirety on January 1, 2007.
SECTION
6.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.
