The College Station city council’s last meeting included the first look at the five year review of impact fees.
Impact fees began in 2016, collected from developers, to offset some of the costs of roads and water and wastewater improvements.
Consultants told the council that during the last five years, the city of College Station spent a combined $175 million dollars on roads and water and wastewater projects. The city collected impact fees totaling almost $11 million, and developers spent $7 million.
City manager Bryan Woods talked about the next ten years and a $453 million dollar list of proposed impact fee capital improvement projects.
The consultants are projecting in the next ten years, College Station will add about 3,300 single family homes and about 4,800 multi family units. The major focus in future developments are College Station’s midtown, University Drive East, Northgate, and the biocorridor.
The council was told the tentative review of the impact fee studies by the city’s advisory committee is October 21, followed by a council public hearing and possible adoption on November 22.
Click below for a sampling of comments from the September 23, 2021 College Station city council meeting.