
- Item# X09
- ISBN: 978-0-923956-97-4
- Copyright (c) 2012
- Paperback
- 351 pp.
- Price: $80.00
Exactions And Impact Fees In California
By Margaret Sohagi , William Abbott , Peter Detwiler , Thomas Jacobson and Harriet Steiner
Comprehensively updated, this is a practical, detailed guide for determining the appropriate and legally defensible mix of exactions and fees local governments may employ to ensure that developments help solve ever-increasing community needs. The book also includes definitive explanations about the distinctions among taxes, fees, assessments, land dedications, land reservations, and other exactions and development requirements.
Topics Include:
The fiscalization of land use: realities in California
Meeting local needs for infrastructure and public facilities through taxes, exactions, and other techniques
Legal authority for and limitations on the imposition of exactions
Local funding techniques: bonds, taxes, and fees
Procedures for adopting various fees
California’s AB 1600 nexus legislation
Methods by which developers are required to participate in the funding of public works and facilities
A look at specific exaction issues of current interest around the state, including child care facilities and services, inclusionary housing, and transit impact fees
Legal challenges to the imposition of exactions, dedications, fees, and charges
An appendix that includes relevant code sections, as well as sample agreements and exactions studies
| ABOUT EXACTIONS AND IMPACT FEES AND CALIFORNIA |
In addition to the information provided below you may also click on the following: Read the Preface and Chapters At-A-Glance (Adobe Acrobat - pdf file) |
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS |
William W. Abbott is a partner in the Sacramento law firm, Abbott & Kindermann, LLP, where he practices environmental, land use, municipal, and real estate law. He has served as a lecturer and program coordinator on land use law for various U.C. Extension campuses for more than 25 years, and as an expert witness on California land use procedures in state and federal court. Margaret Sohagi is owner and principal of the Sohagi Law Group, in Los Angeles, where she represents public entities, both from a legal and planning perspective. She is also an Adjunct Professor of land use law at USC School of Law, where she teaches land use law and is an instructor for the Judicial Council of California, teaching CEQA courses to trial, appellate, and Supreme Court judges and court attorneys. Harriet A. Steiner is a partner in the Sacramento office of Best, Best & Krieger, LLP, where she practices land use, environmental, municipal, and telecommunications law. She has also served as City Attorney for the City of Davis for more than 25 years |






