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11 ATTACHMENT 1, EXHIBIT B
City of Pleasanton
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2023
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060623
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11 ATTACHMENT 1, EXHIBIT B
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
AGENDA REPORT
DOCUMENT DATE
6/6/2023
DESTRUCT DATE
15Y
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City of Pleasanton Capital Improvement Program • FY 2023/24 - FY 2026/27 18 <br />Measure F, also known as the Vehicle Registration Fee (VRF) program, was approved by voters in 2012. <br />This program collects a $10 per year vehicle registration fee which is dedicated to the Alameda Coun- <br />ty’s transportation network improvements with the aim of reducing traffic congestion and pollution. <br />ACTC also administers this program and provides funding allocations to local municipalities in the <br />county. Measure F makes up for approximately 5.4 percent of the transportation funds. The City uses <br />Measure F funds toward local streets and transportation related capital projects. <br />Development Impact Fees <br />The CIP includes funding from the City’s Development Impact Fees like the Transportation Improvement <br />Fees, and non-city fees like the Tri-Valley Transportation Fee and the Dougherty Valley Mitigation Fees. <br />Combined, these development related fees comprise 17.1 percent of the CIP funding sources. <br />Impact fees are one-time charges on new development collected and used by the City to cover the <br />cost of capital facilities and infrastructure that is required to serve new residential and commercial <br />growth. Impact fees are collected upon issuance of a building permit. The City currently has an estab- <br />lished impact fee program that specifies areas of use. These areas include: <br /> •Public Facility Fees that fund: <br /> O Parks & Recreation Facilities <br /> O Downtown Beautification Improvements <br /> O Public Facilities, including fire stations, public safety training facilities, the City Library, <br /> downtown parking, and the Civic Center <br /> •Transportation Improvements <br />Transfers In from Other Funds <br />This revenue category, which accounts for 22.7 percent of the total projected revenues, consists of <br />various transfers from funds other than the General Fund. Contributions from the Utility Enterprise Funds <br />account for the largest share at $8.5 million over a four-year period. Normally, these utility funds make <br />annual contributions based on revenues generated from the City-operated utilities like Water, Recy- <br />cled Water, Sewer, and Storm Drain. While most of these revenues are used to fund the utility opera- <br />tions, a portion is transferred to the capital funds annually to pay for maintenance and improvements <br />projects directly related to these utilities. However, due to operating funding challenges in these utility <br />programs, no transfers to corresponding capital funds are planned in the first two years of the CIP. <br />Other Revenue Sources <br />These CIP funding categories consist of smaller sources including interest earnings on fund balances of <br />all CIP funds, miscellaneous grants, and transportation grants. The combined contribution of these cat- <br />egories to the CIP is 10.6 percent, where 4.2 percent comes from Grants and Miscellaneous, 4.1 percent <br />comes from interest earnings, and 2.3 percent is from transportation grants.
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