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Pleasanton Comprehensive Fee Update and Nexus Study November 2024 <br /> 5 . Commercial Linkage Fee <br /> The commercial linkage fee is charged to non-residential development, exclusively, in <br /> order to mitigate its impact on the need for affordable housing in the city. Development <br /> of nonresidential buildings in the city will attract tenants or businesses who, in turn, hire <br /> additional workers. The wages of a significant portion of the new workers will be <br /> inadequate to support sufficient rent prices to attract residential developers to provide <br /> housing opportunities without further subsidy. The fee will be used to help to fill the <br /> "affordability gap"for housing development and increase the number of homes available <br /> for the local workforce. <br /> As a development impact fee, this linkage fee can only be charged to new development <br /> and must be based on the impact of new development on the need for resources to <br /> subsidize the development of new affordable housing. Fee revenue may be collected by <br /> the City and used to subsidize the production or preservation of affordable units for <br /> lower-income households. Expenditures may include, but are not limited to, direct <br /> contributions to affordable housing developers, land acquisition, and funding local match <br /> requirements to leverage other funding opportunities. This use of funds is consistent with <br /> how the City has been using commercial linkage fee revenue collected since the fee's <br /> adoption, and consistent with Chapter 17.40 of the Pleasanton Municipal Code, the <br /> enabling legislation for the City's Affordable Housing Fee. <br /> Methodology <br /> Estimates for Level of Service <br /> The City of Pleasanton currently has over approximately 1,000 affordable (non-senior) <br /> housing units for an employment base of 41,319 workers.3 This represents a ratio of <br /> 0.024 affordable units per worker. The "adjusted maximum" linkage fee levels identified <br /> herein would allow the City to subsidize a greater number of affordable units per worker <br /> than the current ratio - 0.5 per Commercial worker, 0.2 per Office worker, 0.5 per <br /> Lodging worker, and 0.4 per Industrial worker.4 These higher proportions may be <br /> appropriate given the shortfall of such affordable units in the city, region, and state, and <br /> the impacts of new commercial development on the city's need for affordable housing. <br /> 3 Assisted rental unit count is from the City of Pleasanton Community Development <br /> department as of 2024. The employment base is from the US Census Bureau, ACS, Five-Year <br /> Estimates, 2022. <br /> 4 Proportions are calculated as the number of affordable units that could be subsidized by the <br /> maximum fee on a 100,000 square foot space, divided by the total number of employees that <br /> would work in a given building type (as shown on Table 18). <br /> 27 <br />