AN ACT RELATING TO SUBDIVISION RECREATIONAL FACILITIES IN HARNETT COUNTY AND CONCERNING PUBLIC-PRIVATE REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENTS FOR PARK INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT BY MECKLENBURG COUNTY. SL 2019-59. Enacted June 26, 2019. Effective June 26, 2019.
Bill Summaries: S242 RECREATIONAL LAND FEE CHANGES.
-
Bill S 242 (2019-2020)Summary date: Jun 26 2019 - More information
-
Bill S 242 (2019-2020)Summary date: Jun 17 2019 - More information
House committee substitute to the 2nd edition makes the following changes.
Amends Section 1 of SL 2009-162, which allows Mecklenburg County (County) to enter into reimbursement agreements with private property owners for the design and construction of park infrastructure or parks that meet three specified criteria. Modifies the criteria to allow the County to enter into reimbursement agreements with private property owners for the design and construction of park infrastructure or parks located on property owned by or that will be leased or transferred to the County (previously, required the infrastructure or parks be located on property owned by the private property owner to be leased or transferred to the County).
Amends the act's long title.
-
Bill S 242 (2019-2020)Summary date: Mar 26 2019 - More information
Senate committee substitute to the 1st edition deletes the proposed changes to GS 153A-331, and instead makes the following changes to the statute, applicable to Harnett County only. Allows a subdivision control ordinance to allow a developer to provide funds to the county to be used to acquire recreation land or areas and develop and construct recreational facilities to serve the development or subdivision. Caps a fee that may be imposed under a subdivision control ordinance for these purposes at $500 per residential construction lot. Amends the act's long title.
-
Bill S 242 (2019-2020)Summary date: Mar 13 2019 - More information
Amends GS 153A-331, which allows funds received from a developer under a subdivision control ordinance to be used by the county to acquire recreation land or areas to serve the development or subdivision, by requiring that Harnett County use the funds only for the acquisition or development of recreation, park, or open-space sites.
© 2022 School of Government The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
This work is copyrighted and subject to "fair use" as permitted by federal copyright law. No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the express written permission of the publisher. Distribution by third parties is prohibited. Prohibited distribution includes, but is not limited to, posting, e-mailing, faxing, archiving in a public database, installing on intranets or servers, and redistributing via a computer network or in printed form. Unauthorized use or reproduction may result in legal action against the unauthorized user.