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City of Roseville <br />SPECIAL ASSESSMENT POLICY <br />11/19/12 <br /> <br /> <br />Formatted: Left <br />The purpose of this policy is to be used as a guide by the City of Roseville when preparing 1 <br />assessment rolls, so as to assure uniform and consis tent treatment of affected properties. It is the 2 <br />general policy of the City of Roseville to assess all affected properties according to this policy 3 <br />without regard to funding source. 4 <br />Special assessments are a charge imposed on properties for a particular improvement that 5 <br />benefits the owners of those selected proper ties. The authority to use special assessments 6 <br />originates in the state constitu tion which allows the state legislature to give cities and other 7 <br />governmental units the authority “to levy and collect assessments for local improvements upon 8 <br />property benefited thereby.” The le gislature confers that authority to cities in Minnesota Statutes 9 <br />Chapter 429. 10 <br />1. Special Benefit Test: The proposed assessment shall be equivalent or less than the 11 <br />anticipated increase in market value for properties being assessed. Appraisals shall be 12 <br />completed to determine the influence of an improvement project on the value of the 13 <br />properties proposing to be assessed. 14 <br />2. Determining Assessable Fron tage: Unless otherwise noted in this document, all 15 <br />assessments shall be calculated using property front footage on the segment of the 16 <br />infrastructure included in the improvement project. The assessment rate shall be 17 <br />determined by dividing the total project cost by the total assessable frontage. The 18 <br />following formulas shall apply for calcula ting the total assessable frontage for the 19 <br />improvement project. 20 <br />(a) The assessable frontage shall be 100% of the short side of the lot. 21 <br />(b) Corner and Multiple Frontage LDR1 and LDR2 lots: All corner and multiple 22 <br />frontage LDR1 and LDR2 parcels shall be considered as having 10% of the long 23 <br />side as being assessable footage unless such parcels could be split or subdivided. 24 <br />This is in addition to the short side frontage. 25 <br />(c) Corner and Multiple Frontage Lots (other zoning): All corner and multiple 26 <br />frontage lots for other property zoning sh all be calculated at 10% for the first 150 27 <br />feet of the long side and then 100% for any additional footage. This is in addition 28 <br />to the short side frontage. 29 <br />(d) Odd Lot Formula (all zoning): The odd lot formula shall apply for odd and 30 <br />irregularly shaped lots, which have rear widths that vary by more than 25% in 31 <br />comparison with the front width. The lot will be assumed to have a depth equal to 32 <br />one-half the sum of the two sides and said depth will be divided into the area of 33 <br />the lot to determine the assessable frontage. 34 <br />(e) Lots with more than 4 sides: All lots of more than four sides will be geometrically 35 <br />converted to a four-sided lot of equal area, then the odd-lot formula as described 36 <br />in (d) will be used to determine the as sessable frontage. Where this is not 37 <br />practical, the assessable frontage will be determined by assuming the lot to have 38 <br />an assessable frontage equal to those of the typical rectangular lots near it which 39 <br />are comparable in overall area and nature. 40 <br />(f) Private Driveway: If a public improvement takes place along a public 41 <br />streetroadway with a private driveway that serves more than one property owner , 42 <br />all properties with access to the road public street via the private driveway will be 43