Municipalities and regional districts may borrow to finance a project before receiving sufficient development cost charges. Local governments may include development cost charge interest when calculating a development cost charge. The Inspector of Municipalities will allow interest costs in exceptional circumstances only.
Borrowing may be necessary when infrastructure must be constructed and operational before sufficient funds have accumulated in the development cost charge reserve fund. Interest may be included in DCC calculations under certain circumstances when approved by the Inspector of Municipalities. Examples include:
A reliance on borrowing exposes the local government to financial risk. The inclusion of interest in development cost charge calculations mitigates this risk, however it does not eliminate the risk altogether.
A development cost charge bylaw cannot be adopted by a local government until it has been approved by the Inspector of Municipalities. If a a development cost charge bylaw includes interest costs in the charge calculation, the following information must be included when it is submitted for consideration by the Inspector:
It must be clear to the public and to developers when interest charges are included in the calculation of a development cost charge. The inclusion of interest must be disclosed in the required development cost charge report and reflected in the local government’s financial plan, long-term capital plans and the annual financial statements.
If a local government includes an interest component in the development cost charge calculation, then it must be applied to all development cost charges levied for that project. If development proceeds faster than planned and the borrowing is paid out early in relation to a project, the development cost charge will continue to include the interest element so as to ensure that all development, past and future, is charged on an equitable basis.
The allowable interest provision allows the local government to add an interest component to the development cost charge payable by the other developers. By including interest in the development cost charge calculations for the specific works, some of the debt servicing costs incurred by the front-ending developer are spread equitably over the developments that benefit from the works.
Local governments may want to consider creating area-based development cost charges that contain projects to which interest has been applied. This may increase the overall transparency of the approach, and will promote equity among developers who benefit from, and contribute to, the specific works.
Learn about the full range of influencing factors when local governments consider whether or not to front-end development cost charge funded infrastructure works:
Contact us if you have questions about allowable development cost charge interest.