Chapter
347
]2006 -- S 2920
Enacted 07/07/06
A N A C T
RELATING TO TOWNS AND
CITIES -- REDEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
Introduced By: Senators
Goodwin, and Perry
Date Introduced: March 09,
2006
It is enacted
by the General Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Section 45-31-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 45-31 entitled
"Redevelopment
Agencies" is hereby amended to read as follows:
45-31-8.
Definitions. -- The following definitions and general provisions govern
the
construction
of chapters 31 -- 33 of this title:
(1) "Agency" means a redevelopment agency created by this chapter.
(2) "Arrested blighted area" means any area which, by reason of the
existence of
physical
conditions including, but not by way of limitation, the existence of unsuitable
soil
conditions,
the existence of dumping or other insanitary or unsafe conditions, the
existence of
ledge or
rock, the necessity of unduly expensive excavation, fill or grading, or the necessity
of
undertaking
unduly expensive measures for the drainage of the area or for the prevention of
flooding
or for making the area appropriate for sound development, or by reason of
obsolete,
inappropriate,
or otherwise faulty platting or subdivision, deterioration of site
improvements,
inadequacy
of utilities, diversity of ownership of plots, or tax delinquencies, or by
reason of any
combination
of any of the foregoing conditions, is unduly costly to develop soundly through
the
ordinary
operations of private enterprise and impairs the sound growth of the community.
(3) "Blighted and substandard area" includes a "slum blighted
area", a "deteriorated
blighted
area", or an "arrested blighted area", or any combination of
these areas. "Blighted and
substandard
area" shall also include those areas where the presence of hazardous
materials, as
defined
in section 23-19.14-2, impairs the use, reuse, or redevelopment of impacted
sites.
(4) "Bonds of agency" means any bonds, notes, interim certificates,
debentures, or other
obligations
issued by an agency pursuant to sections 45-33-5 -- 45-33-15.
(5) "Community" means a city or town.
(6) "Deteriorated blighted area" means any area in which there exist
buildings or
improvements,
either used or intended to be used for living, commercial, industrial, or other
purposes,
or any combination of these uses, which by reason of:
(i) Dilapidation, deterioration, age, or obsolescence;
(ii) Inadequate provision for ventilation, light, sanitation, open spaces, and
recreation
facilities;
(iii) High density of population and overcrowding,
(iv) Defective design or unsanitary or unsafe character or conditions of
physical
construction;
(v) Defective or inadequate street and lot layout; and
(vi) Mixed character, shifting, or deterioration of uses to which they are put,
or any
combination
of these factors and characteristics, are conducive to the further
deterioration and
decline
of the area to the point where it may become a slum blighted area as defined in
subdivision
(18), and are detrimental to the public health, safety, morals, and welfare of
the
inhabitants
of the community and of the state generally. A deteriorated blighted area need
not be
restricted
to, or consist entirely of, lands, buildings, or improvements which of
themselves are
detrimental
or inimical to the public health, safety, morals, or welfare, but may consist
of an area
in which
these conditions exist and injuriously affect the entire area.
(7) "Federal government" means the United States of America or any
agency or
instrumentality,
corporate or otherwise, of the United States of America.
(8) "Legislative body" means the city council or town council.
(9) "Obligee of the agency" or "obligee" include any
bondholder, trustee or trustees for
any
bondholder, or lessor demising to the agency property used in connection with a
redevelopment
project or any assignee or assignees of that lessor, and the federal
government.
(10) "Planning commission" or "commission" means a planning
commission or other
planning
agency established under any state law or created by or pursuant to the charter
of the
community.
(11) "Project area" means all or any portion of a redevelopment area.
A project area may
include
lands, buildings, or improvements which of themselves are not detrimental or
inimical to
the
public health, safety, morals, or welfare, but whose inclusion is necessary,
with or without
change
in their conditions or ownership, for the effective redevelopment of the area
of which they
are a
part.
(12) "Public hearing" means a hearing before a legislative body or
before any committee
of the
legislative body to which the matter to be heard has been referred.
(13) "Real property" means lands, including lands underwater and
waterfront property,
buildings,
structures, fixtures, and improvements to the lands, and every estate,
interest, privilege,
easement,
franchise and right, legal or equitable, including rights of way, terms for
years and
liens,
charges or encumbrances by way of judgment, attachment, mortgage, or otherwise,
and the
indebtedness
secured by liens.
(14) "Redevelopment" means the elimination and prevention of the
spread of blighted
and
substandard areas. Redevelopment may include the planning, replanning,
acquisition,
rehabilitation,
improvement, clearance, sale, lease, or other disposition, or any combination
of
these, of
land, buildings, or other improvements for residential, recreational,
commercial,
industrial,
institutional, public, or other purposes, including the provision of streets,
utilities,
recreational
areas, and other open spaces consistent with the needs of sound community
growth in
accordance
with the community's general plan and carrying out plans for a program of
voluntary
repair
and rehabilitation of buildings or other improvements.
(15) "Redevelopment area" means any area of a community which its
legislative body
finds is
a blighted and substandard area whose redevelopment is necessary to effectuate
the public
purposes
declared in this chapter.
(16) "Redevelopment plan" means a plan, as it exists from time to
time, for a
redevelopment
project, which:
(i) Conforms to the general plan for the community as a whole; and
(ii) Is sufficiently complete to indicate land acquisition, demolition and
removal of
structures,
redevelopment, improvements, and rehabilitation as may be proposed to be
carried out
in the
project area, zoning and planning changes, if any, land uses, maximum
densities, building
requirements,
and the plan's relationship to definite local objectives, respecting
appropriate land
uses,
improved traffic, public transportation, public utilities, recreational and
community
facilities,
and other public improvements.
(17) "Redevelopment project" means any work or undertaking of an
agency pursuant to
chapters
31 -- 33 of this title.
(18) "Slum blighted area" means any area in which there is a
predominance of buildings
or
improvements, either used or intended to be used for living, commercial,
industrial, or other
purposes,
or any combination of these uses, which by reason of: (i) dilapidation,
deterioration,
age, or
obsolescence; (ii) inadequate provision for ventilation, light, sanitation,
open spaces, and
recreation
facilities; (iii) high density of population and overcrowding; (iv) defective
design or
unsanitary
or unsafe character or condition of physical construction; (v) defective or
inadequate
street
and lot layout; and (vi) mixed character or shifting of uses to which they are
put, or any
combination
of these factors and characteristics, are conducive to ill health, transmission
of
disease,
infant mortality, juvenile delinquency, and crime; injuriously affect the
entire area and
constitute
a menace to the public health, safety, morals, and welfare of the inhabitants
of the
community
and of the state generally. A slum blighted area need not be restricted to, or
consist
entirely
of, lands, buildings, or improvements which of themselves are detrimental or
inimical to
the
public health, safety, morals, or welfare, but may consist of an area in which
these conditions
predominate
and injuriously affect the entire area.
(19) "State government" means the state of Rhode Island, or any
agency or
instrumentality
of the state, corporate or otherwise.
(20) "State public body" means the state, or any city or town or any
other subdivision or
public
body of the state or of any city or town.
SECTION
2. Section 44-9-25.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-9 entitled "Tax
Sales"
is
hereby amended to read as follows:
44-9-25.2.
Foreclosure of the rights of redemption on account of constructive
abandonment
by a city or town. -- (a)
Notwithstanding the provisions of section 44-9-25,
following
a sale or taking of land for taxes, whenever the city or town holds the
acquired title, the
city or
town may at any time foreclose all rights of redemption upon a finding by the
superior
court of
constructive abandonment.
(b) If the inspector of buildings determines that the buildings or
unimproved land are
abandoned
property he or she shall notify the record owner, and, if appropriate, the
mortgagee or
lessee,
of his or her finding. The notice shall include a statement that the inspection
was
conducted
at the request of the local treasurer and that the failure of the record owner,
or other
interested
party, to correct the conditions described in the notice within thirty (30)
days of receipt
or
publication of the notice will result in proceedings to foreclose the record
owner's right of
redemption.
The notice may be served in the manner required by law for the service in civil
cases
or may
be published. The inspector of buildings shall also, at the time of service or
publication,
post a
copy of the notice in two (2) or more convenient public places.
(c) If at the expiration of the thirty (30) day period, the inspector of
buildings is of the
opinion
that action has not been initiated to correct the condition described in the
notice, he or she
shall
immediately notify the local treasurer in writing under penalties of perjury,
that the
buildings
on the land or the unimproved land itself have been found to be
abandoned property.
The
written notice shall include the facts and circumstances which formed the basis
of his or her
findings,
and a copy of the notice served on the record owner, or if service was by
publication, an
account
of the steps taken to locate the record owner and a copy of the published
notice as well as
information
appearing in the records of the assessors and of the collector and tending to
establish
the
validity of tax title on the land.
(d) If the treasurer is of the opinion that the facts and circumstances as
found by the
inspector
of buildings are sufficient to establish that the buildings on the land or
the unimproved
land taken or purchased are abandoned property and that
the facts essential to the validity of the
tax
title on the land have been adequately established, he or she shall make an
affidavit of that
finding
which shall be recorded in the registry of deeds for the district where the
land lies. The
treasurer
shall incorporate in his or her affidavit the statements of the inspector of
buildings and
the
treasurer, or portions of the statements he or she finds pertinent, and when
recorded, shall be
prima
facie evidence of those facts.
(e) The treasurer shall make an affidavit and shall bring a petition in the
superior court
pursuant
to section 45-9-25 for the foreclosure of all rights of redemption of the land.
The petition
shall
include a description of the land to which it applies, with its assessed
valuation, the source
of title
giving reference to the place, book and page of record, and other facts as may
be necessary
for the
information of the court. A finding of constructive abandonment will be made in
a
situation
where the owner of a property has manifested constructive abandonment with some
act
or
failure to act. In determining whether an owner has constructively abandoned a
property, the
court
shall consider the following:
(1) Whether or not the property is vacant;
(2) Whether or not housing and building code violations have not been
addressed;
(3) Whether or not the grounds are maintained;
(4) Whether or not the building's interior is sound;
(5) Whether or not any vandalism or damage to the building has not been
repaired;
(6) Whether or not dumping regularly occurs on the property;
(7) Whether or not the property is regularly maintained (i.e. grass, litter
control, etc.);
and
(8) The length of time any of the above conditions have existed.
(f) Actions brought under this section to foreclose the right of redemption on
account of
constructive
abandonment in the superior court shall be given precedence on the calendar and
shall be
heard not later than thirty (30) days from the initiation of the proceedings.
SECTION
3. Section 44-3-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-3 entitled "Property
Subject
to Taxation" is hereby amended to read as follows:
44-3-9.
Exemption or stabilizing of taxes on property used for manufacturing,
commercial,
or residential purposes. -- (a)
(1) Except as provided in this section, the electors of
any city
or town qualified to vote on a proposition to appropriate money or impose a tax
when
legally
assembled, may vote to authorize the city or town council, for a period not
exceeding
twenty
(20) years, and subject to the conditions as provided in this section, to
exempt from
payment,
in whole or in part, real and personal property which has undergone
environmental
remediation,
is historically preserved, or is used
for affordable housing, manufacturing,
commercial,
or residential purposes, or to determine a stabilized amount of taxes to be
paid on
account
of the property, notwithstanding the valuation of the property or the rate of
tax; provided,
that
after public hearings, at least ten (10) days' notice of which shall be given
in a newspaper
having a
general circulation in the city or town, the city or town council determines that:
(i) Granting of the exemption or stabilization will inure to the benefit of the
city or town
by
reason of:
(A) The willingness of the manufacturing or commercial concern to locate in the
city or
town, or
of individuals to reside in such an area; or
(B) The willingness of a manufacturing firm to expand facilities with an
increase in
employment
or the willingness of a commercial or manufacturing concern to retain or expand
its
facility
in the city or town and not substantially reduce its work force in the city or
town; or
(C) An improvement of the physical plant of the city or town which will result
in a long-
term
economic benefit to the city or town and state; or
(D)
An improvement which converts or makes available land or facility that would
otherwise
be not developable or difficult to develop without substantial environmental
remediation;
or
(ii) Granting of the exemption or stabilization of taxes will inure to the
benefit of the city
or town
by reason of the willingness of a manufacturing or commercial or residential
firm or
property
owner to construct new or to replace, reconstruct, convert, expand, retain or
remodel
existing
buildings, facilities, machinery, or equipment with modern buildings,
facilities, fixtures,
machinery,
or equipment resulting in an increase or maintenance in plant, residential
housing or
commercial
building investment by the firm or property owned in the city or town;
(2) Provided that should the city or town council make the determination in
subparagraph
(1)(i)(B) of this subsection, any exemption or stabilization may be granted as
to
new
buildings, fixtures, machinery, or equipment for new buildings, firms or expansions,
and
may be
granted as to existing buildings, fixtures, machinery and equipment for
existing
employers
in the city or town.
(b) Cities shall have the same authority as is granted to towns except that
authority
granted
to the qualified electors of a town and to town councils shall be exercised in
the case of a
city by
the city council.
(c) For purposes of this section, "property used for commercial
purposes" means any
building
or structures used essentially for offices or commercial enterprises.
(d) Except as provided in this section, property, the payment of taxes on which
has been
so
exempted or which is subject to the payment of a stabilized amount of taxes,
shall not, during
the
period for which the exemption or stabilization of the amount of taxes is
granted, be further
liable
to taxation by the city or town in which the property is located so long as the
property is
used for
the manufacturing or commercial, or residential purposes for which the
exemption or
stabilized
amount of taxes was made.
(e) Notwithstanding any vote of the qualified electors of a town and findings
of a town
council
or of any vote and findings by a city council, the property shall be assessed
for and shall
pay that
portion of the tax, if any, assessed by the city or town in which the real or
personal
property
is located, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness of the city or town and
the
indebtedness
of the state or any political subdivision of the state to the extent assessed
upon or
apportioned
to the city or town, and the interest on the indebtedness, and for
appropriation to any
sinking
fund of the city or town, which portion of the tax shall be paid in full, and
the taxes so
assessed
and collected shall be kept in a separate account and used only for that
purpose.
(f) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to permit the exemption or
stabilization
provided
in this section for any manufacturing or commercial concern relocating from one
city or
town
within the state of Rhode Island to another.
SECTION
4. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC00531
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