From Deseret News archives:

Pricey permits: BYU study finds big disparity among Wasatch Front cities

Published: Thursday, Feb. 23, 2006 11:31 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Thinking of developing an office building? You may want to steer clear of South Jordan, which charges developers more than $438,000 to obtain a single office building permit, according to a study released Thursday.

You may also want to avoid Herriman, where it takes more than two years to secure the permit.

In some cities, developers face an extremely long and costly battle to build new office and industrial buildings, according to Michael Roderick, president of the Utah chapter of the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties.

"If we cannot develop and deliver projects in a timely manner and a competitive manner, we are going to lose out to all these industries," Roderick said. "Salt Lake County municipalities are competing with the Denvers of the world, the Phoenixes of the world and Las Vegas for business and industry."

The $10,000 study, which was conducted by two Brigham Young University graduate students and commissioned by NAIOP and the Society of Industrial and Office Realtors, found a wild variation in costs and time in securing commercial and industrial permits in 2005 among Salt Lake County cities. The study ranked 15 cities and Salt Lake County.

Story continues below
The study ranked office permit costs based on a proposal to build a 50,000-square-foot office building comprising two stories with a 25,000-square-foot floor plate. The building was valued at $4.5 million and proposed for a site consisting of 2.5 acres on a commercial land site.

The five costliest cities in obtaining an office building permit were South Jordan, Draper, Murray, West Jordan and Taylorsville. Cottonwood Heights, at $18,823, was the cheapest city in permit and development fees for a single project.

However, Doug Meldrum, economic development director for South Jordan, questioned the accuracy of the study.

"I found a $204,000 discrepancy from what it says in the report to what our fees actually are for office," Meldrum said. "It really concerned me."

Meldrum was so concerned he wrote a letter to NAIOP, saying that the study's numbers are not comparable. "The impact fees on a younger, growing community would be dramatically different than an older, built-out community," Meldrum said. "That is like comparing apples to oranges."

Even with a $204,000 downward adjustment to South Jordan's permit and development fees, the city would still rank as the most expensive city in the county in obtaining a commercial building permit.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

View from high-rise on Main Street. Office permitting in Salt Lake City isn't quick or cheap.

previousnext

Latest comments

Sarah Palin a "seed needed to grow"... are you kidding me? I guess...

I remember watching a program where they took scans and photos of the shroud...

I have just the solution. The Free Market! Those who think that the sky is...

Mitchell's attorneys file to withdraw

"which contains information that could be used for impeachment purposes,"...

Expect epic clash on the line

Against Oklahoma were his own fault. Three count em three. He is a poor...

Editorial: Hold the line on taxes

I am a true Utah County Republican/Libertarian. Any tax is too much for me....

How the heck can you incarcerate a man for growing the very plant the US...

Just as Scott McClellan's sudden realization of the Bush administrations...

BYU records with win

The only way to know which team is better is for them to play each other.

Jason is the best thing to happen to Washington D.C. Thanks for the...

Advertisements