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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLTC 237-2026 Transmittal of SOFNA RE 1st Street Project Pump StationMIAMI BEACH OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK LETTER TO COMMISSION L TC #237 -2026 TO: FROM: DATE: SUBJECT: Mayor Steven Meiner and Members of the City Commission Rafael E.Granado,City Clerk rl June 1,2026 Transmittal of SOFNA Email Correspondence Regarding Funding for the 1°'Street Project/Pump Station. Attached please find a memorandum submitted by the South of Fifth Neighborhood Association (SOFNA)regarding funding for the 1Street Project/Pump Station. https://miamibeach.sharepoint.comlsites/CMB-CityClerk/Shared Documents/Public Department Share/$ALUalTC'SILTC Template For City Clerk/LTC SOFNA 1st Street Pump Station.docxTrans CITY OF MIAMI BEACH Finance and Economic Resiliency Committee -Memorandum TO:Members of the Finance and Economic Resiliency Committee (FERC) FROM:Keith Marks,SOFNA DATE:6/1/2026 RE:Request to Consider a Narrow Stormwater Bond Carve-Out to the Rate Moratorium Protecting South of Fifth from Tidal Flooding Dear Chair and Members of the Committee, I want to begin by affirming what the Commission got right.The moratorium on water,sewer,and stormwater rate increases adopted on May 20 (Item C7 Al)was a response to a real problem.Our residents are absorbing rising insurance premiums,higher assessments,inflation,and a 19%wholesale sewer pass-through from Miami-Dade County-all in a single year.The "death by a thousand cuts" concern is legitimate,and the Commission was right to draw a line in defense of affordability. This memo is not a request to abandon that principle.It is a request to refine it. The unintended consequence:a one-size-fits-all freeze locks us out of our only tool. The moratorium,as written,treats all three utilities identically.But the Stormwater Fund is structurally different from water and sewer in one critical way:it is the only legal funding source for a stormwater pump station,and a stormwater rate increase is not a regressive tax.Because our stormwater fee is calculated on impervious surface area roofs,parking decks,and paved lots the burden falls overwhelmingly on those most able to bear it.The commission has the authority to issue a $200 Million Enterprise Stormwater Bond.To do so requires a narrow lifting of the utilities moratorium for a Stormwater Rate increase to cover the cost of the bond payments.Based on a estimate provided in the attached PowerPoint PDF,a single-family homeowner would see roughly $69 a year/$5.75 per month increase to their cost of living.A large beachfront hotel would see roughly $6,900 a year,and a major resort over $34,500 a year paying as much as 500 times what a resident pays.The bulk of our lower- income population are renters,who do not receive this bill directly.This is the opposite of a regressive tax;it is a targeted,fee-for-service charge tied to the runoff each property creates. By freezing this mechanism alongside water and sewer,the moratorium inadvertently closes off the single most equitable path we have to fund critical drainage infrastructure-and it does so at the worst possible moment. Why this is urgent for South of Fifth. The accompanying PowerPoint lays out the full analysis,but the essentials are these: •South of Fifth pays roughly 15%of the City's entire property tax base -yet received virtually nothing fo r flood protect ion.The 2018 G.O.Bond allocated approximately $730,000 to the neighborhood (0.17%of $439M)and zero dollars to the 1st Street Pump Station,which was never on that ballot.By contrast,Flamingo Park received $20M,La Gorce $14M,and North Shore $8M. •Only the Stormwater Fund can legally fund this project.Of the City's 14 infrastructure funding streams,the Sewer and Water Funds are the wrong purpose,the City Center and North Beach RDAs are the wrong geography,and the G.O.Bond does not fund underground pump stations.A Stormwater Revenue Bond -issued by Commission resolution,requiring no public vote -is the appropriate instrument. •The clock is running on $35 million in grants.We have 18 months reserved for permitting Phases 1 and 2.If we cannot fund the construction start within that window,we risk losing $35M in committed grant dollars-money our residents will not get back. •A safe,prudent bond requires only a modest,well-targeted increase.To support a $200M Stormwater Revenue Bond funding the full 1st Street project plus other critical citywide drainage needs at a rating-agency-safe 1.40x coverage,the analysis points to roughly a 23%stormwater increase:about $5.75 per month for a typical household.For perspective,the water/sewer ordinance the Commission declined in May proposed roughly $79 per month.Bond financing leverages this modest increase at approximately 15-t0-1. What we are asking of FERC. We are not asking the Commission to rescind the moratorium wholesale,nor to walk back its commitment to affordability.We are asking the Committee to consider recommending a narrow, surgical carve-out lifting the moratorium solely for the purpose of a stormwater rate adjustment dedicated to this bond issuance and to direct the Administration and our financial advisor to confirm the exact coverage figures and model a simultaneous refunding of the callable Series 2017 bonds,which could reduce the required increase further.We would further recommend pairing any increase with a low-income lifeline rate and a senior hardship exemption,so that the residents the moratorium was designed to protect remain protected. The moratorium protects residents from being nickel-and-dimed.A targeted stormwater carve-out protects those same residents from something far worse the loss of their homes and their tax base to recurrent flooding.These goals are not in conflict.With the right structure,we can honor both. The attached PowerPoint provides the supporting data,the funding inventory,the coverage analysis, and the equity breakdown.I am grateful for the Committee's time and for its continued stewardship of both our residents'wallets and our City's future. Respectfully, Keith Marks South of Fifth Neighborhood Association,President President@sofna.org Attachment:Stormwater Bond Decision Package (8-slide analysis) City of Miami Beach · Commission BriefingStormwater Bond Decision Package Funding the 1st Street Pump Station & Citywide Resilience A $200M Revenue Bond Analysis The ChallengeThe Challenge in Front of Us $125M Total 1st Street Pump Station shortfall Phase 1&2: $54M Phase 3&4: $71M $35M Grants at risk Forfeited if Phase 1 does not break ground within the 18-month window. 18 months —permitting window Time reserved for permitting before Phase 1&2 funding must be in place. South of Fifth faces tidal flooding. The clock is running on $35M in grants. We need a funding decision now. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 02/8 How We Got Here · The 2018 Bond GapWhat South of Fifth Pays vs. What It Got The 1st Street Pump Station Was Never on the 2018 Ballot Taxable Property Value SoFi: ~15% $9B taxable value · $50M/yr property tax) 2018 G.O. Bond —Exclusive SoFi Allocations ◄SoFi: ~0.17% ($730K of $439M —South Pointe Park $480K + bollards $250K) 2018 Bond —1st Street Pump Station SoFi: 0% not on the ballot, $0 allocated 15% of the tax base. 0.17% of the bond. 0% of the pump station.For comparison: Flamingo Park $20M · La Gorce $14M · North Shore $8M · South of Fifth $730K This isn't neglect —the 1st Street Pump Station simply wasn't on the 2018 ballot. The bond's structure determined what was funded, and the pump station was not among the listed projects. And no new infrastructure G.O. Bond has been authorized since 2018. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 03/8 The Funding InventoryWhich Funding Source Can Legally Pay for It? Of 14 Funding Streams, Only One Fits Without Restriction Stormwater Enterprise Fund ELIGIBLE the only clean fit South Pointe RDA Legacy $6.97M already pre-allocated to 1st Street General Fund PayGo / Capital Millage Conditional · modest capacity State / Federal Grants The $35M at risk · time-limited Sewer Fund / Water Fund ✕Wrong purpose City Center / North Beach RDA ✕Wrong geography 2018 G.O. Bond ✕Doesn't fund underground pumps The Stormwater Enterprise Fund is the legally and geographically appropriate source. Revenue bonds backed by it require NO public vote —Commission resolution only. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 04/8 The ObstacleThe May 2026 Moratorium Blocked the Path Item C7 AI Passed May 20, 2026 What It Does Freezes all water, sewer & stormwater rate increases. THREE ESCAPE HATCHES a A 5/7ths rescission vote by the Commission b A declared public safety emergency c A regulatory order compelling action The Impact The Stormwater Revenue Bond pathway is functionally blocked. Without the ability to grow rates, the Stormwater Fund cannot increase net revenues to back new debt. A larger bond needs additional coverage —and coverage requires revenue growth the freeze prevents. To issue a bond large enough for the full program, the Commission would need to lift the moratorium by a 5/7ths vote. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 05/8 The Bond Capacity AnalysisCan the Stormwater Fund Support $200M As-Is? Not Without a Rate Increase —But the Actual Need Fits The Coverage Math Current net revenues available ~$34M Current debt service (~2.0× coverage)~$17M A $200M bond adds ~$13.8M/yr →~$30.8M Coverage with no rate increase ~1.10× Legal floor —financially unsafe, downgrade risk Capacity without a rate increase lands at roughly $155175M —short of the full $200M citywide program. What Fits Today $54M Phase 1&2 · ~$3.7M/yr Easily supported $125M All phases · $8.6M/yr Supported $200M Full citywide program Exceeds capacity without a rate increase The $125M actual need fits within current capacity. The full $200M citywide program requires a rate increase to stay safe. All financial figures are planning estimates and require a formal feasibility study and confirmation by the City's financial advisor. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 06/8 The Coverage LadderWhat Rate Increase Safely Covers $200M? Assumes the 5/7 Moratorium Is Lifted · Coverage Ladder Rate Increase Coverage Monthly / Household Assessment 0%1.10 $25.00 RISKY —legal floor, downgrade risk ~8%1.20× $27.00 MINIMUM —legal but thin ~18%1.35 $29.50 PRUDENT —solid cushion ~23%1.40× $30.75 SAFE RECOMMENDED ~30%1.50 $32.50 STRONG —aspirational Recommended ~23% → 1.40× coverage → ~$30.75/month (+$5.75)—for a $200M citywide resilience program. Far smaller than the failed May 2026 ~$79/month water/sewer ordinance. Bonds leverage the increase ~15-to-1. All financial figures are planning estimates and require a formal feasibility study and confirmation by the City's financial advisor. City of Miami Beach | Stormwater Bond Decision Package 07/8 Who Actually Pays the 23% Stormwater Increase? Because the Fee Tracks Impervious Surface, Hotels & Commercial Carry the Load —Not Residents Miami Beach's stormwater fee is based on IMPERVIOUS AREA (roofs, parking, decks) —the actual cause of runoff. Properties pay in proportion to the burden they create. This makes it a fee-for -service, not a flat tax. Annual Increase by Property Type —drawn to scale Single-family home $25.00 → $30.75/mo $69/yr Small condo $1225/mo +$35–69/yr Small retail 5,000 sq ft · 4.2 ERU +$290/yr Mid commercial 50,000 sq ft · 42 ERU $2,900/yr Large hotel 100,000+ sq ft · 100+ ERU $6,900/yr Major resort 500,000+ sq ft · 500+ ERU +$34,500/yr Residential Commercial Hotels / Resorts ~500× A beachfront resort pays roughly 500what a homeowner pays.The 23% increase falls primarily on hotels, resorts & commercial —who cause the most runoff and recover costs from tourists. Why This Is Equitable ✓Fee tracks impervious area = the cause of runoff ✓Hotels / commercial pay 100500more than residents ✓Renters —most of MB's low-income —often shielded; billed to owner ✓Modest resident impact: ~$5.75 / month ✓Most progressive of realistic options —vs. sales tax, flat fee, or service cuts Fairness Safeguards to Add Fixed-income senior homeowners pay full freight • Flat residential ERU doesn't scale with wealth • Cumulative stacking atop the 19% WASD hike →3 safeguards:1 Low-income lifeline rate (50% discount below AMI  2 Senior / fixed-income hardship exemption • (3 Renter pass-through transparency The Verdict Equitable in structure —far fairer than a sales tax or service cuts —but add low-income and senior safeguards to protect the most vulnerable. Source: Miami Beach Ordinance 2000-3274 (impervious-area ERU methodology); U.S. Census QuickFacts (median household income $72,856; poverty rate 14.4%); FY 2026 Utility Rates. Property-type figures are illustrative estimates based on the impervious-area formula (commercial ERU = impervious sq ft ÷ 791).1 / 1 The DecisionThe Path Forward A Sequenced Decision to Protect Grants and Fund Resilience 1 LIFT the moratorium by 5/7ths vote —specifically authorizing a stormwater rate adjustment tied to the bond. 2 ADOPT a ~23% stormwater rate increase → 1.40× coverage, ~$5.75/month per household. 3 AUTHORIZE a $200M Stormwater Revenue Bond by Commission resolution —no public vote required. 4 ISSUE Series 2026A within the 18-month permitting window to protect $35M in at-risk grants. 5 DEPLOY:Phase 1&2 ($54M) → Phase 3&4 ($71M) → other citywide stormwater ($75M). 6 DIRECT Finance / financial advisor to confirm exact net revenues, run the Additional Bonds Test, and model a simultaneous Series 2017 refunding to potentially reduce the rate increase. This path protects $35M in grants, funds the full citywide resilience program, requires no public vote, and keeps household impact modest —but depends on the Commission lifting the moratorium. 08/8