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CPA Implementation - Enabling Legislation
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Chapter 267 of the Acts of 2000
(With all amendments integrated: SB 2343 ( July 2002), HB 3944 (July 2003), HB 4709 (December 2004), HB 1680 (March 2006), SB 167 (September 2006), and SB 2725 (December 2006).
AN ACT RELATIVE TO COMMUNITY PRESERVATION.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives in General Court assembled, and by
the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. The
General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after chapter
44A the following chapter:- CHAPTER 44B.
COMMUNITY PRESERVATION.
Section 1. This
chapter shall be known and may be cited as the
Massachusetts Community Preservation Act.
Section 2. As used in
this chapter, the following words shall, unless the
context clearly indicates a different meaning, have
the following meanings:-
"Acquire",
obtain by gift, purchase, devise, grant, rental,
rental purchase, lease or otherwise.
"Acquire" shall not include a taking by
eminent domain, except as provided in this chapter.
"Annual
income", a family's or person's gross annual
income less such reasonable allowances for
dependents, other than a spouse, and for medical
expenses as the housing authority or, in the event
that there is no housing authority, the department
of housing and community development, determines.
"Community
housing", low and moderate income housing for
individuals and families, including low or moderate
income senior housing.
"Community
preservation", the acquisition, creation and
preservation of open space, the acquisition,
creation and preservation of historic resources and the creation and preservation of
community housing.
"Community
preservation committee", the committee
established by the legislative body of a city or
town to make recommendations for community
preservation, as provided in section 5.
"Community
Preservation Fund", the municipal fund
established under section 7.
"CP",
community preservation.
"Historic resources", a building,
structure, vessel, real property, document or artifact that is listed or
eligible for listing on the state register of
historic places or has been determined by the local
historic preservation commission to be significant
in the history, archeology, architecture or culture
of a city or town.
"Legislative
body", the agency of municipal government which
is empowered to enact ordinances or by-laws, adopt
an annual budget and other spending authorizations,
loan orders, bond authorizations and other financial
matters and whether styled as a city council, board
of aldermen, town council, town meeting or by any
other title.
"Low income
housing", housing for those persons and
families whose annual income is less than 80 per
cent of the areawide median income. The areawide
median income shall be the areawide median income as
determined by the United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
"Low or moderate
income senior housing", housing for those
persons having reached the age of 60 or over who
would qualify for low or moderate income housing.
"Maintenance",
the upkeep of real or personal property.
"Moderate income
housing", housing for those persons and
families whose annual income is less than 100 per
cent of the areawide median income. The areawide
median income shall be the areawide median income as
determined by the United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
"Open
space", shall include, but not be limited to,
land to protect existing and future well fields,
aquifers and recharge areas, watershed land,
agricultural land, grasslands, fields, forest land,
fresh and salt water marshes and other wetlands,
ocean, river, stream, lake and pond frontage,
beaches, dunes and other coastal lands, lands to
protect scenic vistas, land for wildlife or nature
preserve and land for recreational use.
"Preservation",
protection of personal or real property from injury,
harm or destruction, but not including maintenance.
"Real
property", land, buildings, appurtenant
structures and fixtures attached to buildings or
land, including, where applicable, real property
interests.
"Real property
interest", a present or future legal or
equitable interest in or to real property, including
easements and restrictions, and any beneficial
interest therein, including the interest of a
beneficiary in a trust which holds a legal or
equitable interest in real property, but shall not
include an interest which is limited to the
following: an estate at will or at sufferance and
any estate for years having a term of less than 30
years; the reversionary right, condition or right of
entry for condition broken; the interest of a
mortgagee or other secured party in a mortgage or
security agreement.
"Recreational
use", active or passive recreational use
including, but not limited to, the use of land for
community gardens, trails, and noncommercial youth
and adult sports, and the use of land as a park,
playground or athletic field. "Recreational
use" shall not include horse or dog racing or
the use of land for a stadium, gymnasium or similar
structure.
"Rehabilitation",
the remodeling, reconstruction and making of extraordinary repairs to
historic resources, open spaces, lands for recreational use and
community housing for the purpose of making such historic resources,
open spaces, lands for recreational use and community housing functional
for their intended use, including but not limited to improvements to
comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act and other federal, state
or local building or access codes. With respect to historic resources,
rehabilitation shall have the additional meaning of work to comply with
the Standards for Rehabilitation stated in the United States Secretary
of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties
codified in 36 C.F.R. Part 68.
Section 3. (a)
Sections 3 to 7, inclusive, shall take effect in any
city or town upon the approval by the legislative
body and their acceptance by the voters of a ballot
question as set forth in this section.
(b) Notwithstanding
the provisions of chapter
59 or any other general or special law to the
contrary, the legislative body may vote to accept
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, by approving a surcharge
on real property of not more than 3 per cent of the
real estate tax levy against real property, as
determined annually by the board of assessors. The
amount of the surcharge shall not be included in a
calculation of total taxes assessed for purposes of section
21C of said chapter 59.
(c) All exemptions
and abatements of real property authorized by said
chapter 59 or any other law for which a taxpayer
qualifies as eligible shall not be affected by this
chapter. A taxpayer receiving an exemption of real
property authorized by said chapter 59 or any other
law shall be exempt from any surcharge on real
property established under this section. The
surcharge to be paid by a taxpayer receiving an
abatement of real property authorized by said
chapter 59 or any other law shall be reduced in
proportion to the amount of such abatement.
(d) Any amount of the
surcharge not paid by the due date shall bear
interest at the rate per annum provided in section
57 of said chapter 59.
(e) The legislative
body may also vote to accept one or more of the
following exemptions:
(1) for property
owned and occupied as a domicile by a person who
would qualify for low income housing or low or
moderate income senior housing in the city or town;
(2) for class three,
commercial, and class four, industrial, properties
as defined in section
2A of said chapter 59, in cities or towns with
classified tax rates; or
(3) for $100,000 of
the value of each taxable parcel of residential real
property.
(f) Upon approval by
the legislative body, the actions of the body shall
be submitted for acceptance to the voters of a city
or town at the next regular municipal or state
election. The city or town clerk or the state
secretary shall place it on the ballot in the form
of the following question:
"Shall this
(city or town) accept sections 3 to 7, inclusive of
chapter 44B of the General Laws, as approved by its
legislative body, a summary of which appears
below?"
(Set forth here a
fair, concise summary and purpose of the law to be
acted upon, as determined by the city solicitor or
town counsel, including in said summary the
percentage of the surcharge to be imposed.)
If a majority of the
voters voting on said question vote in the
affirmative, then its provisions shall take effect
in the city or town, but not otherwise.
(g) The final date
for notifying or filing a petition with the city or
town clerk or the state secretary to place such a
question on the ballot shall be 35 days before the
city or town election or 60 days before the state
election.
(h) If the
legislative body does not vote to accept sections 3
to 7, inclusive, at least 90 days before a regular
city or town election or 120 days before a state
election, then a question seeking said acceptance
through approval of a particular surcharge rate with
exemption or exemptions, may be so placed on the
ballot when a petition signed by at least 5 per cent
of the registered voters of the city or town
requesting such action is filed with the registrars,
who shall have seven days after receipt of such
petition to certify its signatures. Upon
certification of the signatures, the city or town
clerk or the state secretary shall cause the
question to be placed on the ballot at the next
regular city or town election held more than 35 days
after such certification or at the next regular
state election held more than 60 days after such
certification.
(i) With respect to real property owned by a cooperative corporation, as defined in section 4 of chapter 157B, that portion which is occupied by a member under a proprietary lease as the member's domicile shall be considered real property owned by that member for the purposes of exemptions provided under this section. The member's portion of the real estate shall be represented by the member's share or shares of stock in the cooperative corporation and the percentage of that portion to the whole shall be determined by the percentage of the member's shares to the total outstanding stock of the corporation, including shares owned by the corporation. This portion of the real property shall be eligible for any exemption provided in this section if the member meets all requirements for the exemption. Any exemption so provided shall reduce the taxable valuation of the real property owned by the cooperative corporation, and the reduction in taxes realized by this exemption shall be credited by the cooperative corporation against the amount of the taxes otherwise payable by or chargeable to the member. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to affect the tax status of any manufactured home or mobile home under this chapter, but this subsection shall apply to the land on which the manufactured home or mobile home is located if all other requirements of this clause are met. This subsection shall take effect in a city or town upon its acceptance by the city or town.
Section 4. (a) Upon
acceptance of sections 3 to 7, inclusive, and upon
the assessors' warrant to the tax collector, the
accepted surcharge shall be imposed.
(b) After receipt of
the warrant, the tax collector shall collect the
surcharge in the amount and according to the
computation specified in the warrant and shall pay
the amounts so collected, quarterly or
semi-annually, according to the schedule for
collection of property taxes for the tax on real
property, to the city's or town's treasurer. The tax
collector shall cause appropriate books and accounts
to be kept with respect to such surcharge, which
shall be subject to public examination upon
reasonable request from time to time.
(c) The remedies
provided by chapter
60 for the collection of taxes upon real estate
shall apply to the surcharge on real property
pursuant to this chapter.
Section 5. (a) A city
or town that accepts sections 3 to 7, inclusive,
shall establish by ordinance or by-law a community
preservation committee. The committee shall consist
of not less than five nor more than nine members.
The ordinance or by-law shall determine the
composition of the committee, the length of its term
and the method of selecting its members, whether by
election or appointment or by a combination thereof.
The committee shall include, but not be limited to,
one member of the conservation commission
established under section
8C of chapter 40 as designated by the
commission, one member of the historical commission
established under section
8D of said chapter 40 as designated by the
commission, one member of the planning board
established under section
81A of chapter 41 as designated by the board,
one member of the board of park commissioners
established under section
2 of chapter 45 as designated by the board and
one member of the housing authority established
under section
3 of chapter 121B as designated by the
authority, or persons, as determined by the
ordinance or by-law, acting in the capacity of or
performing like duties of the commissions, board or
authority if they have not been established in the
city or town. If there are no persons acting in the
capacity of or performing like duties of any such
commission, board or authority, the ordinance or
by-law shall designate those persons.
(b)(1) The community
preservation committee shall study the needs,
possibilities and resources of the city or town
regarding community preservation. The committee
shall consult with existing municipal boards,
including the conservation commission, the
historical commission, the planning board, the board
of park commissioners and the housing authority, or
persons acting in those capacities or performing
like duties, in conducting such studies. As part of
its study, the committee shall hold one or more
public informational hearings on the needs,
possibilities and resources of the city or town
regarding community preservation possibilities and
resources, notice of which shall be posted publicly
and published for each of two weeks preceding a
hearing in a newspaper of general circulation in the
city or town.
(2) The community preservation committee
shall make recommendations to the legislative body for the acquisition,
creation and preservation of open space; for the acquisition,
preservation, rehabilitation and restoration of historic resources; for
the acquisition, creation and preservation of land for recreational use;
for the acquisition, creation, preservation and support of community housing; and for
the rehabilitation or restoration of open space, land for recreational
use and community housing that is acquired or created as provided in
this section. With respect to community housing, the community
preservation committee shall recommend, wherever possible, the reuse of
existing buildings or construction of new buildings on previously
developed sites.
(3) The community
preservation committee may include in its
recommendation to the legislative body a
recommendation to set aside for later spending funds
for specific purposes that are consistent with
community preservation but for which sufficient
revenues are not then available in the Community
Preservation Fund to accomplish that specific
purpose or to set aside for later spending funds for
general purposes that are consistent with community
preservation.
(c) The community
preservation committee shall not meet or conduct
business without the presence of a quorum. A
majority of the members of the community
preservation committee shall constitute a quorum.
The community preservation committee shall approve
its actions by majority vote. Recommendations to the
legislative body shall include their anticipated
costs.
(d) After receiving
such recommendations from the community preservation
committee, the legislative body shall then take such
action and approve such appropriations from the
Community Preservation Fund as set forth in section
8, and such additional appropriations as it deems
appropriate to carry out the recommendations of the
community preservation committee.
(e) For the purposes
of community preservation and upon the
recommendation of the community preservation
committee, a city or town may take by eminent domain
under chapter
79, the fee or any lesser interest in real
property or waters located in such city or town if
such taking has first been approved by a two-thirds
vote of the legislative body. Upon a like
recommendation and vote, a city or town may expend
monies in the Community Preservation Fund, if any,
for the purpose of paying, in whole or in part, any
damages for which a city or town may be liable by
reason of a taking for the purposes of community
preservation.
(f) Section 16 of chapter 30B shall not apply to the acquisition by a city or town, of real property or an interest therein, as authorized by this chapter for the purposes of community preservation and upon recommendation of the community preservation committee, and notwithstanding the provisions of section 14 of chapter 40, for purposes of this chapter, no such real property, or interest therein, shall be acquired by any city or town for a price exceeding the value of the property as determined by such city or town through procedures customarily accepted by the appraising profession as valid.
A city or town may appropriate money in any year from the Community Preservation Fund to an affordable housing trust fund.
Section 6. In every
fiscal year and upon the recommendation of the
community preservation committee, the legislative
body shall spend, or set aside for later spending,
not less than 10 per cent of the annual revenues in
the Community Preservation Fund for open space, but
not including land for recreational use, not less
than 10 per cent of the annual revenues for historic
resources and not less than 10 per cent of the
annual revenues for community housing. In each
fiscal year, the legislative body shall make such
appropriations from the Community Preservation Fund
as it deems necessary for the administrative and
operating expenses of the community preservation
committee, but the appropriations shall not exceed 5
per cent of the annual revenues in the Community
Preservation Fund. Funds that are set aside shall be
held in the Community Preservation Fund and spent in
that year or later years, but funds set aside for a
specific purpose shall be spent only for the
specific purpose. Any funds set aside may be
expended in any city or town in the commonwealth.
The community preservation funds shall not replace
existing operating funds, only augment them.
Section 7.
Notwithstanding the provisions of section
53 of chapter 44 or any other general or special
law to the contrary, a city or town that accepts
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, shall establish a
separate account to be known as the Community
Preservation Fund of which the municipal treasurer
shall be the custodian. The authority to approve
expenditures from the fund shall be limited to the
legislative body and the municipal treasurer shall
pay such expenses in accordance with chapter
41.
The following monies
shall be deposited in the fund: (a) all funds
collected from the real property surcharge or bond
proceeds in anticipation of revenue pursuant to
sections 4 and 11; (b) all funds received from the
commonwealth or any other source for such purposes;
and (c) proceeds from the disposal of real property
acquired with funds from the Community Preservation
Fund. The treasurer may deposit or invest the
proceeds of the fund in savings banks, trust
companies incorporated under the laws of the
commonwealth, banking companies incorporated under
the laws of the commonwealth which are members of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or
national banks, or may invest the proceeds in paid
up shares and accounts of and in co-operative banks
or in shares of savings and loan associations or in
shares of federal savings and loan associations
doing business in the commonwealth or in the manner
authorized by section
54 of chapter 44, and any income therefrom shall
be credited to the fund. The expenditure of revenues
from the fund shall be limited to implementing the
recommendations of the community preservation
committee and providing administrative and operating
expenses to the committee.
Section 8. (a) The
fees of the registers of deeds, except as otherwise
provided, to be paid when the instrument is left for
recording, filing or deposit shall be subject to a
surcharge of $20. The fees for so recording, filing
or depositing a municipal lien certificate shall be
subject to a surcharge of $10. The surcharges shall
be imposed for the purposes of community
preservation. No surcharge shall apply to a
declaration of homestead under chapter
188. No surcharge shall apply to the fees
charged for additional pages, photostatic copies,
abstract cards, additional square feet for the
filing and recording of plans or for additional or
required marginal references.
(b) The fees of the
assistant recorder, except as otherwise provided, to
be paid when the instrument is left for registering,
filing or entering with respect to registered land
shall be subject to a surcharge of $20. The fees for
so registering, filing or entering a municipal lien
certificate shall be subject to a surcharge of $10.
The surcharges shall be imposed for the purposes of
community preservation. No surcharge shall apply to
a declaration of homestead of chapter
188. No surcharge shall apply to the fees
charged for additional lots shown on plans, for
indexing instruments recorded while a petition for
registering is pending, for additional certificates
of sewer assessments, for old age assistance liens,
for duplicates and for photocopies.
(c) All surcharges on
fees collected pursuant to this section shall be
forwarded to the Massachusetts Community
Preservation Trust Fund, established in section 9.
Section 9. (a) There
shall be established and set up on the books of the
commonwealth a separate fund, to be known as the
Massachusetts Community Preservation Trust Fund, for
the benefit of cities and towns that have accepted
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, and pursuant to said
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, have imposed a surcharge
on their real property tax levy, subject to any
exemptions adopted by a municipality. The fund shall
consist of all revenues received by the
commonwealth: (1) under the provisions of section 8;
(2) from public and private sources as gifts, grants
and donations to further community preservation
programs; (3) from damages, penalties, costs or
interest received on account of litigation or
settlement thereof for a violation of section 15; or
(4) all other monies credited to or transferred to
from any other fund or source pursuant to law.
(b) The state
treasurer shall deposit the fund in accordance with
the provisions of section 10 in such manner as will
secure the highest interest rate available
consistent with the safety of the fund and with the
requirement that all amounts on deposit be available
for withdrawal without penalty for such withdrawal
at any time. All interest accrued and earnings shall
be deposited into the fund. The fund shall be
expended solely for the administration and
implementation of this chapter. Any unexpended
balances shall be redeposited for future use
consistent with the provisions of this chapter.
(c) The state
treasurer shall make all disbursements and
expenditures from the fund without further
appropriation, as directed by the commissioner of
revenue in accordance with said section 10. The
department of revenue shall report by source all
amounts credited to said fund and all expenditures
from said fund. The commissioner of revenue shall
assign personnel of the department as it may need to
administer and manage the fund disbursements and any
expense incurred by the department shall be deemed
an operating and administrative expense of the
program. The operating and administrative expenses
shall not exceed 5 per cent of the annual total
revenue received under the provisions of said
section 10.
Section 10. (a) The
commissioner of revenue shall annually on October 15
disburse monies from the fund established in section
10 to cities and towns that have accepted sections 3
to 7, inclusive, and notified the commissioner of
their acceptance. The community shall notify the
commissioner of the date and terms on which the
voters accepted said sections 3 to 7, inclusive. The
municipal tax collecting authority shall certify to
the commissioner the amount the municipality has
raised through June 30 by imposing a surcharge on
its real property levy and shall certify the
percentage of the surcharge applied.
(b) The commissioner
shall multiply the amount in the fund by 80 per
cent. This amount distributed in the first round
distribution shall be known as the match
distribution. The first round total shall be
distributed to each city or town accepting said
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, in an amount not less
than 5 per cent but not greater than 100 per cent of
the total amount raised by the additional surcharge
on real property by each city or town. The
percentage shall be the same for each city and town
and shall be determined by the commissioner annually
in a manner that distributes the maximum amount
available to each participating city or town.
(c) The commissioner
shall further divide the remaining 20 per cent of
the fund in a second round distribution, known as
the equity distribution. The commissioner shall
determine the equity distribution in several steps.
The first step shall be to divide the remaining 20
per cent of the fund by the number of cities and
towns that have accepted said sections 3 to 7,
inclusive. This dividend shall be known as the base
figure for equity distribution. This base figure
shall be determined solely for purposes of
performing the calculation for equity distribution
and shall not be added to the amount received by a
participant.
(d) Each city and
town in the commonwealth shall be assigned a
community preservation rank for purposes of the
equity distribution. The commissioner shall
determine each community's rank by first determining
the municipality's equalized property valuation per
capita ranking, ranking municipalities from highest
to lowest valuation. The commissioner shall also
determine the population of each municipality and
rank each from largest to smallest in population.
The commissioner shall add each equalized property
valuation rank and population rank, and divide the
sum by two. The dividend is the community
preservation raw score for that municipality.
(e) The commissioner
shall then order each municipality by CP raw score,
from the lowest raw score to the highest raw score.
This order shall be the CP rank for each
municipality. If more than one municipality has the
same CP raw score, the municipality with the higher
equalized valuation rank shall receive the higher CP
rank.
(f) After determining
the CP rank for each municipality in the
commonwealth, the commissioner shall divide all
municipalities into deciles according to their CP
ranking, with approximately the same number of
municipalities in each decile, and with the
municipalities with the highest CP rank shall be
placed in the lowest decile category, starting with
decile 10. Percentages shall be assigned to each
decile as follows:
| decile 1 |
140 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 2 |
130 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 3 |
120 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 4 |
110 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 5 |
100 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 6 |
90 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 7 |
80 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 8 |
70 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 9 |
60 per cent of the base figure |
| decile 10 |
50 per cent of the base figure |
After assigning each
municipality to a decile according to their CP rank,
the commissioner shall multiply the percentage
assigned to that decile by the base figure to
determine the second round equity distribution for
each participant.
(f) Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section, the total state
contribution for each city or town shall not exceed
the amount raised by the municipality's surcharge on
its real property levy.
(g) When there are
monies remaining in the trust fund after the first
and second round distributions, and any necessary
administrative expenses have been paid in accordance
with section 6, the commissioner may conduct a third
round surplus distribution. Any remaining surplus in
the fund may be distributed by dividing the amount
of the surplus by the number of cities and towns
that have accepted this chapter. The resulting
dividend shall be the surplus base figure. The
commissioner shall then use the decile categories
and percentages as defined in this section to
determine a surplus equity distribution for each
participant.
(h) The commissioner
shall determine each participant's total state grant
by adding the amount received in the first round
distribution with the amounts received in any later
round or rounds of distributions, with the exception
of a city or town that has already received a grant
equal to 100 per cent of the amount the community
raised by its surcharge on its real property levy.
(1) Only those cities
and towns that adopt the maximum surcharge allowed
by this chapter shall be eligible to receive
additional state monies through the equity and
surplus distributions.
(2) If less than 10
per cent of the cities and towns in the commonwealth
have accepted sections 3 to 7, inclusive, and
imposed and collected a surcharge on their real
property levy, the commissioner may calculate the
state grant with only one round of distributions, or
in any other equitable manner.
(j) After
distributing the trust fund in accordance with this
section, the commissioner may keep any remaining
funds in the trust for distribution in the following
year.
Section 11. A city or
town that accepts sections 3 to 7, inclusive, may
issue, from time to time, general obligation bonds
or notes in anticipation of revenues to be raised
pursuant to section 3, the proceeds of which shall
be deposited in the Community Preservation Fund.
Bonds or notes so issued may be at such rates of
interest as shall be necessary and shall be repaid
as soon after such revenues are collected as is
expedient. Cities or towns that choose to issue
bonds pursuant to this section shall make every
effort to limit the administrative costs of issuing
such bonds by cooperating among each other using
methods including, but not limited to, common
issuance of bonds or common retention of bond
counsel. Except as otherwise provided in this
chapter, bonds or notes issued pursuant to this
section shall be subject to the applicable
provisions of chapter
44. The maturities of each issue of bonds or
notes issued under this chapter may be arranged so
that for each issue the amounts payable in the
several years for principal and interest combined
shall be as nearly equal as practicable in the
opinion of the officers authorized to issue bonds or
notes or, in the alternative, in accordance with a
schedule providing for a more rapid amortization of
principal.
Section 12. (a) A
real property interest that is purchased with monies
from the Community Preservation Fund shall be bound
by a permanent deed restriction that meets the
requirements of chapter
184, limiting the use of the interest to the
purpose for which it was acquired. The deed
restriction shall run with the land and shall be
enforceable by the city or town or the commonwealth.
The deed restriction may also run to the benefit of
a nonprofit, charitable corporation or foundation
selected by the city or town with the right to
enforce the restriction.
(b) Real property
interests acquired under this chapter shall be owned
and managed by the city or town, but the legislative
body may delegate management of such property to the
conservation commission, the historical commission,
the board of park commissioners or the housing
authority, or, in the case of interests to acquire
sites for future wellhead development by a water
district, a water supply district or a fire
district. The legislative body may also delegate
management of such property to a nonprofit
organization created under chapter
180 or chapter
203.
Section 13. The
community preservation committee shall keep a full
and accurate account of all of its actions,
including its recommendations and the action taken
on them and records of all appropriations or
expenditures made from the Community Preservation
Fund. The committee shall also keep records of any
real property interests acquired, disposed of or
improved by the city or town upon its
recommendation, including the names and addresses of
the grantors or grantees and the nature of the
consideration. The records and accounts shall be
public records.
Section 14.
Notwithstanding the provisions of any general or
special law to the contrary, every city and town may
accept sections 3 to 7, inclusive, and may thereupon
receive state grants under section 10. A city or
town that accepts said sections 3 to 7, inclusive,
shall not be precluded from participating in state
grant programs.
State grant programs
may include local adoption of this chapter among the
criteria for selection of grant recipients. Funds in
the Community Preservation Fund may be made
available and used by the city or town as the local
share for state or federal grants upon
recommendation of the community preservation
committee and the legislative body, as provided for
in section 5, if such grants and such local share
are used in a manner consistent with the
recommendations of the community preservation
committee.
Section 15. (a) A
person who, without permission, knowingly carries
away or steals, mutilates, destroys, damages, causes
to be damaged or cuts any tree, shrub, grass or any
other portion of real property purchased by a city
or town with funds derived from this chapter shall
be liable to the city or town in tort for such
actions.
(b) Damages,
including punitive damages for willful or wanton
violation of this chapter or any rule or regulation
issued or adopted hereunder, may be recovered in a
civil action brought by the city or town or, upon
request of the city or town, by the attorney
general. The city or town or, upon request of the
city or town, the attorney general, may bring an
action for injunctive relief against any person
violating this chapter or any rule or regulation
issued hereunder. The superior court shall have
jurisdiction to enjoin violations, to award damages
and to grant such further relief as it may deem
appropriate.
(c) Any damages,
penalties, costs or interest thereon recovered
pursuant to this section shall be deposited into the
Community Preservation Fund of the city or town in
which the violation occurred.
Section 16. (a) At
any time after imposition of the surcharge, the
legislative body may approve and the voters may
accept an amendment to the amount and computation of
the surcharge, or to the amount of exemption or
exemptions, in the same manner and within the
limitations set forth in this chapter.
(b) At any time after
the expiration of five years after the date on which
sections 3 to 7, inclusive, have been accepted in a
city or town, said sections may be revoked in the
same manner as they were accepted by such city or
town, but the surcharge imposed under section 3
shall remain in effect in any such city or town,
with respect to unpaid taxes on past transactions
and with respect to taxes due on future
transactions, until all contractual obligations
incurred by the city or town prior to such
termination shall have been fully discharged.
Section 17. The
commissioner of revenue shall have the authority to
promulgate rules and regulations to effect the
purposes of this chapter.
SECTION 2. Section
38 of chapter 262 of the General Laws, as
appearing in the 1998 Official Edition, is hereby
amended by adding the following paragraph:-
The fees of the
registers of deeds, except as otherwise provided, to
be paid when the instrument is left for recording,
filing or deposit shall be subject to a surcharge
under section 8 of chapter 44B.
SECTION 3. Section
39 of said chapter 262, as so appearing, is
hereby amended by adding the following paragraph:-
The fees of the
assistant recorder, except as otherwise provided, to
be paid when the instrument is left for registering,
filing or entering with respect to registered land
shall be subject to a surcharge under section 8 of
chapter 44B.
Approved
September 14, 2000.
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