Establish a charge to fund City payment of the Flood Safety Benefit Fee to the Urban Flood Safety and Water Quality District
The City of Portland ordains.
Section 1. The Council finds:
- The Oregon Legislature created the Urban Flood Safety and Water Quality District (UFSWQD) in 2019 through Senate Bill 431, now codified in Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) Chapter 550, to manage the levees, dikes, and other infrastructure that protect Portland and the surrounding communities from Columbia River flooding.
- In 2024, the Legislature, through Senate Bill 1517, gave the UFSWQD the authority to impose fees on local governments “to compensate the district for the overall fixed costs of operating the district and operating and maintaining district works that are not compensated for by the annual charge . . .”
- Beginning in Fiscal Year (FY) 2024-25 and annually thereafter, the UFSWQD assesses an annual flood safety benefit (FSB) fee to the City.
- In 2023, a workgroup consisting of multiple City bureaus and stakeholders examined multiple potential funding options. In response to a budget note in the FY 2024-25 Adopted Budget, the Chief Financial Officer recommended that the FSB fee initially be paid from the General Fund because of the broad benefit afforded by the UFSWQD’s infrastructure management. That recommendation also suggested that alternative funding options continue to be explored.
- In FY 2024-25, the City paid the FSB fee from its General Fund and it will do the same for FY 2025-26, during which the fee is estimated to total approximately $5.3 million.
- The FY 2025-26 Adopted Budget included a budget note identifying “an expectation that a fee will be incorporated into the City utility bill in an amount sufficient to cover the FSB fee on an ongoing basis beginning in FY 2026-27" and directing the Chief Financial Officer to convene a workgroup to “identify a recommended customer allocation methodology and implementation plan for consideration by the Finance Committee and/or City Council no later than October 15, 2025, in advance of FY 2026-27 budget development.”
- The workgroup convened by the Chief Financial Officer at Council direction assessed multiple potential cost allocation methodologies and collection strategies and recommended that, beginning with FY 2026-27, the City’s payment of the fee should be reimbursed to the City through a new charge on the unified water/sewer bill, thus utilizing an existing billing system. The fee should not, however, be considered or used as a utility fee.
- The workgroup further recommended that, upon collection of the fee, funds be deposited into the General Fund.
NOW, THEREFORE, the Council directs:
- The UFSWQD reimbursement fee is created and will be assessed by the Portland Water Bureau on the water, sewer, and stormwater bill according to the methodology described in Exhibit A.
Exhibits and Attachments
An ordinance when passed by the Council shall be signed by the Auditor. It shall be carefully filed and preserved
in the custody of the Auditor (City Charter Chapter 2 Article 1 Section 2-122)
Passed as amended by Council
Auditor of the City of Portland
Simone Rede
Impact Statement
Purpose of Proposed Legislation and Background Information
The proposed ordinance establishes a new fee, administered via the water/sewer bill, to address the Flood Safety Benefit (FSB) fee charged to the City by the Urban Flood Safety Water Quality District (UFSWQD) pursuant to ORS Chapter 550.
Financial and Budgetary Impacts
There are no budgetary impacts in FY 2025-26 as result of this ordinance. The FY 2026-27 budget will include collection of this fee, along with the administrative allocation to the Portland Water Bureau (including an annual administrative cost estimated at approximately 12% of collected revenue, plus a one-time charge of approximately $600,000 in FY 2026-27 for reimbursement of initial implementation costs).
Consistent with a budget note in the FY 2025-26 Adopted Budget, the General Fund forecast assumes that a new funding mechanism will be developed that removes the FSB fee funding burden from the General Fund. If the ordinance is not approved, the cost of this fee would remain with the General Fund, resulting in an increase to expenditures in the General Fund forecast and requiring a future decision about General Fund expenditure trade-offs.
Approval of this fee will add an estimated $1.20 monthly to the typical single-family residential water, sewer, and stormwater bill. Eligible low-income customers will receive a discount in alignment with the discount rate on water, sewer, and stormwater charges. Impacts to multi-family will vary based on the number of dwelling units. Non-residential customers will be charged as a percentage of their bill, helping to scale the fee based on usage and system impact.
Economic and Real Estate Development Impacts
Not applicable.
Community Impacts and Community Involvement
In alignment with the budget note included in the FY 2025-26 Proposed Budget and FY 2025-26 Adopted Budget, this fee will be assessed and collected using the utility bill, though it is not in itself a utility fee. Pending Council adoption, the City will undertake a coordinated, inclusive effort to inform and educate customers, ensuring that outreach involves community partners and reflects the diversity of Portland’s communities.
100% Renewable Goal
Not applicable.
Economic and Real Estate Development Analysis
Analysis provided by Prosper Portland
An Economic and Real Estate Development Impact Analysis was not submitted for this proposed action. Pursuant to City Council Resolution 37664, Prosper Portland staff has reviewed the action and agree that it does not require an Economic and Real Estate Development Impact Analysis.
Financial and Budget Analysis
Analysis provided by City Budget Office
Document History
Document number: 2025-365
President's referral: Finance Committee