The formation of any district, annexation or incorporation within a county is governed by the Local Area Formation
Commission (LAFCO). Although every county has one, their policies and practices differ greatly. Many counties encourage incorporations
so the county does not have to provide the municipal services. Sacramento County is not one of them as they try to preserve
the Uncity and the City of Sacramento tries to preserve land for future annexation, not a good scenario for potential new
cities. These entities control the Sacramento County LAFCO Board with two members from the county, two members from the City
of Sacramento and three members from special service districts.
The incorporation process is started by either a current
county special district such as the Recreation and Park District or the Water District adopting a resolution that they want
to convert to a city or the process can be started through a petition signed by 25% of the registered voters of the community.
With the resolution or the petition, an application is filed with LAFCO. LAFCO then assesses the environmental impact of the
new city and the financial feasibility of the new city. Many counties in the state require only a negative declaration in
lieu of the full environmental impact report (EIR) but Sacramento requires the full EIR, a much more costly process. State
law requires only evaluating three years of the financial feasibility of the new city, but Sacramento has adopted the policy
of evaluating ten years, again a more costly process. Up until May 2007, LAFCO would front approximately one half of these
costs and the incorporation proponents would front the balance. If the incorporation was successful, LAFCO would recover their
investment from the new city. If it was unsuccessful, LAFCO would absorb their costs. Because of budget constraints, LAFCO
now requires the incorporation proponents to front the entire cost up front which it is estimated to be in the $300,000 range
regardless of the size of your community. It is obvious that the direction of the Sacramento LAFCO is away from incorporations
and toward selected annexations by the City of Sacramento and toward the preservation of the Uncity by the county.
Once
the EIR and the financial feasibility are complete, the LAFCO staff makes a finding and takes its recommendation to the LAFCO
Board. If approved, an election is called and the final decision on incorporation is with the residents of the Rio Linda Elverta
community.