(dissenting). I respectfully dissent. The people of the State of Michigan presumably enacted the Headlee Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, §§ 25-34, because they believed their liberties were as much threatened by governmental spending and taxing decisions as they were by governmental decisions concerning other subjects addressed in the Michigan Constitution, such as the regulation of speech, Const 1963, art 1, § 5, and the treatment of criminal suspects, Const 1963, art 1, § 20. Section 31 of the Headlee Amendment states in relevant part:
Units of Local Government are hereby prohibited from levying any tax not authorized by law or charter when this section is ratified . . . without the approval of a majority of the qualified electors of that unit of Local Government voting thereon. [1]
Clearly, the people intended to alter the status quo by this provision. In interpreting a constitutional provision, the “primary rule” is to consider the “common understanding” of such a provision. Traverse City School Dist v Attorney General, 384 Mich 390, 405; 185 NW2d 9 (1971). In addition, courts look to “the circumstances surrounding the adoption of the constitutional provision and the purpose sought to be *89accomplished . . . .’’Id. The Headlee Amendment “grew out of the spirit of ‘tax revolt’ and was designed to place specific limitations on state and local revenues. The ultimate purpose was to place pubhc spending under direct popular control.” Waterford School Dist v State Bd of Ed, 98 Mich App 658, 663; 296 NW2d 328 (1980); see also Smith v Scio Twp, 173 Mich App 381, 385; 433 NW2d 855 (1988).
As envisioned by its drafters, a critical aspect of the Headlee Amendment is its requirement that local governments directly obtain the assent of the people before embarking on a fiscal course of action that enhances the pubhc sector at the expense of the private sector. Const 1963, art 9, §§ 25, 31; Headlee Blue Ribbon Commission Report to Governor John Engler, § 5, pp 22-23 (1994). However, it appears that some pubhc officials view the Headlee Amendment as initiating a kind of parlor game by which they are challenged to devise increasingly creative means of circumventing constitutional constraints on pubhc spending. See also Sessa v Macomb Co, 220 Mich App 279; 559 NW2d 70 (1996). It is not coincidental that the incidence of the imposition of various “fees” — as opposed to “taxes” — has soared in Michigan since enactment of the Headlee Amendment.2 This Court’s obligation to uphold the guarantees of the Headlee Amendment, and to protect against its erosion, is no less compelling than its obligation to uphold the mandates of longer-standing constitutional provisions.
The majority finds no constitutional impediment to Lansing’s storm water utility charge established in Lansing Ordinance No. 925, which added a new Chap*90ter 1043 to the Ordinances of the City of Lansing. It concludes that the storm water charge is a user fee, which is unaffected by the Headlee Amendment. However, in my judgment, Ordinance 925 is a “tax” with regard to which a vote of the people is required under the amendment. Const 1963, art 9, § 31. There having been no such vote, the charge is contrary to the Michigan Constitution and, therefore, is null and void.
The issue before us is whether the storm water utility charge is properly characterized as a fee or a tax. There is currently no bright line that distinguishes between a fee, which represents a permissible exercise of the police power, and a tax, which may be implemented only after compliance with the constitutional requirements of the Headlee Amendment. Rather, a multiplicity of factors necessarily must be considered and weighed.3
One established distinction in Michigan is that a fee must be plainly intended as a police regulation, “not as a means primarily of producing revenue,” and that the revenue derived therefrom must be proportionate to the cost of the regulatory activity. Vemor v Secretary of State, 179 Mich 157, 167-170; 146 NW 338 (1914); Bray v Dep’t of State, 418 Mich 149, 160-163; 341 NW2d 92 (1983). Here, the City of Lansing has proposed, through the storm water service charge, to fund $176 million in stormwater collection, detention, and treatment improvements over the next thirty years, a major portion of which (an estimated sixty-*91three percent) constitutes capital expenditures. However, no effort has been made to allocate even that portion of the capital costs that will have a useful life in excess of thirty years to the general fund. This is an investment in infrastructure that will substantially outlast the current “mortgage” that the storm water charge requires property owners to amortize. At the end of thirty years, property owners will have fully paid for a tangible asset that will serve the city for many years thereafter. Accordingly, the “fee” is not structured to simply defray the costs of a “regulatory” activity, but rather to fund a public improvement designed to provide a long-term benefit to the city and all its citizens. The revenue to be derived from the charge is clearly in excess of the direct and indirect costs of actually using the storm water system over the next thirty years and, being thus disproportionate to the costs of the services provided and the benefits rendered, constitutes a tax. See Merrelli v St Clair Shores, 355 Mich 575, 585-588; 96 NW2d 144 (1959).
I do not believe that the capital investment component of a true fee may be designed to amortize such an expense, and to enable the city to fully recoup its investment, in a period significantly shorter than the actual useful service life of the particular public improvement. This fundamental principle of basic accountancy guides public utility regulators, Ass’n of Businesses Advocating Tariff Equity v Public Service Comm, 208 Mich App 248, 261; 527 NW2d 533 (1994) (“[conceptually, ratepayers are charged for the amortization expense when it occurs and, therefore, rates coincide with the expense and are not retroactive”), as well as tax assessors, Consumers *92Power Co v Big Prairie Twp, 81 Mich App 120, 133-135; 265 NW2d 182 (1978). It ought to apply equally here.
This is not to say that a city can never implement a storm water or sewer charge without running afoul of art 9, § 31. A proper fee must reflect the bestowal of a corresponding benefit on the person paying the charge, which benefit is not generally shared by other members of society. Nat'l Cable Television Ass’n v United States & Federal Communications Comm, 415 US 336, 340-342; 94 S Ct 1146; 39 L Ed 2d 370 (1974). Where the charge for either storm or sanitary sewers reflects the actual costs of use, metered with relative precision in accordance with available technology, including some capital investment component, sewerage may properly be viewed as a utility service for which usage-based charges are permissible, and not as a disguised tax. See Ripperger v Grand Rapids, 338 Mich 682, 686-687; 62 NW2d 585 (1954).
The majority concludes that Ripperger is dispositive of the present case. It states that Ripperger held that sewerage disposal charges constitute a user fee. But Ripperger, a case that preceded the Headlee Amendment by twenty-four years, addressed only the particular sewerage charges before it; it did not hold that all sewerage disposal charges, whatever their details, would constitute a user fee. In Ripperger, supra at 686, the Court cited authority finding that charges for water service did not constitute a tax and concluded that the same reasoning applied to the sewerage charges before it. Among the rationales for holding water charges not to be a tax were that the charges were metered and constituted the price paid *93for a commodity and that consumers could voluntarily choose whether to use the service. Id. However, the charges under Ordinance 925 meet neither of these criteria. The charges at issue constitute an investment in infrastructure and therefore are not simply the price paid for a commodity. Further, they are not calibrated and, as discussed below, property owners cannot voluntarily choose in any meaningful sense whether to use Ordinance 925’s service. Accordingly, even under Ripperger — quite apart from under the Michigan Constitution as amended a quarter of a century after Ripperger — the charges at issue would not constitute a legitimate user fee.
The manner in which the storm water charge is secured is relevant to whether it is a disguised tax. Where a charge is reasonably related to the incremental cost of the governmental service furnished, the fact that such a charge is secured by the imposition of a lien on property does not transform an otherwise proper fee into a tax. See Jones v Bd of Water Comm’rs of Detroit, 34 Mich 273, 275 (1876). But having established that the charges exacted from property owners are disproportionate to the incremental costs here, enforcement of the charge through a lien on property, administered by the tax assessor’s office, buttresses the contention that the storm water charge is a tax in disguise.4 It is also significant that the city chose not to have the program administered by the *94Board of Water & Light, which generally administers the utility programs of the city.
A related failing of Ordinance 925 is that the charges do not correspond to the benefits conferred. Property owners already served by a fully bifurcated storm and sanitary sewer system are charged the same amount as property owners who realize the full benefits of the new construction. The record indicates that approximately seventy to seventy-five percent of the property owners in the city already enjoy separated sanitary and storm water sewers, many of whom have paid for such separation by special assessments. This further demonstrates the disproportionality between the charges imposed and the benefits of the service rendered. When a govemmentally imposed obligation exceeds any reasonable value of benefits conferred and subsidizes a general public benefit, it constitutes a tax, rather than a fee. Nat'l Cable Television, supra at 340-342.
Indeed, it would be difficult to argue that Ordinance 925 even constitutes a proper special assessment. “ 1 “The imposition of a charge on all property, real and personal, in a prescribed area, is a tax and not an assessment, although the purpose is to make a local improvement on a street or highway.” ’ ” St Joseph Twp v Municipal Finance Comm, 351 Mich 524, 532; 88 NW2d 543 (1958), quoting Blake v Metropolitan Chain Stores, 247 Mich 73, 77; 225 NW 587 (1929), quoting 1 Cooley on Taxation (4th ed), § 31, pp 106-107. In contrast, a special assessment is a “specific levy designed to recover the costs of improvements that confer local and peculiar benefits upon property within a defined area.” Kadzban v Grandville, 442 Mich 495, 500; 502 NW2d 299 (1993) *95(Griffin, J.); see also Knott v Flint, 363 Mich 483, 497-500; 109 NW2d 908 (1961). Where assessed property receives no special benefit in addition to that conferred upon the community as a whole, a special assessment is invalid, Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich 447, 453; 100 NW2d 486 (1960), and akin to the taking of property without due process of law. Dixon Rd Group v Novi, 426 Mich 390, 402-403; 395 NW2d 211 (1986).
Here, the charge at issue applies generally to property owners, rather than being imposed only on property owners actually benefited. Nor is there any limitation of the charge to property owners within a limited geographical area as is typically the case with a fee. The lack of relationship between the charge imposed and the benefit derived by any individual parcel evidences that the city has failed to differentiate the beneficial special charges from the general benefits conferred to the public. Moreover, it being effectively conceded that many properties in the city are already served by a bifurcated sewer system, expansion of the system to serve other properties confers no benefit on the former group, results in no concomitant increase in the value of the land assessed, and consequently furnishes no basis even for a special assessment. See Kadzban, supra at 500-502 (Griffin, J.).
The acknowledged goal of Ordinance 925 is to address environmental concerns. The amicus curiae brief of the Lansing Regional Chamber of Commerce states that the instant charge is “being imposed to pay for the costs the City will bear in providing for the environmentally safe collection and disposal of storm water, in compliance with the [Federal Water Pollu*96tion Control Act, 33 USC 1251 el seq.]” A cleaner Grand River and the avoidance of federal environmental discharge penalties benefits everyone in the city in roughly equal measure, not only property owners. The extent of any particularized benefit to property owners is considerably outweighed by the general benefit to the citizenry of Lansing as a whole in the form of enhanced environmental quality. See Nat'l Cable Television, supra at 341-342. When virtually every person in a community is a “user” of a public improvement, a municipal government’s tactic of augmenting its budget by purporting to charge a “fee” for the “service” rendered should be seen for what it is: a subterfuge to evade constitutional limitations on its power to raise taxes.
Not only does Ordinance 925 fail to distinguish between property owners who benefit from the capital construction planned under the sewer project and those who do not, but it fails to distinguish between those responsible for greater and lesser levels of runoff. Although it appears to allow a dispensation for property owners who construct a water retention facility that limits the flow of water into the storm water system, or that enhances the quality of such water, such a credit is limited to fifty percent of the charge, irrespective of the effectiveness of such a facility. Further, the credits are prospective only and are not set forth by Ordinance 925 itself, but require the future enactment of regulations by the city. Such regulations had not yet been promulgated at the time of oral argument.
*97Further, I do not find any element of the volition characteristic of a true “fee” here.5 City ordinances mandate that all property owners connect to the sanitary sewer and it does not seem unreasonable to assume that Ordinance 925 will eventually be amended to impose the same requirement with respect to the newly separated storm sewer system. The use of such indispensable services cannot be considered a matter of choice when there is a municipal monopoly and mandate over them. The property owner wishing not to use the service, or to use another service, has no alternatives. The charge is effectively compulsory. The owner is unable to limit the amount of services used, except by relinquishing altogether the right to own property. In contending at oral argument that the city may charge for separated storm sewer “availability,” counsel for the city has effectively acknowledged that any element of true voluntariness with respect to such charges is mere veneer.
Another factor supporting the conclusion that the charge is actually a tax is that the “storm water enterprise fund,” responsible for the administration of the program, replaces the taxpayer-supported General Fund of Lansing for purposes of the storm water share of the combined sewer overflow program. According to the city’s consultants, “[m]anagement of the stormwater infrastructure historically has been financed with general fund revenues from property and income taxes.”
*98I note also that Ordinance 925 provides for the beneficial treatment of charitable institutions. While such treatment may very well represent wise public policy, the promotion of such public policies is generally associated with a tax and not a genuine user fee based strictly upon use. By itself, such a factor may be relatively inconsequential in determining whether a charge is a tax or a fee, but in conjunction with the other circumstances here, I believe that the treatment of charitable institutions belies a legislative purpose to enact what truly is a tax.
Finally, I note a troubling logical implication of the majority opinion. Nothing in the majority’s reasoning would prevent municipalities from supplementing existing tax revenues with police, fire, or a myriad of other “fees” on the ground that such services are disproportionately utilized by property owners. Such a characterization of new taxes as police “fees” or fire “fees” or park “fees” could erode altogether the Headlee Amendment. Cf. United States v City of Huntington West Virginia, 999 F2d 71, 74 (CA 4, 1993). During oral argument, counsel for the Lansing Regional Chamber of Commerce, which supported the ordinance, acknowledged that, if this charge passes constitutional muster, nothing would bar a local government unit from redefining any discrete— and previously tax-supported — government activity as a “service” for which a “fee” may be charged. This would effectively abrogate all Headlee limits on the power of taxation and, concomitantly, on government spending. While a system in which user “fees” are substituted for taxes may well be worth public consideration and debate, it is an issue that cannot be *99considered without reference to the constitutional requirements of the Headlee Amendment.
What properly characterizes most public safety functions, such as core police and fire services, as being beyond the purview of governmental activity that might be subject to a user fee is that the benefits derived from these functions benefit the entire community generally. Not coincidentally, that is also what insulates public safety officials from potential tort liability under the gross negligence exception of the government immunity act, MCL 691.1407(2)(c); MSA 3.996(107)(2)(c); the negligent acts of public safety officials are considered to violate their duty to the public at large, rather than any duty to a particular individual. White v Beasley, 453 Mich 308; 552 NW2d 1 (1996) (discussing the public-duty doctrine). Similarly, criminal activities are investigated and prosecuted in the name of the “People,” all of whom are considered to suffer harm from the commission of such activities, not in the names of individual victims. The preservation of public safety is a quintessential function that government provides to the community as a whole.
Environmental public works projects fit the same mold. These are governmental undertakings of community-wide application and benefit and are properly funded from general revenues. There is no significant element of regulation here. If there were, the storm water charge would be based, not merely on the amount of rainfall shed from a parcel of property as surface runoff, but additionally on the presence of pollutants on that parcel that contaminate such runoff and contribute to the need for treatment before discharge into navigable waters. Further, the regulatory *100nature of the charge would be enhanced if consideration had been given to the location and grade of properties or if greater justification had been provided for the arguable but overly facile assumption that properties contribute to runoff as a direct function of their size. Although it is not the role of this Court to second-guess the premises of a regulatory system devised by local representatives, some closer relationship between the amount of runoff attributable to a particular property and its storm water charge is required before we should be prepared to equate the instant charges with regular utility charges associated with oil, gas, or water usage. While something significantly short of an individualized metering system might well be sufficient, the instant charges are simply too uncalibrated with the actual benefits derived by individual properties from the construction of the city’s storm water project to constitute a true fee.
Through the Headlee Amendment, which is self-executing, Durant v Dep’t of Ed (On Second Remand), 186 Mich App 83, 96-97; 463 NW2d 461 (1990), remanded on other grounds 441 Mich 930 (1993), the Michigan Constitution imposes restraints on a municipality’s powers of taxation. The notion of a constitution is that limits are set upon the power of government, including the Legislature, Toy, ex rel Elliott v Voelker, 273 Mich 205, 216; 262 NW 881 (1935), that cannot be altered by any branch of government, including the judiciary, Stoliker v Bd of State Canvassers, 359 Mich 65, 67; 101 NW2d 299 (1960), and that exert paramount authority over any contrary custom. Dearborn Twp v Dearborn Twp Clerk, 334 Mich 673, 681; 55 NW2d 201 (1952). The *101construction given the Headlee Amendment by the majority
forces the inescapable conclusion that the people have done a futile thing: they have voted themselves a constitutional protection good only until the next session of the legislature.
... A constitutional limitation must be construed to effectuate, not to abolish, the protection sought by it to be afforded. [Lockwood v Comm’r of Revenue, 357 Mich 517, 554, 557; 98 NW2d 753 (1959).]
Constitutional requirements may not be avoided on grounds that compliance is difficult or momentarily not expedient. Alan v Wayne Co, 388 Mich 210, 282; 200 NW2d 628 (1972), reaffirmed 388 Mich 626; 202 NW2d 277 (1972). An overriding rule of constitutional construction requires that rights specifically reserved to the people be saved “against conceivable if not likely evasion or parry” and that such constitutional provisions should not be construed so “as to impede or defeat its generally understood ends when another construction thereof, equally concordant with the words and sense of that clause or section, will guard and enforce those ends.” Michigan Farm Bureau v Secretary of State, 379 Mich 387, 393; 151 NW2d 797 (1967).6
*102I decline to join the majority’s opinion because, in my judgment, it will erode a constitutional provision enacted by “We, the People of the State of Michigan” and designed to protect their liberties by limiting the share of the people’s resources that may be appropriated by the government without the direct consent of the governed. As a result of decisions such as this, the people, if they continue to hold this view, will be required to return to the constitutional drawing board in order to stay one step ahead of their governmental officials. The latter rather than the former have improperly prevailed in this case.
See also Const 1963, art 9, § 25, which provides in relevant part that “[Property taxes and other local taxes and state taxation and spending may not be increased above the limitations specified herein without direct voter approval.”
See Headlee Blue Ribbon Commission Report, supra, § 5, pp 26-27.
This case illustrates the wisdom of the Headlee Blue Ribbon Commission’s recommendation that the state Legislature further define, by statute, the terms “tax,” “fee,” and “special assessment.” See Headlee Blue Ribbon Commission Report, supra, Executive Summary and § 5, pp 29-31.
Chapter 1043.10 of the Ordinances of the City of Lansing, added by Ordinance 925, specifies: “Unpaid stormwater service charges shall constitute a lien against the property affected from the date the charges were incurred. [Unpaid charges] may, by resolution of the City Council, be certified to the City Assessor who shall place the charges on the next City tax roll.”
The Headlee Blue Ribbon Commission Report, supra, § 5, p 29, states that “[p]ayment of a tax is compulsory by law; whereas payments of user fees are only compulsory for those who use the service, have the ability to choose how much of the service to use, and whether to use it at all.”
“If by one mode of interpretation the right must become shadowy and unsubstantial . . . and by another mode it will attain its just end and secure its manifest purpose, it would seem, upon principles of reasoning, absolutely irresistible, that the latter ought to prevail.” Id. at 394, quoting Prigg v Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 41 US (16 Pet) 539, 612; 10 L Ed 1060 (1842).