Bridge, J.
The issue here is whether a “standby charge” imposed by the City of Soap Lake upon vacant, unimproved, uninhabited lots that abut but are unconnected to its water and sewer lines is a regulatory fee or a property tax. We find that the charge is a property tax and that, because it is not assessed uniformly according to the respective values of the properties within the class, it violates article VII, section 1 of the Washington Constitution. We therefore affirm.
[802]*802FACTS
Over the past three decades, respondents Samis Land Company, The Samuel Israel Living Trust, and the Estate of Samuel Israel (hereinafter, collectively, Samis) have acquired approximately 200 platted, vacant lots in the City of Soap Lake (City) and held the lots without significant development. In 1989, the City enacted Soap Lake Municipal Code (SLMC) 13.08.175, imposing a flat-rate $60 annual charge on any “vacant, unimproved land which shall abut a line providing water service or sewer service but have no connection thereto.” Since 1990, Samis has paid the City more than $46,000 in standby charges.
In February 1996, Samis stopped paying such charges in the wake of our decision in Covell v. City of Seattle,1 and in July 1996, Samis filed suit for a full refund of all charges previously paid as well as equitable relief permanently enjoining the City from collecting any more standby charges. Samis then moved for a partial summary judgment that the charge was a property tax that violated the tax uniformity requirement of Wash. Const. art. VII, § 1. The Grant County Superior Court denied the motion, ruling that the charge was not a tax, but rather simply a fee for benefits received and, thus, article VII, section 1 did not apply. The Court of Appeals accepted discretionary review and reversed, concluding that the charge was in fact an unconstitutional property tax under the tests articulated in Covell.2 We granted review.
ANALYSIS
The parties agree that the sole issue before us is whether the trial court erred in rejecting Samis’ motion for a partial summary judgment that SLMC 13.08.175 levies [803]*803an unconstitutional property tax.3 We review summary judgment rulings de novo, viewing all facts and reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party.4 Summary judgment is authorized under CR 56(c) only when no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. “A material fact is one upon which the outcome of the litigation depends in whole or in part.”5
The Soap Lake ordinances at issue here are codified at SLMC 13.08.175:
13.08.175 Standby charge for property abutting water or sewer line.
A. Any person, firm or corporation owning or purchasing vacant, unimproved land which shall abut a line providing water service or sewer service but have no connection thereto shall pay a standby charge of sixty dollars per year per platted lot or unplatted area.
B. The assessment as stated further in subsection A of this section shall be assessed quarterly by the clerk-treasurer of the city on the fifteenth days of January, April, July and October of each year.
[804]*804C. The assessment shall be in addition to all other assessments or charges made in relationship to the usage of water or sewer.
D. This charge may be enforced at the option of the city by filing a lien as against said property. The clerk-treasurer shall file the lien against said property thirty days after the payment is due. (Ord. 744, 1990; Ord. 737 §§ 1-4, 1989).
Municipal ordinances, like state statutes, are presumed constitutional, except where a suspect class or fundamental right is implicated.6 To rebut that presumption, it must be clear that the legislation cannot reasonably be construed in a manner that comports with constitutional imperatives.7
Soap Lake argues that its standby charge is merely a fee collected in exchange for public benefits conferred upon Samis, namely, the nearby installation of city water and sewer lines.8 Local governments have authority under their general article XI, section 11 police powers to require payment of fees that are “ ‘akin to charges for services rendered’ ”9 in that they are deposited into a segregated fund directly related either to the provision of a service [805]*805received by the entities paying the fees or to the alleviation of a burden to which they contribute.10 Such charges, which this court has collectively referred to as “regulatory fees,”11 include a wide assortment of utility customer fees, utility connection fees, garbage collection fees, local storm water facility fees, user fees, permit fees, parking fees, registration fees, filing fees, and license fees.
Because such fees are not considered taxes, they are exempt from fundamental constitutional constraints on governmental taxation authority.12 There is thus an inherent danger that legislative bodies might circumvent constitutional constraints, such as the all-important tax uniformity requirement13 or the one percent ceiling,14 by levying charges that, while officially labeled “regulatory fees,” in fact possess all the basic attributes of a tax. As we noted in Covell, unless sharp distinctions between fees and taxes are [806]*806maintained in the law, “ Virtually all of what now are considered “taxes” could be transmuted into “user fees” by the simple expedient of dividing what are generally accepted as taxes into constituent parts, e.g., a “police fee.” ’ ”15 Courts must therefore look beyond a charge’s official designation and analyze its core nature by focusing on its purpose, design and function in the real world.16
Over the years, our case law has identified several attributes that distinguish fees from taxes. These attributes were consolidated into a three-part test in Covell, where we held that Seattle’s residential street utility charge was in fact an unconstitutionally imposed property tax. First, one must consider whether the primary purpose of the legislation in question is to “regulate” the fee payers or to collect revenue to finance broad-based public improvements that cost money.17 Second, one must determine whether or not the money collected from the fees is segregated and allocated exclusively to “regulatfing] the entity or activity being assessed.”18 Third, one must ascertain whether a direct relationship exists between the rate charged and either a service received by the fee payers or a burden to which they contribute.19
[807]*807The Covell Tests
I
We begin by examining the primary purpose behind the enactment of SLMC 13.08.175.
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Bridge, J.
The issue here is whether a “standby charge” imposed by the City of Soap Lake upon vacant, unimproved, uninhabited lots that abut but are unconnected to its water and sewer lines is a regulatory fee or a property tax. We find that the charge is a property tax and that, because it is not assessed uniformly according to the respective values of the properties within the class, it violates article VII, section 1 of the Washington Constitution. We therefore affirm.
[802]*802FACTS
Over the past three decades, respondents Samis Land Company, The Samuel Israel Living Trust, and the Estate of Samuel Israel (hereinafter, collectively, Samis) have acquired approximately 200 platted, vacant lots in the City of Soap Lake (City) and held the lots without significant development. In 1989, the City enacted Soap Lake Municipal Code (SLMC) 13.08.175, imposing a flat-rate $60 annual charge on any “vacant, unimproved land which shall abut a line providing water service or sewer service but have no connection thereto.” Since 1990, Samis has paid the City more than $46,000 in standby charges.
In February 1996, Samis stopped paying such charges in the wake of our decision in Covell v. City of Seattle,1 and in July 1996, Samis filed suit for a full refund of all charges previously paid as well as equitable relief permanently enjoining the City from collecting any more standby charges. Samis then moved for a partial summary judgment that the charge was a property tax that violated the tax uniformity requirement of Wash. Const. art. VII, § 1. The Grant County Superior Court denied the motion, ruling that the charge was not a tax, but rather simply a fee for benefits received and, thus, article VII, section 1 did not apply. The Court of Appeals accepted discretionary review and reversed, concluding that the charge was in fact an unconstitutional property tax under the tests articulated in Covell.2 We granted review.
ANALYSIS
The parties agree that the sole issue before us is whether the trial court erred in rejecting Samis’ motion for a partial summary judgment that SLMC 13.08.175 levies [803]*803an unconstitutional property tax.3 We review summary judgment rulings de novo, viewing all facts and reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party.4 Summary judgment is authorized under CR 56(c) only when no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. “A material fact is one upon which the outcome of the litigation depends in whole or in part.”5
The Soap Lake ordinances at issue here are codified at SLMC 13.08.175:
13.08.175 Standby charge for property abutting water or sewer line.
A. Any person, firm or corporation owning or purchasing vacant, unimproved land which shall abut a line providing water service or sewer service but have no connection thereto shall pay a standby charge of sixty dollars per year per platted lot or unplatted area.
B. The assessment as stated further in subsection A of this section shall be assessed quarterly by the clerk-treasurer of the city on the fifteenth days of January, April, July and October of each year.
[804]*804C. The assessment shall be in addition to all other assessments or charges made in relationship to the usage of water or sewer.
D. This charge may be enforced at the option of the city by filing a lien as against said property. The clerk-treasurer shall file the lien against said property thirty days after the payment is due. (Ord. 744, 1990; Ord. 737 §§ 1-4, 1989).
Municipal ordinances, like state statutes, are presumed constitutional, except where a suspect class or fundamental right is implicated.6 To rebut that presumption, it must be clear that the legislation cannot reasonably be construed in a manner that comports with constitutional imperatives.7
Soap Lake argues that its standby charge is merely a fee collected in exchange for public benefits conferred upon Samis, namely, the nearby installation of city water and sewer lines.8 Local governments have authority under their general article XI, section 11 police powers to require payment of fees that are “ ‘akin to charges for services rendered’ ”9 in that they are deposited into a segregated fund directly related either to the provision of a service [805]*805received by the entities paying the fees or to the alleviation of a burden to which they contribute.10 Such charges, which this court has collectively referred to as “regulatory fees,”11 include a wide assortment of utility customer fees, utility connection fees, garbage collection fees, local storm water facility fees, user fees, permit fees, parking fees, registration fees, filing fees, and license fees.
Because such fees are not considered taxes, they are exempt from fundamental constitutional constraints on governmental taxation authority.12 There is thus an inherent danger that legislative bodies might circumvent constitutional constraints, such as the all-important tax uniformity requirement13 or the one percent ceiling,14 by levying charges that, while officially labeled “regulatory fees,” in fact possess all the basic attributes of a tax. As we noted in Covell, unless sharp distinctions between fees and taxes are [806]*806maintained in the law, “ Virtually all of what now are considered “taxes” could be transmuted into “user fees” by the simple expedient of dividing what are generally accepted as taxes into constituent parts, e.g., a “police fee.” ’ ”15 Courts must therefore look beyond a charge’s official designation and analyze its core nature by focusing on its purpose, design and function in the real world.16
Over the years, our case law has identified several attributes that distinguish fees from taxes. These attributes were consolidated into a three-part test in Covell, where we held that Seattle’s residential street utility charge was in fact an unconstitutionally imposed property tax. First, one must consider whether the primary purpose of the legislation in question is to “regulate” the fee payers or to collect revenue to finance broad-based public improvements that cost money.17 Second, one must determine whether or not the money collected from the fees is segregated and allocated exclusively to “regulatfing] the entity or activity being assessed.”18 Third, one must ascertain whether a direct relationship exists between the rate charged and either a service received by the fee payers or a burden to which they contribute.19
[807]*807The Covell Tests
I
We begin by examining the primary purpose behind the enactment of SLMC 13.08.175. If the fundamental legislative impetus was to “regulate” the fee payers—by providing them with a targeted service or alleviating a burden to which they contribute—that would suggest that the charge was an incidental “tool of regulation”20 rather than a tax in disguise.21
In Covell, we first sought to ascertain the central rationale for enactment of Seattle’s street utility charges by focusing on the legislative language found in the ordinances themselves:
Although there is language in the ordinances requiring the adoption of a transportation plan along with a funding plan, most of the regulatory language is devoted to fiscal planning rather than toward the type of service or benefit for those who pay fees. . . .
The ordinance language with regard to street improvement and maintenance is of an extremely general nature, and the thrust of the legislation is clearly on funding.[22]
We concluded, “The primary concern of these enactments is with collecting money to pay for [public] improvements rather than with public health, safety, or welfare.”23 Here, as Samis has shown, the “thrust” of the ordinances in question is even more “clearly on funding” than Seattle’s ordinances in Covell since, not most, but all its provisions deal exclusively with revenue collection. As the City readily admitted, the “legislation, i.e., the municipal ordinance, imposing the standby charge makes no attempt to regulate [808]*808the use of water or sewer services.”24 Indeed, as the City unequivocally conceded early on in this litigation: “The primary purpose of the Soap Lake standby charge is to generate revenues.”25
However, the fact that the ordinances themselves deal exclusively with fiscal matters does not necessarily conclude our inquiry. In Margola Associates v. City of Seattle,26 we wrote:
Under Hillis II, a court can look to the “overall plan” of regulation in construing the purpose of the challenged fee. Likewise, in Teter, this court looked beyond the legislation implementing the fee in order to determine the legislation’s purpose. Even though the registration and fee ordinances themselves do not specifically refer to any “overall plan” of regulation or limit the use of revenues, the ordinances should not be viewed in isolation.[27]
The City argues that SLMC 13.08.175 was enacted as a small part of its overall effort to improve the regulation of its city-wide water-sewer system for the general protection of its citizens’ health, welfare, and safety,28 as authorized [809]*809under Wash. Const. art. XI, § 11 and various statutes.29 The City thus urges us to read SLMC 13.08.175 in its broader legislative context, namely, Title 13 SLMC, which establishes an overall regulatory design for “Public Services.”
However, as Samis contended and as counsel for Soap Lake was forced to concede at oral argument, nowhere in that “overall plan” is there a reference to any utility service or burden applicable to the properties being charged here. Indeed, the only provision in all of Title 13 SLMC relevant to the vacant, unimproved lots at issue is evidently SLMC 13.08.175, which deals strictly with revenue collection.30 It is therefore manifest that the City’s primary legislative motivation here was to generate additional revenues to finance broad-based public improvements, not to “regulate” those entities paying the standby charge. The City’s standby charge thus more closely resembles a tax than a fee under the first part of the Covell test.
II
Second, for a charge to be considered a fee under Covell, we have found it “essential” that the money collected be segregated31 and “allocated only to the authorized regula[810]*810tory purpose.”32 Initially, the City appeared to concede that its legislation failed this exclusive allocation test by unequivocally admitting, “The money collected through the standby charge is not allocated exclusively to a regulatory purpose.”33 Later, though, the City argued differently, insisting that it “deposits its availability charges in a separate Water Capital Improvement Fund, and that those funds are use[d] solely for Combined Utility purposes,” all of which are “regulatory, involving facilities to regulate water and sewage to protect public health.”34
Still, simply because charges are allocated to some “broad category”35 of important public services does not necessarily mean they are “regulatory fees.” The second Covell factor requires that “regulatory fees” be “used to regulate the entity or activity being assessed.”36 Here, the only entities being assessed the charge in question are properties subject to no identifiable utility-related “regulatory” activity.37 The more than $46,000 that the City has collected from Samis since 1990 under SLMC 13.08.175 has been allocated to maintaining and improving the city-wide utility system, “regulating” an entirely distinct group to [811]*811which the standby charge does not apply, namely, entities connected to the city utility system.38 Samis has thus shown that, under the exclusive allocation test, the standby charge more closely resembles a tax than a fee.
Ill
The final test for differentiating fees from taxes is whether there is a “direct relationship” between the fee charged and either a service received by the fee payers or a burden to which they contribute.39 If no such relationship exists, then the charge is probably a tax in fee’s clothing. If, however, a direct relationship exists, then “the charge may be deemed a regulatory fee even though the charge is not individualized according to the benefit accruing to each fee payer or the burden produced by the fee payer.”40 In other words, as long as a “direct relationship” is present, “only a practical basis for the rates is required, not mathematical precision.”41
This latter point has been a decisive consideration in most of the cases relied upon by the City and its supporting amici. For instance, in Morse v. Wise,42 we held that the City of Chelan had police power authority to force current sewer customers to pay for improvements to its sewer system, even though new customers were the primary beneficiaries of the improvements. In Teter v. Clark County, we ruled that charges collected from lands shown to be contributing to an increase in surface water runoff were [812]*812“tools of regulation” rather than taxes because, even though no service was being provided to every fee payer, “the rate schedule bears a reasonable [albeit imprecise] relation to the contribution of each lot” to the shared burden being alleviated by the storm and surface water control facilities.43 In Thurston County Rental Owners Ass’n v. Thurston County,44 the court deemed a septic system permit fee charged to finance efforts to reduce ground and surface water contamination in the area to be a valid “regulatory fee” since it was reasonably related to the pollution burden created by new septic systems. In Smith v. Spokane County,45 additional fees were imposed on “water and sewer customers ”46 in an Aquifer Protection Area to pay for the protection, preservation and rehabilitation of their subterranean water source. While the rates in Smith were fixed and unrelated to the “amount of water used, or whether the household is served by a septic system or a municipal sewer line,”47 the court held that “[e]nsuring a clean source of drinking water provides a direct benefit to everyone who receives water from the aquifer.”48 In each of these cases, it was clear that the charge was “ ‘akin to charges for services rendered’ ”49 in that a direct relationship existed between the charge and either a service re[813]*813ceived or a burden to which the payers were contributing.
As Samis has demonstrated, no such direct relationship exists here.50 First, the properties at issue here by definition have no relationship to the City’s water service. The City admits that “liability for the standby charge does not arise from [Samis’] use of a city service.”51 Secondly, the lands at issue are uninhabited properties that generate no sewage of any kind and, as established in the record, do not otherwise burden the City’s sewer or water systems.
Soap Lake argues that the standby charge is justified as payment for the general benefit of living in a community with “a financially viable, efficient and operable water/ sewer system” as well as the enhancement of the value and marketability of properties where connection to city water and sewer lines is readily “available.”52 We find such arguments untenable under Covell. While the Seattle properties at issue in Covell also stood to benefit from public spending of residential street utility charges on the construction, operation, preservation, and expansion of abutting streets, nearby transportation infrastructure, and city[814]*814wide public transit systems,53 we held that “the direct relationship between the charges and the benefits received [or burden imposed] by those who pay them is missing.”54 Indeed, most public expenditures have the effect of enhancing the value and marketability of nearby real estate. However, stretching the “direct relationship” test to include such indirect enhancements would render the third Covell test meaningless as a guide for distinguishing fees from taxes. While our case law is clear that a “charge may be deemed a regulatory fee even though the charge is not individualized according to the benefit accruing to each fee payer or the burden produced by the fee payer,”55 here there is neither an identifiable service being received by the fee payers nor a burden to which they contribute to which the City’s annual $60 charge has any direct relationship.
In short, all three Covell criteria support the conclusion that the standby charge at issue here is not actually a “regulatory fee” but rather a thinly disguised tax designed to raise funds to finance broad-based public purposes.
Determining Tax’s Constitutionality
Lastly, we must determine whether this tax is unconstitutional, as Samis contends. In Covell, we defined property taxes as “an absolute and unavoidable demand against property or the ownership of property.”56 We wrote:
In this case, the street utility charge is not levied against the exercise of any particular right of ownership. Rather, the charge is imposed for the “use or availability of the streets.” SMC § 21.100.030. The amount of the charge, however, is levied [815]*815against property owners to accomplish the public benefit of improving streets.
Consequently, the street utility charge, as assessed, must be declared unconstitutional.[57]
Because liability for the street utility charge in Covell resulted unavoidably from real estate ownership, we found it to be a property tax, which had to be “imposed in a uniform manner based on the value of property” under Wash. Const. art. VII, § 1.58
Here also, SLMC 13.08.175 does not levy a charge against the discretionary exercise of any particular right of ownership. Rather, it imposes an unavoidable demand upon ownership itself. The mere act of owning property located near, but unconnected to, the City’s water and sewer lines makes one liable. The standby charge matches our definition of a property tax.59 Because the tax is set at “sixty dollars per year per platted lot or unplatted area” without regard to each land’s worth, it is clearly not levied uniformly upon the entire class of real estate as constitutionally required.60 The factual record in this case makes it clear that SLMC 13.08.175 cannot reasonably be construed in a manner that comports with constitutional imperatives.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the trial court erred in denying Samis’ motion for partial summary judgment. Under Covell’s three-part test, Soap Lake’s “standby charge” is more akin to a tax than to a fee. Since SLMC 13.08.175 imposes this tax on the mere ownership of select parcels of real estate [816]*816within the City’s jurisdiction, without regard to property value, it violates Wash. Const. art. VII, § 1. We therefore affirm the Court of Appeals and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Alexander, C.J., Smith, Madsen, Sanders, and Ireland, JJ., and Guy, J. Pro Tem., concur.