Transcript Bonds
Bonds
ESSENTIALLY LOANS USED FOR CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS SUCH AS LAND
ACQUISITION OR FACILITY
CONSTRUCTION
ALLOWS A FACILITY TO BE USED NOW
INSTEAD OF WHEN ENOUGH CASH IS
SAVED FAR INTO THE FUTURE
When to use bonds
When the inflation rate is higher than the interest
rate
When a facility (and its benefits) are needed today
When property essential to the master plan must be
purchased now to prevent it from being developed
Types of BONDS
General Obligation
Revenue
variations of the above
General Obligation Bonds
The security is provided by taxpayer’s (and
government entity’s) pledge to increase their tax
burden to retire the bond
General Obligation Bonds (pros)
low risk, as promise is based on full faith and credit
of property taxpayers
cheaper than revenue bonds
tax deductible to investors which serves as an
incentive to purchase even though interest rates are
low
usually requires a vote (if over a $ limit)
General Obligation Bonds (cons)
Difficult to pass referendum for some projects
Increases the local tax burden
Assumes a public good when the beneficiaries may
be primarily users
Increases the statutory debt limit (e.g.. 3%)
Revenue Bonds
The income generated by a particular facility is used
to retire the bond
Sales Tax and Revenue Bonds
STAR BONDS
The purpose of STAR bonds is to allow a locality to finance infrastructure
improvements that will boost the community’s economy. The increased
revenue flow from the development is then diverted to pay off the bonds.
For instance, STAR bonds were used to finance the Kansas Speedway and its
surrounding property. The extra tax revenue collected from the Speedway and
the surrounding property goes to pay off the bonds.
Amendments: Senate Bill 395 is designed to amend the STAR bonds
program. It would exclude the collection of taxes from a STAR bonds district
from streamline sales tax collection methods. Last year, the legislature enacted
a destination-based sales tax collection. If a merchant was to sell a good and
have it delivered out of the taxing jurisdiction, sales tax would have to be
collected at the rate of and directed to the taxing jurisdiction where the good
was delivered. As such, it takes resources away from the STAR bond district
that were to be used to pay off the bond debt.
If SB 395 is adopted, currently existing STAR bond districts would be exempt
from destination based tax collection. In other words, if a merchant sells a
good to a person, the tax revenue stays within the district where the good is sold
regardless of whether it is delivered elsewhere. This allows the STAR bond
districts to meet the financial obligations of the bonds.
Revenue Bonds (pros)
Only users pay for the bond
No referendum for voter approval is required
Not included in the statutory debt limit
eliminates problems with residents paying a
disproportionate share of costs
Revenue Bonds (cons)
Interest rates are higher (2 pts)
increased risk (facility may not be able to generate
enough revenue and default)
may result in higher fees and restrict some use to
economically disadvantaged
Bond Ratings
Private firms rate the issue’s risk of default and
assign a credit rating
Bonds with the best rating are more sellable at a lower interest
rate
Best rating Aaa(Moody’s) or AAA (S & P)
Passing a G.O. bond referendum
Establish the need
Choose the right time (political climate)
Research why other referendums might have failed
and select a strategy and position (focus on positive)
Obtain broad citizen involvement
Clearly communicate costs
Committees needed for a G.O. Bond Referendum
Local Officials committee (executive)
community leaders
Speakers Bureau
Canvassing (get out the vote)
Public relations/publicity
use specialists who do this regularly
Finance
One successful strategy
Manhattan’s Quality of Life
Quality of Life theme (hard to not like)
Something for everyone
all areas of community and variety of participant groups
northview pool
linear trail
softball and outdoor sports complex
upgrade community house