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Some local gov’ts use alternative revenue bonds to finance projects

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Others find them to be too risky and prefer a pay-as-you-go method of financing.

“We’ve taken a very conservative approach over the years,” Huntley Village Manager Dave Johnson said. “Our concern is that if the projection analysis doesn’t work out the way you think, you put that burden on your taxpayers. That never been the village’s approach to making infrastructure improvements.”

The lion’s share of double-barreled bonds are used for infrastructure improvements such as water and sewer systems, or road repairs. A defined revenue most often is user fees or motor-fuel taxes, but can be sales taxes, impact fees and more.

Marengo has taken out more than $4.6 million in double-barreled bonds since 2001, according to the financial reports on the Comptroller’s website.

Marengo City Administrator Gary Boden said that money has been used for infrastructure improvements, such as water or sewer projects, and the municipality hasn’t had to raise property taxes when it issued alternate revenue bonds. It has sought those, he said, because there was a reliable revenue source, and it keeps interest rates down, thus saving money for taxpayers.

In McHenry County, the bonds also have been used for nonessential capital improvements. In Woodstock, the municipality has used alternate revenue bonds for its new police station, a water park, a library, and the iconic opera house, and has not increased taxes to pay for any of it.

Since 2000, it has issued at least $38 million in alternate revenue bonds, according to the financial reports on the Comptroller’s website. The municipality always has made annual payments on the bonds, sometimes retiring millions in just one year.

“It’s about financial management and making sure you can pay for it,” Roscoe Stelford, Woodstock’s finance director, said about the city’s use of alternate revenue bonds. “If the revenues don’t materialize or something happens like the housing market collapses, [you have to be able to] adjust so that you can compensate for those lost revenues.”

In Huntley, the village’s park district has used these bonds to renovate the former Huntley High School into a REC Center and to tear down and rebuild a new clubhouse and restaurant at Pinecrest Golf Course.


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