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With proposed bill, reps take on alternate revenue bond ‘abuse’

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The current law requires signatures from 7.5 percent of the registered voters in the taxing district. And 5 percent under the new proposal. There are 204,437 registered voters in McHenry County.

Doing so is a herculean task, some argue.

“That’s entirely unrealistic to do unless you have a massive amount of manpower to do so,” Costin said.

The bill also would require that revenue from projects financed with alternate revenue bonds be able to pay 150 percent of the debt, an increase from 125 percent in the current law.

The pending legislation also provides that a state chief procurement officer oversee such projects, rather than local analysts. The current law requires an “independent accountant or feasibility analyst” or up-to-date audit showing that the taxing unit has sufficient revenues to back the bonds.

“It seems like there’s a lot of checks and balances [already] within the system itself, and it seems like you’re just adding another layer and more costs,” said Roscoe Stelford, the finance director in Woodstock. “Somebody’s going to have to pay for that. Who’s going to pay for the chief procurement officer?”

The answer is the taxing bodies taking out the bonds will cover the procurement officer’s fees if the measure moves forward. McSweeney hopes this officer will take the place of local consultants that taxing bodies are already hiring.

“Underwriters aren’t going to take their word for the fact that we can repay [the bond just] because the state says we can,” Stelford said. “They’re not going to change their process. I’m still going to be paying for an auditor’s opinion that says I can repay the debt.”

But McSweeney wants to ensure that these studies are approved by someone who doesn’t have skin in the game.

“Let’s make it a fair and nonpartisan person looking into these,” McSweeney said when the bill was introduced.

As the bill moves its way through the house of representatives, unnamed sources said there could be potential modifications to the bill, namely the chief procurement officer potentially could be written out.

But bond experts and local leaders fear the bill would be too restrictive and would bottleneck applications in Springfield, at a time when state lawmakers are struggling to rein in its own expenses.


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