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A03776 Summary:

BILL NOA03776
 
SAME ASSAME AS S04597
 
SPONSORConrad
 
COSPNSRThiele, Otis
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd Art 8 §5, Constn
 
Excludes indebtedness for the construction of sewage facilities contracted prior to 2034 in determining current local debt limitation.
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A03776 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A3776
 
SPONSOR: Conrad
  TITLE OF BILL: CONCURRENT RESOLUTION OF THE SENATE AND ASSEMBLY proposing an amendment to section 5 of article 8 of the constitution, in relation to the exclu- sion of indebtedness contracted for sewage facilities   PURPOSE: The proposed constitutional amendment would enable counties, cities, towns and villages to finance construction and reconstruction of sewage treatment facilities without reducing their capacity to finance other essential capital requirements.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 of this resolution would amend Paragraph E of Section 5 of Article 8 of the Constitution to extend, until January 1, 2034, the authority of counties, cities, towns and villages to exclude from their constitutional debt limits indebtedness contracted for the construction and reconstruction of facilities for the conveyance, treatment and disposal of sewage.   JUSTIFICATION: The exclusion of sewer debt from the constitutional debt limits of coun- ties, cities, towns and villages was first authorized in 1963, for a 10-year period. The purpose of the exclusion was to encourage and enable municipalities to participate in the State's then-new sewer construction assistance plan and issue debt for sewer facilities without reducing their capacity to incur debt within the constitutional debt limit for other capital improvements. The intent in limiting the exclusion to debt incurred during a 10-Year period was to encourage municipalities to take action within that time- frame; the exclusion would thereby assist in accomplishing the purposes of the State's water anti-pollution program. The exclusion has been extended for five successive ten-year periods, reflecting the ongoing and fundamental need for municipal governments to incur debt to finance critical sewer and water pollution control facili- ties. Without this extension, the current debt exclusion will apply only to debt issued through the end of 2023. This amendment would permit the exclusion of indebtedness until January 1, 2034. The need and rationale for the debt exclusion cited in 1963 and in each subsequent extension remains relevant and valid today. Local government finances continue to be strained by the need to repair or replace aging sewer infrastructure. Indeed, the urgent need for improvements and upgrades to municipal sewer facilities is well-docu- mented as an ongoing concern for local governments.1 Currently, the State's primary programs to support improvements to sewer facilities are the Clean Water State Revolving Fund ("CWSRF") (which is capitalized with an annual grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) and the Water Infrastructure Improvement Act ("WIIA") grant program administered by the State Department of Environmental Conserva- tion ("DEC") and the Environmental Facilities Corporation ("EFC"). The CWSRF program provides interest-free or low interest financing to municipalities for wastewater and sewer infrastructure.projects. Since its inception in 1990, the CWSRF program has loaned more than $18.2 billion for 2,473 projects across the State. According to the 2022 intended use plan prepared with respect to the CWSRF, DEC and EFC antic- ipate financing approximately $1 billion in various clean water/sewer projects, including many for the conveyance, treatment and disposal of sewage in New York State. While the State also provides grant funds to municipalities from the CWSRF and the WIIA grant program (created by the State in 2015 to provide an additional source of State funds to help municipalities pay for water quality infrastructure projects), there is clearly still a substantial need for municipalities to borrow (by issu- ing debt) to finance sewer facilities. Moreover, this dynamic is also present in relation to federal financing options for sewer facilities. For example, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development, makes loans at below-market rates, along with grants, available to qual- ifying municipalities. As is the case under the CWSRF program, the USDARD financing involves municipalities issuing their own bo nds as the method of borrowing. In short, the debt contracting capacity under the constitutional debt limit continues to be a critical issue for municipalities seeking to improve and upgrade their sewer infrastructure. The constitutional exclusion has been implemented by Local Finance Law § 124.10, which requires that applications for the exclusion of sewer indebtedness be filed with the State Comptroller. The Office of the State Comptroller's records indicate that from January of 2011 through the close of 2021, municipalities have applied for and were granted 199 exclusions of sewer debt. Each applicant derived benefit from its exclu- sion by virtue of protecting its debt contracting margin, thereby preserving the ability to issue debt for other capital projects and needs. This bill would continue the exclusion of sewer debt from debt limitations and so maintain the resulting significant benefits to muni- cipalities throughout the State. 1 Wastewater Infrastructure Needs of New York State, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, March 2008; Growing Cracks in the Foundation: Local Governments are Losing Ground on Addressing Vital Infrastructure Needs, Office of the New York State Comptroller, December 2012; Growing Cracks in the Foundation: Local Governments Still Chal- lenged to Keep Up with Vital Infrastructure Needs, Office of the New York State Comptroller, September 2014. The current constitutional authorization to exclude debt issued for the construction of sewage facilities from municipal debt limits, expires on December 31, 2023. A constitutional amendment requires passage by two consecutively elected legislatures and approval by the voters. The Legislature passed the proposed amendment the first time during the 2022 legislative session. It must be approved again in the current 2023 legislative session in order to be submitted to the voters as a referen- dum before the current authorization expires. The Comptroller urges the passage of this proposed legislation.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: The resolution was first passed as legislative bill S. 8931/A.9958 of 2022 and is now proposed for Second Passage.   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: This bill has no significant State fiscal impact.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This amendment would become effective on the first day of January next succeeding approval of both houses of two consecutively elected legisla- tures and approval of the people in the subsequent general election.
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