Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1243 Comm Sub / Bill

                    By: Hegar S.B. No. 1243
 (In the Senate - Filed March 6, 2013; March 13, 2013, read
 first time and referred to Committee on Education; April 18, 2013,
 reported adversely, with favorable Committee Substitute by the
 following vote:  Yeas 9, Nays 0; April 18, 2013, sent to printer.)
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 1243 By:  Patrick


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the issuance of interest-bearing time warrants and
 certain notes by school districts.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 45.103, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (c) and adding Subsection (a-1) to
 read as follows:
 (a)  Any school district in need of funds to construct,
 repair, or renovate school buildings, purchase school buildings and
 school equipment, or equip school properties with necessary
 heating, water, sanitation, lunchroom, or electric facilities or in
 need of funds with which to employ a person who has special skill
 and experience to compile taxation data and that is financially
 unable out of available funds to construct, repair, renovate, or
 purchase school buildings, purchase school equipment, or equip
 school properties with necessary heating, water, sanitation,
 lunchroom, or electric facilities or is unable to pay the person for
 compiling taxation data, may, subject to this section, issue
 interest-bearing time warrants, in amounts sufficient to
 construct, purchase, equip, or improve school buildings and
 facilities or to pay all or part of the compensation of the person
 to compile taxation data, any law to the contrary notwithstanding.
 The warrants shall mature in serial installments of not more than 10
 [five] years from their date of issue. The warrants on maturity may
 be payable out of any available funds of the school district in the
 order of their maturity dates. Any interest-bearing time warrants
 may be issued and sold by the district for not less than their face
 value, and the proceeds used to provide funds required for the
 purpose for which they are issued. The warrants shall be entitled
 to first payment out of any available funds of the district as they
 become due. Included in the purposes for which interest-bearing
 time warrants may be issued is the payment of any amounts owed by
 the school district that was incurred in carrying out any of those
 purposes.
 (a-1)  A school district may also issue interest-bearing
 time warrants to refund warrants previously issued under this
 section if the refunding warrants are coterminous with the refunded
 obligations.
 (c)  A school district may not issue interest-bearing time
 warrants in excess of five percent of the assessed valuation of the
 district for the year in which the warrants are issued. The payment
 of interest-bearing time warrants in any one year may not exceed the
 anticipated surplus income of the district for the year in which the
 warrants are issued, based on the budget of the district for that
 year. The anticipated income computed under this section is
 exclusive of all bond taxes. A school district may not have
 outstanding at any one time warrants totaling in excess of $1
 million [$500,000] under this section.
 SECTION 2.  Subsection (a), Section 45.108, Education Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Independent or consolidated school districts may borrow
 money for the purpose of paying maintenance expenses and may
 evidence those loans with negotiable or nonnegotiable notes, except
 that the loans may not at any time exceed 75 percent of the previous
 year's income. The notes may be payable from and secured by a lien
 on and pledge of any available funds of the district, including
 proceeds of a maintenance tax. The term "maintenance expenses" or
 "maintenance expenditures" as used in this section means any lawful
 expenditure of the school district other than payment of principal
 of and interest on bonds. The term includes expenditures relating
 to notes issued to refund notes previously issued under this
 section if the refunding notes are coterminous with the refunded
 obligation. The term also includes all costs incurred in
 connection with environmental cleanup and asbestos cleanup and
 removal programs implemented by school districts or in connection
 with the maintenance, repair, rehabilitation, or replacement of
 heating, air conditioning, water, sanitation, roofing, flooring,
 electric, or other building systems of existing school properties.
 Notes issued pursuant to this section may be issued to mature in not
 more than 20 years from their date. Notes issued for a term longer
 than one year must be treated as "debt" as defined in Section
 26.012(7), Tax Code.
 SECTION 3.  Subsection (a), Section 1202.007, Government
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The following are exempt from the approval and
 registration requirements of this chapter:
 (1)  a public security that is:
 (A)  not subject to mandatory renewal or renewal
 at the option of any person, including the issuer, a holder, or a
 bearer; and
 (B)  payable only out of:
 (i)  current revenues or taxes collected in
 the year the public security is issued; or
 (ii)  the proceeds of other public
 securities;
 (2)  a certificate in evidence of benefit assessments;
 (3)  a certificate of obligation, including a claim or
 account that represents an undivided interest in a certificate of
 obligation, that under Subchapter C, Chapter 271, Local Government
 Code, an issuer is authorized to deliver to a contractor;
 (4)  a time warrant issued under Chapter 252 or 262,
 Local Government Code;
 (5)  a public security authorized by Chapter 1371;
 (6)  a lease, lease-purchase, or installment sale
 obligation, except as provided by other law; [and]
 (7)  a public security that by rule the attorney
 general exempts because it is not practical to require approval
 before the public security's issuance; and
 (8)  a nonnegotiable note issued under Section 45.108,
 Education Code, in a principal amount that does not exceed $1
 million.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2013.
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