Texas 2021 87th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1465 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 05/05/2021

                    By: Hinojosa S.B. No. 1465


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to operation of the Texas small and rural community
 success fund program administered by the Texas Economic Development
 Bank as successor to the Texas leverage fund program and to creation
 of the micro-business disaster recovery loan guarantee program.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 489, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapters E and F to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER E. TEXAS SMALL AND RURAL COMMUNITY SUCCESS FUND
 Sec. 489.251.  DEFINITION. In this subchapter, "fund" means
 the Texas small and rural community success fund established by
 Section 489.252.
 Sec. 489.252.  TEXAS SMALL AND RURAL COMMUNITY SUCCESS FUND.
 (a) The Texas small and rural community success fund is created as
 a trust fund held outside the state treasury by the comptroller as
 trustee. The comptroller shall hold money in the fund in escrow and
 in trust for and on behalf of the bank and the owners of bonds issued
 under Section 489.253.
 (b)  The fund consists of:
 (1)  proceeds from the issuance of bonds under Section
 489.253;
 (2)  payments of principal and interest on loans made
 under this subchapter;
 (3)  loan origination fees imposed on loans made under
 this subchapter;
 (4)  investment earnings described by Subsection (e);
 and
 (5)  any other money received by the bank under this
 subchapter.
 (c)  The fund may be used only:
 (1)  to make loans to economic development corporations
 for eligible projects as authorized by Chapters 501, 504, and 505,
 Local Government Code;
 (2)  to pay the bank's necessary and reasonable costs of
 administering the program established by this subchapter,
 including the payment of letter of credit fees and credit rating
 fees;
 (3)  to pay the principal of and interest on bonds
 issued under Section 489.253;
 (4)  to pay reasonable fees and other costs incurred by
 the bank in administering the fund; and
 (5)  for any other purpose authorized by this
 subchapter.
 (d)  The bank, in coordination with the comptroller, may
 provide for the establishment and maintenance of separate accounts
 or sub-accounts in the fund, including interest and sinking
 accounts, reserve accounts, program accounts, or other accounts.
 The accounts and sub-accounts must be kept and held in escrow and in
 trust as provided by Subsection (a).
 (e)  Pending use, the comptroller may invest and reinvest the
 money in the fund in investments authorized by law for state funds.
 Earnings on the investments shall be credited to the fund.
 (f)  The bank may use money in the fund for the purposes
 specified by and according to the procedures established by this
 subchapter. This state may take action with respect to the fund
 only as specified by this subchapter and only in accordance with the
 resolutions of the executive director of the office adopted under
 Section 489.253.
 Sec. 489.253.  REVENUE-BASED BONDS AUTHORIZED. (a) The
 bank, the office, or the office's successor agency may provide for
 the issuance, sale, and retirement of bonds, including obligations
 in the form of commercial paper notes, to provide funding for
 economic development purposes as authorized by Section 52-a,
 Article III, Texas Constitution, and this subchapter.
 (b)  The bonds are special obligations of the bank and the
 principal of and interest on the bonds must be payable solely from
 the revenues derived by the bank under this subchapter, including
 loan repayments secured by a pledge of the local economic
 development sales and use tax revenues imposed by municipalities
 for the benefit of economic development corporations created under
 Chapters 504 and 505, Local Government Code. The bonds do not
 constitute an indebtedness of this state, the office, or the bank in
 the meaning of the Texas Constitution or of any statutory
 limitation. The bonds do not constitute a pecuniary liability of
 this state, the office, or the bank or constitute a charge against
 the general credit of this state, the office, or the bank, or
 against the taxing power of this state. The limitations provided by
 this subsection must be stated plainly on the face of each bond.
 (c)  The executive director of the office by resolution may
 provide for the bonds to:
 (1)  be executed and delivered at any time in one or
 more series as a single issue or as several issues;
 (2)  be in any denomination and form, including
 registered uncertificated bonds not represented by written
 instruments and commonly known as book-entry obligations, the
 registration of ownership and transfer of which the bank shall
 provide for under a system of books and records maintained by a
 financial institution serving as trustee, paying agent, or bond
 registrar;
 (3)  be of a term authorized by the executive director,
 not to exceed 40 years from their date;
 (4)  be in coupon or registered form;
 (5)  be payable in installments and at a time or times
 not exceeding the term authorized by applicable law;
 (6)  be subject to terms of redemption;
 (7)  be payable at a place or places;
 (8)  bear no interest or bear interest at any rate or
 rates, fixed, variable, floating, or otherwise determined by the
 bank or determined under a contractual arrangement approved by the
 executive director, except that the maximum net effective interest
 rate, computed in accordance with Section 1204.005, on the bonds
 may not exceed a rate equal to the maximum annual interest rate
 established by Section 1204.006; and
 (9)  contain provisions not inconsistent with this
 subchapter.
 (d)  Bonds issued under this section are subject to review
 and approval by the attorney general in the same manner and with the
 same effect as may be required by law, including Chapter 1202 or
 1371, as applicable.
 (e)  This state pledges to and agrees with the owners of any
 bonds issued under this section that this state will not limit or
 alter the rights vested in the bank to fulfill the terms of any
 agreements made with an owner or in any way impair the rights and
 remedies of an owner until the bonds, together with any premium and
 the interest on the bonds, with interest on any unpaid premium or
 installments of interest, and all costs and expenses in connection
 with any action or proceeding by or on behalf of the owners, are
 fully met and discharged. The bank may include this pledge and
 agreement of this state in any agreement with the owners of the
 bonds.
 Sec. 489.254.  BOND SALE AND ISSUANCE. (a) Bonds issued
 under Section 489.253 may be sold at public or private sale at a
 price and in a manner and from time to time as resolutions of the
 executive director of the office that authorize issuance of the
 bonds provide.
 (b)  From the proceeds of the sale of the bonds, the bank may
 pay expenses, premiums, and insurance premiums that the bank
 considers necessary or advantageous in connection with the
 authorization, sale, and issuance of the bonds.
 (c)  In connection with the issuance of its bonds, the bank
 may exercise the powers granted to the governing body of an issuer
 in connection with the issuance of obligations under Chapter 1371.
 However, any bonds issued in accordance with this subchapter and
 Chapter 1371 are not subject to the rating requirement for an
 obligation issued under Chapter 1371.
 Sec. 489.255.  AGREEMENTS IN BONDS. (a) A resolution of the
 executive director of the office that authorizes bonds to be issued
 under Section 489.253 or a security agreement, including a related
 indenture or trust indenture, may contain any agreements and
 provisions customarily contained in instruments securing bonds,
 including provisions respecting the fixing and collection of
 obligations, the creation and maintenance of special funds, and the
 rights and remedies available, in the event of default to the
 holders of the bonds or to the trustee under the security agreement,
 all as the bank considers advisable and consistent with this
 subchapter. However, in making such an agreement or provision, the
 bank may not incur:
 (1)  a pecuniary liability of this state, the office,
 or the bank; or
 (2)  a charge against the general credit of this state,
 the office, or the bank, or against the taxing powers of this state.
 (b)  The resolution of the executive director of the office
 authorizing the issuance of the bonds and a security agreement
 securing the bonds may provide that, in the event of default in
 payment of the principal of or interest on the bonds or in the
 performance of an agreement contained in the proceedings or
 security agreement, the payment and performance may be enforced as
 provided by Sections 403.055 and 403.0551, by mandamus, or by the
 appointment of a receiver in equity with power to charge and collect
 bonds and to apply revenues pledged according to the proceedings or
 the provisions of the security agreement. A security agreement may
 provide that, in the event of default in payment or the violation of
 an agreement contained in the security agreement, a trustee under
 the security agreement may enforce the bondholder's rights by
 mandamus or other proceedings at law or in equity to obtain any
 relief permitted by law, including the right to collect and receive
 any revenue used to secure the bonds.
 (c)  A breach of a resolution of the executive director of
 the office adopted under Section 489.253, a breach of an agreement
 made under this section, or a default under bonds issued under this
 subchapter does not constitute:
 (1)  a pecuniary liability of this state, the office,
 or the bank; or
 (2)  a charge against the general credit of this state,
 the office, or the bank, or against the taxing power of this state.
 (d)  The trustee or trustees under a security agreement or a
 depository specified by the security agreement may be any person
 that the bank designates, regardless of whether the person is a
 resident of this state or incorporated under the laws of the United
 States or any state.
 Sec. 489.256.  REFUNDING BONDS. (a) Bonds issued under
 Section 489.253 may be refunded by the bank by the issuance of the
 bank's refunding bonds in the amount that the bank considers
 necessary to refund the unpaid principal of the refunded bonds,
 together with any unpaid interest, premiums, expenses, and
 commissions required to be paid in connection with the refunded
 bonds. Refunding may be effected whether the refunded bonds have
 matured or are to mature later, either by sale of the refunding
 bonds or by exchange of the refunding bonds for the refunded bonds.
 (b)  A holder of refunded bonds may not be compelled to
 surrender the bonds for payment or exchange before the date on which
 the bonds are payable, or, if the bonds are called for redemption,
 before the date on which they are by their terms subject to
 redemption.
 (c)  Refunding bonds having a final maturity not to exceed
 that permitted for other bonds issued under Section 489.253 may be
 issued under the same terms and conditions provided by this
 subchapter for the issuance of bonds or may be issued in the manner
 provided by statute, including Chapters 1207 and 1371.
 Sec. 489.257.  USE OF BOND PROCEEDS. The proceeds from the
 sale of bonds issued under this subchapter may be applied only for a
 purpose for which the bonds were issued, except that:
 (1)  any secured interest received in the sale shall be
 applied to the payment of the principal of or interest on the bonds
 sold and, if a portion of the proceeds is not needed for a purpose
 for which the bonds were issued, that portion shall be applied to
 the payment of the principal of or interest on the bonds; and
 (2)  any premium received in the sale of the bonds shall
 be applied in accordance with Section 1201.042(d).
 Sec. 489.258.  BONDS AS LEGAL INVESTMENTS FOR FIDUCIARIES
 AND OTHER PERSONS. (a) Bonds of the bank issued under this
 subchapter are securities in which all public officers and bodies
 of this state; municipalities; municipal subdivisions; insurance
 companies and associations and other persons carrying on an
 insurance business; banks, bankers, trust companies, savings and
 loan associations, investment companies, and other persons
 carrying on a banking business; administrators, guardians,
 executors, trustees, and other fiduciaries; and other persons
 authorized to invest in other obligations of this state may invest
 funds, including capital, in their control or belonging to them.
 (b)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the bonds of
 the bank issued under this subchapter are also securities that may
 be deposited with and received by public officers and bodies of this
 state and municipalities and municipal subdivisions for any purpose
 for which the deposit of other obligations of the state are
 authorized.
 Sec. 489.259.  ADMINISTRATION OF FUND. The bank shall
 administer the fund. In administering the fund and this
 subchapter, the bank has the powers necessary to carry out the
 purposes of this subchapter, including the power to:
 (1)  make, execute, and deliver contracts,
 conveyances, and other instruments; and
 (2)  impose charges and provide for reasonable
 penalties for delinquent payments or performance in connection with
 any transaction.
 SUBCHAPTER F. MICRO-BUSINESS DISASTER RECOVERY LOAN GUARANTEE
 PROGRAM
 Sec. 489.301.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Declared disaster" means a state of disaster
 declared by the governor under Chapter 418.
 (2)  "Financial institution" includes a bank, trust
 company, banking association, savings and loan association,
 mortgage company, investment bank, credit union, and
 nontraditional financial institution.
 (3)  "Micro-business" means a corporation,
 partnership, sole proprietorship, or other legal entity that:
 (A)  is domiciled in this state and has at least 95
 percent of its employees located in this state;
 (B)  is formed to make a profit; and
 (C)  employs not more than 20 employees.
 (4)  "Participating financial institution" means a
 financial institution participating in the program.
 (5)  "Program" means the micro-business disaster
 recovery loan guarantee program.
 Sec. 489.302.  MICRO-BUSINESS DISASTER RECOVERY FUND. (a)
 The micro-business disaster recovery fund is a dedicated account in
 the general revenue fund.
 (b)  The micro-business disaster recovery fund is composed
 of:
 (1)  money appropriated by the legislature for the
 implementation and administration of this subchapter;
 (2)  amounts received by the state from federal grants
 or other sources;
 (3)  interest earned on the investment of money in the
 micro-business disaster recovery fund;
 (4)  amounts transferred from the Texas economic
 development bank fund; and
 (5)  any other amounts received under this subchapter
 and required by the bank to be deposited in the micro-business
 disaster recovery fund.
 (c)  Money in the micro-business disaster recovery fund may
 be appropriated only to the bank for use in carrying out the
 purposes of this subchapter.
 Sec. 489.303.  POWERS OF BANK IN ADMINISTERING
 MICRO-BUSINESS DISASTER RECOVERY FUND. In administering the
 micro-business disaster recovery fund, the bank has the powers
 necessary to carry out the purposes of this subchapter, including
 the power to invest money at the bank's discretion in obligations
 determined proper by the bank.
 Sec. 489.304.  MICRO-BUSINESS DISASTER RECOVERY LOAN
 GUARANTEE PROGRAM. (a) The bank shall establish and administer a
 micro-business disaster recovery loan guarantee program in which
 money in the micro-business disaster recovery fund is used to
 guarantee loans made by participating financial institutions to
 micro-businesses that have suffered economic injury as a result of
 a declared disaster.
 (b)  The bank shall determine the eligibility of a financial
 institution to participate in the program and may set a limit on the
 number of eligible financial institutions that may participate in
 the program.
 (c)  To participate in the program, an eligible financial
 institution must enter into a participation agreement with the bank
 that sets out the terms and conditions under which loans made to
 micro-businesses recovering from a declared disaster will be
 guaranteed.
 (d)  To qualify for a loan guarantee under the program, a
 micro-business:
 (1)  must:
 (A)  be in good standing under the laws of this
 state; and
 (B)  not owe delinquent taxes to a taxing unit of
 this state before the date of the initial issuance of the disaster
 declaration; and
 (2)  may not:
 (A)  have total revenue that exceeds the amount
 for which no franchise tax is due under Section 171.002(d)(2), Tax
 Code; or
 (B)  be a franchise, a national chain with
 operations in this state, a lobbying firm, or a private equity firm
 or backed by a private equity firm.
 (e)  A micro-business that receives a loan guarantee shall
 apply the loan to working capital or to the purchase, construction,
 or lease of capital assets damaged, reduced, or lost as a result of
 the declared disaster.
 Sec. 489.305.  RULEMAKING AUTHORITY. The executive director
 of the office shall adopt rules relating to the implementation of
 the program and any other rules necessary to accomplish the
 purposes of this subchapter.
 Sec. 489.306.  ANNUAL REPORT BY PARTICIPATING FINANCIAL
 INSTITUTION. A participating financial institution shall submit an
 annual report to the bank. The report must:
 (1)  provide information regarding outstanding loan
 guarantees, loan guarantee losses, and any other information on
 loan guarantees under the program the bank considers appropriate;
 (2)  state the total amount of loans that the bank has
 guaranteed under this subchapter;
 (3)  include a copy of the financial institution's most
 recent financial statement; and
 (4)  include information regarding the type and size of
 micro-businesses with loan guarantees.
 Sec. 489.307.  ANNUAL REPORT TO LEGISLATURE. The bank shall
 submit to the legislature an annual status report on the program's
 activities.
 SECTION 2.  Section 501.008, Local Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 501.008.  LIMITATION ON FINANCIAL OBLIGATION. (a)
 Except as provided by Subsection (b), a [A] corporation may not
 incur a financial obligation that cannot be paid from:
 (1)  bond proceeds;
 (2)  revenue realized from the lease or sale of a
 project;
 (3)  revenue realized from a loan made by the
 corporation to wholly or partly finance or refinance a project; or
 (4)  money granted under a contract with a municipality
 under Section 380.002.
 (b)  A Type A or Type B corporation may obtain a loan from the
 Texas small and rural community success fund program under
 Subchapter E, Chapter 489, Government Code, for eligible projects
 as authorized by this subtitle. To secure the loan, the Type A or
 Type B corporation may pledge revenue from the sales and use tax
 imposed by the corporation's authorizing municipality under
 Chapter 504 or 505, as applicable, for the benefit of the
 corporation.
 SECTION 3.  The Texas small and rural community success fund
 program authorizes the continued operation, under a new name and
 with new provisions, as added by this Act, of the Texas leverage
 fund program that was established by the September 9, 1992, master
 resolution of the Texas Department of Commerce under Chapter 4
 (S.B. 223), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989
 (codifying authority of the former Texas Department of Commerce to
 issue revenue bonds under former Sections 481.052 through 481.058,
 Government Code), as amended by Chapter 1041 (S.B. 932), Acts of the
 75th Legislature, Regular Session, 1997, and by Chapter 814 (S.B.
 275), Acts of the 78th Legislature, Regular Session, 2003.
 SECTION 4.  (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) of this
 section, the governmental acts and proceedings of the comptroller,
 the Texas Economic Development and Tourism Office, and the Texas
 Economic Development Bank relating to the administration of the
 Texas leverage fund program that occurred before the effective date
 of this Act are validated as if the acts had occurred as authorized
 by law.
 (b)  This section does not validate:
 (1)  an act that, under the law of this state at the
 time the act occurred, was a misdemeanor or felony; or
 (2)  a matter that on the effective date of this Act:
 (A)  is involved in litigation if the litigation
 ultimately results in the matter being held invalid by a final
 judgment of a court; or
 (B)  has been held invalid by a final judgment of a
 court.
 SECTION 5.  The comptroller of public accounts is required
 to implement a provision of this Act only if the legislature
 appropriates money specifically for that purpose.  If the
 legislature does not appropriate money specifically for that
 purpose, the comptroller may, but is not required to, implement a
 provision of this Act using other appropriations available for that
 purpose.
 SECTION 6.  The Texas Economic Development and Tourism
 Office is required to implement a provision of this Act only if the
 legislature appropriates money specifically for that purpose.  If
 the legislature does not appropriate money specifically for that
 purpose, the office may, but is not required to, implement a
 provision of this Act using other appropriations available for that
 purpose.
 SECTION 7.  The Texas Economic Development Bank is required
 to implement a provision of this Act only if the legislature
 appropriates money specifically for that purpose.  If the
 legislature does not appropriate money specifically for that
 purpose, the bank may, but is not required to, implement a provision
 of this Act using other appropriations available for that purpose.
 SECTION 8.  The attorney general is required to implement a
 provision of this Act only if the legislature appropriates money
 specifically for that purpose.  If the legislature does not
 appropriate money specifically for that purpose, the attorney
 general may, but is not required to, implement a provision of this
 Act using other appropriations available for that purpose.
 SECTION 9.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2021.