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CWA forms joint powers agency,
approves $686M bond issuance
By Joe
Naiman
The Alpine Sun
SAN DIEGO — The San Diego County Water
Authority board created a joint powers agency (JPA), which
authorizes the SDCWA to issue revenue bonds while also authorizing
the issuance of up to $686 million in such bonds to finance the
CWA’s Capital Improvement Program and to refinance existing debt.
The Dec. 17 board action also adopts resolutions
declaring the official intent to reimburse certain expenditures from
proceeds of future CWA debt obligations and addressing the future
treatment of interest subsidy payments.
CWA staff put together a package which enables the
formation of the new JPA and the issuance of the bonds, which are
expected to reduce the CWA’s debt service obligation by $3.1 million
annually.
“We all understand and appreciate that this is not an
easy project,” said CWA Administrative and Finance Committee chair
Ken Williams.
The CWA has historically raised funds in the public
debt market by issuing certificates of participation (COPs).
Although there is no substantive difference between revenue-secured
COPs and revenue bonds, recent market events have forced investors
to favor bonds over COPs. The current difference of 50 basis points
(0.5 percent) translates into $3.1 million annually in debt
repayment.
In 2004 several local agencies created the California
Municipal Finance Authority to allow the CMFA to enter into joint
powers agreements with local agencies in order to allow tax-exempt
financing. The CWA’s Dec. 17 action authorizes the CMFA and the CWA
to form a joint powers agency called the San Diego County Water
Authority Finance Agency.
The governance of the JPA will be similar to the San
Diego County Water Authority Financing Corporation, which currently
issues COPs, and the CWA will have control over all finance matters.
The JPA board will consist of the CWA board chair (currently Bud
Pocklington), the chair of the Administrative and Finance Committee
(currently Williams), the CWA’s finance director, the CWA’s general
manager, and the CWA’s general counsel.
A government agency’s debt is often subject to
philosophy. Some boards believe that the pay-as-you-go method frees
up interest payments for other projects. Another philosophy is that
bonding for capital improvement projects translates into future
beneficiaries paying their share in contrast to having a project
paid for in full by current residents who leave the area before the
project’s completion and newer residents not paying at all for the
project. Under a fair-share bond philosophy, a project’s lifecycle
may also dictate the period between a bond’s issuance and its
maturity.
Based on issuance of 40-year bonds, the CWA’s interest
obligation is likely to be between 3.90 and 4.20 percent. The
majority of the bond issue will fund the San Vicente Dam Raise and
Carryover Storage project, which has an expected service life of 100
years. Including pumping and interconnect projects, the Capital
Improvement Program calls for $353.6 million to be spent on the San
Vicente Dam.
The actual authorized issuance amount is $685,636,378
which will cover $524,869,799 for capital acquisition, $71,034,276
for capitalized interest, $51,769,049 to refinance the Series 1998A
COPs, $30,692,494 for the debt service reserve fund, and $7,270,760
for the cost of issuance. The acquisition fund is sized to provide
approximately 24 months of Capital Improvement Program financing
while the capitalized interest fund will be used to provide interest
payments during part of the construction period in order to mitigate
rate impacts.
The Dec. 17 authorizations allowed for preliminary
official statements to be distributed to the bond market on Dec. 22.
Pre-sale marketing and an investor roadshow will take place during
the first full week of January, pricing is slated for
Jan. 11, and the bond sale has a Jan. 25 closing date.
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