Developers and contractors filed into Town Hall on Monday in support of Langtree at the Lake’s request for the town to issue up to $46 million in bonds to pay for the development’s infrastructure.
Langtree Partner and Attorney David Parker spent the better part of his presentation to Mooresville commissioners trying to alleviate concerns that there’s some sort of “gotcha” that accompanies the new special-assessment improvement district (SAID) bonds. The SAID bonds were made possible by the N.C. General Assembly in August, and Langtree is the first development group in the state to ask for the new form of financing.
Parker explained that the town is in no way at risk by issuing the bonds. (To read a one-on-one interview with Parker and his explanation of how the SAID bonds work, click here: http://thegattonreport.blogspot.com/2008/11/corporate-welfare-so-what.html )
At Monday’s public hearing, Parker asked: “Where’s that gotcha?”
“The weird answer is: there ain’t one,” he said.
Catherine Marshall, who lives in the Langtree development area, told commissioners: “When something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”
Al Fiore, chairman and CEO of PowerWorks Electric in Mooresville, said “there is a gotcha,” to the SAID bonds. “It’s gotcha jobs,” he said. “We need jobs.”
He told commissioners that the General Assembly had given them a “tool to stimulate employment in your municipality” and that it isn’t going to cost the town anything.
Many of Fiore’s employees were at the meeting, and Fiore told commissioners that PowerWorks has a contract with Langtree for their first phase of electric work and lighting.
“When you’re thinking about the risks, don’t delay too long,” he said.
Langtree developers have touted jobs, along with increasing tax revenues, as their biggest contributions to the local economy. Langtree has said that its development would bring jobs to Mooresville from the very first day work begins on the site.
Commissioner Miles Atkins asked if all the jobs were guaranteed to be local.
Parker said he couldn’t guarantee that the jobs would go to people who had just lost their jobs. “I wish I could say that, but I can’t.”
But one question that hasn’t yet been answered is this: If the town issues bonds on behalf of Langtree, would the Langtree project then be considered a “public project”? Would the developers have to abide by all the requirements of public projects, such as bidding contract work and having to take the lowest bid without regard to the residence of the contractor and his/her employees?
“This is something that is being researched by the town’s bond counsel and me,” said Town Attorney Steve Gambill in an e-mailed response to Report questions this week. “If this is approved by the town board and the LGC (Local Government Commission), we certainly will have a definite answer.”
At Monday’s public hearing, Atkins said that to avoid the appearance of favoritism and “sending mixed signals to developers,” the town needs to develop a policy setting guidelines for the bonds. The policy would identify certain thresholds, such as overall project costs, that the town would set before it would consider issuing SAID bonds.
Town Manager Steve Husemann said town staff is working on that policy and that it could be presented to the board at its April town board meeting.
To read a list of 10 recommendations that a town financial consultant recently provided to commissioners to help them mitigate their risks in issuing the SAID bonds, click on the documents below:
After Monday’s public hearing, commissioners called for a special meeting on Tuesday, March 24, at 6 p.m. in Town Hall to consider voting on a final assessment resolution for the Langtree proposal. Town Attorney Steve Gambill said the word “final” is misleading; if commissioners pass the resolution, that simply opens the door for them to approach the LGC with the Langtree bonding proposal.
Also at the March 24 meeting, commissioners could vote on a “reimbursement agreement” with Langtree, which stipulates that Langtree will pay for all the town’s due-diligence work on the SAID-financing issue.
Responding on Monday to Parker’s statement that he asked “the most piercing questions” of Langtree, Atkins said he isn’t opposed to the project. However, he told Parker, while Langtree has had months to wrap its brain around the new form of financing, “it came pretty quickly for us.”
“I just got introduced to it last month,” Atkins said.
Parker said that the SAID issue may be new to North Carolina, but that tens of thousands of similar projects have been funded this same way in dozens of states since 1736.
Florida is one state that has special-assessment districts. Many of the projects there are apparently crashing under the pressures of the current economy. But Parker – along with Phil Hunt of Gardnyr Michael Capital, Inc., investment banking and financial advisors, who attended the public hearing with Langtree –said the projects, not the financing form, are failing. They said the projects there are failing because of self-governing issues and because Florida doesn’t have stringent processes in place like North Carolina.
But in an interview with the Report in November, when Langtree was negotiating the bonds with Iredell County, Parker said that of all the states with special assessment districts, Florida is the one with the most safeguards in place. He said that’s why Langtree developers “modeled all of (their) findings – and all the information that will be submitted to the (N.C.) Local Government Commission” after the State of Florida. (See http://thegattonreport.blogspot.com/2008/11/corporate-welfare-so-what.html.)
Parker also said in the interview that when a special-assessment payment has been missed in Florida, the primary lender (typically a bank) covers the missed payment to avoid default. “The bank doesn’t want to have to come in on foreclosure and buy the whole bond …” said Parker. “For that reason,” he said, “it is impossible to sell the bonds without ‘vertical’ financing in place.”Fortunately for Langtree, Parker said at that time, the developers have “loan commitment letters for further financing from lenders that understand that they may be in behind the special assessments and are comfortable with that.”
But when Atkins asked at Monday night’s public hearing if Langtree has commitment letters from the development’s vertical construction lenders, Parker replied: “They’re all waiting for these bonds. It’s a chicken-and-egg thing.”
He said that Langtree could provide commitment letters from its vertical lenders, showing their commitment to building contingent upon the issuance of bonds, this week. It’s unclear if those letters have been received by the town.
Rick Howard, CEO of Langtree, told commissioners that “details are important, but this is about creating job opportunities. It’s about creating jobs locally. We’re ready to (sign) contracts with them, and they’re ready to get busy.”
“This is an opportunity,” Howard said.
Parker said that Gardnyr Michael Capital, Inc. has closed 13 special-assessment financing deals in the past year and a half – during some of the roughest economic times in memory. The company recently closed on a district in Alabama, which Hunt said was “nothing special compared to Mooresville’s project.”
What if the town decides to issue the bonds but the bonds ultimately don’t sell or are only partially sold?
That’s simple, said Hunt. In that case, the project simply wouldn’t move forward. No skin off the town’s back.
Local resident Diane DePriest asked commissioners: what if the bond issuance is approved and the developers/property owners default on their assessment payments?
Hunt said the property would then enter into foreclosure and the Town of Mooresville would end up with the Langtree acreage and its infrastructure. He agreed with other experts who have approached the board on behalf of both Langtree and the town and say that the SAID legislation was written so that the taxpayers bear absolutely no burden and no risk.
Ron Johnson, head of Mooresville’s Convention & Visitors Bureau, spoke in support of the SAID bonds for Langtree. He said the project will significantly increase Mooresville’s tax base and bring additional sales tax to the area. Also, Johnson added, John Q. Hammons’ hotel/convention center would give the town board a place to meet in-town for its annual planning retreat. That comment was followed with laughter and clapping by the board and members of the public at the meeting.
But on a more serious note, DePriest asked: what is the “doomsday scenario” for the Town of Mooresville taxpayer if the project fails?
“There isn’t one,” said Mayor Bill Thunberg. “If the infrastructure is in place, the town still owns it anyway. That’s the doomsday.”