2015 -- H 6250 | |
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LC002748 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC PROPERTY AND WORKS - PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS - | |
PUBLIC PURPOSE FACILITY UPGRADE ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Casey, Shekarchi, Morin, Ackerman, and Keable | |
Date Introduced: May 27, 2015 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings and intent. The general assembly finds that there is a |
2 | public need for the construction, rehabilitation, and upgrade of facilities used for public purposes, |
3 | and that it is in the public interest to provide for such construction, rehabilitation, and upgrade of |
4 | such facilities. |
5 | (1) There is a public need for timely and cost-effective acquisition, design, construction, |
6 | improvement, renovation, expansion, equipping, maintenance, operation, implementation, or |
7 | installation of projects serving a public purpose, including educational facilities, transportation |
8 | facilities, water, or wastewater management facilities, and infrastructure, technology |
9 | infrastructure, roads, highways, bridges, and other public infrastructure and government facilities |
10 | within the state which serve a public need and purpose, and that such public need may not be |
11 | wholly satisfied by existing procurement methods. |
12 | (2) There are inadequate resources to develop new educational facilities, transportation |
13 | facilities, water or wastewater management facilities and infrastructure, technology infrastructure, |
14 | roads, highways, bridges, and other public infrastructure and government facilities for the benefit |
15 | of residents of this state, and that a public-private partnership has demonstrated that it can meet |
16 | the needs by improving the schedule for delivery, lowering the cost, and providing other benefits |
17 | to the public. |
18 | (3) A procurement under this section serves the public purpose of this section if such |
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1 | procurement facilitates the timely development or operating of a qualifying project. |
2 | It is the intent of the general assembly to encourage investment in the state by private |
3 | entities; to facilitate various bond financing mechanisms, private capital, and other funding |
4 | sources for the development and operation of qualifying projects, including expansion and |
5 | acceleration of such financing to meet the public need; and to provide the greatest possible |
6 | flexibility to public and private entities contracting for the provision of public services. |
7 | SECTION 2. Title 37 of the General Laws entitled "PUBLIC PROPERTY AND |
8 | WORKS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
9 | CHAPTER 25 |
10 | PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS – PUBLIC PURPOSE FACILITY UPGRADE ACT |
11 | 37-25-1. Procurements through public-private partnerships. – Notwithstanding any |
12 | provision of the general or public laws to the contrary, the general assembly hereby authorizes the |
13 | executive branch and all its departments, agencies, and offices of the state and all city and town |
14 | authorities to solicit and to accept all such procurements made pursuant to a public-private |
15 | partnership between such entities and qualifying private entities for qualifying projects. |
16 | 37-25-2. Implementation of rules and regulations. – Consistent with the duties |
17 | described in § 37-2-9, the chief purchasing officer shall implement, consider, and decide matters |
18 | of policy, and have the power of review with respect to the implementation of such rules and |
19 | regulations and policy determinations regarding public-private partnerships under this chapter. |
20 | The chief purchasing officer may also promulgate further rules and regulations if necessary to |
21 | effectuate the intent of this chapter. |
22 | 37-25-3. Definitions – Public-private partnerships. – As used in this section: |
23 | (1) "Affected local jurisdiction" means the state, city, town, or special district in which all |
24 | or a portion of a qualifying project is located; |
25 | (2) "Develop" means to plan, design, finance, lease, acquire, install, construct, or expand; |
26 | (3) "Fees" means charges imposed by the private entity of a qualifying project for use of |
27 | all or a portion of such qualifying project pursuant to a comprehensive agreement; |
28 | (4) "Lease payment" means any form of payment, including a land lease, by a public |
29 | entity to the private entity of a qualifying project for the use of the project; |
30 | (5) "Material default" means a nonperformance of its duties by the private entity of a |
31 | qualifying project which jeopardizes adequate service to the public from the project; |
32 | (6) "Operate" means to finance, maintain, improve, equip, modify, or repair; |
33 | (7) "Private entity" means any natural person, corporation, general partnership, limited |
34 | liability company, limited partnership, joint venture, business trust, public benefit corporation, |
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1 | nonprofit entity, or other private business entity; |
2 | (8) "Proposal" means a plan for a qualifying project with detail beyond a conceptual level |
3 | for which terms such as fixing costs, payment schedules, financing, deliverables, and project |
4 | schedule are defined; |
5 | (9) "Qualifying project" means: |
6 | (i) A facility or project that serves a public purpose, including, but not limited to, any |
7 | ferry or mass transit facility, vehicle parking facility, airport or seaport facility, rail facility or |
8 | project, transportation facilities, technology infrastructure, roads, highways, bridges, fuel supply |
9 | facility, oil or gas pipeline, medical or nursing care facility, or educational facility or other |
10 | building or facility that is used or will be used by a public educational institution, or any other |
11 | public facility or infrastructure that is used or will be used by the public at large or in support of |
12 | an accepted public purpose or activity; |
13 | (ii) An improvement, including equipment, of a building that will be principally used by a |
14 | public entity or the public at large or that supports a service delivery system in the public sector; |
15 | (iii) A water, wastewater, or surface water management facility or other related |
16 | infrastructure; or |
17 | (iv) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, for projects that involve a facility |
18 | owned or operated by the governing board of a city or town, district, or hospital or health care |
19 | system, or projects that involve a facility owned or operated by an electric utility, only those |
20 | projects that the governing board designates as qualifying projects pursuant to this section. |
21 | (10) "Responsible public entity" means the state, a city, town, district, school board, or |
22 | any other political subdivision of the state; a public body corporate and politic; or a regional |
23 | entity that serves a public purpose and is authorized to develop or operate a qualifying project; |
24 | (11) "Revenues" means the income, earnings, user fees, lease payments, or other service |
25 | payments relating to the development or operation of a qualifying project, including, but not |
26 | limited to, money received as grants or otherwise from the federal government, a public entity, or |
27 | an agency or instrumentality thereof in aid of the qualifying project; and |
28 | (12) "Service contract" means a contract between a public entity and the private entity |
29 | which defines the terms of the services to be provided with respect to a qualifying project. |
30 | 37-25-4. Procurement procedures. – (a) A responsible public entity may receive |
31 | unsolicited proposals or may solicit proposals for qualifying projects and may thereafter enter |
32 | into an agreement with a private entity, or a consortium of private entities, for the building, |
33 | upgrading, operating, ownership, or financing of facilities. |
34 | (b) The responsible public entity may establish a reasonable application fee for the |
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1 | submission of an unsolicited proposal under this section. The fee must be sufficient to pay the |
2 | costs of evaluating the proposal. The responsible public entity may engage the services of a |
3 | private consultation to assist in the evaluation. |
4 | (c) The responsible public entity may request a proposal from private entities for public- |
5 | private project or, if the public entity receives an unsolicited proposal for a public-private project |
6 | and the public entity intends to enter into a comprehensive agreement for the project described in |
7 | such unsolicited proposal, the public entity shall publish notice in a newspaper of general |
8 | circulation at least once a week for two (2) weeks stating that the public entity has received a |
9 | proposal and will accept other proposals for the same project. The timeframe within which the |
10 | public entity may accept other proposals shall be determined by the public entity on a project-by- |
11 | project basis based upon the complexity of the project and the public benefit to be gained by |
12 | allowing a longer or shorter period of time within which other proposals may be received; |
13 | however, the timeframe for allowing other proposals must be at least twenty-one (21) days, but |
14 | no more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the initial date of publication. A copy of the |
15 | notice must be mailed to each local government in the affected area. |
16 | (d) A responsible public entity that is a school board may enter into a comprehensive |
17 | agreement only with the approval of the local governing body. |
18 | (e) Before approval, the responsible public entity must determine that the proposed |
19 | project: |
20 | (1) Is in the public's best interest; |
21 | (2) Is for a facility that is owned by the responsible public entity, or for a facility for |
22 | which ownership will be conveyed to the responsible public entity; |
23 | (3) Has adequate safeguards in place to ensure that additional costs or service disruptions |
24 | are not imposed on the public in the event of material default or cancellation of the agreement by |
25 | the responsible public entity; |
26 | (4) Has adequate safeguards in place to ensure that the responsible public entity or private |
27 | entity has the opportunity to add capacity to the proposed project or other facilities serving |
28 | similar predominantly public purposes; or |
29 | (5) Will be owned by the responsible public entity upon completion or termination of the |
30 | agreement, and upon payment of the amounts financed. |
31 | (f) Before signing a comprehensive agreement, the responsible public entity must |
32 | consider a reasonable finance plan that is consistent with § 37-25-10 including the project cost; |
33 | revenues by source; available financing; major assumptions; internal rate of return on private |
34 | investments, if governmental funds are assumed in order to deliver a cost-feasible project; and a |
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1 | total cash-flow analysis beginning with the implementation of the project and extending for the |
2 | term of the agreement. |
3 | (g) In considering an unsolicited proposal, the responsible public entity may require from |
4 | the private entity a technical study prepared by a nationally recognized expert with experience in |
5 | preparing analysis for bond rating agencies as well as require disclosure of the private entity's |
6 | corporate governance documents, financial statements, certificates of insurance and any other |
7 | information necessary to determine the capability of such private entity to proceed and complete a |
8 | qualifying project under this chapter. In evaluating the technical study, the responsible public |
9 | entity may rely upon internal staff reports prepared by personnel familiar with the operation of |
10 | similar facilities or the advice of external advisors or consultants who have relevant experience. |
11 | 37-25-5. Project approval requirements. -- (a) All solicited or unsolicited proposals |
12 | from a private entity for approval of a qualifying project must be accompanied by the following |
13 | material and information, unless waived by the responsible public entity: |
14 | (1) A description of the qualifying project, including the conceptual design of the |
15 | facilities or a conceptual plan for the provision of services, and a schedule for the initiation and |
16 | completion of the qualifying project. |
17 | (2) A description of the method by which the private entity proposes to secure the |
18 | necessary property interests that are required for the qualifying project. |
19 | (3) A description of the private entity's general plans for financing the qualifying project, |
20 | including the sources of the private entity's funds and the identity of any dedicated revenue source |
21 | or proposed debt or equity investment on behalf of the private entity. |
22 | (4) The name and address of a person who may be contacted for additional information |
23 | concerning the proposal. |
24 | (5) The proposed user fees, lease payments, or other service payments over the term of a |
25 | comprehensive agreement, and the methodology for and circumstances that would allow changes |
26 | to the user fees, lease payments, and other service payments over time. |
27 | (6) Additional material or information that the responsible public entity reasonably |
28 | requests. |
29 | 37-25-6. Project qualification and process. -- (a) The private entity must meet the |
30 | minimum standards contained in the responsible public entity's guidelines for qualifying |
31 | professional services and contracts for traditional procurement projects. |
32 | (b) The responsible public entity must: |
33 | (1) Ensure that provision is made for the private entity's performance and payment of |
34 | subcontractors, including, but not limited to, surety bonds, letters of credit, parent company |
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1 | guarantees, and lender and equity partner guarantees. For the components of the qualifying |
2 | project which involve construction performance and payment, bonds are required and are subject |
3 | to the recordation, notice, suit limitation, and other requirements; |
4 | (2) Ensure the most efficient pricing of the security package that provides for the |
5 | performance and payment of subcontractors; |
6 | (3) Ensure that provision is made for the transfer of the private entity's obligations if the |
7 | comprehensive agreement is terminated or a material default occurs; |
8 | (c) After the public notification period has expired in the case of an unsolicited proposal, |
9 | the responsible public entity shall rank the proposals received in order of preference. In ranking |
10 | the proposals, the responsible public entity may consider factors that include, but are not limited |
11 | to, professional qualifications, general business terms, innovative design techniques or cost- |
12 | reduction terms, and finance plans. The responsible public entity may then begin negotiations for |
13 | a comprehensive agreement with the highest-ranked firm. If the responsible public entity is not |
14 | satisfied with the results of the negotiations, the responsible public entity may terminate |
15 | negotiations with the proposer, and negotiate with the second-ranked or subsequent-ranked firms |
16 | in the order consistent with this procedure. If only one proposal is received, the responsible public |
17 | entity may negotiate in good faith, and if the public entity is not satisfied with the results of the |
18 | negotiations, the public entity may terminate negotiations with the proposer. Notwithstanding the |
19 | provisions of this subsection, the responsible public entity may reject all proposals at any point in |
20 | the process until contract with the proposer is executed. |
21 | (d) The responsible public entity shall perform an independent analysis of the proposed |
22 | public-private partnership which demonstrates the cost-effectiveness and overall public benefit |
23 | before the procurement process is initiated, or before the contract is awarded. |
24 | (e) The responsible public entity may approve the development or operation of an |
25 | education facility, a transportation facility, a water or wastewater management facility or related |
26 | infrastructure, a technology infrastructure or other public infrastructure, or a government facility |
27 | needed by the responsible public entity as a qualifying project, or the design or equipping of a |
28 | qualifying project that is developed or operated, if: |
29 | (1) There is a public need for or benefit derived from a project of the type that the private |
30 | entity proposes as the qualifying project. |
31 | (2) The estimated cost of the qualifying project is reasonable in relation to similar |
32 | facilities. |
33 | (3) The private entity's plans will result in the timely acquisition, design, construction, |
34 | improvement, renovation, expansion, equipping, maintenance, or operation of the qualifying |
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1 | project. |
2 | (f) The responsible public entity may charge a reasonable fee to cover the costs of |
3 | processing, reviewing, and evaluating the request, including, but not limited to, reasonable |
4 | attorney fees, and fees for financial and technical advisors or consultants and for other necessary |
5 | advisors or consultants. |
6 | (g) Upon approval of a qualifying project, the responsible public entity shall establish a |
7 | date for the commencement of activities related to the qualifying project. The responsible public |
8 | entity may extend the commencement date. |
9 | (h) Approval of a qualifying project by the responsible public entity is subject to entering |
10 | into a comprehensive agreement with the private entity. |
11 | 37-25-7. Interim agreement. -- (a) Before or in connection with the negotiation of a |
12 | comprehensive agreement, the public entity may enter into an interim agreement with the private |
13 | entity proposing the development or operation of the qualifying project. An interim agreement |
14 | does not obligate the responsible public entity to enter into a comprehensive agreement. The |
15 | interim agreement is discretionary with the parties, and is not required on a qualifying project for |
16 | which the parties may proceed directly to a comprehensive agreement without the need for an |
17 | interim agreement. An interim agreement must be limited to provisions that: |
18 | (1) Authorize the private entity to commence activities for which it may be compensated |
19 | related to the proposed qualifying project, including, but not limited to, project planning and |
20 | development, design, environmental analysis and mitigation, survey, other activities concerning |
21 | any part of the prosed qualifying project, and ascertaining the availability of financing for the |
22 | proposed facility or facilities. |
23 | (2) Establish the process and timing of the negotiation of the comprehensive agreement. |
24 | (3) Contain such other provisions related to an aspect of the development or operation of |
25 | a qualifying project that the responsible public entity and the private entity deem appropriate. |
26 | 37-25-8. Comprehensive agreement. -- (a) Before developing or operating the |
27 | qualifying project, the private entity must enter into a comprehensive agreement with the |
28 | responsible public entity. The comprehensive agreement must provide for: |
29 | (1) Delivery of performance and payment bonds, letters of credit, or other security |
30 | acceptable to the responsible public entity in connection with the development or operation of the |
31 | qualifying project, in the form and amount satisfactory to the responsible public entity. For the |
32 | components of the qualifying project which involve construction, the form and amount of the |
33 | bonds must be consistent. |
34 | (2) Review of the design for the qualifying project by the responsible public entity and, if |
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1 | the design conforms to standards acceptable to the responsible public entity, the approval of the |
2 | responsible public entity. This section does not require the private entity to complete the design of |
3 | the qualifying project before the execution of the comprehensive agreement. |
4 | (3) Inspection of the qualifying project by the responsible public entity to ensure that the |
5 | private entity's activities are acceptable to the public entity in accordance with the comprehensive |
6 | agreement. |
7 | (4) Maintenance of a policy of liability insurance, a copy of which must be filed with the |
8 | responsible public entity and accompanied by proofs of coverage, each in the form and amount |
9 | satisfactory to the responsible public entity and reasonably sufficient to ensure coverage of |
10 | liability to the public and employees which names the responsible public entity as an additional |
11 | insured under the policy terms and to enable the continued operation of the qualifying project. |
12 | (5) Monitoring by the responsible public entity of the maintenance practices to be |
13 | performed by the private entity to ensure that the qualifying project is properly maintained. |
14 | (6) Periodic filing by the private entity of the appropriate financial statements that pertain |
15 | to the qualifying project. |
16 | (7) Procedures that govern the rights and responsibilities of the responsible public entity |
17 | and the private entity in the course of the construction and operation of the qualifying project and |
18 | in the event of the termination of the comprehensive agreement or a material default by the |
19 | private entity. The procedures must include conditions that govern the assumption of the duties |
20 | and responsibilities of the private entity by an entity that funded, in whole or in part, the |
21 | qualifying project or by the responsible public entity, and must provide for the transfer or |
22 | purchase of property or other interests of the private entity by the responsibility public entity. |
23 | (8) Fees, lease payments, or service payments. In negotiating user fees, the fees must be |
24 | the same for persons using the facility under like conditions, and must not materially discourage |
25 | use of the qualifying project. The execution of the comprehensive agreement or a subsequent |
26 | amendment is conclusive evidence that the fees, lease payments, or service payments provided |
27 | for in the comprehensive agreement comply with this section. Fees or lease payments established |
28 | in the comprehensive agreement as a source of revenue may be in addition to, or in lieu of, |
29 | service payments. |
30 | (9) Duties of the private entity, including the terms and conditions that the responsible |
31 | public entity determines serve the public purpose of this section. |
32 | (b) The comprehensive agreement may include: |
33 | (1) An agreement by the responsible public entity to make grants or loans to the private |
34 | entity from amounts received from the federal, state, or local government, or an agency or |
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1 | instrumentality thereof. |
2 | (2) A provision under which each entity agrees to provide notice of default and cure |
3 | rights for the benefit of the other entity, including, but not limited to, a provision regarding |
4 | unavoidable delays. |
5 | (3) A provision that terminates the authority and duties of the private entity under this |
6 | section, and dedicates the qualifying project to the responsible public entity or, if the qualifying |
7 | project was initially dedicated by an affected local jurisdiction, to the affected local jurisdiction |
8 | for public use. |
9 | 37-25-9. Fees. -- An agreement entered into pursuant to this chapter may authorize the |
10 | private entity to impose fees to members of the public for the use of the facility. The following |
11 | provisions apply to the agreement: |
12 | (1) The responsible public entity may develop new facilities or increase capacity in |
13 | existing facilities through agreements with public-private partnerships. |
14 | (2) The public-private partnership agreement must ensure that the facility is properly |
15 | operated, maintained, or improved in accordance with standards set forth in the comprehensive |
16 | agreement. |
17 | (3) The responsible public entity may lease existing fee-for-use facilities through a |
18 | public-private partnership agreement. |
19 | (4) Any revenues must be regulated by the responsible public entity pursuant to the |
20 | comprehensive agreement. |
21 | (5) A negotiated portion of revenues from fee-generating uses must be returned to the |
22 | public entity over the life of the agreement. |
23 | 37-25-10. Financing. -- (a) A private entity may enter into a private-source financing |
24 | agreement between financing sources and the private entity. A financing agreement and any liens |
25 | on the property or facility must be paid in full at the applicable closing that transfers ownership or |
26 | operation of the facility to the responsible public entity at the conclusion of the term of the |
27 | comprehensive agreement. |
28 | (b) The responsible public entity may lend funds to private entities that construct projects |
29 | containing facilities that are approved under this section. |
30 | (c) The responsible public entity may use innovative finance techniques associated with a |
31 | public-private partnership under this section, including, but not limited to, federal loans as may be |
32 | available in the Code of Federal Regulations, commercial bank loans, and hedges against |
33 | inflation from commercial banks or other private sources. In addition, the responsible public |
34 | entity may provide its own capital or operating budget to support a qualifying project. The budget |
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1 | may be from any legally permissible funding sources of the responsible public entity, including |
2 | the proceeds of debt issuances. A responsible public entity may use the model financing |
3 | agreement provided in its financing of a facility owned by a responsible public entity. A financing |
4 | agreement may not require the responsible public entity to indemnify the financing source, |
5 | subject the responsible public entity's facility to liens in violation of secure financing by the |
6 | responsible public entity with a pledge of security interest, and any such provision is void. |
7 | (d) A responsible public entity shall appropriate on a priority basis as required by the |
8 | comprehensive agreement a contractual payment obligation, annual or otherwise, from the |
9 | enterprise or other government fund from which the qualifying projects will be funded. This |
10 | required payment obligation must be appropriated before other noncontractual obligations |
11 | payable from the same enterprise or other government fund. |
12 | 37-25-11. Powers and duties of the private entity. -- (a) The private entity shall: |
13 | (1) Develop or operate the qualifying project in a manner that is acceptable to the |
14 | responsible public entity in accordance with the provisions of the comprehensive agreement. |
15 | (2) Maintain, or provide by contract for the maintenance or improvement of, the |
16 | qualifying project if required by the comprehensive agreement. |
17 | (3) Cooperate with the responsible public entity in making best efforts to establish |
18 | interconnection between the qualifying project and any other facility or infrastructure as |
19 | requested by the responsible public entity in accordance with the provisions of the comprehensive |
20 | agreement. |
21 | (4) Comply with the comprehensive agreement and any lease or service contract. |
22 | (b) Each private facility that is constructed pursuant to this section must comply with the |
23 | requirements of federal, state, and local laws; state, regional, and local comprehensive plans; the |
24 | responsible public entity's rules, procedures, and standards for facilities; and such other |
25 | conditions that the responsible public entity determines to be in the public's best interest and that |
26 | are included in the comprehensive agreement. |
27 | (c) The responsible public entity may provide services to the private entity. An agreement |
28 | for maintenance and other services entered into pursuant to this section must provide for full |
29 | reimbursement for services rendered for qualifying projects. |
30 | (d) A private entity of a qualifying project may provide additional services for the |
31 | qualifying project to the public or to other private entities if the provision of additional services |
32 | does not impair the private entity's ability to meet its commitments to the responsible public |
33 | entity pursuant to the comprehensive agreement. |
34 | 37-25-12. Expiration or termination of agreements. -- Upon the expiration or |
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1 | termination of a comprehensive agreement, the responsible public entity may use revenues from |
2 | the qualifying project to pay current operation and maintenance costs of the qualifying project. If |
3 | the private entity materially defaults under the comprehensive agreement, the compensation that |
4 | is otherwise due to the private entity is payable to satisfy all financial obligations to investors and |
5 | lenders on the qualifying project in the same way that is provided in the comprehensive |
6 | agreement or any other agreement involving the qualifying project, if the costs of operating and |
7 | maintaining the qualifying project are paid in the normal course. Revenues in excess of the costs |
8 | for operation and maintenance costs may be paid to the investors and lenders to satisfy payment |
9 | obligations under their respective agreements. A responsible public entity may terminate with |
10 | cause and without prejudice a comprehensive agreement, and may exercise any other rights or |
11 | remedies that may be available to it in accordance with the provisions of the comprehensive |
12 | agreement. The full faith and credit of the responsible public entity may not be pledged to secure |
13 | the financing of the private entity. The assumption of the development or operation of the |
14 | qualifying project does not obligate the responsible public entity to pay any obligation of the |
15 | private entity from sources other than revenues from the qualifying project unless stated |
16 | otherwise in the comprehensive agreement. |
17 | 37-25-13. Sovereign immunity. -- This section does not waive the sovereign immunity |
18 | of a responsible public entity, an affected local jurisdiction, or an officer or employee thereof |
19 | with respect to participation in, or approval of, any part of a qualifying project or its operation, |
20 | including, but not limited to, interconnection of the qualifying project with any other |
21 | infrastructure or project. A city, town or district in which a qualifying project is located possesses |
22 | sovereign immunity with respect to the project, including, but not limited to, its design, |
23 | construction, and operation. |
24 | 37-25-14. Construction. -- This chapter shall be liberally construed to effectuate the |
25 | purposes of this section. This section shall be construed as cumulative and supplemental to any |
26 | other authority or power vested in or exercised by the governing board of a city, town, district, or |
27 | hospital or health care system including those contained in acts of the general assembly |
28 | establishing such public hospital boards. This section does not affect any agreement or existing |
29 | relationship with a supporting organization involving such governing board or system in effect as |
30 | of January 1, 2016. |
31 | (1) This chapter does not limit a political subdivision of the state in the acquisition, |
32 | design, or construction of a public project pursuant to other statutory authority. |
33 | (2) Except as otherwise provided in this section, this chapter does not amend existing |
34 | laws by granting additional powers to, or further restricting, a local governmental entity from |
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1 | regulating and entering into cooperative arrangements with the private sector for the planning, |
2 | construction, or operation of a facility. |
3 | 37-25-15 Severability. -- The provisions of this chapter are severable and if any of its |
4 | provisions are adjudged to be invalid or unconstitutional, this shall not affect or impair any of the |
5 | remaining provisions. |
6 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect on May 1, 2016. |
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LC002748 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC PROPERTY AND WORKS - PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS - | |
PUBLIC PURPOSE FACILITY UPGRADE ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would create the public-private partnership – public purpose facility upgrade act |
2 | the purpose of which would be to promote the upgrade of facilities used for public purposes by |
3 | encouraging private investment in qualifying projects. |
4 | This act would take effect on May 1, 2016. |
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LC002748 | |
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