2017 -- S 0652 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC001744/SUB A/3 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2017 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION | |
| |
Introduced By: Senators Pearson, DiPalma, DaPonte, Gallo, and Conley | |
Date Introduced: March 29, 2017 | |
Referred To: Senate Housing & Municipal Government | |
(RIIB) | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 16-7-41 and 16-7-44 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-7 entitled |
2 | "Foundation Level School Support [See Title 16 Chapter 97 - The Rhode Island Board Of |
3 | Education Act]" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 16-7-41. Computation of school housing aid. |
5 | (a) In each fiscal year the state shall pay to each community a grant to be applied to the |
6 | cost of school housing equal to the following: |
7 | The cost of each new school housing project certified to the commissioner of elementary |
8 | and secondary education not later than July 15 of the fiscal year shall be divided by the actual |
9 | number of years of the bond issued by the local community or the Rhode Island Health and |
10 | Educational Building Corporation in support of the specific project, times the school housing aid |
11 | ratio; and provided, further, with respect to costs of new school projects financed with proceeds |
12 | of bonds issued by the local community or the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building |
13 | Corporation in support of the specific project, the amount of the school housing aid payable in |
14 | each fiscal year shall not exceed the amount arrived at by multiplying the principal and interest of |
15 | the bonds payable in each fiscal year by the school housing aid ratio and which principal and |
16 | interest amount over the life of the bonds, shall, in no event, exceed the costs of each new school |
17 | housing project certified to the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. If a |
18 | community fails to specify or identify the appropriate reimbursement schedule, the commissioner |
19 | of elementary and secondary education may at his or her discretion set up to a five (5) year |
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1 | reimbursement cycle for projects under five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000); up to ten (10) |
2 | years for projects up to three million dollars ($3,000,000); and up to twenty (20) years for |
3 | projects over three million dollars ($3,000,000). |
4 | (b) Aid shall be provided for the same period as the life of the bonds issued in support of |
5 | the project and at the school housing aid ratio applicable to the local community at the time of the |
6 | bonds issued in support of the project as set forth in § 16-7-39. |
7 | (c) Aid shall be paid either to the community or in the case of projects financed through |
8 | the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building Corporation, to the Rhode Island Health and |
9 | Educational Building Corporation or its designee including, but not limited to, a trustee under a |
10 | bond indenture or loan and trust agreement, in support of bonds issued for specific projects of the |
11 | local community in accordance with this section, § 16-7-40 and § 16-7-44. Notwithstanding the |
12 | preceding, in case of failure of any city, town or district to pay the amount due in support of |
13 | bonds issued on behalf of a city, town, school or district project financed by the Rhode Island |
14 | Health and Educational Building Corporation, upon notification by the Rhode Island Health and |
15 | Educational Building Corporation, the general treasurer shall deduct the amount from aid |
16 | provided under this section, § 16-7-40, § 16-7-44 and § 16-7-15 through § 16-7-34.3 due the city, |
17 | town or district and direct said funding to the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building |
18 | Corporation or its designee. Aid paid to a community, including, but not limited to, in connection |
19 | with a project financed through the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank, in accordance with §46- |
20 | 12.2-4.2(g), shall not be pledged or otherwise be available to pay principal or interest on bonds or |
21 | notes or other forms or indebtedness issued by the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank, either |
22 | directly or indirectly through loan agreements, bonds, notes, lease revenue bonds, or capital |
23 | leases, delivered by a community to the Rhode island Infrastructure Bank. |
24 | (d) Notwithstanding any provisions of law to the contrary, in connection with the |
25 | issuance of refunding bonds benefiting any local community, any net interest savings resulting |
26 | from the refunding bonds issued by such community or a municipal public buildings authority for |
27 | the benefit of the community or by the Rhode Island health and educational building corporation |
28 | or the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank for the benefit of the community, in each case in support |
29 | of school housing projects for the community, shall be allocated between the community and the |
30 | state of Rhode Island, by applying the applicable school housing aid ratio at the time of issuance |
31 | of the refunding bonds, calculated pursuant to § 16-7-39, that would otherwise apply in |
32 | connection with school housing projects of the community; provided however, that for any |
33 | refundings that occur between July 1, 2013 and December 31, 2015, the community shall receive |
34 | eighty percent (80%) of the total savings and the state shall receive twenty percent (20%). In |
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1 | connection with any such refunding of bonds, the finance director or the chief financial officer of |
2 | the community shall certify such net interest savings to the commissioner of elementary and |
3 | secondary education. Notwithstanding § 16-7-44 or any other provision of law to the contrary, |
4 | school housing projects costs in connection with any such refunding bond issue shall include |
5 | bond issuance costs incurred by the community, the municipal public buildings authority or the |
6 | Rhode Island health and educational building corporation or the Rhode Island Infrastructure |
7 | Bank, as the case may be, in connection therewith. In connection with any refunding bond issue, |
8 | school housing project costs shall include the cost of interest payments on such refunding bonds, |
9 | if the cost of interest payments was included as a school housing cost for the bonds being |
10 | refunded. A local community or municipal public buildings authority shall not be entitled to the |
11 | benefits of this subsection (d) unless the net present value savings resulting from the refunding is |
12 | at least three percent (3%) of the refunded bond issue. |
13 | (e) Any provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, the commissioner of |
14 | elementary and secondary education shall cause to be monitored the potential for refunding |
15 | outstanding bonds of local communities or municipal public building authorities or of the Rhode |
16 | Island Health and Educational Building Corporation or the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank |
17 | issued for the benefit of local communities or municipal public building authorities and benefiting |
18 | from any aid referenced in this section. In the event it is determined by said monitoring that the |
19 | net present value savings which could be achieved by refunding such bonds of the type |
20 | referenced in the prior sentence including any direct costs normally associated with such |
21 | refundings is equal to (i) at least one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) and (ii) for the state |
22 | and the communities or public building authorities at least three percent (3%) of the bond issue to |
23 | be refunded including associated costs then, in such event, the commissioner (or his or her |
24 | designee) may direct the local community or municipal public building authority for the benefit |
25 | of which the bonds were issued, to refund such bonds. Failure of the local community or |
26 | municipal public buildings authority to timely refund such bonds, except due to causes beyond |
27 | the reasonable control of such local community or municipal public building authority, shall |
28 | result in the reduction by the state of the aid referenced in this § 16-7-4.1 associated with the |
29 | bonds directed to be refunded in an amount equal to ninety percent (90%) of the net present value |
30 | savings reasonably estimated by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education (or his |
31 | or her designee) which would have been achieved had the bonds directed to be refunded been |
32 | refunded by the ninetieth (90th) day (or if such day is not a business day in the state of Rhode |
33 | Island, the next succeeding business day) following the date of issuance of the directive of the |
34 | commissioner (or his or her designee) to refund such bonds. Such reduction in the aid shall begin |
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1 | in the fiscal year following the fiscal year in which the commissioner issued such directive for the |
2 | remaining term of the bond. |
3 | (f) Payments shall be made in accordance with § 16-7-40 and this section. |
4 | (g) For purposes of financing or refinancing school facilities in the city of Central Falls |
5 | through the issuance bonds through the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building |
6 | Corporation, the city of Central Falls shall be considered an "educational institution" within the |
7 | meaning of subdivision 45-38.1-3(13) of the general laws. |
8 | 16-7-44. School housing project costs. |
9 | School housing project costs, the date of completion of school housing projects, and the |
10 | applicable amount of school housing project cost commitments shall be in accordance with the |
11 | regulations of the commissioner of elementary and secondary education and the provisions of §§ |
12 | 16-7-35 -- 16-7-47; provided, however, that school housing project costs shall include the |
13 | purchase of sites, buildings, and equipment, the construction of buildings, and additions or |
14 | renovations of existing buildings and/or facilities. School housing project costs shall include the |
15 | cost of interest payment on any bond issued after July 1, 1988, provided that such bond is |
16 | approved by the voters on or before June 30, 2003, or issued by a municipal public building |
17 | authority or by the appropriate approving authority on or before June 30, 2003. Except as |
18 | provided in § 16-7-41(d) and §46-12.2-4.2(g), those projects approved after June 30, 2003, |
19 | interest payments may only be included in project costs provided that the bonds for these projects |
20 | are issued through the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building Corporation. School |
21 | housing project costs shall exclude: (1) any bond issuance costs incurred by the municipality or |
22 | regional school district; (2) demolition costs for buildings, facilities, or sites deemed surplus by |
23 | the school committee; and (3) restrictions pursuant to § 16-7-44.1 below. A building, facility, or |
24 | site is declared surplus by a school committee when the committee no longer has such building, |
25 | facility, or site under its direct care and control and transfers control to the municipality, § 16-2- |
26 | 15. The board of regents for elementary and secondary education will promulgate rules and |
27 | regulations for the administration of this section. These rules and regulations may provide for the |
28 | use of lease revenue bonds, capital leases, or capital reserve funding, to finance school housing |
29 | provided that the term of any bond, or capital lease shall not be longer than the useful life of the |
30 | project and these instruments are subject to the public review and voter approval otherwise |
31 | required by law for the issuance of bonds or capital leases. Cities or towns issuing bonds, or |
32 | leases issued by municipal public buildings authority for the benefit of a local community |
33 | pursuant to chapter 50 of title 45 shall not require voter approval. Effective January 1, 2008, and |
34 | except for interim finance mechanisms, refunding bonds, borrowing from the school building |
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1 | authority capital fund, and bonds issued by the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building |
2 | Corporation or the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank to finance school housing projects for towns, |
3 | cities, or regional school districts borrowing for which has previously been authorized by an |
4 | enabling act of the general assembly, all bonds, notes and other forms of indebtedness issued in |
5 | support of school housing projects shall require passage of an enabling act by the general |
6 | assembly. |
7 | SECTION 2. Sections 24-18-3 and 24-18-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 24-18 |
8 | entitled "Municipal Road and Bridge Revolving Fund" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
9 | 24-18-3. Definitions. |
10 | As used in this chapter, the following terms, unless the context requires a different |
11 | interpretation, shall have the following meanings: |
12 | (1) "Agency" means the Rhode Island infrastructure bank as set forth in chapter 46-12.2; |
13 | (2) "Annual construction plan" means the finalized list of approved projects to commence |
14 | construction each calendar year; |
15 | (3) "Approved project" means any project approved by the agency for financial |
16 | assistance; |
17 | (4) "Department" means the department of transportation, or, if the department shall be |
18 | abolished, the board, body, or commission succeeding to the principal functions thereof or upon |
19 | whom the powers given by chapter 5 of title 37 to the department shall be given by law. |
20 | (5) "Eligible project" means an infrastructure plan, or portion of an infrastructure plan, |
21 | that meets the project evaluation criteria; |
22 | (6) "Financial assistance" means any form of financial assistance other than grants |
23 | provided by the agency to a city or town in accordance with this chapter for all or any part of the |
24 | cost of an approved project, including, without limitation, temporary and permanent loans, with |
25 | or without interest, guarantees, insurance, subsidies for the payment of debt service on loans, |
26 | lines of credit, and similar forms of financial assistance; |
27 | (7) "Infrastructure plan" means a project proposed by a city or town that would make |
28 | capital improvements to roads, bridges and appurtenances thereto consistent with project |
29 | evaluation criteria; |
30 | (8) "Market rate" means the rate the city or town would receive in the open market at the |
31 | time of the original loan agreement as determined by the agency in accordance with its rules and |
32 | regulations; |
33 | (9) "Project evaluation criteria" means the criteria used by the department to evaluate |
34 | infrastructure plans and rank eligible projects and shall include, but not be limited to: |
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1 | (i) The the extent to which the project generates economic benefits, ; |
2 | (ii) The the extent to which the project would be able to proceed at an earlier date, ; |
3 | (iii) The the likelihood that the project would provide mobility benefits, ; |
4 | (iv) The the cost effectiveness of the project, ; |
5 | (v) The the likelihood that the project would increase safety, ; and |
6 | (vi) The the project's readiness to proceed within the forthcoming calendar year; |
7 | (10) "Project priority list" means the list of eligible projects ranked in the order in which |
8 | financial assistance shall be awarded by the agency pursuant to § 24-18-7; |
9 | (11) "Revolving fund" means the municipal road and bridge revolving fund established |
10 | under § 24-18-4; and |
11 | (12) "Subsidy assistance" means credit enhancements and other measures to reduce the |
12 | borrowing costs for a city or town. |
13 | 24-18-7. Procedure for project approval. |
14 | (a) By September 1, 2013, the department shall promulgate rules and regulations |
15 | establishing the project evaluation criteria and the process through which a city or town may |
16 | submit an infrastructure plan. By December 31, 2013, the agency shall promulgate rules and |
17 | regulations to effectuate the provisions of this chapter which may include, without limitation, |
18 | forms for financial assistance applications, loan agreements, and other instruments. All rules and |
19 | regulations promulgated pursuant to this chapter shall be promulgated in accordance with the |
20 | provisions of chapter 42-35. |
21 | (b) Beginning with the calendar year 2013 and for each calendar year thereafter, cities |
22 | Cities and towns shall have from September 15th through October 15th to submit an |
23 | infrastructure plan plans to the department in accordance with the department's rules and |
24 | regulations promulgated pursuant to subsection (a) of this section. In the event that October 15th |
25 | is a Saturday, Sunday, or a general holiday as enumerated in § 25-1-1, the deadline shall be |
26 | extended through the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or a general holiday as enumerated |
27 | in § 25-1-1. |
28 | (c) By the end of each calendar year, the The department shall evaluate all submitted |
29 | infrastructure plans and, in accordance with the project evaluation criteria, identify all eligible |
30 | projects, and after a public hearing, the department shall finalize and provide the agency and |
31 | statewide planning with a project priority list for the forthcoming calendar year. The agency shall |
32 | not award financial assistance to any project not listed on the project priority list. |
33 | (d) By the end of each calendar year, the agency shall determine the maximum amount of |
34 | financial assistance available for the forthcoming calendar year, provided that it shall not exceed |
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1 | an amount of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000); and provided further that the The agency shall |
2 | not obligate more than fifty percent (50%) of available funding in any calendar year to any one |
3 | city or town unless there are no other eligible projects on the project priority list. |
4 | (e) Upon issuance of the project priority list, the agency shall award financial assistance |
5 | to cities and towns for approved projects provided, however, that the agency does not exceed its |
6 | maximum annual amount of financial assistance. The agency may decline to award financial |
7 | assistance to an approved project which the agency determines will have a substantial adverse |
8 | effect on the interests of holders of bonds or other indebtedness of the agency or the interests of |
9 | other participants in the financial assistance program, or for good and sufficient cause affecting |
10 | the finances of the agency. All financial assistance shall be made pursuant to a loan agreement |
11 | between the agency and the city or town, acting by and through the officer or officers, board, |
12 | committee, or other body authorized by law, or otherwise its chief executive officer, according to |
13 | terms and conditions as determined by the agency, and each loan shall be evidenced and secured |
14 | by the issue to the agency of city or town obligations in fully marketable form in principal |
15 | amount, bearing interest at the rate or rates specified in the applicable loan agreement, and shall |
16 | otherwise bear such terms and conditions as authorized by this chapter and/or the loan agreement. |
17 | SECTION 3. Section 39-2-1.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-2 entitled "Duties of |
18 | Utilities and Carriers" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
19 | 39-2-1.2. Utility base rate -- Advertising, demand-side management and renewables. |
20 | (a) In addition to costs prohibited in § 39-1-27.4(b), no public utility distributing or |
21 | providing heat, electricity, or water to or for the public shall include as part of its base rate any |
22 | expenses for advertising, either direct or indirect, which promotes the use of its product or |
23 | service, or is designed to promote the public image of the industry. No public utility may furnish |
24 | support of any kind, direct or indirect, to any subsidiary, group, association, or individual for |
25 | advertising and include the expense as part of its base rate. Nothing contained in this section shall |
26 | be deemed as prohibiting the inclusion in the base rate of expenses incurred for advertising, |
27 | informational or educational in nature, which is designed to promote public safety conservation of |
28 | the public utility's product or service. The public utilities commission shall promulgate such rules |
29 | and regulations as are necessary to require public disclosure of all advertising expenses of any |
30 | kind, direct or indirect, and to otherwise effectuate the provisions of this section. |
31 | (b) Effective as of January 1, 2008, and for a period of fifteen (15) years thereafter, each |
32 | electric-distribution company shall include a charge per kilowatt-hour delivered to fund demand- |
33 | side management programs. The 0.3 mills per kilowatt-hour delivered to fund renewable energy |
34 | programs shall remain in effect until December 31, 2022. The electric-distribution company shall |
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1 | establish and, after July 1, 2007, maintain, two (2) separate accounts, one for demand-side |
2 | management programs (the "demand-side account"), which shall be funded by the electric |
3 | demand-side charge and administered and implemented by the distribution company, subject to |
4 | the regulatory reviewing authority of the commission, and one for renewable-energy programs, |
5 | which shall be administered by the Rhode Island commerce corporation pursuant to § 42-64-13.2 |
6 | and shall be held and disbursed by the distribution company as directed by the Rhode Island |
7 | commerce corporation for the purposes of developing, promoting, and supporting renewable |
8 | energy programs. |
9 | During the time periods established in subsection (b), the commission may, in its |
10 | discretion, after notice and public hearing, increase the sums for demand-side management and |
11 | renewable resources. In addition, the commission shall, after notice and public hearing, determine |
12 | the appropriate charge for these programs. The office of energy resources and/or the administrator |
13 | of the renewable energy programs may seek to secure for the state an equitable and reasonable |
14 | portion of renewable energy credits or certificates created by private projects funded through |
15 | those programs. As used in this section, "renewable-energy resources" shall mean: (1) Power |
16 | generation technologies, as defined in § 39-26-5, "eligible renewable-energy resources", |
17 | including off-grid and on-grid generating technologies located in Rhode Island, as a priority; (2) |
18 | Research and development activities in Rhode Island pertaining to eligible renewable-energy |
19 | resources and to other renewable-energy technologies for electrical generation; or (3) Projects and |
20 | activities directly related to implementing eligible renewable-energy resources projects in Rhode |
21 | Island. Technologies for converting solar energy for space heating or generating domestic hot |
22 | water may also be funded through the renewable-energy programs. Fuel cells may be considered |
23 | an energy efficiency technology to be included in demand-sided management programs. Special |
24 | rates for low-income customers in effect as of August 7, 1996, shall be continued, and the costs of |
25 | all of these discounts shall be included in the distribution rates charged to all other customers. |
26 | Nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting an electric-distribution company from |
27 | offering any special rates or programs for low-income customers which are not in effect as of |
28 | August 7, 1996, subject to the approval by the commission. |
29 | (1) The renewable energy investment programs shall be administered pursuant to rules |
30 | established by the Rhode Island commerce corporation. Said rules shall provide transparent |
31 | criteria to rank qualified renewable-energy projects, giving consideration to: |
32 | (i) the feasibility of project completion; |
33 | (ii) the anticipated amount of renewable energy the project will produce; |
34 | (iii) the potential of the project to mitigate energy costs over the life of the project; and |
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1 | (iv) the estimated cost per kilo-watt hour (kwh) of the energy produced from the project. |
2 | (c) [Deleted by P.L. 2012, ch. 241, art. 4, § 14]. |
3 | (d) The executive director of the commerce corporation is authorized and may enter into |
4 | a contract with a contractor for the cost-effective administration of the renewable-energy |
5 | programs funded by this section. A competitive bid and contract award for administration of the |
6 | renewable-energy programs may occur every three (3) years and shall include, as a condition, that |
7 | after July 1, 2008, the account for the renewable-energy programs shall be maintained and |
8 | administered by the commerce corporation as provided for in subsection (b). |
9 | (e) Effective January 1, 2007, and for a period of sixteen (16) years thereafter, each gas- |
10 | distribution company shall include, with the approval of the commission, a charge per deca therm |
11 | delivered to fund demand-side management programs (the "gas demand-side charge"), including, |
12 | but not limited to, programs for cost-effective energy efficiency, energy conservation, combined |
13 | heat and power systems, and weatherization services for low-income households. |
14 | (f) Each gas company shall establish a separate account for demand-side management |
15 | programs (the "gas demand-side account"), which shall be funded by the gas demand-side charge |
16 | and administered and implemented by the distribution company, subject to the regulatory |
17 | reviewing authority of the commission. The commission may establish administrative |
18 | mechanisms and procedures that are similar to those for electric demand-side management |
19 | programs administered under the jurisdiction of the commission and that are designed to achieve |
20 | cost-effectiveness and high, life-time savings of efficiency measures supported by the program. |
21 | (g) The commission may, if reasonable and feasible, except from this demand-side |
22 | management charge: |
23 | (i) Gas used for distribution generation; and |
24 | (ii) Gas used for the manufacturing processes, where the customer has established a self- |
25 | directed program to invest in and achieve best-effective energy efficiency in accordance with a |
26 | plan approved by the commission and subject to periodic review and approval by the |
27 | commission, which plan shall require annual reporting of the amount invested and the return on |
28 | investments in terms of gas savings. |
29 | (h) The commission may provide for the coordinated and/or integrated administration of |
30 | electric and gas demand-side management programs in order to enhance the effectiveness of the |
31 | programs. Such coordinated and/or integrated administration may after March 1, 2009, upon the |
32 | recommendation of the office of energy resources, be through one or more third-party entities |
33 | designated by the commission pursuant to a competitive selection process. |
34 | (i) Effective January 1, 2007, the commission shall allocate from demand-side |
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1 | management gas and electric funds authorized pursuant to this section, an amount not to exceed |
2 | two percent (2%) of such funds on an annual basis for the retention of expert consultants, and |
3 | reasonable administration costs of the energy efficiency and resources management council |
4 | associated with planning, management, and evaluation of energy-efficiency programs, renewable- |
5 | energy programs, system reliability least-cost procurement, and with regulatory proceedings, |
6 | contested cases, and other actions pertaining to the purposes, powers, and duties of the council, |
7 | which allocation may by mutual agreement, be used in coordination with the office of energy |
8 | resources to support such activities. |
9 | (j) Effective January 1, 2016, the commission shall annually allocate from the |
10 | administrative funding amount allocated in (i) from the demand-side management program as |
11 | described in subsection (i) as follows: fifty percent (50%) for the purposes identified in |
12 | subsection (i) and fifty percent (50%) annually to the office of energy resources for activities |
13 | associated with planning, management, and evaluation of energy-efficiency programs, renewable- |
14 | energy programs, system reliability, least-cost procurement, and with regulatory proceedings, |
15 | contested cases, and other actions pertaining to the purposes, powers, and duties of the office of |
16 | energy resources. |
17 | (k) On April 15, of each year, the office and the council shall submit to the governor, the |
18 | president of the senate, and the speaker of the house of representatives, separate financial and |
19 | performance reports regarding the demand-side management programs, including the specific |
20 | level of funds that were contributed by the residential, municipal, and commercial and industrial |
21 | sectors to the overall programs; the businesses, vendors, and institutions that received funding |
22 | from demand-side management gas and electric funds used for the purposes in this section; and |
23 | the businesses, vendors, and institutions that received the administrative funds for the purposes in |
24 | subsections (i) and (j). These reports shall be posted electronically on the websites of the office of |
25 | energy resources and the energy efficiency resource management council. |
26 | (l) On or after August 1, 2015, at the request of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank, |
27 | each electric-distribution company, except for the Pascoag Utility District and Block Island |
28 | Power Company, shall remit two percent (2%) of the amount of the 2014 electric demand-side |
29 | charge collections to the Rhode Island infrastructure bank in accordance with the terms of § 46- |
30 | 12.2-14.1. |
31 | (m) On or after August 1, 2015, at the request of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank, |
32 | each gas-distribution company shall remit two percent (2%) of the amount of the 2014 gas |
33 | demand-side charge collections to the Rhode Island infrastructure bank in accordance with the |
34 | terms of § 46-12.2-14.1. |
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1 | SECTION 4. Sections 39-26.5-2, 39-26.5-4.1, 39-26.5-6 and 39-26.5-11 of the General |
2 | Laws in Chapter 39-26.5 entitled "Property Assessed Clean Energy Program" are hereby |
3 | amended to read as follows: |
4 | 39-26.5-2. Definitions. |
5 | As used in this chapter, the following definitions apply: |
6 | (1) "Commercial property" means a property operated for commercial purposes, or a |
7 | residential property which contains five (5) or more housing units. |
8 | (2) "Distributed generation system" means an electrical generation facility located in the |
9 | electric distribution company's load zone with a nameplate capacity no greater than five |
10 | megawatts (5 MW), using eligible renewable energy resources as defined by § 39-26-5, including |
11 | biogas created as a result of anaerobic digestion, but, specifically excluding all other listed |
12 | eligible biomass fuels, and connected to an electrical power system owned, controlled, or |
13 | operated by the electric distribution company. |
14 | (3) "Dwelling" means a residential structure or mobile home which contains one to four |
15 | (4) family housing units, or individual units of condominiums or cooperatives. |
16 | (4) "Eligible net-metering system" means a facility generating electricity as defined in § |
17 | 39-26.4-2. |
18 | (5) "Eligible renewable energy resources" means resources as defined in § 39-26-5. |
19 | (6) "Energy efficiency projects" means those projects that are eligible under § 39-1-27.7 |
20 | or projects that have been defined as eligible in the PACE rules and regulations. |
21 | (7) "Institution" means a private entity or quasi-state agency. |
22 | (8) "Loan loss reserve fund" or "(LRF)" means funds set aside to cover losses in the event |
23 | of loan defaults. |
24 | (9) "Municipality" or "towns and cities" means any Rhode Island town or city with |
25 | powers set forth in title 45 of the general laws. |
26 | (10) "Net metering" means using electricity as defined in § 39-26.4-2. |
27 | (11) "PACE assessment" or "assessment" means the special assessment placed on a |
28 | PACE property owner's property tax or other municipal assessment bill in accordance with this |
29 | chapter, to be collected by or on behalf of the PACE municipality in which that PACE property is |
30 | located and remitted to the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank or to the lender that has financed |
31 | that PACE project. The PACE assessment shall be owed by the current owner of the related |
32 | PACE property as of the time each PACE assessment comes due. In the event of a transfer of |
33 | ownership, all PACE assessments coming due after the date of the transfer, by foreclosure or |
34 | otherwise, shall be owed by the transferee. |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 11 of 26 |
1 | (12) "PACE lien" means the non-accelerating lien placed on a PACE property in |
2 | accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank |
3 | pursuant to this chapter, in order to secure the repayment of a PACE assessment made in |
4 | connection with that PACE property and to secure the repayment of each PACE assessment to be |
5 | made by that PACE property owner as each assessment comes due. |
6 | (13) "PACE municipality" means a municipality voluntarily designated by its city or |
7 | town council as a property-assessed clean energy municipality. |
8 | (14) "PACE project" or "project" means a distinct installation of an eligible energy |
9 | efficiency system, renewable energy net-metering system, distributed generation system, |
10 | alternative fuel infrastructure upgrade, and/or other eligible environmental health and |
11 | environmental safety upgrades. |
12 | (15) "PACE property" or "property" means any residential property or commercial |
13 | property which is the subject of an approved application for a PACE project filed pursuant to this |
14 | chapter. |
15 | (16) "Past due balances" means the sum of the due and unpaid assessments on a PACE |
16 | property as of the time the ownership of that PACE property is transferred. "Past due balances" |
17 | does not mean the unaccelerated balance of the PACE loan at the time that property is transferred. |
18 | (17) "Property-assessed clean energy" or "PACE" is a voluntary financing mechanism |
19 | which allows both residential and commercial property owners to access affordable, long-term |
20 | financing for energy upgrades, and other eligible environmental health and environmental safety |
21 | upgrades on their property. |
22 | (18) "Rhode Island infrastructure bank" means the Rhode Island infrastructure bank |
23 | ("RIIB"). For the purposes of this chapter, Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall include other |
24 | related state agencies and/or third party administrators, as may be engaged by the Rhode Island |
25 | infrastructure bank for the purposes of providing the services envisioned by the rules and |
26 | regulations promulgated in accordance with § 39-26.5-11. |
27 | 39-26.5-4.1. Financing agreements -- PACE assessments -- PACE liens. |
28 | (a) The Rhode Island infrastructure bank or a third-party capital provider may enter into a |
29 | financing agreement with a qualifying PACE property owner. After such agreement is entered |
30 | into, and upon notice from the Rhode Island infrastructure bank, the PACE municipality shall: (i) |
31 | place a caveat on the land records indicating that a PACE assessment and lien is anticipated upon |
32 | completion of the PACE project for such property; or (ii) at the direction of the Rhode Island |
33 | infrastructure bank, levy the PACE assessment and file a lien on the land records on the estimated |
34 | costs of the PACE project prior to the completion or upon the completion of said PACE project. |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 12 of 26 |
1 | (b) PACE assessments levied pursuant to this chapter and the interest, fees and any |
2 | penalties thereon shall constitute a lien against the qualifying PACE property on which they are |
3 | made until they are paid. Such lien shall be collected in the same manner as the property taxes of |
4 | the PACE municipality on real property, including, in the event of default or delinquency, with |
5 | respect to any penalties, fees and remedies. Each such lien may be recorded and released in the |
6 | manner provided for property tax liens and if the property is commercial property as defined |
7 | herein it shall be subject to the consent of existing mortgage holders. The PACE lien shall take |
8 | precedence over all other liens or encumbrances except a lien for taxes of the municipality on real |
9 | property, or if the subject property is residential property as defined herein the PACE lien shall be |
10 | subject to any prior recorded mortgage which lien for taxes or pre-recorded residential mortgage |
11 | shall have priority over such PACE assessment lien. To the extent PACE assessments are paid in |
12 | installments and any such installment is not paid when due, the PACE assessment lien may be |
13 | foreclosed to the extent of any unpaid installment payments and any penalties, interest, and fees |
14 | related thereto. In the event such PACE assessment lien is foreclosed, such PACE assessment lien |
15 | shall survive the judgment of foreclosure to the extent of any unpaid installment payments of the |
16 | PACE assessment secured by such PACE assessment lien that were not the subject of such |
17 | judgment. |
18 | (c) Any PACE municipality may assign to the Rhode Island infrastructure bank any and |
19 | all liens filed by the PACE municipality, as provided in the written agreement between the |
20 | participating municipality and the Rhode Island infrastructure bank. The Rhode Island |
21 | infrastructure bank may sell or assign, for consideration, any and all liens received from the |
22 | participating municipality. The consideration received by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank |
23 | shall be negotiated between the Rhode Island infrastructure bank and the assignee. The assignee |
24 | or assignees of such liens shall have and possess the same powers and rights at law or in equity as |
25 | the Rhode Island infrastructure bank and the participating municipality and its tax collector would |
26 | have had if the lien had not been assigned with regard to the precedence and priority of such lien, |
27 | the accrual of interest and the fees and expenses of collection. The assignee shall have the same |
28 | rights to enforce such liens as any private party holding a lien on real property, including, but not |
29 | limited to, foreclosure and a suit on the debt. Costs and reasonable attorneys' fees incurred by the |
30 | assignee as a result of any foreclosure action or other legal proceeding brought pursuant to this |
31 | section and directly related to the proceeding shall be taxed in any such proceeding against each |
32 | person having title to any property subject to the proceedings. Such costs and fees may be |
33 | collected by the assignee at any time after demand for payment has been made by the assignee. |
34 | 39-26.5-6. Priority of PACE lien. |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 13 of 26 |
1 | (a) A PACE lien on a residential property shall be: subordinate to all liens on the |
2 | residential property in existence at the time the residential PACE lien is filed; subordinate to a |
3 | first mortgage on the residential property recorded after such PACE lien is filed; and superior to |
4 | any other lien on the residential recorded after such PACE lien is filed. This subsection shall not |
5 | affect the status or priority of any other municipal or statutory lien. |
6 | (b) At the time of a transfer of property ownership of a residential property, including by |
7 | foreclosure, the past due balances of any special assessment under this chapter shall be due for |
8 | payment. In the event of a foreclosure action, the past due balances shall include all payments on |
9 | a PACE assessment that are due and unpaid as of the date of the foreclosure. Unless otherwise |
10 | agreed by the PACE lender, all payments on the PACE assessment that become due after the date |
11 | of transfer by foreclosure or otherwise shall continue to be secured by a PACE lien on the PACE |
12 | property and shall be the responsibility of the transferee. |
13 | (c) A PACE lien on a commercial property shall be: senior to all liens on the commercial |
14 | property in existence at the time the PACE lien is filed, subject to the consent of the senior |
15 | existing mortgage holder holders on the property; senior to all liens filed or recorded after the |
16 | time the PACE lien is created; but junior to a municipal tax lien. |
17 | (d) At the time of a transfer of property ownership of a commercial property, including |
18 | by tax sale, in accordance with §44-9-32, or foreclosure, the past due balances of any PACE |
19 | assessment under this chapter shall be due for payment. Unless otherwise agreed by the PACE |
20 | lender, all payments of PACE assessments that become due after the date of transfer by tax sale, |
21 | in accordance with §44-9-32, or foreclosure, or otherwise shall be secured by a PACE lien on the |
22 | PACE property and shall be the responsibility of the transferee. |
23 | 39-26.5-11. Rules and regulations. |
24 | (a) The Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall consult with the office of energy resources |
25 | to promulgate rules and regulations, in accordance with this section, and in accordance with |
26 | chapter 35 of title 42. Such rules and regulations should ensure that the PACE program does not |
27 | adversely affect the implementation of any other energy program in whose coordination the |
28 | Rhode Island infrastructure bank or the office of energy resources is involved. Such rules and |
29 | regulations shall include, but not be limited to, the following: |
30 | (1) The necessary application requirements and procedures for any residential property |
31 | owner or commercial property owner seeking PACE financing; |
32 | (2) The necessary qualifications and requirements for a proposed PACE project; |
33 | (3) The underwriting criteria to be applied in determining the eligibility of properties and |
34 | property owners for PACE projects; and |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 14 of 26 |
1 | (4) Requirements that all existing lien holders on a property be given notice prior to a |
2 | PACE assessment and lien being filed in connection with that property and that all commercial |
3 | property owners seeking a commercial PACE loan receive consent of the primary existing |
4 | mortgage holder holders on that property prior to being eligible. |
5 | (b) The Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall be responsible for promulgating |
6 | agreements, forms and other documents necessary for the efficient administration of the PACE |
7 | program. |
8 | SECTION 5. Sections 46-12.2-2 and 46-12.2-4.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-12.2 |
9 | entitled "Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
10 | 46-12.2-2. Definitions. |
11 | As used in this chapter, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the following |
12 | words and phrases shall have the following meanings: |
13 | (1) "Agency" means the Rhode Island clean water finance agency, and, effective |
14 | September 1, 2015 and thereafter, shall mean the Rhode Island infrastructure bank; |
15 | (2) "Approved project" means any project or portion thereof that has been issued a |
16 | certificate of approval by the department for financial assistance from the agency, and also |
17 | includes any project approved for financial assistance from the agency in accordance with state |
18 | law, and, furthermore, shall include water pollution abatement projects funded outside of the |
19 | water pollution control revolving fund, the Rhode Island water pollution control revolving fund, |
20 | or the local interest subsidy trust fund, without the requirement of the issuance of a certificate of |
21 | approval; |
22 | (3) "Board" means board of directors of the agency; |
23 | (4) "Bond act" means any general or special law authorizing a local governmental unit to |
24 | incur indebtedness for all or any part of the cost of projects coming within the scope of a water |
25 | pollution abatement project, or for other projects related to this chapter, including but not limited |
26 | to § 45-12-2; |
27 | (5) "Bonds" means bonds, notes, or other evidence of indebtedness of the agency; |
28 | (6) "Certificate of approval" means the certificate of approval contemplated by § 46-12.2- |
29 | 8; |
30 | (7) "Chief executive officer" means the mayor in any city, the president of the town |
31 | council in any town, and the executive director of any authority or commission, unless some other |
32 | officer or body is designated to perform the functions of a chief executive officer under any bond |
33 | act or under the provisions of a local charter or other law; |
34 | (8) "Clean Water Act" or "act" means the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, act of |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 15 of 26 |
1 | June 30, 1948, ch. 758, as added Oct. 18, 1972, Pub. L. No. 92-500, 86 Stat. 896, as added Dec. |
2 | 27, 1977, Pub. L. No. 95-217, 91 Stat. 1566 (codified at 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., as amended and |
3 | as hereafter amended from time to time); |
4 | (9) "Corporation" means any corporate person, including, but not limited to, bodies |
5 | politic and corporate, public departments, public offices, public agencies, public authorities, |
6 | political subdivisions of the state, corporations, societies, associations, limited liability |
7 | companies, partnerships and sole proprietorships; |
8 | (10) "Cost" as applied to any approved project, means any or all costs, whenever |
9 | incurred, approved by the agency in accordance with section eight of this chapter, of planning, |
10 | designing, acquiring, constructing, and carrying out and placing the project in operation, |
11 | including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, amounts for the following: planning, |
12 | design, acquisition, construction, expansion, improvement and rehabilitation of facilities; |
13 | acquisition of real or personal property; demolitions and relocations; labor, materials, machinery |
14 | and equipment; services of architects, engineers, and environmental and financial experts and |
15 | other consultants; feasibility studies, plans, specifications, and surveys; interest prior to and |
16 | during the carrying out of any project and for a reasonable period thereafter; reserves for debt |
17 | service or other capital or current expenses; costs of issuance of local governmental obligations or |
18 | non-governmental obligations issued to finance the obligations including, without limitation, fees, |
19 | charges, and expenses and costs of the agency relating to the loan evidenced thereby, fees of |
20 | trustees and other depositories, legal and auditing fees, premiums and fees for insurance, letters or |
21 | lines of credit or other credit facilities securing local governmental obligations or non- |
22 | governmental obligations and other costs, fees, and charges in connection with the foregoing; and |
23 | working capital, administrative expenses, legal expenses, and other expenses necessary or |
24 | incidental to the aforesaid, to the financing of a project and to the issuance therefor of local |
25 | government obligations under the provisions of this chapter; |
26 | (11) "Department" means the department of environmental management; |
27 | (12) "Projected energy efficiency savings" means, at the time a loan agreement is entered |
28 | into between the agency and a local governmental unit, the savings projected to be derived from |
29 | the implementation of energy efficient and renewable energy upgrades to public buildings, as |
30 | determined in accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated by the Rhode Island |
31 | infrastructure bank pursuant to this chapter; |
32 | (13) "Financial assistance" means any form of financial assistance provided by the |
33 | agency to a local governmental unit, person or corporation in accordance with this chapter for all |
34 | or any part of the cost of an approved project, including, without limitation, grants, temporary and |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 16 of 26 |
1 | permanent loans, with or without interest, guarantees, insurance, subsidies for the payment of |
2 | debt service on loans, lines of credit, and similar forms of financial assistance; provided, |
3 | however, notwithstanding the foregoing, for purposes of capitalization grant awards made |
4 | available to the agency, pursuant to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. |
5 | 111-5), or as otherwise required in connection with other capitalization grant awards made |
6 | available to the agency, financial assistance shall also include principal forgiveness and negative |
7 | interest loans; |
8 | (14) "Fully marketable form" means a local governmental obligation in form satisfactory |
9 | to the agency duly executed and accompanied by an opinion of counsel of recognized standing in |
10 | the field of municipal law whose opinions have been and are accepted by purchasers of like |
11 | obligations to the effect that the obligation is a valid and binding obligation of the local |
12 | governmental unit issuing the obligation, enforceable in accordance with its terms; |
13 | (15) "General revenues", when used with reference to a local governmental unit, means |
14 | revenues, receipts, assessments, and other moneys of the local governmental unit received from |
15 | or on account of the exercise of its powers and all rights to receive the same, including without |
16 | limitation: |
17 | (i) Taxes, |
18 | (ii) Wastewater system revenues, |
19 | (iii) Assessments upon or payments received from any other local governmental unit |
20 | which is a member or service recipient of the local governmental unit, whether by law, contract, |
21 | or otherwise, |
22 | (iv) Proceeds of local governmental obligations and loans and grants received by the |
23 | local governmental unit in accordance with this chapter, |
24 | (v) Investment earnings, |
25 | (vi) Reserves for debt service or other capital or current expenses, |
26 | (vii) Receipts from any tax, excise, or fee heretofore or hereafter imposed by any general |
27 | or special law all or a part of the receipts of which are payable or distributable to or for the |
28 | account of the local governmental unit, |
29 | (viii) Local aid distributions, and |
30 | (ix) Receipts, distributions, reimbursements, and other assistance received by or for the |
31 | account of the local governmental unit from the United States or any agency, department, or |
32 | instrumentality thereof; |
33 | (16) "Loan" means a loan by the agency to a local governmental unit, or person, or |
34 | corporation for costs of an approved project, including, without limitation, temporary and |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 17 of 26 |
1 | permanent loans, and lines of credit; |
2 | (17) "Loan agreement" means any agreement entered into by the agency with a local |
3 | governmental unit, person, or corporation pertaining to a loan, other financial assistance, local |
4 | governmental obligations, or non-governmental obligations, including, without limitation, a loan |
5 | agreement, trust agreement, security agreement, reimbursement agreement, guarantee agreement, |
6 | financing lease agreement, appropriate agreement, or similar instrument; |
7 | (18) "Local aid distributions" means receipts, distributions, reimbursements, and other |
8 | assistance payable by the state to or for the account of a local governmental unit, except such |
9 | receipts, distributions, reimbursements, and other assistance restricted by law to specific |
10 | statutorily defined purposes; |
11 | (19) "Local governmental obligations" means bonds, notes, financing lease obligations, |
12 | appropriation obligations, and other evidences of indebtedness in fully marketable form issued by |
13 | a local governmental unit to evidence a loan or other financial assistance, from the agency in |
14 | accordance with this chapter or otherwise as provided herein; |
15 | (20) "Local governmental unit" means any town, city, district, commission, agency, |
16 | authority, board, bodies politic and corporate, public corporation, or other political subdivision or |
17 | instrumentality of the state or of any political subdivision thereof, including the Narragansett Bay |
18 | commission; and, for purposes of dam safety or dam maintenance projects, any person seeking |
19 | financial assistance as a joint applicant with any of the above entities; |
20 | (21) "Local interest subsidy trust fund" means the local interest subsidy trust fund |
21 | established under § 46-12.2-6; |
22 | (22) "Non-governmental obligations" means bonds, notes, or other evidences of |
23 | indebtedness in fully marketable form issued by a person or corporation to evidence a loan, or |
24 | other financial assistance, from the agency in accordance with this chapter or otherwise as |
25 | provided herein. |
26 | (23) "Person" means any natural person; |
27 | (24) "Priority determination system" means the system by which water pollution |
28 | abatement projects are rated on the basis of environmental benefit and other criteria for funding |
29 | assistance pursuant to rules and regulations promulgated by the department as they may be |
30 | amended from time to time; |
31 | (25) "Qualified energy conservation bond" or "QECB" means those bonds designated by |
32 | 26 U.S.C. § 54D. |
33 | (26) "Revenues", when used with reference to the agency, means any receipts, fees, |
34 | payments, moneys, revenues, or other payments received or to be received by the agency in the |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 18 of 26 |
1 | exercise of its corporate powers under this chapter, including, without limitation, loan |
2 | repayments, payments on local governmental obligations, non-governmental obligations, grants, |
3 | aid, appropriations, and other assistance from the state, the United States, or any agency, |
4 | department, or instrumentality of either or of a political subdivision thereof, bond proceeds, |
5 | investment earnings, insurance proceeds, amounts in reserves, and other funds and accounts |
6 | established by or pursuant to this chapter or in connection with the issuance of bonds, including, |
7 | without limitation, the water pollution control revolving fund, the Rhode Island water pollution |
8 | control revolving fund, and the local interest subsidy fund, and any other fees, charges or other |
9 | income received or receivable by the agency; |
10 | (27) "Rhode Island water pollution control revolving fund" means the Rhode Island water |
11 | pollution control revolving fund established pursuant to § 46-12.2-6; |
12 | (28) "Trust agreement" means a trust agreement, loan agreement, security agreement, |
13 | reimbursement agreement, currency or interest rate exchange agreement, or other security |
14 | instrument, and a resolution, loan order, or other vote authorizing, securing, or otherwise |
15 | providing for the issue of bonds, loans, or local governmental obligations or non-governmental |
16 | obligations; |
17 | (29) "Wastewater system revenues" means all rates, rents, fee assessments, charges, and |
18 | other receipts derived or to be derived by a local governmental unit from wastewater collection |
19 | and treatment facilities and water pollution abatement projects under its ownership or control, or |
20 | from the services provided thereby, including, without limitation, proceeds of grants, gifts, |
21 | appropriations, and loans, including the proceeds of loans or grants awarded by the agency or the |
22 | department in accordance with this chapter, investment earnings, reserves for capital and current |
23 | expenses, proceeds of insurance or condemnation, and the sale or other disposition of property; |
24 | wastewater system revenues may also include rates, rents, fees, charges, and other receipts |
25 | derived by the local governmental unit from any water supply of distribution facilities or other |
26 | revenue producing facilities under its ownership or control; wastewater system revenues shall not |
27 | include any ad valorem taxes levied directly by the local governmental unit on any real and |
28 | personal property; |
29 | (30) "Water pollution abatement project" or "project" means any project eligible pursuant |
30 | to Title VI of the Clean Water Act including, but not limited to, wastewater treatment or |
31 | conveyance project that contributes to removal, curtailment, or mitigation of pollution of the |
32 | surface water of the state, and conforms with any applicable comprehensive land use plan which |
33 | has been adopted or any dam safety, removal or maintenance project; it also means a project to |
34 | enhance the waters of the state, which the agency has been authorized by statute to participate in; |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 19 of 26 |
1 | it also means any other project to which the agency has been authorized to provide financial |
2 | assistance; |
3 | (31) "Water pollution control revolving fund" means the water pollution control |
4 | revolving fund contemplated by title VI of the Water Quality Act and established under § 46- |
5 | 12.2-6; |
6 | (32) "Water Quality Act" means the Water Quality Act of 1987, Pub. L. No. 100-4, 101 |
7 | Stat. 7, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., as amended from time to time. |
8 | 46-12.2-4.2. Establishment of the efficient buildings fund. |
9 | (a) There is hereby authorized and created within the Rhode Island infrastructure bank an |
10 | efficient buildings fund for the purpose of providing technical, administrative and financial |
11 | assistance to local governmental units for energy efficient and renewable energy upgrades to |
12 | public buildings and infrastructure, including, but not limited to, streetlights. The Rhode Island |
13 | infrastructure bank shall review and approve all applications for projects to be financed through |
14 | the efficient buildings fund. |
15 | The office of energy resources shall promulgate rules and regulations establishing a |
16 | project priority list for efficient buildings fund and the process through which a local |
17 | governmental unit may submit an application for inclusion of a project on the project priority list. |
18 | Upon issuance of the project priority list by the office of energy resources, the project priority list |
19 | shall be used by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank to determine the order in which financial |
20 | assistance shall be awarded. The Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall promulgate rules and |
21 | regulations to effectuate the provisions of this section which may include, without limitation, |
22 | forms for financial assistance applications, loan agreements, and other instruments. All rules and |
23 | regulations promulgated pursuant to this chapter shall be promulgated in accordance with the |
24 | provisions of chapter 35 of title 42. Eligibility for receipt of this financial assistance by a local |
25 | governmental unit shall be conditioned upon that local governmental unit reallocating their |
26 | remaining proportional QECB allocation to the state of Rhode Island. |
27 | (b) The Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall have all the powers necessary and |
28 | convenient to carry out and effectuate the purposes and provisions of this section including, |
29 | without limiting the generality of the preceding statement, the authority: |
30 | (1) To receive and disburse such funds from the state and federal government as may be |
31 | available for the purpose of the fund subject to the provisions of this section; |
32 | (2) To make and enter into binding commitments to provide financial assistance to |
33 | eligible borrowers from amounts on deposit in the fund; |
34 | (3) To levy administrative fees on eligible borrowers as necessary to effectuate the |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 20 of 26 |
1 | provisions of this section, provided the fees have been previously authorized by an agreement |
2 | between the Rhode Island infrastructure bank and the eligible borrower; |
3 | (4) To engage the services of third-party vendors to provide professional services; |
4 | (5) To establish one or more accounts within the fund; and |
5 | (6) Such other authority as granted to the Rhode Island infrastructure bank under this |
6 | chapter. |
7 | (c) Subject to the provisions of this section and to any agreements with the holders of any |
8 | bonds of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank or any trustee therefor, amounts held by the Rhode |
9 | Island infrastructure bank for the account of the fund shall be applied by the Rhode Island |
10 | infrastructure bank, either by direct expenditure, disbursement, or transfer to one or more other |
11 | funds and accounts held by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank or maintained under any trust |
12 | agreement pertaining to bonds, either alone or with other funds of the Rhode Island infrastructure |
13 | bank, to the following purposes: |
14 | (1) To provide financial assistance to local governmental units to finance costs of |
15 | approved projects, as set forth in subsection (a), and to refinance the costs of the projects, subject |
16 | to such terms and conditions, if any, as are determined by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank; |
17 | (2) To fund reserves for bonds of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank and to purchase |
18 | insurance and pay the premiums therefor, and pay fees and expenses of letters or lines of credit |
19 | and costs of reimbursement to the issuers thereof for any payments made thereon or on any |
20 | insurance, and to otherwise provide security for, and a source of payment for obligations of the |
21 | Rhode Island infrastructure bank, by pledge, lien, assignment, or otherwise as provided in this |
22 | chapter; |
23 | (3) To pay expenses of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank in administering the fund; |
24 | (4) To provide a reserve for, or to otherwise secure, amounts payable by borrowers on |
25 | loans and obligations outstanding in the event of default thereof; amounts in any account in the |
26 | fund may be applied to defaults on loans outstanding to the borrower for which the account was |
27 | established and, on a parity basis with all other accounts, to defaults on any loans or obligations |
28 | outstanding; and |
29 | (5) To provide a reserve for, or to otherwise secure, by pledge, lien, assignment, or |
30 | otherwise as provided in this chapter, any bonds of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank. |
31 | (d) In addition to other remedies of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank under any loan |
32 | agreement or otherwise provided by law, the Rhode Island infrastructure bank may also recover |
33 | from a borrower, in an action in superior court, any amount due the Rhode Island infrastructure |
34 | bank together with any other actual damages the Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall have |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 21 of 26 |
1 | sustained from the failure or refusal of the borrower to make the payments or abide by the terms |
2 | of the loan agreement. |
3 | (e) The Rhode Island infrastructure bank may create one or more loan loss reserve funds |
4 | to serve as further security for any loans made by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank or any |
5 | bonds of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank issued to fund energy efficiency improvements in |
6 | public buildings in accordance with this section. |
7 | (f) To the extent possible, and in accordance with law, the infrastructure bank Rhode |
8 | Island Infrastructure Bank shall encourage the use of project labor agreements for projects over |
9 | ten million dollars ($10,000,000) and local hiring on projects funded under this section. |
10 | (g) Any financial assistance provided by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank to a public |
11 | entity for the purpose of retrofitting a school building shall not be subject to the match established |
12 | by Rhode Island general laws §§ 16-7-35 to 16-7-47, and shall be made subject to coordination |
13 | with the Rhode Island department of education. Notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary in |
14 | chapter 7 of title 16, but subject to §16-7-41(c), any approved project as set forth in subsection (a) |
15 | of this section that is also an "approved project" as defined in §16-7-36 shall be eligible for |
16 | school housing aid assistance under §16-7-35 through 16-7-47, and shall include the payment of |
17 | interest on bonds, lease revenue bonds, capital leases, or capital reserve funding issued by a local |
18 | governmental unit. |
19 | SECTION 6. Sections 46-15.3-4 and 46-15.3-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-15.3 |
20 | entitled "Public Drinking Water Supply System Protection" are hereby amended to read as |
21 | follows: |
22 | 46-15.3-4 Definitions. |
23 | As used in this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the following |
24 | meanings, unless the context shall indicate another or different meaning or intent: |
25 | (1) "Aquifer" means a geologic formation, group of formations, or part of a formation |
26 | capable of yielding a significant amount of groundwater to wells, springs, or surface water. |
27 | (2) "Commercial agricultural producers" means purveyors of at least two thousand five |
28 | hundred dollars ($2,500) of agricultural products during a calendar year. |
29 | (3) "Eligible expenditure" means, but is not limited to, the acquisition of a fee simple |
30 | interest or of a conservation restriction, as that term is defined in § 34-39-2(a), or other interest in |
31 | watershed lands, including, but not limited to, costs and expenses relating to the improvement of |
32 | the lands or interests therein, maintenance of the lands or roads or interests therein, and taxes |
33 | thereon, or the funding of the construction of physical improvements that directly protect the |
34 | quality and safety of public drinking water systems supply. No funds under this section shall be |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 22 of 26 |
1 | used to extend service lines or expand system capacity. |
2 | (4) "Ground water" means water found underground which completely fills the open |
3 | spaces between particles of sand, gravel, clay, silt, and consolidated rock fractures. The zone of |
4 | materials filled with groundwater is called the zone of saturation. |
5 | (5) "Ground water recharge" means the processes of addition of water to the zone of |
6 | saturation, that zone beneath the water table. |
7 | (6) "Raw water" means water in its natural state prior to any treatment. |
8 | (7) "Recharge area" means an area in which water is absorbed that eventually reaches the |
9 | zone of saturation. |
10 | (8) "Sale" means all retail sales of potable water to end users for any purpose in the |
11 | ordinary course of business by a supplier, except for sales exempt pursuant to § 46-15.3-5(c), (d) |
12 | and (e). |
13 | (9) "Source" means the raw water upon which a public water supply system abounds, and |
14 | refers to both groundwater and surface water. |
15 | (10) "Supplier(s) of public drinking water" and "supplier(s)" mean any city, town, |
16 | district, or other municipal, quasi municipal, or public or private corporation or company engaged |
17 | in the sale of potable water and the water supply business in Rhode Island; provided, however, |
18 | that only suppliers which withdraw water from wells, reservoirs, springs, or other original sources |
19 | in potable quality shall be entitled to disbursements pursuant to § 46-15.3-11. |
20 | (11) "The fund" means the water quality protection funds as described in § 46-15.3-10. |
21 | (12) "Watersheds" means those land areas which, because of their topography, soil type, |
22 | and drainage patterns, act as collectors of raw waters which replenish or regorge existing or |
23 | planned public drinking water supplies. |
24 | (13) "Non-billed water" means the difference between water produced by a supplier and |
25 | water sold by the same supplier. |
26 | (14) "Leakage" means the difference between non-billed water and the total of the |
27 | estimated or measured allowances for fire fighting, meter inaccuracy, theft, system usage, main |
28 | flushing, sewer cleaning, storm drain cleaning, and other allowances that may be developed by |
29 | the water resources board. |
30 | 46-15-3-11. Disbursements from the funds. |
31 | (a) Only suppliers which withdraw water from wells, reservoirs, springs, or other original |
32 | sources of potable water shall be entitled to disbursements from the first of the two (2) mentioned |
33 | funds created under § 46-15.3-10 administered by the water resources board. From amounts |
34 | available from bond proceeds or otherwise collected and held by the water resources board |
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1 | pursuant to this chapter, that board shall disburse to each supplier contributing to the fund a |
2 | proportional amount based upon each supplier's pro rata contribution to the first of the two |
3 | mentioned funds created under §46-15.3-10 withdrawal of water by volume from wells, |
4 | reservoirs, springs, or other original sources of water averaged over the three (3) calendar years |
5 | preceding disbursement as determined by the water resources board. Suppliers shall be required |
6 | to expend this money for any eligible expenditure as defined in §46-15.3-4 including, but not |
7 | limited to, as follows: |
8 | (1) Not less than fifty-five percent (55%) shall be spent for acquisition of land or rights in |
9 | land or physical improvements to acquired land required to protect the quality of raw water of the |
10 | water supply system. Expenditures for maintenance, administration, and payment of taxes on land |
11 | acquired under this chapter shall be included within this subdivision. |
12 | (2) Any remaining funds may be used for any eligible expenditures as defined in § 46- |
13 | 15.3-4. |
14 | (b) The city of Providence shall make expenditures from amounts available in the fund |
15 | held by the city of Providence based on the same formula as in subdivisions (a)(1) and (a)(2) |
16 | requirements set forth in subsection (a) above; provided, however, the city of Providence shall be |
17 | exempt from participating in the use of an alternate deicing mixture within the Scituate watershed |
18 | unless drinking water supply sodium levels exceed fifteen (15) ppm (parts per million) for three |
19 | (3) consecutive years or seventeen (17) ppm (parts per million) for one year. The city of |
20 | Providence will monitor sodium levels and report sodium testing results to the Rhode Island |
21 | department of health and the public on a yearly basis. If drinking water supply sodium levels |
22 | exceed fifteen (15) ppm for three (3) consecutive years or seventeen (17) ppm for one year, the |
23 | city of Providence shall immediately participate in the use of an alternative deicing mixture |
24 | within the Scituate watershed. In December of 2008, the city of Providence will provide a three |
25 | (3) year report to the Rhode Island department of environmental management, the general |
26 | assembly and the public. Every three (3) years, the city of Providence will submit a report to the |
27 | general assembly on monitoring data for sodium levels within the Scituate watershed. This report |
28 | will include monitoring data from the previous three (3) year period. |
29 | (c) In making decisions about the expenditure of money under the provisions of this |
30 | chapter, suppliers shall take into account the following factors: |
31 | (1) The likelihood of development of the specific parcel proposed for acquisition; |
32 | (2) The existing land uses, as well as the likelihood of development, in the watershed; |
33 | (3) The potential threat to public drinking water sources posed by development in the |
34 | watershed including, but not limited to, the intensity of development, the types of land uses, |
| LC001744/SUB A/3 - Page 24 of 26 |
1 | proximity to reservoirs and/or well heads, and the buffering and filtration capacity of the natural |
2 | systems; |
3 | (4) Whether alternative protection measures are available and/or have been attempted, |
4 | including local land use regulations; |
5 | (5) The number of persons who presently depend on the sources for their drinking water, |
6 | as well as the number of persons who may depend on it in the future; |
7 | (6) The anticipated cost of the parcel proposed to be purchased, and whether less than a |
8 | fee interest may be acquired which would reduce the cost significantly while still providing |
9 | protection to the source; |
10 | (7) Other cost effectiveness considerations, including whether protection of the source |
11 | can be provided by the construction of physical improvements; |
12 | (8) Whether acquisition of the specific parcel, and the protection of the watershed of |
13 | which it is a part, is consistent with other planning considerations; |
14 | (9) Proposed management techniques for the parcel proposed to be acquired which will |
15 | maximize its capacity to protect the source. |
16 | (d) The costs of issuance of notes and bonds authorized by § 46-15.3-10 may be payable |
17 | from any monies in the water quality protection funds. |
18 | SECTION 7. Section 46-12.2-14.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-12.2 entitled |
19 | "Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank" is hereby repealed. |
20 | 46-12.2-14.1. Electric and gas demand side charge proceeds as further security for |
21 | debt funding energy efficiency improvements in public buildings. |
22 | (a) Upon receipt of the electric and gas demand side charge proceeds identified in §§ 39- |
23 | 2-1.2(l) and 39-2-1.2(m), the Rhode Island infrastructure bank shall deposit the electric and gas |
24 | demand side charge proceeds in a loan loss reserve fund to provide security for any loans made |
25 | by the Rhode Island infrastructure bank or any bonds of the Rhode Island infrastructure bank |
26 | issued to fund energy efficiency improvements in public buildings pursuant to § 46-12.2-4.2. The |
27 | funds in the loan loss reserve fund described therein shall only be used after all other available |
28 | loan loss reserve funds have been applied. |
29 | (b) After all loans and bonds in connection with the efficient buildings fund have been |
30 | repaid in full, the balance of the loan loss reserve fund, including any accrued interest, shall be |
31 | remitted to the electric and gas utilities described in § 39-2-1.2, to be used for energy efficiency |
32 | programmatic purposes. |
33 | SECTION 8. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001744/SUB A/3 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION | |
*** | |
1 | This act would amend several sections relative to the eligibility and award process for |
2 | projects that receive financial assistance from PACE (Property Assessment Clean Energy) |
3 | programs and the Rhode Island infrastructure bank. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC001744/SUB A/3 | |
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