Bill Text: MI HB4331 | 2015-2016 | 98th Legislature | Engrossed

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Local government; financing; emergency municipal loan act; increase cap on emergency loans. Amends secs. 2, 3, 4, 6 & 7 of 1980 PA 243 (MCL 141.932 et seq.). TIE BAR WITH: HB 4325'15, HB 4326'15

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2015-07-14 - Assigned Pa 115'15 With Immediate Effect [HB4331 Detail]

Download: Michigan-2015-HB4331-Engrossed.html

HB-4331, As Passed Senate, June 30, 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

HOUSE BILL NO. 4331

 

 

(as amended April 23, 2015)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     [A bill to amend 1980 PA 243, entitled

 

"Emergency municipal loan act,"

 

by amending sections 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7 (MCL 141.932, 141.933, 141.934,

 

141.936, and 141.937), as amended by 2012 PA 284.]

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     [Sec. 2. (1) There is created a local emergency financial

assistance loan board within the department of treasury. This board shall consist of the state treasurer, the director of the department of licensing and regulatory affairs, and the director of the department of technology, management, and budget. Except for budgeting, procurement, and related functions of the board that shall be performed under the direction and supervision of the state treasurer, the board shall exercise its prescribed statutory powers, duties, and functions independently of the department of treasury.

     (2) The board has the powers necessary to carry out and effectuate the purposes and provisions of this act, and powers vested in the board under other laws of this state, including, but not limited to, all of the following powers:

     (a) To act by an order issued in the name of the board and signed by the members of the board. The signature of the designee of a member, when the designee is acting for his or her principal, has the same force and effect as the signature of the member.

     (b) To authorize and make loans; to renegotiate the terms of outstanding loans; and to make, execute, and deliver contracts and other instruments necessary or convenient to the exercise of its powers.

     (c) To aid, advise, and consult with a municipality with respect to  House Bill No. 4331 as amended April 23, 2015                   (2 of 3)

fiscal questions arising from and relating to its proposed or outstanding loans.

     (d) To promulgate rules under the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328, that it considers necessary.

     (e) To examine the books and records of a municipality applying for or receiving a loan under this act for the purpose of ascertaining if the municipality is complying, in relation to a loan under this act, with the requirements of the board, the laws of this state, and the charter, ordinances, and resolutions of the municipality. Additionally, for effectuating this purpose, the board may require sworn statements from any officer or employee of the municipality and may require the municipality to furnish a statement of its financial condition. The board has full power, in furtherance of its investigations, to examine witnesses on oath, to compel the attendance of witnesses, to compel the giving of testimony, and to compel the production of books, papers, and records. Witnesses may be summoned by the board by its process upon the payment of the same fees as are allowed to witnesses attending in the circuit court for the county in which a hearing is held. A person duly subpoenaed under this section who fails to attend or testify at the place named in the subpoena served for that purpose is guilty of a misdemeanor.

     (f) To serve notice upon a municipality of an order relating to the municipality issued by the board. A municipality has prima facie notice of and is bound by an order of the board if notice has been served upon it by registered mail addressed to any officer of the municipality upon whom legal process may be served.

     (g) To enforce compliance with its orders; with the terms of outstanding loans; with any provision of this act; or, in relation to a loan under this act, with any law of this state or with the charter, ordinances, or resolutions of a municipality that received a loan under this act. As 1 method to enforce compliance, the board may institute appropriate proceedings in the courts of this state, including proceedings for writs of mandamus and injunctions.

     (h) To subject a loan to the terms and conditions the board considers necessary to ensure compliance with the uniform budgeting and accounting act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.421 to 141.440a, and to ensure timely repayment of the loan, including, but not limited to, requiring the direct assignment for repayment of a loan of any state money appropriated to the municipality or, for a municipality that is a school district, other revenue or money that may be pledged by a school district under section 1211 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL 380.1211, or other law. For a loan entered into after the effective date of the amendatory act that added this sentence, if a municipality does not make any scheduled repayment on a loan, the department of treasury shall require the direct assignment for repayment of the loan, in the amount equal to the minimum of the interest due on the loan and up to 5% of the loan, from any state money appropriated to the municipality or, for a municipality that is a school district, other revenue or money that may be pledged by a school district under section 1211 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL 380.1211, or other law.

     (i) To provide loan terms specifying conditions and events of default and remedies available upon default by a municipality.

     (j) To impose loan terms upon the disbursement of a loan authorized to be made under section 3(2)(b) or (3).

     (3) The board shall review each application for a loan from a House House Bill No. 4331 as amended April 23, 2015                   (3 of 3)

municipality to determine if the municipality satisfies the requirements of this act. Except for loans authorized under section 3(2) or (3), upon determining those applications that satisfy the application eligibility requirements of section 4 and, for subsequent annual loans, section 8, the board may authorize an annual loan to 1 or more of those eligible applicants upon declaring that a local fiscal emergency exists in the municipality. For loans authorized under section 3(2) or (3), the board may authorize a loan upon determining that the municipality has satisfied the requirements of this act applicable to loans under section 3(2) or (3).

     (4) All actions of the board shall be approved by all members of the board. All meetings of the board shall be conducted at a public meeting held in compliance with the open meetings act, 1976 PA 267, MCL 15.261 to 15.275.

     (5) Subject to the requirements of this act, the board has the sole authority to determine all of the following:

     (a) The amount of a loan.

     (b) The rate or rates of interest on a loan.

     (c) Any other condition related to a loan including, but not limited to, requiring that the proceeds of a loan be used for specified purposes.

     (6) The department of treasury shall provide staff services to the board to carry out this act.

     (7) A municipality may do 1 or more of the following:

     (a) Borrow money under this act, and issue evidences of indebtedness for repayment of obligations, including, but not limited to, money advanced or previously advanced to a school district or approved or previously approved for advancement to a school district under section 15(2) of the state school aid act of 1979, 1979 PA 94, MCL 388.1615, or money borrowed by the school district under section 1225 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL 380.1225.

     (b) Enter into a loan agreement with the board.

     (c) Issue its notes evidencing the loan.

     (d) Assign and convey any revenues allocated to it for repayment of the loan.

     (e) Take any other action necessary to receive, secure, or repay a loan under this act.]

     Sec. 3. (1) For state fiscal years ending before October 1,

 

2011, the board may authorize loans under this act to

 

municipalities that total up to $5,000,000.00 in a state fiscal

 

year. For state fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2018,

 

the board may authorize loans under this act to municipalities that

 

total up to $10,000,000.00 in a state fiscal year, but a loan to a

 

single municipality shall not exceed $4,000,000.00 in a state

 

fiscal year. For the period beginning on October 1, 2011 and ending

 


House Bill No. 4331 as amended April 23, 2015

on September 30, 2018, the board may do all of the following:

 

     (a) Authorize loans to municipalities other than school

 

districts that total up to $35,000,000.00 [$48,000,000.00] during the

 

period. Loans to a single municipality under this subdivision shall

 

not total more than $20,000,000.00. The board shall not authorize a

 

loan to a municipality under this subdivision until 30 days after

 

the effective date of the amendatory act that added this

 

subdivision.

 

     (b) Authorize loans to municipalities that are school

 

districts that total up to $50,000,000.00 [$70,000,000.00] during

 

the period. Loans to a single school district under this

 

subdivision shall not total more than $20,000,000.00. [The board shall

not authorize a loan to a school district organized as a school district of the first class under part 6 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL 380.401 to 380.485.]

 

     (2) The board may authorize loans under this act to a county

 

within the following limitations:

 

     (a) In the 1998-99 state fiscal year, the board may authorize

 

loans under this act to a county with a population greater than

 

1,500,000.

 

     (b) For a state fiscal year in which the block grant

 

appropriated to a county with a population of more than 1,500,000

 

that is organized under 1966 PA 293, MCL 45.501 to 45.521, and that

 

is a county juvenile agency is less than the amount required to be

 

distributed to that county in that year under the social welfare

 

act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, the board may authorize a

 

loan to that county in an amount not greater than the difference

 

between the amount of the block grant and the amount required to be

 

distributed to that county for that fiscal year under the social

 

welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b. The board is not


required to authorize loans under this subdivision to a county for

 

more than 1 state fiscal year.

 

     (3) If in a state fiscal year the block grant appropriated to

 

a county other than a county described in subsection (2) that is a

 

county juvenile agency is less than the amount required to be

 

distributed to that county in that year under the social welfare

 

act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, the board may authorize a

 

loan to that county in an amount not greater than the difference

 

between the amount of the block grant and the amount required to be

 

distributed to that county under the social welfare act, 1939 PA

 

280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, in that state fiscal year.

 

     (4) Sections 6(2), 7, and 8 and the conditions listed in

 

section 4(1) do not apply to a loan authorized under subsection (2)

 

or (3).

 

     (5) The proceeds of a loan made under subsection (2) or (3)

 

shall be maintained in a separate account and shall not be

 

commingled with the county's general fund or any other special fund

 

or account.

 

     (6) The state treasurer or his or her designee shall monitor

 

the expenditure of the proceeds of any loan made under subsection

 

(2) or (3).

 

     (7) The proceeds of a loan made under subsection (2) or (3)

 

are subject to the requirements of the county juvenile agency act,

 

1998 PA 518, MCL 45.621 to 45.631.

 

     (8) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, revenue

 

for loans made under this act shall be provided from the surplus

 

funds of this state under authorization granted under section 1 of


1855 PA 105, MCL 21.141. Alternatively, for a school district,

 

revenue for a loan made under this act may be provided from money

 

advanced to the school district by this state from money

 

appropriated from the state school aid fund established under

 

section 11 of article IX of the state constitution of 1963 and

 

payable to the school district under the state school aid act of

 

1979, 1979 PA 94, MCL 388.1601 to 388.1896.

 

     (9) After September 30, 2012, the board may restructure

 

payments, but not the outstanding principal balance or interest, on

 

a loan to a municipality under subsection (1) if all of the

 

following apply:

 

     (a) For a municipality that is a school district, in a state

 

fiscal year after the state fiscal year in which the loan to the

 

school district was authorized by the board, the foundation

 

allowance for the school district under the state school aid act of

 

1979, 1979 PA 94, MCL 388.1601 to 388.1896, is less than the

 

foundation allowance for the school district in the state fiscal

 

year in which the loan was authorized.

 

     (b) For a municipality other than a school district, in a

 

state fiscal year after the state fiscal year in which the loan to

 

the municipality was authorized by the board, statutory revenue

 

sharing for the municipality under the Glenn Steil state revenue

 

sharing act of 1971, 1971 PA 140, MCL 141.901 to 141.921, combined

 

with any economic vitality incentive program money payable to the

 

municipality is less than the statutory revenue sharing for the

 

municipality combined with any economic vitality incentive program

 

money payable to the municipality in the state fiscal year in which


the loan was authorized.

 

     (a) (c) The municipality is in compliance with the terms of

 

the loan and any other requirements applicable to the municipality

 

under this act.

 

     (b) (d) The municipality is in compliance with any

 

requirements relating to a deficit elimination plan under state

 

law.

 

     (c) (e) The municipality is in compliance with any applicable

 

consent agreement or order of an emergency manager under the local

 

government and school district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA

 

4, MCL 141.1501 to 141.1531.local financial stability and choice

 

act, 2012 PA 436, MCL 141.1541 to 141.1575, or a successor statute.

 

     (d) (f) For a municipality that is a school district, the

 

school district is in compliance with all requirements for receipt

 

of the foundation allowance and any other requirements applicable

 

to the school district under the state school aid act of 1979, 1979

 

PA 94, MCL 388.1601 to 388.1896.

 

     (e) (g) For a municipality other than a school district, the

 

municipality is in compliance with all conditions for economic

 

vitality incentive program money or statutory revenue sharing or

 

other requirements applicable to the municipality under the Glenn

 

Steil state revenue sharing act of 1971, 1971 PA 140, MCL 141.901

 

to 141.921.

 

     (f) (h) The restructuring of payments complies with applicable

 

law.

 

     (g) (i) The loan has not been sold or transferred under

 

section 6a.


     (10) As used in this section, "county juvenile agency" means

 

that term as defined in section 2 of the county juvenile agency

 

act, 1998 PA 518, MCL 45.622.

 

     Sec. 4. (1) If the governing body of a municipality desires to

 

request a loan, it shall provide by resolution for the submission

 

of an application to the board for a loan made under this act. The

 

municipality shall certify and substantiate all of the following

 

information and conditions to be eligible for consideration for a

 

loan authorization by the board:

 

     (a) A deficit for the municipality's general fund is projected

 

for the current fiscal year.

 

     (b) That 1 or both of the following have occurred within the

 

18 months immediately preceding the loan request:

 

     (i) The municipality has issued tax anticipation notes or

 

revenue sharing notes under the revised municipal finance act, 2001

 

PA 34, MCL 141.2101 to 141.2821, or for a school district, issued

 

notes under section 1225 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451,

 

MCL 380.1225.

 

     (ii) The department of treasury has acted upon a request by

 

the municipality to issue tax anticipation notes or revenue sharing

 

notes under the revised municipal finance act, 2001 PA 34, MCL

 

141.2101 to 141.2821.

 

     (c) The municipality meets 1 or more of the following

 

conditions:

 

     (i) Its income tax revenue growth rate is .90 or less, or the

 

municipality has 2 or more emergency loans outstanding at the time

 

its application is submitted and its income tax revenue growth rate


is 1.3 or less.

 

     (ii) Its local tax base growth rate is 75% or less of the

 

statewide tax base growth rate.

 

     (iii) The state equalized valuation of real and personal

 

property within the municipality at the time the loan application

 

is made is less than the state equalized valuation of real and

 

personal property within the municipality in the immediately

 

preceding year.

 

     (iv) The municipality is levying the maximum number of mills

 

it is authorized to levy as approved by the voters and has either

 

of the following:

 

     (A) One or more delinquent special assessments.

 

     (B) Outstanding bonds, notes, or other evidences of

 

indebtedness that were issued in anticipation of a contract

 

obligation with, or an assessment obligation against, another

 

municipality that has 1 or more delinquent special assessments that

 

were levied to satisfy, in whole or in part, the contract or

 

assessment obligation.

 

     (v) For a school district, the department of treasury

 

determines that 1 or more of the following apply:

 

     (A) The school district's membership under section 6 of the

 

state school aid act of 1979, 1979 PA 94, MCL 388.1606, at the time

 

the loan application is made has declined over a the preceding 3-

 

state-fiscal-year period by a total of 15% or more. , as determined

 

by the department of treasury.

 

     (B) The loan will assist the school district in resolving a

 

financial emergency or fiscal stress within the school district.


     (vi) The municipality is in receivership or is subject to a

 

consent agreement under the local government and school district

 

fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL 141.1501 to 141.1531,

 

local financial stability and choice act, 2012 PA 436, MCL 141.1541

 

to 141.1575, or a successor statute, and loan authorization by the

 

board is necessary to implement a financial and operating plan, a

 

consent agreement, or a continuing operations plan or recovery plan

 

for the municipality under the local government and school district

 

fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL 141.1501 to 141.1531,

 

local financial stability and choice act, 2012 PA 436, MCL 141.1541

 

to 141.1575, or a successor statute.

 

     (vii) The municipality is a municipality for which a financial

 

emergency has been confirmed to exist and responsibilities for the

 

municipality are vested in an emergency financial manager under

 

former 1990 PA 72 or is a municipality for which a consent

 

agreement, including a plan to address a serious financial problem,

 

is in place for the municipality under former 1990 PA 72. This

 

subparagraph applies only if the local government and school

 

district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL 141.1501 to

 

141.1531, is repealed or otherwise not effective and former 1990 PA

 

72 is again in effect or applicable.

 

     (d) The municipality submits a 5-year plan, that has been

 

approved by the governing body of the municipality, and that will

 

balance future expenditures with anticipated revenues.

 

     (2) If the board determines it necessary, the board may

 

inspect, copy, or audit the books and records of a municipality.

 

     (3) Subsection (1) does not apply to a loan authorized under


section 3(2) or (3).

 

     Sec. 6. (1) A loan made under this act shall bear an annual

 

rate or rates of interest, if any, as established by the board

 

under section 2(5). The board may establish interest for a loan

 

under this act either at a rate or rates that are fixed for the

 

term of the loan or, if the formula is approved by the board at the

 

time the loan is made or renegotiated as authorized in section 2,

 

at a rate calculated upon a formula that varies the rate annually.

 

The board may provide that the interest rate or rates for a loan

 

under this act may adjust to an interest rate or rates determined

 

at the time of the sale or transfer by the state treasurer to be

 

sufficient to facilitate the sale of the loans under section 6a.

 

Except for loans sold or transferred under section 6a, if the

 

interest rate for a loan under this act is a single fixed rate, the

 

annual rate of interest for the term of a loan shall not be less

 

than the municipal 10-year rate as determined by the state

 

treasurer. The board may consider a higher interest rate based on

 

both the market interest rates and the risk of the municipality

 

requesting the loan. Except for loans sold or transferred under

 

section 6a, if the interest rate for a loan under this section is

 

not a single fixed rate, all of the following apply to the loan:

 

     (a) The annual rate of interest for the loan shall not be less

 

than 2.5%, but the board may consider a higher interest rate based

 

on both the market interest rates and the risk of the municipality

 

requesting the loan.

 

     (b) If the loan includes an interest-only repayment period,

 

the interest-only repayment period shall not be more than 60


months.

 

     (2) Interest payments are due and payable as determined by the

 

board or the state treasurer under section 6a. Repayment of all of

 

the principal shall be made not more than 30 years from the date of

 

issuance determined by the board or state treasurer under section

 

6a, except as provided in subsection (5). This subsection, sections

 

7 and 8, and the conditions listed in section 4(1) do not apply to

 

a loan authorized under section 3(2) or (3).

 

     (3) The loan agreement between the board and a county for a

 

loan authorized under section 3(2) or (3) shall establish the

 

schedule for payment of the principal of and interest on the loan,

 

the nature of the obligation of the county to repay a loan made

 

under this act, and any security for that loan. Payments of

 

principal and interest for a loan authorized by section 3(2) shall

 

be limited to revenues allocated to the county under the health and

 

safety fund act, 1987 PA 264, MCL 141.471 to 141.479, minus those

 

revenues authorized by the board in the loan agreement for use in

 

the payment of other county obligations.

 

     (4) Unless other state appropriations to a municipality are

 

pledged or assigned in an amount sufficient for the municipality to

 

make a required principal or interest payment, if the

 

municipality's payment of required principal or interest is

 

delinquent, the state treasurer may withhold the amount of all

 

delinquent payments that are due on a loan issued under this act

 

from state payments to the municipality under the Glenn Steil state

 

revenue sharing act of 1971, 1971 PA 140, MCL 141.901 to 141.921.

 

     (5) Except for loans sold or transferred under section 6a or


as otherwise determined by the board, notwithstanding the payment

 

schedules and methods established by this section or by the terms

 

of a loan agreement, a municipality may initiate repayment of all

 

or part of a loan made under this act at an earlier date or may

 

make repayment in fewer installment payments, or both. The board

 

shall not condition either eligibility for consideration for a loan

 

or the grant of a loan under this act on repayment schedules and

 

terms other than those required by subsections (1), (2), (3), and

 

(4). In addition, failure of a municipality to make repayments

 

under terms or a schedule it has instituted under this subsection

 

does not disqualify the municipality from eligibility for

 

consideration for loans in subsequent fiscal years.

 

     (6) A loan issued under this act shall be a general obligation

 

of the municipality except that a loan issued under section 3(2)

 

shall not be a general obligation of the municipality and shall be

 

repaid solely from specific revenues pledged for repayment of the

 

loan.

 

     Sec. 7. (1) A municipality that receives a loan under this act

 

shall perform all of the following:

 

     (a) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, employ a

 

full-time professional administrator or contract with a person with

 

expertise in municipal finance and administration to direct or

 

participate directly in the management of the municipality's

 

operations until otherwise ordered by the board. If the

 

municipality is in receivership under the local government and

 

school district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL 141.1501

 

to 141.1531, local financial stability and choice act, 2012 PA 436,


MCL 141.1541 to 141.1575, or a successor statute, compensate the

 

emergency manager may perform the functions of the full-time

 

professional administrator under this subdivision. for the

 

municipality and reimburse the emergency manager's actual and

 

necessary expenses as provided under section 15(5)(e) of the local

 

government and school district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA

 

4, MCL 141.1515, or a successor statute. If the municipality is

 

under a consent agreement as provided under the local government

 

and school district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL

 

141.1501 to 141.1531, or a successor statute, compensate those

 

officials who are required to be compensated under the consent

 

agreement with the municipality and reimburse those officials'

 

actual and necessary expenses as provided under the consent

 

agreement.

 

     (b) If the local government and school district fiscal

 

accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL 141.1501 to 141.1531, is

 

repealed or otherwise not effective and former 1990 PA 72 is again

 

in effect or applicable and an emergency financial manager is in

 

place for the municipality under former 1990 PA 72, compensate the

 

emergency financial manager and reimburse the emergency financial

 

manager's actual and necessary expenses. If the local government

 

and school district fiscal accountability act, 2011 PA 4, MCL

 

141.1501 to 141.1531, is repealed or otherwise not effective and

 

former 1990 PA 72 is again in effect or applicable and a consent

 

agreement is in place for the municipality under former 1990 PA 72,

 

compensate those officials who are required to be compensated under

 

the consent agreement with the municipality and reimburse those


officials' actual and necessary expenses as provided under the

 

consent agreement.

 

     (b) (c) Not more than 6 months after receiving a loan and

 

semiannually after that date for the period the loan is

 

outstanding, submit to the board an evaluation of the performance

 

of the municipality against the 5-year plan submitted under section

 

4(1).

 

     (c) (d) Submit all of the following to the board on a

 

quarterly basis:

 

     (i) A statement of actual revenues received in the last

 

quarter and in the current fiscal year to date.

 

     (ii) A statement of total revenues estimated to be received by

 

the municipality in the current fiscal year.

 

     (iii) A statement of expenditures made and encumbrances

 

entered into by the municipality in the last quarter and in the

 

current fiscal year to date.

 

     (iv) A statement of revenues that were estimated to be

 

received and expenditures that were estimated to be made during the

 

current fiscal year and through the end of the last quarter.

 

     (v) A balance sheet indicating whether total estimated

 

expenditures for the current fiscal year and for the last quarter

 

exceed the total estimated revenues for the current fiscal year and

 

for the last quarter, respectively.

 

     (d) (e) Submit the general appropriations act of the

 

municipality, and any amendments to that act, adopted under the

 

uniform budgeting and accounting act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.421 to

 

141.440a, or any equivalent report as may be required by the board


House Bill No. 4331 as amended April 23, 2015

if the municipality is not required to adopt a general

 

appropriations act.

 

     (e) (f) Submit any budget change in the current fiscal year or

 

any amendment to the general appropriations act of the municipality

 

for the current fiscal year to the board before adoption.

 

     (f) (g) Submit any budget for the ensuing fiscal year or the

 

general appropriations act of the municipality for the ensuing

 

fiscal year to the board before adoption.

 

     (g) (h) Certify that the municipality has fully complied with

 

all statutory requirements concerning use of the uniform chart of

 

accounts and audits.

 

     (2) If the state treasurer determines that a municipality is

 

not in compliance with all of the requirements under subsection (1)

 

and with the 5-year plan submitted under section 4(1), the state

 

treasurer may modify the terms of the loan to require a higher

 

interest rate or to accelerate the repayment of the loan.

 

     (3) As used in this section, "expenditure" and "revenue" mean

 

those terms as defined in sections 2c and 2d of the uniform

 

budgeting and accounting act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.422c and 141.422d.

 

     (4) Subsection (1) does not apply to a loan authorized under

 

section 3(2) or (3).

 

     [                                                            

 

                                      ]

 

     Enacting section [1]. This amendatory act does not take effect

 

unless all of the following bills of the 98th Legislature are

 

enacted into law:

 

     (a) House Bill No. 4325.


     (b) House Bill No. 4326.

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