Bill Text: MI HB5299 | 2017-2018 | 99th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Local government; financing; creation of a financial management team under certain circumstances; provide for, and provide for other general amendments. Amends title & sec. 2 of 2012 PA 436 (MCL 141.1542) & adds secs. 9a & 9b.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2017-12-13 - Re-referred To Committee On Michigan Competitiveness [HB5299 Detail]

Download: Michigan-2017-HB5299-Introduced.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE BILL No. 5299

 

 

November 30, 2017, Introduced by Reps. Lower, Leutheuser, Albert and Crawford and referred to the Committee on Michigan Competitiveness.

 

     A bill to amend 2012 PA 436, entitled

 

"Local financial stability and choice act,"

 

by amending the title and section 2 (MCL 141.1542), section 2 as

 

amended by 2015 PA 110, and by adding sections 9a and 9b.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

TITLE

 

     An act to safeguard and assure the financial accountability of

 

local units of government and school districts; to preserve the

 

capacity of local units of government and school districts to

 

provide or cause to be provided necessary services essential to the

 

public health, safety, and welfare; to provide for review,

 

management, planning, and control of the financial operation of

 

local units of government and school districts and the provision of

 

services by local units of government and school districts; to

 

provide criteria to be used in determining the financial condition


of local units of government and school districts; to authorize a

 

declaration of the existence of a financial emergency within a

 

local unit of government or school district; to prescribe remedial

 

measures to address a financial emergency within a local unit of

 

government or school district; to provide for a review and appeal

 

process; to provide for the appointment and to prescribe the powers

 

and duties of an emergency manager for a local unit of government

 

or school district; to provide for the appointment and to prescribe

 

the powers and duties of a financial management team for a local

 

unit of government; to provide for the modification or termination

 

of contracts under certain circumstances; to provide for the

 

termination of a financial emergency within a local unit of

 

government or school district; to provide a process by which a

 

local unit of government or school district may file for

 

bankruptcy; to prescribe the powers and duties of certain state

 

agencies and officials and officials within local units of

 

government and school districts; to provide for appropriations; and

 

to repeal acts and parts of acts.

 

     Sec. 2. As used in this act:

 

     (a) "Chapter 9" means chapter 9 of title 11 of the United

 

States Code, 11 USC 901 to 946.

 

     (b) "Chief administrative officer" means any of the following:

 

     (i) The manager of a village or, if a village does not employ

 

a manager, the president of the village.

 

     (ii) The city manager of a city or, if a city does not employ

 

a city manager, the mayor of the city.

 

     (iii) The manager of a township or the manager or


superintendent of a charter township or, if the township does not

 

employ a manager or superintendent, the supervisor of the township.

 

     (iv) The elected county executive or appointed county manager

 

of a county or, if the county has not adopted the provisions of

 

either 1973 PA 139, MCL 45.551 to 45.573, or 1966 PA 293, MCL

 

45.501 to 45.521, the county's chairperson of the county board of

 

commissioners.

 

     (v) The chief operating officer of an authority or of a public

 

utility owned by a city, village, township, or county.

 

     (vi) The superintendent of a school district.

 

     (c) "Creditor" means either of the following:

 

     (i) An entity that has a noncontingent claim against a local

 

government that arose at the time of or before the commencement of

 

the neutral evaluation process and whose claim represents at least

 

$5,000,000.00 or comprises more than 5% of the local government's

 

debt or obligations, whichever is less.

 

     (ii) An entity that would have a noncontingent claim against

 

the local government upon the rejection of an executory contract or

 

unexpired lease in a chapter 9 case and whose claim would represent

 

at least $5,000,000.00 or would comprise more than 5% of the local

 

government's debt or obligations, whichever is less.

 

     (d) "Debtor" means a local government that is authorized to

 

proceed under chapter 9 by this act and that meets the requirements

 

of chapter 9.

 

     (e) "Emergency manager" means an emergency manager appointed

 

under section 9. An emergency manager includes an emergency

 

financial manager appointed under former 1988 PA 101 or former 1990


PA 72 who was acting in that capacity on March 28, 2013. For

 

purposes of section 9a, an emergency manager includes a financial

 

management team as provided under section 9a.

 

     (f) "Entity" means a partnership, nonprofit or business

 

corporation, limited liability company, labor organization, or any

 

other association, corporation, trust, or other legal entity.

 

     (g) "Financial and operating plan" means a written financial

 

and operating plan for a local government under section 11,

 

including an educational plan for a school district.

 

     (h) "Good faith" means participation by an interested party or

 

a local government representative in the neutral evaluation process

 

with the intent to negotiate a resolution of the issues that are

 

the subject of the neutral evaluation process, including the timely

 

provision of complete and accurate information to provide the

 

relevant participants through the neutral evaluation process with

 

sufficient information, in a confidential manner, to negotiate the

 

readjustment of the local government's debt.

 

     (i) "Interested party" means a trustee, a committee of

 

creditors, an affected creditor, an indenture trustee, a pension

 

fund, a bondholder, a union that under its collective bargaining

 

agreements has standing to initiate contract negotiations with the

 

local government, or a representative selected by an association of

 

retired employees of the public entity who receive income or

 

benefits from the public entity. A local government may invite

 

holders of contingent claims to participate as interested parties

 

in the neutral evaluation process if the local government

 

determines that the contingency is likely to occur and the claim


may represent at least $5,000,000.00 or comprise more than 5% of

 

the local government's debt or obligations, whichever is less.

 

     (j) "Local emergency financial assistance loan board" means

 

the local emergency financial assistance loan board created under

 

section 2 of the emergency municipal loan act, 1980 PA 243, MCL

 

141.932.

 

     (k) "Local government" means a municipal government or a

 

school district.

 

     (l) "Local government representative" means the person or

 

persons designated by the governing body of the local government

 

with authority to make recommendations and to attend the neutral

 

evaluation process on behalf of the governing body of the local

 

government.

 

     (m) "Local inspector" means a certified forensic accountant,

 

certified public accountant, attorney, or similarly credentialed

 

person whose responsibility it is to determine the existence of

 

proper internal and management controls, fraud, criminal activity,

 

or any other accounting or management deficiencies.

 

     (n) "Municipal government" means a city, a village, a

 

township, a charter township, a county, a department of county

 

government if the county has an elected county executive under 1966

 

PA 293, MCL 45.501 to 45.521, an authority established by law, or a

 

public utility owned by a city, village, township, or county. For

 

purposes of sections 9a and 9b, municipal government also includes

 

an underfunded local unit of government as that term is defined in

 

section 3 of the protecting local government retirement and

 

benefits act.


     (o) "Neutral evaluation process" means a form of alternative

 

dispute resolution or mediation between a local government and

 

interested parties as provided for in section 25.

 

     (p) "Neutral evaluator" means an impartial, unbiased person or

 

entity, commonly known as a mediator, who assists local governments

 

and interested parties in reaching their own settlement of issues

 

under this act, who is not aligned with any party, and who has no

 

authoritative decision-making power.

 

     (q) "Receivership" means the process under this act by which a

 

financial emergency is addressed through the appointment of an

 

emergency manager under section 9. Receivership does not include

 

chapter 9 or any provision under federal bankruptcy law.

 

     (r) "Review team" means a review team appointed under section

 

4.

 

     (s) "School board" means the governing body of a school

 

district.

 

     (t) "School district" means a school district as that term is

 

defined in section 6 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL

 

380.6, or an intermediate school district as that term is defined

 

in section 4 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451, MCL 380.4.

 

     (u) "State financial authority" means the following:

 

     (i) For a municipal government, the state treasurer.

 

     (ii) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (iii), for a

 

school district, the superintendent of public instruction.

 

     (iii) For a school district subject to a deficit elimination

 

plan under section 1220 of the revised school code, 1976 PA 451,

 

MCL 380.1220, the state treasurer.


     (v) "Strong mayor" means a mayor who has been granted veto

 

power for any purpose under the charter of that local government.

 

     (w) "Strong mayor approval" means approval of a resolution

 

under 1 of the following conditions:

 

     (i) The strong mayor approves the resolution.

 

     (ii) The resolution is approved by the governing body with

 

sufficient votes to override a veto by the strong mayor.

 

     (iii) The strong mayor vetoes the resolution and the governing

 

body overrides the veto.

 

     Sec. 9a. (1) If the state treasurer declares under section 11

 

of the protecting local government retirement and benefits act that

 

a financial emergency exists within a municipal government for

 

purposes of this section, a financial management team must be

 

created in the department of treasury as the emergency manager for

 

that municipal government to address the underfunded status of the

 

municipal government.

 

     (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, a

 

financial management team only has those powers as provided under

 

this section.

 

     (3) Not less than 45 days after the state treasurer declares a

 

financial emergency exists as provided under subsection (1), the

 

governor shall appoint 3 members for the financial management team.

 

The financial management team must include all of the following:

 

     (a) An individual with a minimum of 5 years' experience and

 

demonstrable expertise in financial matters.

 

     (b) An individual with a minimum of 5 years' experience

 

working in local units of government.


     (c) An individual who has been a resident of the municipal

 

government for at least 5 years and is not an employee or an

 

elected or appointed officer of the municipal government. The

 

governing body of the municipal government may submit a list of not

 

less than 3 residents of the municipal government as a

 

recommendation for the appointment under this subdivision.

 

     (4) The governor shall appoint 1 of the members of the

 

financial management team appointed under subsection (3) as

 

chairperson of the financial management team. An individual

 

appointed under subsection (3)(a) or (b) may serve on more than 1

 

financial management team.

 

     (5) Upon appointment, a member of a financial management team

 

shall take and file with the secretary of state the oath of office

 

required under section 1 of article XI of the state constitution of

 

1963. A member of a financial management team shall serve at the

 

pleasure of the governor. A vacancy on a financial management team

 

must be filled in the same manner as an original appointment.

 

     (6) A member of a financial management team shall discharge

 

the duties of the position in a manner faithful to the oath of

 

office required under section 1 of article XI of the state

 

constitution of 1963, in a nonpartisan manner, in the best

 

interests of the municipal government, and with the degree of

 

diligence, care, and skill that an ordinarily prudent person would

 

exercise under similar circumstances in a like position. A member

 

of a financial management team shall not make or participate in

 

making a decision, or in any way attempt to use his or her position

 

as a member of the financial management team to influence a


decision, on a matter before the financial management team in which

 

the member is directly or indirectly interested. A member of a

 

financial management team shall not be interested directly or

 

indirectly in any contract with a financial management team, the

 

department of treasury, or the municipal government that would

 

cause a substantial conflict of interest. A member of a financial

 

management team is subject to the applicable provisions of all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) 1978 PA 472, MCL 4.411 to 4.431.

 

     (b) 1968 PA 318, MCL 15.301 to 15.310.

 

     (c) 1968 PA 317, MCL 15.321 to 15.330.

 

     (d) 1973 PA 196, MCL 15.341 to 15.348.

 

     (7) A member of a financial management team is a civil officer

 

subject to impeachment and conviction under section 7 of article XI

 

of the state constitution of 1963.

 

     (8) The state treasurer shall call the initial meeting of a

 

financial management team not less than 30 days after the

 

appointment of the initial members of the financial management

 

team. After the first meeting, the financial management team shall

 

meet quarterly, or more frequently at the call of the chairperson

 

or if requested by 2 or more members of the financial management

 

team. A financial management team may act only by the affirmative

 

vote of 2 or more of its members at a meeting of the financial

 

management team.

 

     (9) A writing prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or

 

retained by a financial management team in the performance of an

 

official function is not subject to the freedom of information act,


1976 PA 442, MCL 15.231 to 15.246.

 

     (10) A financial management team shall exercise its powers,

 

duties, and functions, including any rule-making and adjudication,

 

independently of the state treasurer. The budgeting, procurement,

 

and related management functions of a financial management team are

 

subject to the direction and supervision of the state treasurer.

 

The department of treasury may provide staff support for a

 

financial management team. Each member of a financial management

 

team must be paid for his or her service as a member and the

 

compensation must be set forth in a contract with the department of

 

treasury as approved by the state treasurer. Each contract must be

 

posted on the department of treasury's website within 7 days after

 

the contract is approved by the state treasurer.

 

     (11) A financial management team is granted broad powers to

 

rectify the underfunded status of a municipal government while

 

preserving the fiscal stability of the municipal government and its

 

capacity to provide or cause to be provided necessary governmental

 

services essential to the public health, safety, and welfare.

 

Notwithstanding any charter provision or ordinance to the contrary,

 

a financial management team may take 1 or more of the following

 

additional actions with respect to the municipal government for

 

which it was created to rectify the underfunded status of the

 

municipal government:

 

     (a) Analyze factors and circumstances contributing to the

 

underfunded status of the municipal government and require the

 

municipal government to take measures to correct the underfunded

 

status, including, but not limited to, corrective options described


in section 10 of the protecting local government retirement and

 

benefits act.

 

     (b) Require the municipal government to amend, revise,

 

approve, or disapprove its proposed budget or general

 

appropriations act, including, but not limited to, requiring the

 

municipal government to include specified amounts of money for

 

specified purposes, to restrict specified payments of money for

 

specified purposes in a budget or general appropriations act of the

 

municipal government, to revise a budget or general appropriations

 

act of the municipal government, or to transfer a fund balance of

 

the municipal government.

 

     (c) Require the municipal government to employ or contract

 

for, at the expense of the municipal government, auditors,

 

actuaries, and other technical personnel necessary to address the

 

underfunded status of the municipal government.

 

     (d) Require the municipal government to sell, lease, assign,

 

or otherwise use or transfer the assets or liabilities of the

 

municipal government.

 

     (e) Require the municipal government to take any other action

 

relating to the operation of the municipal government, its

 

employment of personnel, or its expenditure of money necessary to

 

address the underfunded status of the municipal government.

 

     (12) A financial management team may not require a municipal

 

government to act or refrain from an act under subsection (11) if

 

the financial management team determines that the act or refraining

 

from the act would directly endanger the health, safety, or welfare

 

of the residents of the municipal government or unconstitutionally


impair a bond, note, security, or uncontested legal obligation of

 

the municipal government.

 

     (13) A financial management team may enter into a consent

 

agreement with the municipal government. The consent agreement must

 

provide for remedial measures considered necessary to address the

 

underfunded status of the municipal government. The consent

 

agreement must provide for periodic status reports to the state

 

treasurer. In order for the consent agreement to go into effect,

 

the consent agreement must be approved by the governing body of the

 

municipal government, by resolution, and by the financial

 

management team, and must be approved and executed by the state

 

treasurer. Nothing in the consent agreement shall limit the ability

 

of the financial management team in its sole discretion to declare

 

a material breach of the consent agreement. The consent agreement

 

may include a grant to an officer of the municipal government of 1

 

or more of the powers vested in the financial management team under

 

subsection (11). The consent agreement may provide for the

 

retention by the municipal government of a consultant for the

 

purpose of assisting the municipal government to achieve the goals

 

and objectives of the consent agreement. The consent agreement must

 

provide for the release of the municipal government from the

 

consent agreement and the termination of the consent agreement.

 

     (14) In addition to staff otherwise authorized by law, a

 

financial management team may appoint additional staff and secure

 

professional assistance as the financial management team considers

 

necessary to fulfill its duties under this section.

 

     (15) A municipal government subject to this section must


comply with both of the following:

 

     (a) Any budget, general appropriations act, or budget

 

amendment recommended under the uniform budgeting and accounting

 

act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.421 to 141.440a, must be consistent with

 

requirements imposed by the financial management team under

 

subsection (11) or required under a consent agreement under

 

subsection (13).

 

     (b) Any budget, general appropriations act, or budget

 

amendment adopted under the uniform budgeting and accounting act,

 

1968 PA 2, MCL 141.421 to 141.440a, must be consistent with the

 

requirements imposed by the financial management team under

 

subsection (11) or required under a consent agreement under

 

subsection (13).

 

     (16) Any action by a financial management team under this

 

section is binding on the municipal government and its officers,

 

employees, agents, and contractors. Officers, employees, agents,

 

and contractors of the municipal government shall take and direct

 

those actions that are necessary and advisable to maintain

 

compliance with requirements imposed by the financial management

 

team under subsection (11).

 

     (17) If a financial management team determines both of the

 

following, the financial management team shall declare that a

 

financial emergency exists within the municipal government and the

 

governor shall appoint an emergency manager to address the

 

financial emergency within the municipal government under section

 

9:

 

     (a) The municipal government has failed to comply with the


mandates or requirements under this section.

 

     (b) The municipal government has failed to rectify its

 

noncompliance with the mandates or requirements of this section

 

within 30 days after receiving notification of its noncompliance

 

from the financial management team.

 

     (18) A financial management team may issue to the appropriate

 

elected and appointed officers, and employees, agents, and

 

contractors of the municipal government the orders the financial

 

management team considers necessary to accomplish the purposes of

 

this section. An order issued under this section is binding on the

 

officers, employees, agents, and contractors of the municipal

 

government to whom it is issued.

 

     (19) A financial management team shall submit quarterly

 

reports to the state treasurer regarding the underfunded status of

 

the municipal government. The state treasurer shall post copies of

 

the reports on a website maintained by the department of treasury.

 

     (20) A financial management team continues in the capacity of

 

a financial management team for a municipal government until all of

 

the following occur:

 

     (a) The financial management team determines that the

 

municipal government is no longer in underfunded status in a

 

sustainable fashion based upon the standards detailed in section

 

5(4)(a) and (b) of the protecting local government retirement and

 

benefits act.

 

     (b) The financial management team notifies the state treasurer

 

of its determination under subdivision (a).

 

     (c) The state treasurer concurs in the determination of the


financial management team under subdivision (a).

 

     (d) The state treasurer notifies the financial management team

 

and the governing body of the municipal government of his or her

 

concurrence under subdivision (c).

 

     (21) If a financial management team no longer continues in the

 

capacity of a financial management team for a municipal government

 

under subsection (20), the financial management team is dissolved

 

and this section does not apply to the municipal government.

 

     (22) If a financial management team determines that a

 

municipal government has failed to comply with the mandates or

 

requirements under this section as provided under subsection (17)

 

and an emergency manager is appointed for that municipal government

 

under section 9, the financial management team is dissolved and

 

this section does not apply to the municipal government.

 

     (23) For the fiscal year ending September 30, 2018,

 

$250,000.00 is appropriated from the general fund to the department

 

of treasury for the purpose of implementing this section and

 

section 9b.

 

     (24) As used in this section, "underfunded status" means that

 

term as defined in section 3 of the protecting local government

 

retirement and benefits act.

 

     Sec. 9b. Beginning 30 days after the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added this section, the department of treasury

 

shall create and maintain a website that allows any resident of a

 

municipal government for which a financial management team is in

 

place under section 9a to submit input concerning that municipal

 

government.

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