2001 House Bill 5411 / 2002 Public Act 246

Introduced in the House

Nov. 1, 2001

Introduced by Rep. Mickey Mortimer (R-65)

To amend certain bonding authority contained in the Revised School Code so that it conforms to the changes in the law caused by Senate Bill 29, now Public Act 34 of 2001. Among other things that law authorized local units of government, school districts, and other bonding authorities, to issue debt without prior Department of Treasury approval if they file an annual audit report demonstrating financial soundness. That law authorizes “budget bonds,” now prohibited, which are paid out of the operating budget and do not require a vote of the people, and negotiated bond sales, rather than competitive sales, now required for larger issues. The new law also limits the issuance of refunding bonds and zero-coupon bonds to instances where they actually save taxpayer dollars. See also House Bills 5404 to 5423.

Referred to the Committee on Commerce

Feb. 5, 2002

Passed in the House 104 to 0 (details)

Received in the Senate

Feb. 5, 2002

March 21, 2002

Passed in the Senate 36 to 0 (details)

Received

Substitute offered by Sen. Joanne Emmons (R-23)

To reconsider the vote by which the bill was passed.

The substitute passed by voice vote

Substitute offered by Sen. Joanne Emmons (R-23)

To replace the previous version of the bill with one which makes it retroactive to March 1, 2002.

The substitute passed by voice vote

Passed in the Senate 36 to 0 (details)

To amend certain bonding authority contained in the Revised School Code so that it conforms to the changes in the law caused by Senate Bill 29, now Public Act 34 of 2001. Among other things that law authorized local units of government, school districts, and other bonding authorities, to issue debt without prior Department of Treasury approval if they file an annual audit report demonstrating financial soundness. That law authorizes “budget bonds,” now prohibited, which are paid out of the operating budget and do not require a vote of the people, and negotiated bond sales, rather than competitive sales, now required for larger issues. The new law also limits the issuance of refunding bonds and zero-coupon bonds to instances where they actually save taxpayer dollars.

Received in the House

March 21, 2002

April 11, 2002

Amendment offered by Rep. Mickey Mortimer (R-65)

The amendment passed by voice vote

Passed in the House 100 to 0 (details)

Received in the Senate

April 11, 2002

April 17, 2002

Passed in the Senate 37 to 0 (details)

Received in the House

April 17, 2002

Signed by Gov. John Engler

April 30, 2002