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Wakulla County finance staff warn short-term borrowing and policy changes will be needed if both Opportunity Park projects proceed

2904107 · April 8, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

County finance briefed commissioners that short-term construction borrowing and later long-term financing would likely be required if the two prospective projects move forward; staff recommended updating the county's debt-per-capita guidance and adding the projects to the JPMorgan borrowing list.

WAKULLA COUNTY, Fla. — County finance staff told commissioners at a workshop that, if both Project Boomer and Project Safety proceed as currently estimated, Wakulla County would likely use short-term construction borrowing to build tenant-ready buildings and later convert a portion of that borrowing into long-term debt.

Greg (county finance staff) said the county’s existing debt policy sets an aspirational guideline of $500 per resident (adjusted for inflation), which currently equates to about $671 per resident; the county’s short-term borrowing related to implementation of grant-funded projects has already driven the county near that guideline, he said.

Why it matters: presenters said the county must be able to cash-flow large grant-funded…

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