Downingtown Area SD staff outline $81 million maximum bond parameters; expect about $67 million issuance
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District finance staff recommended a maximum-parameters resolution that would advertise up to $81 million (a legal ceiling) and authorize up to $30 million of new money; presenters said the district expects to issue closer to $67 million, with a maximum interest rate listed at 6%.
Downingtown Area School District finance staff told the school board they will seek authorization to advertise a maximum-parameters bond resolution that lists $81,000,000 as the legal ceiling and a 6% maximum interest rate, while cautioning that the district expects to actually issue a lower amount.
At the meeting, a representative from Raymond James said the $81 million figure is an inflated ceiling required by state filing rules and that the likely issuance will be closer to $67,000,000, which would cover restructuring of prior series and provide about $30,000,000 in new money for capital projects and reimbursements for elementary school construction. “If someone asks you, oh, the district’s issuing $81,000,000 of debt, that’s just a max parameter,” the finance representative said, adding that the maximum interest rate shown in the notice is 6% and actual rates will be lower.
Bond counsel Helen Espenshade said the parameters resolution is intended to cover the full transaction under Pennsylvania’s Local Government Unit Debt Act and federal securities laws, and that staff must publish a statutory advertisement and file required documents with the Department of Community and Economic Development before the board adopts the final parameters. Espenshade outlined the need for a preliminary offering document, official statement and closing documents and said district officials would be authorized to complete those filings and closing steps.
Board members asked procedural and timeline questions. A member asked whether the restructuring would extend maturities from 2033; staff replied the plan moves maturities out to 2048 while providing approximately $30 million of new proceeds. Staff clarified that the board’s authorization tonight would allow the district to place the advertisement; a final vote on the parameters resolution is scheduled for the board’s next regular meeting.
The board did not take a final vote on the parameters resolution at this meeting. Next steps include publishing the required advertisement, completing state filings and returning to the board for a final vote and signatures before locking in interest rates and settling bonds in the spring.
