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A05415 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          5415
 
                               2015-2016 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    February 20, 2015
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by M. of A. BRENNAN, ABINANTI, OTIS -- Multi-Sponsored by --
          M. of A. MOSLEY, PERRY -- (at request of  the  State  Comptroller)  --
          read  once  and referred to the Committee on Corporations, Authorities
          and Commissions
 
        AN ACT to amend the public authorities law  and  the  general  municipal
          law,   in   relation   to  clarifying  and  making  certain  technical
          corrections to the public authorities  reform  act  of  2009;  and  to
          repeal certain provisions of the public authorities law relating ther-
          eto
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1.  Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subdivision 1 and subdivision  2
     2  of section 2800 of the public authorities law, as amended by chapter 506
     3  of the laws of 2009, are amended to read as follows:
     4    (a)  For  the purpose of furnishing the state with systematic informa-
     5  tion regarding the status and  the  activities  of  public  authorities,
     6  every  state authority continued or created by this chapter or any other
     7  chapter of the laws of the state of New York shall submit to the  gover-
     8  nor,  the  chairman  and  ranking  minority member of the senate finance
     9  committee, the chairman and ranking minority member of the assembly ways
    10  and means committee, the state comptroller, and the  authorities  budget
    11  office,  within ninety days after the end of its fiscal year, a complete
    12  and detailed report or reports setting forth:  (1)  its  operations  and
    13  accomplishments; (2) its financial reports, including (i) audited finan-
    14  cials in accordance with all applicable regulations and following gener-
    15  ally  accepted  accounting  principles  as defined in subdivision ten of
    16  section two of the state finance law, (ii) grant and  subsidy  programs,
    17  (iii)  operating  and  financial risks, (iv) current ratings, if any, of
    18  its bonds issued by recognized municipal bond rating agencies and notice
    19  of changes in such ratings, and  (v)  long-term  liabilities,  including
    20  leases  and  employee benefit plans; (3) its mission statement and meas-
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04041-01-5

        A. 5415                             2
 
     1  urements including its most recent measurement report; (4) a schedule of
     2  its bonds and notes outstanding at the end of its fiscal year,  together
     3  with a statement of the amounts redeemed and incurred during such fiscal
     4  year  as  part  of a schedule of debt issuance that includes the date of
     5  issuance, term, amount, interest rate  and  means  of  repayment.  Addi-
     6  tionally,  the debt schedule shall also include all refinancings, calls,
     7  refundings, defeasements and interest rate exchange or other such agree-
     8  ments, and for any debt issued during the reporting year,  the  schedule
     9  shall  also  include a detailed list of costs of issuance for such debt;
    10  (5) a compensation schedule, [in addition to  the  report  described  in
    11  section twenty-eight hundred six of this title,] that shall include, (i)
    12  by  position,  title  and  name  of  the person holding such position or
    13  title, the salary, compensation, and allowance  [and/or]  paid  to  such
    14  person,  and (ii) benefits provided to any officer, director or employee
    15  in a decision making or managerial  position  of  such  authority  whose
    16  salary is in excess of one hundred thousand dollars; [(5-a) biographical
    17  information,  not  including  confidential personal information, for all
    18  directors and officers  and  employees  for  whom  salary  reporting  is
    19  required  under  subparagraph  five of this paragraph;] (6) the projects
    20  undertaken by such authority during the past year;  (7)  a  listing  and
    21  description[,  in  addition  to  the  report  required by paragraph a of
    22  subdivision three of section twenty-eight  hundred  ninety-six  of  this
    23  article] of all real property of such authority having an estimated fair
    24  market  value  in  excess of fifteen thousand dollars that the authority
    25  acquires or disposes of during such period. The report shall contain the
    26  price received or paid by the authority and the name of  the  purchaser,
    27  lessee, lessor or seller for all such property sold, leased or bought by
    28  the  authority  during such period; (8) such authority's code of ethics;
    29  (9) an assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control structure
    30  and procedures; (10) [a copy of the legislation that forms the statutory
    31  basis of the authority; (11) a description  of  the  authority  and  its
    32  board  structure,  including  (i)  names  of  committees  and  committee
    33  members, (ii) lists of board meetings and attendance, (iii) descriptions
    34  of major authority units, subsidiaries, and (iv)  number  of  employees;
    35  (12) its charter, if any, and by-laws; (13) a listing of material chang-
    36  es in operations and programs during the reporting year; (14) at a mini-
    37  mum  a  four-year  financial plan, including (i) a current and projected
    38  capital budget, and (ii) an operating budget report, including an actual
    39  versus estimated budget, with an analysis and measurement  of  financial
    40  and  operating  performance;  (15)]  its  board performance evaluations;
    41  provided, however, that such evaluations shall not be subject to disclo-
    42  sure under article six  of  the  public  officers  law;  [(16)]  (11)  a
    43  description  of the total amounts of assets, services or both assets and
    44  services bought or sold without competitive bidding, including  (i)  the
    45  nature  of  those assets and services, (ii) the names of the counterpar-
    46  ties, and (iii) where the contract price for  assets  purchased  exceeds
    47  fair  market  value, or where the contract price for assets sold is less
    48  than fair market value, a detailed explanation of the justification  for
    49  making  the  purchase or sale without competitive bidding, and a certif-
    50  ication by the chief executive officer and chief  financial  officer  of
    51  the  public authority that they have reviewed the terms of such purchase
    52  or sale and determined that it complies with applicable law and procure-
    53  ment guidelines; and [(17)] (12) a description of any  material  pending
    54  litigation  in  which  the  authority  is involved as a party during the
    55  reporting year, except that no hospital need disclose information  about
    56  pending malpractice claims beyond the existence of such claims.

        A. 5415                             3
 
     1    (b)  Each state authority shall make accessible to the public, via its
     2  official or shared internet web site, (1)  documentation  pertaining  to
     3  its  mission[,]  and  current  activities[,]; (2) its most recent annual
     4  report and financial [reports] statements,  and  current  [year]  budget
     5  [and]  reports;  (3)  its  most  recent independent audit report and any
     6  other report provided to  the  authorities  budget  office  unless  such
     7  information is covered by subdivision two of section eighty-seven of the
     8  public  officers law; (4) biographical information, not including confi-
     9  dential personal information, pertaining to the professional  qualifica-
    10  tions  and  expertise  for all directors and officers; (5) a copy of the
    11  legislation that forms the statutory  basis  of  the  authority;  (6)  a
    12  description  of  the  authority  and  its board structure, including (i)
    13  names of committees and committee members, (ii) minutes of  board  meet-
    14  ings, (iii) descriptions of major authority units and subsidiaries, (iv)
    15  number  of employees and staff; (7) an organization chart; (8) its char-
    16  ter, if any, and a copy of its current by-laws; (9) a listing of materi-
    17  al changes in operations and programs during  the  reporting  year;  and
    18  (10)  any  other information as may be required by the state comptroller
    19  or authorities budget office.
    20    2. Local authorities. (a) Every local authority[, continued or created
    21  by this chapter or any other chapter of the laws of  the  state  of  New
    22  York]  shall  submit  to  the  chief executive officer, the chief fiscal
    23  officer, the chairperson of the legislative body of the local government
    24  or local governments, the state comptroller and the  authorities  budget
    25  office,  within ninety days after the end of its fiscal year, a complete
    26  and detailed report or reports setting forth:  (1)  its  operations  and
    27  accomplishments; (2) its financial reports, including (i) audited finan-
    28  cials in accordance with all applicable regulations and following gener-
    29  ally  accepted  accounting  principles  as defined in subdivision ten of
    30  section two of the state finance law, (ii) grants and subsidy  programs,
    31  (iii) operating and financial risks, (iv) current ratings if any, of its
    32  bonds  issued by recognized municipal bond rating agencies and notice of
    33  changes in such ratings, and (v) long-term liabilities, including leases
    34  and employee benefit plans; (3) its mission statement  and  measurements
    35  including  its  most  recent  measurement  report; (4) a schedule of its
    36  bonds and notes outstanding at the end of its fiscal year, together with
    37  a statement of the amounts redeemed and incurred during such fiscal year
    38  as part of a schedule of debt issuance that includes the date  of  issu-
    39  ance,  term, amount, interest rate and means of repayment. Additionally,
    40  the  debt  schedule  shall  also  include   all   refinancings,   calls,
    41  refundings, defeasements and interest rate exchange or other such agree-
    42  ments,  and  for any debt issued during the reporting year, the schedule
    43  shall also include a detailed list of costs of issuance for  such  debt;
    44  (5)  a  compensation  schedule  [in  addition to the report described in
    45  section twenty-eight hundred six of this title] that shall include,  (i)
    46  by  position,  title  and  name  of  the person holding such position or
    47  title, the salary, compensation, and allowance  [and/or]  paid  to  such
    48  person,  and (ii) benefits provided to any officer, director or employee
    49  in a decision making or managerial  position  of  such  authority  whose
    50  salary is in excess of one hundred thousand dollars; [(5-a) biographical
    51  information,  not  including  confidential personal information, for all
    52  directors and officers  and  employees  for  whom  salary  reporting  is
    53  required  under  subparagraph  five of this paragraph;] (6) the projects
    54  undertaken by such authority during the past year;  (7)  a  listing  and
    55  description[,  in  addition  to  the  report  required by paragraph a of
    56  subdivision three of section twenty-eight  hundred  ninety-six  of  this

        A. 5415                             4

     1  article] of all real property of such authority having an estimated fair
     2  market  value  in  excess of fifteen thousand dollars that the authority
     3  acquires or disposes of during such period. The report shall contain the
     4  price  received  or paid by the authority and the name of the purchaser,
     5  lessee, lessor or seller for all such property sold, leased or bought by
     6  the authority during such period; (8) such authority's code  of  ethics;
     7  (9) an assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control structure
     8  and procedures; (10) [a copy of the legislation that forms the statutory
     9  basis  of  the  authority;  (11)  a description of the authority and its
    10  board  structure,  including  (i)  names  of  committees  and  committee
    11  members, (ii) lists of board meetings and attendance, (iii) descriptions
    12  of  major  authority  units, subsidiaries, (iv) number of employees, and
    13  (v) organizational chart; (12) its charter, if any, and by-laws; (13)  a
    14  listing  of  material  changes  in  operations  and  programs during the
    15  reporting year; (14) at a minimum a four-year financial plan,  including
    16  (i) a current and projected capital budget, and (ii) an operating budget
    17  report,  including  an  actual versus estimated budget, with an analysis
    18  and measurement of financial and operating performance; (15)] its  board
    19  performance  evaluations  provided, however, that such evaluations shall
    20  not be subject to disclosure under article six of  the  public  officers
    21  law;  [(16)] (11) a description of the total amounts of assets, services
    22  or both assets and services bought or sold without competitive  bidding,
    23  including (i) the nature of those assets and services, (ii) the names of
    24  the  counterparties,  and  (iii)  where  the  contract  price for assets
    25  purchased exceeds fair market value, or where  the  contract  price  for
    26  assets  sold  is  less than fair market value, a detailed explanation of
    27  the justification for making the purchase or  sale  without  competitive
    28  bidding,  and  a  certification by the chief executive officer and chief
    29  financial officer of the public authority that they  have  reviewed  the
    30  terms  of  such  purchase  or  sale and determined that it complies with
    31  applicable law and procurement guidelines; and [(17)] (12) a description
    32  of any material pending litigation in which the authority is involved as
    33  a party during the reporting year, except that no  provider  of  medical
    34  services  need  disclose  information  about  pending malpractice claims
    35  beyond the existence of such claims.
    36    (b) Each local authority shall make accessible to the public, via  its
    37  official  or  shared  internet web site, (1) documentation pertaining to
    38  its mission[,] and current activities[,]; (2)  its  most  recent  annual
    39  report  and  financial  [reports]  statements, and current [year] budget
    40  [and] reports; (3) its most recent  independent  audit  report  and  any
    41  other  report  provided  to  the  authorities  budget office unless such
    42  information is covered by subdivision two of section eighty-seven of the
    43  public officers law; (4) biographical information, not including  confi-
    44  dential  personal information, pertaining to the professional qualifica-
    45  tions and expertise for all directors and officers; (5)  a copy  of  the
    46  legislation  that  forms  the  statutory  basis  of the authority; (6) a
    47  description of the authority and  its  board  structure,  including  (i)
    48  names  of  committees and committee members, (ii) minutes of board meet-
    49  ings, (iii) descriptions of major authority units and subsidiaries, (iv)
    50  number of employees and staff; (7) an organization chart; (8) its  char-
    51  ter, if any, and a copy of its current by-laws; (9) a listing of materi-
    52  al  changes  in  operations  and programs during the reporting year; and
    53  (10) any other information as may be required by the authorities  budget
    54  office.
    55    §  2.  Subdivision 4 of section 2800 of the public authorities law, as
    56  added by chapter 506 of the laws of 2009, is amended to read as follows:

        A. 5415                             5
 
     1    4. The authorities budget office may, upon application of any authori-
     2  ty, waive any requirements of this  section  upon  a  showing  that  the
     3  authority  meets  the  criteria  for  such a waiver established by regu-
     4  lations of the authorities budget office. Such regulations shall provide
     5  for  consideration of: (a) the number of employees of the authority; (b)
     6  the annual budget of the authority; (c) the ability of the authority  to
     7  prepare  the  required  reports using existing staff; and (d) such other
     8  factors as the authorities budget office deems to reflect the  relevance
     9  of  the  required  disclosures to evaluation of an authority's effective
    10  operation, and the burden such disclosures place on  an  authority.    A
    11  waiver  granted  pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall not apply to the
    12  filing requirement  imposed  on  an  industrial  development  agency  by
    13  section  eight hundred fifty-nine of the general municipal law or to any
    14  other requirement that a state or local authority file or  submit  docu-
    15  ments  or  information  to  the  state  comptroller. Each waiver granted
    16  pursuant to this subdivision shall be disclosed in the reports  of  such
    17  office issued pursuant to section seven of this chapter.
    18    §  3.  Subdivision  3 of section 2801 of the public authorities law is
    19  REPEALED and subdivisions 1 and 2, as amended by chapter 506 of the laws
    20  of 2009, are amended to read as follows:
    21    1. State authorities. Every state authority or  commission  heretofore
    22  or  hereafter  continued or created by this chapter or any other chapter
    23  of the laws of the state of New York shall submit to the  governor,  the
    24  chair  and  ranking minority member of the senate finance committee, the
    25  chair and ranking minority member of the assembly ways and means commit-
    26  tee, the state comptroller and the authorities budget office, for  their
    27  information,  annually  [not  more than one hundred twenty days and] not
    28  less than [ninety] thirty days before the  commencement  of  its  fiscal
    29  year, in the form submitted to its members or trustees, an adopted budg-
    30  et  plan  of at least six years and budget information on operations and
    31  capital construction setting forth the estimated receipts  and  expendi-
    32  tures  for  the next fiscal year [and], the current fiscal year, and the
    33  next three fiscal years, and the actual receipts  and  expenditures  for
    34  the last completed fiscal year.
    35    2. Local authorities. For the local authority fiscal year ending on or
    36  after December thirty-first, two thousand seven and annually thereafter,
    37  every  local  authority [heretofore or hereafter continued or created by
    38  this chapter or any other chapter of the laws of the state of New  York]
    39  shall  submit  to the chief executive officer, the chief fiscal officer,
    40  the chairperson of the legislative  body  of  the  local  government  or
    41  governments, the state comptroller and the authorities budget office for
    42  their information, annually [not more than ninety days and not less than
    43  sixty]  thirty  days  before the commencement of its fiscal year, in the
    44  form submitted to its members or trustees, an adopted budget plan of  at
    45  least  six  years  and  budget  information  on  operations  and capital
    46  construction setting forth the estimated receipts and  expenditures  for
    47  the  next fiscal year [and], the current fiscal year, and the next three
    48  fiscal years, and the actual receipts  and  expenditures  for  the  last
    49  completed fiscal year.
    50    §  4.  Subdivisions  2 and 7 of section 2802 of the public authorities
    51  law, subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 506 of the  laws  of  2009  and
    52  subdivision  7  as added by chapter 766 of the laws of 2005, are amended
    53  to read as follows:
    54    2. Local authorities. For the local authority fiscal year ending on or
    55  after December thirty-first, two thousand seven and annually thereafter,
    56  every local authority [heretofore or hereafter continued or  created  by

        A. 5415                             6

     1  this  chapter or any other chapter of the laws of the state of New York]
     2  shall submit to the chief executive officer, the chief  fiscal  officer,
     3  the chairperson of the legislative body of the local government or local
     4  governments  and the authorities budget office, together with the report
     5  described in section twenty-eight hundred of this title, a copy  of  the
     6  annual  independent  audit  report,  performed  by  a  certified  public
     7  accounting firm in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards
     8  as defined in subdivision eleven of section two  of  the  state  finance
     9  law,  and  management  letter  and any other external examination of the
    10  books and accounts of such authority other than copies of the reports of
    11  any examinations made by the state comptroller.
    12    7. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the  contrary,  a  [public]
    13  state  or  local  authority  may  exempt  information from disclosure or
    14  report, if the counsel of such authority deems that such information  is
    15  covered  by  subdivision two of section eighty-seven of the public offi-
    16  cers law.
    17    § 5. Section 2806 of the public authorities law is REPEALED.
    18    § 6. The opening paragraph of subdivision 2 of  section  2825  of  the
    19  public  authorities  law, as amended by chapter 174 of the laws of 2010,
    20  is amended to read as follows:
    21    Except for members who serve as members by virtue of holding  a  civil
    22  office  of  the state or local government, the majority of the remaining
    23  members of the governing body of every state or local authority shall be
    24  independent members; provided, however, that this provision shall  apply
    25  to  appointments  made  on  or after the effective date of chapter seven
    26  hundred sixty-six of the laws of two  thousand  five  which  added  this
    27  subdivision.  The  official or officials having the authority to appoint
    28  or remove such remaining members shall  take  such  actions  as  may  be
    29  necessary  to  satisfy  this requirement and further, shall consider the
    30  prospective diversity of the members of a state  authority  when  making
    31  their  determinations  to  appoint  any member. For the purposes of this
    32  section, an independent member is one who:
    33    § 7. The opening paragraph of subdivision 6 of section 2827-a  of  the
    34  public  authorities law, as added by chapter 506 of the laws of 2009, is
    35  amended to read as follows:
    36    On or before the first day of January, two thousand eleven, and  annu-
    37  ally  on such day thereafter, any subsidiary public benefit corporation,
    38  in cooperation with its parent public benefit corporation, shall provide
    39  to the state comptroller, the director of the authorities budget office,
    40  the chair and ranking minority member of the senate  finance  committee,
    41  the  chair  and  ranking  minority member of the assembly ways and means
    42  committee, and each chair and ranking member of the assembly and  senate
    43  committees  on corporations, authorities and commissions a report on the
    44  subsidiary public benefit corporation. Such  report  shall  include  for
    45  each subsidiary:
    46    § 8.  Subdivision 1 and paragraph (a) of subdivision 8 of section 2879
    47  of  the  public authorities law, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 564
    48  of the laws of 1988 and paragraph (a) of subdivision  8  as  amended  by
    49  chapter 844 of the laws of 1992, are amended to read as follows:
    50    1.  Every [public] state and local authority and public benefit corpo-
    51  ration, [a majority of the members of which consist  of  persons  either
    52  appointed by the governor or who serve as members by virtue of holding a
    53  civil  office of the state, or a combination thereof,] (such entities to
    54  be hereinafter in this section referred to as "corporation") shall adopt
    55  by resolution comprehensive guidelines which  detail  the  corporation's
    56  operative  policy and instructions regarding the use, awarding, monitor-

        A. 5415                             7
 
     1  ing and reporting of procurement contracts. Guidelines approved  by  the
     2  corporation shall be annually reviewed and approved by the corporation.
     3    (a) Each corporation shall [annually] submit within ninety days of the
     4  end  of its fiscal year its report on procurement contracts to the divi-
     5  sion of the budget and the authorities budget office and copies  thereof
     6  to  the  department  of  audit  and  control, the department of economic
     7  development, the senate finance committee  and  the  assembly  ways  and
     8  means committee.
     9    §  9.  Subdivision 3 of section 2896 of the public authorities law, as
    10  amended by chapter 506 of the laws  of  2009,  is  amended  to  read  as
    11  follows:
    12    3. a. Each [public] state and local authority shall [publish, not less
    13  frequently  than  annually] prepare within ninety days of the end of its
    14  fiscal year as part of the annual report  pursuant  to  section  twenty-
    15  eight hundred of this article, a report listing all real property of the
    16  [public]  state  and local authority.   Such report shall include a list
    17  and full description of all  real  and  personal  property  disposed  of
    18  during  such  period. The report shall contain the price received by the
    19  [public] state and local authority and the name of the purchaser for all
    20  such property sold by the [public] state and local authority during such
    21  period and such other information as required by the authorities  budget
    22  office.
    23    b.  The [public] state or local authority shall deliver copies of such
    24  report to the comptroller, the director of the budget, the  commissioner
    25  of general services, the legislature and the authorities budget office.
    26    §  10.  Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subdivision 7 of section 2925 of the
    27  public authorities law, as added by chapter 838 of the laws of 1983, are
    28  amended to read as follows:
    29    (a) Each corporation, a majority of the members of  which  consist  of
    30  persons  appointed  by the governor or who serve as members by virtue of
    31  holding a civil office of the state, or  a  combination  thereof,  shall
    32  [annually]  submit  within ninety days of the end of its fiscal year its
    33  investment report to the division of  the  budget  and  the  authorities
    34  budget office and copies thereof to the department of audit and control,
    35  the senate finance committee and the assembly ways and means committee.
    36    (b)  Each  corporation,  other than a corporation included under para-
    37  graph (a) of this subdivision, shall  [annually]  submit  within  ninety
    38  days  of  the  end of its fiscal year its investment report to the chief
    39  executive officer and chief fiscal officer of each municipality for  the
    40  benefit  of  which  it  was  created  and to the department of audit and
    41  control and the authorities budget office.
    42    § 11. Subdivision 2 of section 561-a of the general municipal law,  as
    43  added by chapter 681 of the laws of 1963, is amended to read as follows:
    44    2.  Within  [sixty] ninety days after the close of the fiscal year, an
    45  agency shall submit an annual report of its financial condition  to  the
    46  commissioner,  the  authorities  budget  office  and  to the state comp-
    47  troller. The report shall be in  such  form  as  the  comptroller  shall
    48  require.  The  commissioner  or  the  comptroller may require additional
    49  information from the agency or any officer thereof at any time.
    50    § 12. Section 859 of the general municipal law, as  added  by  chapter
    51  692  of  the  laws  of 1989, paragraph (b) and the opening paragraph and
    52  subparagraph (v) of paragraph (e) of subdivision 1 as amended by chapter
    53  357 of the laws of 1993, paragraph (e) of subdivision 1 and  subdivision
    54  3  as  added  and subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 356 of the laws of
    55  1993 and paragraph (f) of subdivision 1 as added by section 28  of  part
    56  A3 of chapter 62 of the laws of 2003, is amended to read as follows:

        A. 5415                             8
 
     1    § 859. Financial records.  1. (a) Each agency shall maintain books and
     2  records in such form as may be prescribed by the state comptroller.
     3    (b)  Within  ninety  days following the close of its fiscal year, each
     4  agency or authority shall prepare a financial statement for that  fiscal
     5  year  in  such  form as may be prescribed by the state comptroller. Such
     6  statement shall be audited within such ninety day period by an independ-
     7  ent certified public accountant in accordance with government accounting
     8  standards established by the United States  general  accounting  office.
     9  The  audited  financial  statement  shall include supplemental schedules
    10  listing all straight-lease transactions  and  bonds  and  notes  issued,
    11  outstanding  or  retired during the applicable accounting period whether
    12  or not such bonds, notes or transactions are considered  obligations  of
    13  the  agency.  For  each  issue  of  bonds  or notes such schedules shall
    14  provide the name of each project financed with proceeds of  each  issue,
    15  and  whether  the  project occupant is a not-for-profit corporation, the
    16  name and address of each owner of each project, the estimated amount  of
    17  tax  exemptions  authorized for each project, the purpose for which each
    18  bond or note was issued, date of issue, interest rate at issuance and if
    19  variable the range of interest rates applicable, maturity date,  federal
    20  tax  status of each issue, and an estimate of the number of jobs created
    21  and retained by each project. For each straight-lease transaction,  such
    22  schedules  shall  provide  the  name  of  each  project, and whether the
    23  project occupant is a not-for-profit corporation, the name  and  address
    24  of  each  owner  of each project, the estimated amount of tax exemptions
    25  authorized for each project, the purpose for which each transaction  was
    26  made,  the method of financial assistance utilized by the project, other
    27  than the tax exemptions claimed by the project and an  estimate  of  the
    28  number of jobs created and retained by each project.
    29    (c)  Within  [thirty]  ninety  days  after [completion] the end of the
    30  fiscal year, a copy of the audited financial statement shall  be  trans-
    31  mitted  to  the  commissioner of the department of economic development,
    32  the authorities budget office, the state comptroller and  the  governing
    33  body of the municipality for whose benefit the agency was created.
    34    (d)  An  agency, other than an agency that ceases to exist pursuant to
    35  section eight hundred eighty-two of this title, with no bonds  or  notes
    36  issued  or  outstanding and no projects during the applicable accounting
    37  period may apply to the state comptroller for a waiver of  the  required
    38  audited  financial statement.  Application shall be made on such form as
    39  the comptroller may prescribe.  A waiver granted pursuant to this  para-
    40  graph  shall not apply to any filing requirement imposed on an agency by
    41  or pursuant to section twenty-eight hundred of  the  public  authorities
    42  law.
    43    (e)  If  an  agency  or  authority shall fail to file or substantially
    44  complete, as determined by the state comptroller, the  financial  state-
    45  ment  required  by  this  section,  the  state comptroller shall provide
    46  notice to the agency or authority. The notice shall state the following:
    47    (i) that the failure to file a financial statement as  required  is  a
    48  violation  of  this section, or in the case of an insufficient financial
    49  statement, the manner in which  the  financial  statement  submitted  is
    50  deficient;
    51    (ii)  that the agency or authority has thirty days to comply with this
    52  section or provide an adequate written explanation to the comptroller of
    53  the agency's or authority's reasons for the inability to comply; and
    54    (iii) that the agency's or authority's failure to provide  either  the
    55  required  financial  statement or an adequate explanation will result in
    56  the notification of the chief executive officer of the municipality  for

        A. 5415                             9
 
     1  whose  benefit  the  agency  or  authority  was  created of the agency's
     2  noncompliance with this section. Where  such  agency  or  authority  has
     3  failed  to  file  the  required  statement,  the comptroller shall addi-
     4  tionally  notify  the agency or authority that continued failure to file
     5  the required statement may result in loss of the agency's or authority's
     6  authority to provide exemptions from state taxes.
     7    (iv) If an agency or authority after thirty days has  failed  to  file
     8  the  required  statement  or  the  explanation in the manner required by
     9  subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, or provides an insufficient explana-
    10  tion, the comptroller shall notify the chief executive  officer  of  the
    11  municipality  for  whose benefit the agency or authority was created and
    12  the agency of  the  agency's  or  authority's  noncompliance  with  this
    13  section.  Such notice from the state comptroller shall further delineate
    14  in what respect the agency or authority has failed to comply  with  this
    15  section.  If  the  agency  or  authority has failed to file the required
    16  statement, the notice shall additionally state that continued failure to
    17  file the required statement may  result  in  loss  of  the  agency's  or
    18  authority's authority to provide exemptions from state taxes.
    19    (v)  If, thirty days after notification of the chief executive officer
    20  of the municipality for  whose  benefit  the  agency  or  authority  was
    21  created  of  the  agency's  or  authority's noncompliance, the agency or
    22  authority fails to file the required statement,  the  comptroller  shall
    23  notify the chief executive officer of the municipality for whose benefit
    24  that agency or authority was created and the agency or authority that if
    25  such  report  is  not  provided  within  sixty  days, that the agency or
    26  authority will no longer be authorized to provide exemptions from  state
    27  taxes.
    28    (vi)  If,  sixty  days after the notification required by subparagraph
    29  (v) of this paragraph, the comptroller has  not  received  the  required
    30  statement,  the agency or authority shall not offer financial assistance
    31  which provides exemptions from state taxes until such  financial  state-
    32  ment is filed and the comptroller shall so notify the agency or authori-
    33  ty and the chief executive officer of the municipality for whose benefit
    34  the  agency  was  created.  Provided, however, that nothing contained in
    35  this paragraph shall be deemed to  modify  the  terms  of  any  existing
    36  agreements.
    37    (f)  Within  thirty days after completion, a copy of an audited finan-
    38  cial statement which contains transactions of or bonds or notes of civic
    39  facilities as defined in paragraph (b) of the former  subdivision  thir-
    40  teen of section eight hundred fifty-four of this article, shall be tran-
    41  smitted  by  the  agency to the commissioner of health, the chair of the
    42  senate finance committee, the chair  of  the  assembly  ways  and  means
    43  committee, the chair of the senate health committee and the chair of the
    44  assembly health committee.
    45    2.  On or before September first of each year, the commissioner of the
    46  department of economic development  shall  prepare  and  submit  to  the
    47  governor,  speaker  of  the assembly, majority leader of the senate, the
    48  director of the authorities budget office, and the state comptroller,  a
    49  report  setting  forth a summary of the significant trends in operations
    50  and financing by agencies and authorities;  departures  from  acceptable
    51  practices  by  agencies  and  authorities;  a compilation by type of the
    52  bonds and notes outstanding; a compilation of all outstanding  straight-
    53  lease  transactions; an estimate of the total number of jobs created and
    54  retained by agency or authority  projects;  and  any  other  information
    55  which in the opinion of the commissioner bears upon the discharge of the
    56  statutory functions of agencies and authorities.

        A. 5415                            10
 
     1    3.  On or before April first, nineteen hundred ninety-six, the commis-
     2  sioner shall submit to the director of the division of the  budget,  the
     3  director  of  the  authorities budget office, the temporary president of
     4  the senate, the speaker of the assembly,  the  chairman  of  the  senate
     5  finance  committee,  the chairman of the assembly ways and means commit-
     6  tee, the chairman of the senate local government committee, the chairman
     7  of the senate committee on  commerce,  economic  development  and  small
     8  business,  the  chairman of the assembly committee on commerce, industry
     9  and economic development, the chairman of the assembly local governments
    10  committee [and], the chairman of the  assembly  real  property  taxation
    11  committee,  the  chair of the senate committee on corporations, authori-
    12  ties and commissions, and the chair of the assembly committee on  corpo-
    13  rations,  authorities and commissions an evaluation of the activities of
    14  industrial development agencies and authorities in the state prepared by
    15  an entity independent of the department. Such evaluation shall  identify
    16  the  effect  of  agencies  and  authorities  on:  (a)  job  creation and
    17  retention in  the  state,  including  the  types  of  jobs  created  and
    18  retained;  (b) the value of tax exemptions provided by such agencies and
    19  authorities; (c) the  value  of  payments  received  in  lieu  of  taxes
    20  received  by municipalities and school districts as a result of projects
    21  sponsored by such entities; (d) a summary of the types of projects  that
    22  received  financial  assistance; (e) a summary of the types of financial
    23  assistance provided by the agencies and authorities; (f)  a  summary  of
    24  criteria  for  evaluation  of projects used by agencies and authorities;
    25  (g) a summary of tax exemption policies of agencies and authorities; and
    26  (h) such other factors as may  be  relevant  to  an  assessment  of  the
    27  performance  of  such agencies and authorities in creating and retaining
    28  job opportunities for residents of the state. Such evaluation shall also
    29  assess the process by which agencies and  authorities  grant  exemptions
    30  from  state  taxes  and  make recommendations for the most efficient and
    31  effective procedures for the use of  such  exemptions.  Such  evaluation
    32  shall  further include any recommendations for changes in laws governing
    33  the operations of industrial development agencies and authorities  which
    34  would enhance the creation and retention of jobs in the state.
    35    § 13. This act shall take effect immediately.
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