'The School District Equivalent Of A Payday Loan'

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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More than 200 school districts across California are taking a second look at the high price of the debt they've taken on using risky financial arrangements. Collectively, the districts have borrowed billions in loans that defer payments for years — leaving many districts owing far more than they borrowed.

In 2010, officials at the West Contra Costa School District, just east of San Francisco, were in a bind. The district needed $2.5 million to help secure a federally subsidized $25 million loan to build a badly needed elementary school.

Charles Ramsey, president of the school board, says he needed that $2.5 million upfront, but the district didn't have it.

"We'd be foolish not to take advantage of getting $25 million" when the district had to spend just $2.5 million to get it, Ramsey says. "The only way we could do it was with a [capital appreciation bond]."

Those bonds, known as CABs, are unlike typical bonds, where a school district is required to make immediate and regular payments. Instead, CABs allow districts to defer payments well into the future — by which time lots of interest has accrued.

In the West Contra Costa Schools' case, that $2.5 million bond will cost the district a whopping $34 million to repay.


more nuttiness


California School District Owes $1 Billion On $100 Million Loan : NPR
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Vancouver Island
Yea but the people responsible have now left with their golden retirements and some other dumb schmuck is catching all the flack.
 

Highball

Council Member
Jan 28, 2010
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The best example of Organized crime in California is their Educational System. Million dollar salaries for the Administrators and Superintendents and Teachers living near the poverty level. The student fees have almost doubled to make this all work for financing. And they clamor for "More!"