PART 50 BONDING GUIDELINES : Sections Listing

TITLE 71: PUBLIC BUILDINGS, FACILITIES AND REAL PROPERTY
CHAPTER I: CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT BOARD
SUBCHAPTER a: RULES
PART 50 BONDING GUIDELINES


AUTHORITY: Implementing and authorized by Section 9.06 of the Capital Development Board Act [20 ILCS 3105/9.06].

SOURCE: Adopted at 2 Ill. Reg. 30, p. 140, effective July 27, 1978; amended at 4 Ill. Reg. 9, p. 233, effective February 14, 1980; amended at 5 Ill. Reg. 1890, effective February 17, 1981; amended and codified at 8 Ill. Reg. 20247, effective October 1, 1984; amended at 12 Ill. Reg. 9845, effective May 27, 1988; old Part repealed and new Part adopted at 25 Ill. Reg. 67, effective December 22, 2000; emergency amendment at 30 Ill. Reg. 11397, effective June 13, 2006, for a maximum of 150 days; emergency amendment repealed by emergency rulemaking at 30 Ill. Reg 12615, effective July 10, 2006, for the remainder of the 150 days; emergency expired November 9, 2006.

 

Section 50.110  General Standards and Guidelines for the Appropriate Utilization of Bond Proceeds

 

a)         General.  The general uses of Capital Development Bond, School Construction Bond, General Obligation Bond and Build Illinois Bond proceeds appropriated to the Board shall always be and remain consistent with the provisions expressed in Article VIII, Section 1 and Article IX, Section 9 of the 1970 Constitution of the State of Illinois, and with the provisions of the Capital Development Bond Act of 1972 [30 ILCS 420], the School Construction Bond Act [30 ILCS 390], General Obligation Bond Act [30 ILCS 330] and the Build Illinois Bond Act [30 ILCS 425].

 

b)         Bondable Capital Improvements.  Bondable capital improvements and related expenditure purposes generally include, but are not limited to, the following:

 

1)         Planning expenses for architectural and engineering design;

 

2)         Real property;

 

3)         Buildings, additions, and/or structures (including required site development or preparation and associated fixed equipment that is required for functional effectiveness);

 

4)         Utilities;

 

5)         Initial durable movable equipment as defined in Section 50.120(e), Durable Movable Equipment;

 

6)         Site improvements;

 

7)         Remodeling and/or Rehabilitation;

 

8)         Direct costs associated with the issuance of State  General Obligation Bonds.

 

c)         General Obligation Bond Proceeds.

 

1)         In general, any expenditure purpose shall be considered appropriate for financing from proceeds provided that such expenditure purposes:

 

A)        are not recurring.  In this context, recurring expenses are defined as those costs that are incurred at frequent or regular intervals within the initial term of financing, and that would cause pyramiding accumulation of costs for the same expenditure purpose before the expenses initially incurred for such purpose are completely amortized;

 

B)        can be characterized as durable or not readily consumed in use;

 

C)        reflect an extended useful life or longevity that confers long-term (non-transitory) benefits on the citizens of the State of Illinois;

 

D)        are not subject to inherent risk of failure or rapid technological obsolescence, or primarily intended to fulfill temporary requirements;

 

E)        reflect a direct interest of the State of Illinois, including its legally constituted subdivisions, in any real property to be improved, as evidenced by valid title to the real property on which the proposed improvement is to be made, or an easement interest of record that at least encompasses the proposed term of bond financing;

 

F)         appreciably increase, improve, or enhance the equitable interests of the State of Illinois in capital facilities, land, permanent improvements, and related assets;

 

G)        are considered as internal components of a project, which if considered separately may not reflect an extended useful life, but will be bondable provided that such components are initially required for and appreciably contribute to effective functioning, or are otherwise incapable of separation from a more complex unit that in itself is bondable.

 

2)         All seven factors must be present in order for an expenditure purpose to be bondable.

 

3)         Notwithstanding the above prescribed purposes, a nonconforming expenditure may yet be considered bondable if it is deemed to be in the public interest as evidenced by a substantive enactment of the General Assembly.  Only Public Acts specifying a project shall be deemed a substantive enactment.

 

Section 50.120  Standardized Definitions and Guidelines

 

The following standardized definitions and guidelines enumerate the appropriate utilization of Capital Development, School Construction, General Obligation and Build Illinois Bond proceeds appropriated to the Board to finance bondable capital improvements as listed in Section 50.110(b) above.

 

a)         Planning.  Bondable planning costs include those expenditures that are related to architectural and engineering design required for planning the construction or installation of bondable capital improvement projects. Included are costs for schematic design development, which refers to preliminary studies developed from program statements that reflect the general functional characteristics and architectural requirements of a bondable capital improvement project; costs for definitive design development, which means the refinement of schematic design into final detailed design requirements; and costs incurred for the completion of construction documents and detailed working drawings required for bidding and construction, including any allowable reimbursables provided within an executed contract for professional and technical services.

 

b)         Land.  Land includes expenditures for the acquisition of real property (including easements of record with an extended term, but excluding any leasehold interests obtained through rental of real property), whether obtained by purchase or by condemnation under the applicable eminent domain laws of the State of Illinois, and for all expenses directly and necessarily related to such purchase or condemnation.  All necessary and reasonable expenses incurred in the acquisition of real property qualify for bond financing.  Such expenditures may include but are not limited to the following:

 

1)         land costs

 

2)         appraisal fees

 

3)         title opinions

 

4)         surveying fees

 

5)         real estate fees

 

6)         title transfer taxes

 

7)         condemnation costs and related legal expenses.

 

c)         Buildings, Additions, and/or Structures.  Buildings, additions and/or structures shall mean and include those facilities with a roof and/or walls that have a foundation.  This category also includes site developments necessarily required or related to the preparation of a site for construction purposes; and required built-in, special-purpose, or other fixed equipment, which is permanently affixed or connected to real property in such a manner that removal would cause consequent damage to the real property to which it is affixed.  All expenditures that may be classified within the category defined shall be bondable.

 

d)         Utilities.  In general, the category utilities shall mean and include expenditures for the acquisition, construction, replacement, modernization, and/or extension of systems for distributing or disbursing utility services. Bondable utility costs may include but are not limited to the following items:

 

1)         provisions for potable water, high-temperature water for sanitary or other related purposes, domestic hot or chilled water;

 

2)         systems and associated components for disbursing or distributing electricity or providing telecommunications service, including underground or overhead distribution cables for television, computers, or other modes of communication;

 

3)         steam and condensate returns;

 

4)         storm and/or sanitary sewers;

 

5)         fire hydrants and stand pipes;

 

6)         central fire and security alert systems;

 

7)         exterior lighting;

 

8)         tap-ons or extensions related to existing utility systems;

 

9)         automated temperature/environmental control systems, and air and water pollution control systems;

 

10)       provisions for the disposal of scientific contaminated waste and surgical waste;

 

11)       solar heating or other approved energy systems;

 

12)       sewage and water treatment facilities, equipment and related distribution systems;

 

13)       earth moving to create artificial lakes or reservoirs for utility or related conservation purposes;

 

14)       restoration of natural and/or man-made features of the site of any utilities installation to its original condition;

 

15)       trenches or ditches dug for the purpose of laying tile or providing ducts to remove excessive rainfall and prevent erosion.

 

e)         Durable movable equipment

 

1)         Durable movable equipment shall mean initial movable equipment, including all items of initial equipment, other than built-in equipment, that are necessary and appropriate for the functioning of a particular facility for its specific purpose, and that will be used solely or primarily in the rooms or areas covered in the subject project. Further, such equipment is defined as manufactured items that have an extended useful life, are not affixed to a building and are capable of being moved or relocated from room to room or building to building, are not consumed in use, and have an identity and function that will not be lost through incorporation into a more complex unit.

 

2)         In applying the above definition, reference should be made to the State Finance Act [30 ILCS 105], and the distinction between commodities (Section 15b of that Act) and equipment (Section 20) as defined by that Act.  Within the context of that Act, the following guidelines should be applied in defining durable movable equipment:

 

A)        Bondable

 

i)          Office/household equipment and furniture will be bondable.

 

ii)         Machinery, implements and major tools will be bondable.

 

iii)        Scientific instruments and apparatus will be bondable when they have a useful life similar to office equipment.

 

iv)        Transportation and installation costs incurred with an outside source will be considered part of the equipment cost for items funded by the Board.

 

v)         Equipment not otherwise classified will be considered bondable provided it meets all other guidelines.

 

vi)        Significant useful life should be considered a minimum of 10 years.

 

B)        Non-bondable

 

i)          Scientific apparatus items that are subject to short useful life, such as glassware, tubing, crockery and light bulbs are not bondable. These items are more correctly defined as commodities.

 

ii)         Library books, maps, and paintings other than those purchased in the Art in Architecture program [20 ILCS 3105/14] are not fundable from bond funds.

 

iii)        Livestock, for any use, is not fundable from bond funds.

 

iv)        Rolling stock, including boats, cars, trucks and related items, are not fundable from bond funds.

 

v)         Spare and replacement parts should be considered commodities.

 

vi)        No commodities shall be purchased from bond funds.

 

f)         Site Improvements.  Site Improvements means and includes expenditures for all improvements to real property that are not otherwise included within the category of buildings, additions and/or structures (subsection (c) of this Section). Bondable site improvement expenditures shall include all above costs incidental to demolition, rough and final grading of a site, and the construction or replacement of sidewalks, road and driveway pavement surfaces, bridges, ramps, curbs, overpasses, underpasses, pedestrian bridges and tunnels, surface parking areas, campground development, building terraces, retaining walls, exterior lighting, and seeding or sodding for erosion control only if related to a bondable capital improvement project.

 

g)         Remodeling and Rehabilitation

 

1)         Bondable remodeling and rehabilitation means and includes expenditures for all capital improvements that have the primary objective of altering the functional capabilities of a structure or facility.

 

2)         Remodeling shall include all capital improvement projects that have the primary objective of changing the functional character of areas, modifying capacity for the number of persons who can be accommodated, and/or altering spatial relationships.

 

3)         Rehabilitation shall include all non-recurring capital improvement expenditures having the primary purpose of restoring or upgrading an existing area to original operating condition.  Recurring expenditures for repairs and/or maintenance that are predictable or reflect regular attention in preserving or keeping a facility in ordinarily efficient operating condition or arresting deterioration without appreciably upgrading, improving, or increasing the value of a facility, shall be considered non-bondable repair and maintenance expenditures.

 

h)         Direct Costs Associated with the Issuance of State General Obligation Bonds.  Costs of this nature shall include expenses associated with advertising, printing, bond rating, security, delivery, legal and financial services, and all other expenses necessary and incident to the issuance of State General Obligation Bonds.

 

Section 50.130  Limitations on Expenditures of Bond Proceeds

 

a)         The following expenditure purposes shall not be bondable:

 

1)         operational and administrative expenses, such as compensation costs, travel, commodities, non-initial equipment, or other recurring expenditures that are similar in character;

 

2)         expenditures for leasing or rental of equipment and/or facilities;

 

3)         archeological digs, research, or exploration;

 

4)         expenditures for routine operation, routine repair, or routine maintenance of existing structures, buildings, or real property that would typically be covered by operation and maintenance funds of the user agency and for reimbursement of user agencies for administration, staff, or other costs;

 

5)         expenditures to acquire or construct temporary facilities or facilities whose abandonment or replacement is imminent;

 

6)         unpredictable or unusual legal expenses (other than land acquisition legal expenses), such as for special litigation, that are not ordinarily or customarily provided within the budget for a capital improvement project.  These expenditures are more appropriately financed from contractual services operating funds appropriated for such purposes;

 

7)         separate purchases of sand, gravel, rock, asphalt and concrete in limited quantities; ordinary hardware items; temporary, nondurable fencing; spare and/or replacement parts and equipment; hand tools; decorative models, plaques and other commemorative memorabilia; and other commodity-type consumable items having a relatively brief expected useful life;

 

8)         expenditures for general long-range development plans, master plans, historical or archeological research, surveying, preliminary engineering studies, aerial mapping, feasibility studies, program or scope statements, or other expenditures similar in character;

 

9)         expenditures for independent landscaping improvements that are not directly associated with a bondable capital improvement project. In this context, seeding or sodding that is not primarily intended for erosion control in relation to a bondable capital improvement project shall not be bondable.  Similarly, expenditures incurred for the planting of trees, shrubs, bushes, or other vegetation, including revegetation, shall not be bondable improvements unless the expenses are directly and initially associated with or represent an integral component of a bondable capital improvement project.

 

b)         The following expenditure purposes shall be bondable only if those purposes demonstrate an expected useful life, based upon engineering studies, supporting technical data, or relevant precedents under similar circumstances, that is at least equal to the term of bond financing:

 

1)         purchase or installation of metal pilings or similar materials (but not riprap) for the purpose of erosion and/or flood control, provided that the impact of the proposed expenditure is to improve rather than maintain such areas;

 

2)         expenses directly related to dredging, levee, drainage, channel and/or lake improvements;

 

3)         rehabilitation of existing road and parking area surfaces;

 

4)         costs incurred in the acquisition or purchase of historical, antique or period furnishings of value, provided that the items are directly associated with a new capital improvement project and considered essential to the primary purpose of such project and acquisition of the furnishings is pursuant to the mandate of the appropriation for the project, and further provided that the items will be subject to adequate security and protection and accepted property control accountability.