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Executive Report By SHELLEY DAVIS

Controversial municipal bond ruling postponed

POSTPONEMENT until May 31 of the controversial Internal Revenue Service's ruling concerning state and municipal securities used as collateral by banks could be a good omen, according to Don Smith, chief fiscal officer of the Illinois Treasurer's Office. The ruling, made on December 15, was to have taken effect January 8.

The postponement gives Congress, the IRS and the U.S. Treasury Department a chance to examine the ruling. The ruling could have a devastating effect on 34 states, including Illinois, which require some kind of collateral for negotiated time deposits made to banks by governmental units. Smith said there is a "good chance" that the ruling will be withdrawn or that some type of legislative action will be taken.

The ruling stems from a 1954 tax code regulation that prohibits borrowers from deducting interest payments on a loan used to buy tax-exempt issues. This is what banks that use tax-exempt municipal bonds as collateral, have been doing for years, the IRS said. The ruling says that banks may no longer deduct the interest paid on negotiated time deposits as a business expense if municipal bonds are used as collateral. However, an earlier IRS ruling permitted deduction for interest paid on U.S. securities, which are not tax-exempt.

Negotiated time deposits are those made by governmental units for short periods of time, often involving millions of dollars. Illinois law requires that banks pledge collateral of 110 percent of the market value of securities to insure that money will be there when the governmental unit wishes to withdraw it. The securities can be either U.S. issue or municipal bonds, which include all bonds issued by the state or any unit of local government. This allows the state to receive high interest benefits from these types of deposits while at the same time allowing banks that use tax-exempt municipal bonds to get a double tax protection — tax free bonds and a business expense deduction for the interest paid on the accounts.

State Treasurer Jerry Cosentino said if the new ruling is upheld, the effect on governmental units in Illinois could be devastating. The fear is that banks will opt for U.S. government securities, where deductions can be made, instead of buying municipal bonds. The decrease in the marketability of municipal bonds will in turn cause a reduction in state revenues derived from interest earnings, Cosentino said. He pointed out that for fiscal 1980, the state deposited more than $2 billion in public funds in over 1,000 banks in the state. These deposits earned about $216 million in interest payments.

The ruling, however, was softened somewhat when the IRS decided to remove a stipulation to apply it retroactively. Although it was predicted that banks would only be forced to repay the IRS for deductions dating back not more than three years, this in itself could have resulted in billions of dollars for all the banks involved. Smith said that attempting to determine the amount of money owed to the IRS in back taxes for just a three-year period would have been ". . . an impossible task. If you had 25 years, you wouldn't have gotten it done," he said.

It is still too early to tell what the total effect on Illinois will be if the ruling stands, Smith said. However, he estimated that if the effect is 15 percent — a figure he said is used only as an example — the state could lose $30 million annually in interest payments.

Farmland conversion update
THE AMOUNT of farmland in Illinois did not increase from 1974 to 1978, although U.S. Census Bureau figures seemed to indicate it did. The census bureau says its earlier published data showed 29.095 million acres of farmland in Illinois in 1974 and 29.734 million acres in 1978, an increase of 639,000 acres. But this increase, the census bureau says, was caused by an undercount of Illinois farms, particularly small and part-time farms.

Under a more accurate system used in 1978, some farms were counted for the first time. Adjusted figures released by the census bureau in December show a decline in Illinois farmland since 1969 — from 30.718 million acres in 1969 to 30.209 million acres in 1974 — and to 29.734 million acres in 1978. Between 1974 and 1978 about 475,433 acres of farmland were converted to other uses, or close to 118,000 acres per year. This is higher than the 100,000 acres per year estimated by the U.S. Soil Conservation Service; it also raises the estimated loss of revenue from Illinois farm products from $22 million each year to $23 million.

State Stix

In January the general funds end-of-month balance was $283.34 million; the general funds average daily available balance was $310.44 million; and the combined funds end-of-month balance was $489.18 million. . ..The statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in January was 9.0 percent. In December the final seasonally adjusted unemployment rates in the state's major cities were: Bloomington-Normal, 7.2 percent; Champaign-Urbana, 6.0 percent; Chicago,. 8.5 percent; Davenport-Rock Island-Moline (Illinois sector), 8.8 percent; Decatur, 11.9 percent; Kankakee, 12.5 percent; Peoria, 9.5 percent; Rockford, 14.8 percent; Springfield, 7.3 percent; St. Louis (Illinois sector), 10.2 percent. . . Approximately 674,500 children in Illinois in 1975 lived in homes with family incomes below the official poverty line, according to a report issued by the University of Chicago titled, "The State of the Child." the poverty rate for children during the period between I969 ,and 1975 increased from 11.0 to 16.5, while the poverty rate for adults decreased during the same period from 9.8 to 7.9 . . . . The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency collected a total ol $54,625 in penalties assessed by the Pollution Control Board between July1 and December 31, 1980. During that time period a total of $82,550 in penalties was levied. For fiscal year 1980, the EPA collected $186,032.50 in penalties out of a total of $198,812.50 in fines levied.

Weatherization assistance
Illinois received in January more than $15 million in federal funds under the Weatherization Assistance for Low-Income Persons Program, but requests total $26 million. The funds are channeled to homeowners or renters, particularly the elderly and handicapped, to pay for caulking and weatherstripping homes, installing insulation, storm doors and other improvements to reduce heat loss and conserve energy. The program is administered by the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs (DCCA), and is part of the federal energy assistance program.

Last year the program helped about 10,000 families with $15 million. The 1980 federal grant totalled $13.4 million but $3.6 million was added from a 1979 "carryover."

David M. Farrell, head of DCCA's office of resource conservation, says the $15 million available this year is not enough. Requests total $26 million; Chicago alone wanted $8 million. The money is supposed to be available from February 1 to December 31, but at the rate requests are coming in, it may run out by July or August. Additional funds that were expected probably will not be available, Farrell said. Expected cutbacks in the federal Comprehensive Training and Employment Act program (CETA) will also raise the cost of the program since much of the work has been done by CETA employees.

32/ April 1981/ Illinois Issues


Heating bill assistance
A total of $35 million was made available in January to help low-income Illinois residents pay heating bills. Part of the Low-Income Energy Assistance Program under the U.S. Department of Energy, the money is available to both homeowners and renters, with special attention to elderly and handicapped. The federal assistance to Illinois is 75 percent more than last year.

Unlike 1980, when a flat $300 grant was given to eligible persons, grants this year range from $60 to $430, depending on personal income, location and type of heating system. The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs is the lead state agency for administering the grants (phone 800-252-8643). A special weather-related emergency fund was set up to provide supplies, power generators, space heaters and 24-hour warmth centers.

Rate hike rehearing denied
The Illinois Commerce Commission denied Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company a rehearing on its 4.34 percent increase granted in December. Peoples Gas requested an 8.7 percent increase worth $89,489,000; instead, it received the 4.34 percent increase worth $44.7 million.

Municipal elections
More than 50 municipalities and 10 townships conducted primary elections for the first time under the new Illinois consolidated election law on February 24. The law, which puts administration of local elections under the control of county clerks and municipal boards of election commissioners, will eventually affect more than 1,300 municipalities, 1,400 townships, 1,000 school districts and thousands of other local governmental units in Illinois. April 7 is the date for all general elections at the local level.

Bid-rigging suit
Three highway contracting firms — one from Wisconsin and two from Illinois — were required to make payments totaling $80,000 to the state following an antitrust suit settlement in February. Illinois filed a complaint in 1975 alleging that employees of Huckaba & Sons Construction Co. of Charleston, General Paving Co. of Champaign and F. F. Mengel Co. of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., had agreed among themselves to submit collusive, noncompetitive and rigged bids to the state for construction of a highway project, which allegedly resulted in the Department of Transportation paying an artificially inflated price for the project. All three firms were found guilty of bid-rigging in 1974, but denied wrongdoing in this case.

Crime info center
The Illinois Attorney General's Office joined the Mid-States Organized Crime Information Center in December. The organization, founded in 1980, consists of state and local law enforcement agencies in Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota and South Dakota. It enables member agencies to share information on individuals and organizations engaged in criminal trafficking, organized crime and narcotics. It also makes possible the coordination of investigations and enforcement activities across state lines.

Fish and wildlife area
An 1,886-acre tract of land in Randolph County was acquired by the Department of Conservation in January. The tract is part of a planned 2,281-acre project to be called the Turkey Bluffs State Fish and Wildlife Area. The land was purchased from Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA) for $1.1 million and negotiations are continuing for the purchase of an additional 400 acres to complete the area. More than 400 acres will be used as a scenic overlook. The cost of development will be covered by federal funds under the Great River Road program; 75 percent of the purchase cost of the remaining 1,875 acres will be covered by reimbursements from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Pittman-Robertson program, which is funded by the excise tax on sporting equipment and ammunition.

Low interest farm loans
In another move to help out the small farmer in Illinois, state Treasurer Jerry Cosentino proposed legislation in January to set up an "agribond" low-interest loan program for farmers and agribusiness. Rep. Clarence Darrow (D., Rockford) was expected to be the House sponsor for the measure.

The proposed legislation would create a new Illinois Agricultural Development Authority that would administer $50 million in tax-exempt insured agricultural development revenue bonds to be used for low-interest loans. Ten percent of the money for the bonds would come from local banks while the rest would come from the new authority. The loans, which could be used to purchase farmland or equipment, would be guaranteed by the federal Farmers' Home Administration (FmHA) allowing banks to make the loans with about 9 or 10 percent interest rates, well below the prevailing rate of 16 to 18 percent.

Small farmers, whose farms are their principal source of income, would be the beneficiaries of the new program. Eligibility would be determined by FmHA screening committees already in existence in each county. Cosentino said a similar program financed with state funds was a "great success" last year.D

April 1981/ Illinois Issues/ 33


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