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Also in July 2020, NIFA approved the sale of $230 million in short-term funding as Nassau County
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looked to fill a revenue hole created by the pandemic.
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In August 2020, Curran reversed course and proposed a financial plan that avoided longer-term
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borrowing through NIFA at least through 2020. Republicans had raised objection to such borrowing
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because the length of the term needed to get the best interest rate would mean that Nassau would
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not be able to end NIFA oversight for many years, since the bonds would be long-term.
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Also in August, NIFA spelled out a dire situation for county finances, saying that "draconian"
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measures might be needed to rescue the county's finances in the wake of the pandemic, including
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significant layoffs and property tax increases.
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As the start of the 2021 fiscal year neared, Curran proposed a budget that would have NIFA
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refinance $360 million in county and NIFA debt. Initial Republican opposition to the plan was based
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in part on the fact that such a plan would extend NIFA control over the county's financial
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operations. Barsky said Curran's spending plan was "perhaps ... the most challenging budget the
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county has prepared in recent memory." In early October, the county legislature's Finance and Rules
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committee approved a "declaration of need" that asked NIFA to refinance county debt over a 15-year
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period. This would be for less duration than the 30-year refinancing that could have kept NIFA
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supervising county finances until 2051. After some Republican resistance, the county ultimately
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9853_160
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accepted a plan to have NIFA borrow funds to save Nassau money on its financing costs as it sought
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to recover from the pandemic, raising the prospect that the agency will be part of the governance
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of the county for at least 35 years from its inception, since it would be until 2035 or so that the
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debt would mature.
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The financing went through in an oversubscribed bond sale in February 2021. Approximately $1.1
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billion in NIFA-backed bonds were sold out in less than two hours. The interest rate on the debt
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was approximately 1.3%. The debt taken on was not new debt but rather a restructuring. It saved the
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county approximately $435 million in debt service over the life of the 15-year bonds. The savings
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were enough that the expected hole in the county's budget as a result of the pandemic was
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effectively closed.
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The bonds carried a triple A rating from Fitch. It does keep NIFA in the picture until 2035.
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NIFA and the Blakeman administration
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In an interview Newsday conducted with Blakeman a few days after Election Day 2021, Adam Barsky,
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the chairman of NIFA, said he would work with Blakeman. "the same way I worked with Ed Mangano and
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Laura Curran, with a lot of respect." Barsky said the county was in "relatively good shape based on
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one-time resources, which are from the federal (pandemic) aid." He also referred to the large
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refinancing conducted by NIFA under the Curran administration as having put Nassau on more solid
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ground. "The question is how to use those funds to provide long-term structural balance to the
|
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budget," he was quoted as saying. "Utilizing the short-term resources for long-term expenses that
|
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will go on indefinitely will only dig the county into a deeper hole."
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In the November 8 issue of The Point, Newsday's daily politics newsletter, the question was raised
|
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how Blakeman and NIFA might work together. The article noted how the prior Republican county
|
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executive, Ed Mangano, joined with the county legislature in 2010 to end a home heating tax and
|
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blow a $40 million hole in the budget in the process. Given the extensive cuts in revenue that the
|
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Nassau Republicans promised during the 2021 election, which had just been completed at the time of
|
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the newsletter's publication, NIFA's Barsky raised the question of whether a similar scenario might
|
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play out next year. "We need to hear from the legislature and Bruce Blakeman and see what they plan
|
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to do," Barsky said.
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The newsletter article also noted that NIFA was two seats short of being at its full lineup of
|
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seven members.
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In December, when NIFA approved the 2022 budget, the final one of Curran's tenure, Barsky addressed
|
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the fact that Republicans in the election had promised large cuts in fees and taxes. Barsky said he
|
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has spoken with both Blakeman and legislative presiding officer Richard Nicolello about whether
|
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Republicans would try to enact the fee cuts in 2022. As quoted by Newsday, Barsky said, "Neither
|
9853_194
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has committed to do one thing or another as of yet. I did explain to both of them that it really
|
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doesn't matter, because after we approve the budget, if there are things that take place
|
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post-budget that put the county out of balance, then NIFA will expect and require them to make
|
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necessary adjustments to account for whatever the change is. Whatever it is, if it puts a hole in
|
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the budget they're expected to fix that hole."
|
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Credit rating
|
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In August 2020, Fitch Ratings gave NIFA a AAA rating on approximately $400 million in sales
|
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tax-backed debt. In early November 2020 Fitch Ratings Service gave NIFA a short-term credit rating
|
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of F1 on an issue of variable rate bonds backed by the county's sales tax. That is Fitch's
|
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second-highest short-term credit rating. The AAA rating was affirmed in January 2021 when Fitch
|
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rated several new debt issuances.
|
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Moody's has had an Aa1 credit rating on NIFA since at least 2015. That is the second-highest level
|
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in its schedule of ratings.
|
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See also
Buffalo Fiscal Stability Authority
Development Authority of the North Country
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Erie County Fiscal Stability Authority
Lower Manhattan Development Corporation
|
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Municipal Assistance Corporation for the City of NY
New York State Housing Finance Agency
|
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State of New York Municipal Bond Bank Agency
|
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References
External links
NIFA website
|
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Nassau County, New York
Politics of New York (state)
Financial regulation in the United States
|
9854_0
|
Dr. Vyasanakere Prabhanjanacharya (); (born 15 June 1946), is an eminent Indian Sanskrit scholar
|
9854_1
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known for his discourses on Sanatana Dharma. He is an expert in the Dvaita school of philosophy,
|
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founded by Sri Madhvacharya. Sri Prabhanjanacharya has written, edited and compiled numerous books
|
9854_3
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on Veda, Upanishads, Ramayana, Mahabharata, Bhagavata etc. in the light of Madhva philosophy.
|
9854_4
|
He has won many titles and awards from Indian and International organizations. He was the chairman
|
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of the All India Madhwa Philosophical Conference held in Bangalore in 1994. He was the Principal
|
9854_6
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and Professor (of Sanskrit) of the Government First Grade College in Bangalore. He opted for
|
9854_7
|
voluntary retirement from the job to focus on his spiritual and philosophical pursuits. He founded
|
9854_8
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the Śrī Jayatīrtha Manuscript Library, which focuses on rare and unpublished works in Indian
|
9854_9
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philosophy.
|
9854_10
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He has also founded the Śrī Vyāsa Madhva Saṁśodhana Pratiṣṭhāna trust, which focuses on enriching
|
9854_11
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Indian culture, tradition and values. The trust, through its publication wing, the Aitareya
|
9854_12
|
Prakaashana, publishes numerous works. Sri Prabhanjanacharya has critically edited Sarvamula
|
9854_13
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Granthas - collection of all the works of Sri Madhvacharya, based on a 700-year old palmleaf
|
9854_14
|
manuscript. He has also brought out a series of books called StotraMālikā, which is a wonderful
|
9854_15
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collection of hundreds of rare Stotras and stutis, mainly on the Vaiṣṇava tradition.
|
9854_16
|
Sri Prabhanjanacharya has also edited and published numerous books on the Mahabharata, Bhagavadgita
|
9854_17
|
and the Upanishads. In 2005, he was honoured with the President's award of Certificate of Honour
|
9854_18
|
(2005). He is the recipient of several prestigious awards including Rajyotsava Award-2002 (from
|
9854_19
|
Govt. of Karnataka), Vidyavachaspati, Jnanaratnakara, Vidyamanya Mahaprashasti and many others for
|
9854_20
|
his contribution to the Sanskrit, Indian Philosophy and Dvaita Vedanta.
|
9854_21
|
Early life
|
9854_22
|
Vyasanakere Prabhanjanacharya was born on 15 June 1946 in Vyasanakere, a village in the Bellary
|
9854_23
|
district of Karnataka. He obtained B.E. (Mechanical) from the Mysore University; B.A. from the
|
9854_24
|
Karnataka University; and M.A. (in Sanskrit) from the Bangalore University.
|
9854_25
|
He holds PhD from the Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha; and D.Litt. from BHU for his critical edition
|
9854_26
|
of Sarvamūla works of Jagadguru Śrī Madhvācārya.
|
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|
Sanskrit works (edited/compiled/authored)
|
9854_28
|
Sanskrit Works (Edited critically with explanatory notes)
|
9854_29
|
1-7) ŚrīMadhvācāryapraṇītāḥ Sarvamūlagranthāḥ [श्रीमध्वाचार्यप्रणीताः सर्वमूलग्रन्थाः] - collective
|
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