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Agenda - 04-04-2023; 8-a - Minutes
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Agenda - 04-04-2023; 8-a - Minutes
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3/30/2023 12:15:30 PM
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BOCC
Date
4/4/2023
Meeting Type
Business
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Agenda
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8-a
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Agenda for April 4, 2023 BOCC Meeting
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\Board of County Commissioners\BOCC Agendas\2020's\2023\Agenda - 04-04-2023 Business Meeting
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RES-2023-024-Refund-Release Resolution-Approval
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RES-2023-028-Approval of in county travel allowance for Orange County schools board of education members
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39 <br /> 1 Slide #10 <br /> Thanks! <br /> H01 �)W kSF>\ <br /> LAWYERS AND ADVISORS Questions? <br /> 2 <br /> 3 Bob Jessup said by early April 2024, the Board needs to know what they'd like to bond to <br /> 4 address and plan for a public hearing, with the bond referendum in November 2024. <br /> 5 Commissioner Richards asked if counties typically have an idea of needed projects before <br /> 6 moving forward. <br /> 7 Bob Jessup said yes, that's the information that would inform them how much to ask for <br /> 8 on the bond. He said it is also typical to have a project in the queue they can assign to the bond. <br /> 9 Commissioner Hamilton asked if the schools capital needs consultant could provide some <br /> 10 numbers that would be helpful in determining the need for a bond. <br /> 11 Travis Myren said they could ask them to. He said by April of next year they should have <br /> 12 a good idea. <br /> 13 Commissioner Hamilton asked how long the informal process has taken in Orange <br /> 14 County. <br /> 15 Jessup said years because of the approach Orange County takes with receiving input <br /> 16 from the community through task forces and other avenues. He said most counties he works with <br /> 17 could have it done within a day. He reiterated that this is a commissioner-driven process. <br /> 18 Bonnie Hammersley said the informal process for the 2016 bond was started about a year <br /> 19 in advance. <br /> 20 Vice-Chair McKee said there was no task force for the 2016 bond and the Board of <br /> 21 Commissioners at the time wanted the bond to provide funding for schools, but community <br /> 22 members advocated for different allocations of the funds. He said the need for affordable housing <br /> 23 became predominant amongst conversations, and a reduction was made in the amount for <br /> 24 schools to allocate $5 million for affordable housing, to keep the total amount for the bond $125 <br /> 25 million. <br /> 26 Chair Bedford said there was a Bond Education Committee that was tasked with informing <br /> 27 the community of what the bond would do. <br /> 28 Commissioner Hamilton added this committee was formed after the Board voted to move <br /> 29 forward with the bond. <br /> 30 Travis Myren said the county can afford a $130 million bond at this time, over 5 years. <br /> 31 Vice-Chair McKee asked if the last bond will be paid off by November 2024. <br /> 32 Bonnie Hammersley said no, it's paid back over 20 years. She added that the last bond <br /> 33 before 2016 was in 2001. <br /> 34 Commissioner Greene asked what the 2001 bond addressed. <br /> 35 Vice-Chair McKee said it was for parks, senior centers, schools, and one other item he <br /> 36 couldn't recall. He shared his reasoning for his vote on the 2016 bond. He said the total need at <br /> 37 the time surpassed the county's debt capacity. He said if the Board had added additional areas <br /> 38 for the money to be distributed, it would have reduced the amount to schools to $60 million and <br /> 39 with the 60-40 split between the systems it wouldn't have been enough to even rebuild Chapel <br />
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