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In order to comply with Minn. Stat. 16A.695 requirements on the expenditure of state bonds, to <br /> minimize the total costs of acquisition and to be consistent with reimbursements made on other <br /> projects, these costs are not grant-eligible: <br /> • Acquisition costs incurred to acquire a local park, which is later designated a regional park <br /> • Interest incurred by the acquiring regional park implementing agency or entity under contract <br /> with the agency on bonds it issued to buy the land, or interest incurred on a contract for deed <br /> payment <br /> • Projected investment revenue lost by the acquiring regional park implementing agency or entity <br /> under contract with the agency, based on what it might have earned on funds it spent to acquire <br /> the land or to buy an option to purchase the land <br /> • Interest on inter-agency or intra-agency loans used to finance the acquisition payment(s) or <br /> option to purchase <br /> Reimbursement for development projects undertaken before they can be financed through the <br /> Capital Improvement Plan <br /> Reimbursement will be considered for development projects provided that: <br /> • the project is consistent in timing, scale, type, and cost with a Council-approved master plan <br /> • all information required for the development grant is submitted to the Council prior to the <br /> regional park implementing agency undertaking the project, and <br /> • the Council approves the project. <br /> State funds are not eligible to be used for reimbursement grants when the regional park implementing <br /> agency uses the reimbursement to pay off its bonds or an account that was used to initially finance the <br /> project. In those cases, only Council bonds may be used. In cases where the regional park <br /> implementing agency uses the proceeds from the reimbursement grant to finance new capital projects, <br /> state funds as well as Council bonds may be used to finance the grant. <br /> The Council will consider reimbursing the implementing agency based on whether the development or <br /> rehabilitation project meets the criteria - not on how the regional park implementing agency plans to <br /> spend the reimbursement grant. However, regional park implementing agencies should state how they <br /> would spend the reimbursement grant so that state funds as well as Council bonds can be used when <br /> possible. <br /> This would eliminate any need for amendments to the Council's Unified Capital Budget, since the <br /> Regional Parks Capital Improvement Program (CIP) would accurately reflect, and inform the public and <br /> elected officials, how the funds will be spent. <br /> Because Council bonds are limited to financing only 40% of the total biennial Regional Parks CIP, the <br /> following steps will be taken when considering reimbursement requests in a biennial Regional Parks <br /> CIP: <br /> • Regional park implementing agencies should submit their CIP funding requests with the <br /> understanding that reimbursement grants should not exceed 40% of a regional park <br /> implementing agency's biennial CIP allocation. <br />