Members
A. James Barnes
Chair
Terry Agriss
John Boland
George Butcher
DonaUComll
Michael Curtey
Rachel Doming
Kelly Downard
Mary Francoeur
James Oebhardt
Scott Hasklns
Jennifer Hernandez
Keith Hinds
Langdon Marsh
Greg Mason
Karen Massey
Mathllde McLean
Undone Patten
Sharon Dlxon-Peay
Cherte Rice
Andrew Sawyers
Doug Scott
GregSwartz
Steven Thompson
Leanne Tobias
Jim Tozzl
Chlara Trabucchl
Justin Wilson
Stan Me/burg
Designated
Federal Official
June 15, 2009
Honorable Lisa P Jackson
Administrator
United States Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20460
Dear Administrator Jackson:
The Environmental Financial Advisory Board (EFAB) is pleased to
transmit to you two reports dealing with an innovative environmental finance
concept which, with certain additions, could produce significant environmental
improvements across the nation.
This concept, the Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bond (VEIB)
Program, produces long-term, low-cost incentives for installing improvements to
reduce green house gas emissions, improve air quality and reduce non-point
source water pollution. VEIBs can be used to finance a host of improvements
including, but not limited to: (1) solar panels; (2) insulation: (3) insulating doors
and windows; (4) new energy efficient tankless water heaters; (5) new EPA-
certified wood stoves and hydronic heaters; (6) geothermal loops; (7) green roofs;
(8) rain gardens; (9) permeable pavement; (10) septic tank replacements; (11) new
clean agricultural diesel engines; (12) livestock feeding stations; (13) animal
waste management facilities; (14) stream crossings; (15) stream buffers (trees and
fences); and probably more.
The first report deals with the VEIB concept itself, and makes specific
recommendations for the Agency to encourage states and local governments to
adopt VEIB programs that embrace the types of environmental improvements
mentioned above. To date, such programs have been limited only to energy
efficiency devices. The Board believes that the country is missing an opportunity
to do more environmental good by extending the VEIB concept to a wider array
of environmental improvements.
Providing Advice on "How To Pay" for Environmental Protection
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The second report deals with the implementation of VEIB programs. As
you will see, the VEIB concept breaks new ground in the field of municipal
finance. As such there is a multiplicity of good underwriting, risk mitigation and
consumer protection measures that should be observed in implementing any VEIB
program. The report outlines them in detail.
We commend the 'VEIB concept to you and the Agency, We hope that
icept will indeed - in a far broader form - sweep the country and bring
mainr i-mnrnvftrnftnts tr» thft envtmnrnfint
this concept will
mis concept win inaeea - in a tar oroaoer rorm •
with it major improvements to the environment.
We would be pleased to answer any questions or brief you and any of your
staff should you desire additional information about these reports. The Board
looks forward to continuing to assist EPA in the mission of protecting human
health and the environment.
Sincerely,
A James Barnes A, Stanley Meiburg'
EFAB Chair Designated Federal Official
Enclosures
cc; Scott Fulton, Acting Deputy Administrator
Michael Shapiro, Acting Assistant Administrator
Office of Water
Gina McCarthy, Assistant Administrator
Office of Air and Radiation
Maryann Froehlich, Acting Chief Financial Officer
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Environmental Financial Advisory Board
EFAB
A. Stanley Meiburg
Designated Federal
Official
Members
A. James Barnes, Chair
Terry Agriss
John Boland
George Butcher
Donald Correll
Michael Curley
Rachel Deming
Kelly Downard
Mary Francoeur
James Gebhardt
Scott Haskins
Jennifer Hernandez
Keith Hinds
Langdon Marsh
Greg Mason
Karen Massey
Mathilde McLean
Linden Patton
Sharon Dixon-Peay
Cherie Rice
Andrew Sawyers
Doug Scott
Greg Swartz
Steve Thompson
Leanne Tobias
Jim Tozzi
Chiara Trabucchi
Justin Wilson
Voluntary Environmental Improvement
Bonds: An Innovative, Local,
Environmental Finance Concept for
Mitigation of Climate Change Risk; Air
Pollution Reduction; and the Reduction of
Non-Point Source Water Pollution
This report has not been reviewed for approval by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency; and hence, the views and opinions expressed in the
report do not necessarily represent those of the Agency or any other
agencies in the Federal Government.
June 2009
Printed on Recycled Paper
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United States Environmental Protection Agency
Environmental Financial Advisory Board
Report on Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds:
An Innovative Local Environmental Finance Concept for Mitigation of
Climate Change Risk; Air Pollution Reduction; and the Reduction of Non-
Point Source Water Pollution
In 2008, the Environmental Financial Advisory Board (the "Board") submitted a report to the
Administrator, entitled "Innovative Finance Programs for Air Pollution Reduction" (the "2008
Report"). In that report, the Board recommended that the Environmental Protection Agency (the
"Agency") encourage States to create Air Quality Finance Authorities (AQFAs) to finance air
pollution reduction equipment and explained how such Authorities could be constituted, and
would work.
This Report goes far beyond our 2008 Report. It identifies specific state and local initiatives that
could, with modest changes, including specific risk management, underwriting and consumer
protection actions, result in programs that would provide a dramatic breakthrough in financing
programs to mitigate risks of climate change through the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions,
to reduce air pollution, and to reduce non-point source water pollution. We call these financial
innovations "Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds" (VEIBs)1.
The genesis of the VEIB concept began in Berkeley, California, in 2008. The City formed a
special taxing district - the "Sustainable Energy Financing District" - to finance the purchase
and installation of solar panels on the homes of individual citizens if they consented to pay for
this improvement through an annual tax assessment on their home to be paid along with their real
property taxes. To test the financing method and administration of the program, the City
authorized a pilot program on September 23, 2008 and partnered with Renewable Funding, LLC
to fund and administer a $1.5 million pilot program.
Enabling legislation has now been passed in California and Colorado where approximately a
dozen municipalities are now implementing such programs.
1 Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds (VEIBs) are a specialized form of "Property Secured Obligation", a
concept well understood in the municipal bond trade. The report advocates the use of VEIBs, as the centerpiece of
local government finance programs to mitigate risks of climate change and improve air and water quality. VEIBs
can be used to finance property-owner owned and maintained environmental and energy efficiency devices
and improvements to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, reduce air pollution, and to reduce non-point source water
pollution. Theoretically, VEIBs could be applied to any type of property, whether used by an individual homeowner
or commercial entity or other ownership type.
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Although the Board applauds these initiatives, we are concerned that States and communities
across the country are missing an opportunity to do even more good for the environment.
Specifically, although to date these programs have been limited to energy savings devices,
VEIBs can, in fact, be used to fund a host of environmental and energy efficiency programs
including but not limited to:
• Solar panels
• Insulation
• New insulating windows and doors
• Tankless water heaters
• Geothermal loops
• Replacement of old wood stoves and hydronic heaters with EPA-approved devices
• Permeable pavement
• Rain gardens
• Green roofs
• Replacement of failing septic systems
• Animal Feeding Operations
• Animal Waste Management Systems
• Structures for stream crossings
• Stream buffers (trees & fences)
• Replacement of agricultural diesel equipment
The Board's concern is that States are enacting legislation and communities are mounting only
narrowly focused programs that could be expanded to become much broader and do much more
environmental good.
Among the more attractive features of properly designed VEIBs are:
• They can provide long-term financing -longer than conventional financing2. This
drastically reduces monthly payments.
• They offer lower interest rates than conventional financing, in part because the rate is
based upon the improved property securing the debt3.
• Property owners can request to finance improvements and consent to the imposition of an
improvements based tax or assessment. No one is compelled to participate and only
those property owners who requested the improvements pay.
2 It is critical that the finance term not exceed the useful life of the improvement to avoid creating an imbalance
between the value of the asset and the amount of the liability.
3 As used throughout this report, "improved property" means a property whose owner requested to finance
environmental and energy efficient improvements and consented to the imposition of a tax or an assessment to pay
for the improvements. However, the intent of VEIBs is to finance improvements which provide a wider public
benefit. As such, the Board recommends that the sponsoring local government assure there is sufficient public
benefit to be derived from using PSOs to finance improvements on individual properties.
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• The sponsoring government finances the improvements by issuing Property Secured
Obligations, or PSOs, or, in some circumstances, by finding other sources of long-term
property secured debt.
• Those property owners pay for their improvements through semi-annual or annual special
taxes or assessments that are paid in conjunction with their general property tax bills.
• The PSOs and the associated periodic payments are secured by a lien against the owner's
real property.
• The real property liens can constitute a secure financing structure which results in
favorable interest rates. Depending upon the state, these liens can be superior in priority
to all home mortgages, home equity loans, deeds of trust or other commercial liens4.
• Depending upon the ownership and maintenance of the improvements, PSOs in the form
of publicly offered VEIBs are likely to be taxable debt pursuant to current Federal tax
law.
• Since PSOs can be structured as an obligation of the improved properties, authorization
of the VEIBs can be limited to the owners of the properties to be improved, i.e. no
referendum should be necessary.
• Historically, PSOs programs may, or may not, require the creation of special taxing
districts. Whether a district is required or not, it is essential to authorize the sponsoring
local governments to distinguish between improved and non-improved properties when
imposing the special tax assessment. Ideally, because property owners can consent to
participate, authorization to form a special taxing district and / or issue VEIBs should be
limited to the owners of the improved properties.
The VEIB program could be implemented with modest changes to existing state and local PSO
authority, including specific risk management, underwriting and consumer protection actions.
The local initiatives upon which the VEIB concept is based are beginning to sweep across the
country. The Board believes strongly that the EPA should educate and advocate the creation of
VEIB programs with proper controls.
There are two specific areas where the EPA could help. The first is to set forth the conditions
and requirements of a properly structured VEIB program. In an accompanying report, the Board
describes just such a set of underwriting guidance. The importance of such considerations
cannot be underestimated. Municipal bonds are generally issued to pay for the actions of
government. In this case, they are being issued to pay for the actions of individual citizens.
There are a host of underwriting criteria and other vital considerations that need to be observed
4 As is common with PSOs, sponsoring governments must ensure that the value to lien ratio is sufficient to finance
improvements through VEIBs. Obviously, if insufficient real property value existed, not only would the current
lenders and lienholders be adversely affected, but subsequent marketability of the property might be affected, taking
what should have been an environmental success story into an economic sinkhole.
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for a successful program. And, ultimately, if VEIB programs are unsuccessful, a great
opportunity will have been missed.
The second area where the EPA could help is to set forth the principles upon which state
enabling legislation can be based. There are seven critical elements in amending or enacting
appropriate statutes to adapt PSO authority for VEIB programs:
1) The statute must define public improvements - such as energy efficiency and
environmental improvements - to include those owned and maintained by individual
property owners.
2) The statute should authorize as many types of energy efficiency and environmental
improvement devices as feasible.
3) The statute must enable sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
distinguish between improved and non-improved properties.
4) The statute must authorize sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
impose a discretionary special tax or assessment based upon the property improvements
rather than a tax based on the assessed value of the property.
5) The statute must authorize sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
impose the discretionary special tax or assessment on those improved properties whose
owners have consented to the imposition of the special tax or assessment.
6) The statute must authorize the issuance of property secured debt by the sponsoring local
government or a special taxing district and authorize the execution of property secured
debt with other sources.
7) If a special taxing district is required, the sponsoring local government should be
authorized to accelerate district formation by petition of property owners requesting the
improvements and consenting to the imposition of a special tax or assessment.
In this regard, the Board specifically recommends:
1) The Administrator request that the President of the United States create an inter-agency
task force to define the characteristics of a PSO based VEIB program and encourage the
adoption of such VEIB programs by state and local governments. The task force could
be composed of the Agency, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development, the Department of Energy, the Department of Treasury and
other agencies.
2) The Administrator encourage this inter-agency task force to study and recommend
changes to the Federal Tax Code and other initiatives to enable the issuance of tax-
exempt bonds to finance energy efficiency and environmental improvements owned and
operated by property owners with appropriate linkages to the wider public good.
4
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3) The Administrator create an intra-agency task force, with appropriate representatives of
the Office of Water and the Office of Air and Radiation, as well as the Regional Offices
to educate and advocate the adaptation of PSOs as the essential underlying security for
VEIB programs throughout the country.
4) The EPA review its discretionary grant and other authority in any programs where
properly designed VEIBs can be used with a view to creating further financial incentives
for communities to adopt their own VEIB programs.
In summary, the Board believes that adapting existing PSO authority to create properly designed,
implemented and managed VEIBs can offer an unprecedented opportunity to involve the people
of the United States, individually and directly, in efforts to improve energy efficiency and to
improve the quality of our environment. With authorization by the owners of improved
properties, VEIBs can be voluntary and provide incentives for ordinary citizens to make valuable
contributions to their own quality of life. If efforts to promote them are successful, and they are
widely adopted, they will improve energy efficiency and significantly reduce both air and non-
point source water pollution across the country.
It will be easier to change people's behavior on climate change and for the betterment of the
environment if such efforts are as easy and affordable as possible. VEIBs make such measures
both easy and highly affordable. VEIBs offer the most favorable financing terms possible; they
carry the lowest available interest rates for the longest possible term.
Americans generally realize that we must all do our part to reduce the risks of climate change
and improve the environment. We need to recycle more. We need to use fewer plastic shopping
bags and buy more fuel efficient or less carbon intense cars. But the VEIB concept opens up
whole new vistas of individual environmental initiatives. Under a VEIB program, individual
families will have many low cost opportunities to do their part to reduce climate change and to
improve environmental quality. The lower the cost, the more families will seize these
opportunities.
We believe that the VEIB concept will recruit thousands of citizens to the cause of climate
change and environmental quality and, in the course of doing so, produce significant benefits for
the country in terms of energy efficiency, clean air, and clean water. Therefore, the Board highly
commends the concept of Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds to the Administrator
and to the Agency.
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Environmental Financial Advisory Board
EFAB
A. Stanley Meiburg
Designated Federal
Official
Members
A. James Barnes, Chair
Terry Agriss
John Boland
George Butcher
Donald Correll
Michael Curley
Rachel Deming
Kelly Downard
Mary Francoeur
James Gebhardt
Scott Haskins
Jennifer Hernandez
Keith Hinds
Langdon Marsh
Greg Mason
Karen Massey
Mathilde McLean
Linden Patton
Sharon Dixon-Peay
Cherie Rice
Andrew Sawyers
Doug Scott
Greg Swartz
Steve Thompson
Leanne Tobias
Jim Tozzi
Chiara Trabucchi
Justin Wilson
Financial, Underwriting, Risk Mitigation
and Consumer Protection Considerations
for the Adoption of Voluntary
Environmental Improvement Bond
Programs
This report has not been reviewed for approval by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency; and hence, the views and opinions expressed in the
report do not necessarily represent those of the Agency or any other
agencies in the Federal Government.
June 2009
Printed on Recycled Paper
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United States Environmental Protection Agency
Environmental Financial Advisory Board
Report on the Financial, Underwriting, Risk Mitigation and Consumer
Protection Considerations for the Adoption of Voluntary Environmental
Improvement Bond (VEIB) Programs
In an accompanying report, entitled, Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds: An
Innovative Local Environmental Finance Concept for Mitigation of Climate Change Risk; Air
Pollution Reduction; and the Reduction of Non-Point Source Water Pollution, this Board
encouraged the Agency to assist States and communities across the country in implementing
VEIB programs1 to achieve a large number of climate change and other important environmental
goals. This report deals with specific underwriting and risk management considerations involved
in the implementation of properly designed VEIB programs which should be followed to assure
that the maximum public and private environmental and economic benefits can be derived on a
sustainable basis.
These VEIBs, if properly designed and deployed, can achieve both private asset improvement
and environmental public benefit. This public benefit, mitigation of climate change risk,
reduction of air pollution, etc., would be achieved through property-owner owned and
maintained environmental and energy efficiency improvements. If appropriate quality
underwriting controls are put in place as part of the VEIB programs, the likelihood that these
private improvements will, in fact, perform in the long term and achieve the desired public
benefit (reduction of climate change risk, reduction of air pollution, etc.) is high. Without
appropriate underwriting controls, it is possible that these instruments could inadvertently leave
the private asset holder with a non-performing asset and the public with an enforcement
obligation against an effectively unsecured and /or unrecoverable tax debt.
This report details the design structure and uses of VEIBs and makes specific recommendations
about underwriting their deployment, set forth with the goal of achieving actual environmental
benefits.
Background
We preface our remarks by noting that government programs in the main, especially those
funded by municipal bonds, most commonly involve the actions of the government itself in
relatively large endeavors, and that they involve the creation of benefits for the population of the
community-at-large. VEIBs certainly benefit the entire community (and country) in terms of
1 Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bonds (VEIBs) are a specialized form of "Property Secured Obligation", a
concept well understood in the municipal bond trade. The report advocates the use of VEIBs, as the centerpiece of
local government finance programs to mitigate risks of climate change and improve air and water quality. VEIBs
can be used to finance property-owner owned and maintained environmental and energy efficiency
improvements to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, reduce air pollution, and to reduce non-point source water
pollution. Theoretically, VEIBs could be applied to any type of property, whether used by an individual homeowner
or commercial entity or other ownership type.
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cleaner air and water; but the beneficiaries of the individual energy efficiency, emissions
reductions and / or pollution abatement devices themselves are individual property owners. In
our 2008 report, entitled Innovative Finance Programs for Air Pollution Reduction, we discussed
the difficulties of aggregating a multiplicity of small environmental projects and aggregating the
security of individual properties.
VEIBs do both. The local government is the aggregator of the individual projects. And, the
credit problem is addressed by having the individual project payments secured by a tax lien on
the property - a financing technique that largely obviates the thorny problem of dealing with
property owner credit.
Risk Management Essentials
That said, the implementation of VEIB programs presents many new challenges to local
governments undertaking them. There are risk mitigation and consumer protection
considerations to be observed, where hapless property owners might find themselves having to
pay for improvements that are faulty or otherwise do not work if certain underwriting and other
technology / service provider pre-qualification requirements are not put in place. There is also
the serious risk of placing additional liens on properties already overburdened with mortgages or
home equity loans if proper underwriting techniques are not prescribed. Communities must take
these considerations into account when implementing VEIB programs. Furthermore, although
VEIBs are officially classed as "special revenue bonds" and are technically not the official debt
of the issuing community; they nonetheless carry a heavy burden of municipal fiduciary
responsibility for tax lien enforcement in the event of non-payment to bondholders.
Communities must be fully prepared to undertake the unpleasant task of enforcing these tax liens
and, if necessary, foreclosing on the property in order to assure an orderly stream of payments to
bondholders.
This report deals with these considerations in depth.
This report is organized into three relevant sections. The first deals with the genesis of VEIB
programs in Berkeley, California in 2008. The second deals with how other jurisdictions,
including the rest of California, Colorado, Massachusetts and Annapolis, Maryland, are
organizing their efforts. The third deals with the several specific underwriting considerations
necessary to assure that such programs achieve their desired goals.
The Berkeley FIRST Program: Basic Characteristics and Legislative / Charter
Requirements
The genesis of the VEIB concept began in Berkeley, California, in 2008. The City formed a
special taxing district - the "Sustainable Energy Financing District" - to finance the purchase
and installation of solar panels on the homes of individual citizens if they consented to pay for
this improvement through an annual tax assessment on their home to be paid along with their real
property taxes. Under the Berkeley program which was officially launched on November 5,
2008, a homeowner can finance up to $37,500 per home for new solar panels through property
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secured debt. The homeowners can select solar panels from a list of approved2 products and
select an installer from a certified list of installers3. Given that solar panels have a long useful
life, the City's special taxing district can issue bonds with a term of 20 years or use PSO
authority to secure other sources of long-term debt. The City supports this program as a means to
address climate change risk.
When other cities like San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Palm Desert, San Diego and San Jose learned
about the Berkeley initiative, they decided to implement similar financing mechanisms. Initially,
these cities learned they could not legally do so because Berkeley is a "charter city" with special
tax and assessment authority that enabled it to include solar panels in the definition of public
improvements eligible for financing through a Berkeley sponsored special taxing district.
Subsequently, two bills were introduced to amend California's special taxing district statutes to:
(1) include solar panels and other energy efficiency improvements as a public improvement
eligible to be financed by a special taxing district, (2) enable local governments more discretion
in defining improved properties, and (3) accelerate the formation of a special taxing district
based on consent from property owners requesting the improvements.
Both bills passed both houses of the California legislature and one was signed into law by the
Governor. In the rush of business in the closing days of the legislative session, however, the
second bill was inadvertently vetoed. It has been reintroduced with strong indications that it will
become law in 2009.
Federal and California tax law provide that the interest component of special tax/assessment
payments are deductible from both federal and state income taxes - as are the interest payments
on home mortgages and home equity loans. There is no other loss of income to government.
Possible Coordination of Benefits Under ARRA
When investigating facts for this report, we also became aware of a community seeking a
determination of whether PSOs financing privately owned and maintained improvements can be
used in conjunction with the energy efficiency tax credits offered in the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009. The combination of favorable financing, lower energy costs, and
federal tax credits, will be a powerful inducement for property owners, particularly homeowners,
to finance these investments in our nation's environmental future.
The Colorado Program
As Berkeley was organizing its program, the State of Colorado amended its PSO statutes to enact
a similar financing program. The Colorado statutes are slightly broader than the California
statutes. They not only finance solar panels but also insulation, new doors, windows and certain
2 For a product to be listed as approved a mere listing in a voluntary service was required. No assurance or warranty
was provided by such product manufacturers as a condition of approval.
3 For an installer to become certified, the installer must be a licensed solar installer and registered with the California
Solar Initiative (CSI). These criteria did not provide assurance that if the installation was not up to standard, that
appropriate repairs could be made or compensatory damages could be paid.
3
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other energy saving improvements. However, in contrast to California, Colorado's statutes do
not enable sponsoring local governments to accelerate formation of a special taxing district based
on consent of property owners requesting the improvements; rather Colorado requires a
referendum to organize the district. As such, the program is more difficult for Colorado local
governments to implement than the Berkeley program. Boulder County was the first county to
take advantage of this new amended statutory authority with a proposition on its ballot on
November 4, 2008. The proposition passed with 64% of the vote. The cities within Boulder
County that want to participate must pass their own ordinances to opt into the county program.
Some already have.
Annapolis' Program: Public/Private Partnership Approach
The City of Annapolis, Maryland, has adapted its existing PSO authority to create its own
variation of a VEIB. As described by Mayor Ellen Moyer, Annapolis allows property owners to
finance any project that will "reduce the carbon footprint of a home". The Annapolis program
has assembled a public/private partnership where a pool of funds will be provided by local banks
to the Chamber of Commerce Foundation from which homeowners will borrow. The trade off,
however, for this simplicity of funding is a shorter term. The banks' maximum loan term is 10
years, irrespective of the useful life of the improvement. Thus a $20,000 solar panel array will
cost Annapolis residents about $2,600 a year, as opposed to about $1,600 a year in Berkeley. As
in the other programs, the loan will be secured by an assessment against individual homes and
the payments will be collected as part of their real property taxes. Annapolis is implementing
their program without a district, based on their existing PSO authority to impose discretionary
taxes or assessments upon participants requesting the improvements.
The Massachusetts Program
Similar to other states, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts relies on PSO authority to finance
new septic tanks without the necessity of districts. In Massachusetts the homeowner makes an
agreement for the city or town board of health to replace or repair a septic tank at the owner's
expense. The city pays for this, what in Massachusetts is called a "betterment", by borrowing
the money from the Commonwealth's Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF). Cities in
Massachusetts have the power to issue PSOs to fund this program, but have apparently found it
more convenient to borrow from their CWSRF which offers very low rates and 20-year terms.
Failing septics are a non-point source of water pollution; so they qualify for CWSRF assistance.
As in California and Colorado, annual principal and semi-annual interest payments are secured
by a tax assessment against the homeowner's property. Massachusetts has financed over 3,000
new septic systems since 1995, substantially reducing non-point source pollution from these
sources. No districts and no referenda were required.
Discussion of Broader Applications for More Environmental Benefit
All of these adaptations of existing PSO authority are highly innovative and are highly
commendable programs, in and of themselves; but they have far broader applications.
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The Board believes that all of these various applications - in California, Colorado, Maryland and
Massachusetts - can be combined into a single concept that can be used to finance a multiplicity
of improvements for the environment. We call this environmental finance concept: Voluntary
Environmental Improvement Bonds (VEIBs).
Among the many things that can be financed with VEIBs are: solar panels, insulation, insulating
doors and windows, new energy efficient tankless water heaters, new EPA-certified wood stoves
and hydronic heaters (outdoor, wood fired water heaters), geothermal loops, green roofs, rain
gardens, permeable pavement, septic tank replacements, new clean agricultural diesel engines,
livestock feeding stations, animal waste management facilities, stream crossings, stream buffers
(trees and fences), and probably more. Any type of improvement that can be linked to real
property by a tax lien and that can be reasonably expected to remain with the property when
ownership changes, can be financed using a PSO. Furthermore, and even more importantly, is
the fact that with VEIBs individual property improvements can be pooled and financed together,
at the same time. One district (if necessary) could be created where all of the above
environmental improvements could be financed together.
Adapting existing PSO authority for VEIBs could be relatively simple. First, sponsoring
governments could create a special taxing district or could directly finance these environmental
improvements or energy efficiency improvements on behalf of property owners who consent to
the imposition of property secured tax or assessment. Second, the property owners would
finance the improvements over an extended period of years at comparatively favorable rates.
Underwriting & Risk Management Conditions & Warranties Essential to Sustainability
Risk management conditions are recommended as an integral component of any PSO program
designed as a VEIB because once owners agree to the assessment and the device is duly
purchased and installed, the obligation of the owner to make payments, which secure the bond,
are unconditional and irrevocable, irrespective of whether the device performs as advertised or
expected. The sponsoring local government must ensure that an improvement is likely to last for
the term of the assessment. As such, certain adaptations of existing PSO authority are
recommended to increase the likelihood that the public benefit will be realized in the long term.
The structure must not only ensure a public benefit, but must also ensure a level of consumer
protection by mitigating the risk of non-performance of the improvements through required risk
management terms and conditions.
Although government agencies - as in California and Maryland - may publish list of "approved"
products and/or installers, these government lists in and of themselves do not constitute
warranties of the devices themselves or the workmanship of the installation. Therefore, any
subsequent failure of, or defect in, the device or installation must be dealt with by the
homeowner and the vendor/installer directly either through warranties, insurance or other legal
remedies. If the property owner refuses to pay - for any reason - the sponsoring local
government must have the authority to initiate foreclosure proceedings to cure the delinquency
and retire the PSO.
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To reduce the likelihood of such failures, appropriate underwriting should be integrated into the
program design. Prior to issuing the PSO, the sponsoring local government must review the
value to lien ratio for all properties to be improved on an individual basis to ensure adequate
security. A full assessment of current liens against the citizen applicant's current real property
should be made to assure that the proposed tax lien would not place the property or owner in
compromised position, where the debt exceeded the real property value. The value of this
property assessment is that it should be one defense against the inadvertent individual property
delinquencies and consequential enforcement obligation for the local government as a result of
the program.
Underwriting activities should include development of a screening process designed to confirm
that before inclusion on an approved list, businesses offering products / installation carried
appropriate levels of insurance and bonding for the precise work to be performed or product to
be provided, have good standing with the Better Business Bureau or equivalent, have not been
debarred from government contracts, and have a history of good product performance - at least
for the period equivalent to the PSO terms (e.g. tax lien payoff period). Additionally, the
sponsoring local government should require warranties, insurance, and performance bonds from
the manufacturers and installers of the improvements sufficient to repair potential damages
incurred during installation and as necessary to restore the improvement or product to good
working order.
In summary, underwriting criteria should include: (1) verification of sufficient real property
value (which the Board understands is generally required by law before a PSO can be issued); (2)
for the product manufacturer - minimum general liability coverage, including a product liability
extension with limits of liability of no less than $1 million per occurrence and $3 million in the
aggregate; (3) for the installer, a valid license to operate in the jurisdiction plus general liability
insurance, with a completed operations extension of $lmillion for each event and $3 million in
the aggregate with a minimum claims' period of five years.
VEIBs : Positive Cash Flow Impact with an Environmental Benefit
A roof full of solar panels can cost a family $20,000 - $40,000. A houseful of new energy
efficient windows and doors can run $7,500. Replacing a failing septic tank can cost $15,000. A
new wood stove is $3,500. Even new tankless water heaters can cost $1,000. Most American
families cannot just walk into an appliance store and put down a credit card - at 18.9% interest -
and take one of these devices home. Nor are American families particularly attracted by the
enticement of a second mortgage to take on such projects because the mortgage payments may
be higher than the concurrent expense reductions resultant from the installation of the
improvement and because a mortgage may impair credit, whereas a tax lien may not. Thus,
because these devices are not economic for the homeowner, most people just don't buy them.
With VEIBs, provided that the useful life of the appliance or other real property improvement is
sufficient to make annual payments feasible, the $20,000 upfront cost of a solar panel can be
reduced to less than the equivalent of $120 a month payment. The $15,000 septic system
becomes $82 a month. The $7,500 of new insulating windows and doors becomes less than $41
a month. The $3,500 wood stove becomes less than $19 a month. And even the new tankless
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water heaters go from $1,000 to less than $11 a month. These are significant financial incentives
that avoid the burden of additional consumer or mortgage debt obligations for homeowners and
replace same with a tax debt that travels with the land, as will the real property improvement. In
addition, energy saving devices also result in lower power costs that further offset the monthly
payment expense and may be further subsidized by federal tax credits.
The third and final step requires the sponsoring government to issue district PSOs or limited
PSOs (the VEIB) to raise the cash to pay for the individual environmental improvements. Only
those homeowners who request the improvements are responsible for the debt service. With
authority to distinguish between improved and non-improved properties, a sponsoring local
government can impose a discretionary tax or assessment on the improved properties. Not all
taxpayers pay for these bonds, only those who request the improvements do. It is truly a
Voluntary Environmental Improvement Bond. That is the key to broad acceptance of this
revolutionary concept. The local government issues a bond, but only those who benefit pay it
off. No other taxpayers pay a penny.
There are three critical elements in the VEIB concept. The first, of course, is its voluntary nature
and the fact that those who do not participate do not pay. The second is that the VEIB is a PSO
and is thus secured by a lien against the owners' property. If the owner sells the property, then
the subsequent owner - who then enjoys the improvement - continues to pay for it: the lien goes
with the property. When citizens agree to participate in the program, they agree to accept this
special assessment against their property. Thus, an assessment and lien against the property is
created by contract. In the commercial world, craftsmen have long secured for their services to
property owners by filing what are known as Mechanics' Liens. These liens arise out of the
contract between the homeowner and the craftsman; they secure the homeowners' promises to
pay for the craftsman's services. This is a similar type of lien; although since it is a PSO lien, it
can be superior in priority to all commercial liens and mortgages4.
Local governments should also consider the impact of VEIB assessments on prior secured
lenders. Depending on state law, such lenders may be able to accelerate assessment payments on
sale, which would vitiate a major benefit of the program.
The importance of this lien and assessment cannot be underestimated. The lien enables the
sponsoring local government to issue or oversee the issuance of PSOs and obtain comparatively
better rates than conventional financing. Generally, bonds secured by an unlimited general
obligation of the local government receive lower rates. However, with sufficient value to lien,
PSOs can still attract comparatively favorable rates. Bondholders know that if the individual
property owners do not make their payments, that the local government can initiate foreclosure
proceedings, cure the delinquencies, and retire the related debt. By adapting existing PSO
authority, VEIBs can achieve similar rate results.
The third critical element is that the term of payment can be extended far beyond conventional
financing from banks or finance companies. The longer the term, the lower the annual payment.
4 As noted above, the underwriting of the bond (VEIB) must assure that applicants with properties that do not have
sufficient real property value and/or cash flow are not permitted to participate in the program in order to mitigate the
risk of bad debt and adverse impact to existing lenders and lienholders.
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This is what makes this program so attractive. The long term matches the useful of the asset and
enables the property owner to make affordable, lower payments over the term of the PSO.
However, as noted above, the term should not exceed the life of the useful life of the real
property improvement - as that would be economically unjustified. As such, the importance of
design controls cannot be over-emphasized.
Commercial banks prefer not to make unsecured loans for more than five to seven years. But
with VEIBs either the sponsoring local government or a special taxing district can issue the debt,
rather than a personal loan. That can change credit considerations dramatically. In the field of
municipal finance, the rule is that the term of debt should be commensurate with the service life
of the assets being financed by the debt. "Service life" essentially refers to how long something
will last before it has to be replaced. This means that if a water pump lasts 10 years, it can be
financed for ten years. If a school bus last 15 years, it can be financed for fifteen years. Rural
water and sewer systems projects are traditionally financed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Water & Environment Program for forty years.
Solar panels can last up to 25 years. Insulating windows and doors can last for 30 years. So can
the new EPA-certified wood stoves. New tankless water heaters can probably last 10 years.
Therefore, with a VEIB, all of these different property improvements can be financed for their
full service lives - not just according to a conventional lender's internal credit policy.
In addition, most homes change hands every 7-9 years. Homeowners may be loathe to make
large investments for improvements such as these with home equity loans, because they will
have to pay these second mortgages off when they sell the house and leave the improvements
behind. Depending on the state, the property buyer's lender may or may not be able to require
prepayment of PSO assessments. Generally, the property buyer's lender cannot require
prepayment of special taxes that resemble traditional property taxes. Accordingly, it is possible
that the assessment will stay with the property and the new owners continue the payments just as
they continue to enjoy the improvements.
Finally, one of the attractive features of VEIB programs is that the owner does not have to pay
off the debt upon sale of the property. The theory, of course, is that the improvement stays with
the property and so should the financial obligation. The other side of this argument is that the
new property owner is saddled with an unwanted financial burden, notwithstanding the benefit
received. These issues need to be carefully aired by local governments contemplating VEIB
programs.
How can existing PSO authority be adapted to create VEIB programs in other jurisdictions? The
answer will be, in most cases, by the amending or enactment of legislation at the state level.
Certain cities - like Annapolis and Berkeley - may have inherent PSO authorities in their
charters to conduct such programs. But most often local governments act under broad authorities
that the states grant to classes of jurisdictions, not individual ones. It is most likely that statutes
similar to those in California, Colorado and Massachusetts will be necessary.
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As such, there are seven critical elements in amending or enacting appropriate statutes to adapt
PSO authority for VEIB programs:
1) The statute must define public improvements - such as energy efficiency and
environmental improvements - to include those owned and maintained by individual
property owners.
2) The statute should authorize as many types of energy efficiency and environmental
improvement devices as feasible.
3) The statute must enable sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
distinguish between improved and non-improved properties.
4) The statute must authorize sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
impose a discretionary special tax or assessment based upon improvements to the
property rather than a tax based on assessed value of the property.
5) The statute must authorize sponsoring local governments or special taxing districts to
impose the discretionary special tax or assessment on those improved properties whose
owners have consented to the imposition of the special tax or assessment.
6) The statute must authorize the issuance of property secured debt by the sponsoring local
government or a special taxing district and authorize the execution of property secured
debt with other sources.
7) If a special taxing district is required, the sponsoring local government should be
authorized to accelerate district formation by petition of property owners requesting the
improvements and consenting to the imposition of a special tax or assessment. .
If properly understood, we believe there would be widespread support for amending or enacting
this type of legislation. If the last twelve months of activity are a precursor of what is to come,
the VEIB concept might well sweep the country.
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\ UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
« WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460
AUG 31 2009
OFFICE OF
AIR AND RADIATION
Mr. A. James Barnes
Chair
Environmental Financial Advisory Board
Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs
Adjunct Professor of Law
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana 47405
Dear Professor Barnes:
Thank you for transmitting to the Administrator two reports from the Environmental
Financial Advisory Board (EFAB) regarding the innovative concept of Voluntary Environmental
Improvement Bonds (VEIB). I am responding on her behalf and appreciate the Board's
willingness to think about innovative finance options to reduce greenhouse gases and air
pollution.
I have asked my staff to work with EFAB on exploring the VEIB program's potential to
finance a variety of environmental and energy efficiency programs. During the past two years,
OAR has followed with interest the development of the City of Berkeley VEIB program to
encourage private adoption of GHG-reducing technology, and is supporting the use of such
finance tools to help communities with air pollution problems. We believe that the use of VEIBs
could contribute to our nationwide effort to replace old, polluting wood stoves and hydronic
heaters with more efficient, EPA-certified devices. This could help enable areas plagued by
wood smoke to improve air quality and meet national standards for particle pollution.
In addition, as recommended in the June report, we are investigating ways to work with
other federal agencies for promoting this sort of innovative financing option. We look forward
to working with EFAB as your recommendations will inform our discussions.
I appreciate the assistance that you and all of the members of the Board have provided to
the Agency. Your advice and detailed recommendations represent well-reasoned and thoughtful
ideas about how to advance environmental protection.
Sin
jina McCarthy
Assistant Administrator
Internet Address (URL) • http://www.epa.gov
Recycled/Recyclable • Printed with Vegetable Oil Based Inks on 100% Postconsumer, Process Chlorine Free Recycled Paper
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