(1) The authority shall have power and is hereby authorized to issue, from time to time, its bonds in such principal amount as it shall determine to be necessary to provide sufficient funds to pay, finance or refinance the cost of any facility, and all other expenditures of the authority incidental and necessary or convenient to carry out its corporate purposes and powers. The cost of any facility shall include all amounts determined by the authority to be necessary or desirable in connection with the acquisition, construction, development, improvement and equipping of a facility including, but not limited to:
(a)  The cost of acquiring all lands, structures, real or personal property, rights, rights-of-way, franchises, easements and interests necessary, used or useful for or in connection with the facility;
(b)  The cost of all machinery and equipment necessary, used or useful in connection with the facility;
(c)  The cost of architectural, engineering and legal services, including studies, surveys, plans and specifications, and related services;
(d)  The cost of interest on bonds prior to and during construction, and if judged advisable by the authority, for a period after completion of such construction, and all other costs incidental to the issuance of bonds by the authority;
(e)  The cost of reserves for future repairs, replacements and additions to a facility, insurance policies and premiums and related costs and expenses; and
(f)  All other costs and expenses determined by the authority to be necessary and incidental to the acquisition, construction, financing and placing in operation of a facility.
The proceeds of the bonds may also be used to provide for the payment of any financial fees and charges, including underwriting discounts, financial advisory, legal and trustee fees and expenses, the premiums for or costs of bond insurance, surety bonds or other forms of credit or liquidity enhancement, and to provide for any necessary debt service reserves associated with such bonds.
(2)  The bonds shall be authorized by resolution or resolutions of the authority, shall be dated, shall mature, shall bear interest, shall be in such form and shall otherwise have such terms and provisions as such resolution or resolutions may provide, except that no bond shall mature more than forty (40) years from the date of its issue. The bonds shall bear interest at such rate or rates, shall be executed in such manner, shall be payable in such medium at such place or places, and be subject to such terms of redemption as such resolution or resolutions may provide. The authority may sell its bonds at public or private sale, at such price or prices as it shall determine.

Terms Used In Idaho Code 67-8915

  • Assets: (1) The property comprising the estate of a deceased person, or (2) the property in a trust account.
  • Authority: means the Idaho energy resources authority created pursuant to section 67-8904, Idaho Code. See Idaho Code 67-8903
  • Bonds: means any bonds, notes, certificates or other obligations or evidences of indebtedness issued by the authority. See Idaho Code 67-8903
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Facility: means any facility necessary, used or useful in connection with the generation, transmission or distribution of electric power and energy and any clean energy generation project, in each case including but not limited to all real and personal property, fuel supplies and transportation facilities, pollution control facilities, battery and other energy storage facilities, and all equipment and improvements necessary or desirable in connection with a facility. See Idaho Code 67-8903
  • Lien: A claim against real or personal property in satisfaction of a debt.
  • person: includes a corporation as well as a natural person;
Idaho Code 73-114
  • Property: includes both real and personal property. See Idaho Code 73-114
  • Revenues: means all receipts, purchase payments, loan repayments, lease payments, rents, fees and charges, and all other income or receipts derived by the authority from a participating utility. See Idaho Code 67-8903
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the territories; and the words "United States" may include the District of Columbia and territories. See Idaho Code 73-114
  • Tort: A civil wrong or breach of a duty to another person, as outlined by law. A very common tort is negligent operation of a motor vehicle that results in property damage and personal injury in an automobile accident.
  • Trustee: A person or institution holding and administering property in trust.
  • Uniform Commercial Code: A set of statutes enacted by the various states to provide consistency among the states' commercial laws. It includes negotiable instruments, sales, stock transfers, trust and warehouse receipts, and bills of lading. Source: OCC
  • (3)  Any resolution or resolutions authorizing bonds, or any trust indenture or other instrument securing bonds, may contain provisions which shall be a part of the contract or contracts with the holders thereof, as to:
    (a)  Pledging and assigning all or any part of the revenues of the authority to secure the payment of the bonds, and the use and disposition of such revenues pending the payment of the bonds;
    (b)  Pledging and assigning all or any part of the assets of the authority including mortgages and obligations securing the same, to secure the payment of the bonds;
    (c)  The setting aside of reserves or sinking funds and the regulation and disposition thereof;
    (d)  Limitations on the purpose to which the proceeds of sale of bonds may be applied and limitations on the issuance of additional bonds, the terms upon which additional bonds may be issued and secured, and the refunding of outstanding or other bonds;
    (e)  The procedure, if any, by which the terms of any contract with bondholders may be amended, the amount of bonds the holders of which must consent thereto, and the manner in which such consent may be given;
    (f)  Vesting in a trustee or trustees such property, rights, powers and duties in trust as the authority may determine, which may include any or all of the rights, powers and duties of the trustee appointed by the bondholders pursuant to this chapter;
    (g)  Defining the acts or omissions to act which shall constitute a default in the obligations and duties of the authority to the holders of the bonds and providing for the rights and remedies of the holders of the bonds in the event of such default, including as a matter of right the appointment of a receiver; and
    (h)  Any other matters, of like or different character, deemed necessary, desirable or appropriate by the authority in connection with the issuance of its bonds.
    (4)  Any pledge made by the authority shall be valid and binding from the time when the pledge is made; the revenues, moneys or property so pledged and thereafter received by the authority shall immediately be subject to the lien of such pledge without any physical delivery thereof or further act, and the lien of any such pledge shall be valid and binding as against all parties having claims of any kind in tort, contract or otherwise against the authority, irrespective of whether such parties have notice thereof. Neither the resolution nor any other instrument by which a pledge is created need be recorded.
    (5)  Neither the directors of the authority nor any other person executing such bonds shall be subject to any personal liability or accountability by reason of the issuance thereof.
    (6)  The authority may from time to time purchase any of its outstanding bonds out of any moneys available to it for such purpose at such price or prices as the authority shall deem reasonable or necessary.
    (7)  In the discretion of the authority, the bonds may be secured by a trust indenture by and between the authority and a corporate trustee, which may be any bank or trust company organized under the laws of the United States or any state. Such trust indenture may contain such provisions for protecting and enforcing the rights and remedies of the bondholders as may be determined by the authority to be reasonable and necessary, including covenants setting forth the duties of the authority in relation to the exercise of its corporate powers, the custody, the safeguarding and application of all moneys, the events of default and the rights and remedies of the bondholders and the corporate trustee upon the occurrence of an event of default. The authority may provide by such trust indenture for the payment of the proceeds of the bonds and the revenues to the trustee under such trust indenture or other depository, and for the method of disbursement thereof, with such safeguards and restrictions as it may determine. All expenses incurred in carrying out such trust indenture may be treated as a part of the operating expenses of the authority. If the bonds shall be secured by a trust indenture, the bondholders shall have no authority to appoint a separate trustee to represent them.
    (8)  Whether or not the bonds are of such form and character as to be negotiable instruments under the terms of the uniform commercial code, the bonds are hereby made negotiable instruments within the meaning of and for all the purposes of the uniform commercial code, subject only to the provisions of the bonds for registration.