Bonds

Fayetteville, Arkansas, voters OK $335.5 million of bonds

EA Builder
Fayetteville, Arkansas, Mayor Molly Rawn
The bond package will result “in modern facilities and services that match the scale of a city that now exceeds 100,000,” according to Fayetteville, Arkansas, Mayor Molly Rawn.

City of Fayetteville, Arkansas

Voters in Fayetteville, Arkansas passed a $335.5 million bond program last week that keeps in place a 1% special sales tax to pay off the debt. 

Processing Content

Proceeds are earmarked for water, sewer, parks, animal services, pedestrian infrastructure, recycling and fire safety projects, with $61.9 million allocated for an aquatic recreation center.

The bond package will result “in modern facilities and services that match the scale of a city that now exceeds 100,000,” according to Mayor Molly Rawn. 

“This bond was built strategically and always with the heart of Fayetteville in mind,” she said in a statement. “Each project was informed by data, shaped by public input, and grounded in the plans our city has committed to.”

Key to the 2026 bond program was voter approval of a ballot measure to refinance up to $40 million of outstanding sales and use tax capital improvement bonds from the city’s previous debt program and to extend the 1% sales tax.

A detailed plan for issuing the new money debt, including the size and timing of an initial deal to be sold through Stephens Inc., is expected by May 15, according to a city spokesperson.

City voters approved $226 million of sales tax-backed bonding authority in 2019.

Fayetteville last sold sales and use tax capital improvement bonds in a $15 million, Series 2024 deal that was rated AA-minus by S&P Global Ratings with a stable outlook.

Source link

Share with your friends!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get The Latest Investing Tips
Straight to your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.