According to a
state official, the state’s capitol city, Harrisburg, has enough cash to last
through November. The official noted that delaying payments to some vendors
could help Harrisburg make it through the end of the year. The official, Fred
Reddig of the Department of Community and Economic Development, which oversees
the state’s distressed communities, also said the city may issue some tax
anticipation notes (TANs) in January if banks are willing. Mr. Reddig said Harrisburg,
which remains under state receivership, will have a budget gap of about $15
million by year’s end: “Many municipalities need to address that cash-flow
deficit early in the year and that’s where the Tan would come into play, in
January, to address those liabilities that are brought forward. The Tan would
deal with the deficit in the early couple of months” of 2013.” Harrisburg has
about $320 million of bond debt that it cannot pay because of financing
overruns to an incinerator retrofit project. The receiver’s office has also issued
requests for proposals to lease or acquire the sewer and wastewater systems,
and is negotiating exclusively with the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management
Authority over the incinerator. Harrisburg’s largest vendor is Highmark Inc. of
Pittsburgh, which provides non-prescription coverage to municipal employees. Although
the city owes Highmark roughly $1.5 million, the carrier has not threatened to
shut off coverage. To which Reddig warns: “The point is that the city needs to
be in communication with their major creditors, much the same way you or I
would need to talk with a creditor if we couldn’t make a mortgage payment. If
you communicate with a vendor, it is less inclined to take action. If you let
the lender know, it provides the lender some level of comfort.” Meanwhile, Harrisburg’s
chief operating officer, Ricardo Mendez-Saldivia, reported that the city’s accounting
firm Trout, Ebersole & Groff LLP has stopped work on the city’s 2010 and
2011 audits because the city has yet to pay the firm. Mr. Mendez-Saldivia
reports that the 2010 audit is 90% finished, but only minimal work has been
done on 2011. Tomorrow, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania will hear oral
arguments about the City Council‘s appeal of an order by Lynch to double the
earned-income tax to 2% from 1%. In addition, the Pennsylvania Senate is
scheduled to begin hearings on the incinerator bond financings tomorrow.
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