Riley: Providence's Cash Flow Problem

Michael G. Riley, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Riley: Providence's Cash Flow Problem

Providence Rhode Island officials and Providence Mayors are notoriously misleading about the financial condition of the city and as a rule admit to nothing. Mayor Elorza unfortunately is no exception. Despite Mr. Elorza’s silence on a $62 million dollar default and theft of the City’s own pension fund assets he is still stuck with the enormous issue that Providence has a huge cash flow problem and is perpetually on the brink of bankruptcy. Rather working to address the problem through a packaged receivership, this new mayor is stuck in the same egotistical mindset that says “I am Mayor and I know how to fix things”. I believe, he does know in his own heart that bankruptcy is the proper course but he won’t do it. He won’t do what is right. He won’t file for bankruptcy protection or ask for a receiver because he will lose the power he craves. If he really cared about the City of Providence and its 178,000 constituents he would not lie about the recent $62,000,000 default. He would not chose to mislead municipal bondholders with false and misleading financial information. And he wouldn’t secretly borrow at 8.25% instead of easily borrowing at 1 to 2% or less like other distressed cities. 

Despite the trouble, Providence can be much smarter about its predicament. Mayor Elorza , a self-proclaimed accountant, runs the scam this way. After skimming and diverting Pension fund contributions all year long then borrows the diverted amount of $62 million for four months at 8.25%. This probably illegal, expensive and secretive maneuver costs Providence tax payers an additional $1.7 million every year. That’s an awful of of trouble to go to even for a scheming politician. Why doesn’t he just do what Bridgeport is doing now?

Why does Bridgeport borrow at 1% and Providence 8.25%?

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Despite Bridgeport declaring bankruptcy in 1991 and then issuing an ill-timed Pension Obligation Bond (POB) of $350 million in 1999 which was lost in the dot com and 2008 crashes, Bridgeport can still borrow for short term cash flow issues at approximately 1%. It doesn’t borrow from its own pension fund. Bridgeport like every other cit in America with cash flow problems uses tax anticipation notes. On October 22, 2013, Bridgeport issued a tax anticipation note in the amount of $71,500,000 to fund cash flows and for operating expenses. The note matured on February 18, 2014 with an interest rate of 1.00%. On April 15, 2014, the City issued a tax anticipation note in the amount of $20,000,000 to fund cash flows for operating expenses. That note matured on August 15, 2014 with an interest rate of 1.0%. On November 19, 2014, the City issued a tax anticipation note in the amount of $50,000,000 to fund cash flows for operating expenses. 

What is Elorza hiding?

I suspect that one reason Mayor Elorza does not seek to finance the obvious cash flow problems in Providence using tax anticipation notes is that Providence is so broke they can’t even pay their legal bills or a ratings agency to issue the notes. Another reason may be that for secretly borrowing from the pension fund has worked if your original intention is to default, like Cicilline and Elorza before him, Maybe Elorza never intends to pay the pension fund back and will eventually default on the loan just like Providence did a few weeks back. This of course would be known as accounting fraud and would land the Mayor in Jail.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Michael G. Riley is vice chair at Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, and is managing member and founder of Coastal Management Group, LLC. Riley has 35 years of experience in the financial industry, having managed divisions of PaineWebber, LETCO, and TD Securities (TD Bank). He has been quoted in Barron’s, Wall Street Transcript, NY Post, and various other print media and also appeared on NBC News, Yahoo TV, and CNBC.    

Timeline - Rhode Island Pension Reform

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