West Virginia Code § 31-15B-2

Infrastructure general obligation bonds; amount; when may issue
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
Bonds of the State of West Virginia, under authority of the infrastructure improvement
amendment of 1994, of the par value not to exceed in the aggregate $300 million, are hereby
authorized to be issued and sold solely for the construction, extension, expansion,
rehabilitation, repair and improvement of water supply and sewage treatment systems and
for the acquisition, preparation, construction and improvement of sites for eeconomic
development as provided for by the Constitution and the provisions of this article.
These bonds may be issued by the Governor upon resolution by the infrastructure council
and certification to the Governor. The bonds shall bear such dateu and mature at such time,
bear interest at such rate not to exceed eight percent per annum, be in such amounts, be in
such denominations, be in such registered form, carry such tregistration privileges, be due
and payable at such time and place and in such amounts, and subject to such terms of
redemption as such resolution may provide: Provided, That in no event may the amount of
bonds outstanding exceed an amount for which $24 million would not be sufficient to
provide annual service on the total amount of debt outstanding.
Both the principal and interest of the bonds shall be payable in the lawful money of the
United States of America and the bonds and the interest thereon shall be exempt from
taxation by the State of West Virginiga, or by any county, district or municipality thereof,
which fact shall appear on the face of the bonds as part of the contract with the holder of the
bond. e
The bonds shall be executed on behalf of the State of West Virginia, by the manual or
facsimile signature of the treasurer thereof, under the great seal of the state or a facsimile
thereof, and countersigned by the manual or facsimile signature of the Auditor of the state.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.