1.
a.The board may carry out projects, borrow money, and issue revenue bonds and
pledge orders to pay all or part of the cost of projects, the revenue bonds and pledge orders
to be payable solely out of the net revenues of the county enterprise or combined county
enterprise involved in the project. The cost of a project includes the construction contracts,
interest upon the revenue bonds and pledge orders during the period or estimated period of
constructionandfortwelvemonthsthereafter, orfortwelvemonthsaftertheacquisitiondate,
reserve funds as the board deems advisable in connection with the project and the issuance
of revenue bonds and pledge orders, and the costs of engineering, architectural, technical
and legal services, preliminary reports, surveys, property valuations, estimates, p
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1. a. The board may carry out projects, borrow money, and issue revenue bonds and
pledge orders to pay all or part of the cost of projects, the revenue bonds and pledge orders
to be payable solely out of the net revenues of the county enterprise or combined county
enterprise involved in the project. The cost of a project includes the construction contracts,
interest upon the revenue bonds and pledge orders during the period or estimated period of
constructionandfortwelvemonthsthereafter, orfortwelvemonthsaftertheacquisitiondate,
reserve funds as the board deems advisable in connection with the project and the issuance
of revenue bonds and pledge orders, and the costs of engineering, architectural, technical
and legal services, preliminary reports, surveys, property valuations, estimates, plans,
specifications, notices, acquisition of real and personal property, consequential damages or
costs, easements, rights-of-way, supervision, inspection, testing, publications, printing and
sale of bonds and provisions for contingencies. The board may sell revenue bonds or pledge
orders at public or private sale in the manner prescribed by chapter 75 and may deliver
revenue bonds and pledge orders to the contractors, sellers, and other persons furnishing
materials and services constituting a part of the cost of the project in payment therefor.
b. The board may deliver its revenue bonds to the federal government or any agency
thereof which has loaned the county money for sanitary or solid waste projects, water
projects, or other projects, for which the government has a loan program.
2. The board may issue revenue bonds to refund revenue bonds, pledge orders, and
other obligations which are by their terms payable from the net revenues of the same county
enterprise or combined county enterprise, or from a county enterprise comprising a part of
the combined county enterprise, at lower, the same, or higher rates of interest. A county
may sell refunding revenue bonds at public or private sale in the manner prescribed by
chapter 75 and apply the proceeds to the payment of the obligations being refunded, and
may exchange refunding revenue bonds in payment and discharge of the obligations being
refunded. The principal amount of refunding revenue bonds may exceed the principal
amount of the obligations being refunded to the extent necessary to pay any premium due
on the call of the obligations being refunded and to fund interest accrued and to accrue on
the obligations being refunded.
3. The board may contract to pay not to exceed ninety-five percent of the engineer’s
estimated value of the acceptable work completed during the month to the contractor at the
end of each month for work, material, or services. Payment may be made in warrants drawn
on any fund from which payment for the work may be made. If such funds are depleted,
anticipatory warrants may be issued bearing a rate of interest not exceeding that permitted
by chapter 74A even if a collection of taxes or special assessments or income from the sale of
bonds which have been authorized and are applicable to the public improvement takes place
after the fiscal year in which the warrants are issued. If the board arranges for the private
sale of anticipatory warrants, they may be sold and the proceeds used to pay the contractor.
The warrants may also be used to pay other persons furnishing services constituting a part
of the cost of the public improvement.