November 8, 2024

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Lawsuit seeks to derail financing for Austin light-rail project

3 min read
Lawsuit seeks to derail financing for Austin light-rail project

A group of property taxpayers in Austin, Texas, filed a lawsuit this week to stop the issuance of bonds for a multi-billion-dollar light-rail project.

The litigation filed Monday in Travis County District Court against Austin’s mayor, city council, and transit officials seeks a permanent injunction prohibiting the Austin Transit Partnership, a corporation created by the city and its Capital Metro Transportation Authority to spearhead Project Connect, from issuing any long-term debt that would be paid off with an increase in the city’s property tax rate. 

Voters in 2020 approved the tax hike to help fund what was then a $7.1 billion light rail plan. The plaintiffs contend funds raised by the tax hike can only be used for city maintenance and operation purposes.

A bus stop in downtown Austin in 2020. A group of city taxpayers filed a lawsuit seeking to block the issuance of bonds for a multi-billion-dollar light-rail project.

Bloomberg News

“Austin cannot get around this restriction on the use of the Project Connect Tax by creating an alter-ego corporation… and transferring the limited-purpose tax to ATP to use to pay debt service on bonds ATP plans to issue,” the lawsuit said, adding ATP “does not have more authority or fewer restrictions on its use of property tax revenue than the city itself.”

It pointed to a May Texas Attorney General opinion that said state law “does not authorize a municipality to ‘earmark’ use of a voter-approved increase in its maintenance and operation property tax revenue for debt service.” The opinion also questioned Austin’s ability to transfer property tax revenue to ATP on an ongoing basis.

The city has contended ATP has the ability to issue contract revenue bonds. Bryan Rivera, ATP’s interim chief financial officer, said no bond sale has been approved and officials continue to work with consultants and bond counsel “to solidify the plan of finance.”

Legislation to restrict this first-of-its-kind funding model in Texas stalled in the legislature earlier this year. House Bill 3899 would have required voter approval of bonds issued by local government-created corporations like ATP that are allowed to tap property tax revenue for specified projects.

Austin Mayor Kirk Watson expressed disappointment with the lawsuit and said the city will review the allegations carefully and take appropriate next steps. 

“The voters approved this ongoing multi-billion-dollar project that will bring much needed mobility infrastructure to the city of Austin,” he said in a statement. 

Plaintiffs, who include a former Austin City Council member and a current Travis County commissioner, also claim the project presented to voters in 2020 is not the same project that is moving forward. 

“The defendants cannot rely on voter authorization to build the 2020 Project Connect plan to instead build a drastically different Project Connect plan with features voters might very well have rejected,” the lawsuit said. 

As estimates reportedly topped $11 billion from $7.1 billion in 2020, ATP in March unveiled five lower-cost options that carry a price tag of about $5 billion each and would take as much as 10 years to complete.

In June, ATP announced it was moving forward with the first phase of light rail with one of the options and would be commencing an independent environmental impact study.