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Debt Limitations <br /> All Minnesota municipalities (counties, cities, towns and school districts) are subject to statutory <br /> "net debt" limitations under the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, Section 475.53. Net debt is <br /> defined as the amount remaining after deducting from gross debt the amount of current <br /> revenues which are applicable within the current fiscal year to the payment of any debt and the <br /> aggregation of the principal of the following: <br /> 1. Obligations issued for improvements which are payable wholly or partially from the <br /> proceeds of special assessments levied upon benefited property. <br /> r 2. Warrants or orders having no definite or fixed maturity. <br /> 3. Obligations payable wholly from the income from revenue producing conveniences. <br /> ► 4. Obligations issued to create or maintain a permanent improvement revolving fund. <br /> 5. Obligations issued for the acquisition and betterment of public waterworks and public <br /> lighting, heating or power systems, and any combination thereof, or for any other public <br /> convenience from which revenue is or may be derived. <br /> 6. Certain debt service loans and capital loans made to school districts. <br /> 7. Certain obligations to repay loans. <br /> 8. Obligations specifically excluded under the provisions of law authorizing their issuance. <br /> 9. Debt service funds for the payment of principal and interest on obligations other than those <br /> described above. <br /> Levies for General Obligation Debt =. <br /> (Sections 475.61 and 475.74, Minnesota Statutes) <br /> Any municipality which issues general obligation debt must, at the time of issuance, certify <br /> levies to the county auditor of the county(ies) within which the municipality is situated. Such <br /> levies shall be in an amount that if collected in full will, together with estimates of other <br /> revenues pledged for payment of the obligations, produce at least five percent in excess of the - . <br /> amount needed to pay principal and interest when due. <br /> Notwithstanding any other limitations upon the ability of a taxing unit to levy taxes, its ability to <br /> levy taxes for a deficiency in prior levies for payment of general obligation indebtedness is <br /> without limitation as to rate or amount. <br /> Metropolitan Revenue Distribution (Chapter 473F, Minnesota Statutes) <br /> "Fiscal Disparities Law" <br /> The Charles R. Weaver Metropolitan Revenue Distribution Act, more commonly known as <br /> "Fiscal Disparities," was first implemented for taxes payable in 1975. Forty percent of the <br /> increase in commercial-industrial (including public utility and railroad) net tax capacity valuation <br /> since 1971 in each assessment district in the Minneapolis/St. Paul seven-county metropolitan <br /> area (Anoka, Carver, Dakota, excluding the City of Northfield, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, <br /> excluding the City of New Prague, and Washington Counties) is contributed to an area-wide tax <br /> base. A distribution index, based on the factors of population and real property market value <br /> per capita, is employed in determining what proportion of the net tax capacity value in the area- <br /> wide tax base shall be distributed back to each assessment district. <br /> 11-3 <br />