SEC charges Chelsea after city self-disclosed bond offer problems
On
Wednesday, the SEC, which regulates Wall Street's financial markets as
well as municipal bond offerings, announced that Chelsea was among 71
governmental debt issuers subjected to enforcement actions.
The
small city between East Boston and Everett faces no financial penalty
and long ago implemented the reforms called for by the SEC sanction,
according to Chelsea Treasurer/Collector Robert Boulrice.
"Sanction's
an awfully strong word," Boulrice said. Despite a heading declaring it a
"cease-and-desist order" that is "imposing remedial sanctions," the
actual enforcement in the SEC document appears relatively mild - which
is by design.
"We
encourage eligible parties to take advantage of the favorable terms we
are offering under this initiative. Those who do not self-report and
instead decide to take their chances can expect to face increased
sanctions for violations," SEC Enforcement Division Director Andrew Ceresney said in March 2014, announcing the Municipalities Continuing Disclosure Cooperation (MCDC) Initiative.
The
city's treasurer for nine years, Boulrice said he learned of the
voluntary disclosure program at a treasurer conference in June 2014, and
heard the alternative - maintaining the discrepancy was immaterial -
could put cities at great risk.
"It
seemed to be extreme. You know, fines and then a whole lot of reporting
and auditing. It just seemed to be extremely severe for missing a
deadline," Boulrice said. He said, "Upon the advice of bond counsel, I
chose to self-disclose."
In
November 2014 Boulrice admitted that Chelsea had been late filing its
annual financial report in 2010, and then subsequently neglected to
disclose its prior late filing, he said. Boulrice said that less than a
month later, the city had adopted reforms to prevent that from happening
again.
"Some folks chose to wait and see if they got cited and then try to appeal that that's really not material," Boulrice said.
Chelsea
was the only Massachusetts municipality included in the 71 enforcements
actions announced Wednesday. Around the country, the states of
Minnesota and Hawaii disclosed making similarly minor misstatements, as
well as Fairfield, Connecticut and York, Maine.
Accuracy in financial reports is important as people who buy and sell municipal bonds can rely on them in making decisions.
In
its announcement Wednesday, the SEC said it found that from 2011 to
2014, the "71 issuers and obligated persons sold municipal bonds using
offering documents that contained materially false statements or
omissions about their compliance with continuing disclosure
obligations."
"The
diversity among the 71 entities in these actions demonstrates that
continuing disclosure failures were a widespread and pervasive problem
in the municipal bond market," Andrew Ceresney,
director of the SEC Enforcement Division, said in a statement. "The
MCDC Initiative has brought attention to this important issue and
resulted in increased compliance by municipal issuers and underwriters."
In its announcement Wednesday, the SEC said it found that from 2011 to 2014, the "71 issuers and obligated persons sold municipal bonds using offering documents that contained materially false statements or omissions about their compliance with continuing disclosure obligations."
ReplyDeleteSo does Templeton disclose all needed info when they try to borrow or issue bonds?
Do we have a system of blame it on the new help that works out ok?
Will the USDA loan still be offered before any bond rates are reissued?
Will we ever get the funds needed for the full scope of the water tank project?
"It seemed to be extreme. You know, fines and then a whole lot of reporting and auditing. It just seemed to be extremely severe for missing a deadline,
ReplyDeleteSo if Templeton did this in the n th degree what fines could we face.
Maybe a call to the famed DOR could help us with the loan like they did With the previous trophy holder Winchendon. Bail us out of the hard spot we are in to pay for the multitude of Audits that we have no idea what the cost will be.
Many questions and no money to get them with.