GO Bond Reserve Sample Clauses

GO Bond Reserve. All ad valorem property taxes, whether on deposit on the date hereof or received in the future, levied to pay debt service on the Bonds and the other general obligation bonds of the District (collectively, the “GO Bonds”), are to be held in the Debt Service Fund until expended to pay debt service on the GO Bonds. On the date hereof and during each year, the District shall allocate the amount in the Debt Service Fund, in excess of the amount to be used to pay current year’s debt service on the GO Bonds (together with the reasonable carryover amount), ratably among the GO Bond issues in accordance with one of the following, as provided in Treas. Reg. § 1.148-6(e)(6) in proportion to either (a) the relative values of the bonds of those issues under Xxxxx. Reg. § 1.148-4(e), (b) the relative amounts of the remaining maximum annual debt service requirements on the outstanding principal amounts of those issues, or (c) the relative original stated principal amounts of the outstanding issues. Such amount is herein referred to as the “Reserve Amount.” A portion of the Reserve Amount not in excess of the least of (i) 10% of the aggregate stated principal amount (or, if more than de minimis amount of original issue discount or premium, issue price (net of pre-issuance accrued interest)) of the GO Bonds, (ii) the aggregate maximum annual principal and interest requirements on the GO Bonds and (iii) 125% of the aggregate average annual principal and interest requirements on the GO Bonds, is to be invested without restriction, but such portion shall be redetermined upon issuance of any new GO Bond issue and upon retirement or defeasance of any existing GO Bond issue. The portion of the remaining excess amount, if any, of the Reserve Amount allocated to a particular issue of GO Bonds as described above generally is to be invested at a yield not in excess of the yield on such issue of GO Bonds. On the date hereof, there is no remaining excess amount of the Reserve Amount (i.e., no amount in excess of the unrestricted amount of the Reserve Amount as described above).
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Related to GO Bond Reserve

  • Bond Reduction Upon Purchaser’s writ- ten request, Contracting Officer shall redetermine the amount of Purchaser’s performance bond to an amount not less than Purchaser’s remaining obligations, including the value of Included Timber remaining on Sale Area, plus the estimated cost of uncompleted work required of Purchaser and any unpaid xxxxxxxx due on the timber sale. Contracting Officer shall provide written notice of the re- determined amount to Purchaser and to Purchaser’s surety. Similarly, Contracting Officer shall report to Pur- chaser in writing the amount of deposited cash or depos- ited securities required thereafter, if such deposits exist in lieu of a surety bond. As soon as security for the performance of this con- tract or the settlement of Claims incident thereto is no longer necessary, appropriate notice shall be given to surety or deposits that may have been made in lieu of surety bond shall be returned to Purchaser, subject to the conditions in B9.5.

  • Project Fund (a) The Trustee shall use moneys in the Tax-Exempt Bonds Account and the Equity Account of the Project Fund for the acquisition, rehabilitation and equipping of the Project, to pay other Qualified Project Costs and to pay other costs related to the Project as provided herein; provided, however, that any monies on deposit in the Capitalized Interest Account of the Project Fund shall only be used to make payments on the Note (including payments under the Swap Agreement, as provided therein) pursuant to Section 2.5 of the Loan Agreement and as otherwise provided in Section 8.7(c) below. The amounts on deposit in the Tax-Exempt Bonds Account shall not be applied to the payment of Costs of Issuance. The amounts on deposit in the Equity Account of the Project Fund shall be disbursed pursuant to the provisions of Section 8.7(g) hereof. Not less than 95% of the Tax-Exempt Bond proceeds representing net proceeds of the Tax-Exempt Bonds will be expended for Qualified Project Costs (the “95% Requirement”). Before any payment shall be made from any account within the Project Fund, the Regulatory Agreement and Mortgage shall have been recorded in the official records of Los Angeles County (confirmed by the title company responsible for such recording), and there shall be filed with the Trustee a Written Requisition of the Borrower substantially in the form attached hereto as Exhibit C-1 and approved by the Servicer for each such payment (upon which the Trustee may conclusively rely). Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Trustee may withdraw amounts from the Equity Account of the Project Fund without a Written Requisition to pay interest on the Bonds. Amounts on deposit in the Tax-Exempt Bonds Account of the Project Fund shall be allocated to, and disbursed from time to time by the Trustee for the sole purpose of, paying Qualified Project Costs and other costs that are the subject of a Written Requisition and approved by the Servicer as provided in the preceding sentence, which requisition shall include a certification that the “95% Requirement” referred to above is complied with and shall include an exhibit that allocates the amount to be disbursed among the Tax-Exempt Bonds Account and the Equity Account of the Project Fund. In connection with a Written Requisition: Only the signature of an authorized officer of the Servicer shall be required on a Written Requisition during any period in which a default by the Borrower has occurred and is then continuing under the Loan (notice of which default has been given in writing by an authorized officer of the Servicer to the Trustee and the Issuer, and the Trustee shall be entitled to conclusively rely on any such Written Notice as to the occurrence and continuation of such a default). The Trustee shall disburse amounts in the Project Fund upon receipt of a Written Requisition signed only by the Servicer (and without any need for any signature by an Authorized Borrower Representative), so long as the amount to be disbursed is to be used solely to make payments of principal, interest and/or fees due under the Bond Documents. The Trustee shall be entitled to conclusively rely upon any Written Requisition in determining whether to disburse amounts from the Project Fund.

  • Project Funding 8.1 The Project Funding for completion of this PFA is as follows:

  • Bond Requirements The Contractor hereby agrees to comply with the State’s bonding requirements as identified in the Instructions to Bidders which are included in the RFP and are attached and incorporated into the Contract Documents.

  • MORTGAGE BOND If the sale is subject to the Purchaser obtaining a mortgage bond as per clause 12 of the terms and conditions: Mortgage bond amount R Institution If not completed, sale is unconditional and clause 12 of the terms and conditions does not apply. Purchaser specifically acknowledges this clause

  • RECYCLED BOND PAPER Consistent with the Board of Supervisors’ policy to reduce the amount of solid waste deposited at the County landfills, the Contractor agrees to use recycled-content paper to the maximum extent possible on this Contract.

  • Rebate Fund Company agrees to make all payments to the Trustee and rebate all amounts to the United States of America as are required of it under Section 6.06 of the Indenture. The obligation of Company to make such payments shall remain in effect and be binding upon Company notwithstanding the release and discharge of the Indenture.

  • Savings Bonds 1. The Employer agrees to include employees in the existing system of payroll deduction through which an employee may purchase United States Savings Bonds.

  • Reserve Account (a) On the Closing Date, the Seller shall deposit the Specified Reserve Balance into the Reserve Account. Amounts held from time to time in the Reserve Account shall be held by the Trust Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Noteholders.

  • Holds, Limitations, and Reserves What are holds, limitations and reserves? Under certain circumstances, in order to protect PayPal and the security and integrity of the network of buyers and sellers that use the PayPal services, PayPal may take account- level or transaction-level actions. If we take any of the actions described here, we will normally notify you of our actions, but we may, if it is reasonable to do so (for example if you are in breach of this user agreement or we consider it advisable for security reasons), take any of these actions without prior notice to you. To request information in connection with an account limitation, hold or reserve, you should visit the Resolution Center or follow the instructions in our email notice with respect to the limitation, hold or reserve. You acknowledge and agree that any funds held under this user agreement may be placed in your reserve account and that you will provide to us any information as we may reasonably request to allow us to determine whether the risk has passed. Holds A hold is an action that PayPal may take under certain circumstances either at the transaction level or the account level. When PayPal places a hold on a payment amount, the money is not available to either the sender or the recipient. PayPal reviews many factors before placing a hold on a payment, including: account tenure, transaction activity, business type, past customer disputes, and overall customer satisfaction. Some common situations where PayPal will hold payments include where we have reason to believe that: • Transactions are higher risk, this can be where the transaction involves the sale of goods or services in a high risk category, or other facts known to us typically resulting in an increased number of chargebacks, other claims or disputes or to be often involved in fraud or illegal activity. • There is a sudden and abnormal change in a PayPal account holder’s selling activity including an increase in the number of chargebacks, reversals, or buyer complaints received in relation to such PayPal account. • Any PayPal account is being used in relation to restricted activities. • A PayPal account involved in the transaction may have been compromised, or that stolen financial details (bank or credit card) are used for the payment, or otherwise a transaction has not been properly authorized. • A user is trying to send or withdraw funds they received fraudulently. • A user has not provided sufficient Information to us to enable us to verify their identity or the identity of their business and/or the user has a limited trading history with PayPal. • A payment sent to you as a seller is challenged as a payment that should be invalidated and reversed. • Your buyer files a chargeback, reversal or PayPal Buyer Protection claim on a payment you received. • Your buyer files a claim under a marketplace's resolution process. • There is a risk of reversal of funds in your account to your funding source. • There is a risk of liability (a non-exhaustive list of examples of such risk is set out in the section Actions We May Take If You Engage In Any Restricted Activities above). Payment review When we identify a potentially high-risk transaction, we review the transaction more closely before allowing it to proceed. This may be because we have the reasonable suspicion that the payer’s PayPal account is being used in relation to restricted activities or for other reasons as determined by us in our reasonable discretion. This may include where there is a risk of liability (a non-exhaustive list of examples of such risk is set out in the section Actions We May Take If You Engage In Any Restricted Activities above). If a payment is subject to payment review, we may: • Execute the payment order initiated by the buyer. • In our discretion, immediately upon such execution restrict the payer’s account. • Place a hold on the payment in the payer’s account. • Notify the recipient to delay the delivery of the purchase paid for by the payment. As a buyer, this may delay your receipt of the item you purchased. If we clear the transaction, we will notify the seller and direct them to ship the item. If we don’t clear the transaction, we will cancel it and return the funds to you, unless we are legally required to take other action. All payments that complete payment review are still subject to being reversed under the terms of this user agreement but will be PayPal‘s Seller Protection program eligible if they meet the PayPal‘s Seller Protection program requirements. PayPal will provide notices to you by email and/or in the transaction history tab of your PayPal account. A payment subject to payment review is a review of the payment only and is implemented to reduce the risk of PayPal users receiving high risk transactions. A payment subject to payment review is neither a review nor a representation by PayPal as to the commercial dealings, character or reputation of a party to the payment transaction and should not be considered as a lessening of the respect of any person. Holds related to your instructions Certain PayPal functionality may allow you (whether directly or via someone you permit to act on your behalf, like an online marketplace platform on which you transact as a seller) to instruct us to hold your funds (including the proceeds of payments you receive using PayPal) in your reserve account. In such a case we will show you the availability status of those funds in your balance – the status descriptions may differ according to the functionality you used to instruct us to place the hold. We will release the hold on the funds according to the instruction that you (or the entity that you have permitted to act on your behalf) give to us, subject to the rest of this user agreement. Account Limitations Limitations are implemented to help protect PayPal, buyers and sellers when we notice restricted activities, an increased financial risk, or activity that appears to us as unusual or suspicious. Limitations also help us collect information necessary for keeping your PayPal account open. There are several reasons why your PayPal account could be limited, including where we have reason to believe that: • Someone could be using your PayPal account without your knowledge, then we’ll limit it for your protection and look into the fraudulent activity. • Someone has used your card or bank account without your permission, for example if your debit or credit card issuer or bank alerts us to this. • You have breached this user agreement or violated the Acceptable Use Policy. • Your performance as a seller indicate your PayPal account is high risk. Examples include: indications of poor selling performance because you’ve received an unusually high number of claims and chargebacks, selling an entirely new or high-cost product type, or if your typical sales volume increases rapidly. • There is a risk of liability (a non-exhaustive list of examples of such risk is set out in the section Actions We May Take If You Engage In Any Restricted Activities above). We may also limit your PayPal account in order to comply with applicable law. You will need to resolve any issues with your account before a limitation can be removed. Normally, this is done after you provide us with the information we request. However, if we reasonably believe a risk still exists after you have provided us that information, we may take action to protect PayPal, our users, a third party, or you from reversals, fees, fines, penalties, legal and/or regulatory risks and any other liability.

Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.