Honorable John B. Johnson Chairman State of New York Dormitory Authority Honorable Robert L. Polk Chairman City University Construction Fund
The question has been raised whether the City University Construction Fund (CUCF) and the City University of New York (CUNY) are authorized to agree with the New York State Dormitory Authority (Authority) that annual payments to the Authority under a lease are to include an amount for a special reserve fund that is used in emergencies to protect the interests of bondholders secured by real property leased to higher educational institutions. We are of the opinion that such payments are authorized.
The Authority is a State public benefit corporation (Public Authorities Law, §
The Authority clearly has the power to create a special reserve fund (Public Authorities Law, §
Even if one assumes that, in theory, a contribution to the reserve fund is in "aid" of a private undertaking, it does not necessarily follow that the aid is constitutionally prohibited. We have recently said that if the State derives a direct benefit from a program that includes a grant of public money to a private entity and if that direct benefit is in furtherance of the public interest, the constitutional prohibition does not apply (1980 Op Atty Gen 88 and cases cited; 1979 id. 60). The direct benefit to the State in an across-the-board special reserve fund is obvious. When the Authority goes to market for funds, the cost of those funds are directly affected by the risks of non-payment as seen by those who purchase Authority bonds. A reserve fund for emergencies decreases the bondholders' risks. Thus, the cost of borrowing is lower which, in turn, means that the beneficiaries of the loans, the lessees, are charged less for debt service. Both public and private entities benefit. Moreover, while it is true that a private entity in financial trouble may be benefited by the reserve fund to which public entities contribute, it is equally true that a public entity may be benefited by the same fund to which private entities contribute. Viewed this way, it is even arguable that, rather than a permissible public grant, the arrangement is in the nature of a bargained quid pro quo.
We conclude that the City University Construction Fund and the City University of New York may enter into a lease agreement with the New York State Dormitory Authority that requires an annual contribution to a special reserve fund usable for the benefit of lessees that are not public entities.*
