SENATE BILL No. 443

 

 

June 14, 2011, Introduced by Senators JOHNSON, CASPERSON and WARREN and referred to the Committee on Transportation.

 

 

 

     A bill to create a regional transit authority; to provide

 

regional transportation; to provide for certain pension rights and

 

obligations of transit employees; to prescribe certain powers and

 

duties of the authority and of certain state agencies and

 

officials; to authorize the levy of taxes and to provide for the

 

issuance of bonds and notes; to make appropriations; to provide for

 

the pledge of taxes, revenues, assessments, tax levies, and other

 

funds for bond and note payments; and to repeal acts and parts of

 

acts.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the

 

"regional transit authority act".

 

     Sec. 2. As used in this act:

 

     (a) "Authority" means a regional transit authority formed


 

under this act.

 

     (b) "Board" means the governing body of an authority.

 

     (c) "Chief executive officer" means the mayor or city manager

 

of a city or the county executive of a county or, if a county does

 

not have a county executive, the chairperson of the county board of

 

commissioners.

 

     (d) "Governor's representative" means either the director of

 

the department of transportation of this state or the chairperson

 

of the state transportation commission, to be appointed to the

 

board by the governor under section 5 of this act.

 

     (e) "Public transit" means the movement of people and goods by

 

publicly or privately owned bus, railroad car, rapid transit

 

vehicle, taxicab, or other conveyance which provides general or

 

special service to the public, but not including charter or

 

sightseeing service or transportation which is exclusively used for

 

school purposes. Public transit, as defined by this section, is

 

declared by law to be a transportation purpose within the meaning

 

of section 9 of article IX of the state constitution of 1963.

 

     (f) "Public transit region" means an area consisting of any of

 

the following:

 

     (i) A county in which a qualified city is located.

 

     (ii) All other counties immediately contiguous to a qualified

 

city, in which an authority incorporated under this act operates a

 

public transit system or causes a public transit system to operate.

 

     (iii) A county added to an authority under section 4 of this

 

act.

 

     (g) "Public transit system" means all plants, equipment, work


 

instrumentalities, and real and personal property and rights, used

 

or useful for public transit.

 

     (h) "Transit district" means any of the following:

 

     (i) A qualified city, a county in which a qualified city is

 

located, or a county immediately contiguous to a qualified city.

 

     (ii) A county added to an authority under section 4.

 

     (i) "Qualified city" means a city with a population of more

 

than 700,000 according to the most recent decennial census.

 

     Sec. 3. For a public transit region there shall be created an

 

authority, which shall become effective upon the appointment of a

 

majority of all members of the board of the authority, for the

 

purpose of planning acquiring, owning, operating, or causing to be

 

operated, a public transit system and carrying out the rights,

 

duties, and obligations provided in this act.

 

     Sec. 4. (1) A county that is not included in the public

 

transit region and not a participant in the authority may petition

 

the authority to become part of the public transit region and

 

participate in the authority, provided that the petition is

 

approved by resolution of the governing body of the petitioning

 

county.

 

     (2) A petitioning county shall be added to the public transit

 

region and the authority if all of the following conditions are

 

satisfied:

 

     (a) The petitioning county is adjacent to a county that is, at

 

the time of the petition, included in the public transit region.

 

     (b) The addition of the petitioning county is approved by the

 

board.


 

     (c) If the authority is levying a tax as provided under

 

section 9(2), the petitioning county shall be a provisional member

 

without voting power and without public transit service from the

 

authority until the tax is approved by a majority of electors of

 

the petitioning county at the first primary or general election to

 

occur at least 71 days after the appointment under section 5(6).

 

The approval of the tax by the electors of a county added under

 

this section shall be determined only by calculation of a majority

 

within the petitioning county, and shall be separate and distinct

 

from the calculation of a majority of electors voting on the tax

 

under section 10(2).

 

     Sec. 5. (1) An authority created under this act shall be

 

directed and governed by a board of directors consisting of the

 

governor's representative and 1 member representing each transit

 

district. The governor's representative shall only serve on the

 

board if necessary to establish or preserve an odd number of board

 

members.

 

     (2) Except as otherwise provided in this act, board members

 

shall serve for a period of 4 years. If a vacancy on the board

 

occurs, the vacancy shall be filled in the same manner as the

 

initial appointment for the remainder of the term that created the

 

vacancy.

 

     (3) Each board member, other than the governor's

 

representative, shall be appointed by the chief executive officer

 

of the transit district that member will represent. The appointment

 

of a board member from a qualified city shall be ratified by

 

majority vote of the city council located in the transit district


 

that the member will represent.

 

     (4) A ratified appointment under this section shall become

 

effective upon the filing of the appointment with the secretary of

 

state and the clerk of the county in which the transit district is

 

located. The appointment of the governor's representative shall

 

become effective upon the filing of the appointment with the

 

secretary of state.

 

     (5) Initial appointments shall be made within 60 days of the

 

effective date of this act.

 

     (6) If a county is added to a public transit region as

 

provided in section 4, the board member representing the transit

 

district consisting of the county shall be appointed as provided

 

under subsection (3) within 30 days of the conditions of section

 

4(2)(a) and (b) having been satisfied, and at least 71 days prior

 

to the election described in section 4(2)(c). If a tax levied under

 

section 10(2) is not approved as provided in section 4(2)(c), the

 

appointment of the board member provided in this subsection shall

 

be void.

 

     (7) No board member shall serve on boards related to this

 

authority, including, but not limited to, all of the following:

 

     (a) Suburban mobility authority for regional transportation.

 

     (b) Detroit department of transportation.

 

     (c) Southeast Michigan council of governments.

 

     (d) Detroit transportation corporation.

 

     (8) Each board member shall be a resident and registered

 

elector of the transit district that board member represents.

 

     (9) Upon appointment to the board under this section, and upon


 

taking and filing of the oath of office required under section 1 of

 

article XI of the state constitution of 1963, a board member shall

 

enter office and exercise the duties of the office of board member.

 

     (10) Board members shall serve without compensation but may be

 

reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses incurred while

 

attending board meetings or performing other authorized official

 

business of the authority.

 

     (11) An individual who is not of good moral character or who

 

has been convicted of, pled guilty or no contest to, or forfeited

 

bail concerning a felony under the laws of this state, any other

 

state, or the United States shall not be appointed or remain as a

 

member of the board.

 

     (12) Board members appointed under this section shall possess

 

business, financial, or professional experience relevant to the

 

operation of public transit systems.

 

     Sec. 6. (1) Within not more than 30 days following the

 

appointment of the members of the board, the board shall hold its

 

first meeting at a date and time determined by the governor's

 

representative. The board members shall elect from among the board

 

members an individual who is not the governor's representative to

 

serve as chairperson of the board and may elect other officers as

 

the board considers necessary. All officers shall be elected

 

annually by the board.

 

     (2) The business of the board shall be conducted at a public

 

meeting of the board held in compliance with the open meetings act,

 

1976 PA 267, MCL 15.261 to 15.275. Public notice of the time, date,

 

and place of the meeting shall be given in the manner required by


 

the open meetings act, 1976 PA 267, MCL 15.261 to 15.275. A board

 

shall adopt bylaws consistent with the open meetings act, 1976 PA

 

267, MCL 15.261 to 15.275, governing its procedures and the holding

 

of meetings. After organization, a board shall adopt a schedule of

 

regular meetings and adopt a regular meeting date, place, and time.

 

The board shall meet not less than quarterly. The board shall adopt

 

bylaws within 90 days of the organizational meeting. A special

 

meeting of the board may be called by the chairperson of the board

 

or as provided in bylaws adopted by the board.

 

     (3) All actions of the board under this act shall be by simple

 

majority vote of all serving members of the board; provided that

 

the board may in its bylaws provide that certain action shall

 

require the approval of a supermajority not to exceed 4/5 of

 

serving members. For purposes of this subsection, "certain action"

 

includes, but is not limited to, any budgetary, financial,

 

taxation, or membership issues before the board.

 

     (4) A board shall keep a written or printed record of each

 

meeting, which record and any other document or record prepared,

 

owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by the authority in

 

the performance of an official function shall be made available to

 

the public in compliance with the freedom of information act, 1976

 

PA 442, MCL 15.231 to 15.246.

 

     (5) A board shall provide for a system of accounts for the

 

authority to conform to a uniform system required by law and for

 

the auditing of the accounts of an authority. The board shall

 

obtain an annual audit of the authority by an independent certified

 

public accountant and report on the audit and auditing procedures


 

in the manner provided by sections 6 to 13 of the uniform budgeting

 

and accounting act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.426 to 141.433. The audit

 

also shall be in accordance with generally accepted government

 

auditing standards and shall satisfy federal regulations relating

 

to federal grant compliance audit requirements.

 

     (6) Within 90 days of the first meeting of the board, the

 

board shall develop and approve an administrative budget and

 

identify funding for the administrative budget. The board shall

 

adopt a budget for the fiscal year in accordance with the uniform

 

budget and accounting act, 1968 PA 2, MCL 141.421 to 141.440a.

 

     (7) A board shall provide for the purchase of, the contracting

 

for, and the providing of supplies, materials, services, insurance,

 

utilities, third-party financing, equipment, printing, and all

 

other items as needed by the authority to efficiently and

 

effectively meet the needs of the authority using competitive

 

procurement methods to secure the best value for the authority. The

 

board shall make all discretionary decisions concerning the

 

solicitation, award, amendment, cancellation, and appeal of

 

authority contracts. The board shall adopt a procurement policy

 

consistent with the requirements of this act and federal and state

 

laws relating to procurement.

 

     (8) An authority shall establish contracting policies and

 

procedures providing for all of the following:

 

     (a) Except for the negotiated construction contracts permitted

 

under this subdivision, a contract shall not be awarded by an

 

authority or an authorized officer of the authority for the

 

construction, repair, remodeling, or demolition of any part of a


 

public transit system unless the contract is let pursuant to a

 

procedure that requires competitive bidding. A negotiated

 

construction contract shall not be required to be let by

 

competitive bidding if the board or an authorized officer of the

 

authority with delegated authority to enter into contracts

 

determines that any of the following apply:

 

     (i) The negotiated contract amount is less than $50,000.00.

 

However, if the contract amount, including change orders,

 

subsequently exceeds $50,000.00, the authority shall detail, in

 

writing, the reasons why the contract amount exceeded $50,000.00.

 

     (ii) As determined in writing by the board or an authorized

 

officer with delegated authority to enter into contracts, the

 

contract is for emergency repair or construction necessitated by a

 

sudden, unforeseen occurrence or situation of a serious and urgent

 

nature and is not for convenience or expediency.

 

     (iii) As determined in writing by the board or an authorized

 

officer with delegated authority to enter into contracts, the

 

repair or construction is necessary to ensure rider safety or

 

otherwise protect life or property.

 

     (iv) The construction, repair, remodeling, or demolition is to

 

be conducted by employees.

 

     (b) The authority shall establish policies and procedures for

 

hiring professional service contractors.

 

     (c) The authority shall utilize competitive bidding for all

 

purchases and all other contracts unless the board, or, if

 

authorized by the board to approve procurements, an authorized

 

officer of the authority, determines and details in writing the


 

reason that competitive solicitation of bids or proposals is not

 

appropriate, that procurement by competitive bids is not

 

practicable to efficiently and effectively meet the authority's

 

needs, or that another procurement method is in the public's best

 

interests.

 

     (d) The authority shall assure that the policies and

 

procedures follow applicable federal requirements.

 

     (9) A board may employ personnel that the board considers

 

necessary to assist the board in performing the power, duties, and

 

jurisdictions of the authority, including, but not limited to,

 

employment of a chief executive officer and other senior executive

 

and administrative staff. Individual board members shall not hire

 

or be assigned personal staff.

 

     (10) A board shall establish policies to assure that the board

 

and the authority shall not do either of the following:

 

     (a) Fail or refuse to hire, recruit, or promote; demote;

 

discharge; or otherwise discriminate against a person with respect

 

to employment, compensation, or a term, condition, or privilege of

 

employment, or a contract with the authority because of religion,

 

race, color, national origin, age, sex, sexual orientation, height,

 

weight, marital status, partisan considerations, or a disability or

 

genetic information that is unrelated to the person's ability to

 

perform the duties of a particular job, position, or contract.

 

     (b) Limit, segregate, or classify an employee, a contractor,

 

or applicant for employment or a contract in a way that deprives or

 

tends to deprive the employee, contractor, or applicant of an

 

employment opportunity or otherwise adversely affects the status of


 

an employee, contractor, or applicant because of religion, race,

 

color, national origin, age, sex, sexual orientation, height,

 

weight, marital status, partisan considerations, or a disability or

 

genetic information that is unrelated to the person's ability to

 

perform the duties of a particular job or position.

 

     (11) No later than 180 days after the first meeting of the

 

board, the board shall report to the legislature in writing its

 

final recommendations including, but not limited to, funding

 

recommendations. The board shall make its final recommendations

 

from among the recommendations for funding, development, and

 

operation of a regional transit system contained in the

 

comprehensive regional transit service plan adopted by the regional

 

transportation coordinating council in 2008.

 

     Sec. 7. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this act, an

 

authority may do all things necessary or convenient to implement

 

the purposes, objectives, and provisions of this act and the

 

purposes, objectives, and jurisdictions vested in the authority or

 

the board by this act or other law, including, but not limited to,

 

all of the following:

 

     (a) Adopt and use a corporate seal.

 

     (b) Adopt, amend, and repeal bylaws for the regulation of its

 

affairs and the conduct of its business.

 

     (c) Sue and be sued in its own name and plead and be

 

impleaded.

 

     (d) Borrow money and issue bonds and notes according to the

 

provisions of this act.

 

     (e) Make and enter into contracts, agreements, or instruments


 

necessary, incidental, or convenient to the performance of its

 

duties and execution of its powers, duties, and jurisdictions under

 

this act with any federal, state, local, or intergovernmental

 

governmental agency or with any other person or entity, public or

 

private, upon terms and conditions acceptable to the authority.

 

     (f) Engage in collective negotiation or collective bargaining

 

and enter into agreements with a bargaining representative as

 

provided by 1947 PA 336, MCL 423.201 to 423.217.

 

     (g) Solicit, receive, and accept gifts, grants, labor, loans,

 

contributions of money, property, or other things of value, and

 

other aid or payment from any federal, state, local, or

 

intergovernmental agency or from any other person or entity, public

 

or private, upon terms and conditions acceptable to the authority,

 

or participate in any other way in a federal, state, local, or

 

intergovernmental program.

 

     (h) Make application for and receive loans, grants,

 

guarantees, or other financial assistance in aid of a public

 

transit system from any state, federal, local, or intergovernmental

 

or agency or from any other source, public or private, including,

 

but not limited to, financial assistance for purposes of

 

developing, planning, constructing, improving, and operating a

 

public transit system.

 

     (i) Procure insurance or become a self-funded insurer against

 

loss in connection with the property, assets, or activities of the

 

authority.

 

     (j) Indemnify and procure insurance indemnifying board members

 

from personal loss or accountability for liability asserted by a


 

person with regard to bonds or other obligations of the authority,

 

or from any personal liability or accountability by reason of the

 

issuance of the bonds or other obligations or by reason of any

 

other action taken or the failure to act by the authority.

 

     (k) Invest money of the authority, at the discretion of the

 

board, in instruments, obligations, securities, or property

 

determined proper by the board and name and use depositories for

 

authority money. Investments shall be made consistent with an

 

investment policy adopted by the board that complies with this act

 

and 1943 PA 20, MCL 129.91 to 129.97a.

 

     (l) Contract for goods and services as necessary and as

 

provided under this act.

 

     (m) Employ legal and technical experts, other officers,

 

agents, employees, or other personnel, permanent or temporary, as

 

considered necessary by the board as provided under this act.

 

     (n) Contract for the services of persons or entities for

 

rendering professional or technical assistance, including, but not

 

limited to, consultants, managers, legal counsel, engineers,

 

accountants, and auditors, as provided under this act.

 

     (o) Establish and maintain an office.

 

     (p) Acquire by gift, devise, transfer, exchange, purchase,

 

lease, or otherwise on terms and conditions and in a manner the

 

authority considers proper property or rights or interests in

 

property. Property or rights or interests in property acquired by

 

an authority may be by purchase contract, lease purchase,

 

agreement, installment sales contract, land contract, or otherwise.

 

The acquisition of any property by an authority for a public


 

transit system in furtherance of the purposes of the authority is

 

for a public use, and the exercise of any other powers granted to

 

the authority is declared to be a public, governmental, and

 

municipal function, purpose, and use exercised for a public purpose

 

and matters of public necessity.

 

     (q) Hold, clear, remediate, improve, maintain, manage,

 

protect, control, sell, exchange, lease, or grant easements and

 

licenses on property or rights or interests in property that the

 

authority acquires, holds, or controls.

 

     (r) Convey, sell, transfer, exchange, lease, or otherwise

 

dispose of property or rights or interest in property to any person

 

or entity on terms and conditions, and in a manner and for

 

consideration the authority considers proper, fair, and valuable.

 

     (s) Adopt reasonable rules and regulations for the orderly,

 

safe, efficient, and sanitary operation and use of a public transit

 

system owned by the authority.

 

     (t) Do all other acts and things necessary or convenient to

 

exercise the powers, duties, and jurisdictions of the authority

 

under this act or other laws that related to the purposes, powers,

 

duties, and jurisdictions of the authority.

 

     (2) An authority shall adopt public transit plans for its

 

public transit region, and shall adopt any regional transit plan

 

approved by an entity that, before September 15, 2010, was

 

authorized to engage in transit planning in the public transit

 

region under the metropolitan transportation authorities act of

 

1967, 1967 PA 204, MCL 124.401 to 124.426. The authority shall

 

review the adopted plan annually and update the adopted plan as


 

necessary. The authority shall coordinate service overlap, rates,

 

routing, scheduling, and like functions between operators of public

 

transit. The authority may employ operating personnel, negotiate

 

collective bargaining agreements with operating personnel, or own

 

operating assets of a public transit service within the public

 

transit region. The authority shall coordinate the operating and

 

capital transit plans of transit agencies within the public transit

 

region.

 

     (3) The authority may charge fares and enter into contracts

 

for the service provided by the public transit system as necessary

 

to provide funds to meet the obligations of the authority.

 

     Sec. 8. Immediately upon creation under section 3, an

 

authority shall become the "designated recipient" for its public

 

transit region for purposes of the former federal urban mass

 

transportation act of 1964, Public Law 88-365, and the regulations

 

promulgated under that act, to apply for federal and state

 

transportation operating and capital assistance grants.

 

     Sec. 9. (1) The authority may acquire property for a public

 

transit system by purchase, construction, lease, gift, or devise,

 

either within or without the area served by the public transit

 

system and may hold, manage, control, sell, exchange, or lease the

 

property. The authority may utilize any appropriate statute for the

 

purpose of condemnation. Such condemnation proceedings shall only

 

be applicable to property located within the public transit region.

 

     (2) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the

 

property of the authority created under this act and its income,

 

activities, and operations are exempt from all taxes and special


 

assessments of this state or a political subdivision of this state.

 

Property of an authority and its income, activities, and operations

 

that are leased to private persons are not exempt from any tax or

 

special assessment of this state or a political subdivision of this

 

state. Property of an authority is exempt from any ad valorem

 

property taxes levied under the general property tax act, 1893 PA

 

206, MCL 211.1 to 211.155, or other law of this state authorizing

 

the taxation of real or personal property. An authority is an

 

entity of government for purposes of section 4a(1)(a) of the

 

general sales tax act, 1933 PA 167, MCL 205.54a, and section

 

4(1)(h) of the use tax act, 1937 PA 94, MCL 205.94.

 

     (3) The property of an authority created under this act is

 

public property devoted to an essential public and governmental

 

purpose. Income of the authority is for a public and governmental

 

purpose.

 

     (4) If an authority seeks to enter into an agreement or

 

arrangement for the whole or partial transfer of operational

 

jurisdiction, management, control, ownership, or other interest in

 

or relating to a public transit system owned or operated by a

 

qualified city, the chief executive officer of the qualified city

 

may enter into and execute the agreement or arrangement and any

 

necessary instruments or documents relating to the transfer

 

notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary or any limitations,

 

requirements, or processes set forth by law, ordinance, or charter,

 

including, but not limited to, any requirement in law, ordinance,

 

or charter that a vote of the electors of the qualified city is

 

required.


 

     Sec. 10. (1) An authority may raise revenues to fund all of

 

its activities, operations, and investments consistent with its

 

purposes. The sources of revenue available to the authority may

 

include, but are not limited to, any of the following:

 

     (a) Fees, fares, rents, or other charges for use of a public

 

transit system which the authority may fix, regulate, and collect.

 

     (b) Federal, state, or local government grants, loans,

 

appropriations, payments, or contributions.

 

     (c) The proceeds from the sale, exchange, mortgage, lease, or

 

other disposition of property that the authority has acquired.

 

     (d) Grants, loans, appropriations, payments, proceeds from

 

repayments of loans made by the authority, or contributions from

 

public or private sources.

 

     (e) The proceeds of a tax levied pursuant to subsection (2).

 

     (f) Investment earnings on the revenues described in

 

subdivisions (a) to (e).

 

     (2) An authority may levy taxes within the public transit

 

region only as approved by the board and by an aggregate majority

 

of electors of the entire public transit region voting on the

 

authorization of taxes, subject to both of the following:

 

     (a) In any tax year, an amount equal to not less than 100% of

 

the revenues generated in a county by any tax levied pursuant to

 

this subsection shall be applied to the cost of services rendered

 

by the public transit system in that county.

 

     (b) No tax levied pursuant to this subsection shall be subject

 

to capture by any entity with the power to capture tax increment

 

revenues, including, but not limited to, local development finance


 

authorities, downtown development authorities, tax increment

 

finance authorities, and brownfield redevelopment authorities.

 

     (3) Any funding appropriated to the authority from local units

 

of government shall be returned to the local units of government if

 

the authority ceases to operate before the funding is used.

 

     Sec. 11. (1) For the purpose of acquiring, improving,

 

enlarging, or extending a public transit system, the authority may

 

issue self-liquidating revenue bonds under the revenue bond act of

 

1933, 1933 PA 94, MCL 141.101 to 141.140, or any other act

 

providing for the issuance of self-liquidating revenue bonds. The

 

bonds shall not be a general obligation of the authority, but shall

 

be payable solely from the revenue of the public transit system.

 

However, if the authority issues self-liquidating revenue bonds

 

with a pledge of the full faith and credit of the authority, those

 

revenue bonds are subject to the revised municipal finance act,

 

2001 PA 34, MCL 141.2101 to 141.2821.

 

     (2) The authority may borrow money and issue municipal

 

securities in accordance with and exercise all of the powers

 

conferred upon municipalities by the revised municipal finance act,

 

2001 PA 34, MCL 141.2101 to 141.2821.

 

     (3) The authority may issue a bond or municipal security that

 

bears no interest and appreciates as to principal amount. The bonds

 

or municipal securities authorized by this subsection shall be

 

exempt from section 305(2) and (3) of the revised municipal finance

 

act, 2001 PA 34, MCL 141.2305.

 

     (4) All bonds, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness

 

issued by an authority under this act, and the interest on the


 

bonds or other evidences of indebtedness, are free and exempt from

 

all taxation within this state, except for transfer and franchise

 

taxes.

 

     (5) The issuance of bonds, notes, or other evidences of

 

indebtedness by an authority shall require approval of the board.

 

     (6) For the purpose of more effectively managing its debt

 

service, an authority may enter into an interest rate exchange or

 

swap, hedge, or similar agreement or agreements in connection with

 

the issuance or proposed issuance of bonds, notes, or other

 

evidences of indebtedness or in connection with its then

 

outstanding bonds, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness.

 

     (7) In connection with entering into an interest rate exchange

 

or swap, hedge, or similar agreement, the authority may create a

 

reserve fund for the payment thereof.

 

     (8) An agreement entered into under this section shall be

 

payable from general funds of the authority or, subject to any

 

existing contracts, from any available money or revenue sources,

 

including revenues specified by the agreement, securing the bonds,

 

notes, or evidences of indebtedness in connection with which the

 

agreement is entered into.

 

     Sec. 12. (1) If an authority enters into an agreement or

 

arrangement for the whole or partial transfer of operational

 

jurisdiction, management, control, ownership, or other interest in

 

or relating to a public transit system owned or operated by a local

 

government or a transit authority, the employees that are necessary

 

for the operation of the transit system shall be transferred to and

 

appointed as employees of the authority subject to all rights and


 

benefits. These employees shall be given seniority credits and sick

 

leave, vacation, insurance, and pension credits in accordance with

 

the records or labor agreements from the acquired system. Members

 

and beneficiaries of any pension or retirement system or other

 

benefits established by the acquired system shall continue to have

 

rights, privileges, benefits, obligations, and status with respect

 

to the established system. The authority shall assume the

 

obligations of any system acquired by it with regard to wages,

 

salaries, hours, working conditions, sick leave, health and

 

welfare, and pension or retirement provisions for employees. If the

 

employees of an acquired system were not guaranteed sick leave,

 

health and welfare, and pension or retirement pay based on

 

seniority by the acquired system, the political subdivision is not

 

required to provide these benefits retroactively.

 

     (2) No employee who is transferred to a position with the

 

authority by reason of that transfer shall be placed in any worse

 

position with respect to worker's compensation, pension, seniority,

 

wages, sick leave, vacation, health and welfare insurance, or any

 

other benefits that he or she enjoyed as an employee of the

 

acquired system.

 

     (3) The authority, as of the transfer date, immediately shall

 

assume and be bound by any existing collective bargaining

 

agreements applicable to employees of local governments or transit

 

authorities whose employment is transferred to the authority either

 

as a result of the authority's express assumption of the employees

 

or as a result of a consolidation, merger, or assumption as

 

provided by this act until a new collective bargaining agreement is


 

effective. Local government and transit authority employees whose

 

employment is not transferred to the authority shall be reassigned

 

within the local government or transit authority pursuant to the

 

terms of any applicable collective bargaining agreements. A

 

representative of the employees or a group of employees in the

 

local government or transit authority who represents or is entitled

 

to represent the employees or a group of employees of the local

 

government or transit authority pursuant to 1947 PA 336, MCL

 

423.201 to 423.217, shall continue to represent the employee or

 

group of employees after the employees transfer to the authority.

 

This subsection does not limit the rights of employees, under

 

applicable law, to assert that a bargaining representative

 

protected by this subsection is no longer their representative. The

 

rights and benefits protected by this subsection may be altered by

 

a future collective bargaining agreement or, for employees not

 

covered by collective bargaining agreements, by benefit plans as

 

established and adopted by the authority.

 

     (4) Transferred employees shall not by reason of the transfer

 

have their accrued local government pension benefits or credits

 

diminished. If a transferring employee is not vested in his or her

 

local government or transit authority pension rights at the time of

 

transfer, his or her posttransfer service with the authority shall

 

be credited toward vesting in any local government retirement

 

system in which the transferring employee participated prior to the

 

transfer, but posttransfer service with the authority shall not be

 

credited for any other purpose under the local government's

 

retirement system, except as provided in subsection (5).


 

     (5) Notwithstanding any ordinance or charter provision to the

 

contrary, a transferred local government employee or a transferred

 

transit system employee described in this section or a person hired

 

by the authority as a new employee after the transfer date may

 

remain or become a member in the local government retirement

 

system. During the period the employee remains or is a member in

 

the local government system, the employee's posttransfer service

 

with the authority and his or her posttransfer compensation from

 

the authority shall be counted in determining both eligibility for

 

and the amount of pension benefits that the employee will be

 

eligible to receive from the local government system or plan.

 

Employees eligible to make the election described in this

 

subsection shall agree to make any employee contributions required

 

for continuing participation in the local government system and

 

also agree to meet all requirements and be subject to all

 

conditions that, from time to time, apply to employees of the local

 

government who participate in the local government system.

 

     (6) For each employee transferred from a transit system, the

 

transit system retirement plan shall contribute, as applicable, to

 

the trustees of the local government retirement system an amount

 

determined by the local government system's actuary sufficient to

 

fund the accrued liability for all of that employee's retirement

 

and other postemployment benefits under the system on a current

 

basis, as those liabilities are accrued up to the date of transfer.

 

     (7) For each employee meeting the requirements of subsection

 

(5) who elects to remain a member in the local government

 

retirement system or transit system retirement system, the


 

authority shall, on a timely basis, contribute, as applicable, to

 

the trustees of the appropriate retirement system an amount

 

determined by the retirement system's actuary to be sufficient to

 

fund the liability for all of that employee's retirement and other

 

postemployment benefits under the system on a current basis, as

 

those liabilities are accrued from and after the transfer date.

 

     (8) Nothing in this section shall prohibit an authority from

 

establishing a retirement system for employees hired after the

 

creation of the authority, and nothing in this section shall

 

prohibit those employees who elect to transfer to a retirement

 

system established for employees of the authority after creation of

 

the authority from transferring to the retirement system created by

 

the authority at their option.

 

     (9) The authority shall comply with all federal requirements

 

to protect transit employees in 49 USC 5333(b). The authority shall

 

honor all existing employee protection agreements.

 

     Sec. 13. (1) The revenues raised by an authority may be

 

pledged, in whole or in part, for the repayment of bonded

 

indebtedness and other expenditures issued or incurred by the

 

authority.

 

     (2) A financial obligation of an authority is a financial

 

obligation of the authority only and not a financial obligation of

 

and shall not be transferred to this state or any city or county

 

within a public transit region.

 

     Sec. 14. (1) In the event of the authority proposing

 

privatization, there shall be a cost analysis. The cost analysis of

 

privatizing the services shall include both of the following:


 

     (a) All necessary monitoring and oversight of the private

 

entity by this state.

 

     (b) Up-to-date cost estimates for using reputable companies

 

that have a previous history or reputation for providing quality

 

services and that will provide services covered by performance

 

bonds.

 

     (2) The authority shall not proceed with privatization of

 

services under this section unless it establishes a cost savings of

 

at least 10% of the cost of using employees of the authority to

 

provide the services.

 

     Enacting section 1. Sections 4a and 4b of the metropolitan

 

transportation authority act of 1967, 1967 PA 204, MCL 124.404a and

 

124.404b, are repealed.

 

     Enacting section 2. This act does not take effect unless all

 

of the following bills of the 96th Legislature are enacted into

 

law:

 

     (a) Senate Bill No. 444.                                   

 

           

 

     (b) Senate Bill No. 445.