Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Statutory
provision. The commissioner of education must administer the guarantee program
for school district bonds according to the provisions of Texas Education Code
(TEC), Chapter 45, Subchapter C.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions
apply to the guarantee program for school district bonds.
(1) Annual debt service--payments of
principal and interest on outstanding bonded debt scheduled to occur between
September 1 and August 31 during the fiscal year in which the guarantee is
sought as reported by the Municipal Advisory Council (MAC) of Texas or its
successor, if the district has outstanding bonded indebtedness.
(A) The annual debt service will be
determined by the current report of the bonded indebtedness of the district as
reported by the MAC of Texas or its successor as of the date of the application
deadline.
(B) The annual debt
service does not include:
(i) the amount of
debt service to be paid on the bonds for which the reservation is sought;
or
(ii) the amount of debt service
attributable to any debt that is no longer outstanding at the application
deadline, provided that the Texas Education Agency (TEA) has sufficient
evidence of the discharge or defeasance of such debt.
(C) Solely for the purpose of this
calculation, the debt service amounts for variable rate bonds will be those
that are published in the final official statement, or if there is no official
statement, debt service amounts based on the maximum rate permitted by the bond
order or other bond proceeding that establishes a maximum interest rate for the
bonds.
(2) Application
deadline--the last business day of the month in which an application for a
guarantee is filed. Applications must be submitted electronically through the
website of the MAC of Texas or its successor by 5:00 p.m. on the last business
day of the month to be considered in that month's application
processing.
(3) Average daily
attendance (ADA)--total refined average daily attendance as defined by TEC,
§
42.005.
(4) Bond--a debt security issuance approved
by the attorney general, issued under TEC, §
45.003 or §
45.004, to provide
long-term financing with a maturity schedule of at least three years.
(5) Bond Guarantee Program (BGP)--the
guarantee program that is described by this section and established under TEC,
Chapter 45, Subchapter C.
(6) Bond
order--the order adopted by the governing body of a school district that
authorizes the issuance of bonds and the pricing certificate, if any,
establishing the terms of the bonds executed pursuant to such order.
(7) Combination issue--an issuance of bonds
for which an application for a guarantee is filed that includes both a new
money portion and a refunding portion, as permitted by the Texas Government
Code, Chapter 1207. The eligibility of combination issues for the guarantee is
limited by the eligibility of the new money and refunding portions as defined
in this subsection.
(8) Enrollment
growth--growth in student enrollment, as defined by §
129.1025 of this title (relating
to Adoption by Reference: Student Attendance Accounting Handbook), that has
occurred over the previous five school years.
(9) Nationally recognized investment rating
firm--an investment rating firm that is designated by the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission as a nationally recognized statistical
rating organization (NRSRO) and is demonstrating that it has:
(A) had its current NRSRO designation for at
least three consecutive years;
(B)
provided credit ratings to each of the following:
(i) fifteen or more fixed income securities
denominated in United States dollars and issued during the immediately
preceding three years; and
(ii) ten
or more school districts in the United States; and
(C) a documented separation of duties between
employees involved in credit analysis and employees involved in business
relationships with clients.
(10) New money issue--an issuance of bonds
for the purposes of constructing, renovating, acquiring, and equipping school
buildings; the purchase of property; or the purchase of school buses. An
issuance of bonds for the purpose of constructing teacher or student housing is
eligible for the guarantee for new money only if it is an integral part of the
educational mission of the school district as determined by the commissioner.
Eligibility for the guarantee for new money issues is limited to the issuance
of bonds authorized under TEC, §
45.003. A new money
issue does not include the issuance of bonds to purchase a facility from a
public facility corporation created by the school district or to purchase any
property that is currently under a lease-purchase contract under the Local
Government Code, Chapter 271, Subchapter A. A new money issue does not include
an issuance of bonds to refinance any type of maintenance tax-supported debt.
Maintenance tax-supported debt includes, but is not limited to:
(A) time warrants or loans entered under TEC,
Chapter 45, Subchapter E; or
(B)
any other type of loan or warrant that is not supported by bond taxes as
defined by TEC, §
45.003.
(11) Notes issued to provide
interim financing--an issuance of notes, including commercial paper notes,
designed to provide short-term financing for the purposes of constructing,
renovating, acquiring, and equipping school buildings; the purchase of
property; or the purchase of school buses. For notes to be eligible for the
guarantee under this section, the notes must be:
(A) issued to pay costs for which bonds have
been authorized at an election occurring before the issuance of the
notes;
(B) approved by the attorney
general or issued in accordance with proceedings that have been approved by the
attorney general; and
(C) refunded
by bonds issued to provide long-term financing no more than three years from
the date of issuance of such notes, provided that the date of issuance of notes
will be determined by reference to the date on which the notes were issued for
capital expenditures and the intervening date or dates of issuance of any notes
issued to refinance outstanding notes will be disregarded.
(12) Refunding issue--an issuance of bonds
for the purpose of refunding bonds, including notes issued to provide interim
financing, that are supported by bond taxes as defined by TEC, §
45.003. Eligibility
for the guarantee for refunding issues is limited to refunding issues that
refund bonds, including notes issued to provide interim financing, that were
authorized by a bond election under TEC, §
45.003.
(13) Total debt service--total outstanding
principal and interest on bonded debt.
(A) The
total debt service will be determined by the current report of the bonded
indebtedness of the district as reported by the MAC of Texas or its successor
as of the date of the application deadline, if the district has outstanding
bonded indebtedness.
(B) The total
debt service does not include:
(i) the amount
of debt service to be paid on the bonds for which the reservation is sought;
or
(ii) the amount of debt service
attributable to any debt that is no longer outstanding at the application
deadline, provided that TEA has sufficient evidence of the discharge or
defeasance of such debt.
(C) Solely for the purpose of this
calculation, the debt service amounts for variable rate bonds will be those
that are published in the final official statement, or if there is no official
statement, debt service amounts based on the maximum rate permitted by the bond
order or other bond proceeding that establishes a maximum interest rate for the
bonds.
(c)
Data sources.
(1) The following data sources
will be used for purposes of prioritization:
(A) projected ADA for the current school year
as adopted by the legislature for appropriations purposes;
(B) final property values certified by the
comptroller of public accounts, as described in the Texas Government Code,
Chapter 403, Subchapter M, for the tax year preceding the year in which the
bonds will be issued. If final property values are unavailable, the most recent
projection of property values by the comptroller, as described in the Texas
Government Code, Chapter 403, Subchapter M, will be used;
(C) debt service information reported by the
MAC of Texas or its successor as of the date of the application deadline;
and
(D) enrollment information
reported to the Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS) for the
five-year time period ending in the year before the application date.
(2) The commissioner may consider
adjustments to data values determined to be erroneous or not reflective of
current conditions before the deadline for receipt of applications for that
application cycle.
(d)
Bond eligibility.
(1) Only those combination,
new money, and refunding issues as defined in subsection (b)(7), (10), and
(12), respectively, of this section are eligible to receive the
guarantee.
(2) Refunding issues
must comply with the following requirements to retain eligibility for the
guarantee for the refunding bonds, except that subparagraph (C) of this
paragraph does not apply to a refunding issue that provides long-term financing
for notes issued to provide interim financing.
(A) As with any district applying for
approval for the guarantee, the district issuing the refunding bonds must meet
the requirements for initial approval specified in subsection (g)(2)(A) of this
section.
(B) The bonds to be
refunded must have been:
(i) previously
guaranteed by the Permanent School Fund (PSF) or approved for credit
enhancement under §
61.1038 of this title (relating to
School District Bond Enhancement Program);
(ii) issued on or after November 1, 2008, and
before January 1, 2010; or
(iii)
issued as notes to provide interim financing as defined in subsection (b)(11)
of this section.
(C) The
district must demonstrate that issuing the refunding bond(s) will result in a
present value savings to the district and that the refunding bond or bonds will
not have a maturity date later than the final maturity date of the bonds being
refunded. Present value savings is determined by computing the net present
value of the difference between each scheduled payment on the original bonds
and each scheduled payment on the refunding bonds. Present value savings must
be computed at the true interest cost of the refunding bonds. If the
commissioner approves refunding bonds for the guarantee based on evidence of
present value savings but at the time of the sale of the refunding bonds a
present value savings is not realized, the commissioner may revoke the approval
of the bonds for the guarantee.
(D)
The refunding transaction must comply with the provisions of subsection
(g)(4)(A)-(C) of this section.
(3) If a district files an application for a
combination issue, the application will be treated as an application for a
single issue for the purposes of eligibility for the guarantee. A guarantee for
the combination issue will be awarded only if both the new money portion and
the refunding portion meet all of the applicable eligibility requirements
described in this section. As part of its application, the applicant district
must present data that demonstrate compliance for both the new money portion of
the issue and the refunding portion of the issue.
(4) If the commissioner determines that an
applicant has deliberately misrepresented information related to a bond issue
to secure a guarantee, the commissioner must revoke the approval of the bonds
for the guarantee.
(e)
Determination of PSF capacity to guarantee bonds.
(1) Each month the commissioner will estimate
the available capacity of the PSF. If necessary, the commissioner will confirm
that the PSF has sufficient capacity to guarantee the bonds before the issuance
of the final approval for the guarantee in accordance with subsection (g)(3) of
this section. The calculation of capacity will be based on a multiplier of
three and one-half times the cost value of the PSF with the proviso that under
no circumstances could the capacity of the fund exceed the limits set by
federal regulation. The commissioner may increase or decrease the multiplier to
prudently manage fund capacity and preserve the AAA credit rating of the PSF.
Changes to the multiplier made by the commissioner are to be ratified or
rejected by the State Board of Education (SBOE) at the next meeting for which
the item can be posted.
(2) The
SBOE may establish an amount of capacity to be held in reserve of up to 5.0% of
the fund's capacity. The amount to be held in reserve may be increased or
decreased by a majority vote of the SBOE based on changes in the cost value,
asset allocation, and risk in the portfolio, or may be increased or decreased
by the commissioner as necessary to prudently manage fund capacity and preserve
the AAA credit rating of the PSF. Changes to the amount held in reserve made by
the commissioner are to be ratified or rejected by the SBOE at the next meeting
for which the item can be posted.
(3) The net capacity of the PSF to guarantee
bonds is determined by subtracting the amount to be held in reserve, as
determined under paragraph (2) of this subsection, from the total available
capacity, as described in paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(f) Application process and
application processing.
(1) Application
submission and fee. A district must apply to the commissioner for the guarantee
of eligible bonds or the credit enhancement of eligible bonds as authorized
under §
61.1038 of this title by
submitting an application electronically through the website of the MAC of
Texas or its successor. The district must submit the information required under
TEC, §
45.055(b),
and this section and any additional information the commissioner may require.
The application and all additional information required by the commissioner
must be received before the application will be processed. The district may not
submit an application for a guarantee or credit enhancement before the
successful passage of an authorizing proposition.
(A) The application fee is $1,500.
(B) The fee is due at the time the
application for the guarantee or the credit enhancement is submitted. An
application will not be processed until the fee has been remitted according to
the directions provided on the website of the MAC of Texas or its successor and
received by TEA.
(C) The fee will
not be refunded to a district that:
(i) is not
approved for the guarantee or the credit enhancement; or
(ii) does not sell its bonds before the
expiration of its approval for the guarantee or the credit
enhancement.
(D) The fee
may be transferred to a subsequent application for the guarantee or the credit
enhancement by the district if the district withdraws its application and
submits the subsequent application before the expiration of its approval for
the guarantee or the credit enhancement.
(2) Application prioritization and
processing. Applications will be prioritized based on districts' property
wealth per ADA, with the application of a district with a lower property wealth
per ADA prioritized before that of a district with a higher property wealth per
ADA. Applications may also be prioritized for districts that experience
unforeseen catastrophes or emergencies that require the renovation or
replacement of school facilities as described in TEC, §
44.031(h).
All applications received during a calendar month will be held until up to the
15th business day of the subsequent month. On or before the 15th business day
of each month, the commissioner will announce the results of the prioritization
and process applications for initial approval for the guarantee, up to the
available net capacity as of the application deadline, subject to the
requirements of this section.
(A) Approval for
guarantees will be awarded each month beginning with the districts with the
lowest property wealth per ADA until the PSF reaches its net capacity to
guarantee bonds.
(B) Approval for
guarantees will be awarded based on the fund's capacity to fully guarantee the
bond issue for which the guarantee is sought. Applications for bond issues that
cannot be fully guaranteed will not receive an award. The amount of bond issue
for which the guarantee was requested may not be modified after the monthly
application deadline for the purposes of securing the guarantee during the
award process. If PSF net capacity has been exhausted, the commissioner will
process the application for approval of the credit enhancement as specified in
§
61.1038 of this title.
(C) The actual guarantee of the bonds is
subject to the approval process prescribed in subsection (g) of this
section.
(D) An applicant school
district is ineligible for consideration for the guarantee if its lowest credit
rating from any nationally recognized investment rating firm as defined in
subsection (b)(9) of this section is the same as or higher than that of the
PSF.
(3) Late
application. An application received after the application deadline will be
considered a valid application for the subsequent month, unless withdrawn by
the submitting district before the end of the subsequent month.
(4) Notice of application status. Each
district that submits a valid application will be notified of the application
status within 15 business days of the application deadline.
(5) Reapplication. If a district does not
receive approval for the guarantee or for any reason does not receive approval
of the bonds from the attorney general within the time period specified in
subsection (g)(4) of this section, the district may reapply in a subsequent
month. Applications that were denied approval for the guarantee will not be
retained for consideration in subsequent months.
(g) Approval for the guarantee; district
responsibilities on receipt of approval.
(1)
Initial and final approval provisions.
(A) If,
during the monthly estimation of PSF capacity described in subsection (e)(1) of
this section, the commissioner determines that the available capacity of the
PSF is 10% or less, the commissioner may require an applicant school district
to obtain final approval for the guarantee as described in paragraph (3) of
this subsection.
(B) If the
commissioner has not made such a determination:
(i) the commissioner will consider the
initial approval described in paragraph (2) of this subsection as both the
initial and final approval; and
(ii) an applicant school district that has
received notification of initial approval for the guarantee, as described in
paragraph (2) of this subsection, may consider that notification as
notification of initial and final approval for the guarantee and may complete
the sale of the applicable bonds.
(2) Initial approval.
(A) The following provisions apply to all
applications for the guarantee, regardless of whether an application is for a
new money, refunding, or combination issue. Under TEC, §
45.056, the
commissioner will investigate the applicant school district's accreditation
status and financial status. A district must be accredited and financially
sound to be eligible for initial approval by the commissioner. The
commissioner's review will include the following:
(i) the purpose of the bond issue;
(ii) the district's accreditation status as
defined by §
97.1055 of this title (relating to
Accreditation Status) in accordance with the following:
(I) if the district's accreditation status is
Accredited, the district will be eligible for consideration for the
guarantee;
(II) if the district's
accreditation status is Accredited-Warned or Accredited-Probation, the
commissioner will investigate the underlying reason for the accreditation
rating to determine whether the accreditation rating is related to the
district's financial soundness. If the accreditation rating is related to the
district's financial soundness, the district will not be eligible for
consideration for the guarantee; or
(III) if the district's accreditation status
is Not Accredited-Revoked, the district will not be eligible for consideration
for the guarantee;
(iii)
the district's compliance with statutes and rules of TEA; and
(iv) the district's financial status and
stability, regardless of the district's accreditation rating, including
approval of the bonds by the attorney general under the provisions of TEC,
§
45.0031 and §
45.005.
(B) The following limitation
applies to applications for new money issues of bonds for which the election
authorizing the issuance of the bonds was called after July 15, 2004. The
commissioner will limit approval for the guarantee to a district that has, at
the time of the application for the guarantee, less than 90% of the annual debt
service of the district with the highest annual debt service per ADA, as
determined by the commissioner annually, or less than 90% of the total debt
service of the district with the highest total debt service per ADA, as
determined by the commissioner annually. The limitation will not apply to
school districts that have enrollment growth, as defined in subsection (b)(8)
of this section, of at least 25%, based on PEIMS data on enrollment available
at the time of application. The annual debt service amount is the amount
defined by subsection (b)(1) of this section. The total debt service amount is
the amount defined by subsection (b)(13) of this section.
(C) The commissioner will grant or deny
initial approval for the guarantee based on the review described in
subparagraph (A) of this paragraph and the limitation described in subparagraph
(B) of this paragraph and will provide an applicant district whose application
has received initial approval for the guarantee written notice of initial
approval.
(3) Final
approval. The provisions of this paragraph apply only as described in paragraph
(1) of this subsection. A district must receive final approval before
completing the sale of the bonds for which the district has received
notification of initial approval.
(A) A
district that has received initial approval must provide a written notice to
TEA two business days before issuing a preliminary official statement (POS) for
the bonds that are eligible for the guarantee or two business days before
soliciting investment offers, if the bonds will be privately placed without the
use of a POS.
(i) The district must receive
written confirmation from TEA that the capacity continues to be available
before proceeding with the public or private offer to sell bonds.
(ii) TEA will provide this notification
within one business day of receiving the notice of the POS or notice of other
solicitation offers to sell the bonds.
(B) A district that received confirmation
from TEA in accordance with subparagraph (A) of this paragraph must provide
written notice to TEA of the placement of an item to approve the bond sale on
the agenda of a meeting of the school board of trustees no later than two
business days before the meeting. If the bond sale is completed pursuant to a
delegation by the board to a pricing officer or committee, notice must be given
to TEA no later than two business days before the execution of a bond purchase
agreement by such pricing officer or committee.
(i) The district must receive written
confirmation from TEA that the capacity continues to be available for the bond
sale before the approval of the sale by the school board of trustees or by the
pricing officer or committee.
(ii)
TEA will provide this notification within one business day before the date that
the district expects to complete the sale by official action of the board or of
a pricing officer or committee.
(C) TEA will process requests for final
approval from districts that have received initial approval on a first come,
first served basis. Requests for final approval must be received before the
expiration of the initial approval.
(D) A district may provide written
notification as required by this paragraph by facsimile transmission or by
email in a manner prescribed by the commissioner.
(4) District responsibilities on receipt of
approval.
(A) Once a district is awarded
initial approval for the guarantee, each issuance of the bonds must be approved
by the attorney general within 180 days of the date of the letter granting the
approval for the guarantee. The initial approval for the guarantee will expire
at the end of the 180-day period. The commissioner may extend the 180-day
period, based on extraordinary circumstances, on receiving a written request
from the district or the attorney general before the expiration of the 180-day
period.
(B) If the bonds are not
approved by the attorney general within 180 days of the date of the letter
granting the approval for the guarantee, the commissioner will consider the
application withdrawn, and the district must reapply for a guarantee.
(C) If applicable, the district must comply
with the provisions for final approval described in paragraph (3) of this
subsection to maintain approval for the guarantee.
(D) A district may not represent bonds as
guaranteed for the purpose of pricing or marketing the bonds before the date of
the letter granting approval for the guarantee.
(h) Financial exigency. The following
provisions describe how a declaration of financial exigency under §
109.2001 of this title (relating
to Financial Exigency) affects a district's application for guarantee approval
or a district's previously granted approval.
(1) Application for guarantee of new money
issue. The commissioner will deny approval of an application for the guarantee
of a new money issue if the applicant school district has declared a state of
financial exigency for the district's current fiscal year. The denial of
approval will be in effect for the duration of the applicable fiscal year
unless the district can demonstrate financial stability.
(2) Approval granted before declaration. If
in a given district's fiscal year the commissioner grants approval for the
guarantee of a new money issue and the school district subsequently declares a
state of financial exigency for that same fiscal year, the district must
immediately notify the commissioner and may not offer the bonds for sale unless
the commissioner determines that the district may proceed.
(3) Application for guarantee of refunding
issue. The commissioner will consider an application for the guarantee of a
refunding issue that meets all applicable requirements specified in this
section even if the applicant school district has declared a state of financial
exigency for the district's current fiscal year. In addition to fulfilling all
applicable requirements specified in this section, the applicant school
district must also describe, in its application, the reason financial exigency
was declared and how the refunding issue will support the district's financial
recovery plan.
(i)
Allocation of specific holdings. If necessary to successfully operate the BGP,
the commissioner may allocate specific holdings of the PSF to specific bond
issues guaranteed under this section. This allocation will not prejudice the
right of the SBOE to dispose of the holdings according to law and requirements
applicable to the fund; however, the SBOE will ensure that holdings of the PSF
are available for a substitute allocation sufficient to meet the purposes of
the initial allocation. This allocation will not affect any rights of the bond
holders under law.
(j) Defeasance.
The guarantee will be completely removed when bonds guaranteed by the BGP are
defeased, and such a provision must be specifically stated in the bond order.
If bonds guaranteed by the BGP are defeased, the district must notify the
commissioner in writing within ten calendar days of the action.
(k) Bonds issued before August 15, 1993. For
bonds issued before August 15, 1993, a school district seeking the guarantee of
eligible bonds must certify that, on the date of issuance of any bond, no funds
received by the district from the Available School Fund (ASF) are reasonably
expected to be used directly or indirectly to pay the principal or interest on,
or the tender or retirement price of, any bond of the political subdivision or
to fund a reserve or placement fund for any such bond.
(l) Bonds guaranteed before December 1, 1993.
For bonds guaranteed before December 1, 1993, if a school district cannot pay
the maturing or matured principal or interest on a guaranteed bond, the
commissioner will cause the amount needed to pay the principal or interest to
be transferred to the district's paying agent solely from the PSF and not from
the ASF. The commissioner also will direct the comptroller of public accounts
to withhold the amount paid, plus interest, from the first state money payable
to the district, excluding payments from the ASF.
(m) Bonds issued after August 15, 1993, and
guaranteed on or after December 1, 1993. If a school district cannot pay the
maturing or matured principal or interest on a guaranteed bond, the
commissioner will cause the amount needed to pay the principal or interest to
be transferred to the district's paying agent from the PSF. The commissioner
also will direct the comptroller of public accounts to withhold the amount
paid, plus interest, from the first state money payable to the district,
regardless of source, including the ASF.
(n) Payments. For purposes of the provisions
of TEC, Chapter 45, Subchapter C, matured principal and interest payments are
limited to amounts due on guaranteed bonds at scheduled maturity, at scheduled
interest payment dates, and at dates when bonds are subject to mandatory
redemption, including extraordinary mandatory redemption, in accordance with
the terms of the bond order. All such payment dates, including mandatory
redemption dates, must be specified in the bond order or other document
pursuant to which the bonds initially are issued. Without limiting the
provisions of this subsection, payments attributable to an optional redemption
or a right granted to a bondholder to demand payment on a tender of such bonds
according to the terms of the bonds do not constitute matured principal and
interest payments.
(o) Guarantee
restrictions. The guarantee provided for eligible bonds under the provisions of
TEC, Chapter 45, Subchapter C, is restricted to matured bond principal and
interest. The guarantee applies to all matured interest on eligible bonds,
whether the bonds were issued with a fixed or variable interest rate and
whether the interest rate changes as a result of an interest reset provision or
other bond order provision requiring an interest rate change. The guarantee
does not extend to any obligation of a district under any agreement with a
third party relating to bonds that is defined or described in state law as a
"bond enhancement agreement" or a "credit agreement," unless the right to
payment of such third party is directly as a result of such third party being a
bondholder.
(p) Notice of default.
A school district that has determined that it is or will be unable to pay
maturing or matured principal or interest on a guaranteed bond must
immediately, but not later than the fifth business day before maturity date,
notify the commissioner.
(q)
Payment from PSF.
(1) Immediately after the
commissioner receives the notice described in subsection (p) of this section,
the commissioner will instruct the comptroller to transfer from the appropriate
account in the PSF to the district's paying agent the amount necessary to pay
the maturing or matured principal or interest.
(2) Immediately after receipt of the funds
for payment of the principal or interest, the paying agent must pay the amount
due and forward the canceled bond or coupon to the comptroller. The comptroller
will hold the canceled bond or coupon on behalf of the PSF.
(3) Following full reimbursement to the PSF
with interest, the comptroller will further cancel the bond or coupon and
forward it to the school district for which payment was made. Interest will be
charged at the rate determined under the Texas Government Code, §
2251.025(b).
Interest will accrue as specified in the Texas Government Code, §
2251.025(a) and
(c).
(r) Bonds not accelerated on default. If a
school district fails to pay principal or interest on a guaranteed bond when it
matures, other amounts not yet mature are not accelerated and do not become due
by virtue of the school district's default.
(s) Reimbursement of PSF. If payment from the
PSF is made on behalf of a school district, the school district must reimburse
the amount of the payment, plus interest, in accordance with the requirements
of TEC, §
45.061.
(t) Repeated failure to pay. If a total of
two or more payments are made under the BGP or the credit enhancement program
authorized under §
61.1038 of this title on the bonds
of a school district, the commissioner will take action in accordance with the
provisions of TEC, §
45.062.