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QZAB
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U.S. Department
of Education
Qualified Zone Academy
Bonds —
Technical Background
In 1997, recognizing the urgent need for
greater investment in schools, Congress created a new financial instrument,
the Qualified Zone Academy Bond (QZAB), to help schools raise funds to:
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Renovate and Repair buildings
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Invest in Equipment and Up to Date Technology
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Develop Challenging Curricula
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Train Quality Teachers
QZABs also encourage schools and businesses
to cooperate in innovative ways that expand students' learning opportunities
and help schools prepare students with the kinds of skills employers, and
our nation, need to compete in the global economy. At least 21 states are
currently using, or planning to issue, QZABs and an additional five states
are exploring their use.
Can Schools Still
Use Qualified Zone Academy Bonds? What are the recent changes?
States and school districts were first
authorized to use QZABs under the Taxpayers' Relief Act of 1997. These
bonds have already been used to improve schools in such diverse locations
as Pomona, CA; Little Axe, OK; Houston, TX and Norfolk, VA. Last year,
Congress and the President extended the program through 2000 and 2001 to
support an additional $400 million of improvements in schools across the
country in each of these years. The new bonds authorized for 2000 and 2001
must be issued after two years; thus bonds authorized for 2000 must be
issued by December 31, 2002 and bonds authorized for 2001 must be issued
December 31, 2003. The existing bonds for 1998 and 1999 must now be issued
after three years; thus, bonds authorized for 1998 must be issued by December
31, 2001, and bonds authorized in 1999 must be issued by December 31, 2002.
How Do Qualified
Zone Academy Bonds Work?
Schools usually fund large projects, like
building renovation or construction, through debt mechanisms such as tax-exempt
bonds or loans. School districts must then pay a substantial amount of
interest on this debt. For schools serving low income students, QZABs reduce
the burden of interest payments by giving financial institutions holding
the bonds (or other debt mechanism) a tax credit in lieu of interest. The
school district must still pay back the amount of money it initially borrowed,
but does not have to pay any interest -- typically about half the cost
of renovating a school. The credit rate for QZABs sold on a given day are
set by the Treasury Department
Who Receives Qualified
Zone Academy Bonds?
Each state is allotted an amount of money
its schools may borrow using QZABs (the allocation formula is based on
state percentages of the national population of individuals with incomes
below the poverty line). States have the flexibility to choose their own
processes to award bond authority to qualified schools. A qualified school
is one that is located in an Empowerment Zone or Enterprise Community or
has at least 35% of its students eligible for free or reduced price school
lunch. The two alternative criteria allow both rural and urban schools
serving poor children to benefit from QZABs.
In addition, a qualified school must
develop a partnership with a business and private entities must make a
contribution to the school worth at least 10% of the money borrowed using
the QZAB. The private entities must provide written commitments as their
contributions. These contributions can take many forms:
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Cash
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Goods, including equipment and technology
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Services, including help developing curriculum
or using technology
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Internships or field trips that provide
opportunities for students to learn outside a traditional classroom setting.
The business or other private entity does
not simply make a donation to the school. The school and the businesses
become partners who create a plan together for how their combined efforts
can improve student education.
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