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Section III Pain & Agony (Reality Check) in Accessing Capital Financing A. General Recommendations to Consider Prior to Seeking Formal Financing
B. Lessons Learned or Project Construction and Funding Hints NOTE: Some Hints are Applicable to any Project I. Organize the project and the related funding process. Typical points to consider are listed below. Not every point is required for every project, it depends on the nature of the project and the requirements of the funding organization and the underwriter.
II. During the legal due diligence process, the attorneys will need a large amount of hospital information. Ask the lawyers to give you a common list of information they want to review, and schedule a document review session by all legal counsel during the same day at the hospital, rather than on multiple dates for individual attorneys. If one attorney identifies a matter of concern, all attorneys should agree on a proposed course of action to resolve that issue on the day due diligence is being conducted at the hospital. III. Select experienced advisors who have been involved in similar projects and financings before. There is a close-knit fraternity of advisors who work well together. While these advisors may appear to be more expensive, they have working relationships that help facilitate the transaction in an orderly and a timely way. Delaying a project for several months may increase the cost of construction and increase financing costs, not to mention your frustration. The least-costly advisor may be the most expensive advisor in the end. IV. Experienced advisors know many of the pitfalls of financings, and do not want to be associated with a bad financing. Neither do you. Talk candidly with your advisors about your financing concerns. They are working for the hospital and will try to find appropriate ways to accomplish your desires.V. On occasion, property not used in hospital operations does not need to serve as collateral for a loan. For example, rental houses around the hospital being held for possible future development might be excluded from the financing collateral, as they are not necessary for hospital operations. Excluding this real estate would permit the hospital to sell these properties more easily in the future should they not be needed. VI. Tax-exempt bonds may not be used to fund significant improvements to space used by taxable entities under federal tax laws. This should be taken into account when constructing a project that utilizes tax-exempt funding and contains space used by physicians, proprietary labs, etc. VII. If you dont understand something about the financing, ask to have it explained by one of the hospitals advisors. You will be operating under these financing documents for many years. You need to understand what youre agreeing to before you sign the bond documents. VIII. Dont agree to any computation under the financing documents if you dont know how t to make the computation. Do test calculations using both historical financial information and forecast information to ensure the hospital has enough capacity under the calculations. IX. Prepare a summary of all the covenants the hospital has agreed to under the loan documents. Periodically (at least quarterly) monitor actual performance against these covenants. You may need to adjust hospital operations mid-year to meet bond covenants. X. If you incur new debt after the financing transaction, or sell property, make sure you are doing so under the terms of these financing documents. Remember, capital leases impact your debt service coverage ratio. XI. If you think you have a bond covenant violation, talk with your legal counsel or accountant. Deal with these issues proactively. No organization associated with the hospital wants a financing failure. They will work with you to solve a problem. XII. The end of the funding process is the sale of the bonds. Immediately after the bonds are sold, sign contracts for construction. Dont sign a construction contract until you are sure the hospital has the money in place to pay for the construction.XIII. Should cost overruns occur, there might be an opportunity for issuing additional bonds. Seek information from bond counsel or your financial advisor to understand this possibility. Additional bonds are not an additional source of funding. They are an emergency funding source. XIV. Ensure the project planning includes conservative contingency costs during early feasibility analysis (initially 15%). This contingency can be reduced when final project plans are available. A rule of thumb is that when the construction drawings are completed and bid, the hospital has a 5% contingency on new construction and 7% to 10% contingency on remodeled areas to pay for unanticipated variations from working drawings. XV. Evaluate whether a project manager is needed, or if hospital staff can handle the job. Good project management is a must. Hospital staffs already have full-time jobs, so consider the impact of project management on that individual and the department. XVI. Dont forget soft costs such as sales tax, bond issuance fees and, with revenue bonds, reserve accounts. These can be 20% of the project costs. XVII. Dont forget the hospital may need equipment and technical support after the project is completed. XVIII. During remodels, ensure that equipment being acquired fits through doors and into designed spaces. XIX. The building design and financial footprint should match.
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