The
Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority is a port authority financing and/or operating
air, rail, trucking, and port facilities,
as well as supporting and funding economic development activities in
Lucas
County
, located in northwest
Ohio and bordering on southeast
Michigan.
Mission
The Port Authority's mission is to: "assure that the Toledo area's
water, air, rail, and surface transportation assets are developed
and operated in a cohesive, coordinated and safe manner in order to
provide maximum efficiencies and benefits to shippers, receivers,
and passengers; to assure optimum business growth, technology
development, investment, job retention and improvement in quality
of life."
Transportation facilities
Airports
The Port Authority operates two airports.
Toledo Express
Airport
is the region's commercial aviation hub, with large
air cargo facilities as well as airline
service. Toledo Metcalf Field
was formerly the commercial aviation field, and now
serves air charter, air cargo, corporate
aviation, and general aviation
operations.
Rail terminals
The
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Plaza
serves up to 100,000 Amtrak
rail passengers each year, making it Ohio’s busiest passenger rail
hub. In 1996, the Port Authority spent $8.5 million
renovating the facility and it now serves as an intermodal train
and bus terminal with office space above. Additionally, five
freight railroads (
Ann Arbor
Railroad,
Canadian
National Railway,
CSX
Transportation,
Norfolk
Southern Railway, and
Wheeling and Lake Erie
Railway) move freight through the region. With several
railyards loading
petroleum products, automotive parts, completed
automobiles,
bulk and
break-bulk
cargo, and food products, Toledo ranks as one of the top five
rail hubs in the U.S.
Trucking terminals
43% of U.S. industrial markets and 47% of Canadian industrial
markets lie within 500 miles of Toledo. Due to its location and the
development of the
Interstate
highway system, nearly 100 local freight carriers have
facilities in Northwest Ohio. Port Authority facilities such as
Toledo Express Airport and the Port of Toledo provide direct access
to major highways including
Interstate
75 and the
Ohio Turnpike (
Interstate 80/
90), as well as
U.S.
24 which provides direct access to Indianapolis
via Fort Wayne, Indiana
.
Port of Toledo
The
Port of Toledo is a large Great Lakes
port located at the western end of Lake Erie
. It provides
intermodal access to rail and trucking resources,
as well as
Big Lucas and
Little Lucas, two of the largest cranes of any
port on the Great Lakes.
,
Economic development
Development financing
The Port Authority provides business financing, having assisted
more than 225 economic development projects representing a total
investment of more than $1.3 Billion and resulting in the creation
and retention of more than 13,000 jobs. It provides the following
financing options:
- Fixed Interest Rate Revenue Bonds provide smaller companies access to
capital markets as if they were
BBB- investment-grade companies.
It may provide:
- Financing for projects from $1 million to $8 million
- Fixed interest rates for full term of the bonds
- Typically 90% financing and 10% equity
- 20-year financing for land and buildings
- 7- or 10-year financing for equipment
- Tax exempt bonds for manufacturing,
non-profit 501,
and governmental operations
- Taxable bonds for all other projects
- Off-Balance Sheet
Transactions provide large, publicly traded companies and
certain non-profit organizations with significant benefits. Neither
the asset nor the liability associated with the project appears on
their balance sheet. The Port Authority owns the facility and
leases it. The Financial Accounting Standards Board has
strengthened the conditions needed to be met to keep a lease
off-balance sheet, and Port Authority transactions are structured
to meet those new requirements. The Port Authority has completed 16
off-balance sheet transactions for companies such as BAX Global, Owens
Corning, HCR Manor Care, and
Brush Wellman. Such
transactions remain a viable option for certain entities. Benefits
include:
- Possible 100% financing
- Lower cost of construction
- Flexible options to purchase or extend lease
- Governmental, Operating, and Financing Leases available
- Infrastructure Financing helps developers, governmental
entities and other organizations finance public infrastructure such
as streets, utilities, and public parking facilities. Mixed-use
developments can tap tax increment financing or special assessments
to provide debt service payments. The Port Authority has provided $75
million in tax exempt bond financing for infrastructure for Crocker
Park, a mixed use facility in Westlake, Ohio
. Other benefits include:
- Possibility of 100% financing
- Lower cost of construction
- Fixed interest rate, tax exempt financing
- Terms of up to 32 years
- Ohio 166 Regional Loan Program provides a low interest rate
program for financing land, building, and equipment for projects in
Lucas, Wood, Fulton, Henry, Ottawa, Sandusky, Williams, Defiance,
Seneca, and Erie Counties. It offers:
- Up to 40% of project costs for manufacturing,
manufacturing-related, distribution, and research and development
businesses
- Loans of up to $350,000, based on about $35,000 for each job
created or retained.
- A term of five to 15 years
- Current fixed interest rate of 4%.
- Small Business
Administration 504 loan program may provide fixed asset funding
for a for-profit business with a net worth of not more than $7
million and net after-tax profit of not more than $2.5 million. A
typical transaction consists of 50% bank financing; 40% SBA; and
10% equity. The SBA takes a second collateral position. This
program is available from the Port Authority throughout Ohio and
Southern Michigan. Benefits include:
- Up to 40% of project costs for any manufacturing, distribution,
or commercial operation.
- Maximum loan of $1,000,000; up to $1,300,000 if the projects
meets certain specific federal government policy objectives
- Term of either 10-years or 20-years
- Fixed interest rate at or slightly below market rate.
Revenue Bond Territory is not limited to the Port Authority taxing
jurisdiction, but includes any county in the State of Ohio.
Land development
The Port Authority acquires and disposes of
real property to facilitate the growth and
development of its transportation assets. It also leases parcels it
owns in order to promote economic development. The Port Authority
also administers a
Foreign Trade
Zone, anarea physically located in the United States, but
considered outside the jurisdiction of
U.S. Customs
duties. Because of the zone’s unique trade
designation, goods can be stored, exhibited, repackaged,
manipulated, manufactured, or mixed with other foreign/domestic
merchandise within the zone — duty free. Duty is paid only when
goods are moved out of the FTZ into the United States.
References