House GOP bill would create oversight board for Puerto Rico

House Republicans are preparing legislation to create a new oversight board that would help Puerto Rico control its finances, a move designed to deal with the territory's $70 billion in debt.
The legislation is in response to House Speaker Paul Ryan's promise at the end of last year that the House would work with Puerto Rico to come up with "a responsible solution" by the end of March for the territory's massive debt problems. The House Natural Resources Committee is expected to release the bill publicly on Tuesday.
A draft bill would create a five-person board designed to audit the territory's government and create new fiscal plans and budget measures. According to a summary of the legislation obtained by The Associated Press, the board would not give Puerto Rico the broad bankruptcy authority it has asked for, but would allow the oversight board to decide whether debt restructuring is necessary. If the board decides debt restructuring is needed in some areas and certain conditions are met, it could facilitate court-supervised restructuring.
Puerto Rico, along with the Obama administration and many Democrats in Congress, has pushed for bankruptcy protection, saying it would not cost U.S. taxpayers and is the right thing to do. Some Democrats have been wary of an oversight or control board asserting too much authority over the territory's government.
The summary makes it clear that Republicans oppose giving the island full ability to declare bankruptcy. Like all U.S. states and territories, Puerto Rico cannot declare bankruptcy under federal law — though mainland municipalities and their utilities can, and municipalities and utilities in Puerto Rico cannot. The island's public utilities are heavily indebted.
The document says that allowing the island to declare bankruptcy could harm U.S. taxpayers who have invested in Puerto Rican bonds, undercut efforts to reform the territory's "irresponsible fiscal policies" and make it harder for Puerto Rico to access capital markets in the future.
In a statement, Pedro Pierluisi, Puerto Rico's non-voting representative in Congress, said the draft bill "represents a very serious effort to address a very serious problem." Pierluisi endorsed the idea of a control board and its ability to facilitate some debt restructuring.
Still, he said he believes the proposal may give the oversight board too much control. "For the board to be effective in achieving its goals, it must have teeth but not fangs," Pierluisi said.
He did not detail his concerns and said he would not discuss them until the legislation is public.
Puerto Rico has been mired in economic stagnation for nearly a decade. The territory's financial problems grew worse as a result of setbacks in the wider U.S. economy, and government spending in Puerto Rico continued unchecked as borrowing covered increasing deficits. Almost 10 percent of Puerto Rico's 3.4 million residents have left, and hundreds of businesses have closed.
Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla has said the island is headed for a humanitarian crisis. If the government isn't able to restructure its debt, Puerto Rico will have to start laying off police officers, firefighters, medical professionals and other public employees, officials say.
Utah Rep. Rob Bishop, the Republican chairman of the Natural Resources Committee, has worked with the territory and the Obama administration in drafting the legislation. But Bishop has expressed concerns that the territory hasn't turned over audited financial statements, saying the only way to obtain them is through a strong control board.
"There is broad agreement that the Puerto Rican government lacks the capacity to affect change over its finances," Bishop said after a February hearing on the issue.
A spokesman for Bishop said the legislation will be released next week. A committee vote is expected in April.
Three Senate committees introduced legislation in December that also would create an authority to oversee the territory's finances, but none of the panels have yet considered it. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has not said if the Senate will move a bill.
Meanwhile, this week the Supreme Court heard arguments over whether the island's financially struggling public utilities should be allowed to restructure their debt. Puerto Rico lawmakers passed their own law in 2014 to help cash-strapped utilities meet obligations to bondholders and creditors. But a federal district court agreed with creditors in ruling that the local measure is not allowed under federal bankruptcy law. The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed.
Follow Mary Clare Jalonick on Twitter athttp://twitter.com/mcjalonick




FILE - Puerto Rico's resident line up to vote during the U.S. territory's Republican primary at the Santurce county in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Sunday March 6, 2016. House Republicans are preparing legislation to create a new oversight board that would help Puerto Rico control its finances, a move designed to deal with the territory's $70 billion in debt.
Carlos Giusti, Associated Press
By Mary Clare Jalonick

House GOP bill would create oversight board for Puerto Rico

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