State of Florida Division of Bond Finance Notice

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

State of Florida Division of Bond Finance Notice State of Florida Division of Bond Finance Notice The following Official Statement is placed on the internet as a matter of convenience only and does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy bonds. Although the information has been formatted in a manner which should exactly replicate the printed Official Statement, physical appearance may differ due to electronic communication difficulties or particular user equipment. In order to assure accuracy, users should obtain a copy of and refer to the printed Official Statement. The user of this Official Statement assumes the risk of any discrepancies between the printed Official Statement and the electronic version of this document. Copies of the printed Official Statement may be obtained from: Florida Division of Bond Finance 1801 Hermitage Boulevard Suite 200 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (850) 488-4782 Fax: (850) 413-1315 New Issue - Book-Entry Only This Official Statement has been prepared by the Division of Bond Finance to provide information about the 2012A Bonds. Selected information is presented on this cover page for the convenience of the reader. To make an informed decision, a prospective investor should read this Official Statement in its entirety. Unless otherwise indicated, capitalized terms have the meanings given in Appendix A. $26,500,000 STATE OF FLORIDA Board of Governors University of Florida Dormitory Revenue Bonds, Series 2012A Dated: Date of Delivery Due: July 1, as shown on the inside front cover Bond Ratings AA Fitch Ratings Aa2 Moody’s Investors Service AA- Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services Tax Status In the opinion of Bond Counsel, interest on the 2012A Bonds will be excluded from gross income for federal income tax purposes and will not be an item of tax preference for purposes of the federal alternative minimum tax imposed on individuals and corporations. However, interest on the 2012A Bonds will be taken into account in determining adjusted current earnings for purposes of computing the alternative minimum tax on corporations. The 2012A Bonds and the income thereon are not subject to taxation under the laws of the State of Florida, except estate taxes and taxes under Chapter 220, Florida Statutes, as amended. See “TAX MATTERS” herein for a description of other tax consequences to holders of the 2012A Bonds. Redemption The 2012A Bonds maturing on or after July 1, 2022 are subject to optional redemption as provided herein. The 2012A Bonds maturing on July 1, 2031 are subject to mandatory redemption as provided herein. Security The 2012A Bonds will be secured by and payable from the Pledged Revenues, which consist of the revenues of the Housing System after deducting the Current Expenses and amounts required for the Prior Lien Obligations. The 2012A Bonds are not secured by the full faith and credit of the State of Florida or the University. Lien Priority The lien of the 2012A Bonds on the Pledged Revenues will be on a parity with the Outstanding Parity Bonds and any subsequently issued Additional Parity Bonds, of which $75,965,000 will be Outstanding subsequent to the issuance of the 2012A Bonds, and will be junior and subordinate to the Prior Lien Obligations, of which $525,000 is currently Outstanding. Additional Parity Bonds Additional Parity Bonds payable on a parity with the 2012A Bonds and the Outstanding Parity Bonds may be issued if the average Pledged Revenues for the two immediately preceding fiscal years, as adjusted, are at least 125% of the Maximum Annual Debt Service. This description of the requirements for the issuance of the Additional Parity Bonds is only a summary of the complete requirements. See "SECURITY FOR THE 2012A BONDS - Additional Parity Bonds" herein for more complete information. Purpose Proceeds will be used to finance the 2012A Project and to pay costs of issuance. Interest Payment Dates January 1 and July 1, commencing January 1, 2013. Record Dates December 15 and June 15. Form/Denomination The 2012A Bonds will initially be registered in the name of Cede & Co., as nominee of The Depository Trust Company, New York, New York (“DTC”). Individual purchases will be made in book-entry form only through Direct Participants (defined herein) in denominations of $1,000 and integral multiples thereof. Purchasers of the 2012A Bonds will not receive physical delivery of the 2012A Bonds. See “DESCRIPTION OF THE 2012A BONDS.” Closing/Settlement It is anticipated that the 2012A Bonds will be available for delivery through the facilities of DTC in New York, New York on May 10, 2012. Bond Registrar/ Paying Agent U.S. Bank Trust National Association, New York, New York. Bond Counsel Bryant Miller Olive P.A., Tallahassee, Florida. Issuer Contact Division of Bond Finance, (850) 488-4782, [email protected] Maturity Structure The 2012A Bonds will mature on the dates and bear interest at the rates set forth on the inside front cover. April 18, 2012 MATURITY STRUCTURE Initial Principal Interest Price or First Optional Redemption CUSIP© Due Date Amount Rate Yield* Date and Price Serial Bonds 34157TAT3 July 1, 2013 $880,000 2.00% 0.60% - 34157TAU0 July 1, 2014 1,030,000 3.00 0.80 - 34157TAV8 July 1, 2015 1,060,000 4.00 1.00 - 34157TAW6 July 1, 2016 1,105,000 4.00 1.25 - 34157TAX4 July 1, 2017 1,150,000 4.00 1.45 - 34157TAY2 July 1, 2018 1,195,000 4.00 1.70 - 34157TAZ9 July 1, 2019 1,240,000 4.00 2.02 - 34157TBA3 July 1, 2020 1,290,000 4.00 2.30 - 34157TBB1 July 1, 2021 1,345,000 4.00 2.53 - 34157TBC9 July 1, 2022** 1,395,000 4.00 2.70 July 1, 2021 @ 100% 34157TBD7 July 1, 2023 1,450,000 3.00 @100 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBE5 July 1, 2024 1,495,000 3.00 3.11 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBF2 July 1, 2025 1,540,000 3.00 3.25 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBG0 July 1, 2026 1,585,000 3.125 3.35 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBH8 July 1, 2027 1,635,000 3.25 3.45 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBJ4 July 1, 2028 1,690,000 3.375 3.52 July 1, 2021 @ 100 34157TBK1 July 1, 2029 1,745,000 3.50 3.60 July 1, 2021 @ 100 Term Bond 34157TBM7 July 1, 2031 $3,670,000 3.50% 3.68% July 1, 2021 @ 100 ___________________________ * Price and yield information provided by the underwriters. ** The yield on this maturity is calculated to a 100% call on July 1, 2021. © Copyright 2012, American Bankers Association. CUSIP data herein is provided by Standard & Poor's, CUSIP Service Bureau, a division of McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. This data is not intended to create a database and does not serve in any way as a substitute for the CUSIP Services. The State of Florida has not authorized any dealer, broker, salesman or other person to give any information or to make any representations, other than those contained in this Official Statement, and if given or made, such other information or representations must not be relied on. Certain information herein has been obtained from sources other than records of the State of Florida which are believed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness by, and is not to be construed as a representation by the State of Florida. The information and expressions of opinion herein are subject to change without notice, and neither the delivery of this Official Statement nor any sale made hereunder will, under any circumstances, create any implication that there has been no change in the affairs of the State of Florida since the date hereof. This Official Statement does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor will there be any sale of the 2012A Bonds by any person in any jurisdiction in which it is unlawful for such person to make such an offer, solicitation or sale. STATE OFFICIALS BOARD OF GOVERNORS CHAIR VICE CHAIR DEAN COLSON MORTEZA HOSSEINI ______________________________________________________ GOVERNING BOARD OF THE DIVISION OF BOND FINANCE GOVERNOR RICK SCOTT Chairman ATTORNEY GENERAL CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER PAM BONDI JEFF ATWATER Secretary Treasurer COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE ADAM H. PUTNAM ______________________________________________________ J. BEN WATKINS III Director Division of Bond Finance ASHBEL C. WILLIAMS Executive Director and CIO State Board of Administration of Florida BOND COUNSEL Bryant Miller Olive P.A. Tallahassee, Florida [This page intentionally left blank] TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION ............................................................................... 1 AUTHORITY FOR THE ISSUANCE OF THE 2012A BONDS ........................................... 2 General Legal Authority ................................................................... 2 Division of Bond Finance .................................................................. 2 State Board of Administration of Florida....................................................... 2 Board of Governors....................................................................... 2 University Board of Trustees................................................................ 3 Administrative Approval................................................................... 3 DESCRIPTION OF THE 2012A BONDS ............................................................. 4 REDEMPTION PROVISIONS ..................................................................... 4 Optional Redemption...................................................................... 4 Mandatory Redemption.................................................................... 4 Notice of Redemption ..................................................................... 4 PURPOSE OF THE ISSUE.......................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Together for a Safe Campus
    ANNUAL SECURITY AND FIRE SAFETY REPORT • 2019 TOGETHER FOR A SAFE CAMPUS UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA GAINESVILLE CAMPUS• HTTPS://POLICE.UFL.EDU/CLERY/ Together for a Safe Campus: University of Florida Gainesville he University of Florida Police Department, a State of Florida and Nationally and Internationally accredited T law enforcement agency, was established to provide protection and service to the university community. We are committed to the prevention of crime and the protection of life and property; the preservation of peace, order, and safety; the enforcement of all laws and ordinances; and the safeguarding of your constitutional guarantees. The University of Florida Police Department is staffed by highly trained officers and Police Service Technicians (PSTs) who utilize only the very latest tools in the fight against crime to be better prepared to keep the campus community as safe as possible. The University of Florida has an array of services in place to promote an environment that is as crime-free as possible. We encourage you to familiarize yourself with these services and take advantage of them to help make your educational and living experience at the University of Florida as enjoyable and crime-free as possible. I encourage you to contact our Community Services Division at (352) 392-1409 and visit the department’s web site on-line at http://www.police.ufl.edu for additional information on available programs and services. Contents — Chief Linda J. Stump-Kurnick 2 Safety and Security, a Shared Responsibility 3 University of Florida Police Department Safety and Security 5 Reporting Emergencies or Crime It’s a Shared Responsibility on Campus 6 Consumer Information he University of Florida is a public land-grant institution with its main campus 7 Policies Promoting Safety and Security located on 2,000 acres within an urban population of 95,400.
    [Show full text]
  • White House Clasact Thy M
    alumni CLAS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES,notes UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA SPRING 2008 journey to the white house CLASact Thy M. Nguyen is arguably one of the University of Florida’s Thy M. Nguyen most successful young alumni. Graduating a mere seven About CLAS years ago, she has earned an M.A. in strategic studies and B.A., Political Science, 2001 The College of Liberal Arts international economics from Johns Hopkins University, and Sciences at the University and landed a job as a Foreign Affairs Officer in the Bureau of Florida is the largest college for International Security and Nonproliferation. In between assignments in Austria, Vietnam, China, on campus, with more than 700 and Japan, she debriefed Alumni CLASnotes on faculty members responsible her life at the U.S. State Department. for teaching the majority of the university’s core curriculum to at ACn: What does an average day look like for you? least 35,000 students each year. TN: A typical day starts off with checking diplo- matic reporting that has come in overnight from CLAS has more than 12,000 around the world concerning the key countries undergraduate students pursuing and issues I cover. Then I check to see whether a variety of disciplines through I have been assigned to draft any briefing its 42 majors and 42 minors. Ad- materials for my bureau leadership or depart- ment principals to prepare them for meetings, ditionally, nearly 2,000 graduate hearings, and high-level visits. Generally this students are attaining advanced includes briefing papers, press guidance, pre- degrees in the college.
    [Show full text]
  • Partial Differential Equations
    CALENDAR OF AMS MEETINGS THIS CALENDAR lists all meetings which have been approved by the Council pnor to the date this issue of the Nouces was sent to press. The summer and annual meetings are joint meetings of the Mathematical Association of America and the Ameri· can Mathematical Society. The meeting dates which fall rather far in the future are subject to change; this is particularly true of meetings to which no numbers have yet been assigned. Programs of the meetings will appear in the issues indicated below. First and second announcements of the meetings will have appeared in earlier issues. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS presented at a meeting of the Society are published in the journal Abstracts of papers presented to the American Mathematical Society in the issue corresponding to that of the Notices which contains the program of the meet­ ing. Abstracts should be submitted on special forms which are available in many departments of mathematics and from the office of the Society in Providence. Abstracts of papers to be presented at the meeting must be received at the headquarters of the Society in Providence, Rhode Island, on or before the deadline given below for the meeting. Note that the deadline for ab­ stracts submitted for consideration for presentation at special sessions is usually three weeks earlier than that specified below. For additional information consult the meeting announcement and the list of organizers of special sessions. MEETING ABSTRACT NUMBER DATE PLACE DEADLINE ISSUE 778 June 20-21, 1980 Ellensburg, Washington APRIL 21 June 1980 779 August 18-22, 1980 Ann Arbor, Michigan JUNE 3 August 1980 (84th Summer Meeting) October 17-18, 1980 Storrs, Connecticut October 31-November 1, 1980 Kenosha, Wisconsin January 7-11, 1981 San Francisco, California (87th Annual Meeting) January 13-17, 1982 Cincinnati, Ohio (88th Annual Meeting) Notices DEADLINES ISSUE NEWS ADVERTISING June 1980 April 18 April 29 August 1980 June 3 June 18 Deadlines for announcements intended for the Special Meetings section are the same as for News.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Florida Page 1 Fall 2017 University Employee File Detail of Salaries As of October 30, 2017 All Fund Sources
    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PAGE 1 FALL 2017 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE FILE DETAIL OF SALARIES AS OF OCTOBER 30, 2017 ALL FUND SOURCES ACADEMIC AFFAIRS ADVISEMENT & RETENTION-0204 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME JOB BGT CURRENT TITLE FTE RATE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ REEVES KEVIN AST DIR, Academic Support Sv 1.00 47,522.30 VINSON RONDA Administrative Support AST I 1.00 38,063.54 DEPT TOTAL 2.00 85,585.84 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PAGE 2 FALL 2017 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE FILE DETAIL OF SALARIES AS OF OCTOBER 30, 2017 ALL FUND SOURCES ACADEMIC AFFAIRS INSTITUTE ONLINE LEARNING-0214 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME JOB BGT CURRENT TITLE FTE RATE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BALES RICHARD Graphic Designer I 1.00 42,500.00 BEAUPRE MEREDITH AST DIR, Academic Support Sv 1.00 65,975.00 CUMMINGS EVANGELINE AST Provost, DIR Academic Su .91 188,389.96 FORD JENNIFER Graphic Designer II 1.00 55,825.00 FORSHEE AMBER Administrative Spec III 1.00 53,795.00 HARPER KATHRYN ASO DIR, Communications 1.00 96,425.00 KEPIC GLENN SR ASO IN .50 51,498.57 NASH GUTIERREZ ALEJAND Marketing and Comm Specialis 1.00 36,600.00 QUIROGA TATIANA Marketing and Comm Specialis
    [Show full text]
  • January/February 2014 Vol
    The Gainesville Iguana January/February 2014 Vol. 28, Issue 1/2 CMC SpringBoard fundraiser March 21 by Joe Courter The date for the Civic Media Center’s annual SpringBoard fundraiser is Friday evening, March 21. There will be a new location this year after last year’s venture at Prairie Creek Lodge, and that is in the heart of Down- town Gainesville at the Wooly, 20 N. Main St., a new event venue in what is the old Woolworth building next to and run by The Top restaurant. There will be food from various area restaurants, a si- lent auction and raffle items, and awards. The speaker this year is an old friend of McDonald’s workers and allies strike on July 31, 2013 in Chicago. Photo by Steve Rhodes. the CMC, David Barsamian, the founder and main man with Alternative Radio, who said he is “honored to follow in No- 2013 in review: Aiming higher, am’s footsteps.” labor tries new angles and alliances That is fitting because Alternative Ra- by Jenny Brown ment that jobs that once paid the bills, dio has made a special effort to archive from bank teller to university instructor, Noam Chomsky talks since its founding This article originally appeared in the now require food stamps and Medicaid to in 1989. David’s radio show was a staple January 2014 issue of LaborNotes. You supplement the wages of those who work See SPRINGBOARD, p. 2 can read the online version, complete with informative links and resources, at www. every day. labornotes.org/2013/12/2013-review- California Walmart worker Anthony INSIDE ..
    [Show full text]
  • Original Contract
    DocuSign Envelope ID: DA1E3BA9-E1E1-43BB-940D-4B642AFD24FE State Term Contract 84111600-20-1 For Financial and Performance Audits This Contract is between the State of Florida, Department of Management Services (Department), an agency of the State of Florida and James Moore & Co. (Contractor), collectively referred to herein as the “Parties.” Accordingly, the Parties agree as follows: I. Initial Contract Term. The Initial Contract Term shall be for three years. The Initial Contract Term shall begin on March 1, 2021 or the date of the last signature on this Contract, whichever occurs later. The Contract shall expire on February 29, 2024 unless terminated earlier in accordance with the incorporated Special Contract Conditions. II. Renewal Term. Upon mutual written agreement, the Parties may renew this Contract, in whole or in part, for a Renewal Term not to exceed the Initial Contract Term, pursuant to the incorporated Special Contract Conditions. III. Contract. As used in this document, “Contract” (whether or not capitalized) shall, unless the context requires otherwise, include this document and all incorporated Attachments, which set forth the entire understanding of the Parties and supersedes all prior agreements. All modifications to this Contract must be in writing and signed by all Parties. All Attachments listed below are incorporated in their entirety into, and form part of, this Contract. The Contract Attachments shall have priority in the order listed: a) Special Contract Conditions, Contract Attachment B b) Contractor’s submitted Cost Proposal, Contract Attachment A c) Customer Contract or Purchase Order(s) d) Contractor’s submitted Technical Proposal, Contract Attachment C e) Authorized Services List, Contract Attachment D f) Contractor Information Form, Contract Attachment E g) No Offshoring, Contract Attachment F h) Subcontracting, Contract Attachment G Page 1 of 10 DocuSign Envelope ID: DA1E3BA9-E1E1-43BB-940D-4B642AFD24FE State Term Contract No.
    [Show full text]
  • Historyof-Uffacilities.Pdf
    The third time’s the charm… © 2010 University of Florida Department of Housing and Residence Education. All rights reserved. Brief quotation may be used. Other reproduction of the book, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other means requires written permission. Cover design by Nathan Weis. Editorial assistance by Darlene Niswander. Preface Contents A History of University of Florida Residence Facilities (Revised 3rd Edition) is part of an ongoing project to Buckman Hall ..........................................................................................................9 establish a central location to archive all the various types of historical information that staff donate as they Thomas Hall ..........................................................................................................12 FOHDQWKHLURIÀFHVUHWLUHRUWHUPLQDWHHPSOR\PHQWZLWKWKH8QLYHUVLW\RI)ORULGD7KHÀUVWHGLWLRQRIWKLV ERRNLQFOXGHGLQIRUPDWLRQWKURXJK7KHVHFRQGHGLWLRQLQFOXGHGXSGDWHVUHYLVLRQVDQGQHZLQIRUPDWLRQ Sledd Hall ...............................................................................................................15 JDWKHUHGVLQFH7KHWKLUGHGLWLRQLQFOXGHVXSGDWHVUHYLVLRQVDQGQHZLQIRUPDWLRQJDWKHUHGVLQFHDV well as more photographs. Fletcher Hall ..........................................................................................................17 Murphree Hall ........................................................................................................19 Historical questions pertaining to residence facilities from
    [Show full text]
  • Together for a Safe Campus
    ANNUAL SECURITY AND FIRE SAFETY REPORT • 2019 TOGETHER FOR A SAFE CAMPUS UF HEALTH JACKSONVILLE CAMPUS • WWW.HSCJ.UFL.EDU Together for a Safe Campus: UF Health Jacksonville he University of Florida Police Department, a State of Florida and Nationally and Internationally accredited T law enforcement agency, was established to provide protection and service to the university community. We are committed to the prevention of crime and the protection of life and property; the preservation of peace, order, and safety; the enforcement of all laws and ordinances; and the safeguarding of your constitutional guarantees. The University of Florida Police Department is staffed by highly trained officers and Police Service Technicians (PSTs) who utilize only the very latest tools in the fight against crime to be better prepared to keep the campus community as safe as possible. The University of Florida has an array of services in place to promote an environment that is as crime-free as possible. We encourage you to familiarize yourself with these services and take advantage of them to help make your educational and living experience at the University of Florida as enjoyable and crime-free as possible. I encourage you to contact our Community Services Division at (352) 392-1409 and visit the department’s web site on-line at http://www.police.ufl.edu for additional information on available programs and services. — Chief Linda J. Stump-Kurnick Contents he UF Health Jacksonville Security Department is the main security provider for the University of Florida 2 Safety and Security a Shared T Health Jacksonville Campus.
    [Show full text]
  • Part I: Signatures Attesting to Integrity (Applicable to All Institutions)
    University of Florida Fifth-Year Interim Report Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges March 2010 University of Florida Fifth-Year Interim Report Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges March 2010 The Commission on Colleges Southern Association of Colleges and Schools THE FIFTH-YEAR INTERIM REPORT (Revised February 2009—Formerly incorrectly stated as 2008) Name of Institution: University of Florida Address of the Institution: Office of the Provost PO Box 113175, 235 Tigert Hall Gainesville, FL 32611-1375 Name, title, contact numbers of person(s) preparing the report: Dr. Joseph Glover, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Phone: (352) 392-2404 The Fifth-Year Interim Report is divided into five parts: Part I: Signatures Attesting to Integrity (applicable to all institutions). Requests that the chief executive officer and accreditation liaison attest to the accuracy of institutional assessment and documentation supporting that assessment. Part II: Abbreviated Institutional Summary Form Prepared for Commission Reviews (applicable to all institutions). Requests that the institution complete the abbreviated “Institutional Summary Form Prepared for Commission Reviews.” Part III: Abbreviated Compliance Certification (applicable to all institutions). Monitors continued compliance with identified Core Requirements and Comprehensive Standards at the decennial interval. Part IV: Additional Report (applicable to select institutions). Addresses issues identified in an action letter following a recent review of the institution. If applicable, issues are identified in an attached letter. Part V: Impact Report of the Quality Enhancement Plan (applicable to all institutions reaffirmed since 2004 using the Principles of Accreditation). An institution may also be requested to host an off-site committee charged to review new, but unvisited, off-campus sites initiated since the institution’s previous reaffirmation.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer 2016 University of Florida President
    Commencement Commencement SUMMER 2016 University of Florida President Dr. W. Kent Fuchs Dr. Kent Fuchs became the 12th President of the University of Florida in January 2015. Under President Fuchs’ leadership, the university has developed shared goals for the decade ahead. UF’s overarching aspiration is to be a premier comprehensive university that the state, nation and world look to for leadership. Previous to the UF presidency, Dr. Fuchs spent six years as Cornell’s provost before coming to UF. He was appointed provost after serving as the university’s Joseph Silbert Dean of Engineering from 2002 to 2008. He joined Cornell from Purdue University, where he headed the School of Electrical Born on an Oklahoma farm in 1954, President Fuchs and Computer Engineering from 1996 to 2002. He spent much of his youth in Alaska before moving was a professor in the Department of Electrical and to Miami, where he graduated from Miami Killian Computer Engineering and the Coordinated Science Senior High School. His two younger brothers and Laboratory at the University of Illinois from 1985 stepmother live in South Florida. to 1996. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association of the Advancement of Science, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the Association for Computing Machinery, and has received numerous awards for teaching and research. President Fuchs earned his doctorate in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Illinois, and a master of divinity from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Chicago. He credits divinity school with teaching him communication and community- building skills, and to balance his innately analytic perspective with a deep appreciation for people and for human relationships.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Florida Page 1 Spring 2010 University Employee File Detail of Salaries As of March 18, 2010 All Fund Sources
    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PAGE 1 SPRING 2010 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE FILE DETAIL OF SALARIES AS OF MARCH 18, 2010 ALL FUND SOURCES ACADEMIC AFFAIRS ADVISEMENT & RETENTION-0204 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME JOB BGT CURRENT TITLE FTE RATE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PETERSON DANA PRG DIR & MASTER LECTURER 1.00 71,405.94 VINSON RONDA PROGRAM AST 1.00 32,322.24 DEPT TOTAL 2.00 103,728.18 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PAGE 2 SPRING 2010 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE FILE DETAIL OF SALARIES AS OF MARCH 18, 2010 ALL FUND SOURCES ACADEMIC AFFAIRS FACULTY DEVELOPMENT-0202 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME JOB BGT CURRENT TITLE FTE RATE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SATTLER ELLEN ADMINISTRATIVE AST, SR 1.00 52,500.00 DEPT TOTAL 1.00 52,500.00 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PAGE 3 SPRING 2010 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE FILE DETAIL OF SALARIES AS OF MARCH 18, 2010 ALL FUND SOURCES ACADEMIC AFFAIRS INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH-0205 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME JOB BGT CURRENT TITLE FTE RATE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [Show full text]
  • General Infrastructure Data & Analysis
    9. GENERAL INFRASTRUCTURE DATA & ANALYSIS UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA GENERAL INFRASTRUCTURE CAMPUS MASTER PLAN, 2020-2030 DATA & ANALYSIS I. Introduction The general infrastructure data and analysis section of the master plan applies to the University’s main campus and satellite properties. This section provides background information on the University’s existing infrastructure and provides information on projected improvements that will be necessary in light of future building projects. Sub-elements included within this section are stormwater, potable water, wastewater and solid waste. Additionally, reclaimed water usage is addressed in both the potable water section and in the wastewater section. The University’s commitment to using reclaimed water for outside irrigation serves as a major component of the main campus’ sustainable water conservation practices. Facilities Services is responsible for permitting, maintenance and expansion of general infrastructure on the main campus, East Campus and Libraries Remote Services site. The remaining satellite properties are handled individually with each unit handling their own infrastructure permits, maintenance and improvements. Facilities Services obtains permits for stormwater and consumptive use of water (potable and reuse) from the St. Johns River Water Management District (SJRWMD). The consumptive use permit covers both the secondary use of potable water (drinking water) that the University receives from Gainesville Regional Utilities (GRU) and covers the University’s wells. GRU includes and accounts for the University’s potable water use in its permit with the SJRWMD. Wastewater is treated in on- campus facilities and handled under a permit from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The University’s main campus solid waste is transported to Alachua County, which in turn transfers the non-recycled waste to the New River landfill in Duval County.
    [Show full text]