§ 100545 Higher Education Bond Withdrawals
This law lets the state finance director borrow money from the General Fund, but only up to the amount of unsold bonds, put that money into a special bond fund, and then pay it back later with the interest it would have earned if it had stayed invested.
A California State University needs money to fix old campus buildings. It asks the Director of Finance to take $5 million from the General Fund (the amount of unsold bonds they have). The money goes into the Higher Education Capital Outlay Bond Fund, and after the projects are done the university pays back the $5 million plus the interest it would have earned.
The university can use the borrowed money for its building projects, but it must later return the exact amount it borrowed plus the interest that the money would have earned in the Pooled Money Investment Account.
Total repayment = Amount withdrawn + (Amount withdrawn × Interest rate × Years held)
The university withdraws $10 million and holds it for 2 years. The Pooled Money Investment Account earns 3% interest per year.
Result: Interest = 10,000,000 × 0.03 × 2 = 600,000. Total repayment = 10,000,000 + 600,000 = $10,600,000.
AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.
§ 100545 Higher Education Bond Withdrawals
Last verified: January 10, 2026