YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
MOHELA's Board of Directors unanimously approved a plan that would fund Gov. Matt Blunt's initiative to sell the authority's assets to a private bidder and use the profit to fund scholarships and capital improvements for the state's public colleges and universities.
Original terms of Blunt's initiative, announced last week, called for selling MOHELA outright. The sale was expected to provide as much as $425 million for schools, but it also provoked skepticism in college students and legislators who thought the agency's privatization would cause interest rates to spike.
Under the new plan, MOHELA would sell only its consolidation loans, amounting to assets of about $2.4 billion, according to Blunt spokesperson Jessica Robinson. By retaining ownership of its directly backed loans, MOHELA will continue to regulate interest rates.
The change could bring in $25 million in addition to the $425 million for higher education and could deliver the funds up to two months earlier, Robinson said. MOHELA can begin the bidding process immediately, rather than push the proposal through the legislative process.
“MOHELA is better positioned to know and understand their own assets,” Robinson said. “With this, we'll actually see the funds as early as September.”
The original plan allocated nearly $37 million for projects at Missouri State University. Allocations of the additional funding have not been announced.[[In-content Ad]]
A relocation to Nixa from Republic and a rebranding occurred for Aspen Elevated Health; Kuick Noodles LLC opened; and Phelps County Bank launched a new southwest Springfield branch.
Mahomes-backed Whataburger franchisee takes over operation of Springfield-area restaurants
Council debates when to vote on city manager contract
New owner purchases longtime Marshfield real estate firm
Red's Giant Hamburg auction draws top bid of $575K