That legal status allows the agency to issue public bonds to raise the financial capital necessary to build additional power generating and other public utility facilities.
It authorizes a 10% income tax and also limits the ability to issue public bonds.
As with the Main, public bonds will not pay for equipment or furnishings inside the branches.
In September 2000, Western Guilford was renovated via public bond.
General Media was privately owned until 1994, when it offered the public high-risk bonds and divided its operations in two.
The holders of public bonds lay claim on part of the annual product of a country collected by the state through taxes.
After selling public bonds, Harmony began to build its own campuses.
The plan, which is subject to regulatory approvals, would cost $7.3 billion, to be financed with tax-exempt public bonds.
The claims arose from a public bond offering to pay for a prison construction project in Texas.
That offering will be sold only after the public bonds are placed.