Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions, but subject to such requirements as the legislature shall impose by general or special
law, indebtedness contracted by any county, city, town, village or
school district and each portion thereof from time to time contracted for any object or purpose for which indebtedness may be contracted may also be financed by sinking fund bonds with a maximum maturity of fifty years, which shall be redeemed through annual contributions to sinking funds established by such county, city, town, village or
school district, provided, however, that each such annual contribution shall be at least equal to the
amount required, if any, to enable the sinking fund to redeem, on the date of the contribution, the same
amount of such indebtedness as would have been paid and then be payable if such indebtedness had been financed entirely by the issuance of serial bonds, except, if an issue of sinking fund bonds is combined for sale with an issue of serial bonds, for the same object or purpose, then the
amount of each annual sinking fund contribution shall be at least equal to the
amount required, if any, to enable the sinking fund to redeem, on the date of each such annual contribution, (i) the
amount which would be required to be paid annually if such indebtedness had been issued entirely as serial bonds, less (ii) the
amount of indebtedness, if any, to be paid
during such year on the portion of such indebtedness actually issued as serial bonds.
Not to be outdone, Malloy's Commissioner of Education Stefan Pryor told the superintendents that despite what he and Malloy had said in the past and despite federal and state
laws to the contrary, he was authorizing greater flexibility when it came to the
amount of testing
during the coming
school year and whether
school districts had to include test results in their teacher evaluation program.
After working as an extern for the First District Court in Logan, Utah,
during his final term of
law school, Trevor worked for a firm in St. George, Utah, for over five years, focusing on workers» compensation and personal injury cases, in addition to working on cases involving federal civil rights litigation and performing a significant
amount of appellate work.