I.
INTRODUCTION
The New York State Canal Corporation
(Corporation) is responsible for the maintenance,
operation, construction, reconstruction,
improvement, development, financing and promotion of
the Canal System and for implementation of the New
York State Canal Recreationway Plan (CRP). In
accordance with the provisions of the Canal Law, the
Corporation has the authority to acquire, hold and
dispose of real property to advance the purposes of
the Corporation and thus, the interest of the State.
The purpose of this Policy is to: detail
the Corporation’s operative policy and instructions
regarding the use, awarding, monitoring and
reporting of contracts for the Disposal of real
property, the Acquisition of real property and the
issuance of Permits associated with the Canal
System; and authorize the development of Standard
Operating Procedures (SOPs) for the purpose of
implementing this Policy.
II.
DEFINITIONS
A. Transactions
For purposes of this Policy, Transactions
shall include, but not be limited to, Acquisitions,
Disposals, the issuance of Permits, and Transfers of
Jurisdiction.
B. Disposals
Disposals shall include, but not be
limited to, the sale of real property, the transfer
of any beneficial interest in real property such as
leases or easements, and the exchange of real
property of at least equal value, in the public
interest, and necessary for Canal purposes.
Disposals shall not include the transfer of real
property secured by a loan or other financial
obligation of another party. Disposals shall not
include Permits or Transfers of Jurisdiction.
C. Acquisitions
Acquisitions are Transactions whereby the
Corporation acquires and holds in the name of the State
by purchase or appropriation, real property or rights or
easements therein. Acquisitions shall also include
permits and contracts entered into by the Corporation to
use real property not under the jurisdiction of the
Corporation.
D. Permits Issued by the
Corporation
Permits issued by the Corporation are
agreements granting temporary occupancy or use of lands
or structures of the Canal System and for the diversion
of canal waters for sanitary, farm or industrial
purposes. Corporation permits are revocable instruments
granting certain limited privileges that can only be
issued when the same can be done without detriment to
canal navigation or damage to the banks or other
structures thereof.
Permits do not transfer a beneficial interest
in real property. Permits are revocable in part to
assure availability of the real property for Corporation
or public purposes. Permits include Occupancy and Work
Permits.
1. Occupancy Permit
An Occupancy Permit is a revocable
instrument that authorizes the temporary, restricted use
of real property under the jurisdiction of the
Corporation, including, temporary use of canal lands or
structures, and for the diversion of canal waters for
sanitary, farm purposes or industrial purposes.
2. Work Permit
A Work Permit is a revocable
instrument that authorizes construction, maintenance,
inspection, survey, or other type of work or short term
activity on real property under the jurisdiction of the
Corporation.
E. Transfers of
Jurisdiction
Transfers of Jurisdiction are
transactions between the Corporation and other State
governmental entities where jurisdiction over the real
property is transferred and reassigned on such terms and
conditions as the Corporation deems proper, but the
title to the real property remains in the name of the
people of the State of New York.
III.
GENERAL LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
All Transactions shall comply fully with
applicable State, federal, and local laws, rules and
regulations, including but not limited to: Title 9 of
Article 2 of the Public Authorities Law, the Canal Law,
Title 5-A of Article 9 of the Public Authorities Law,
the Lobbying Procurement Act, and other applicable laws,
rules, regulations, policies, procedures and executive
orders.
IV.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
A
The Corporation shall maintain adequate inventory
controls and accountability systems for all real
property under its control.
B. The Board shall approve all
Transactions under the Corporation’s jurisdiction,
except as otherwise delegated (see Section VI.
Responsibilities and Authorizations).
C.
Transactions involving real property shall be
consummated as promptly as possible. Unless otherwise
provided by the Board, Board authorization for a
Transaction shall be deemed expired one year following
the date of such authorization unless the parties have
executed a contract acceptable to the Corporation for
such Transaction within such one-year period.
Expiration of Board authorization for a Transaction
shall mean that the Transaction may no longer be
consummated pursuant to such expired authorization
absent further action of the Board. The Executive
Director shall provide periodic report to the Board
regarding the expired transactions.
D. The Corporation may dispose of any real
property for its corporate purposes. The Corporation
may cause to be abandoned such Canal lands as are no
longer necessary or useful as part of the Canal System
or as an aid to navigation thereon.
E. A Transaction must be resubmitted to the
Board during the one-year period of authorization
provided in Section IV.C. if any of the following
circumstances occur and the Executive Director
determines that the Transaction should be progressed:
1.
If, in the Executive Director’s determination,
the circumstances change following Board action, and as
a result, the material Board approved terms and
conditions cannot be followed.
2.
If, in the Executive Director’s determination,
the background information about the Transaction
presented to the Board changes in any material way.
F. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Policy, if the Executive Director
determines that it is in the best interests of the
Corporation to stop progression of a Board approved
Transaction during the one-year period of authorization
provided in Section IV.C., the Executive Director may
cancel the Transaction. An information report will then
be provided to the Board, at its next scheduled meeting,
detailing the reasons that the Transaction was
cancelled.
G. All Disposals will be reviewed by the Canal
Recreationway Commission (CRC) for consistency with the
CRP in accordance with the provisions of Section 138-b
of the Canal Law and with the criteria and procedures
adopted pursuant thereto.
H. 1. No asset owned, leased or otherwise in
the control of the Corporation may be sold, leased, or
otherwise alienated for less than its fair market value
except if:
(a) the transferee is a
government or other public entity, and the terms and
conditions of the transfer require that the ownership
and use of the asset will remain with the
government or any other public entity;
(b) the purpose of the
transfer is within the purpose, mission or governing
statute of the Corporation; or
(c) in the event the
Corporation seeks to transfer an asset for less than its
fair market value to other than a governmental entity,
which disposal would not be consistent with the
Corporation’s mission, purpose or governing statutes,
the Corporation shall provide written notification
thereof to the governor, the speaker of the assembly,
and the temporary president of the senate, and such
proposed transfer shall be subject to denial by the
governor, the senate, or the assembly. Denial by the
governor shall take the form of a signed certification
by the governor. Denial by either house of the
legislature shall take the form of a resolution by such
house. The governor and each house of the legislature
shall take any such action within sixty days of
receiving notification of such proposed transfer during
the months of January through June, provided that if the
legislature receives notification of a proposed transfer
during the months of July through December, the
legislature may take any such action within sixty days
of January first of the following year. If no such
resolution or certification is performed within sixty
days of such notification of the proposed transfer to
the governor, senate, and assembly, the Corporation may
effectuate such transfer.
2. In the event a below fair market
value asset transfer is proposed, the following
information must be provided to the Corporation Board
and the public:
(a) a full description of the
asset;
(b) an appraisal of the fair
market value of the asset and any other information
establishing the fair market value sought by the
Corporation Board;
(c) a description of the
purpose of the transfer, and a reasonable statement of
the kind and amount of the benefit to the public
resulting from the transfer, including but not limited
to the kind, number, location, wages or salaries of jobs
created or preserved as required by the transfer, the
benefits, if any, to the communities in which the asset
is situated as are required by the transfer;
(d) a statement of the value to
be received compared to the fair market value;
(e) the names of any private
parties participating in the transfer, and if different
than the statement required by subparagraph (d) of this
paragraph 2 of Section IV.H., a statement of the value
to the private party; and
(f) the names of any other
private parties who have made an offer for such asset,
the value offered, and the purpose for which the asset
was sought to be used.
3. Before approving the disposal of any
property for less than fair market value, the
Corporation Board shall consider the information
described in paragraph 2 of this Section IV.H. and make
a written determination that there is no reasonable
alternative to the proposed below market transfer that
would achieve the same purpose of such transfer.
I. The Corporation shall use a competitive
process open to the public for all Disposals, except in
limited circumstances. The Corporation shall document
the basis for progressing a Disposal without use of a
public competitive process.
All Disposals or contracts for Disposal
of real property of the Corporation shall be made after
publicly advertising for bids except in limited
circumstances where Disposals and contracts for Disposal
may be negotiated or made by public auction without
public advertising for bids.
One of the following conditions must be
met to dispose or contract for the Disposal of real
property through negotiation or public auction without
public advertising for bids:
1. The fair market value of the real
property does not exceed fifteen thousand dollars
($15,000);
2. Bid prices after advertising are not
reasonable, either as to all or some part of the real
property, or have not been independently arrived at in
open competition;
3. The Disposal will be to the State or
any political subdivision, and the estimated fair market
value of the real property and other satisfactory terms
of Disposal are obtained by negotiation;
4. Under those circumstances permitted
by Section IV.H. of this Policy; or
5. The action is otherwise authorized
by law.
J. The Corporation shall create a clear and
comprehensive record for each Transaction that documents
its compliance with this Policy. Such record shall be
maintained in a manner and for a period consistent with
the applicable document retention policy.
V.
GENERAL PRACTICES
A. Transactional Analyses
Every proposed Transaction shall have a
documented analysis conducted that will address all
salient real property-related issues, and that will
consider all applicable alternatives listed in Section
V.B. below.
B. Types of Transactions
and the Appropriate Use Thereof
1. Disposals
The Corporation may receive direct
inquiries for purchasing Canal real property (e.g.,
easement, fee) or may determine on its own that Canal
real property is no longer necessary or useful as part
of the Canal System or as an aid to navigation thereon
and that the disposition is in the interest of the
Corporation’s corporate purposes.
The Corporation is authorized,
after review and comment by the Canal Recreationway
Commission (CRC), as to consistency with the CRP, to
enter into leases of Canal System land which are
consistent with the CRP. Lands to be leased must be
determined by the Corporation to have no essential
purpose for navigation. All other Disposals shall be
reviewed in accordance with criteria established by the
CRC.
Disposals may be performed by the
Commissioner of General Services on behalf of the
Corporation when the Corporation has entered into an
agreement with the Commissioner of General Services
pursuant to Article 9, Title 5-A of the Public
Authorities Law and all other applicable provisions of
the Public Authorities Law.
2. Acquisitions
The Corporation may acquire real
property (e.g., fee, lease, easement) for a variety of
purposes including, but not limited to, improvements to
the Canal System such as the Canalway trail and
maintenance, control or repair of the Canal System. The
Corporation may also enter into permits and contracts to
use real property not under the jurisdiction of the
Corporation.
Real property may be acquired by
purchase or by exercise of the power of eminent domain.
When the need arises for the Corporation to acquire real
property via exercise of the power of eminent domain,
the Corporation shall take all steps to carry out the
Acquisition in compliance with the Eminent Domain
Procedure Law.
3. Permits
Permits may be used when
limited privileges can be granted without detriment to
canal navigation or damage to the banks or other
structures thereof, but the real property cannot be
disposed of because it is, or may in the future be,
necessary or useful as part of the Canal System, as an
aid to navigation thereon or for canal terminal
purposes. Permits are revocable and may be used when
the real property needs to be available upon thirty days
notice for Corporation or public purposes. Unless
otherwise authorized by the Executive Director, where a
Disposal is contemplated, an Occupancy or Work Permit
will not be issued in advance of completion of the
Disposal.
Unless otherwise authorized by the
Executive Director, where the issuance of an Occupancy
Permit is contemplated, a Work Permit shall not be
issued in advance of the issuance of the Occupancy
Permit.
4. Transfers of Jurisdiction
Transfers of Jurisdiction shall be
progressed on such terms and conditions as approved by
the Board.
5. Amendments,
Extensions, and/or Renewals of Existing Permits and
Leases
Occupancy Permits shall be reviewed
before the next annual payment date or as soon as
practicable thereafter, and, if necessary, revoked or
redrafted to reflect this Policy and the requisite
operational and/or administrative procedures.
Leases will be reviewed at the time
of the next renewal and amended to reflect this Policy
and the requisite operational and/or administrative
procedures, consistent with the terms of the lease.
C. Use of Appraisals
1. No disposition of real property, or
any interest in real property, shall be made unless an
appraisal of the value of such property has been made by
an independent appraiser and included in the record of
the Transaction.
2. At least one appraisal shall
be conducted by an independent appraiser for all
Disposals and Acquisitions. Two appraisals shall be
conducted by independent appraisers if: (i) the
appraised value of the real property is greater than
$300,000; or (ii) it is deemed to be in the best
interest of the Corporation as determined by the
Contracting Officer.
3. An appraisal shall be
conducted or coordinated by authorized Corporation staff
for all Permits for which an appraisal is necessary.
4. When the need arises for the
Corporation to acquire real property via exercise of the
power of eminent domain, the Corporation shall comply
with all appraisal requirements in the Eminent Domain
Procedure Law.
D. Advertising and Bidding for Disposals
When advertising for bids is required:
(1) the advertisement shall be made at such time,
through such methods, and on such terms and conditions
as shall permit full and free competition consistent
with the value and nature of the real property; (2) all
bids shall be publicly disclosed at the time and place
stated in the advertisement; and (3) the award shall be
made with reasonable promptness by notice to the
responsible bidder whose bid, conforming to the
invitation for bids, will be most advantageous to the
State and the Corporation, price and other factors
considered, provided, that any and all bids may be
rejected when it is in the public interest to do so.
E. Documenting Disposals
by Negotiation
At least 90 days before the Disposal, an
explanatory statement for each Disposal by negotiation
shall be prepared and distributed by the Contracting
Officer in accordance with Article 9, Title 5-A of the
Public Authorities Law detailing the circumstances of
the Disposal, including but not limited to, the proposed
price. The statement shall be prepared and distributed
prior to bringing the Transaction to the Board for
approval.
The following Disposals by negotiation
require an explanatory statement:
1. Any real property that has an estimated
fair market value in excess of one hundred thousand
dollars ($100,000), except that any real property
disposed of by lease or exchange shall only be subject
to clauses 2 and 3 below;
2. Any real property disposed of by lease, if
the estimated annual rent over the term of the lease is
in excess of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000);
3. Any real property or real and related
personal property disposed of by exchange, regardless of
value, or any property any part of the consideration for
which is real property.
F. Review by the Office
of the State Comptroller (OSC)
The following
Transactions shall be submitted to OSC for review and
approval:
1. Disposals of real property or interests
therein where the value exceeds $10,000.
2. Acquisitions of real property or
interests therein where the total payment exceeds
$50,000.
G. Review by the Canal Recreationway
Commission (CRC)
In accordance with the provisions of the
Canal Law and SOP 900-1-02.3, Canal Recreationway
Commission, the CRC will review certain Transactions to
ensure that the proposed Transactions are consistent
with the CRP.
H. Review of
Environmental Impacts
In accordance with the State
Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) and the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
Corporation shall consider potential environmental
impacts and permit requirements associated with any
Transaction.
I. Review by Other
Agencies
Transactions shall be coordinated with
local, State and federal agencies as may be required by
statute or regulation. Such agencies include, but are
not limited to: NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and
Historic Preservation, NYS Department of Transportation,
NYS Office of General Services, NYS Department of
Environmental Conservation and U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.
J. Reports
The Corporation will develop and
distribute reports regarding real property management
activities as required by law including, but not limited
to, annual inventory reports, annual real property
disposition reports, and Disposal by negotiation
statements.
VI.
RESPONSIBILITIES AND AUTHORIZATIONS
A. The Board shall designate a
Contracting Officer who is responsible for compliance
with and enforcement of the Policy as it applies to
Disposals and Acquisitions of real property.
B. The Executive Director is authorized to
interpret, implement, and administer this Policy and
shall develop SOPs necessary to carry out its intent.
These SOPs should identify the roles and
responsibilities of Corporation personnel who implement
and administer this Policy and define the manner in
which those responsibilities are to be fulfilled.
The Executive Director is also authorized
to oversee the actions of Corporation staff to ensure
compliance with applicable laws, rules and regulations,
and with this Policy.
C. The Chief Engineer is authorized to acquire
and dispose of real property necessary to progress
capital projects in accordance with the provisions of
the annual Contracts Program approved by the Board. All
such Acquisitions and Disposals shall be progressed in
accordance with the provisions of this Policy. In
general, Board approval shall not be required for such
Acquisitions and Disposals, provided however, Board
approval shall be required for all Disposals for less
than fair market value.
D. The Contracting Officer or designee is
authorized to approve real property Occupancy Permits.
E. The Director of Canals or designee is
authorized to approve real property Work Permits.
F.
The Director of Real Property Management is
authorized, in consultation with the Contracting
Officer, to interpret the SOPs and to resolve any
questions among staff regarding the SOPs.
VII.
PENDING DISPOSALS AND ACQUISITIONS
All Disposals and Acquisitions approved by the
Board prior to March 1, 2010 that are still pending
final execution shall be reevaluated by the Contracting
Officer to ensure compliance with this Policy. If, upon
reevaluation, the terms and conditions as authorized by
the Board resolution do not comply with this revised
Policy, the Contracting Officer must promptly prepare a
report to the Executive Director and the Board detailing
the reasons that the item(s) can or cannot be
progressed. When an item cannot be progressed, the
Contracting Officer in consultation with the Executive
Director and the Director of Canals must seek further
direction from the Board which may result in the item
being amended, withdrawn or otherwise resolved.
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