Wayne County commissioners unanimously approved selecting Truist Bank as the lender for installment financing to fund improvements at Rosewood Middle School and Rosewood Elementary School.
Ted Cole of Davenport & Company told commissioners Davenport issued an RFP seeking up to $9,000,000 and received five proposals. He said Truist offered the lowest fixed 20-year rate, quoted at 4.30%, while Webster Bank’s competing proposal was 4.32%. Davenport recommended Truist based on the lower rate and lower closing costs, noting Truist would not require title insurance — an estimated $15,000 savings — and would hold project proceeds in a Truist account during construction.
The board had earlier held a public hearing on the proposed installment financing; no members of the public spoke. Commissioners adopted a resolution making findings and determinations about the financing and later, after Davenport’s presentation and a brief question-and-answer session, moved to select Truist as the lender. The motion passed unanimously.
Cole outlined key terms relevant to the county’s timetable and flexibility: Truist’s rate lock would extend through a March 21 closing, and Davenport has submitted the required application to the North Carolina Local Government Commission (LGC) for review. Davenport reported that Truist’s prepayment provisions would allow full-payoff beginning roughly a year after closing subject to a 5% penalty that steps down over time to a par prepayment (no penalty) beginning around 2031; Webster’s prepayment language was more restrictive in the early years.
On costs and modeled totals, Davenport used a planning model of a 20-year term. The Truist scenario showed a project principal near $8.8 million, a placeholder cost-of-issuance of $135,000, a bank attorney fee of $7,000 and total debt-service on the modeled schedule of about $13,054,000 over 20 years at the 4.30% rate. Cole said the county’s debt-service model already accounts for planned borrowings and anticipated projects, and staff said the additional FY27 debt service would be absorbed within the sales-tax-backed modeling referenced during the meeting.
Next steps: Davenport asked the board to notify the chosen bank promptly so documentation can be prepared, noting the LGC typically considers such financings on its March calendar; Davenport said final county approval and LGC approval were expected around March 3 with closing possible by March 20–21 if the schedule holds.
The board’s vote to select Truist was unanimous; no public comments were recorded on the financing at the hearings held by the board.