Press Release|Public Finance
KBRA Assigns AA Rating to County of Erie, NY General Obligation Public Improvement Serial Bonds, Series 2025A and General Obligation Refunding Serial Bonds, Series 2025B; Affirms Rating for General Obligation Bonds
30 Jun 2025 | New York
KBRA assigns a long-term rating of AA to the County of Erie, NY General Obligation Public Improvement Serial Bonds, Series 2025A and General Obligation Refunding Serial Bonds, Series 2025B. KBRA additionally affirms the long-term rating of AA for the County's outstanding General Obligation Bonds. The rating Outlook is Stable.
Key Credit Considerations
The rating actions reflect the following key credit considerations:
Credit Positives
- Stable general fund unassigned fund balance above the Charter requirement of 5% of the prior year’s general fund expenditures.
- Diversifying resource base that has shown resiliency during periods of economic stress.
- Strong fiscal management controls and sound pension funding metrics contribute to expenditure flexibility.
Credit Challenges
- Heavy reliance on economically sensitive sales tax revenues. A portion of the sale tax must additionally be reauthorized every two years, but the County has a track record of uninterrupted authorization dating back to its initialization in 1985.
- The statutory limitation in the rate of increase in the property tax rate has the potential to adversely impact expenditure flexibility.
- The timing and amount of intergovernmental fund transfers to ECMCC are outside of the County’s control.
Rating Sensitivities
For Upgrade
- Improved internal liquidity and increased revenue-raising flexibility.
- Continued maintenance of available reserves above required levels.
For Downgrade
- Deterioration in liquidity position.
- Inability to achieve structural budgetary balance due to a decline in economically sensitive revenues or lack of flexibility in reducing operating expenditures.
- Significant budget stress through an economic downturn due to reliance on economically sensitive sales tax revenues and State statutory limitations on property tax growth.
To access ratings and relevant documents, click here.