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What the New Superintendent Needs to Know About Financial Leadership. WASA New Superintendent Workshop July 30, 2013 Dr. Ken Hoover. Superintendents need to know:. Basic K-12 Finance Critical Financial Indicators to Monitor Areas Where Your Financial Leadership Matters
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What the New Superintendent Needs to Know About Financial Leadership WASA New Superintendent Workshop July 30, 2013 Dr. Ken Hoover
Superintendents need to know: • Basic K-12 Finance • Critical Financial Indicators to Monitor • Areas Where Your Financial Leadership Matters • How to Avoid Financial Pitfalls • Where to go to get help if you need it
Basic K-12 Finance Some basic rules never change: • Revenues > or = Expenditures (most of the time) • New expenditures require new revenues or offsetting cuts to existing programs. • Financial planning (short-term and long-range) • Be vigilant (don’t use autopilot). Review variances for clues to what is really happening. • Ongoing communication with stakeholders needs to be accurate • Know where to get financial help
Critical Financial Indicators to Monitor • Enrollment – pay attention to in and out migration during the year. Know if you are growing or shrinking (different financial stresses caused by each) • Fund balance trend over time. • Historical spending patterns for utilities, fuel, salaries and benefits. • Your levy capacity (understand how your levy relates to this over the next few years).
11 Areas Where Your Financial Leadership Matters • Align resources with board priorities. Invest in strategies to improve student learning even if you have to cut something else. • Set the financial tone (for the district as well as for schools and programs) • Values trump skills, but skills are needed. Get the right people in the right places. • Cash is king. • Know your financial status. Be able to project status into the future. Be aware of how you impact both. Track your decisions.
11 Areas Where Your Financial Leadership Matters • Learn how to deal with uncertainty. • Give everyone the same financial picture. • Collaborate for success. Use working budgets. • Stay competitive. Benchmark the best and learn from them. • Run a clean financial operation. • Use redundancy to catch errors.
John Dekker’s “Top Ten” – Ways to get into Financial Hot Water #1 – Bet your job that current shortfalls will be addressed in the next legislative session. #2 – Assume that enrollment will increase at the same rate every year. #3 – Solve staff morale issues with money. #4 – Commit to new programs or salary adjustments after the budget is adopted. #5 – Think of an “ending fund balance” as start-up funds for new programs or services. #6 – Be confident you can accurately anticipate all the costs of operating new programs and/or facilities. #7 – Assume that staff mix doesn’t change that much from year-to-year. • #8 – Forget that: • Schools pay sales’ tax • benefits need to be added to every new salary • sick/annual leave cash-outs need to be budgeted for retirees #9 - Expect that all administrators/supervisors will live within their budgets #10 – Assume district financial officer/business manager will take care of finances without your involvement
Ken’s additional tips • The numbers change whenever an assumption or variable changes. Understanding why is more important than sticking with a number that isn’t real. Train your audience – tell them the numbers will change. • Use care with end of year adjustments to your financial records. • Do monthly forecasts of revenues, expenditures, cash and fund balance. Each month ensure your fiscal team compares actuals to estimates and understands or can explain the variances.
Ken’s additional tips • Understand how state funded pay or benefit increases have a negative impact on your budget.
Where to get help • WASA can put together a team to review programs or functions. • ESD’s employ staff with strong financial skills. • WASBO • OSPI provides lot of great resources on their website and will answer questions too. • SAO (sometimes).