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Expenditures. CASBO Training. Values and Money. We spend our TIME and our MONEY on what we VALUE. Why are you here?. ASBO Certification Increase personal knowledge Tier 1 Requirement Tier 1 annual update. Expenditures.
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Expenditures CASBO Training
Values and Money • We spend our TIME and our MONEY on what we VALUE.
Why are you here? • ASBO Certification • Increase personal knowledge • Tier 1 Requirement • Tier 1 annual update.
Expenditures • What are the major categories of expenditures in a typical district? • Salaries & Benefits • Supplies/Equipment • Services • Capital Outlay • Debt Service.
What is the proportion of each to the whole operating budget? • Salaries & Benefits • Supplies/Equipment • Services • Capital Outlay • Debt Service.
Salaries/Benefits • Salaries • Contracted wages • Time sheet pay
Benefits Calculations • FICA – 6.2% (maximum salary $113,700 in 2013) • Medicare – 1.45% • Teacher Retirement – 14% • = 21.65% • Other benefits provided by the district for all certified and/or classified employees • Health - $131, moving to $150 in January • Dental, Disability Insurance • Worker’s Compensation • Unemployment • For estimating purposes, total @25%. • Will vary slightly by district.
Salary Essentials • Approved Salary Schedules for various groups of employees • Approved way for paying for extra assignments • Contracts issued in a timely fashion • Educational Increments • Savings from retirees vs. new hires • Severance Issues • Multi-year impact of salary policy • Educational Excellence Trust Fund compliance.
Supplies/Equipment • Difference is important as it relates to accounting and the inventory of fixed assets • Inventory vs. fixed asset • Inventory – a detailed list of items in stock • Fixed asset - Any tangible asset with a life of more than two years used in an entity's operations.
Services • Professional Services • Property Services • Other Services.
Professional Services • Professional and Consultant Services are exempt from bidding • Accounting • Engineers • Architects • Legal • Medical • Information/Technology • Appraisal • Do they give advice or do they supply a product? • Generally, are they licensed or recognized in some way by a certifying professional organization?
Property Services • Utilities • Construction Services • Lawn care • Cleaning services • Rental.
Other Services • Transportation • Insurance • Advertising.
Capital Outlay • Purchases/Construction of a fixed asset of such a significant amount that it is considered unusual and substantial in relation to the overall budget of the district.
Debt Service • Payment is in three parts • Principal • Interest • Fees • Debt Schedule
Debt Service • Your Fiscal Agent • Taxable vs. Non-Taxable Bonds • Arbitrage - Attempting to profit by exploiting price differences of identical or similar financial instruments on different markets or in different forms.
ACCOUNTING • The definition of accounting is “the system of recording and summarizing business and financial transactions and analyzing, verifying, and reporting the results.”
ACCOUNTING - Why should I care about accounting for money? • It is the right thing to do. • People lose their job quicker over money and sex than anything else. • You have a responsibility to your public. • You have a responsibility to your kids.
Basis of Accounting • Establishes point-in-time when revenues or expenditures and related assets and liabilities are recognized in district accounts and reported in financial statements • Determines timing with which the accounting system recognizes transactions.
Basis of Accounting • Cash Basis – Recognized when cash is received or disbursed • Accrual Basis – Measures financial position based on economic resources and obligations
Cash Basis • Revenue recorded when cash is received • Expenses recorded when cash is paid • Financial condition measured b cash balance • Receivables, payables or accrued items are not recognized.
Accrual Basis • Revenues are recognized when earned – regardless of when received • Expenses are recognized when incurred – regardless of when paid • Economic status reflects resources and obligations – regardless of cash flow timing.
Accounting for Expenditures • You will spend money. • How will you know how much you are spending and what you spent it for? • How can you report that information out to your Board and to your Public? • How can you prepare for the annual visit of your auditor?
Evolution of Account Classifications • Handbook II, Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: Standard Receipt and Expenditure Accounts, 1957 • Handbook II Revised, Financial Accounting: Classification and Standard Terminology for Local and State School Systems, 1973.
Account Classification Standards-Present Edition • Handbook II R2- 1990 • Reflects changes and clarifications in generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) • Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems. 2003 Edition (NCES) • NCES Revised Edition published June, 2009. http://nces.ed.gov/ppubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid2009325 • State Accounting Systems (ADE, etc.) adapt Handbook II R2 for use by local school districts
Access on APSCN site
Interest relative to Handbook IIR2 is widespread • Account coding is required to reveal: • Athletic expenditures • Student transportation • District administration • School administration • Instructional facilitators • Supervisory aides • Substitutes • Property Insurance
Act 1006 • Requires gathering information on these expenditures: • Student growth • Declining enrollment • Special education catastrophic occurrences • Special education services • Technology grants • Debt service supplement • General facilities • Distance learning • Gifted and talented
Do it Right…or Pay the Price! • Act 1006 provides for ADE to publish rules to identify error rates by local schools in reporting and provides that fines or other penalties may be assessed.
THE BUDGET UNIT • The 21 digit number that indicates what fund will pay, what kind of expenditure, what cost-center, what type of goods or services the expenditure is. • It provides the detail of the expenditure. • It also provides a way to report and analyze the expenditures of a district and ultimately the state.
THE BUDGET UNIT • Six sections of the budget unit: • 1000-1140-049-000-00 61110 – Certified Salary • 2000-1120-042-000-00 62210 – Certified Social Security • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100 – Supplies for early childhood • 2000-2134-005-000-79 65800 – Nurse’s travel budget
What is this budget strip used for? 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
FUND • 1000 – Teacher Salary Fund • 2000 – Operating Fund • 3000 – Building Fund • 4000 – Debt Service Fund • 5000 – Capital Outlay Fund • 6000 – Federal Funds • 7000 – Activity Funds • 8000 – Food Service Fund • 9000 – Fixed Assets • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Source of Fund - SOF • Federal Funds • Activity Funds • Grants • Categorical Funds • 223 – Professional Development • 275 – ALE • 276 – ELL • 281 – NSLA • Facilities Funding • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Function • 1000 – Instruction • 2000 – Support Services • 3000 – Operation of Non-Instructional Services • 4000 – Facilities acquisition and Construction • 4610 – Building Acquisition and Construction • 4630 – Athletic Building Acquisition and Construction • 5000 – Other (debt) • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Location • Normally, it is the last three digits of the building’s LEA number. Can be a building number designated by the district for non-instructional buildings. • ??-??-040 • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Program • Used to further identify the specific use of the funds to be expended. • Districts may use 900-999 • Special Ed – 200 • Athletics - 115 • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Subject • Used to provide even more detail on the expenditure. • The State can use both Program and Subject codes at their discretion. • Currently, the State does not use this portion of the budget unit. • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100
Object • Sometimes called the Account. Tells us what was purchased • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100 • 61000 – Salaries • 61100 • 61110 – Certified Salaries • 61120 – Classified Salaries • 62000 – Benefits • 62200 • 62210 – Certified Social Security • 62220 – Classified Social Security
Object • 63000 – Purchased Professional and Technical Services • 63370 – Architect • 64000 – Purchased Property Services • 64240 – Lawn Care • 65000 – Other Purchased Services • 65210 – Property Insurance • 65310 – Telephone
Object • 66000 – Supplies and materials • 66100 – General Supplies • 66410 – Textbooks • 67000 – Property • 67100 – Land and improvements • 67200 – Buildings • 68000 – Other Objects • 68830 – Property Tax • 69000 – Other • 69310 – Transfer to Teacher Salary Fund
The Budget Strip 2 281 1105 040 987 00 66100 • 2281-1105-040-987-00 66100 Object Fund/Source of Fund Function Program Subject Location
Determining Which Coding to Use • Accounting is both a science and an art. • I could give you an invoice and we could come up with 10 different ways to code that invoice. • Pay attention to what the Department says to do. • Be honest. • Be consistent. • Ask other people’s opinion. • It really does matter.
Management Strategies For Expenditure • Establish Procedures • Purchase Order (P.O.) Process • Receipts/Reimbursements • Do you have a written purchasing procedure? • Do you have a written travel reimbursement procedure? • Frequent Monitoring and Reporting • Ask for reports periodically. • Report to your Board frequently.
Management Strategies For Expenditure • Learn how to operate “Excel” • Track important numbers • Ending Balance • Total Revenue • Total Expenditures • Property Tax Assessments • Student ADM • Be cautious about adding new personnel.
Management Strategies For Expenditure • Control of Organizational Chart of Accounts Structure • A single person should control the chart • Internal Controls • Systems of cross checking and balancing to ensure the opportunity for theft and fraud are minimized • Segregation of Duties • A key operational control to ensure that one individual does not participate in more than one key operational function • Security of your unwritten checks and signature stamps.
Targets of “Fiscal Distress” • Declining balance to jeopardize fiscal integrity of a school district • Act or violation to jeopardize fiscal integrity • Any other fiscal condition of a school district deemed to have a material detrimental negative impact on the continuation of educational services by that school district.
Potential “acts or violations” • Material failure to… • Properly maintain school facilities • Violation of local, state, or federal fire, health or safety code provisions • Violation of local, state, or federal construction code provisions or law • Material state or federal audit exceptions • Failure to provide timely and accurate legally-required financial reports to ADE, Division of Legislative Audit, General Assembly or IRS
Other ways to violate…. • Materially… • Insufficient funds to cover payroll, salary, employment benefits or legal tax obligations • Failure to meet legally binding minimum teacher salary schedule obligations • Failure to comply with state law governing purchasing or bid requirements • Default on any school district debt obligations • Discrepancies between budgeted and actual school district expenditures