300 likes | 419 Views
Understanding Capital Programs September 2007. Responsibilities. School Boards providing schools and facilities for their students operating and maintaining their schools as effectively and efficiently as possible Provincial Government
E N D
Understanding Capital Programs • September 2007
Responsibilities • School Boards • providing schools and facilities for their students • operating and maintaining their schools as effectively and efficiently as possible • Provincial Government • providing adequate financial resources and the flexibility to enable boards to meet those responsibilities • monitoring board actions to ensure accountability to the taxpayers • Capital Programs Branch • CPB is responsible for developing and implementing policies governing pupil accommodation.
Accountability Framework • Boards submit their capital needs via online tools to provide the Ministry with accurate and current data • Ministry manages and consolidates school board data • Tools: • School Facilities Inventory System (SFIS) • School Board Capital Plan • Geographic Information System (GIS) • Renewal Capital Asset Planning Process (ReCAPP) • As of June 12, 2006, Ministry approval is required for transfers from capital reserves (PAG and POD) for new capital commitments, prior to the board completing the transfer. • This is to ensure that the board has the financial resources to sustain existing capital debt as well as planned new projects
School Facilities Inventory System • Contains detailed information on each school facility • Used to determine capacity of schools on a uniform and consistent basis. • Pupil Accommodation Grants are based largely on information stored in SFIS • Continuously tracks changes to boards’ capital inventories • Maintained by school boards and administered by the Ministry
Capital Plans • Boards set and maintain rolling 10-year capital plans • Contains integrated data relating to projected capital needs and plans intended to meet the needs • Enables CPB to consolidate board data to identify unfunded needs and ensure asset utilization • Ministry is not approving a board’s individual capital plans. The capital plan tool is to capture a board’s capital needs and future plans for the Ministry to discuss with the board. • Ministry is working with boards to review and analyze the plan in order to identify and assess the capital needs across the province. • Link to SFIS and GIS system
Geographic Information System • Used to locate schools, calculate school-to-school distances and query specific capital related information from a spatial perspective
Geographic Information System • Aerial Photographs of Facilities
Renewal Capital Asset Planning Process (ReCAPP) • Standard software application used to capture the detailed inventory of each school • Allows boards to manage school facility renewal data • Generates summary reports for Ministry use • Used for all capital renewal programs including Good Places to Learn renewal and School Renewal • All boards received a licence to access their ReCAPP database
SFIS TPFR EFIS Capital Programs • Grant forSchool Operations • Top Up Funding • Software Licensing Fee • Community Use of • Schools • Grant forSchool Renewal • Top Up Funding • School Renewal • Enhancement • - GPL Renewal • Grant forNew Pupil Places • Pure NPP • Enrolment Pressures • French Cap Trans. (old) • PTR (old) • 2005 Policy Transitional • New Capital • Programs • - New PTR • 4-year French Cap. Trans • Growth Schools • PCS Capital • Best Start • Capital Debt Commitments • Policy Tools • Capital Plans • Pupil Accom. Review • ReCAPP • GIS School Boards
TPFR SFIS EFIS • Section 11 • Pupil Places • Total Project Costs • Appendix C • OTG • Open Facilities • Top Ups Funding EFIS • By School Year • Facilities Information • Classroom summary: • (Room Details, Permanent GFA/Age, • Non-Permanent GFA/Age) • - PTR/ EP / 2005 Policy Trans. Adj. Schools • New Facilities (completed, underway) • Capacity (NPP, OTG) • Capital Plan: • (Planning Area, Enrolment Projections, Accommodation Changes, Programs (PCS, PTR, • Best Start, etc..)) SFIS SFIS EFIS • Schedule 13 • Most recent ADE SFIS in relation to EFIS School Boards
Pupil Accommodation Grants 2007-08 Projections of $2.8 Billion • School Operations • School Renewal • New Pupil Places • Program Specific funding: • Prior Capital Commitments and Debt Charges
School Operations Allocation 2007-08 Projections of $1.7 Billion (includes summer enhancement of $20M in School Operations) • Heating, lighting, cleaning and maintenance • Operations Grant is based on enrolment and various benchmarks • Top-Up Funding • Regular Top-Up (+20%) • 2003-04 Rural Education Strategy (Scaled) • 2007-08 Rural schools (100%) • 2007-08 Supported schools (100%) • Community Use of Schools • Asset Management Software
School Renewal Allocation 2007-08 Projections of $0.4 Billion • Repairs and renovations (existing needs) • Renewal Grant is based on enrolment and various benchmarks • Top-Up Funding • Regular Top-Up (+20%) • 2003-04 Rural Education Strategy (Scaled) • 2007-08 Rural schools (100%) • 2007-08 Supported schools (100%) • Good Places to Learn Renewal
Good Places to Learn • The facility assessment process identified a backlog of renewal needs over a five year period, 2002-03 to 2006-07 • In February 2005, the Good Places to Learn (GPL) initiative was announced with a goal of investing $4 billion to address school renewal and new school construction: • $2 billion was specifically targeted to reduce the backlog or renewal needs identified through the facility assessment. • Stage 1 (Spring 2005) provided $1 billion to fund approximately 40% of high and urgent needs identified for 2002-03 and 2003-04 • Stage 2 (Spring 2006) provided $0.5 billion to fund 18.5% of the 5 year high and urgent needs and missing or inadequate program needs less funding provided in Stage 1 • Stage 3 (Fall 2007) will provide $0.5 billion – TBD
School Condition Assessment • In 2002, the government announced an initiative to assess school renewal needs across the province. • The Ministry contracted with CPSI (Capital Planning Solutions Inc) to undertake a comprehensive facility assessment of all schools in the province utilizing building analysis software. • Independent assessors performed on-site inspections of each school • Deferred maintenance needs over 5 years (2002-03 to 2006-07) • Specialized teaching spaces (gym, science labs, etc.) • Assessment information captured in ReCAPP database.
New Pupil Places Allocation 2007-08 Projections of $0.5 Billion • Supports about $7.5 billion in capital investments over 25 years • Construction of new schools or additions • “Pure” New Pupil Places is based on enrolment greater than capacity and various benchmarks • Enrolment Pressures • For boards whose capacity is greater than enrolment • Significant and persistent enrolment pressure at a school • Not sufficient capacity in nearby schools
NPP - Growth Boards • Board’s capacity is ‘fixed’ • New Pupil Places allocation grows with enrolment • Boards can continue to build new spaces to meet space needs
NPP – No Capacity Reductions • Feb 2005: Boards no longer able to remove permanent capacity • New Pupil Places funding declines with enrolment • May have created pressure to finance existing debt commitments
Outstanding Capital Commitments & Debt Charges • Outstanding Capital Commitments • Continuation of funding for $650 Million capital program in 1997-98 and 1998-99 • Converted to New Pupil Places • Debt Charges • 1998: committed to provide funding in 98-99, 99-00 and 00-01 for servicing costs of capital project loans approved prior to amalgamation • 2001: approx. $1.1 Billion of this debt was permanently financed. • 2003: permanent financing for capital-related debt not already permanently financed.
Facility Condition Index • The facility assessments completed for all boards in 2002 also provided the ability to produce a Facility Condition Index (FCI) for each school • FCI is an industry measure of the building state of repair, indicating the renewal costs as a percent of the total replacement value. • Schools with an FCI <30% should be the focus of maintenance funding to preserve the boards’ buildings. • Schools with an FCI between 30-65% are likely the top candidates for the GPL renewal monies • Schools with an FCI of 65% or greater, are deemed prohibitive-to-repair (PTR) and should be considered for retirement and/or replacement
FCI Groupings (As of October 2006)
Prohibitive to Repair • The Ministry identified a preliminary inventory of approximately 200 prohibitive-to-repair schools across the province based on FCI Index. • Boards have increased the list to almost 500 schools based on renewal needs either missed or not included in the original visual inspections, including asbestos and accessibility. • Boards are required to keep proceeds of disposition from the sale of any PTR schools or sites in a special capital reserves. • We are still in the process of reviewing PTR candidates for funding. • As of Sept 2007, PTR funding and planning approvals of about $360 million had been approved to recognize approximately 57 PTR schools.
French-Language Capital Transition • Since 2001-02, this program annually addressed areas for which French-language school boards did not have permanent accommodation • Beginning in 2006-07, a four-year commitment was made to support permanent accommodation in areas where needed and to support student retention in French-language boards • Made available based on board business cases
Primary Class Size Capital • More than $700M has been allocated to school boards to address their PCS accommodation needs. • This capital funding provides school boards with the opportunity to make a one-time adjustment to their elementary capital stock to reflect the increased space required to support smaller primary class sizes, by either constructing or acquiring new classrooms. • It is expected that boards will use this funding over the next few years to undertake capital projects that are required to meet their PCS-related space needs. • It is estimated that this funding will be used to build or acquire over 1,900 new classrooms.
Best Start • Capital funding for Best Start child care spaces in new schools • Conditions: • Planned, tendered, or under construction in 2005-2006 or 2006-07 school years • Confirmation that the spaces are approved by the municipality within its Best Start Plan • Operating funds committed for the spaces • Funding is the lesser of the costs of constructing the child care space or the elementary pupil place benchmarks x 1.4
Capital Debt Commitments • Debt commitments made before August 31, 2006 exceed board’s Grant for New Pupil Places • Conditions for funding: • Board had planned to remove capacity • Board has unexpected decline in enrolment • Pupil Accommodation Allocation Reserve and Proceeds of Disposition Reserve applied to any shortfall • Made available based on board business cases
Growth Schools • Boards need schools in areas of new residential development and Grant for New Pupil Places is insufficient • Conditions: • New Pupil Places grant is not sufficient to support existing capital debt and the cost of new schools • The board currently has an EDC by-law in place • Project is to be located on a site within an area identified in the EDC background study • Utilization rate for the planned school averages 80% or greater for 10 years • Construction for the planned growth school is needed for the 2007-08, 2008-09 or 2009-10 school years • Made available based on board business cases
OFA Long-Term Financing • The Ministry is working with the OFA to establish a provincial vehicle to provide long-term financing for approximately $1.5B of construction costs incurred by school boards under the following new capital programs: • Good Places to Learn – Renewal – Prohibitive to Repair • Primary Class Size Capital – Growth Schools • Capital Transitional Adjustment Programs for French-language boards • Boards will be able to long-term finance up to the maximum capitalized principal amount determined under each of these programs once the projects are substantially complete. • Boards are reimbursed for the short-term interest costs incurred while these capital projects are underway.