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General Information. HRA Funded by the district with contributions. Contributions are available to eligible employees for the reimbursement of medical care expenses incurred. Plan document definesthe contribution, the medical care expenses covered and carryover of unused funds to subsequent
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1. Health Reimbursement Arrangements Accounting for an HRA Plan
For DPI Purposes
March 2009
2. General Information HRA
Funded by the district with contributions.
Contributions are available to eligible employees for the reimbursement of medical care expenses incurred.
Plan document defines
the contribution,
the medical care expenses covered and
carryover of unused funds to subsequent periods.
3. General Information What makes the accounting complicated is that each individual district determines the type of arrangement.
The proper accounting of an HRA plan for DPI purposes is dependent on the type of arrangement the district has.
4. Questions you need to answer Is any part of the HRA a lump-sum contribution at retirement?
This is an OPEB benefit
Is so, has your district established a post employment benefit trust reported in fund 73?
Is this HRA lump-sum contribution being funded separately in the fund 73 trust?
5. OPEB benefit If your district has established a trust and is funding this OPEB benefit in the trust
Follow the DPI requirements for funding a fund 73 trust
6. OPEB benefit If your district has not established a trust but rather will pay the benefit from operating funds when it comes due
Follow the DPI requirements for pay as you go. Expenditure when retiree payment is made.
Function 290000, Object 290
7. Questions you need to answer Is the HRA a benefit that is earned in the year that the district contribution is made?
May be available:
During employment
After employment
Both Non-OPEB Flowchart 2
Non-OPEB Flowchart 2
8. Non-OPEB Benefit Are District contributions held in a trust account (i.e. bank account)?
Is the trust account an irrevocable trust?
When employment is terminated, are the accumulated funds applied against the next years district contribution or allocated to remaining individuals?
9. Non-OPEB Benefit Irrevocable Trust All questions are yes
Example:
District Contribution
10B711000-Trust $30,000
XXE XXXXXX 249 $30,000
10B 815200 (NEW ACCT) $30,000
10B 711000-District $30,000
Payment of costs
10B 815200 (NEW ACCT) $21,200
10B-711000-Trust $21,200
10. Non-OPEB Benefit Not an Irrevocable Trust If the trust account is not an irrevocable trust OR accumulated funds go back to the district
Example:
Payment of costs
XXE XXXXXX 249 $20,200
10E 290000 290 $ 1,000
10B-711000 $21,200
11. Questions you need to answer Are contributions held as assets of the district until payment is made to Administrator for claims?
Reported as an expenditure when the benefits are paid NOT when the District contribution is made
12. Non-OPEB Benefit Not an Irrevocable Trust Example:
Payment of costs
XXE XXXXXX 249 $20,200
10E 290000 290 $ 1,000
10B-711000 $21,200
13. How are Investment Earnings Reported? Are investment earnings used to pay medical claims?
Irrevocable Trust
10B 711000-Trust
10B 815200 (NEW ACCT)
Asset-held
XXE XXXXXX 249
10E 290000 290
10R 280
14. How are Investment Earnings Reported? Are investment earnings used to reduce the subsequent year contribution?
Irrevocable Trust
10B 711000
10B 815200 (NEW ACCT)
Asset-held
10B 711000
10R 280
15. How are Investment Earnings Reported? Are investment earnings used to pay administrative fees of the trust?
Irrevocable Trust
10E 290000 940
10R 280