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Fundamentals of School Finance. WSSDA Webinar May 14, 2014 Barbara Posthumus, Director of Business Services Lake Washington School District bposthumus@lwsd.org. Agenda. Budgeting for Capital Levies Budgeting for Bonds Debt Service Limitations Front-Funding Monitoring and Reporting.
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Fundamentals of School Finance WSSDA Webinar May 14, 2014 Barbara Posthumus, Director of Business Services Lake Washington School District bposthumus@lwsd.org
Agenda • Budgeting for Capital Levies • Budgeting for Bonds • Debt Service Limitations • Front-Funding • Monitoring and Reporting
Capital Levies • For levies passed in 2014, collection begins in 2015 • Typically collect 53% in Spring and 47% in Fall • For newly passed levies, your 2014-15 budget will only include the spring collection. • The 2nd year, 2015-16 will include 100% of annual levy
Capital Levies Example: $5.0 Million levy over 4 years = $20Million $5.0 x 53% = $2,650,000 = 2014-15 revenue $5.0 x 53% = $2,650,000 plus $5.0 x 47% = $2,350,000 Total = $5,000,000 = 2015-16 revenue
Technology Levies • Technology Levies have special rules • Beginning in 2008, OSPI required that expenditures on staff training and software related to technology systems must be spent in the General Fund • Capital Technology Levy revenue then must be transferred from the Capital Projects Fund to the General Fund to cover the costs • You will see this in the presented budget as a transfer out of capital and a revenue in GF
Facility Levies • 100% of Revenue and Expenditures are in Capital Projects Fund
Budgeting for Bonds • Great news – you passed a bond!! • Determination of when to sell bonds • Must be able to spend 85% of proceeds within 3 years • Business Office will work with underwriter and advisor to sell bonds • Board will need to pass resolution • Superintendent/Business Office will conduct call with rating agencies to rate the bonds
Budgeting for Bonds • Bonds impact two funds: • Revenue from bond sale and construction expenses go in Capital Projects Fund • Principal and Interest Payments on Bonds are paid out of debt service fund. • The presented budget will reflect estimated amounts if prior to actual sale • Will need to levy an amount sufficient to pay principal and interest
Voted Debt Limitation • The total indebtedness of a district can not exceed 5% of the value of taxable property within a school district. This includes all non voted debt and all voted debt (bonds). • Voter approved bond capacity may exceed 5% of the district’s assessed valuation but the principal amount of the bond sale is limited to the available debt capacity. • Small school districts may have to structure bond issues and repayments differently than large districts due to the debt limitations.
Debt Limit Example • Griffin School District AV=$1,300,000,000 • 5% debt limitation = $65 million • Current outstanding voted debt $13 million • Current outstanding non voted debt $300K • Cost of a new high school $100 million • To construct a high school – would likely need to qualify for state matching funds and would need to ensure funding availability before moving forward. Maximum bond issuance would be about $52 million. • In this scenario, a district could issue ½ and then issue the other ½ in the subsequent year. This would increase the cost of issuance but would likely result in more available capacity (if AV increases and additional existing debt is paid down).
Debt Limitations • LGOs, lines of credit, capital leases, LOCAL program obligations, conditional sales contracts, and qualified zone academy bonds are all examples of non-voted debt subject to different rules for use of funds. • All non voted debt above is limited to .00375 (3/8th of 1 percent) of the value of taxable property within the school district
Example of a use of non-voted debt • Utilizing the State Treasurer’s LOCAL program, one local district was able to purchase school buses over a 13 year term. They are making payments utilizing state funds from the depreciation schedule. • This funding allowed them to fund buses without utilizing a transportation levy or cutting educational programs.
Property Tax Levy RateRegular and Excess Levy Rates(Rate Per $1,000 of Assessed Value)
Front-funding • Can you spend dollars from voted levies or bonds prior to collection? • Maybe……. • Need to have other reserves • Need to clearly track new expenditures separately • Need a clear cash flow plan
Front-funding • Why you may not want to • If use other reserves to front-fund, then those reserves will not be available for emergencies • May show negative fund balance line item on your budget – requires additional explanations • Depends on your level of reserves and need to use those reserves immediately for other things
Budgeting Capital Projects • For best transparency, sources of funds should be clearly identified. • Bonds vs. levies • Multiple Levies crossing over years
Monitoring and Reporting • Monthly board financial reports provided by district • If conducting multi-year construction project, outstanding encumbrances in Capital Projects Fund may exceed budget • District staff have reporting requirements to OSPI if receiving State Assistance on construction projects
Additional Resources • Organization and Financing of Washington Public Schools http://www.k12.wa.us/safs/PUB/ORG/13/Final%20Edition%202013.pdf • Funding Resources for School Facilities http://www.k12.wa.us/SchFacilities/default.aspx