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1 GASB Statement 54 Fund Balance Reporting and Governmental Fund Types deene.dayton@state.sd.us 773-5932
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2 Intro Statement No. 54 Released March 11, 2009 Effective for periods beginning after June 15, 2010
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3 Current F/B Fund balance is a term used for assets minus liabilities in a “governmental” fund
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4 Current F/B Reserved F/B Resources not available for spending Reserve for inventory Long-term loan receivable Legal restrictions on spending Restriction narrower than the purpose of the fund itself Bond covenants
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5 Current F/B Designated F/B Management’s intended future use of resources Designated for future projects F/B applied to subsequent year’s budget
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6 Current F/B Unreserved, Undesignated F/B What’s left May even represent what’s left in a Special Revenue Fund
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7 Current Proprietary – Food Service Net Assets – Invested in Capital Restricted Unrestricted
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8 New F/B - Listing Nonspendable Restricted Committed Assigned Unassigned
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9 New F/B - Nonspendable Not in spendable form, such as: Inventory Long-term loans and notes receivable Prepaids Amounts legally or contractually required to be maintained intact The principal balance of a permanent fund
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10 New F/B - Restricted Similar definition as for net assets in Statement 34 – when constraints are placed on resources in the following manner – External parties Debt covenants Contributors The constitution State law (CO, SPED, Pension)
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11 New F/B - Committed Amounts that can only be used for specific purposes pursuant to constraints imposed by formal action of the highest level of decision making authority (governing board) Constraint can be removed or changed only by the same body (governing board) Action to constrain resources should occur prior to the end of fiscal year, though the exact amount may be determined subsequently
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12 New F/B - Assigned Amounts that are constrained by the government’s “intent” to be used for specific purposes Intent is expressed by – The governing body A body or individual to which the governing body has delegated the authority to assign amounts to be used for specific purposes
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13 New F/B - Assigned Constraints imposed on the use of assigned amounts are more easily removed or modified than those imposed on amounts that are classified as committed. Some governments may not have both committed and assigned fund balances, as not all governments have multiple levels of decision-making authority.
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14 New F/B - Assigned By reporting particular amounts that are not restricted or committed in a special revenue, capital projects, debt service, or permanent fund, the government has “assigned” those amounts to the purposes of the respective funds. In other words, the non-general funds will only have an unassigned balance if it is negative.
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15 New F/B - Assigned An appropriation of existing f/b to eliminate a projected budgetary deficit in the subsequent year’s budget (f/b applied) satisfies the criteria to be classified as an assignment of fund balance. An assigned f/b is created if the proposed budget at the May meeting contains “fund balance applied” in the General Fund.
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16 New F/B - Assigned GASB believes that an appropriation of existing fund balance does not meet the criteria for a commitment because the government does not have to take action to remove the constraint---it expires at the end of the budgetary period.
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17 New F/B - Assigned Because outlying funds are generally already “restricted” f/b, it would not be appropriate to peel out some of the restricted to report as an “assigned” f/b for subsequent year’s budget. May record such assignments as a layer of restricted for internal tracking but may not “display” it as such on GAAP f/s.
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18 New F/B - Unassigned The residual classification for the General Fund.
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19 New F/B - ALL The amount that should be reported as nonspendable f/b should be determined before classifying amounts in the restricted, committed, and assigned f/b classifications. Place balances of a given fund from the top down, until the balances are gone. 1. nonspendable, 2. restricted, 3. committed, 4. assigned, and 5. unassigned
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20 New F/B - Negative Nonspendable, Restricted and Committed balances should always be reported at their full established amounts – even if they cause a negative unassigned.
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21 New F/B - Negative An assigned f/b cannot cause a negative unassigned. A district can only assign what it has.
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22 New F/B - Negative A negative residual amount should not be reported for restricted, committed or assigned fund balances in any fund.
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23 Special Laws Stay vigilant of special laws that establish levels of authority Interest Earned Sale of Surplus Property Transfers out of CO & SPED SDCL 13-16-26
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24 Closing Revenues Go back to each fund and each revenue account and ask yourself where that account should be closed at the end of the year. Keep in mind the Special Laws
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25 Spending Priority All governmental funds should have a spending priority policy established Does your district want to spend restricted or committed dollars first….and so on.
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26 Closing Expenditures Review the expenditure accounts for each fund and determine if the established closing process coincides with the district’s spending priority.
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27 New F/B - Display The following components of f/b: Two components of nonspendable Major restricted purposes Specific purposes of committed and assigned The preceding may either be reported separately in the f/s’s or aggregated in the f/s’s and disclosed in the notes
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28 New F/B - Disclosures The disclosures for committed f/b should identify the government’s highest level of decision making authority AND the formal action that is required to be taken to establish a f/b commitment
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29 New F/B - Disclosures The disclosures for assigned f/b should identify the body or official authorized to assign amounts to a specific purpose AND the policy established by the governing body pursuant to which that authorization is given.
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30 New F/B - Disclosures If a governing body has established a minimum f/b policy, then the policy should be described in the notes to f/s
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31 Fund Types – Special Revenue Special revenue funds “are used” to account for and report the proceeds of specific revenue sources that are restricted or committed to expenditure for specified purposes. The proceeds of specific revenue sources should be the foundation for a special revenue fund.
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32 Fund Types – Special Revenue The restricted or committed proceeds of specific revenue sources should be expected to continue to comprise a substantial portion of the inflows reported in the fund.
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33 Fund Types – Special Revenue Note disclosures should disclose the purpose of each major Special Revenue Fund as well as identifying which revenues are reported in each of these funds.
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34 Special Revenue – Impact Aid Impact Aid is special revenue but it is not spent on a special purpose so it technically is not a special revenue fund. But state law (SDCL 13-16-31) references a separate Impact Aid fund.
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35 Special Revenue – Impact Aid When a GAAP/Compliance conflict exists, we try to satisfy both Maintain a separate Impact Aid Fund throughout the year……blend it with the General Fund for year end financial reporting Note – Transfers from the Impact Aid Fund to non-General Funds would be reported as a transfer out of the General Fund (permissible under SDCL 13-16-26.2)
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36 Special Revenue – Impact Aid All funds are required to be budgeted (SDCL 13-11- 2), such as General, Impact Aid, CO… GASB requires budgetary RSI for General and major special revenue funds Impact Aid is not a GASB recognized major special revenue fund so it will not be reported as budgetary RSI General Fund budgetary RSI will include only the budgeted General fund and not any blended Impact Aid amounts (explain in notes to RSI)
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37 Fund Types – Capital Projects To account for the expenditure on capital outlays, including the acquisition or construction of capital facilities and other capital assets. (broader definition)
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38 Fund Types – Capital Projects Although the use of a capital projects fund is not required, its application will prevent distortions of trend data in an entity’s operating funds.
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39 Fund Types – Debt Service To account for financial resources that are restricted, committed or assigned to expenditure for principal and interest. All debt does not trigger/mandate the use of a debt service fund…….however
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40 Fund Types – Debt Service Debt service funds “should be used” to report resources if legally mandated. Debt service funds “should be used” to account for resources that are being accumulated for principal and interest maturing in future years. (term bond)
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41 Fund Types – Permanent “Should be used” to account for resources that are restricted to the extent that only earnings, and not principal, may be used for purposes that support the reporting government’s programs. Not to include private purpose trust money that is for individuals, private organizations, or other governments.
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