802.00 - Revenue

802.00 - Revenue dawn@iowaschoo… Wed, 05/27/2020 - 12:57

802.01 - Local, State, and Federal Revenue

802.01 - Local, State, and Federal Revenue

All revenue received by the school district shall be classified under the official accounting system and be placed in the hands of the secretary and treasurer of the Board of Directors to be deposited into the official district depository as set by the Board of Directors and in accordance with applicable state laws. Funds may be deposited in other banks when specifically approved by the Board of Education.

 

 

 (April 12, 1971; July 15, 1991; July 7, 2003; July 18, 2011; June 23, 2014)

 

dawn@iowaschoo… Wed, 05/27/2020 - 13:06

802.01 R1 - Investment and Depository Designation

802.01 R1 - Investment and Depository Designation

School district funds in excess of current needs shall be invested in compliance with this policy.  This policy is meant to comply with applicable state law.

The goals of the school district’s investment portfolio in order of priority are:

  1. To provide safety of the principal;
  2. To maintain the necessary liquidity to match expected liabilities; and
  3. To obtain a reasonable rate of return.

In making investments, the school district shall exercise the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use to meet the goals of the investment program.

School district funds are moneys of the school district, including operating funds.  “Operating funds” of the school district are funds which are reasonably expected to be used during a current budget year or within fifteen months of the receipt.  When investing operating funds, the investments must mature within three hundred ninety-seven (397) days or less.  When investing funds other than operating funds, the investments must mature according to the need for the funds.

The Board authorizes the treasurer to invest funds in excess of current needs in the following investments:

  1.   Interest bearing savings, money market, and checking accounts at the school district’s authorized depositories.  Such depositories and amounts for deposit limits are:

    a.    State Bank of Toledo                    at $15,000,000 (so long as it continues as federally insured and approved by the state treasurer); and,
    b.  
      Lincoln Savings Bank                   at $15,000,000 (so long as it continues as federally insured and approved by the state treasurer).

  1.   Qualified investment pools, including, but not limited to, Iowa Schools Joint Investment Trust Program (ISJIT);
  1.   Obligations of the United States government, its agencies and instrumentalities; and,
  1.   Certificates of deposit and other evidences of deposit at federally insured Iowa depository institutions.

The board may change the above-referenced investment of funds via a Board resolution, adopted during an open meeting and included in the minutes of the meeting.  It shall be the responsibility of the treasurer to oversee the investment portfolio in compliance with this policy and the law.

It shall be the responsibility of the treasurer to bring a contract with an outside person to invest school district funds, to advise on investments, to direct investments, to act in a fiduciary capacity or to perform other services to the Board for review and approval.  The treasurer shall also provide the Board with information about and verification of the outside person’s fiduciary bond.  Contracts with outside persons shall include a clause requiring the outside person to notify the school district within thirty (30) days of any material weakness in internal structure or regulatory orders of sanctions against the outside person regarding the services being provided to the school district and to provide the documents necessary for the performance of the investment portion of the school district audit.  The compensation of the outside persons shall not be based on the performance of the investment portfolio.

The treasurer shall be responsible for reporting to and reviewing with the Board at its regular meetings the investment portfolio’s performance, transaction activity, and current investments, including the percent of the investment portfolio by type of investment and by issuer and maturities.  The report shall also include trend lines by month over the last year and year-to-year trend lines regarding the performance of the investment portfolio.  It shall also be the responsibility of the treasurer to obtain the information necessary to ensure that the investments and the outside persons doing business with the school district meet the requirements outlined in this policy.

In all of the above matters requiring action by the district treasurer, the treasurer shall work in conjunction with the Board secretary.

It shall be the responsibility of the superintendent to deliver a copy of this policy to the school district’s depositories, auditor, and outside persons doing business with the school district.

It shall also be the responsibility of the superintendent, in conjunction with the treasurer, to develop a system of investment practices and internal controls over the investment practices.  The investment practices shall be designed to prevent losses, to document the officers’ and employees’ responsibility for elements of the investment process and address the capability of the management.

 

 

 (August 17, 1992; September 19, 1994; September 15, 1997; July 7, 2003; July 18, 2011; June 23, 2014; February 4, 2020)

 

dawn@iowaschoo… Wed, 05/27/2020 - 13:07

802.04 - Capital Assets

802.04 - Capital Assets

The school district will establish and maintain a capital assets management system for reporting capitalized assets owned or under the jurisdiction of the school district in its financial reports in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) as required or modified by law; to improve the school district's oversight of capital assets by assigning and recording them to specific facilities and programs and to provide for proof of loss of capital assets for insurance purposes. 

Capital assets, including tangible and intangible assets, are reported in the government-wide financial statements (i.e. governmental activities and business type activities) and the proprietary fund financial statements. Capital assets reported include school district buildings and sites, construction in progress, improvements other than buildings and sites, land and machinery and equipment. Capital assets reported in the financial reports will include individual capital assets with an historical cost equal to or greater than $2,500, except for intangible right to use lease assets. The Federal regulations governing school lunch programs require capital assets attributable to the school lunch program with a historical cost of equal to or greater than $500 be capitalized. Additionally, capital assets are depreciated over the useful life of each capital asset. 

All intangible assets (except for right to use lease assets) with a purchase price equal to or greater than $25,000 with useful life of two or more years, are included in the intangible asset inventory for capitalization purposes. Such assets are recorded at actual historical cost and amortized over the designated useful lifetime applying a straight-line method of depreciation. If there are no legal, contractual, regulatory, technological or other factors that limit the useful life of the asset, then the intangible asset needs to be considered to have an indefinite useful life and no amortization should be recorded.

If an intangible asset that meets the threshold criteria is fully amortized, the asset must be reported at the historical cost and the applicable accumulated amortization must also be reported. It is not appropriate to “net” the capital asset and amortization to avoid reporting. For internally generated intangible assets, outlays incurred by the government's personnel, or by a third-party contractor on behalf of the government, and for development of internally generated intangible assets should be capitalized.

The district recognizes the importance of classifying leases of intangible assets as assets or liabilities in financial statements. When operating as a lessor, the district will recognize a lease liability and an intangible right-to-use lease asset. When operating as a lessee, the district will recognize a lease receivable and a deferred inflow of resources consistent with the requirements established in GASB 87. 

The District recognizes a lease liability and an intangible right-to-use lease asset with an initial value of $25,000 or more. At the commencement of a lease, the District initially measures the lease liability at the present value of payments expected to be made during the lease term. Subsequently, the lease liability is reduced by the principal portion of lease payments made. The lease asset is initially measured as the initial amount of the lease liability, adjusted for lease payments made at or before the lease commencement date plus certain initial direct costs to place the asset in service. The lease asset is then amortized on a straight-line basis over the life of the lease. 

The capital assets management system must be updated monthly to account for the addition/acquisition, disposal, relocation/transfer of capital assets. It is the responsibility of the superintendent to count and reconcile the capital assets with a capital assets management system on June 30 each year. 

It is the responsibility of the superintendent to develop administrative regulations implementing this policy. It will also be the responsibility of the superintendent to educate employees about this policy and its supporting administrative regulations. 

In determining the capital asset capitalization threshold, the size of the school district, the property insurance deductible and the time and effort necessary to account for and track capital assets with a lesser value should be considered. It is strongly recommended the board consult with the school auditor prior to setting the capitalization threshold. 

An intangible asset excluding right to use lease, should be recognized in the statement of net assets only if it is identifiable which means the asset is either separable or arose from contractual or other legal rights, regardless of whether those rights are transferable or separable. The intangible asset must also possess all of the following

characteristics/criteria:

- lack of physical substance;

- be of a nonfinancial nature (not in monetary form like cash or investment securities); and, 

- the initial useful life extending beyond a single reporting period.

Examples of intangible assets include easements, land use rights, patents, trademarks and copyrights. In addition, intangible assets include computer software purchased, licensed or internally generated, including websites, as well as outlays associated with an internally generated modification of computer software. Intangible assets can be purchased or licensed, acquired through nonexchange transactions or internally generated. Intangible assets exclude assets acquired or created primarily for purposes of directly obtaining income, assets from capital lease transactions reported by lessees, and goodwill created through the combination of a government and another entity. 

 

A school district could, and many do, use bar code identification tags to control capital assets, such as VCRs, technology equipment, etc., even though these capital assets have a cost below the capitalization threshold. In tracking these capital assets only the information necessary to control the location and use of them needs to be maintained. Some school districts video-tape each classroom/office annually to save time and effort tracking capital assets below the capitalization threshold. The video tape is also helpful for insurance claims. Whether a school district chooses to track capital assets with a cost below the capitalization threshold or not, capital assets with a cost below the capitalization threshold should not be included in the capital assets listing for reporting purposes.

 

This policy provides for valuing capital assets at historical cost as required by GAAP. This policy bases the capitalization threshold on the historical/acquisition cost of the individual asset. The school district can choose to use the historical cost of all the items included in a purchase order as the basis for determining whether to capitalize the capital asset. The cost of improvements may be added to the historical cost of a capital asset. Deciding whether to add the costs of an improvement to a capital asset's historical cost is a judgment call which should be made after consulting with the school auditor.

 

Approved: June 16, 1997

Reviewed: July 7, 2003; September 15, 2003; November 1, 2010; July 18, 2011; June 23, 2014; February 4, 2020

Revised: March 6, 2023

 

arobson@s-tama… Thu, 04/06/2023 - 09:26