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GASB Statement No. 54 Fund Balance Reporting and Governmental Fund Type Definitions

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GASB Statement No. 54. Fund Balance Reporting and Governmental Fund Type Definitions. GASB Statement No. 54. Karen McConnell, Director of Business Affairs: Central Dauphin School District Jill Gilbert, Partner: Trout, Ebersole & Groff, LLP. Presentation outline. Background and Summary - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: GASB Statement No. 54

GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance Reporting and

Governmental Fund Type Definitions

Page 2: GASB Statement No. 54

GASB Statement No. 54

Karen McConnell, Director of Business Affairs: Central Dauphin School District

Jill Gilbert, Partner: Trout, Ebersole & Groff, LLP

Page 3: GASB Statement No. 54

Presentation outline

Background and Summary Fund Balance Classifications

Current Under GASB 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions Fund Balance Reporting and Disclosures

Page 4: GASB Statement No. 54

Background and Summary

Enhance the usefulness of fund balance information. Clearer fund balance classifications that can

be more consistently applied. Clarifying existing governmental fund type

definitions.

Page 5: GASB Statement No. 54

Background and Summary

Only applies to the five governmental funds. No changes to the reporting of net assets for

government-wide and proprietary statements. Effective for financial statements for periods

beginning after June 15, 2010. Early implementation is encouraged.

Page 6: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Classification

The governmental funds are composed of five types of funds:

1) General Fund

2) Special Revenue Funds

3) Capital Project Funds

4) Debt Service Funds and

5) Permanent Funds.

Page 7: GASB Statement No. 54

Why the change???

Research conducted by GASB shows a lack of consistency amount governments in reporting the components of fund balance.

Fund balance components are often misunderstood by financial statement users

Currently unclear whether any portion of the reserved or designated fund balance are available to help balance a governments budget.

Page 8: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Hierarchy:

Nonspendable Fund Balance Restricted Fund Balance Committed Fund Balance Assigned Fund Balance Unassigned Fund Balance

Page 9: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Nonspendable – not expected to be converted to cash.

Not in spendable form Inventories Prepaid Long-term notes receivable

Funds legally or contractually required to be maintained intact.

Corpus of a permanent fund

Page 10: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Restricted Essentially the same definition as reported for

restricted net assets under GASB 34. Should be restricted when constraints placed

on the use of resources are either: Externally imposed by creditors, grantors,

contributors, or laws or regulations of other governments; or

Imposed by law through constitutional provisions of enabling legislation

Page 11: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Committed Constraints on use are imposed by formal

action of the government’s highest level of decision-making authority.

Constraints can only be removed or changed by taking the same type of action it employed to commit them.

Page 12: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Committed (cont’d) Should incorporate contractual obligations to

the extent that existing resources in the fund have been specifically committed for use in satisfying those contractual obligations.

The formal action to commit fund balance should occur prior to the end of the reporting period.

Amount, subject to constraint, may be determined in the subsequent period.

Page 13: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Assigned For all governmental funds other than the

general fund, any remaining positive amounts not classified as nonspendable, restricted or committed.

For the general fund, amounts constrained for the intent to be used for a specific purpose that is narrower than the general purpose of the government.

Cannot assign an amount if it would cause a deficit in the unassigned fund balance.

Page 14: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Assigned (cont’d) Not required to be the government’s highest

level of decision making authority. Nature of the action to remove or modify

assignments are not as strict.

Page 15: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Unassigned General fund, amounts not classified as

nonspendable, restricted, committed or assigned. Only fund that would report a positive amount in unassigned fund balance.

Other governmental funds amount expended in excess of resources that are nonspendable, restricted, committed or assigned.

Page 16: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Not all governments will have all five components of fund balance.

Should review current policies and procedures to determine if resources would meet the definition of committed or assigned.

Additional policies may need to be adopted or revised to be consistent with the new definitions.

Page 17: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Stabilization Arrangements Defined as revenue stabilization, budgetary

stabilization, working capital needs, contingencies or emergencies, or other “rainy day" arrangements.

The authority to set aside these amounts usually comes from statute, ordinance, resolution, charter, or constitution.

The formal action should identify the specific circumstance and need for stabilization.

Page 18: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Stabilization Arrangements (cont’d) Funds needed “in an emergency” is not

specific enough to be committed. Funds needed to offset “anticipated revenue

shortfall” do not qualify unless the shortfall is quantified and can be distinguished from other revenue shortfalls.

Page 19: GASB Statement No. 54

Fund Balance–GASB 54

Stabilization Arrangements (cont’d) Should be reported as restricted or committed

if they meet the criteria, otherwise they should be reported as unassigned.

Should not be reported as assigned. Information should be disclosed in the notes to

the financial statements.

Page 20: GASB Statement No. 54

Change in Fund Definitions

Clarifying certain terms used in fund type definitions would improve consistency.

Not intended to impose more restrictive interpretations on the use of the various fund types.

Many not following current standards, as they relate to special revenue funds.

Page 21: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

General Fund Current definition – To account for all financial

resources except those required to be accounted for in another fund.

New definition – To account for all financial resources not accounted for and reported in another fund.

Changed the definition to eliminate the notion that no other governmental funds should be reported unless they are required is eliminated and that the establishment of other funds can be discretionary.

Page 22: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Special Revenue Funds Current definition – To account for the proceeds of

specific revenue sources that are legally restricted to expenditure for specified purposes.

New definition – To account for the proceeds of specific revenue sources that are restricted or committed to expenditure for specified purposes other than debt service and capital projects.

Removed the legally restricted terminology because it implies a restriction enforceable by law.

Page 23: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Special Revenue Funds (cont’d) Proceeds of specific restricted or committed revenue

sources should be the foundation for the fund. Specific revenue sources should be expected to

continue to comprise a substantial portion of the inflows.

Other resources (i.e. investment earnings, transfers from other funds) may be reported in the fund if those resources are restricted, committed, or assigned to the specified purpose of the fund.

Page 24: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Special Revenue Funds (cont’d)

Required to disclose the purpose for each major special revenue – identifying which revenues and other resources are reported in each of the funds.

If the government does not expect that a substantial portion of the inflows will be from restricted or committed resources, the government should stop using a special revenue fund and report the remaining resources in the general fund.

Page 25: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Capital Projects Fund Current definition – To account for financial

resources to be used for the acquisition or construction of major capital facilities.

New definition – To account for all financial resources that are restricted, committed, or assigned to expenditure for capital outlays.

Page 26: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Debt Service Funds Current definition – To account for the

accumulation of resources for, and the payment of, general long-term debt principal and interest.

New definition – To account for all financial resources that are restricted, committed, or assigned to expenditure for principal and interest.

Page 27: GASB Statement No. 54

Governmental Fund-Type Definitions

Permanent Funds – 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.

Page 28: GASB Statement No. 54

Summary

Establishes a hierarchy of fund balance classifications .

Clarifies the definition of existing governmental fund types.

Must determine if current special revenue funds meet the revised fund definition for such funds.  

Effective for financial statements for periods beginning after June 15, 2010. GASB encourages early implementation.

Page 29: GASB Statement No. 54

Any questions

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Page 30: GASB Statement No. 54

Contact information

Karen L. McConnell, MBA CPA

Director of Business Affairs

Central Dauphin School District

(717) 545-4703 ext. 205

[email protected]

Jill E. Gilbert, CPA/Partner

Trout, Ebersole and Groff, LLP

(717) 358-9152

[email protected]