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INSIGHT TO GET IT RIGHT: PREPARING FOR 2017 AUDIT & TAX FILINGS
June 13, 2017
Nick Wallace, [email protected]
Nicole Fishback, [email protected]
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• Participate in entire webinar• Answer polls when they are provided• If you are viewing this webinar in a group Complete group attendance form with
• Title & date of live webinar• Your company name• Your printed name, signature & email address
All group attendance sheets must be submitted to [email protected] within 24 hours of live webinar
Answer polls when they are provided
• If all eligibility requirements are met, each participant will be emailed their CPE certificates within 15 business days of live webinar
TO RECEIVE CPE CREDIT
• NOT a technical discussion of the details of FASB & GASB pronouncements
• Provide a practical “how to” session on issues to consider as you work through this year’s audit & tax preparation plans & prepare for fall board meetings & other presentations later this year, regarding making changes required by new accounting standards & new tax regulations
TODAY’S WEBINAR
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• FASB pronouncements Revenue recognition (ASC 606) Leases (ASC 842) Other accounting changes Tips for early adopters of ASU 2016-14
• Tax challenges & tips• Impact of GASB standards GASB to be implemented
• Pension (year 2 & 3 – GASB 73, 78, 81))• OPEB reporting (GASB 74)• Split Interest Agreements (GASB 81)
Lease exposure draft• SFA (Perkins closeout & audit findings)
AGENDA
• Revenue recognition (ASU 2014-09) – effective for years beginning after December 15, 2017, (FY19) for Conduit Bond Obligors or a year later for everyone else: practically speaking, need to consider the following issues
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION
IMPACT
COMMUNICATION
IMPLEMENTATION
HOW TO FIND ANSWERS
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Communication needs of boards, management & accounting & finance staff• How the new standard will impact revenue streams Contributions – scoped out Tuition – including traditional & nontraditional programs State or federal appropriations (contract with a customer or
contribution?) Sponsored contracts (including disclosure requirements) Sponsored grants
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION IMPACT
Mainly Larger Mainly Larger Schools
Mainly Larger Schools
Communication needs of boards, management & accounting & finance staff• How new standard will impact revenue streams
For institutions with health care entities• Patient services – transaction price, performance obligation, impact of collectability• Clinical trials – transaction price, performance obligation
Royalties & licensing – point in time vs. over time, variability, handling of expenses under contract Auxiliaries (housing, dining contracts, bookstore including warranty obligations
& rights of return & athletics) Publications Other (conferences, memberships, corporate sponsorships)
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION IMPACT
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Revenue Stream Accounting Impact Data/System Impact Disclosures
1. Tuition
2. Continuing Ed/Online
3. State/Federal Appropriations
4. Sponsored Contracts
5. Sponsored Grants TBD TBD TBD
6. Contribution Revenue
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION IMPACT
High Impact Moderate Impact Low Impact Scoped OutColor Code
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION COMMUNICATION
Board
Management
Finance Teams
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Communication needs of boards, management & accounting & finance staff
• Boards – what do I tell them?
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION COMMUNICATION
Major Areas of Change
Magnitude of Change
Probable Direction of
Change
Timing of Implementation
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION COMMUNICATION
Major Areas of Change
Magnitude of Change
Probable Direction of
Change
Timing of Implementation
Timeline for implementation steps (applies to FYE May or June 30, 2019, for conduit debt issuers, or FYE May or June 30, 2020, for all others)
New areas for internal control (existence, completeness, valuation, rights & obligations, etc.)
Areas for estimates & judgments (allocation of transaction price, collectability, etc.)
New vocabulary (contract with a customer, transaction price, performance obligation, consideration payable to customer, right to withdrawal)
Board Communication
ManagementCommunication
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FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUERECOGNITION COMMUNICATION
Finance Staff Communication
• Inventory process for all material revenue streams & existing contracts• Implement the five-step approach for all material revenue streams• Identify new estimates & judgments. Accumulate, organize & document relevant supporting
conclusions & calculations• Determine transition model – run parallel (two years prior to implementation) under full
retrospective or for “modified approach” – use current GAAP two years prior & disclose impact on each line item in year of implementation
Management Communication
Board Level Communication
• Finance staff communication plan – additional matters Process for collecting data for disclosures Systems changes or adjustments needed Pro forma impact (especially related to ratios & debt covenants) Format PBC workpapers to be evaluated by auditors who will be
evaluating the implementation of this standard
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – REVENUE RECOGNITION COMMUNICATION
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REVENUE RECOGNITION IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
HOW TO FIND ANSWERS
• Resources AICPA Revenue Recognition resource page AICPA publication: “Financial Reporting Brief: Roadmap to
Understanding the new Revenue Recognition Standard” Center for Audit Quality: Preparing for the New Revenue Recognition
Standard BKD Summary of AICPA Progress on Revenue Guidance (March 2017)
bkd.com/thought-center
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• Leases (ASU 2016-02): effective for years beginning after December 15, 2018, (FY20) for Conduit Bond Obligors or a year later for everyone else. Practically speaking, need to consider the following issues
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASES
IMPACT
COMMUNICATION
IMPLEMENTATION
HOW TO FIND ANSWERS
Communication needs of boards, management & accounting & finance staff• How the new standard will impact Debt covenant & debt capacity assessments Financial ratios Bond ratings & cost of borrowing Institutional budgeting Procurement & contract review
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASES IMPACT
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FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASES COMMUNICATION
Board
Management
Finance Teams
Communication needs of boards, management & accounting & finance staff• Boards – what do I tell them?
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASES COMMUNICATION
Major Areas of Change
Magnitude of Change
Probable Direction of
Change
Timing of Implementation
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FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASES COMMUNICATION
Major Areas of Change
Magnitude of Change
Probable Direction of
Change
Timing of Implementation
Board Communication
ManagementCommunication
• Review of contracts for lease determination Includes contracts that could include leases
• Review of impact (if any) on debt covenants• Review of impact on Title IV compliance ratios• Communication with rating agencies• Policy level decisions (materiality, etc.)
FASB PRONOUNCEMENTS – LEASE COMMUNICATION
Finance Staff Communication•Inventory process for all contracts including those that could have embedded leases•Transition options including practical expedients•Identify new estimates & judgments. Accumulate, organize & document relevant supporting
conclusions & calculations•Calculation tools to use (existing ERP tools, commercially purchased software, etc.)•For larger, more complex entities think about & decide upon procedures for data collection &
coverage of completeness assertion
Management Communication
Board Level Communication
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HOW TO FIND ANSWERS
• Resources for software* LeaseAccelerator SAP Lease Administration by NAKISA Aptitude Lease Accounting Engine Financial Computer Systems, Inc.: EZ13 Real Asset Management*No endorsement implied
A FEW OTHER FASB ACCOUNTING CHANGES
*May 10, 2017 – FASB EITF Project added to determine accounting for costs associated with implementing cloud computing
Accounting Change Impact Effective Date – Public Entity
Effective Date –Nonpublic Entity
Fees paid in a cloud computing arrangement*
Guidance to determine if cloud computing includes a software license
Years beginning after December 15, 2015.Generally FY June 30, 2017 (conduit debt)
Years beginning after December 15, 2016.Generally FY June 30, 2018
Presentation of going concern (ASU 2014-15)
Defined management’s responsibility to evaluategoing concern & to provide disclosures
Effective for annualperiods ending afterDecember 15, 2016
Effective for annualperiods ending afterDecember 15, 2016
Eliminating extraordinary & unusual Items
Eliminates separate classification & disclosures for extraordinary items
Effective for annual periods beginning afterDecember 15, 2015
Effective for annual periods beginning afterDecember 15, 2015
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OTHER FASB ACCOUNTING CHANGES
• For a full review of all FASB pronouncements impacting the 2017 fiscal year, please see “BKD FASB Standard Setter Update: 2016 Edition”
• Plan & implement early to avoid the “rush” of implementing revenue recognition, leases & financial reporting for not-for-profits in sequential years. Notice the convergence of effective dates below
TIP FOR EARLY ADOPTERS OF ASU 2016-14
FASB Standard Schools w/Conduit Debt All Other Schools
Lease FY20 FY21
Revenue Recognition FY19 FY20
Financial Reporting FY19 FY19
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• Nicole Fishback 990 compliance, form changes, due dates 1098T update UBI update Endowment issues Future issues
TAX CHALLENGES & TIPS
• Understanding IRS terminology in forms & instructions• Hours involved in gathering data from multiple parties• Lengthy process from end of fiscal year to actual filing return• Overall tax compliance burden is usually higher than compared
to a for-profit entity• Trying to ensure responses throughout the forms are consistent
CHALLENGES IN FORM 990 COMPLIANCE
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2017 FILING SEASON – DUE DATES
Tax Type (Form) Form No.Current Due
DateNew Due
DateCurrent Extended
Due DateNew Extended
Due Date
Partnership 1065 4/15 3/15 9/15 9/15
S Corp 1120S 3/15 3/15 9/15 9/15
C Corp 1120 3/15 4/15 9/159/15 (Until 2025)
10/15 (After 2025)
Trust 1041 4/15 4/15 9/15 9/30
Employee Benefit Plans 5500 7/31 7/31 10/15 11/15
Tax-Exempt Organizations 990/990-T 5/15 5/158/15 (First)
11/15 (Second)11/15
FinCEN 114 6/30 4/15 None 10/15
Note: due dates listed
are for entities with calendar
year-ends
Due date changes for years beginning after December 31, 2015
• Changes to 2016 Form 990 For tax years beginning after December 31, 2015
• First extension for Form 990 & 990-EZ will cover a six-month period• Second extension is no longer available• Previously, two three-month extensions were available• The final filing due date with extensions remains unchanged
2016 FORM 990 CHANGES
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• Changes to 2016 Form 990 The publicly supported charity definition has been updated to include
agricultural research organization under §170(b)(1)(A)(ix) • Only pertains to §501(c)(3) organizations that are exempt as a public charity &
operate as agricultural research organizations. In other words, it doesn’t affect most organizations
2016 FORM 990 CHANGES
• Changes to 2016 Form 990 Goods or services with insubstantial value have been indexed for
inflation. The value of items valued at $10.60 or less that bear the organization’s name or logo & are given to donors in exchange for a donation of $53.00 or more need not be disclosed to the donor
2016 FORM 990 CHANGES
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• Proposed regulations issued on August 15, 2016 Eliminate exceptions for reporting for nonresident aliens, individuals
whose tuition is fully paid by scholarship & individuals whose tuition is paid by a formal billing arrangement
• Announcement 2016-42 Provides schools will not be assessed penalties if they report tuition
billed (box 2) instead of amount received (box 1) for calendar year 2017, which will be reported in 2018
FORM 1098-T UPDATES
• Terrell v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2016-85 IRS disallowed the taxpayers education credit School had reported the amount billed rather than the amount paid on
the Form 1098-T Tax court sided with the taxpayer & allowed the credit The pertinent number is qualified tuition paid
FORM 1098-T UPDATES
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UBI UPDATES
• UBI is Income from a trade or business; Income from an activity that is regularly carried on; & Income from an activity that is not substantially related to the
performance of its exempt purpose or function
• Income & expenses are reported annually on Form 990-T
UBI UPDATES
• Private Letter Ruling 201644019• IRS issued several rulings related to proposed activities of a section
501(c)(3) educational organization, specifically, that One-time sale of assets to partnership will not be treated as “regularly carried
on” for UBI purposes; Payments by partnership to organization will be treated as exempt royalties
under section 512(b)(2); Lease payments made by partnership to organization will be excludable rent
payments under section 512(b)(3); & Activities of organization’s wholly-owned, for-profit corporate subsidiary will
not be attributed to organization
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• Technical Advice Memorandum 201633032• IRS holds catalog & online retail sales are taxable IRS concludes income from various merchandise sales made through a
§501(c)(3) organization’s printed catalog, online store & various retail outlets were taxable as UBI because sales did not contribute significantly to organization’s exempt purpose. Interestingly, the IRS seems to have abandoned its normal product-by-product UBI analysis in this ruling & instead made a blanket conclusion all sales are taxable
UBI UPDATES
• Common question – can school claim a loss from the conduct of an unprofitable unrelated trade or business activity?
• IRS has disallowed college & university unrelated business income tax loss deductions claimed on Form 990-T because years of continuous losses from the activity demonstrate the lack of a profit motive
• Two recent cases …
UBI UPDATES
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• In Roberts v. Commissioner, the Seventh Circuit reversed the Tax Court, which had held that an individual did not operate his horse racing business with the intent to earn a profit
• The case contains a good analysis of the different profit motive factors in §1.183 as well as discussion of the extent to which a profit motive can be found in business start-up activities
• http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2016/D04-15/C:15-3396:J:Posner:aut:T:fnOp:N:1738162:S:0
UBI UPDATES
• In Main v. Commissioner, the Tax Court determined that an attorney’s automobile restoration activity was engaged in with the intent to earn a profit, notwithstanding losses from the activity
• http://www.ustaxcourt.gov/UstcInOp/OpinionViewer.aspx?ID=10843
UBI UPDATES
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UBI UPDATES• Advertising or qualified sponsorship payments? IRS Tax-Exempt & Government Entities Divisions issued detailed analysis of
difference between taxable advertising income & qualified sponsorship payments that are not subject to UBIT
Issue indicators in the contract for sponsorship payments• Sponsor received any substantial return benefit• Payment entitles the payor use or acknowledgment of the name or logo of the payor’s
trade or business in periodicals• Payment is made in connection with any qualified convention or trade show activity• Exclusive provider arrangement exists• Advertising
COLLEGE & UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENTS
• In December 2015, Congressional Research Service published a report describing possible changes to the federal income tax treatment of college & university endowments. There are ongoing congressional hearings on the subject Four areas of possible tax reform
• Imposing a minimum payout rate on endowments• Imposing a tax on endowments or endowment earnings• Limiting the charitable contribution deduction for certain gifts made to endowments• Changing the tax treatment of certain offshore investment strategies that use
“blocker corporations” in connection with unrelated business income tax planning
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INVESTMENTS BY CRT IN ORGANIZATION ENDOWMENTS
• Many organizations are both trustees & charitable beneficiaries of charitable remainder trusts (CRTs)
• Many donors & organizations invest CRT assets in the organization’s endowment
• Many endowments though, earn UBI, & if CRT earns any UBI, it must pay penalty excise tax equal to 100 percent of the amount of UBI
• PLR 201636043 – IRS concluded that redemption of the units would be treated as gain or loss from investment activity & not characterized as UBI
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
• Numerous individual & business “extenders” expired on December 31, 2016
• Impossible to predict tax reform at this point Likely to require bipartisan support Unclear if tax legislation would be retroactive to
January 1, 2017 Several drafts contain provisions on charitable
contributions• Fate of recent treasury regulations
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Standard Description Effective Date
GASB Statement No. 73,Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions and Related Assets That Are Not within the Scope of GASB Statement 68, and Amendments to Certain Provisions of GASB Statements 67 and 68Issued June 2015Related Resources: GASB IssuesFinal Rules Governing Reporting for Postemployment BenefitsOther Than Pensions
Establishes accounting & financialreporting requirements for defined benefit pensions & defined contribution pensions under plans not administered through a trust that meet specified criteria, i.e., not covered by Statement 68. The requirements are similar to Statement 68, with as-needed modifications for any assets accumulated. The standard also provides minor changes to Statements 67 & 68
Amendments to Statements67 & 68 & presentation requirements for assets accumulated for pensions not administered through a trust are effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2015The pension provisions are effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2016
Applicable for June 30, 2017 yearends
GASB STANDARDS
Standard Description Effective Dates
GASB Statement No. 78, PensionsProvided through Certain Multiple-Employer Defined Benefit Pension PlansIssued December 2015Related Resources: GASB FinalizesGuidance on Certain Cost-SharingPension Plans
Narrows the scope & applicability ofGASB Statement No. 68, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions, to exclude pensions provided to employees of state or local governmental employers through a cost-sharing multiple-employer defined benefit pension plan that meets specific criteria. Establishes new guidance for these employers, including separate requirements for recognition & measurement of pension expense or expenditures & liabilities, note disclosures & requiredsupplementary information (RSI)
Reporting periods beginningafter December 15, 2015
FYE June 30, 2017
GASB STANDARDS
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Standard Description Effective Date
GASB Statement No. 79, CertainExternal Investment Pools and Pool ParticipantsIssued December 2015Related Resources: New Amortized Cost Guidance for Investment Pools
Establishes new criteria to continueamortized cost accounting for certain external investment pools & adds disclosure requirements for qualifying pools & their participants
Reporting periods beginningafter June 15, 2015.Certain portfolio quality & monthly shadow pricing provisions are effective for reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2015
December 31, 2016 & June 30, 2017 year ends
GASB STANDARDS
Standard Description Effective Date
GASB Statement No. 74,Financial Reporting for Postemployment Benefit Plans Other Than Pension PlansIssued June 2015Related Resources: GASB Issues Final Rules Governing Reporting for Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions
Addresses the financial reporting for OtherPostemployment Benefits (OPEB) defined benefit & defined contribution plans administered through trusts meeting specified criteria, requiring a statement of fiduciary net position & a statement of changes in fiduciary net position. In addition, the guidance requires more extensive note disclosures & RSI related to the measurement of the OPEB liabilities for which assets were accumulated. Also provides guidance on reporting OPEB assets not in a trust.
Fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2016
FYE June 30, 2017
GASB STANDARDS
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Standard Description Effective Date
GASB Statement No. 81,Irrevocable Split-Interest AgreementsIssued March 2016Related Resources:GASB Finalizes Irrevocable Split-Interest Agreements Guidance
Standardizes recognition & measurementfor various split-interest agreements. Governments receiving resources from an irrevocable split-interest agreement as the agreement’s intermediary would recognize assets, liabilities & deferred inflows of resources. Governments with a beneficial interest in a split-interest agreement administered by a third party would recognize an asset & a deferred inflow ofresources
Reporting periods beginningafter December 15, 2016
Calendar 2017 years & FYE June 30, 2018
GASB STANDARDS
Standard Description Effective Date
GASB Statement No. 82,Pension Issues – an amendment of GASB Statements No. 67, No. 68 and No. 73Issued March 2016Related Resources: Final Guidance on Pension Implementation Issues
Addresses the presentation of payroll-related measures in RSI, selection of assumptions & treatment of deviations from guidance in Actuarial Standards of Practice for financial reporting purposes & classification of payments made by employers to satisfy plan member contribution requirements.In addition, GASB No. 82 updates or supersedes related questions in Implementation Guide No. 2015-1
Reporting periods beginning after June 15, 2016, with certain exceptions pertaining to the assumption guidance
FYE June 30, 2017
GASB STANDARDS
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Topic & Title Description Status (Subject to Change)
Exposure Draft: LeasesIssued in January 2016
Related Resources: GASB’sProposed Lease AccountingChanges
Based on the foundational principle that all leases are financings of the right to use an underlying asset, the proposal recommends a single approach to accounting for leases. Lessees would recognize an intangible asset & lease liability, & lessors would recognize a lease receivable & deferred inflow ofresources
Final Statement: May 2017Tentatively effective for reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2018. Earlier application is permitted
Calendar 2019 or FYE June 30, 2020
GASB STANDARDS – EXPOSURE DRAFT
• If a student receives disbursement of a Perkins loan after June 30, 2017, & before October 1, 2017, for the 2017–2018 award year, the student may receive any subsequent disbursements of that Perkins loan. However, disbursements are not permitted after June 30, 2018
• Certain new disclosure requirements to borrowers Regarding end of future availability of Perkins loans Regarding Direct loan (DL) repayment & forgiveness benefits not
available to Perkins loans
PERKINS LOAN PROGRAM
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• Liquidation of Perkins A school’s Perkins loan portfolio & its Perkins loan revolving fund
must both be liquidated when it ends its participation in the Perkins loan program
• A school must liquidate its Perkins loan portfolio & program fund, when it Voluntarily withdraws from the program; Has had its eligibility to participate in the Perkins loan program
terminated by ED; Has not been approved by ED for continued participation during
the school's recertification process; or Is closing
PERKINS LOAN PROGRAM – LIQUIDATION
• Perkins liquidation is Accounting for all the loans that remain in the portfolio, & Accounting for the remaining Perkins revolving fund
• What’s involved? Turn over loans to ED – assignment Account for all loans/update NSLDS accordingly Ascertain any liabilities as a result, e.g., purchased loans Split the remaining fund – distributional shares of remaining cash asset
PERKINS LOAN PROGRAM – LIQUIDATION
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• How to prepare? Assess your portfolio
• How many loans remain open?• Are loans accurately being reported on FISAP?• Are loans accurately being reported/updated to NSLDS?
Discuss timing of liquidation• Allowance for Perkins loans
Liquidation audit
PERKINS LOAN PROGRAM – LIQUIDATION
1. Repeat Finding – Failure to Take Corrective Action
2. NSLDS Roster Reporting – Inaccurate/Untimely Reporting
3. Return to Title IV (R2T4) Calculation Errors
4. Return to Title IV (R2T4) Funds Made Late
5. Verification Violations
TOP AUDIT FINDINGS (ACCORDING TO DOE)
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• NSLDS Roster file (formerly called Student Status Confirmation Report [SSCR]) not submitted in a timely manner to NSLDS
• Failure to provide notification of last date of attendance/changes in student enrollment status
• Failure to report accurate enrollment types & effective dates
• Clearinghouse reporting schedule
• File submission or system issues
CAUSES OF TOP FINDINGS – NSLDS REPORTING
• Inadequate system in place to identify/track official & unofficial withdrawals
• No system in place to track number of days remaining to return funds
• Institutional charges incorrect• Incorrect number of days used in term/payment period• Incorrect number of days used for breaks• Incorrect withdrawal date
CAUSES OF TOP FINDINGS – R2T4
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The information contained in these slides is presented by professionals for your information only & is not to be considered as legal advice. Applying specific information to your situation requires careful consideration of facts & circumstances. Consult your BKD advisor or legal counsel before acting on any matters covered.
BKD, LLP is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. State boards of accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses for CPE credit. Complaints regarding registered sponsors may be submitted to the National Registry of CPE Sponsors through its website: www.nasbaregistry.org
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• CPE credit may be awarded upon verification of participant attendance
• For questions, concerns or comments regarding CPE credit, please email the BKD Learning & Development Department at [email protected]
CPE CREDIT
THANK YOU!FOR MORE INFORMATION
Nick Wallace | 317.383.4000 | [email protected]
Nicole Fishback | 317.383.4000 | [email protected]
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