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did_capital_assets [2021/09/29 20:05]
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did_capital_assets [2026/04/16 21:27] (current)
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 **Policy DID\\ **Policy DID\\
-Capital ​Assets\\ +Inventory and Management of Assets\\ 
-School Board Approved: ​June 262007**+School Board Approved: ​April 62026**
  
-**Background GASB 34** \\ +**NOTE: Any property purchased in whole or in part with Federal funds must be managed ​in accordance with Board policy [[daf_administration_of_federal_grants|DAF]]with specific fidelity ​to [[daf-6_administration_of_federal_grants_-_inventory_management_equipment_and_supplies_purchased_with_federal_funds|DAF-6]].**\\
-The Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) issued Statement No. 34 on June 30, 1999. GASB 34 significantly changed the way governments account and report financial information. This new reporting affects every public school organization that issues financial statements ​in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Among the many new requirementsGASB 34 requires schools ​to capitalize and depreciate certain types of assets. \\+
  
-**Policy Summary** \\ +The District’s capital assets ​include, but are not necessarily limited ​to, land, land improvements,​ buildings, building improvements, ​and infrastructureas well as vehicles and certain machinery, equipment, software, works of art, and other tangible ​or intangible assets that are used in operations and that have initial useful lives extending beyond one fiscal yearCapital assets also include certain improvements,​ modifications,​ replacements,​ or renovations to capital assets ​that materially increase their value or useful life. The School Board’s expectation for the District’s ​capital asset management and accounting process is to ensure that the District’s procedures are sufficiently formalized and implemented to allow for adequate financial reportingas assessed by the District’s auditors.\\
-It is the policy of the Jaffrey-Rindge School ​District ​(the District) to: 1) Maintain adequate records of its material ​capital assets ​including: a) The cost to acquiremaintain ​and improve the capital assetb) The costs associated with the usage (or depreciation) ​of the capital asset, and c) The costs associated with the disposal ​or retirement of the capital asset2) Report material ​capital assets ​in District’s ​financial reports, which are subject ​to the annual auditin conformance with the generally accepted accounting principles+
  
-**Definitions and Concepts**\\ +The Business Administrator or Superintendent’s designee shall be responsible ​for establishing written ​capital ​asset proceduresThe capitalization threshold established for single items within any of the asset classes shall not be less than $10,000.00 per item except for land and constructed ​assets, which will have a threshold of $100,000The acquisition of quantity ​of items, none of which have an individual cost of more than $10,000 but which in aggregate cost more than $10,000will not be considered capital assets.\\
-Capital Assets: Capital assets are property that have a significant cost and have a useful life in excess of one year. As defined by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 34, Basic Financial Statements - and Management’s Discussion and Analysis - for State and Local Governments (GASB 34), “capital ​assets include land,... buildings, building improvements,​ vehicles, machinery, equipment,... infrastructure, ​and all other tangible or intangible ​assets ​that are used in operations... Infrastructure assets are long-lived capital assets that normally are stationary in nature and normally can be preserved for significantly greater number ​of years than most capital assets... Infrastructure assets include roadsbridgestunnelsdrainage systems, water and sewer systems, dams...” \\+
  
-Useful Life: Useful life means the estimated number ​of years that the asset will be able to be used for the purpose for which it was purchased by the District. Assets that are consumedused-up ​or worn-out in one year or less should not be capitalized. Reference the Capital Asset Procedures Manual for a Schedule of Depreciation Lives.\\ +Capital assets having an acquisition cost (or other relevant valuation) above the capitalization threshold ​of the applicable ​asset class shall be valued, inventoried,​ depreciated ​for financial accounting purposes when appropriate,​ and regularly tracked over time through ​the point of retirement, sale, or other disposition.\\
-  +
-Material Capital Asset: A material capital asset is an asset with an estimated useful life greater than one year that exceeds the District’s capitalization threshold. \\+
  
-Capitalization:​ The process of recording ​the cost of the propertyas an asset, on the Districtwide Balance Sheet and depreciating the asset over its useful life. \\+District procedures related to capital asset management shall also account for the appropriate identification, ​recording, and tracking ​of capital assets that are acquired using (1) federal funds(2) capital borrowingor (3) referendum funds that are subject to specific restrictions ​on use.\\
  
-Depreciation:​ In accounting terms, depreciation is the process of allocating the cost of the asset over a period of time (its useful life), rather than including ​the total cost as an expense in the year the asset was purchased, acquired, ​or constructed. \\+Nothing in this policy prevents ​the District from otherwise inventorying ​(recording, counting, and trackingsupplies, equipment, and other items that are not capitalized for financial reporting purposes. Further, the District shall appropriately inventory any such non-capitalized items if required by law or by the terms of any grant or contract.\\
  
-**Policy**\\ +**District ​Policy ​History:**\\ 
-The District’s capitalization threshold has been set at $5,000 per item except for land and constructed assetswhich will have a threshold of $100,000. \\+First Reading: March 2, 2026\\ 
 +Second Reading: March 16,2026\\ 
 +Third reading/​approved:​ April 6, 2026\\ 
 +**District ​revision history:** Approved April 192021Revised March 22026\\
  
-Records will be maintained by the SAU office for all assets exceeding the capitalization threshold. \\+**Federal Regulations Description** 
 +2 CFR Part [[https://​www.ecfr.gov/​current/​title-2/​subtitle-A/​chapter-II/​part-200|200 Uniform Requirements for Federal Awards (Grants)]]\\
  
-The acquisition of a quantity of items, none of which have an individual cost of more than $5,000 but which in aggregate cost more than $5,000, will not be considered capital assets. \\+{{ ::​policy_did_inventory_and_management_of_assets_1_.pdf |Download}}\\ 
 +[[section_d|Section D]]\\ 
 +[[start|Policy Manual]]
  
-The cost basis of an asset shall be the historical acquisition or actual construction cost of the item (including applicable ancillary costs), adjusted upward if a repair, maintenance or addition results in significantly increasing the value, capacity or useful life of the asset. \\ 
  
-Donated capital assets shall be recorded at the fair market value of the item at the time of its donation and otherwise treated, for financial record purposes, the same as any similarly situated capital asset. \\ 
- 
-The costs associated with the purchase of computer software, upgrades, annual license fees, or maintenance charges, are not regarded as a capital asset and will be expensed in the year acquired, except for the purchase cost of the Advanced Data System software (or replacement software) and any other enterprise-wide software systems for the District. \\ 
- 
-Each capital asset record shall consist of documentation of the acquisition cost(s) of the asset, a determination of probable useful life, adjustments to the historic cost due to additions or improvements,​ the source of funds used to acquire or improve the asset (for example, bond proceeds, appropriations,​ etc), the disposition costs of the item (including any salvage realized at disposal), and the location of the asset. \\ 
- 
-Adequate documentation,​ such as invoices, lease contracts, annual reports, etc., should be maintained to justify and support all costs associated with the capital asset. If the actual acquisition cost is not readily determinable an estimated historical cost can be used. All costs must be documented, including methods and sources used to establish any estimated costs. \\ 
- 
-Capital asset records shall be preserved and accessible for audit purposes for the life of the asset and for seven (7) years after the final disposal of the item. \\ 
- 
-The capital asset records shall be maintained and updated, not less than annually, by the Finance Manager (or a designated individual assigned by the Superintendent). \\ 
- 
-At the end of each fiscal year, a person(s) independent of the record keeper, shall perform a complete physical inventory of the District’s material capital assets and shall reconcile the inventoried items to the master capital asset records. Any discrepancies shall be reported to the Finance Manager and resolved no later than September 1st following the fiscal year that just ended. \\ 
- 
-For detailed procedures regarding the accounting of capital assets, examples of asset classifications and depreciation,​ and procedures for recording assets in the District’s software system, reference the District’s Capital Asset Procedures Manual.\\ ​ 
- 
- 
-**Legal References:​**\\ 
-//GASB Statement No. 34 \\ 
-GASB Statement No. 34 Implementation Recommendations for School Districts by the ASBO International Accounting, Auditing and Budgeting Committee// ​ 
- 
-{{ ::​did_capital_assets.pdf |Download}}\\ 
-[[section_d|Section D]]\\ 
-[[start|Policy Manual]] 
did_capital_assets.1632938734.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/09/29 20:05 by wiki