| 4Glossary
of Budget Terms
Below are a few
definitions to help you follow the school budget process in New
York State.
Bond:
Money borrowed to pay for a school district expenditure.
Typically, the money is used for capital expenditures, such as the
purchase of buses or the construction or renovation of a building,
although in some cases school districts also issue bonds for other
large expenditures such as the repayment of back taxes in a
certiorari settlement. The goal in borrowing is to spread the cost
out over a period of years and lessen the cost to taxpayers in any
one year. By definition, a bond is a written promise to pay a
specified sum of money, called the face value or principal amount,
at a specified date in the future (the maturity date), together
with periodic interest at a specific rate.
Budget:
A plan of financial operation expressing the estimates of proposed
expenditures for a fiscal year and the proposed means of financing
them.
Budget
calendar:
The schedule of key dates that the Board of Education and
administrators follow in the preparation, adoption and
administration of the budget.
Budget
cap:
In the event of a school budget defeat and the adoption of a
contingent budget, school districts must cap their spending
increase at 120% of the Consumer Price Index or 4 percent,
whichever is lower. For more on this, see the definition of a
contingent budget.
Capital
outlay:
An expenditure that is generally more than $20,000 and results in
the ownership, control or possession of assets intended for
continued use over long periods of time. These can include new
buildings or building renovations and additions; new school buses;
as well as new equipment (i.e. desks, computers, etc.) and library
books purchases for a new or expended school building.
Consumer
Price Index (CPI):
An index of prices used to measure the change in the cost of basic
goods and services in comparison with a fixed base period. Also
called cost-of-living index. However, the CPI does not take into
account many of the items that cause school district budgets to
rise, such as the increasing cost of health insurance, liability
insurance and retirement contributions.
Contingent budget:
Under state law, school boards can submit a budget to voters a
maximum of two times. If the proposed budget is defeated twice,
the board must adopt a contingency budget. The board also has the
option of going directly to a contingent budget immediately after
the first budget defeat. Under a contingent budget, the district
may not increase spending by more than this 120 percent of the
Consumer Price Index or 4 percent, whichever is lower. The items
exempt from this cap are tax certiorari and other legal
settlements, debt service (mortgage payments), and costs
associated with enrollment growth. Under a contingent budget, the
percentage of the budget devoted to administrative costs cannot
increase from what it was in the prior year's budget or the last
defeated budget, whichever is lower. Once a contingent budget is
established, community residents are no longer allowed to petition
boards of education to put additional items up for a separate
vote.
Employee
benefits:
Amounts paid by
the district on behalf of employees. These amounts are not
included in the gross salary. They are fringe benefits, and while
not paid directly to employees, are part of the cost of operating
the school district. Employee benefits include the district cost
for health insurance premiums, dental insurance, life and
disability insurance, Medicare, retirement, social security and
tuition reimbursement.
Equalization rate:
In simple terms, an equalization rate represents the average level
of assessment in each community. For example, an equalization rate
of 80 means that, on average, the property in a community is being
assessed at 80 percent of its market value. The works "on average"
are stressed to emphasize that an equalization rate of 80 does not
mean that each and every property is assessed at 80 percent of
full value. Some may be assessed at lower than 80 percent, while
others may be assessed at higher than 80 percent.
Equalization
rates are established by the New York State Board of Equalization
and Assessment. School districts that comprise more than one city,
town or village must use the equalization rate to determine the
tax rates for each municipality. The purpose is to bring some
semblance of equity to how the taxes are distributed in any one
school district, so that ideally a home with a full market value
of $100,000 in one community will pay the same taxes as a home
with a market value of $100,000 in the next community, regardless
of how those two homes are assessed.
Expenditure:
Payment of cash or transfer of property or services for the
purpose of acquiring an asset or service.
Fiscal
Year:
A fiscal year is the accounting period on which a budget is based.
The New York State fiscal year runs from April 1 through March 31.
The fiscal year for all New York counties and towns and for most
cities is the calendar year. School districts in the state operate
on a July 1 through June 30 fiscal year.
Fund
Balance:
A fund balance is created when the school district has money left
over at the end of its fiscal year from either under spending the
budget or taking in additional revenue. Part of the fund balance
(appropriated fund balance) may be applied as revenues to the
district's following year budget. A portion - up to two percent of
the total budget - may also be set aside (unappropriated fund
balance) to pay for emergencies or other unforeseen problems.
Fundamental
Operating Budget (FOB): The total amount of money required to pay
for current-year programs, staffing and services at next year's
prices -- i.e., what the next year's budget would be if the
current year's budget were simply "rolled over."
Revenue:
Sources of income financing the operation of the school district.
Salaries:
The total amount paid to an individual, before deductions, for
services rendered while on the payroll of the district.
Tax base:
Assessed value of local real estate that a school district may tax
for yearly operational monies.
Tax levy:
Total sum to be
raised by the school district after subtracting out all other
revenues including state aid. The tax levy is used to determine
the tax rate for property owners in each of the cities, towns or
villages that makes up a school district.
Tax rate:
The amount of tax paid for each $1,000 of assessed value of
property. In districts that cover just one municipality, the tax
rate is figured simply by dividing the total assessed property
value by 1,000 and then dividing that again into the tax levy (the
amount of money to be raised locally). In districts that encompass
more than on municipality, the formula for figuring the tax rate
is more complicated. It involves assigning a share of the total
tax levy to each municipality and applying equalization rates to
take into account different assessment practices.
STAR:
The New York State School Tax Relief (STAR) program provides
exemptions from school taxes for all owner-occupied, primary
residents, regardless of income. Senior citizens with combined
incomes that do not exceed $62,000 may qualify for a larger
exemption.
Supplies:
Consumable materials used in the operation of the school district
including food, textbooks, paper, pencils, office supplies,
custodial supplies, material used in maintenance activities and
computer software.
Support services:
The personnel, activities, and programs that enhance instruction.
These include attendance, guidance, and health programs; library
personnel and services; special education services; professional
development programs; transportation; administration; buildings
and ground operations; and security.
Three-part budget:
School district must, by law, divide their budgets into three
components - administrative, capital and program - and each year
they must show how much each portion has increased in relation to
the whole budget. A further definition of the three components is
as follows:
-
Administrative Budget Component:
These
expenditures include office and administrative costs; salaries
and benefits for certified school administrators who spend 50
percent or more of their time performing supervisory duties;
data processing; public information; legal fees; property
insurance; and school board expenses.
-
Capital Budget Component:
This covers all school bus purchases, debt service on buildings,
and leasing expenditures; tax certiorari and court-ordered
costs; and all facility costs, including salaries and benefits
of the custodial staff; service contracts, maintenance supplies
and equipment; and utilities.
-
Program Budget Component:
This portion includes salaries and benefits of teachers and
supervisors who spend the majority of their time teaching;
instructional costs such as supplies, equipment and textbooks;
co-curricular activities and interscholastic athletes; staff
development; and transportation operating costs.
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