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Fund 73 Accounting and Management With Changing Benefits

Marc Duff, Deputy Chief Financial Officer Racine Unified School District Michele Gundrum, School Finance Auditor Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction. Fund 73 Accounting and Management With Changing Benefits. Changing Benefits, Changing Fund 73. What’s in Fund 73?.

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Fund 73 Accounting and Management With Changing Benefits

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  1. Marc Duff, Deputy Chief Financial Officer Racine Unified School District Michele Gundrum, School Finance Auditor Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction Fund 73 Accounting and Management With Changing Benefits

  2. Changing Benefits, Changing Fund 73

  3. What’s in Fund 73? • OPEB - Valued in actuarial study • Wide variety of benefits included • Supplemental Stipend Type Pension - Valued in study • Traditional Pension - Separate valuation (only a few districts have this, similar to WRS) • Fully funded HRAs • Active employee current use • Active employee for use during retirement • TSAs • Prefunded Termination Benefits

  4. Traditional OPEB and Supplemental Stipend

  5. Traditional OPEB-Stipend • OPEB and Supplemental Stipend Type Pension benefits - Valued in actuarial Study • THREE MAJOR SEPARATE CASH TRANSACTIONS! • DO NOT MINGLE THEM! • NO NETTING! • Contribution to the Trust • Payment of Retiree Benefits from Trust • Implicit Rate Subsidy (also retiree benefit)

  6. Contribution to the Trust • Expenditure is charged to Object 218 and allocated to the active employees fund, function and project • Contributions to the trust need to be physical CASH movement IN FULL from district to trust

  7. Contribution to the Trust • Variation would be to record Due To (812000) payables and Due From receivables (714000) throughout the year. • If contribution exceeds the ARC, the amount in excess is not allocated to active employees and is not eligible for categorical aid or federal grants • All 10E-292000-218 OR • Allocated between funds and still 292000-218 • District determines amount to contribute • Amount of retiree benefits may help determine amount, but completely separate transaction

  8. Payment of Retiree Benefits - Option 1 • All retiree benefits funded into the trust must be paid from the trust • Option 1 - If a district is able to pay vendors directly from the trust:

  9. Payment of Retiree Benefits - Option 2 • District can choose to have Fund 10 pay the benefits throughout the year, but Fund 73 MUST pay Fund 10 back IN CASH and IN FULL. • Keep the transactions clean!!!!! • NOT a district expenditure. Never make the retiree benefit payment any 2xx Object. Should be set up as a Due From Fund 73 receivable.

  10. Payment of Retiree Benefits - Option 2

  11. Implicit Rate Subsidy • Implicit Rate Subsidy is an expenditure of the trust (retiree benefit) if retirees are on the district’s health insurance plan, UNLESS • Self-funded and trust pays actual medical costs • ETF State Group Health Plan - Community Rated • Plan premiums rated separately for retirees • Immaterial as determined by actuary • Fund 73 trust must pay the district IN CASH and IN FULL for the Implicit Rate Subsidy.

  12. Implicit Rate Subsidy • Implicit rate subsidy is paid to the district and reduces the healthcare costs of active employee plan members with health insurance. • Credit Object 241, MUST BE ALLOCATED to employee fund, function and project • Even if no contribution that year, implicit rate subsidy payback applies. • Implicit rate subsidy calculation includes any amounts paid directly from retiree to insurance company. Sample of Activity was updated. • Do not use amount from study, must be applied to actual health and long term care insurance costs.

  13. Sample of Activity - Exhibit A Sample of Activity - Exhibit B

  14. Implicit Rate Subsidy • Allocated as a credit to active employee healthcare premiums, Object 241, to the active employee’s fund, functions and projects.

  15. Retiree paid portion of benefits • Retiree may pay a portion of their premiums. • CASH is not district funds and should be deposited directly into trust (Option 1, next slide) • If the district can’t deposit directly into trust, cash should go into a Due to Fund 73 liability account and be paid IN CASH and IN FULL to the trust. (initially recorded as Option 2, next slide)

  16. Retiree paid portion of benefits OPTION ONE OPTION TWO

  17. Traditional OPEB-Stipend Guidance • Employee Benefit Trust Fund webpage • Recent Communications (this presentation and letters to districts) • Benefit Trust Fund Requirements • Special Ed Categorical Aid Eligibility Worksheet • Sample of Activity • Account Descriptions and Sample Entries • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_emp_benefit_trust_fund

  18. Traditional Pensions

  19. Traditional Pension • Only a few districts have this, similar to WRS • Contribution into the trust based on actuarial study • Contribution is Object 218, fund, function and project of active employee plan members. Must be allocated!!! • Revenue into the Fund 73 trust is Source 953 • Payment of retiree benefit expenditures from Fund 73 trust is Object 992 • Therefore, total Object 218 should equal the sum of 73R-951 + 73R-953

  20. HRAs

  21. HRA differences • HRA/HSA document lists all scenarios under Payroll And Benefits • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_wufaracct_code_ex • HRA is valued in actuarial study • Accounting follows traditional OPEB • At retirement, district will put $1,000 into an HRA for each year worked, but does not put the full $1,000 into the trust every year. Unfunded liability exists. Also could fund, but not allocated under employee’s name in HRA account.

  22. HRA differences • HRA is fully funded when earned • MUST GO INTO IRREVOCABLE ACCOUNT • District puts away $1,000 in each year an employee works for use at retirement. The full $1,000 is funded every year and is allocated and held in the HRA account in the employee’s name. • Obligation is fully funded and will not be valued in the actuarial study. • Allocated to employee fund, function and project!!!! • Earnings belong to trust - can pay fees or be allocated to employee accounts

  23. HRA payment to trust for active employees future use in retirement • Allocated to each employee’s individual fund, function and project and object 219. • Held in HRA account in each person’s name

  24. HRA payment to trust for active employees current medical costs • The trust agreement allows for non-OPEB transactions. • Allocated to each employee’s individual fund, function and project and object 249.

  25. HRA payment to trust for retirees current medical costs (pay as you go) • The trust agreement allows for non-OPEB transactions. • Expenditure for retired employees to use for current medical costs. • This was not prefunded into the trust while active employee

  26. Fund 73 HRA Activity -not valued in study • The activity in Fund 73 for all HRAs that are not valued in the OPEB study is the same.

  27. HRA Guidance • WUFAR Accounting Issues and Coding Examples • Under Payroll and Benefits • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_wufaracct_code_ex

  28. Other Benefits in Fund 73

  29. Other Benefits in the Trust • TSAs • If not in actuarial study, fully funded in year earned. • Object 219, allocated to employee fund, function and project • Revenue into the Fund 73 trust is 959 - Other Contributions • Expenditure out of Fund 73 trust is Object 996 - TSA/Misc • Prefunded Termination Benefits - See Compensated Absences - Prefunding under Payroll and Benefits • Carried on Balance Sheet until termination benefits paid out. Expenditure occurs upon termination • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_wufaracct_code_ex

  30. Reminders, New Guidance

  31. OPEB Trust Activity • All transactions with the trust need to be CASH TRANSACTIONS • Contributions to the trust need to be physical cash movement from district to trust in full. • Payment of Implicit Rate Subsidy needs to be physical cash movement from trust to the district in full. • Benefits must be paid with physical cash movement from the trust in full. • NO NETTING!!!

  32. Deadlines • Contribution to the trust must be physically transferred to trust by July 30 to be counted as an expenditure for the year just ending on June 30.

  33. Fund 73 gains and losses • Book unrealized gains and losses • Fund 73 only • Object 998 - Unrealized Losses on Investments • Object 998 is used to recognize the decrease in value of the Fund 73 investment. Used with Fund 73, function 420000 only. • Realized losses are coded to Object 964. • Source 957 - Unrealized Gains on Investments • Source 957 is used to recognize the increase in value of the Fund 73 investment. • Realized gains are coded to Source 280.

  34. Benefits must be budgeted • Contribution for all benefits should be budgeted. • Amount of contribution is a decision by the district. • In some years, a district may not have a contribution at all. In these cases, there are enough funds in the trust that retiree benefits are still paid from the trust.

  35. PI-1202 Reporting • Benefits • ALL 200 object codes!! • All prefunded retirement benefits are allocated to active employees and must be included in the 1202 Report - In general, all 21X should tie to active employees • WRS • OPEB Trust Contributions • TSA Contributions • HRA’s that are fully funded in the year earned • Any other active employee benefit • Implicit Rate Subsidy credit to 241 • Use budgeted amounts

  36. Terminating Use of Trust • Deplete the funds in the trust by paying out benefits • Consider if district isn’t making contribution, and just using trust, could impact shared costs. • District may spread closure out over a few years and still make some contribution to reduce impact on shared costs • Notify DPI that you have depleted trust funds and won’t be using it anymore. • Contact your legal counsel about the dissolution of the trust

  37. District Perspective Through Payroll

  38. Example of Fiscal Benefit of Using OPEB Trust • For RUSD, about 32% of OPEB costs can be attributed to federal grants or state categorical aid. Finite Funds – taken away from other use Additional State Aid – outside the cap • Since 2007 RUSD has set aside $7.2 million in the F73 OPEB trust.

  39. Method of Payroll Deduction • In discussing payroll deduction method with districts, most used a flat percent of payroll spread across all regular employees. • Others do not use a payroll deduction method while other districts are phasing out their OPEB trust. • Method of payroll deduction should be reasonably related to the employees eligible for the post employment benefit.

  40. Setting Up OPEB System Through Payroll • OPEB is set up as a benefit (Object 218) • Determine payroll employer paid deduction method - Should be reasonably linked to OPEB benefit received (Health coverage, HRA, retirement supplement, etc.)

  41. Payroll Deduction Calculation Decisions GOAL IS FOR AN ACCURATE RATE • Before calculating the OPEB payroll deduction percentage, decide what is the goal of the contribution. - Pay-as-you-go cost plus 5%? - Higher contribution to reduce OPEB liability? - Lower amount due to 3 year rolling average for eligibility? • Assumptions to use in calculation - Compensation adjustments - Vacancy impacts - Benefit adjustments

  42. Challenges – OPEB Payroll method • The payroll deduction method for generating the OPEB amounts will not be exact (e.g. vacancies, adjusted benefits, self-funded cost, retiree costs/drops, etc.) • Adjustments need to be spread across all 218 accounts • As a self-insured district, actual costs for retirees may not be known before the July 30 Fund 73 cash deposit deadline • Need to reconcile the district payroll system requirements with the detailed OPEB transaction requirements

  43. Resources and Contact Michele Gundrum, School Finance Auditor michele.gundrum@dpi.wi.gov or 608-267-9218 • Benefit Trust Fund page: • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_emp_benefit_trust_fund • WUFAR Accounting Issues and Coding Examples • http://sfs.dpi.wi.gov/sfs_wufaracct_code_ex

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