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Financial Long Range Planning

Financial Long Range Planning. Dr. Bruce Capron Honeoye Falls – Lima Central School District Livonia Central School District. Overview. Present a model b udget Identify key d rivers of budget i ncreases Generate forecasts Consider reserve s pending and sustainability

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Financial Long Range Planning

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  1. Financial Long Range Planning Dr. Bruce Capron Honeoye Falls – Lima Central School District Livonia Central School District

  2. Overview • Present a model budget • Identify key drivers of budget increases • Generate forecasts • Consider reserve spending and sustainability • Simulate the impact of changes over five years • Summarize

  3. Purpose of Multi-year Budgeting • Generate focus on the things that matter. • Make common sense of the obvious. • Understand how today’s decisions propagate forward. • Anticipate icebergs. • Plan soft landings

  4. Model Appropriation Budget

  5. Size and Sensitivity

  6. Revenue Budget

  7. Revenue Budget

  8. Revenue Assumptions • Expense Driven Aid formulas remain unchanged. • Foundation + GEA Aid increase at 2X the CPI

  9. Balancing the Budget Gap = Budgeted Revenue + Reserves - Budgeted Expenses What increase in the levy balances the budget? Is this levy increase above the tax cap?

  10. Salary and Wages

  11. Salaries and Wages • Consider a 2.5% annual wage increase

  12. Retirements and Breakage • Retire without Rehiring • Salary = $ 85,000 • TRS = $ 13,813 • FICA and Medicare = $ 6,522 • Total $105,315 • Retire and rehire an early career teacher • Salary = $ 40,000 • TRS = $ 6,500 • FICA and Medicare = $ 3,600 • Total $49,560 • Breakage = $ 55,755

  13. Employee Demographics(Minimal Upcoming Retirements)

  14. Employee Demographics(Significant Upcoming Retirements)

  15. Other Factors • Review enrollment projections and carefully consider whether the position will be replaced. • If you are rehiring for this position: • What experience level is complimentary to your other staff? • Are you seeking second career teachers that have private sector experience? • What hiring practice will smooth annual breakage?

  16. Salary Projections • Project 2.5% wage increase • Assume 1.0% savings from breakage

  17. Teacher Retirement System

  18. Teacher Retirement System • TRS Employer Contribution Rate • Normal Rate 15.85% • Expense Rate 0.27% • Group Life Insurance Rate 0.13% • Excess Benefit Plan Rate 0. 0% 16.25%

  19. Investment Portfolio Investment Portfolio • 62% Equity • 28% Fixed Income • 10% Real Estate Target ROA = 8%

  20. TRS • Calculation of Normal Rates Total Liabilities – (Assets + Receivables) Normal Rate = Present Value of Future Salaries 108.2 billion – (82.8 billion + 3.6 billion) Normal Rate = 138.2 billion Normal Rate = 15.85%

  21. Teacher Retirement System

  22. Teacher Retirement System

  23. Teacher Retirement System

  24. Teacher Retirement System

  25. Teacher Retirement System

  26. Employee Retirement Pension

  27. ERS Pension • Investment Portfolio • $160 billion • 60% Equity • 30% Fixed Income • 10% Real Estate • Return of 10.4% (3/13) • 498,000 Active Members • 381,000 Retirees

  28. Employee Retirement System

  29. Health Care Costs

  30. Health Care Expenditures

  31. Health Care Drivers • 3% to 5% per year in increased general costs • 1% to 3% per year in increased utilization (less healthy society) • 1% increase due to technology • Cost savings from introducing advanced technology is not quite offsetting new product costs • Drug companies are focused on the multiple thousands of dollar per dose products even as many popular drugs are becoming generic

  32. Health Care Growth(Average Annual Change in National Health Care Expenditures)

  33. Why is the apparent rate of Health Care Inflation Slowing? • Health Care Inflation is driven by the macro economy. Key influencers are: • Inflation rate this year and inflation rate in the preceding two years. • Real GDP growth this year and real GDP growth in the preceding five years • Result • 77% of the historical health care costs are explained by these macro-economic factors.

  34. Health Care Projections

  35. Health Insurance

  36. Why not hope for low health care inflation? • Both health care and pension costs correlate with multi-year trailing averages that largely follow the economy. • Health care and pension costs tent to move in opposite directions • Low Health Care inflation -> Higher pension costs • Higher Health Care inflation -> Lower pension costs

  37. What’s Worse? • What is more challenging to the budget? • $1 million in additional pension costs or • $1 million in additional health care costs? Health Care – the tax cap doesn’t go up with the cost of health insurance.

  38. Energy, Contractual and Supply Expenses

  39. Natural Gas Energy Information Administration www.eia.gov

  40. Energy, Supply Contractual Expenses

  41. Putting it All Together

  42. Putting it all Together • Wages increase: 2.5% • Health Care increases: • 6.5%-> 7.0% -> 7.5% -> 7.7% -> 7.5% • Pension costs follow projections • TRS: 16.25% -> 18.25% -> 18%... • ERS: 21.9% -> 20.9% -> 20.9% …. • Energy, contractual expenses and supplies increase with the CPI • CPI: 1.65% -> 2%...

  43. Putting it all together

  44. What do you do? • First, count the breakage from retirements. • Second, hope the legislative budget contains additional aid.

  45. Impact of 1% Breakage

  46. Impact of More State Aid(Foundation Aid Increases at 2.5X CPI)

  47. Reserves and Fund Balance

  48. Reserves and Fund Balance • Fund Balance • Excess of Revenues over Appropriations. • Renewable Reserve Use • Ongoing use of appropriated fund balance? • Generate enough fund balance to maintain 4% Unassigned Fund Balance? • Non-renewableReserve Use • Potential deficit spending spiral

  49. But what about the $2 million in Restricted Reserves • What does it mean to the school if reserves are used to make up the budget gap rather than increasing taxes?

  50. Recall the Budget that worked in most years • Note that only the 2014-2015 year budget requires exceeding the tax cap.

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