1 / 20

“The Squeeze Play” Cost containment and budget control

“The Squeeze Play” Cost containment and budget control. Leigh A. Coop, Director of Facilities Vacaville Unified School District Bill Savidge, AIA, Director of Facilities & Planning Fremont Union High School District Jay C. Davison, AIA, Managing Partner Capital Program Management Group.

mayda
Download Presentation

“The Squeeze Play” Cost containment and budget control

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “The Squeeze Play”Cost containment and budget control • Leigh A. Coop, Director of Facilities Vacaville Unified School District • Bill Savidge, AIA, Director of Facilities & Planning Fremont Union High School District • Jay C. Davison, AIA, Managing Partner Capital Program Management Group

  2. A District-wide approach to equity • Get Board to adopt District-wide priorities for expenditure of funds • Agree on a base condition level to which each campus will be brought • Provide each site a “guaranteed” scope rather than a “guaranteed” budget

  3. Design standards & defined scope • Develop a set of district-wide design/materials/systems standards to guide all design work • Provide design teams with very specific written scope of work for each project

  4. Project budgets • Budget all of your projects before starting any of them. • Verify that the scope relates to the available dollars. • Budget appropriate contingencies at the project level • Assign appropriate program costs to a program budget

  5. Simple project cost ratios Excluding costs of site purchases: • Modernization: Construction bids represent about 70% of project costs • New construction: Construction bids represent about 75% of project costs

  6. Contingencies • Prior to bid: allow a “design contingency” of 10% of construction budget to allow for award, or maintain a program reserve • Post bid: allow construction contingencies (for design errors & omissions, and unforeseen conditions) of: • Up to 5% for new construction • Up to 10% for modernization (more if unknown dryrot or termite damage is suspected)

  7. Costs assigned to program • Inflation (construction cost escalation): historical average is 4% per year • Encroachment on other District operations (e.g. M & O) • Prevailing wage compliance • Program management, including District staff assigned to program

  8. Costs assigned to program (con’t.) • Budget tracking & reporting • Outside audit costs • Oversight committee support • Informational website • Web-based project control system • Program contingencies

  9. Recommended program contingencies • Program contingency comprises three major categories: • Major catastrophe (e.g. dryrot or toxics) • Litigation • Board changes priorities • Set aside an unallocated reserve account to balance budgets

  10. Did you remember inflation?

  11. Effects of program time on escalation cost—6 years

  12. Cash Flow and Bond Issuances • Prepare realistic cash flow projection in as much detail as you can • Consult with financial advisor • Make sure that you have allowed adequate contingencies at each level • Invest the money you don’t need right away in short-term notes

  13. Cash Flow and Bond issuances

  14. Spending efficiently & effectively • Prototypes and fee structures • Timing of bids • Prequalification • Alternate delivery methods • Project controls • Grouping of projects and purchases

  15. Leveraging your local funds • State funding cycles • Short-term investment (arbitrage) • Other potential funding sources • Short-term financing • Cost of bond issuances

  16. Peace among fiscal systems • Most school district fiscal/accounting systems do not adapt well to construction projects • Construction budgets should be kept in a separate system; but: • The design of the second should reflect the needs of the first; and: • The budget system must maintain an audit trail

  17. Example of a project budgeting system

  18. Budget audit trail example

  19. How it all fits together Program Constructionbudgets $ $$$ $ Pre-construction Budgets Post-construction budgets $ Budget

  20. Questions?

More Related