carrollton-farmers branch independent school district
Transcription
carrollton-farmers branch independent school district
This page intentionally left blank Highland Park Independent School District Dallas, Texas Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2013 Prepared by: Business Services Department Kris Ingersoll, CPA, RSTBA Director of Business Services Tim Turner, CPA, RSTBA Assistant Superintendent For Business Services . This page intentionally left blank HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMPREHENSIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS Exhibit Page Introductory Section Certificate of Board Letter of Transmittal School Administration Consultants and Advisors Organization Chart GFOA Certificate ASBO Certificate Map of Highland Park Financial Section Independent Auditor’s Report Management's Discussion and Analysis A-1 B-1 C-1 C-2 C-3 C-4 D-1 D-2 D-3 E-1 E-2 F-1 G-1 G-2 G-3 G-4 G-5 G-6 Basic Financial Statements Government-Wide Statements: Statement of Net Position Statement of Activities Governmental Funds Financial Statements: Balance Sheet Reconciliation of the Governmental Funds Balance Sheet to the Government-Wide Statement of Net Position Statement of Revenues, Expenditures, and Changes in Fund Balance Reconciliation of the Governmental Funds Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balance to the Government-Wide Statement of Activities Proprietary Fund Financial Statements: Statement of Net Position Statement of Revenues, Expenses, and Changes in Fund Net Position Statement of Cash Flows Fiduciary Fund Financial Statements: Statement of Fiduciary Net Position Statement of Changes in Fiduciary Net Position Notes to the Basic Financial Statements Required Supplementary Information Budgetary Comparison Schedule - General Fund Notes to Required Supplementary Information Supplementary Information - Combining and Individual Statements and Schedules Nonmajor Governmental Funds: Combining Balance Sheet Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenditures, and Changes in Fund Balances Budgetary Comparison Schedule - Debt Service Fund Nonmajor Enterprise Funds: Combining Statement of Net Position Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenses, and Changes in Fund Net Position Combining Statement of Cash Flows i iii xi xii xiii xiv xv xvi 1 4 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 53 54 58 60 62 64 65 66 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMPREHENSIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS - CONTINUED Exhibit Page Supplementary Information - Combining and Individual Statements and Schedules Private Purpose Trust Funds Combining Statement of Net Position Combining Statement of Changes in Fiduciary Fund Net Position Agency Funds: Combining Statement of Changes in Assets and Liabilities - All Agency Funds Other TEA Schedules: Schedule of Delinquent Taxes Receivable 76 Statistical Section (unaudited): S Statistical Section Narrative S-1 Net Position by Component S-2 Change in Net Position S-3 Fund Balances, Governmental Funds S-4 Governmental Funds Revenues S-5 Governmental Funds Expenditures and Debt Service Ratio S-6 Governmental Funds, Other Financing Sources and Uses and Net Change in Fund Balance S-7 Assessed Value and Actual Value of Taxable Property S-8 Direct and Overlapping Property Tax Rates S-9 Principal Property Taxpayers S-10 Property Tax Levies and Collections S-11 Ratios of General Bonded Debt Outstanding S-12 Direct and Overlapping Governmental Activities Debt S-13 Legal Debt Margin Information S-14 Demographic and Economic Statistics S-15 Top Ten Principal Employers S-16 Full-Time-Equivalent District Employees by Type S-17 Teacher Average Salary and FTE Counts S-18 Operating Statistics S-19 School Building Information 79 80 82 86 88 90 92 95 96 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 108 109 G-7 G-8 G-9 H-1 Reports on Internal Control, Compliance, and Federal Awards Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting and on Compliance and Other Matters Based on an Audit of Financial Statements Performed in Accordance with Government Auditing Standards Independent Auditor's Report on Compliance for Each Major Program and on Internal Control over Compliance Required by OMB Circular A-133 Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards Notes to the Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards Schedule of Findings and Questioned Costs Summary of Prior Year Audit Findings 68 70 74 113 115 117 118 119 121 Introductory Section This page intentionally left blank HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT Dallas County, 057-911 Certificate of Board We, the undersigned, certify that the attached Comprehensive Annual Financial Report of the Highland Park Independent School District for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013, was reviewed and approved at a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Highland Park Independent School District on January 21, 2014. i This page intentionally left blank ii HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT 7015 Westchester Drive, Dallas Texas 75205 (214) 780-3000 Fax (214) 780-4019 www.hpisd.org January 21, 2014 Board of Trustees and the Taxpayers of the Highland Park Independent School District: The Texas Education Code requires that all school districts file a complete set of financial statements with the Texas Education Agency (TEA) within 150 days of the close of each fiscal year. The financial statements must be presented in conformity with general accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and audited by a firm of licensed certified public accountants in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards. Pursuant to that requirement, we hereby issue the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) of the Highland Park Independent School District (the District) for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013. This report consists of management’s representations concerning the finances of the District. Responsibility for both the accuracy of the presented data and the completeness and fairness of the presentation, including all disclosures, rests with the District. We believe the information presented is accurate in all material aspects; that it is presented in a manner designed to fairly set forth the financial position and the results of operations of the District as measured by the financial activity of its various funds; and that all disclosures necessary to enable the reader to gain an understanding of the District’s financial activities have been included. Weaver and Tidwell, LLP, Dallas, Texas, a firm of licensed certified public accountants, have audited the financial statements of the District. The goal of the independent audit is to provide reasonable assurance that the financial statements of the District for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013 are free of material misstatement. The independent audit involves examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements; assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management; and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. The independent auditor concluded, based upon the audit, that there was a reasonable basis for rendering an unqualified opinion that the District’s financial statements for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013, are fairly presented in conformity with GAAP. The independent auditor’s report is presented as the first component of the financial section of this report. GAAP require that management provide a narrative introduction, overview, and analysis to accompany the basic financial statements in the form of Management’s Discussion and Analysis (MD&A). This letter of transmittal is designed to complement MD&A and should be read in conjunction with it. The District’s MD&A is found immediately following the report of the independent auditor. iii Profile of the District The District opened its first campus, John S. Armstrong School in 1914 with ninety-five students, three teachers and a principal. The residents of the District elect a sevenmember Board of Trustees (the “Board”). The seven members of the Board serve, without compensation, a three-year term of office. On a rotating basis, two or three places are filled during annual elections held in May. In 2014, the election will be held on May 10th. Vacancies may be filled by appointment until the next election. Candidates must be qualified voters of the District. Regular meetings are scheduled the second Tuesday of every month with the exception of the month of July when there is no Board meeting. Special meetings and study sessions are scheduled as needed and announced in compliance with public notice requirements. The Board has final control over local school matters limited only by the state legislature, by the courts, and by the will of the people as expressed in school board elections. Board decisions are based on a majority vote of those present. In general, the Board adopts policies, sets direction for curriculum, and employs the Superintendent, who oversees the operations of the District and its schools. Along with general Board business, Trustees are charged with numerous statutory regulations that include calling trustee and other school elections, canvassing the results, organizing the Board, and electing its officers. The Board is also responsible for setting the tax rate, setting salary schedules, acting as a board of appeals in personnel and student matters, confirming recommendations for textbook adoptions, and adopting and amending annual budgets for the General Fund and the Debt Service Fund. The District serves three communities within a six square mile area located in north central Dallas County and is surrounded by the Dallas Independent School District. The Town of Highland Park, City of University Park and City of Dallas are the three different municipalities served by the District. The small community is known as the “Park Cities.” There is no raw land for residential, commercial, or industrial development. Southern Methodist University is located in the District. The District provides a quality public education program for children from kindergarten through grade 12. In addition to the basic instructional programs, the District offers special education, gifted and talented, bilingual/ESL, remedial, college preparatory, and career and technical programs. The District is fully accredited by the Texas Education Agency. Since the opening of the first campus in 1914, it has become apparent that the preservation of a quality education is a priority in the community. The District has attained a national standing for excellence due to the generous support of the community and the deep commitment of faculty and staff. This affiliation paralleled with an atmosphere set upon high expectations, results in a phenomenal educational environment. The District currently has four elementary schools (grades K-4), an intermediate school (grades 5-6), a middle school (grades 7-8), and one high school (grades 9-12). Enrollment for the 2013-14 year is 7,034, an increase of 186 students from the previous year. Highland Park High School graduated 474 seniors in 2013. iv The District’s mission statement is as follows: “The Highland Park Independent School District, with an unyielding commitment to excellence, will provide an exceptional academic program that recognizes the unique potential of each student and integrates the intellectual, social, cultural and physical aspects of learning. This program will empower each student to become an eager lifelong learner committed to academic excellence, integrity, responsible citizenship and service to others.” To accomplish its mission, the District attracts highly qualified personnel to teach an individualized educational program in all grade levels. A student-centered approach to learning through the use of a widely diversified curriculum is the educational philosophy of the District. A high degree of professionalism exists among District employees, and an on-going recognition of student and staff excellence contributes to this environment. The HPISD schools have long been committed to excellence in education. The District’s students continue to win academic and co-curricular honors in district, state and national competitions. District staff, likewise, is recognized as outstanding educators and professionals by their peers in Texas and throughout the nation. Long Range Planning Much of the District's instructional program planning is done using the District and Campus Improvement Plans. The plans demonstrate the commitment to increase student achievement for all students. Campus Improvement Plans address specific needs of students at individual campuses. The District and Campus Improvement Plans include annual goals for improving student achievement and objective evaluation criteria for measuring success. The annual budget serves as the foundation for the District’s financial planning and control. This process begins in January. The District’s Finance Committee sets budget targets and provides oversight for the budget development process. In addition, multiyear budget targets are established so that future finance challenges can be addressed and met. The Finance Committee is comprised of district administrators, all members of the Board, and community members. Based on the parameters set forth, all district managers are required to submit to the District’s Business Services Department their requests for appropriations for the next school year. The requests are compiled, summarized, and provided to the Finance Committee for review and discussion. Upon approval of the Finance Committee, a preliminary budget is then presented and discussed with the Board at one or more public budget workshops. The proposed budget is prepared by August 20th for the September 1 fiscal year start date. The Board president calls a board meeting for the purpose of discussing and adopting the budget and the tax rate. A notice of this meeting is required to be published at least 10 days, but not more than 30 days before the public meeting. The budget is adopted prior to August 31st for a September 1 fiscal year start date. Internal Controls Management of the District is responsible for establishing and maintaining an internal control structure. In addition, management is to ensure that the District’s assets are protected from loss, theft, or misuse, and to ensure that adequate accounting data are compiled to allow for the preparation of financial statements are in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. The internal control structure is designed to v provide reasonable, but not absolute, assurance that these objectives are met. The concept of reasonable assurance recognizes that: • The cost of a control should not exceed the benefits likely to be derived. • The valuation of costs and benefits requires estimates and judgments by Management. As a recipient of state financial assistance, the District’s internal control structure is designed to ensure District compliance with applicable laws and regulations related to this assistance. This internal control structure is subject to periodic evaluation by Management and independent auditors. The District’s internal control structure includes budgetary, as well as accounting controls. The objective of budgetary controls is to ensure compliance with legal provisions embodied in the official budget adopted by the Board. The Board adopts an official budget for the general fund and the debt service fund. In accordance with procedures prescribed by the State Board of Education, the Board must approve budget amendments that affect the total amount in a fund or functional spending category prior to the expenditure of the funds. The functional level is specified by the Board policy as the legal level of budgetary control. Budgetary control is maintained at the organizational level by the encumbrance of estimated purchase amounts prior to the release of purchase orders to vendors. Outstanding encumbrances at the end of the fiscal year are a reserve of fund balance and are treated as expenditures in the subsequent year upon receipt of the goods or services. Factors Affecting Financial Condition The information presented in the financial statements is perhaps best understood when it is considered within the broader perspective of the specific environment in which the District operates. Introduction. The District is located in the Park Cities community, north central Dallas County, approximately three miles north of downtown Dallas. The Park Cities community is considered one of the finest communities in which to live in Dallas County because of the outstanding public schools, distinguished homes and excellent public service departments. In addition, the Park Cities community is one of the wealthiest communities in Texas. Population. The Texas Department of State Health Services estimates the population in Dallas County at 2,508,741 for 2013. The estimated population for the Park Cities is 34,600. Local economy. Dallas has established a national reputation as an economic force. The economic stability of the Park Cities provides a solid tax base for the District. The largest employers in the Park Cities are Southern Methodist University, the District, and the municipalities. In the Dallas Area, major employers include AMR Corporation, Dallas ISD, Walmart, Verizon Communications Inc., SBC Communications, Texas Health Resources, City of Dallas, Baylor Health Care System, UT Southwestern Medical City, Medical City of Dallas, and the U.S. Postal Service. There are many other major employers in Dallas County providing products or services in the industries of telecommunications, retail, health services, financial services, military aircraft design, vi restaurants, and many other areas. The diverse economy and highly skilled work force contributes to the strengths of the Dallas Area. The District’s tax base has grown 5 percent over the previous year. For tax year 2013, the Dallas County Appraisal District certified that, as of July 2013, the total market value of all real and business personal property, before qualified exemptions, was $15,488,842,000. The taxable value for the same property was $11,733,798,388. Residential property makes up 87 percent of the taxable value on the tax roll. The District is required to provide a $15,000 homestead exemption for qualified homeowners. In addition to State required exemptions, the District offers the maximum local homestead exemption of twenty percent, thereby reducing the taxable value of the average home to approximately $1,110,000. Major Accomplishments and Initiatives As reflected in the District’s mission statement, activities of the District focus on learning opportunities for students. The following information reflects the degree of success that both the District and its students have accomplished in both academics, extra and cocurricular activities: • All seven Highland Park Independent School District campuses were named National Center for Educational Achievement higher performing schools. • In the last seven years, the Highland Park Independent School District and all seven of its campuses were rated “Exemplary” by the Texas Education Agency, the highest possible rating. • Highland Park High School was named among the Top High Schools in the country in 2013 by Newsweek magazine. The publication listed HPHS in the 86th spot. • Highland Park High School earned the 92nd spot on U.S. News & World Report’s Gold Medal list of the top 100 high schools in 2012. • In the 2013 year, 1,095 students took 2,719 AP tests, with 70% scoring a 3, 4 or 5. • Highland Park High School students posted a composite score of 1780 (617 in math, 588 in critical reading and 575 in writing) on the 2013 Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT). • In 2013, Highland Park High School students earned a composite score of 26.7 on the ACT, surpassing both state and national averages. The Texas state average score increased to a high of 20.9, while the national average was also 20.9. • Approximately 98% of 2011-12 graduates matriculated to institutions of higher education. • Scholarships offered to the Class of 2012 exceeded $14.8 million. • In 2013, eight Highland Park High School students were named National Merit Semifinalists by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation. Thirty students were named National Merit Commended students and four were named National Hispanic Scholars. vii • In 2013, the Highland Park High School science team won the UIL 4A State Competition for the eight consecutive year. • In 2013, three Highland Park High School band students and three choir students were named All-State and performed at the Texas Music Educators’ Association convention. • In 2013, the Highland Park Debate Team won the UIL 4A Texas Forensic Association State Championship. • In 2013, the HPHS tennis team won the UIL 4A state tournament for the sixth consecutive year for 15 state titles overall. • In 2013, the Highland Park Blue Wave Girls Swim and Dive team won the UIL 4A State meet for the 12th time in 13 years. • In 2013, the boys “Blue” Golf team won the UIL State Championship. • In 2013, the wrestling team Coach was named State 4A Coach of the Year. • District staff and students were awarded 20 awards at the Texas School Public Relations Association Conference, including Best of Category Award. Student Demographic Study. During the 2009-10 school year, Population and Survey Analysts, Inc. completed a student demographic study within District boundaries in the following areas of concern: housing projections; ratios of students per household; student enrollment projections, and long range planning. The scenario of most-likely growth projections shows a projected increase of 759 students over the next five years, with an additional 217 students projected by the 2018-19 school year. Therefore, by fall 2016, Highland Park ISD could have a projected enrollment of 7,529 students and by fall 2018 a total of 7,746 students. Annual growth rates could range from 1.2% to 2.5%. District Facilities. Currently, the District is able to house all students under the individual campuses. In 2013, the District began capital projects to the Intermediate and Middle School campus to include expanding the cafeteria area and refinishing out a 6400 square foot shell space into three classrooms. The final cost of the project was approximately $3.7 million and was completed in the fall of 2013. The cafeteria project renovated 12,066 square feet of dining and kitchen space while adding an additional 6,512 square feet of the same space. A security entry way was also included in the renovations. The increased area will serve the projected student population in the grades 5-8 for future years. Projects completed in the 2012-13 year, included remodeling bathrooms and the media center at one elementary campus; replacing the field turf and installing additional handrails at the football stadium; remodeling a District owed building that is used by the Highland Park Education Foundation; and remodeling a custodial house at one of the elementary campuses. The facility upgrades over the last three years accommodates the current enrollment of students and will be adequate for several more years. However, the District is looking viii into how further expansion can be done at the existing campuses if enrollment exceeds a project 8,000 by the end of the decade. Component Unit. The Government-wide financial statements for the District include one component unit, the Highland Park Education Foundation. The entity is a separate 503(c)(3) entity that has the sole purpose of raising funds for the District. The component unit has its own Board of Trustees that is separate from the District’s Board of Trustees. The financial information provided has been audited by a separate audit firm than the Districts’ but has provided their financial data to Weaver and Tidwell, LLP for review and inclusion into the District’s financial statements. Awards and Acknowledgments GFOA Certificate of Achievement. The Governmental Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada (GFOA) awarded a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting to Highland Park Independent School District for its comprehensive annual financial report for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2012. This was the 15th consecutive year that the District has achieved this prestigious award. In order to be awarded a Certificate of Achievement, a government must publish an easily readable and efficiently organized comprehensive annual financial report. This report satisfied both generally accepted accounting principles and applicable legal requirements. A Certificate of Achievement is valid for a period of one year only. We believe that our current CAFR continues to meet the Certificate of Achievement Program’s requirements and we are submitting it to the GFOA to determine its eligibility for another certificate. ASBO Certificate of Excellence. The Association of School Business Officials (ASBO) has awarded the Certificate of Excellence in Financial Reporting to the District for 15 consecutive years. This award is for school districts whose comprehensive annual financial reports substantially conform to the recommended principles and standards of financial reporting adopted by that organization. The award is granted only after an intensive review of financial reports by an expert panel of certified public accountants and practicing school business officials. Management believes that the CAFR for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013, which will be submitted to ASBO for review, also conforms to their principles and standards. FIRST (Financial Integrity Rating System of Texas). Highland Park Independent School District received a rating of "Superior Achievement" under Texas' Schools FIRST financial accountability rating system. The Superior Achievement rating is the state's highest, demonstrating the quality of the Highland Park ISD's financial management and reporting system. This is the 11th consecutive year Highland Park ISD has received the superior rating. Schools FIRST (Financial Integrity Rating System of Texas) is a financial accountability system for Texas school districts developed by the Texas Education Agency in response to Senate Bill 875 of the 76th Texas Legislature in 1999. The primary goal of Schools FIRST is to achieve quality performance in the management of school districts' financial resources, a goal made more significant due to the complexity of accounting associated with Texas' school finance system. The accountability system was established in 2003. ix The preparation of this report would not have been possible without the efficient and dedicated services of the entire staff of the Business Services Department. We want to express our appreciation to all members who assisted and contributed to the preparation of this report. We would also like to thank the members of the Board of Trustees for their interest and support in planning and conducting the financial operations of the District in a responsible and progressive manner. Respectfully submitted, x HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT School Administration Elected Officials Board of Trustees Leslie L. Melson President Jim Hitzelberger Vice-President Cynthia Beecherl Secretary Joe Taylor Finance Officer Kelly Walker Member Paul Rowsey Member Sam Dalton Member Appointed Officials Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dawson R. Orr Assistant Superintendent for Business Services Timothy Turner Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum, Instruction, and Special Programs Gena Gardiner xi HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT Consultants and Advisors Architects SHW Group Inc Architects + Engineers 4000 McEwen Road North Dallas, Texas 75244-5083 Auditors Weaver and Tidwell, LLP 12221 Merit Drive Suite 1400 Dallas, Texas 75251-2280 Bond Counsel Vinson & Elkins, L.L.P. 3700 Trammell Crow Center 2001 Ross Avenue Dallas, Texas 75201-2975 Depository Bank PlainsCapital Bank 8200 Douglas Avenue, Ste 200 Dallas, Texas 75225 Financial Advisors Dain Rauscher Incorporated Cityplace, Suite 2400 2711 North Haskell Avenue Dallas, Texas 75204-2936 General Counsel Thompson & Knight, L.L.P. One Arts Plaza 1722 Routh Street, Suite 1500 Dallas, Texas 75201 Fiscal Agent The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. 600 North Pearl Street Suite 420 Dallas, Texas 75201 xii Highland Park Independent School District Organization Chart xiii xiv xv xvi Financial Section This page intentionally left blank INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT To the Board of Trustees Highland Park Independent School District 7015 Westchester Drive Dallas, Texas 75205 Report on the Financial Statements We have audited the accompanying financial statements of the governmental activities, the business-type activities, the discretely presented component unit, each major fund, and the aggregate remaining fund information of Highland Park Independent School District (the District), as of and for the year ended August 31, 2013, and the related notes to the financial statements, which collectively comprise the District’s basic financial statements as listed in the table of contents. Management’s Responsibility for the Financial Statements Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of these financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America; this includes the design, implementation, and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair presentation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error. Auditor’s Responsibility Our responsibility is to express opinions on these financial statements based on our audit. We did not audit the financial statements of the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation, the discretely presented component unit. Those financial statements were audited by other auditors whose report has been furnished to us, and our opinions, insofar as they relate to the amounts included for the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation, are based solely on the report of the other auditors. We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America and the standards applicable to financial audits contained in Government Auditing Standards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free from material misstatement. The financial statements of the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation were not audited in accordance with Government Auditing Standards. An audit involves performing procedures to obtain audit evidence about the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The procedures selected depend on the auditor’s judgment, including the assessment of the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to fraud or error. In making those risk assessments, the auditor considers internal control relevant to the entity’s preparation and fair presentation of the financial statements in order to design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the entity’s internal control. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes evaluating the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. -1- Highland Park Independent School District Page 2 We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our audit opinions. Opinions In our opinion, based on our audit and the report of other auditors, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the respective financial position of the governmental activities, the business-type activities, the discretely presented component unit, each major fund, and the aggregate remaining fund information of the District, as of August 31, 2013, and the respective changes in financial position, and, where applicable, cash flows thereof for the year then ended in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Other Matters Required Supplementary Information Accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America require that the management’s discussion and analysis and budgetary comparison information on pages 4–12 and 53–54 be presented to supplement the basic financial statements. Such information, although not a part of the basic financial statements, is required by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, who considers it to be an essential part of financial reporting for placing the basic financial statements in an appropriate operational, economic, or historical context. We have applied certain limited procedures to the required supplementary information in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America, which consisted of inquiries of management about the methods of preparing the information and comparing the information for consistency with management’s responses to our inquiries, the basic financial statements, and other knowledge we obtained during our audit of the basic financial statements. We do not express an opinion or provide any assurance on the information because the limited procedures do not provide us with sufficient evidence to express an opinion or provide any assurance. Other Information Our audit was conducted for the purpose of forming opinions on the financial statements that collectively comprise the District’s basic financial statements. The introductory section, combining and individual nonmajor fund financial statements, and statistical section, are presented for purposes of additional analysis and are not a required part of the basic financial statements. The schedule of expenditures of federal awards is presented for purposes of additional analysis as required by U.S. Office of Management and Budget Circular A-133, Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations, and is also not a required part of the basic financial statements. -2- Highland Park Independent School District Page 3 The combining and individual nonmajor fund financial statements and the schedule of expenditures of federal awards are the responsibility of management and were derived from and relate directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the basic financial statements. Such information has been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in the audit of the basic financial statements and certain additional procedures, including comparing and reconciling such information directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the basic financial statements or to the basic financial statements themselves, and other additional procedures in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America. In our opinion, the combining and individual nonmajor fund financial statements and the schedule of expenditures of federal awards are fairly stated in all material respects in relation to the basic financial statements as a whole. The introductory and statistical sections have not been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in the audit of the basic financial statements and, accordingly, we do not express an opinion or provide any assurance on them. Other Reporting Required by Government Auditing Standards In accordance with Government Auditing Standards, we have also issued our report dated January 15, 2014, on our consideration of the District’s internal control over financial reporting and on our tests of its compliance with certain provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, and grant agreements and other matters. The purpose of that report is to describe the scope of our testing of internal control over financial reporting and compliance and the results of that testing, and not to provide an opinion on internal control over financial reporting or on compliance. That report is an integral part of an audit performed in accordance with Government Auditing Standards in considering the District’s internal control over financial reporting and compliance. WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P. Dallas, Texas January 15, 2014 -3- Management’s Discussion and Analysis The business management team of Highland Park Independent School District has prepared this narrative overview and analysis of the financial activities of the District for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013. Readers are encouraged to review the information furnished in the letter of transmittal, found at the front of this report, as well as the District’s financial statements, which follow this section. Financial Highlights • The net position of the District at the close of the fiscal year was $75,394,638. Of this amount, $25,767,489 is unrestricted and may be used to meet future obligations of the District’s operations. • As of the close of the fiscal year, the District’s governmental funds reported combined ending fund balances of $24,282,747. Of this amount, $16,718,127 (approximately 68.8 percent) is unassigned; and therefore, is available for spending at the government’s discretion. • At the end of the fiscal year, unassigned fund balance for the general fund was $16,730,139, which approximated 13.6 percent of the total general fund expenditures. Overview of the Financial Statements This discussion and analysis is intended to serve as an introduction to the District’s basic financial statements. The basic financial statements are comprised of three components: 1) government-wide financial statements, 2) fund financial statements, and 3) notes to the financial statements. This report also contains other supplementary information in addition to the basic financial statements. Government-wide financial statements. The government-wide financial statements are designed to provide readers with a broad overview of the District’s finances, in a manner similar to a private-sector business. The statement of net position presents information on all of the District’s assets and liabilities, with the difference between the two reported as net position. Over time, increases or decreases in net position may serve as a useful indicator of whether the financial position of the District is improving or deteriorating. The statement of activities presents information for all of the current year’s revenues and expenses regardless of when cash is received or paid. Thus, revenues and expenses are reported in this statement for some items that will only result in cash flows in future fiscal periods. Both of the District’s government-wide financial statements distinguish the functions of the District as being principally supported by taxes and intergovernmental revenues (governmental activities) as opposed to business-type activities that are intended to recover all or a significant portion of their costs through user fees and charges. The business-type activities of the District include a community education program and a community tennis center. The government-wide financial statements can be found at Exhibits A-1 and B-1. Fund financial statements. A fund is a grouping of related accounts that is used to maintain control over resources that have been segregated for specific activities or objectives. The District, like other state and local governments, uses fund accounting to ensure and demonstrate compliance with finance-related requirements. The fund financial statements provide more detailed information about the District’s most significant funds not the District as a whole. Some funds are required by State law and/or bond covenants. Other funds may be established by the District to control and manage money for -4- particular purposes or to evidence appropriate use of certain taxes, grants and other special revenues. All of the funds of the District can be divided into three categories: governmental funds, proprietary funds, and fiduciary funds. • Governmental funds. Governmental funds are used to account for essentially the same functions reported as governmental activities in the government-wide financial statements. However, unlike the government-wide financial statements, governmental fund financial statements focus on short-term inflows and outflows of spendable resources, as well as on balances of spendable resources available at the end of the fiscal year. Such information may be useful in evaluating the District’s short-term financing requirements. Because the focus on governmental funds is narrower than that of the government-wide financial statements, it is useful to compare the information presented for governmental funds with similar information presented for governmental activities in the government-wide financial statements. By doing so, readers may better understand the long-term impact of the District’s short-term financing decisions. Reconciliations are provided for both the governmental fund balance sheet and statement of revenues, expenditures, and changes in fund balances. These reconciliations facilitate the comparison between governmental funds and governmental activities. The District maintained 12 governmental funds in fiscal year 2012-13. Information is presented separately in the governmental fund balance sheet and in the governmental fund statement of revenues, expenditures, and changes in fund balance for the general fund and the capital projects fund, which are considered to be the only major funds. Financial data from the other 10 governmental funds are combined into a single, aggregated presentation. Individual fund data for each of these non-major governmental funds are provided in the form of combining statements found elsewhere in this report. The District adopts an annual appropriated budget for its general fund and debt service fund. A budgetary comparison schedule has been provided to demonstrate compliance with these budgets. The basic governmental fund financial statements can be found at Exhibit C-1 and C-3. • Proprietary funds. Proprietary funds provide the same type of information as the governmentwide financial statements, only in more detail. There are two proprietary fund types. Enterprise funds are used to report the same functions presented as business-type activities in the government-wide financial statements. As mentioned above in the government-wide definition, the District has two business-type activities or enterprise funds. The second type of proprietary fund is the internal service fund. Internal service funds are an accounting device used to accumulate and allocate costs internally among the various functions. The District uses the internal service fund to report activities for its self-funded insurance program. The basic proprietary fund financial statements are at Exhibits D-1, D-2 and D-3 in this report. • Fiduciary funds. Fiduciary funds are used to account for resources held for the benefit of parties outside the District. Fiduciary funds are not reflected in the government-wide financial statements because the resources of those funds are not available to support the District’s programs. The District is the trustee, or fiduciary, for these funds and is responsible for ensuring that the assets reported in these funds are used for their intended purposes. All the District’s fiduciary activities are reported in a separate statement of fiduciary net assets and a statement of changes in fiduciary net assets are at Exhibits E-1 and E-2 in this report. Notes to the financial statements. The notes provide additional information that is essential to having a complete understanding of the data provided in the government-wide and fund financial statements. -5- Other information. In addition to the basic financial statements and accompanying notes, this report also presents certain required supplementary information that further explains and supports the information in the financial statements. Required supplementary information can be found at Exhibits F-1 and G-3 in this report. The combining statements referred to earlier in connection with non-major governmental funds are presented immediately following the required supplementary information. Combining statements start at Exhibit G-1 in this report and continue through Exhibit G-9. A required TEA schedule is located at Exhibit H-1. Government-wide Financial Analysis As noted earlier, net position may serve over time as a useful indicator of a government’s financial position. Exhibited below in Table I, are the District’s net positions summarized for both the governmental activities and the business-type activities. Exhibited in Table II, is the change in the District’s net assets. Table I District’s Net Position Governmental Activities Business-type Activities 2013 Current and other assets 2012 2013 Total Primary Government 2012 2013 2012 $ 36,917,914 $ 41,584,645 $ 2,198,776 $ 2,243,665 $ 39,116,690 $ 43,828,310 147,615,695 148,795,792 268,475 256,191 147,884,170 149,051,983 184,533,609 190,380,437 2,467,251 2,499,865 187,000,860 192,880,293 9,560,156 10,991,560 28,968 163,677 9,589,124 11,155,237 Noncurrent liabilities 102,017,098 109,410,202 - - 102,017,098 109,410,202 Total Liabilities 111,577,254 120,401,762 28,968 163,677 111,606,222 120,565,439 46,259,243 40,044,080 268,475 256,191 46,527,718 40,300,271 Capital assets Total Assets Current liabilities Net position: Net investment in capital assets Restricted Unrestricted Total Net Position 3,099,431 3,154,823 - - 3,099,431 3,154,823 23,597,681 26,779,772 2,169,808 2,079,988 25,767,489 28,859,760 $ 72,956,355 $ 69,978,675 $2,438,283 $2,336,179 $ 75,394,638 $ 72,314,854 Government-Wide Activities. As of August 31, 2013, the District’s position exceeded its liabilities by $75,394,638, an increase of $3,079,784 over the previous year-end. The total cost of all governmentwide activities for the fiscal year was $138,325,233. Funding for these government-wide activities is from specific program revenues, property taxes, grants and contributions, and other general revenues. The following is a summary of the government-wide activities: • • • The total cost of government-wide activities for fiscal year 2012-13 was $138,325,233. Specific program revenues received in the amount of $13,885,800 were used to offset the cost of activities. The remaining cost of government-wide activities not directly funded by program revenues was $124,439,433. The following graph, Figure A-1, shows the District’s sources of revenue for the fiscal year. -6- Figure A-1 District Sources of Revenue for Year Ended August 31, 2013 State Aid 7% Operating Grants & Contributions Charges 6% for Services and all others 3% Property Taxes 84% Total District’s investment in capital assets (e.g., land, buildings and improvements, and furniture and equipment) less any outstanding debt used to acquire those assets is $46,527,718. The District uses the capital assets within the governmental activities to provide services to students; consequently, these assets are not available for future spending. Although the District’s investment in its capital assets is reported net of related debt, it should be noted that the resources needed to repay this debt must be provided from other sources, since the capital assets themselves cannot be used to liquidate these liabilities. A small portion of the District’s net position, $3,099,431 (10.7 percent), represents resources that are subject to external restrictions on how they may be used. The remaining balance of unrestricted net position, $25,767,489, may be used to meet the District’s ongoing obligations. This surplus is not an indication that the District has significant resources available to meet financial obligations next year, but rather the result of having long-term commitments that are less than currently available resources. Table II Change in the District’s Net Position Governmental Activities Revenues: 2013 2012 Business-type Activities 2013 Total Primary Government 2012 2013 2012 Program Revenues Charges for services 3,068,230 $1,573,612 $1,550,067 $ 4,612,214 $ 4,618,297 8,810,448 9,807,850 40,827 37,668 8,851,275 9,845,518 422,311 80,323 - - 422,311 80,323 118,441,821 117,048,949 - - 118,441,821 117,048,949 8,775,795 10,894,879 - - 8,775,795 10,894,879 Investment Earnings 296,910 304,777 4,691 3,799 301,601 308,576 Misc. Local and Intermediate Revenue 400,000 42,980 (400,000) - - 42,980 140,185,887 141,247,988 1,219,130 1,591,534 141,405,017 142,839,522 Operating Grants and Contributions Capital Grants and Contributions $ 3,038,602 $ General Revenues Property Taxes State Aid - Formula Grants Total Revenue -7- Business –type Activities Governmental Activities Total Primary Government Expenses: 2013 Instruction & Instructional-Related Services 2012 2013 2012 2013 2012 $ 42,604,480 $ 42,168,726 - - $ 42,604,480 Instructional and School Leadership 4,120,465 3,921,649 - - 4,120,465 3,921,649 Support Services – Student 7,921,207 7,599,178 - - 7,921,207 7,599,178 Administrative Support Services 2,996,012 2,768,530 - - 2,996,012 2,768,530 Support Services – Nonstudent Based 6,347,949 6,916,624 - - 6,347,949 6,916,624 Debt Service 4,356,850 5,131,258 - - 4,356,850 5,131,258 Facilities acquisition and Construction $ 42,168,726 - 99,170 - - - 99,170 68,861,244 69,600,253 - - 68,861,244 69,600,253 Seay Tennis Center - - 450,476 445,749 450,476 445,749 Academy for Lifelong Learning - - 666,550 625,018 666,550 625,018 137,208,207 138,205,388 1,117,026 1,070,767 138,325,233 139,276,155 Intergovernmental Charges Total Expenses Change in net position Net position – beginning Net position – ending 2,977,680 3,042,600 69,978,675 66,936,075 $ 72,956,355 $ 69,978,675 102,104 520,767 3,079,784 3,563,367 1,815,412 72,314,854 68,751,487 $ 2,438,283 $ 2,236,179 $ 75,394,638 $ 72,314,854 2,336,179 Governmental Activities. For the 2012-13 fiscal year, net position from activities, decreased by $2,977,680. The net cost of governmental activities for the year was $124,936,846. The amount paid by taxpayers for these activities through property taxes was $118,441,821 or 94.8 percent. However, of the total amount of property taxes collected, the District was required to send $68,513,500 to the State as required under the recapture provisions of Chapter 41 in the Texas Education Code. This amount represents approximately 57.8 percent of all property tax revenue collected locally. The District’s Chapter 41 recapture payments to the State are shown on Exhibit B-1 of the financial statements under the expense line item “Contracted Instructional Services Between Schools.” When excluding Chapter 41 recaptured payments to the State, the cost of governmental activities for the District was $68,694,707, a decrease of 0.4 percent from the previous year. Business-Type Activities. Net position for business-type activities as of August 31, 2013, was $2,438,283, an increase from prior year by $102,104. Charges for services, Operating Grants and Contributions combined were $1,614,439 for the year, an increase of $26,704. Total cost of operations for business-type activities were $1,117,026, which increased from the previous year by $46,259. Both enterprises were profitable for the year. There was an operating transfer from the business-type activities to the governmental activities in the amount of $400,000. As previously mentioned business-type activities consist of two for-profit operations, the Seay Tennis Center and the Academy for Life-long Learning. Transfers from their operations are done to support the governmental activities annual budget. Financial Analysis of the District’s Funds As stated earlier, the District uses fund accounting to ensure and demonstrate compliance with financerelated legal requirements, bond covenants, and segregation for particular purposes. Governmental funds. The focus of the District’s governmental funds is to provide information on shortterm inflows, outflows, and balances of spendable resources. Such information is useful in assessing the District’s financing requirements. In particular, unassigned fund balance may serve as a useful measure of the District’s net resources available for spending at the end of the fiscal year. -8- As of August 31, 2013, the District’s governmental funds reported combined ending fund balances of $24,282,747, a decrease of $3,958,562 from the previous year. Of the combined ending fund balances approximately 61.5 percent, or $16,718,127 of this total amount constitutes unassigned fund balance. Table III illustrates the fund balances of the governmental funds. Table III Fund Balances Governmental Funds – Fund Balance As of August 31, 2013 Capital Projects General Fund Non major Governmental Funds Total Governmental Funds Restricted for: Advanced Placement Initiatives 104,408 $ 104,408 State Funded Special Revenue $ - $ - $ 20,227 20,227 Debt Service - - 1,432,942 1,432,942 Local Special Revenue - - 1,604,123 1,604,123 Committed for: Capital Expenditures - 3,127,558 - Campus Activities Unassigned: Total Fund Balance 16,730,139 $ 16,730,139 $ 3,127,558 $ 3,127,558 1,275,362 1,275,362 (12,012) 4,425,050 16,718,127 $ 24,282,747 At the end of the current fiscal year, the ending fund balance for the General Fund was unassigned and totaled $16,730,139. The total fund balance represents 13.6 percent of total general fund expenditures. The fund balance decreased by $639,435 as of the end of the fiscal year. The decrease is due to expenditures exceeding revenues by $444,435 and net operating transfers out of $195,000 to the Capital Projects Fund. Property taxes are the primary source of revenue for the General Fund, representing 86.6 percent of the total revenue for the fund. Property tax collections totaled $106,551,334 for the current fiscal year, an increase of $966,423 from the previous year. The increase is related to the net property values increasing by 0.2 percent. Total revenues for the General Fund equaled $121,923,431. Total General Fund expenditures for the year ended August 31, 2013, were $122,367,866, an increase of $481,056 over 2012 expenditures. The increase is primarily related to the net impact to the payroll expenditure budget when considering of a 2 percent raise to the existing staff. For the 2012-13 fiscal year, the Capital Projects Fund is a major reportable fund. This is reflected on Exhibits C-1 and C-3. The fund balance as of August 31, 2013, is $3,127,558, a decrease of $3,226,273 from the prior year. The decrease is primarily attributed to a capital project at our intermediate and middle school where the cafeteria dining and kitchen area is being expanded and the three classrooms are being finished out from a shell state. In addition, $595,000 was transferred in from the General Fund for minor renovations to the athletic stadium to include replacing the field turf and installing additional handrails. Revenues for the Capital Projects Fund were $444,544, of which $422,311 was generated from donations from support booster clubs. Donated revenue was used to renovate a media center at one of the District’s elementary schools and minor capital improvements at two other elementary schools. The non-major governmental funds column is comprised of the Debt Service Fund and 9 Special Revenue Funds. The significant funds are discussed below. -9- The Debt Service Fund had tax revenues of $11,155,099 for the 2012-13 year. Expenditures from the fund were $11,015,913 resulting in net revenues over expenditures in the amount of $202,516. On July 17, 2013, the District refinanced $22,545,000 of Series 2005 of Tax Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds by issuing Series 2013 Tax Refunding Bonds in the amount of $22,285,000. The final cost of the issuance was $24,842,217. The District made a contribution of $495,000 towards the transaction to eliminate any savings the District would have earned through the refunding in 2013. See Note 10 for addition information on the refinancing. The ending fund balance was $1,432,942 for the fund. The District maintained 9 special revenue funds in the current fiscal year. The total ending fund balance for all special revenue funds combined was $2,992,108, an increase of $71,744 from the previous year. The campus activity fund and the gift fund are the two largest special revenue funds. Together the two funds represent $2,688,935 (89.9 percent) of the total ending fund balance of all special revenue funds. Proprietary funds. As mentioned earlier, the District’s proprietary funds statements provide the same type of information found in the government-wide financial statements, but in more detail. Total net position for the enterprise funds as of August 31, 2013, totaled $2,438,283, an increase of $102,104 from the previous year. Total income for the year was $1,573,612, an increase of $23,545 from last year. Expenditures for the year were $1,117,026, an increase of $46,259 over prior year. Detail schedule can be reviewed at Exhibits G-4 and G-5 Total net position for the internal service fund as of August 31, 2013, totaled $1,418,122, an increase of $401,071 from the prior year. The primary reason for the increase in net position was due to a favorable year with workers compensation claims. General Fund Budgetary Highlights For the General Fund, the final budgeted amount for revenues was $122,912,887. This was $429,598 higher than the original adopted budget of $122,483,289. The difference was due to an increase in state aid from the Texas Education Agency (TEA). In August 2013, the District amended its appropriations budget to $123,653,585, an increase of $429,598 over the original adopted budget. The most significant appropriation budget amendment for the year was a $595,000 operating transfer out to the Capital Projects Fund to fund the returfing of the field at the football stadium and miscellaneous renovation to the stadium. Capital Asset and Debt Administration Capital assets. At August 31, 2013, the District had invested $147,884,170 in a broad range of capital assets, including land, buildings and improvements, furniture and equipment and construction in progress. (See Table V below). - 10 - Table V District’s Capital Assets, net of Depreciation (In thousands) Governmental Activities 2013 2012 Business-type Activities 2013 Land Buildings and Improvements Furniture and Equipment Construction in Progress $ 23,296 $ 23,296 116,857 120,692 3,958 4,808 3,505 - $ 93 175 - Totals at Historical Cost $147,616 $148,796 $ 268 2012 $ Total Activities 2013 2012 Increase (Decrease) Perc. (%) 104 152 $ 23,296 $ 23,296 116,950 120,796 4,133 4,808 3,505 152 ( 3.2) ( 14.0) 2,205.9 $ 256 $ 147,884 $ 149,052 ( 0.8) As of the end of the fiscal year, there was a decrease of $1,180,097 in capital assets (net of depreciation) used for governmental activities. Additional information about the District’s capital assets is presented in Note 6 of the financial statements. Long-term debt. As of August 31, 2013, the District had total bonded debt outstanding of $101,595,000, a decrease of $7,190,000 from the prior year. As previously mentioned, the District refunded Series 2005 Bonds with Series 2013 Bonds. The refunding resulted in a decrease in the District’s debt service payments of $1,442,756, which resulted in a present value economic gain of $1,373,710. The $22,285,000 of the Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds, Series 2005, were refunded and are considered legally defeased, and are no longer included in the District’s basic financial statements. More detailed information about the District’s long-term debt is presented in Note 9 of the financial statements. Economic Factors and Next Year’s Budgets and Rates The District experienced a 5 percent increase in taxable values for tax year 2013. The total appraised local taxable value for the 2013-14 budget year was certified by the Dallas Central Appraisal District at $11,733,798,388, an increase of $556,167,761 from the previous year. The District’s weighted average daily attendance (WADA) used for the 2013-13 fiscal budget is 7,679.5. The total tax rate for fiscal year 2013-14 is $1.1267 per $100 of value, $1.0267 for maintenance and operations (General Fund) and $0.10 for interest and sinking (Debt Service Fund). This is a decrease in the rate by $0.0075 which is in the Debt Service Rate. The Dallas County Tax Office certified adjusted tax collections for both the General fund and the Debt Service Fund at $125,412,609, an increase of $6,146,067 over the previous year. For the 2013-14 fiscal year, the District budgeted total revenues for the General Fund at $125,500,147, of which $112,699,955 will come from property tax collections, $8,571,692 will come from State aid, and the remaining $4,228,500 will come from other local resources. Parent Teacher Organizations, Highland Park Education Foundation and the Highland Park Sports Club has committed $2,723,500 to the District’s General Fund budget. The General Fund appropriations budget for 2013-14 is $126,276,517, which is an increase from the prior year adopted budget by $3,052,530, or 2.5 percent increase. Of the $126,276,517 budgeted for 201314, $69,287,492 will be sent to the State for Chapter 41 recapture. This amount is an increase of 1.1 percent from the previous year. When eliminating that payment to the State, the District’s expenditure budget for the 2013-14 year is $56,989,025, a 4.2 percent increase from prior year. An operating transfer - 11 - into the General Fund from an enterprise fund in the amount of $400,000 is budgeted for the 2013-14 year. The same amount that was budgeted in the 2012-13 year. The 2013-14 general fund ending fund balance is estimated to be $16,353,764, which is adequate to fund 3.4 months of general fund operating expenditures when Chapter 41 recapture is eliminated from the equation. Debt Service fund revenues are budgeted at $10,926,848 for the 2013-14 year. Appropriations are budgeted at $10,938,880, to include principal, interest and fees payments towards the District’s outstanding bonded debt. The debt service ending fund balance as of the August 31, 2014 is estimated at $1,311,063. Requests for Information This financial report is designed to provide our citizens, taxpayers, customers, investors and creditors with a general overview of the District’s finances. In addition, it provides evidence of accountability for funds the District receives. Questions concerning any of the information provided in this report or requests for additional information should be addressed to the District’s Administration Office, Business Services Department, Highland Park I.S.D., 6915 Westchester Drive, Dallas, Texas 75205. - 12 - Basic Financial Statements - 13 - This page intentionally left blank - 14 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF NET POSITION AUGUST 31, 2013 Data Control Codes Primary Government Governmental Activities 1110 1120 1220 1230 1240 1250 1260 1290 1410 1490 1510 1520 1530 1570 1580 1810 1000 EXHIBIT A-1 ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Delinquent property taxes receivables Allowance for uncollectible taxes (credit) Due from other governments Accrued interest Internal balances Other receivables (net) Deferred expenses Other current assets Capital assets: Land Buildings and building improvements Furniture and equipment Accumulated depreciation Construction in progress Restricted cash and investments $ 23,296,152 173,225,698 12,417,510 (64,828,478) 3,504,813 - Total assets LIABILITIES Accounts payable Interest payable Accrued wages payable Due to other governments Unearned revenue Noncurrent liabilities: 2501 Due within one year 2502 Due in more than one year 2000 Total liabilities 2110 2140 2160 2180 2300 NET POSITION 3200 Net investment in capital assets Restricted for: 3820 State programs 3850 Debt service 3890 Donor stipulations 3900 Unrestricted net position 3000 Total net position 16,634,907 $ 19,149,083 1,935,889 (290,382) 317,054 86,095 (1,441,679) 321,082 205,865 - $ Business-type Activities 50,064 $ 703,289 3,744 1,441,679 310,163 201,456 (243,144) - Total Component Unit HPISD Education Foundation 16,684,971 $ 19,852,372 1,935,889 (290,382) 317,054 89,839 321,082 205,865 23,296,152 173,535,861 12,618,966 (65,071,622) 3,504,813 - 2,035,271 3,457,681 528,949 1,802 8,819,839 184,533,609 2,467,251 187,000,860 14,843,542 3,849,578 194,481 1,922,497 1,428,923 2,164,677 7,624 21,344 - 3,857,202 194,481 1,943,841 1,428,923 2,164,677 702,914 41,330 7,131,456 94,885,642 111,577,254 28,968 7,131,456 94,885,642 111,606,222 744,244 46,259,243 268,475 46,527,718 124,635 1,370,673 1,604,123 23,597,681 72,956,355 $ 2,169,808 2,438,283 $ 124,635 1,370,673 1,604,123 25,767,489 75,394,638 $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 15 - 12,951,029 1,148,269 14,099,298 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Program Revenues Data Control Codes 1 3 Expenses Charges for Services 4 Operating Grants and Contributions GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITIES: 11 12 13 21 23 31 33 34 35 36 41 51 52 53 72 73 81 91 92 Instruction Instructional resources and media services Curriculum and staff development Instructional leadership School leadership Guidance, counseling, and evaluation services Health services Student transportation Food service Extracurricular activities General administration Plant maintenance and operations Security and monitoring services Data processing services Interest on long-term debt Debt Service - Bond fees Facilities acquisition and construction Contracted instructional services between schools Incremental costs related to WADA $ 39,949,333 $ 1,004,711 1,650,436 1,076,148 3,044,317 2,975,043 560,365 185,584 1,412,509 2,787,706 2,996,012 5,399,657 122,336 825,956 4,343,604 13,246 68,513,500 347,744 137,208,207 $ 1,711,648 $ 123,606 16,594 7,904 89,303 28,784 4,632 17,134 795,834 16,594 223,748 2,821 3,038,602 $ 5,896,570 205,746 371,672 54,879 238,800 154,299 31,274 1,171,016 328,788 128,120 197,442 31,842 8,810,448 [TB] TOTAL BUSINESS-TYPE ACTIVITIES: $ 450,476 666,550 1,117,026 $ 631,562 942,050 1,573,612 $ 18,390 22,437 40,827 [TP] TOTAL PRIMARY GOVERNMENT: $ 138,325,233 $ 4,612,214 $ 8,851,275 $ 2,985,004 $ - 3,454,652 [TG] TOTAL GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITIES: $ BUSINESS-TYPE ACTIVITIES: 01 02 Seay Tennis Center Academy for Lifelong Learning COMPONENT UNIT: 03 Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation Data Control Codes MT DT GC IE FR Taxes Property taxes, levied for general purposes Property taxes, levied for debt service Grants & contributions not restricted Investment earnings Transfers TR CN NB NE Total general revenues and transfers Change in net position Net position-beginning Net position-ending $ General Revenues and Transfers: The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 16 - EXHIBIT B-1 Program Revenues 5 Capital Grants and Contributions $ Net (Expense) Revenue and Changes in Net Position 6 7 Primary Government Governmental Business-type Activities Activities $ 31,711 $ 390,600 422,311 $ $ - $ 422,311 $ $ - $ $ (32,309,404) $ (675,359) (1,262,170) (1,013,365) (2,716,214) (2,791,960) (524,459) (185,584) (224,359) (1,663,084) (2,851,298) (4,978,467) (122,336) (791,293) (4,343,604) (13,246) 390,600 (68,513,500) (347,744) (124,936,846) $ Total $ $ 199,476 297,937 497,413 $ 199,476 297,937 497,413 $ - (124,936,846) $ 497,413 $ (124,439,433) $ - $ 107,217,132 11,224,689 8,775,795 296,910 400,000 $ HPISD Education Foundation - - 127,914,526 2,977,680 69,978,675 72,956,355 $ - $ 8 (32,309,404) $ (675,359) (1,262,170) (1,013,365) (2,716,214) (2,791,960) (524,459) (185,584) (224,359) (1,663,084) (2,851,298) (4,978,467) (122,336) (791,293) (4,343,604) (13,246) 390,600 (68,513,500) (347,744) (124,936,846) $ - - Component Unit $ 4,691 (400,000) (395,309) 102,104 2,336,179 2,438,283 $ - 17 - - $ 107,217,132 11,224,689 8,775,795 301,601 127,519,217 3,079,784 72,314,854 75,394,638 $ 469,648 1,447,237 1,447,237 1,916,885 12,182,413 14,099,298 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT BALANCE SHEET GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 Data Control Codes 1110 1120 1220 1230 1240 1250 1260 1290 1000 ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Property taxes-delinquent Allowance for uncollectible taxes (credit) Due from other governments Accrued interest Due from other funds Other receivables Total assets 3510 3545 3600 3000 4000 Total liabilities and fund balances 3450 3450 3480 3490 Capital Projects General Fund LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES LIABILITIES: Accounts payable Accrued wages payable Due to other funds Due to other governments Deferred revenue Total liabilities Fund balances: Restricted for: Advanced Placement Initiatives State funded special revenue Debt service Donor stipulations Committed for: Capital expenditure Campus activities Unassigned Total fund balances 2110 2160 2170 2180 2300 2000 EXHIBIT C-1 $ $ $ 9,812,955 17,521,146 1,780,345 (267,051) 228,535 79,119 459,110 205,354 29,819,513 484,252 1,872,846 6,422,722 1,428,923 2,880,631 13,089,374 $ $ $ $ $ 3,127,558 3,127,558 16,730,139 16,730,139 29,819,513 1,009,201 405,090 1,414,291 $ - - $ 4,506,769 35,080 4,541,849 Non-major Governmental Funds $ 4,541,849 $ 1,774,231 627,937 155,544 (23,331) 88,519 3,343 2,893,008 4,622 5,523,873 65,607 49,651 54,014 929,551 1,098,823 Total Governmental Funds $ $ $ 1,559,060 1,922,497 6,881,826 1,428,923 3,810,182 15,602,488 104,408 20,227 1,432,942 1,604,123 104,408 20,227 1,432,942 1,604,123 1,275,362 (12,012) 4,425,050 3,127,558 1,275,362 16,718,127 24,282,747 5,523,873 $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 18 - 16,093,955 18,149,083 1,935,889 (290,382) 317,054 82,462 3,352,118 245,056 39,885,235 39,885,235 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT RECONCILIATION OF THE GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS BALANCE SHEET TO THE GOVERNMENT-WIDE STATEMENT OF NET POSITION AUGUST 31, 2013 TOTAL FUND BALANCES - GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS EXHIBIT C-2 $ 24,282,747 1 The District uses internal services funds to charge the costs of certain activities, such as self-insurance, to appropriate functions in other funds. The assets and liabilities of the internal service funds are included in governmental activities in the statement of net position. The net effect of this consolidation is to increase net position. 1,418,122 2 Capital assets used in governmental activities are not financial resources and therefore are not reported in governmental fund financial statements. 212,444,173 3 Accumulated depreciation has not been included in the governmental fund financial statements. (64,828,478) 4 Long-term liabilities have not been included in the governmental fund financial statements. (102,017,098) 5 Property taxes reported as deferred revenue in the governmental fund financial statements are recognized as revenue in the government-wide financial statements. 1,645,505 6 Interest is accrued on outstanding debt in the government-wide financial statements, whereas in the governmental fund financial statements, an interest expenditure is reported when due. (194,481) 7 Costs associated with the issuance of long-term debt are expensed when incurred in the governmental funds financial statements. These costs are capitalized and amortized over the life of the life of the debt in the government-wide financial statements. NET POSITION OF GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITIES 205,865 $ 72,956,355 The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 19 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT EXHIBIT C-3 STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES, AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Data Control Codes 10 General Fund 620 Capital Projects Non-major Governmental Funds Total Governmental Funds REVENUES 5700 5800 5900 5020 Total local and intermediate sources State program revenues Federal program revenues Total revenues $ 110,675,171 11,248,260 121,923,431 $ 444,544 $ 444,544 16,165,439 $ 223,975 798,067 17,187,481 127,285,154 11,472,235 798,067 139,555,456 EXPENDITURES 0011 0012 0013 0021 0023 0031 0033 0034 0035 0036 0041 0051 0052 0053 0071 0072 0073 0081 0091 0092 6030 1100 CURRENT: Instruction Instructional resources & media services Curriculum & instructional staff development Instructional leadership School leadership Guidance, counseling, and evaluation services Health services Student (pupil) transportation Food service Cocurricular/extracurricular activities General administration Plant maintenance and operations Security and monitoring services Data processing services DEBT SERVICE: Debt service - Principal on long-term debt Debt service - Interest on long-term debt Debt service - Bond issuance costs and fees CAPITAL OUTLAY: Facilities Acquisition and Construction INTERGOVERNMENTAL: Contracted instructional services between schools Incremental costs associated with Chapter 41 Total expenditures Excess (deficiency) of revenues over (under) expenditures 32,242,710 669,203 1,144,915 977,660 2,654,081 2,630,160 507,438 1,275,511 2,197,211 2,743,315 5,076,457 156,313 767,992 425,000 38,656 68,513,500 347,744 122,367,866 (444,435) 176,247 94,643 34,067 25,531 12,714 18,409 3,904,206 4,265,817 (3,821,273) 4,328,161 184,617 409,277 393 113,704 84,167 1,324 185,584 13,722 469,938 12,043 67,160 27,218 36,747,118 948,463 1,554,192 978,053 2,767,785 2,714,327 508,762 185,584 1,323,300 2,692,680 2,768,072 5,162,026 156,313 795,210 6,505,000 4,393,336 117,577 6,930,000 4,431,992 117,577 16,913,221 3,904,206 68,513,500 347,744 143,546,904 274,260 (3,991,448) 22,285,000 2,062,217 (24,714,331) (367,114) (92,854) 4,517,904 4,425,050 $ 22,285,000 995,000 2,062,217 (595,000) (24,714,331) 32,886 (3,958,562) 28,241,309 24,282,747 OTHER FINANCING SOURCES (USES) : 7901 7915 7916 8911 8940 7080 1200 0100 3000 Refunding bonds issued Transfers in Premium or discount on issuance of bonds Transfers out (use) Payment to bond refunding escrow agent (use) Total other financing sources and (uses) Net change in fund balances Fund balances - September 1 (beginning) Fund balances - August 31 (ending) $ 400,000 (595,000) (195,000) (639,435) 17,369,574 16,730,139 $ 595,000 595,000 (3,226,273) 6,353,831 3,127,558 $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 20 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT RECONCILIATON OF THE GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE TO THE GOVERNMENT-WIDE STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 TOTAL NET CHANGE IN FUND BALANCES - GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS EXHIBIT C-4 $ (3,958,562) The District uses internal service funds to charge the costs of certain activities such as self-insurance to appropriate functions in other funds. The net income of internal service funds is reported with government activities. The net effect of this consolidation is to increase net position. 401,071 Current year capital outlays are expenditures in the fund financial statements, but they are shown as increases in capital assets in the government-wide financial statements. 4,207,423 Depreciation is not recognized as an expense in governmental funds since it does not require the use of current financial resources. The net effect of the current year's depreciation is to decrease net position in the government-wide financial statements. (5,343,736) The issuance of long-term debt (e.g. bonds) provides current financial resources to governmental funds, while the repayment of the principal of long-term debt consumes the current financial resources of governmental funds. Neither transaction, however, has any effect on net position. Also, governmental funds report the effect of issuance costs, premiums, and deferred losses on refunding when debt is first issued; however the amounts are deferred and amortized in the government-wide financial statements. This amount represents the net effect of the following items: o Refunding bonds issued - (22,285,000) o Repayments - 29,475,000 o Debt issue costs - 127,886 o Deferred loss on refunding - 2,040,994 o Premium on bonds (2,062,217) o Amortization of premium on bonds, 1,176,238, less the amortization of debt issue costs (57,764) and deferred loss on refunding (951,911) 7,463,226 Current year changes in accrued interest payable do not require the use of current financial resources; and therefore, are not reported as expenditures in governmental funds. 26,607 Loss on disposition of capital assets results in a decrease in net position , but the effect is not recognized in the governmental funds. (43,784) Revenue from property taxes is deferred in the fund financial statements until they are considered available to finance current expenditures, but such revenues are recognized when assessed, net of an allowance for uncollectible accounts, in the government-wide statements. 225,435 CHANGE IN NET POSITION OF GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITIES $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 21 - 2,977,680 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF NET POSITION PROPRIETARY FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT D-1 Business-Type Activities Enterprise Funds ASSETS CURRENT ASSETS: Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Accrued interest Due from other funds Other receivables Total current assets $ NON CURRENT ASSETS Capital Assets: Buildings and improvements Accumulated depreciation on buildings and improvements Furniture and equipment Accumulated depreciation on furniture and equipment Total noncurrent assets Total assets LIABILITIES CURRENT LIABILITIES: Accounts payable Accrued wages payable Total liabilities NET POSITION Net investment in capital assets Unrestricted Total net position $ 50,064 703,289 3,744 1,441,679 2,198,776 Governmental Activities Internal Service Funds $ 540,952 1,000,000 3,633 72,128 70,805 1,687,518 310,163 - (217,105) 201,456 - (26,039) 268,475 - 2,467,251 1,687,518 7,624 21,344 28,968 269,396 269,396 268,475 2,169,808 2,438,283 1,418,122 1,418,122 $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 22 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES, AND CHANGES IN FUND NET POSITION PROPRIETARY FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT D-2 Business-Type Activities Enterprise Funds Governmental Activities Internal Service Funds OPERATING REVENUES: Local and intermediate sources $ Total operating revenues OPERATING EXPENSES: Payroll costs Professional and contractual services Supplies and materials Depreciation expense Other operating costs Total operating expenses Operating income NONOPERATING REVENUES: Earnings from temporary deposits and investments State program revenues Total nonoperating revenues Income before transfers TRANSFERS Transfers out Total transfers Change in net position Total Net Position- September 1 (Beginning) Total Net Position - August 31 (Ending) $ 1,573,612 $ 537,047 1,573,612 537,047 858,239 109,912 42,507 30,724 75,644 104,237 36,735 1,117,026 140,972 456,586 396,075 4,691 40,827 45,518 4,996 4,996 502,104 401,071 (400,000) - (400,000) - 102,104 401,071 2,336,179 1,017,051 2,438,283 $ 1,418,122 The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 23 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS PROPRIETARY FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES Cash received from user charges Payments to employees for services Payments to suppliers EXHIBIT D-3 Business-Type Activities Enterprise Funds Governmental Activities Internal Service Funds $ $ Net cash provided by operating activities 1,223,192 (992,704) (228,307) 2,181 CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES Purchase of investment securities Investment earnings Purchase of capital assets Sale of capital assets 398,530 (270,608) 127,922 (3,289) 4,075 (194,908) 151,900 (1,000,000) 1,363 - Net cash used in investing activities (42,222) (998,637) CASH FLOWS FROM NON-CAPITAL FINANCING ACTIVITIES: Transfers out Received from state government (400,000) 40,827 - Net cash used in financing activities (359,173) - Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents (399,214) Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of year Cash and cash equivalents at the end of year Reconciliation of operating income to net cash provided by operating activities: Operating income Adjustments to reconcile operating income to net cash provided by operating activities Depreciation Effect of increases and decreases in current assets and liabilities: (Increase) decrease in receivables (Increase) in interfund Increase (decrease) in accounts payable Increase (decrease) in accrued wages payable Net cash provided by operating activities (870,715) $ 449,278 50,064 $ 1,411,667 540,952 $ 456,586 $ 396,075 30,724 $ (350,420) (156,053) 21,344 2,181 - $ (66,389) (72,128) (129,636) 127,922 The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 24 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF FIDUCIARY NET POSITION FIDUCIARY FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT E-1 Private Purpose Trust Funds ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Accrued interest Other receivable Due from other funds Restricted assets $ Total assets 38,074 145,035 Agency Funds $ 67,354 125,587 669 22,504 2,021,122 - 183,109 2,237,236 LIABILITIES Accounts payable Due to other funds Due to other organizations Due to student groups 500 6 - 42,076 5,215 1,991,916 198,029 Total liabilities 506 NET POSITION Held in trust for other purposes $ 2,237,236 182,603 Total net position $ 182,603 The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 25 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN FIDUCIARY NET POSITION FIDUCIARY FUNDS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT E-2 Private Purpose Trust Funds ADDITIONS: Local and intermediate sources $ Total additions 7,028 7,028 DEDUCTIONS: Other operating costs 9,150 Total deductions 9,150 Change in net position (2,122) Total Net Position - September 1 (Beginning) Total Net Position - August 31 (Ending) 184,725 $ The accompanying notes to the basic financial statements are an integral part of this statement. - 26 - 182,603 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies Highland Park Independent School District (the District) is a public educational agency operating under the applicable laws and regulations of the State of Texas. It is governed by a seven member Board of Trustees (the Board) elected by registered voters of the District. The District prepares its basic financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles promulgated by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board and other authoritative sources identified in Statement on Auditing Standards No. 69 of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants; and it complies with the requirements of the appropriate version of Texas Education Agency's Financial Accountability System Resource Guide (the Resource Guide) and the requirements of contracts and grants of agencies from which it receives funds. Reporting Entity In defining the scope of the District for financial reporting purposes, the District conforms with the criteria of GASB Statement No. 14, “The Financial Reporting Entity” as amended by GASB Statement No. 39, “Determining Whether Certain Organizations Are Component Units” and GASB No. 61, “The Financial Reporting Entity: Omnibus”. This report includes the financial statements of the District’s primary government, which covers all funds or organizations that are part of the District’s legal entity. Additionally, the District’s reporting entity also includes the accounts of the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation, (the Foundation) as a discretely presented component unit, a legally separate, tax exempt entity. The Foundation was organized to receive and distribute funds, property and gift of any kind exclusively for the benefit of Highland Park Independent School District, its students, and personnel in furtherance of the education objectives of the Foundation. Separate financial statements are issued by the Foundation and can be obtained from: Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation, 4201 Grassmere, Dallas, TX 75205. Contributions from the Foundation to the District were approximately $350,000 for the year ending August 31, 2013. Government-wide and Fund Financial Statements The government-wide financial statements (i.e., the statement of net position and the statement of changes in net position) report information on all of the non-fiduciary activities of the primary government. For the most part, the effect of interfund activity has been removed from these statements. The governmental activities are supported by tax revenues and intergovernmental revenues. Business-type activities include operations that rely, to a significant extent, on fees and charges for support. The Statement of Activities demonstrates the degree to which the direct expenses of a given function are offset by program revenues. Direct expenses are those that are clearly identifiable with a specific function. Program revenues include: 1) charges to customers or applicants who purchase, use or directly benefit from goods, services, or privileges provided by a given function and 2) grants and contributions that are restricted to meeting operational or capital requirements of a particular function. Taxes and other items not properly included among program revenues are reported instead as general revenues. - 27 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies - Continued Government-wide and Fund Financial Statements - Continued Interfund activities between governmental funds and between governmental and proprietary funds appear as due to/due from on the governmental fund balance sheet and proprietary fund statement of net position and as other resources and other uses on the governmental fund statement of revenues, expenditures and changes in fund balance and on the proprietary fund statement of revenues, expenses, and changes in net position. All interfund transactions between governmental funds and between governmental funds and internal service funds are eliminated on the government-wide statements. Interfund activities between governmental funds and enterprise funds remain on the government-wide statements and appear on the government-wide statement of net position as internal balances and on the statement of activities as interfund transfers. Interfund services provided and used are not eliminated in the process of consolidation. The fund financial statements provide reports on the financial condition and results of operations for two fund categories - governmental and fiduciary. Since the resources in the fiduciary funds cannot be used for District operations, they are not included in the governmentwide statements. The District considers some governmental funds major and reports their financial condition and results of operations in a separate column. Proprietary funds distinguish operating revenues and expenses from nonoperating items. Operating revenues and expenses result from providing services and producing and delivering goods in connection with a proprietary fund’s principal ongoing operations. All other revenues and expenses are nonoperating. Measurement Focus, Basis of Accounting, and Financial Statement Presentation Measurement focus is the accounting convention, which determines which assets and liabilities are included on the balance sheet of a fund type and whether a fund type's operating statement presents "financial flow" or capital maintenance information. Basis of accounting refers to when revenues and expenditures are recognized in the accounts and reported in the financial statements. Basis of accounting relates to the timing of measurements made, regardless of the measurement focus applied. The government-wide financial statements use the economic resources measurement focus and the accrual basis of accounting, as do the proprietary fund and fiduciary fund financial statements (with the exception of Agency funds which are custodial in nature thus do not have a measurement focus). Revenues are recorded when earned and expenses are recorded when a liability is incurred, regardless of the timing of the related cash flows. Property taxes are recognized as revenues in the year for which they are levied. Grants and similar items are recognized as revenue as soon as all eligibility requirements imposed by the provider have been met. - 28 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies - Continued Measurement Focus, Basis of Accounting, and Financial Statement Presentation Continued Governmental fund financial statements use the current financial resources measurement focus and the modified accrual basis of accounting. With this measurement focus, only current assets, current liabilities and fund balances are included on the balance sheet. Operating statements of these funds present net increases and decreases in current assets (i.e., revenues and other financing sources and expenditures and other financing uses). The modified accrual basis of accounting recognizes revenues in the accounting period in which they become both measurable and available, and it recognizes expenditures in the accounting period in which the fund liability is incurred, if measurable, except for unmatured interest and principal on long-term debt, which is recognized when due. The expenditures related to certain compensated absences and claims and judgments are recognized when the obligations are expected to be liquidated with expendable available financial resources. The District considers all revenues available if they are collectible within 60 days after year end. Revenues from local sources consist primarily of property taxes. Property tax revenues and revenues received from the State are recognized under the susceptible to accrual concept. Miscellaneous revenues are recorded as revenue when received in cash because they are generally not measurable until actually received. Investment earnings are recorded as earned, since they are both measurable and available. Grant funds are considered to be earned to the extent of expenditures made under the provisions of the grant. Accordingly, when such funds are received, they are recorded as deferred revenues until related and authorized expenditures have been made. If balances have not been expended by the end of the project period, grantors sometimes require the District to refund all or part of the unused amount. The Proprietary Fund types and Fiduciary Fund types are accounted for on a flow of economic resources measurement focus and utilize the accrual basis of accounting. This basis of accounting recognizes revenues in the accounting period in which they are earned and become measurable and expenses in the accounting period in which they are incurred and become measurable. The District applies all GASB pronouncements. With this measurement focus, all assets and all liabilities associated with the operation of these funds are included on the fund Statement of Net Position. The fund equity is segregated into net investment in capital assets, restricted net position, and unrestricted net position. Fund Accounting The District's accounting system is organized and operated on the basis of funds, each of which is considered a separate accounting entity. The operations of each fund are accounted for with a separate set of self-balancing accounts that comprise its assets, liabilities, fund equity, revenues and expenditures. District resources are allocated to and accounted for in individual funds based upon the purposes for which they are to be spent and the means by which spending activities are controlled. - 29 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Fund Accounting - Continued The District reports the following major governmental funds: General Fund is the general operating fund of the District. It is utilized to account for all revenues and expenditures except those required to be accounted for in another fund. Major sources include local property taxes, state funding under the minimum Foundation Program and interest earnings. Expenditures include all costs associated with the daily operations of the schools. Capital Projects Fund is utilized to account for financial resources to be used for the acquisition or construction of major capital facilities. Such resources are derived from proceeds of general obligation bonds and interest earned on such monies and local sources committed for such purposes. Additionally, the District reports the following fund types: Governmental Funds: Special Revenue Funds are utilized to account for the proceeds of specific revenue sources, other than expendable trusts or for major capital projects that are legally restricted or committed for specified purposes. Debt Service Fund is utilized to account for the accumulation of resources for, and the payment of, general long-term debt principal, interest, and related costs arising from general obligation bonds. Proprietary Funds: Enterprise Funds are used to account for operations that are financed and operated in a manner similar to private business enterprises where the intent of the District is that the costs (expenses including depreciation) of providing services to the general public on a continuing basis be financed through user charges. Seay Tennis Center is used to account for the operations of the tennis center that provides services to the residents of the District and to the District's athletic teams. Academy for Lifelong Learning is used to account for the operations of the continuing education school that provides services to the residents of the District. Internal Service Funds are used to account for the financing of goods or services by one department to another on a cost reimbursement basis. Insurance Fund is used to account for the District's partially self-insured workers’ compensation plan. - 30 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Fund Accounting - Continued Fiduciary Funds: Private Purpose Trust Funds consist of various scholarship funds held in a trustee capacity. Agency Funds are used to account for assets held by the District in a trustee or agency capacity for student and employee activities, as well as other organizations. Budgets and Budgetary Accounting The District facilitates budgeting and budgetary control by preparing annual budgets for the General Fund and Debt Service Fund and appropriately amending the budgets as circumstances dictate; the annual budgets as amended are an integral part of the accounting system, providing appropriate budgetary control over revenues, expenditures and transfers through comparison of actual data and encumbrances to budgetary data. The Superintendent of Schools is designated as the budget officer of the District and is responsible for preparing, or causing to be prepared, a budget for the next succeeding fiscal year. The budget is required to be prepared not later than August 20 at a meeting of the Board of Trustees called for the purpose of adopting such budget after ten days public notice of the meeting has been given. The administration performs semi-annual budget reviews by which budget requirements are reevaluated and revisions recommended to the Board of Trustees. The Board of Trustees may approve amendments to the budget, which are required when a change is made to any one of the functional expenditure categories or revenue object accounts defined by the Texas Education Agency. Such amendments must be reflected in the official minutes of the Board, and may not, by law, occur after August 31. Therefore, the legal level of budgetary control is at the function level within each budgeted fund. Management may transfer appropriations between objects, sub-objects, organizations, programs, and projects without approval from the Board of Trustees, as long as appropriations are not increased at the function level. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) requires the budgets to be filed with the Texas Education Agency through regular submissions to the Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS). The budget should not be exceeded in any functional expenditure category under TEA requirements. The final amended versions of these budgets are used in this report. Unused appropriations lapse at the end of each fiscal year; however, the District increases the subsequent year appropriations by an amount equal to outstanding encumbrances. Supplemental appropriations were not significant to the original adopted budget for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2013. Budgets for the General and Debt Service Funds are adopted on a basis consistent with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). - 31 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Investments The District’s general policy is to report money market investments and short-term participating interest-earning investment contracts at amortized cost and to report nonparticipating interestearning investment contracts using a cost-based measure. However, if the fair value of an investment is significantly affected by the impairment of the credit standing of the issuer or by other factors, it is reported at fair value. All other investments are reported at fair value unless a legal contract exists which guarantees a higher value. The term “short-term” refers to investments, which have a remaining term of one year or less at time of purchase. The term “nonparticipating” means that the investment’s value does not vary with market interest rate changes. Local Tax Revenues and Receivables Ad valorem taxes are levied from valuations assessed as of January 1 and are recognized as revenue beginning on the date of levy, October 1, when they become available. Available means collected within the current period or expected to be collected soon enough thereafter to be used to pay current liabilities. Taxes not expected to be collected within sixty days of the fiscal year end are recorded as deferred revenues and are recognized when they become available. Taxes collected prior to the levy date to which they apply are recorded as deferred revenues and recognized as revenue of the period to which they apply. Current taxes are due on October 1 and become delinquent if unpaid on February 1. Pursuant to Subtitle E of the Texas Property Tax Code, penalties and interest on unpaid taxes are calculated at the rate of 1% per month of delinquency. On January 1 of each year, a tax lien attaches to property to secure the payment of all taxes, penalties and interest ultimately imposed. Allowance for Uncollectible Taxes An allowance for uncollectible taxes is provided based upon an analysis of historical trends. Uncollectible personal property taxes are periodically reviewed and written off, but the District is prohibited from writing-off real property taxes without specific authority from the Texas legislature. The District expects to receive all significant receivables within one year of August 31, 2013. - 32 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Capital Assets Capital assets which include land, buildings, furniture and equipment, are reported in the applicable governmental or business-type activities columns in the government-wide financial statements. Capital assets are defined by the District as assets with an initial, individual cost of more than $5,000 and an estimated life of two years or more. Such assets are recorded at historical cost or estimated historical cost if purchased or constructed. Donated capital assets are recorded at estimated fair market value at the date of donation. The costs of normal maintenance and repairs that do not add to the value of the asset or materially extend asset lives are not capitalized. Major outlays for capital assets are capitalized as projects are constructed. Buildings, furniture, and equipment of the District are depreciated using the straight line method over the following estimated useful lives: Years Buildings Building Improvements Vehicles Office Equipment Computer Equipment 10-40 10-20 5-11 5-7 5-7 Compensated Absences This District does not compensate its employees for unused leave; therefore no accrual for compensated absences is required. Long Term Debt In the government-wide financial statements bond premiums and discounts, as well as issuance costs, are deferred and amortized over the life of the bonds using the effective interest method. Bonds payable are reported net of the applicable bond premium or discount. Bond issuance costs are reported as deferred charges and amortized over the term of the related debt. In the fund financial statements, governmental fund types recognize bond premiums and discounts, as well as bond issuance costs, in the period the debt is issued. The face amount of debt issued is reported as other financing sources. Premiums received on debt issuances are reported as other financing sources while discounts on debt issuances are reported as other financing uses. Issuance costs, whether or not withheld from the actual debt proceeds received, are reported as debt service expenditures. - 33 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Governmental Fund Financial Statements The District has adopted the provisions of GASB Statement No. 54, Fund Balance Reporting and Government Fund Type Definitions. The objective of the statement is to enhance the usefulness of fund balance information by providing clearer fund balance classifications that can be more consistently applied and by clarifying the existing government fund type definitions. The statement establishes fund balance classifications that comprise a hierarchy based primarily on the extent to which a government is bound to observe constraints imposed upon the use of the resources reported in governmental funds. Fund balance classifications, under GASB 54 are Nonspendable, Restricted, Committed, Assigned, and Unassigned. These classifications reflect not only the nature of funds, but also provide clarity to the level of restriction placed upon fund balance. Fund balance can have different levels of constraint, such as external versus internal compliance requirements. Unassigned fund balance is a residual classification within the General Fund. The General Fund should be the only fund that reports a positive unassigned balance. In all other funds, unassigned is limited to negative residual fund balance. In accordance with GASB 54, the District classifies governmental fund balances as follows: Nonspendable -- includes amounts that cannot be spent because they are either not in spendable form, or, for legal or contractual reasons, must be kept intact. This classification includes inventories, prepaid items and long term receivables. Restricted -- includes fund balance amounts that are constrained for specific purposes which are externally imposed by providers, such as creditors or amounts restricted due to constitutional provisions or enabling legislation. This classification includes the retirement of long term debt, donations, construction programs and other federal and state grants. Committed -- includes fund balance amounts that are constrained for specific purposes that are internally imposed by the District through formal action of the highest level of decision making authority. Committed fund balance is reported pursuant to resolution passed by the District’s Board of Trustees. This classification includes campus activity funds, and various other construction funds. Assigned -- includes fund balance amounts that are self-imposed by the District to be used for a particular purpose. Fund balance can be assigned by the District’s Board, the Superintendent, or the Superintendent’s designee. Unassigned -- includes residual positive fund balance within the General Fund which has not been classified within the other above mentioned categories. Unassigned fund balance may also include negative balances for any governmental fund if expenditures exceed amounts restricted, committed, or assigned for those specific purposes. When both restricted and unrestricted fund balances are available for use, it is the District’s policy to use restricted fund balance first, then unrestricted fund balance. Furthermore, committed fund balances are reduced first, followed by assigned amounts and the unassigned amounts when expenditures are incurred for purposes for which amounts in any of those unrestricted fund balance classifications can be used. - 34 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Debt Service The ad valorem tax rate is allocated each year between the General Fund and the Debt Service Fund. The full amount estimated to be required for general obligation bond retirement is provided by the debt service tax together with interest earned within the Debt Service Fund. Accounting Estimates The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The amount of state foundation revenue a school district earns for a year may vary until the time when final values for all factors in the state and formula become available. Availability can be as late as midway into the next fiscal year. It is at least reasonably possible that the foundation revenue estimate for the year ended August 31, 2013 will change. Cash Flow Presentation For the purpose of presenting the statement of cash flows, the District considers all highly liquid investments with an original maturity or initial maturity of less than three months to be cash equivalents. Interfund Transactions During the course of normal operations, it is necessary for the District to enter into transactions among its various funds. These transactions consist of one or more of the following types: • • • Reimbursements to a fund, which are generally reflected through the allocation of pooled cash accounts, for expenditures or expenses initially made from it that are properly applicable to another fund. All interfund receivable / payable balances at August 31, 2013 were the result of these types of reimbursements and are expected to be repaid within one year. Transfers in and out, as appropriate, which are shown as other financing sources or uses in the fund financial statements. All other outstanding balances between funds are reported as “due to/from other funds” in the fund financial statements. - 35 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 1. Significant Accounting Policies – Continued Account Code Reporting The Data Control Codes refer to the account code structure prescribed by TEA in the Financial Accountability Resource Guide. The Texas Education Agency requires school districts to display these codes in the financial statements filed with the Agency in order to insure accuracy in building a statewide data base for policy development and funding plans. Note 2. Cash and Investments The funds of the District must be deposited and invested under the terms of a contract, contents of which are set out in the Depository Contract Law. The depository bank places approved pledged securities for safekeeping and trust with the District’s agent bank in an amount sufficient to protect District funds on a day-to-day basis during the period of the contract. The pledge of approved securities is waived only to the extent of the depository bank’s dollar amount of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) insurance. At August 31, 2013, the carrying amount of the District’s deposits (cash, certificates of deposit, and interest-bearing savings accounts included in temporary investments) was $10,246,884 and bank balance was $10,208,601. The District’s cash deposits at August 31, 2013 and during the year ended August 31, 2013 were entirely covered by FDIC insurance or by pledged collateral held by the District’s agent bank in the District’s name. The following is disclosed regarding coverage of combined balances on the date of highest deposit: a. Depository: Plains Capital Bank b. The market value of securities pledged as of the date of the highest combined balance on deposit was $141,237,328. c. The highest combined balances of cash, savings, and time deposit accounts amounted to $113,649,032 on February 6, 2013. d. Total amount of FDIC coverage at the time of the highest combined balance was $250,000. - 36 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 2. Cash and Investments - Continued Legal and Contractual Provisions Governing Deposits and Investments The Public Funds Investment Act (Government Code Chapter 2256) contains specific provisions in the areas of investment practices, management reports and establishment of appropriate policies. Among other things, it requires the District to adopt, implement, and publicize an investment policy. That policy must address the following areas: (1) safety of principal and liquidity, (2) portfolio diversification, (3) allowable investments, (4) acceptable risk levels, (5) expected rates of return, (6) maximum allowable stated maturity of portfolio investments, (7) maximum average dollar-weighted maturity, allowed based on the stated maturity date for the portfolio, (8) investment staff quality and capabilities, (9) and bid solicitation preferences for certificates of deposit. Statutes and the District’s investment policy authorized the District to invest in the following investments as summarized in the table below: Maximum Maximum Authorized Maximum Percentage Investment Investment Type Maturity of Portfolio In One Issuer U.S. Treasury Obligations 1 year None None U.S. Agency Securities 1 year None None State of Texas Securities 1 year None None Certificates of Deposit 1 year None None Money Market None None Repurchase agreements 90 days 15% None Mutual Funds 15% None Investment pools None None Guaranteed investment contracts 1 year None None Commercial paper 270 days None None The Act also requires the District to have independent auditors perform test procedures related to investment practices as provided by the Act. The District is in substantial compliance with the requirements of the Act and with local policies. Cash and cash investments as of August 31, 2013 are classified in the accompanying financial statements as follows: Statement of Net Position Primary Government: Cash and cash equivalents Current investments $ 16,684,971 19,852,372 Fiduciary Funds: Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Restricted assets 105,428 125,587 145,035 Total cash and investments - 37 - $ 36,913,393 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 2. Cash and Investments – Continued Cash and investments as of August 31, 2013 consist of the following: $ Cash on hand Deposits with financial institutions Investments Total cash and investments 5,755 10,246,884 26,660,754 $ 36,913,393 Disclosures relating to interest rate risk Interest rate risk is the risk that changes in market interest rates will adversely affect the fair value of an investment. Generally, the longer the maturity of an investment the greater the sensitivity of its fair value to changes in market interest rates. By policy the District shall use final and weighted-average maturity limits and diversification to reduce exposure to changes in interest rates. One of the ways that the District manages its exposure to interest rate risk is by investing mainly in investment pools which purchase a combination of shorter term investments with an average maturity of less than 60 days thus reducing the interest rate risk. The District monitors the interest rate risk inherent in its portfolio by measuring the weighted average maturity of its portfolio. As of August 31, 2013, the District had the following investments: Investment Type Lone Star Investment Pool Certificates of Deposit Common Stock Total Investments $ $ Amount 6,537,760 19,977,959 145,035 Weighted Average Maturity 57 days 70 days NA Minimum Legal Rating N/A N/A N/A Rating as of Year End Triple A Not rated Triple A 26,660,754 As of August 31, 2013 the District did not invest in any securities which are highly sensitive to interest rate fluctuations. Disclosures relating to credit risk Generally, credit risk is the risk that an issuer of an investment will not fulfill its obligation to the holder of the investment. This is measured by the assignment of a rating by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization. The table in the previous section lists the minimum rating required by (where applicable) the Public Funds Investment Act, the District’s investment policy, or debt agreements, and the actual rating as of year-end for each investment type. - 38 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 2. Cash and Investments – Continued Concentration of credit risk The investment policy of the District contains no limitations on the amount that can be invested in any one issuer. As of August 31, 2013 other than external investment pools the District did not have 5% or more of its investment with one issuer. Custodial credit risk Custodial credit risk for deposits is the risk that, in the event of the failure of a depository financial institution, a government will not be able to recover its deposits or will not be able to recover collateral securities that are in the possession of an outside party. The custodial credit risk for investments is the risk that, in the event of the failure of the counterparty to a transaction, a government will not be able to recover the value of its investment or collateral securities that are in the possession of another party. The Public Funds Investment Act and the District’s investment policy do not contain legal or policy requirements that would limit the exposure to custodial credit risk for deposits or investments, other than the following provision for deposits: The Public Funds Investment Act requires that a financial institution secure deposits made by state or local governmental units by pledging securities in an undivided collateral pool held by a depository regulated under state law (unless so waived by the governmental unit). The market value of the pledged securities in the collateral pool must equal at least the bank balance less the FDIC insurance at all times. As of August 31, 2013 the District deposits with financial institutions in excess of federal depository insurance limits were fully collateralized. The Lone Star Investment Pool (the “Pool”) is organized in conformity with the Interlocal Cooperation Act, Chapter 791 of the Texas Government Code, and the Public Funds Investment Act, Chapter 2256 of the Texas Government Code. The Pool is governed by an 11 member Board of Trustees, consisting of individuals representing entities participating in the Pool. The fair value of the District’s position in the Pool is the same as the value of the Pool shares. - 39 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 3. Due From Other Governments The District participates in a variety of state programs from which it receives grants to partially or fully finance certain activities. In addition, the District receives entitlements from the State through the School Foundation and Per Capita Programs. Amounts due from state governments as of August 31, 2013, are as follows: Fund Due From State General Non-major: IDEA-B Formula IDEA-B Preschool $ 228,535 87,939 580 Total Non-major 88,519 Total $ 317,054 Note 4. Other Receivables Other receivables recorded in the fund level financial statements consisted of the following at August 31, 2013: General Fund Sports Club gift receivable PTA gifts receivable Sundry receivable Miscellaneous receivable - 40 - Capital Projects Non-Major Funds $ 128,500 $ 38,826 30,839 7,189 $ 35,080 - 4,622 $ 205,354 $ 35,080 $ 4,622 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 5. Interfund Receivables/Payables Schedule of Interfund receivables and payables at August 31, 2013, is as follows: Receivable Fund Payable Fund Amount Purpose General Fund: General Fund General Fund General Fund Non-Major Funds Trust and Agency Capital Projects Funds Total Due From Other Funds Non-Major Funds Internal Service Fund Enterprise Funds Agency Funds General Fund General Fund General Fund General Fund Total Due To Other Funds $ 54,014 6 405,090 $ 459,110 $ 2,887,793 72,128 1,441,679 2,021,122 Operational Operational Operational (1) Operational Operational Operational Operational $ 6,422,722 $ 405,090 $ 405,090 $ 5,215 2,887,793 $ 2,893,008 $ 54,014 $ 54,014 $ 1,441,679 $ 1,441,679 General Fund $ $ 72,128 72,128 Operational General Fund General Fund $ 9,634 2,011,488 Operational Operational $ 2,021,122 Agency Funds $ Private Purpose Trust Funds 5,215 6 $ 5,221 Capital Projects Funds: General Fund Capital Projects Funds Total Due To From Other Funds Operational Non-Major Funds: Non-Major Funds Non-Major Funds Agency Funds General Fund Total Due From Other Funds General Fund Non-Major Funds Total Due To Other Funds (2) Operational Operational Operational Enterprise Funds: Enterprise Funds General Fund Total Due From Other Funds Operational Internal Service Funds: Internal Service Funds Total Due From Other Funds Agency Funds: Agency Funds Agency Funds Total Due From Other Funds Non-Major Funds General Fund Total Due To Other Funds Operational Operational (1) Reclassified to accounts payable in the government – wide Statement of Net Position (2) Reclassified to other receivables in the Government – wide Statement of Net Position - 41 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 6. Capital Asset Activity Capital asset activity for the District for the year ended August 31, 2013, was as follows: Beginning Additions Balance Retirements/ Ending Transfers Balance Governmental Activities: Capital assets, not depreciated: Land $ 23,296,152 $ - Construction in progress - $ - $ 23,296,152 3,504,813 - 3,504,813 23,296,152 3,504,813 - 26,800,965 172,885,961 339,737 - 173,225,698 12,169,667 362,873 (115,030) 12,417,510 185,055,628 702,610 (115,030) 185,643,208 Total capital assets not depreciated Capital assets, being depreciated: Buildings and improvements Furniture, equipment and other Total capital assets being depreciated Less accumulated depreciation for: Buildings and improvements (52,194,420) (4,174,259) - (56,368,679) (7,361,568) (1,169,477) 71,246 (8,459,799) (59,555,988) (5,343,736) 71,246 (64,828,478) 125,499,640 (4,641,126) (43,784) 120,814,730 (1,136,313) $ (43,784) $ 147,615,695 Furniture, equipment and other Total accumulated depreciation Total capital assets, being depreciated, net Governmental activities capital assets, net $ 148,795,792 $ Business-type Activities: Capital assets, not depreciated: Construction in progress 151,900 - (151,900) - 151,900 - (151,900) - Total capital assets not depreciated Capital assets, being depreciated: Buildings and improvements $ Furniture and equipment 310,163 $ - $ - $ 310,163 6,548 194,908 - 201,456 316,711 194,908 - 511,619 (205,872) (11,233) - (217,105) (6,548) (19,491) - (26,039) (212,420) (30,724) - (243,144) 104,291 164,184 - 268,475 (151,900) $ 268,475 Total capital assets being depreciated Less accumulated depreciation for: Buildings and improvements Furniture and equipment Total accumulated depreciation Total capital assets, being depreciated, net Business-type activities capital assets, net $ - 42 - 256,191 $ 164,184 $ HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 6. Capital Asset Activity – Continued Depreciation expense was charged to governmental functions as follows: Instruction Instructional Resources and Media Services Curriculum and Instructional Staff Development Instructional Leadership School Leadership Guidance, Counseling and Evaluation Services Health Services Food Services Cocurricular/ Extracurricular Activities General Administration Plant Maintenance and Operations Data Processing Services $ 3,630,997 71,225 102,665 104,676 298,026 276,757 55,707 144,357 146,983 194,696 284,497 33,150 Total Depreciation Expense $ 5,343,736 The District has active construction commitments totaling $1,509,426 as of August 31, 2013. Note 7. Deferred Revenues Deferred revenue at year end in the fund level financial statements consisted of the following: General Fund Debt Service Fund Other Non-Major Funds Total Net Tax Revenue Donations Student Fees Athletic Receipts $ 1,513,293 $ 132,212 $ 500,000 152,502 714,836 - $ 12,800 784,539 - 1,645,505 512,800 937,041 714,836 Total $ 2,880,631 $ 132,212 $ 797,339 $ 3,810,182 Note 8. Risk Management The District is exposed to various risk of loss related to torts, theft or damage to and destruction of assets; errors and omissions and national disasters for which the District carries commercial insurance. There have been no significant reductions in coverage from the prior year and settlements have not exceeded coverage in the past three years. - 43 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 8. Risk Management - Continued As of August 31, 2011, the District discontinued all of the self-funded medical plans. At that time, employees became eligible to purchase health insurance through TRS-Active Care which is the statewide health plan for public education employees established by the 77th Texas Legislature and is a fully insured plan administered by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas. Additionally, the District maintains a self-insured worker's compensation plan administered by the Texas Association of School Boards. For this plan, stop-loss coverage was in effect with an aggregate limit of $365,305. Self-insurance fund revenues and expenses are recognized on the accrual basis. Unpaid claims filed prior to August 31 and subsequently approved by the administrator of the plan are recorded as a liability. 2013 Health Claims payable, beginning of year Claims incurred for and changes in estimates Claim payments Claims payable, end of year $ 2012 - $ $ $ 776,279 (394,480) (381,799) - Because remaining claims under the District’s self-funded medical plan were less than the estimated claims payable as of August 31, 2011, reversal of the remaining balance resulted in a negative expense for the year ended August 31, 2012. Workers' Compensation Claims payable, beginning of year Claims incurred for and changes in estimates Claim payments Claims payable, end of year - 44 - $ $ 2013 2012 328,426 $ 104,237 (163,267) 269,396 $ 271,732 232,852 (176,158) 328,426 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 8. Risk Management - Continued End-of-year claims payable for Workers’ Compensation includes an estimate of incurred but unreported claims reserve loss. This liability is based on requirements of Governmental Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 10, which requires that a liability has been incurred as of the date of the financial statements and the amount of loss can be reasonably estimated. Because actual claim liabilities depend on such complex factors as inflation, changes in legal doctrines, and damage awards, the process used in computing the liability does not result necessarily in an exact amount. The liability booked was the discounted actuarial estimate at the mean funding level. The District does not provide any post-retirement health benefits to its employees Note 9. Bonds Payable General long-term debt of the District consists of Unlimited Tax School Building Bonds payable. Debt service requirements are payable solely from future revenues of the Debt Service Fund which consist principally of property taxes collected by the District and investment income. General obligation bonds payable at August 31, 2013, are summarized as follows: Interest Rate Payable Final Maturity Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds, Series 2005 3.00% to 5.00% 2019 Unlimited Tax School Building Bonds, Series 2008 4.00% to 5.00% Unlimited Tax School Building Bonds, Series 2009 Description Payable Amounts Outstanding 9/1/2012 Amounts Original Issue Retired Outstanding 8/31/2013 - $ 27,005,000 $ 9,595,000 2,045,000 62,105,000 Issued $ 40,195,000 $ 36,600,000 2028 70,000,000 64,150,000 - 3.50% to 5.00% 2028 5,400,000 5,400,000 - Maintenance Tax Note, Series 2011 0.25% to 2.00% 2018 3,045,000 2,635,000 - Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds, Series 2013 2.00% to 4.00% 2019 22,285,000 Total $ - 22,285,000 $ 108,785,000 $ 22,285,000 $ - 45 - - 425,000 - 5,400,000 2,210,000 22,285,000 29,475,000 $ 101,595,000 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 9. Bonds Payable – Continued Debt service requirements are as follows: General Obligations Year Ended August 31, 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019-2023 2024-2028 Principal 7,080,000 $ 7,405,000 7,640,000 7,915,000 8,220,000 29,835,000 33,500,000 Interest 4,314,393 $ 3,988,043 3,689,743 3,403,980 3,080,755 11,178,347 4,173,138 Total Requirements 11,394,393 11,393,043 11,329,743 11,318,980 11,300,755 41,013,347 37,673,138 101,595,000 $ 33,828,399 $ 135,423,399 $ $ Note 10. Changes in Long Term Liabilities A summary of changes in general long-term debt follows: Beginning Balance Additions Reductions Ending Balance 22,285,000 $ 2,062,217 (2,040,994) (29,050,000) $ (425,000) (1,176,238) 951,911 99,385,000 $ 2,210,000 2,632,431 (2,210,333) Due Within One Year Governmental Activities: Bonds Payable: General Obligation Bonds Maintenance Tax Notes Premium on Bonds Deferred loss on refunding Total Governmental Activities Long-term Liabilities $ 106,150,000 $ 2,635,000 1,746,452 (1,121,250) $ 109,410,202 $ 22,306,223 $ (29,699,327) $ 102,017,098 $ 6,655,000 425,000 578,911 (527,455) 7,131,456 During the year ended August 31, 2013, the District issued $22,285,000 Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds, Series 2013. Net proceeds from the sale of the bonds and an issuer contribution totaled $24,821,948. Of these proceeds, $24,714,331 was placed with an escrow agent to provide for all future debt payments of the refunded bonds. This refunding resulted in a decrease in the District’s debt service payments of $1,442,756, which resulted in an economic gain (difference between the present value of the debt service payments of the old debt and new debt) of $1,373,710. As a result of this transaction, $22,545,000 of Unlimited Tax Refunding Bonds, Series 2005 were refunded and are considered legally defeased, and are no longer included in the District’s basic financial statements. - 46 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 11. Local, Intermediate and Out-of-State Revenues During the current year, revenues from local and intermediate sources in the fund level financial statements consisted of the following: General Fund Property Taxes Penalties and Interest Tuition and Fees Investment Earnings Rent Parking Garage Fees Gifts Athletic Activities Co-curricular Activities Total Capital Projects Funds Non - Major Funds Special Debt Revenue Service Funds Fund Total Governmental Funds $ 106,551,334 $ 462,357 445,389 249,426 200,502 90,765 2,200,469 474,929 - $ 22,233 422,311 - $ 1,067,600 4,521 3,115,472 759,417 11,155,099 $ 47,596 15,734 - 117,706,433 509,953 1,512,989 291,914 200,502 90,765 5,738,252 474,929 759,417 $ 110,675,171 $ 444,544 $ 4,947,010 $ 11,218,429 $ 127,285,154 Note 12. Employees’ Retirement Plan Plan Description. The Highland Park Independent School District contributes to the Teacher Retirement System of Texas (TRS), a cost-sharing multiple employer defined benefit pension plan. TRS administers retirement and disability annuities, and death and survivor benefits to employees and beneficiaries of employees of the public school systems of Texas. It operates primarily under the provisions of the Texas Constitution, Article XVI, Sec. 67, and Texas Government Code, Title 8, Subtitle C. TRS also administers proportional retirement benefits and service credit transfers under Texas Government Code, Title 8, Chapters 803 and 805, respectively. The Texas State Legislature has the authority to establish and amend benefit provisions of the pension plan and may, under certain circumstances, grant special authority to the TRS Board of Trustees. TRS issues a publicly available financial report that includes financial statements and required supplementary information for the defined benefit pension plan. That report may be obtained by writing to the TRS Communications Department, 1000 Red River Street, Austin, Texas 78701, by calling the TRS Communications Department at 1-800-223-8778, or by downloading the report from the TRS Internet website, www.trs.state.tx.us, under the TRS Publications heading. Funding Policy. Contribution requirements are not actuarially determined, but are established and amended by the Texas State Legislature. The state funding policy is as follows: (1) The state constitution requires the legislature to establish a member contribution rate of not less than 6.0% of the member’s annual compensation and a state contribution rate of not less than 6.0% and not more than 10% of the aggregate annual compensation of all members of the system; (2) A state statute prohibits benefit improvements or contribution reductions if, as a result of a particular action, the time required to amortize TRS’s unfunded actuarial liabilities would be increased to a period that exceeds 31 years, or, if the amortization period already exceeds 31 years, the period would be increased by such action State law provides - 47 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 12. Employees’ Retirement Plan – Continued for a member contribution rate of 6.4% for fiscal years 2013-2011, and a state contribution rate of 6.4% for fiscal year 2013, 6.0% for fiscal year 2012, and 6.644% for fiscal year 2011. In certain instances the reporting district is required to make all or a portion of the state’s contribution, limited to 6.644% for fiscal year 2011, 6.0% for fiscal year 2012, and 6.4% for fiscal year 2013. State contributions to TRS made on behalf of the Highland Park Independent School District’s employees for the years ended August 31, 2013, 2012, and 2011 were $2,444,251, $2,215,806, and $2,186,317 respectively. The District has recognized these payments as both revenue and expenditures. Note 13. Retiree Health Plan Plan Description The District contributes to the Texas Public School Retired Employees Group Insurance Program (TRS-Care), a cost-sharing multiple-employer defined benefit postemployment health care plan administered by the Teacher Retirement System of Texas. TRS-Care Retired Plan provides health care coverage for certain persons (and their dependents) who retired under the Teacher Retirement Systems of Texas. The statutory authority for the program is Texas Insurance Code, Chapter 1575. Section 1575.052 grants the TRS Board of Trustees the authority to establish and amend basic and optional group insurance coverage for participants. The TRS issues a publicly available financial report that includes financial statements and required supplementary information for TRS-Care. That report may be obtained by visiting the TRS website at www.trs.state.tx.us, by writing to the Communications Department of the Teacher Retirement System of Texas at 1000 Red River Street, Austin, Texas, or by calling 1-800-223-8778. Funding Policy Contribution requirements are not actuarially determined but are legally established each biennium by the Texas Legislature. Texas Insurance Code, Sections 1575.202, 203, and 204 establish state, active employee, and public school contributions, respectively. The State of Texas and active public school employee contribution rates were 0.50% and 0.65% of public school payroll, respectively, for fiscal year 2013, and 1.0% and 0.65% of public school payroll, respectively, for fiscal years 2012 and 2011. The school district contributed a percentage of payroll set at 0.55% for fiscal years 2013, 2012, and 2011. Per Texas Insurance Code, Chapter 1575, the public school contribution may not be less than 0.25% or greater than 0.75% of the salary of each active employee of the public school. For the years ended August 31, 2013, 2012 and 2011, the active member contributions were $248,504, $241,188, and $239,458, respectively, and the school district’s contributions were $210,273, $204,082, and $202,586, respectively, which equaled the required contributions each year. In addition, the State of Texas contributed $101,064, $95,214, and $84,299 in 2013, 2012, and 2011, respectively, for on-behalf payments for Medicare, Part D and $90,041 in 2012 under the temporary Early Retiree Reinsurance Program (ERRP). As ERRP was a temporary program that TRS participated in during fiscal year 2012, there was no funding received for fiscal year 2013 under this program. The District has recognized these payments as both revenues and expenditures. - 48 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 14. Interfund Transfers All interfund transfers between various funds are approved supplements to the operations of those funds. Individual fund operating transfers for fiscal year 2013 were as follows: Transfer In Transfer Out Capital Projects General Fund General Fund Enterprise Fund Amount $ $ Purpose 595,000 Field turf and future projects 400,000 Operating transfer for budget purposes 995,000 Note 15. New Accounting Pronouncements The GASB issued Statement No. 65, Items Previously Reported as Assets and Liabilities, which will be effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2012. The Statement reclassifies certain items that were previously reported as assets and liabilities, as deferred outflows or inflows of resources, and recognizes these items as outflows or inflows of resources. This statement applies to all state and local governmental entities. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its Financial Statements and will take the necessary steps to implement it. The GASB Issued Statement No. 66, Technical Conditions, an Amendment of GASB statements 10 and 62, which will be effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2012. The objective of the statement is to improve accounting and financial reporting by resolving conflicting guidance caused by the issuance of two recent pronouncements: statements 54 and 62. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its financial statements and take the necessary steps to implement it. The GASB issued Statement No. 67, Financial Reporting for Pension Plans, which will be effective for periods beginning after June 15, 2013. The objective of this Statement is to improve financial reporting of state and local governmental pension plans with regard to providing decision-useful information, supporting assessments of accountability and interperiod equity, and creating additional transparency. This Statement applies to all state and governmental entities and amends Statements 25 and 50. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its Financial Statements and will take the necessary steps to implement it. The GASB issued Statement No. 68, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions, which will be effective for periods beginning after June 15, 2014. The objective of this Statement is to improve accounting and financial reporting of state and local governmental pension plans. This Statement applies to all state and governmental entities and replaces Statements 27 and 50. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its Financial Statements and will take the necessary steps to implement it. - 49 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO THE BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Note 15. New Accounting Pronouncements – Continued The GASB issued Statement No. 69, Governmental Combinations and Disposals of Government Operations, which will be effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2013. The objective of this Statement is to establish accounting and financial reporting standards related to government combinations and disposals of government operations. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its Financial Statements and will take the necessary steps to implement it. The GASB issued Statement No. 70, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Nonexchange Financial Guarantees, which will be effective for periods beginning after June 15, 2013. The objective of this Statement is to require a state or local government guarantor that offers a nonexchange financial guarantee to another organization or government to recognize a liability on its financial statements when it is more likely than not that the guarantor will be required to make a payment to the obligation holders under the agreement. The District will evaluate the impact of the standard on its Financial Statements and will take the necessary steps to implement it. - 50 - Required Supplementary Information - 51 - This page intentionally left blank - 52 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGETARY COMPARISON SCHEDULE – GENERAL FUND FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Data Control Codes 5700 5800 5020 0011 0012 0013 0021 0023 0031 0033 0035 0036 0041 0051 0052 0053 0071 0072 0073 0091 0092 6030 1100 7915 8911 7080 1200 0100 3000 EXHIBIT F-1 Budgeted Amounts Original Final REVENUES: Total local and intermediate sources State program revenues $ 111,451,018 $ 11,032,271 Total revenues EXPENDITURES: CURRENT: Instruction Instructional resources and media services Curriculum and instructional staff development Instructional leadership School leadership Guidance, counseling, and evaluation services Health services Food service Cocurricular/extracurricular activities General administration Plant maintenance and operations Security and monitoring services Data processing services Principal on long-term debt Interest on long-term debt Bond issuance costs and fees Contracted instructional services between schools Incremental costs associated with Chapter 41 Total expenditures Deficiency of revenues over expenditures 111,451,018 $ 11,461,869 110,675,171 $ 11,248,260 (775,847) (213,609) 122,483,289 122,912,887 121,923,431 (989,456) 32,425,955 703,044 1,421,159 866,222 2,577,295 2,719,303 511,592 1,289,122 2,118,033 2,470,071 5,763,490 150,176 848,636 425,000 38,657 750 68,537,957 357,525 32,403,141 705,764 1,288,510 1,010,915 2,686,311 2,673,273 520,719 1,339,826 2,218,450 2,788,177 5,683,504 175,176 799,930 425,000 38,657 750 68,537,957 357,525 32,242,710 669,203 1,144,915 977,660 2,654,081 2,630,160 507,438 1,275,511 2,197,211 2,743,315 5,076,457 156,313 767,992 425,000 38,656 68,513,500 347,744 160,431 36,561 143,595 33,255 32,230 43,113 13,281 64,315 21,239 44,862 607,047 18,863 31,938 1 750 24,457 9,781 123,223,987 123,653,585 122,367,866 1,285,719 (740,698) (740,698) (444,435) 400,000 - 400,000 (595,000) 400,000 (595,000) 400,000 (340,698) 17,369,574 17,028,876 $ (195,000) (935,698) 17,369,574 16,433,876 $ (195,000) (639,435) 17,369,574 16,730,139 $ OTHER FINANCING (USES) : Transfers in Transfers out (use) Total other financing (uses) Net change in fund balances Fund balances - September 1 (beginning) Fund balances - August 31 (ending) $ Actual Amounts (GAAP BASIS) Variance With Final Budget Positive or (Negative) - 53 - 296,263 296,263 296,263 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO REQUIRED SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies Official Budget The District is required by state law to adopt annual budgets for its General and Debt Service Fund. Each budget is presented on the modified accrual basis of accounting, which is consistent with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). The following procedures are followed in establishing the budgetary data reflected in the financial statements: Prior to August 20 of the preceding fiscal year, the District prepares a budget for the next succeeding fiscal year beginning September 1. The operating budget includes proposed expenditures and the means of financing them. A meeting of the Board of Trustees is then called for the purpose of adopting the proposed budget after ten days public notice of the meeting has been given. Prior to September 1, the Board of Trustees legally enacts the budget through passage of a resolution. The approved budget is filed with the Texas Education Agency. Once a budget is approved, it can be amended at the function and fund level only by approval of a majority of the members of the Board of Trustees. Amendments are presented to the Board at their regular meetings. Each amendment must have Board approval. Such amendments are made before the fact, are reflected in the official minutes of the Board, and are not made after fiscal year-end as dictated by law. - 54 - Combining Statements and Schedule - 55 - This page intentionally left blank - 56 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NON MAJOR GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS Special Revenue Funds The Special Revenue Funds account for the proceeds of specific revenue sources that have been restricted to expenditures for specific purposes other than expendable trusts or for major capital projects. The programs included within these funds are as follows: IDEA-B Formula Fund is funded by the U.S. Department of Education, as passed through the State of Texas, for the purpose of providing special education and related services to children with disabilities, ages 3-21. IDEA-B Preschool Fund is funded by the U.S. Department of Education, as passed through the State of Texas, for the purpose of providing special education and related services to children with disabilities, ages 3-5. Advanced Placement Incentives Fund receives State Program Revenue to support professional development of teachers teaching advanced classes. Textbook Allotment Fund is for funds awarded to school districts under the textbook allotment. Special Education Needs Fund is for the purpose of benefitting children with disabilities in the District by building staff capacity and providing for exceptional expenditures beyond the budget, such as specialized training, assistive technology, and other educational services to benefit students with disabilities. State Funded Special Revenue Fund is used to account for activities related to the Read to Succeed license plate program designed to help generate money for public libraries and strengthen the campus reading program. Campus Activity Funds - each campus has an activity fund and the campus principal is accountable for all aspects of the fund at that campus. Revenues are generated by sales and fund raising events at the campus locations. Summer Camps Fund is used to account for fees received by the District for summer camps and their related expenditures. Gifts Fund is used to account for donations received by the District with donor imposed restrictions. Debt Service Fund The Debt Service Fund is utilized to account for the accumulation of resources for, and the payment of, governmental long term debt principal, interest, and related costs arising from general obligation bonds. - 57 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING BALANCE SHEET NONMAJOR GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 224 IDEA-B Formula Fund 1110 1120 1220 1230 1240 1250 1260 1290 ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Property taxes - delinquent Allowance for uncollectible taxes (credit) Due from other governments Accrued interest Due from other funds Other receivables Total assets $ $ 3545 3600 3000 LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES Accounts payable $ Accrued wages payable Due to other funds Deferred revenue Total liabilities Fund balances: Restricted for: Advanced Placement Initiatives State funded special revenue Debt service Donor stipulations Committed for: Campus activities Unassigned Total fund balances 4000 Total liabilities and fund balances 2110 2160 2170 2300 3450 3450 3480 3490 $ - 225 IDEA-B Preschool Fund $ - 397 Advanced Placement Incentives $ 410 Textbook Allotment - 87,939 87,939 $ 580 375 955 $ 104,668 104,668 $ 33,925 54,014 87,939 $ 955 955 260 260 428 Special Education Needs Fund - $ $ $ 18,134 18,134 $ - $ 192,934 192,934 421 1,963 2,384 - - 104,408 - 18,134 - 190,550 - - 104,408 18,134 190,550 955 $ 104,668 18,134 $ 192,934 87,939 $ - 58 - EXHIBIT G-1 429 State Funded Special Revenue Fund - 461 Campus Activity Funds $ 2,093 2,093 $ - $ 2,093 - 344,312 $ 627,937 - 480 Summer Camps Fund Total Nonmajor Special Revenue Funds Gifts 3,343 1,103,388 2,078,980 $ 646 150 796 $ 1,470,770 1,450 1,472,220 $ 344,312 $ 627,937 88,519 3,343 2,893,008 1,600 3,958,719 $ 19,079 $ 784,539 803,618 $ 12,808 12,808 45,847 $ 12,800 58,647 65,607 $ 49,651 54,014 797,339 966,611 - 2,093 1,275,362 1,275,362 2,093 $ 2,078,980 $ - 499 $ - - - 1,413,573 (12,012) (12,012) 796 $ $ 599 Debt Service Total Nonmajor Governmental Funds 1,429,919 $ 155,544 1,774,231 627,937 155,544 (23,331) 3,022 1,565,154 $ (23,331) 88,519 3,343 2,893,008 4,622 5,523,873 $ 132,212 132,212 65,607 49,651 54,014 929,551 1,098,823 1,432,942 - 104,408 20,227 1,432,942 1,604,123 1,413,573 104,408 20,227 1,604,123 1,275,362 (12,012) 2,992,108 1,432,942 1,275,362 (12,012) 4,425,050 1,472,220 $ 3,958,719 $ 1,565,154 $ 5,523,873 - 59 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES NONMAJOR GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 224 IDEA-B Formula Fund REVENUES: 5700 Total local and intermediate sources 5800 State program revenues 5900 Federal program revenues 5020 Total Revenues EXPENDITURES: Current: 0011 Instruction 0012 Instructional resources and media services 0013 Curriculum and staff development 0021 Instructional leadership 0023 School leadership 0031 Guidance, counseling, and evaluation services 0033 Health services 0034 Student Pupil Transportation 0035 Food service 0036 Cocurricular/Extracurricular activities 0041 General administration 0051 Plant maintenance and operations 0053 Data processing services Debt Service: 0071 Debt Service - Principal on long-term debt 0072 Debt Service - Interest on long-term debt 0073 Debt Service - Bond issuance costs and fees 6030 Total expenditures 1100 Excess (deficiency) of revenues over (under) expenditures OTHER FINANCING SOURCES (USES): 7901 Refunding bonds issued 7916 Premium or discount on issuance of bonds 8940 Payments to bond refunding escrow agent (use) 7080 Total other financing sources (uses) 1200 $ Net change in fund balance 0100 Fund Balance - September 1 (beginning) 3000 Fund Balance- August 31 (ending) $ 782,624 782,624 225 IDEA-B Preschool Fund $ 15,443 15,443 397 Advanced Placement Incentives Textbook Allotment $ $ - 410 - 595,900 1,140 185,584 - 15,443 - 1,483 5,695 3,980 - 782,624 204,009 204,009 428 Special Education Needs Fund $ 4,336 4,336 - 156,285 29,628 - 1,346 38,291 38,136 - 15,443 11,158 185,913 77,773 - - (11,158) 18,096 (73,437) - - - - - - - (11,158) 18,096 (73,437) - - 38 18,134 263,987 190,550 - 60 - $ 115,566 $ 104,408 $ $ EXHIBIT G-2 $ $ 47 47 1,675,781 1,675,781 $ Total Nonmajor Special Revenue Funds 499 Gifts 298,594 15,583 314,177 $ 2,972,635 2,972,635 $ 4,947,010 223,975 798,067 5,969,052 11,218,429 11,218,429 $ 16,165,439 223,975 798,067 17,187,481 4,328,161 184,617 409,277 393 113,704 84,167 1,324 185,584 13,722 469,938 12,043 67,160 27,218 - 6,505,000 4,393,336 117,577 16,913,221 127,057 71,744 202,516 274,260 2,139,551 57,208 355,574 393 39,979 7,679 1,169 13,722 123,882 12,043 67,160 27,218 - 1,645,093 333,726 30,688 (19,549) - - 47 30,688 (19,549) 127,057 71,744 2,046 2,093 1,244,674 1,275,362 7,537 (12,012) 1,286,516 $ 1,413,573 2,920,364 2,992,108 $ $ 6,505,000 4,393,336 117,577 11,015,913 333,726 - $ Debt Service 2,845,578 1,418,153 127,409 8,577 69,745 8,724 155 12,330 - - Total Nonmajor Governmental Funds 599 4,328,161 184,617 409,277 393 113,704 84,167 1,324 185,584 13,722 469,938 12,043 67,160 27,218 5,897,308 - 47 $ 480 Summer Camps Fund 461 Campus Activity Funds 429 State Funded Special Revenue Fund - 61 - $ 22,285,000 2,062,217 (24,714,331) (367,114) 22,285,000 2,062,217 (24,714,331) (367,114) - - (92,854) (164,598) $ 1,597,540 1,432,942 $ 4,517,904 4,425,050 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGETARY COMPARISON SCHEDULE DEBT SERVICE FUND FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Actual Amounts (GAAP BASIS) Data Control Codes Budgeted Amounts Original Final 5700 5020 REVENUES: Total local and intermediate sources Total revenue 0071 0072 0073 EXPENDITURES: Debt Service - Principal on long-term debt Debt Service - Interest on long-term debt Debt Service - Bond issuance costs and fees 6030 7901 7916 8940 7080 EXHIBIT G-3 $ 11,222,640 $ 11,222,640 Total expenditures Excess (deficiency) of revenues over (under) expenditures Net change in fund balance 0100 Fund balances - September 1 (beginning) 3000 Fund balances - August 31 (ending) 11,218,429 $ 11,218,429 (4,211) (4,211) 6,505,000 4,893,030 4,000 6,505,000 4,893,030 4,000 6,505,000 4,393,336 117,577 499,694 (113,577) 11,402,030 11,402,030 11,015,913 386,117 202,516 381,906 (179,390) OTHER FINANCING SOURCES: Refunding bonds issued Premium or discount on issuance of bonds Payments to bond refunding escrow agent (use) Total other financing sources 1200 11,222,640 $ 11,222,640 Variances With Final Budget Positive or (Negative) (179,390) $ - 62 - (179,390) (179,390) 22,285,000 2,062,217 (24,714,331) (367,114) (164,598) 1,597,540 1,597,540 1,597,540 1,418,150 $ 1,418,150 $ 1,432,942 $ 22,285,000 2,062,217 (24,714,331) (367,114) 14,792 14,792 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NONMAJOR ENTERPRISE FUNDS Enterprise Funds The Enterprise Funds account for operations that are financed and operated in a manner similar to private business enterprises where the intent of the District is that of costs (expenses including depreciation) of providing services to the general public on a continuing basis be financed through user charges. The Fund is comprised of the following individual funds: Seay Tennis Center is used to account for the operations of the tennis center that provides services to the residents of the District and to the District’s athletic teams. Academy for Lifelong Learning is used to account for the operations of the continuing education school that provides services to the residents of the District. - 63 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF NET POSITION NONMAJOR ENTERPRISE FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT G-4 700 Seay Tennis Center ASSETS CURRENT ASSETS: Cash and cash equivalents Current investments Accrued interest Due from other funds Total current assets $ NONCURRENT ASSETS: Capital assets: Buildings and improvements Accumulated depreciation on buildings and improvements Furniture and equipment Accumulated depreciation on furniture and equipment Total Noncurrent Assets Total assets LIABILITIES CURRENT LIABILITIES: Accounts payable Accrued wages payable Total liabilities NET POSITION Net investment in capital assets Unrestricted net position Total net position 50,064 $ 703,289 3,744 31,876 788,973 - 64 - $ 1,409,803 1,409,803 Total Nonmajor Enterprise Funds 50,064 703,289 3,744 1,441,679 2,198,776 310,163 - 310,163 (217,105) 201,456 - (217,105) 201,456 (26,039) 268,475 1,057,448 - (26,039) 268,475 2,467,251 5,121 5,121 $ 711 Academy For Lifelong Learning 268,475 783,852 1,052,327 $ 1,409,803 2,503 21,344 23,847 1,385,956 1,385,956 $ 7,624 21,344 28,968 268,475 2,169,808 2,438,283 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN FUND NET POSITION NONMAJOR ENTERPRISE FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT G-5 700 Seay Tennis Center OPERATING REVENUES: Local and intermediate sources $ 711 Academy For Lifelong Learning Total Nonmajor Enterprise Funds 631,562 $ 942,050 $ 1,573,612 Total operating revenues OPERATING EXPENSES: Payroll costs Professional and contractual services Supplies and materials Depreciation expense Other operating costs Total operating expenses 631,562 942,050 1,573,612 369,106 38,058 12,588 30,724 450,476 489,133 71,854 29,919 75,644 666,550 858,239 109,912 42,507 30,724 75,644 1,117,026 Operating income NONOPERATING REVENUES: Earnings from temporary deposits and investments State program revenues 181,086 275,500 456,586 4,691 18,390 22,437 4,691 40,827 23,081 22,437 45,518 204,167 297,937 502,104 Total nonoperating revenues Income before transfers Transfers out (400,000) Change in net position Total net position- September 1 (Beginning) Total net position - August 31 (Ending) $ - 65 - - (195,833) 297,937 1,248,160 1,052,327 $ 1,088,019 1,385,956 $ (400,000) 102,104 2,336,179 2,438,283 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS NONMAJOR ENTERPRISE FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 EXHIBIT G-6 700 Seay Tennis Center CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES: Cash received from user charges Cash payments to employees for services Cash payments to suppliers 711 Academy For Lifelong Learning Total Nonmajor Enterprise Funds 600,179 $ (524,915) (50,646) 623,013 $ (467,789) (177,661) 24,618 (22,437) (3,289) 4,075 (194,908) 151,900 - (3,289) 4,075 (194,908) 151,900 (42,222) - (42,222) CASH FLOWS FROM NON-CAPITAL FINANCING ACTIVITIES: Transfers out Received from state government Net cash provided by (used in) non-capital financing activities (400,000) 18,390 22,437 (400,000) 40,827 (381,610) 22,437 (359,173) Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents (399,214) - (399,214) $ Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES: (Net) purchase of investment securities Interest and dividends on investments Purchase of capital assets Sale of capital assets Net cash used in investing activities 1,223,192 (992,704) (228,307) 2,181 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year $ 449,278 50,064 $ - $ 449,278 50,064 Reconciliation of Operating Income to Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Operating Activities: Operating income: $ 181,086 $ 275,500 $ 456,586 30,724 - 30,724 (31,383) (155,809) 24,618 $ (319,037) (244) 21,344 (22,437) $ (350,420) (156,053) 21,344 2,181 Adjustments to reconcile operating income to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities: Depreciation Effect of increases and decreases in current assets and liabilities: (Increase) decrease in receivables Increase (decrease) in accounts payable Increase (decrease) in accrued wages payable Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities $ - 66 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT PRIVATE PURPOSE TRUST FUNDS Private Purpose Trust Funds The Private Purpose Trust Funds are utilized to account for assets held by the District in a trustee capacity. The various trust funds consist of memorial donations and bequests for student scholarships, for which the District serves as the trustee. - 67 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF NET POSITION PRIVATE PURPOSE TRUST FUNDS AUGUST 31, 2013 ASSETS CURRENT ASSETS: Cash and cash equivalents Total current assets $ NONCURRENT ASSETS: Restricted assets Total noncurrent assets Total assets LIABILITIES CURRENT LIABILITIES: Accounts payable Due to other funds 810 812 813 Gage Art Trust Bradfield Scholarship Martin Memorial Jordan Memorial 6,400 $ 6,400 $ 10,093 $ 10,093 11,900 $ 11,900 2,269 2,269 145,035 145,035 - - - 151,435 10,093 11,900 2,269 6 - - - 6 - - - - Total Liabilities NET POSITION Held in Trust for Other Purposes Total net position 809 151,429 151,429 $ - 68 - 10,093 10,093 $ 11,900 11,900 $ 2,269 2,269 EXHIBIT G-7 $ $ 814 815 816 817 818 Mclean Memorial Varner Memorial Park Cities Memorial Goodloe Trust Other Trusts 3,457 $ 3,457 3,756 $ 3,756 - - 3,457 3,756 154 $ 154 - 43 $ 43 - 154 Total Private Purpose Trust Funds 2 $ 2 43 38,074 38,074 145,035 145,035 2 183,109 500 - - - - - 500 6 500 - - - - 506 2,957 2,957 $ 3,756 3,756 $ 154 154 $ - 69 - 43 43 $ 2 2 $ 182,603 182,603 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN FIDUCIARY FUND NET POSITION PRIVATE PURPOSE TRUST FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 ADDITIONS: Local and intermediate sources Total additions $ DEDUCTIONS: Other operating costs Total deductions 810 812 813 Gage Art Trust Bradfield Scholarship Martin Memorial Jordan Memorial 3,672 $ 3,672 3,900 3,900 Change in net position (228) Total net position - September 1 (Beginning) Total net position - August 31 (Ending) 809 $ 18 $ 18 500 500 (482) 151,657 10,575 151,429 $ 10,093 $ - 70 - 3,315 $ 3,315 500 500 2,815 9,085 11,900 $ 5 5 500 500 (495) 2,764 2,269 EXHIBIT G-8 $ $ 814 815 816 817 818 Mclean Memorial Varner Memorial Park Cities Memorial Goodloe Trust Other Trusts 6 $ 6 7 $ 7 500 500 500 500 (494) (493) 3,451 4,249 2,957 $ 3,756 $ 2 $ 2 1,000 1,000 (998) 1,152 3 $ 3 - 71 - $ 7,028 7,028 1,750 1,750 - 9,150 9,150 (1,747) - (2,122) 1,790 154 $ - Total Private Purpose Trust Funds 43 $ 2 184,725 2 $ 182,603 This page is intentionally left blank - 72 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT AGENCY FUNDS Agency Funds The District accounts for resources held for others in a custodial capacity in agency funds. The Districts agency funds are as follows: Student Activities Fund – accounts for the receipt and disbursement of monies for student activity organizations. Employee Activities – accounts for the receipt of money from District vending machines used for employee activities. Other Organizations – accounts for receipt of monies collected on behalf of other organizations. - 73 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT COMBINING STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ASSETS AND LIABILITIES ALL AGENCY FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Balance September 1 2012 Student Activities Assets: Cash and temporary investments Current investment Accrued interest Due from other funds Total assets Liabilities: Due to other funds Due to student groups Total liabilities Employee Activities Assets: Cash and temporary investments Liabilities: Due to employees Other Organizations Assets: Other receivable Due from other funds Total assets Liabilities: Accounts payable Due to other organizations Total liabilities Total Agency Funds Assets: Cash and temporary investments Current investments Accrued interest Other receivable Due from other funds Total assets Liabilities: Accounts payable Due to other funds Due to other organizations Due to student groups Total liabilities $ Additions EXHIBIT G-9 Deductions Balance August 31 2013 65,643 $ 125,000 559 14,303 205,505 $ 8,081 $ 587 669 304,389 313,726 $ 7,956 $ 559 309,058 317,573 $ 65,768 125,587 669 9,634 201,658 $ 1,533 $ 203,972 205,505 $ 3,786 $ 296,784 300,570 $ 104 $ 304,313 304,417 $ 5,215 196,443 201,658 $ 833 $ 2,411 $ 1,658 $ 1,586 $ 833 $ 2,411 $ 1,658 $ 1,586 $ $ 2,064,017 2,064,017 $ 22,504 $ 2,039,264 2,061,768 $ $ 2,091,793 2,091,793 $ 22,504 2,011,488 2,033,992 $ 2,064,017 2,064,017 $ 42,076 $ 2,090,542 2,132,618 $ $ 2,162,643 2,162,643 $ 42,076 1,991,916 2,033,992 66,476 $ 125,000 559 2,078,320 2,270,355 $ 10,492 $ 587 669 22,504 2,343,653 2,377,905 $ 9,614 $ 559 2,400,851 2,411,024 $ 67,354 125,587 669 22,504 2,021,122 2,237,236 $ 1,533 2,064,017 204,805 2,270,355 $ 42,076 $ 3,786 2,090,542 299,195 2,435,599 $ $ 104 2,162,643 305,971 2,468,718 $ 42,076 5,215 1,991,916 198,029 2,237,236 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ - 74 - OTHER TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY SCHEDULE - 75 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHEDULE OF DELINQUENT TAXES RECEIVABLE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 Year Ended August 31, 2004 and prior years 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 (School Year Under Audit) $ 1 2 Tax Rate Maintenance Debt Service various $ 1.5000 1.4500 1.2857 0.9767 0.9950 1.0125 1.0125 1.0267 1.0267 1000 Totals - 76 - various $ 0.1100 0.0800 0.0700 0.0600 0.1000 0.1000 0.1025 0.1075 0.1075 3 Assessed/Appraised Value For School Tax Purposes various 7,345,918,996 8,059,328,914 9,091,554,443 10,245,668,114 11,247,904,634 11,691,476,226 11,234,350,824 11,069,317,404 11,177,630,627 EXHIBIT H-1 10 Beginning Balance 09/01/12 $ $ 20 Current Year's Total Levy 520,190 $ 80,975 128,071 109,536 86,950 101,326 102,544 142,699 398,387 1,670,678 $ 30 30a Maintenance Collections Debt Service Collections 40 Entire Year's Adjustments 50 Ending Balance 8/31/2013 $ 119,266,542 5,926 $ 1,966 8,721 8,155 4,447 7,866 1,273 2,077 (41,472) 106,552,375 516 $ 144 481 444 273 751 123 210 (4,342) 11,156,499 (63,231) $ 2 11,923 5,244 69,941 (172,333) (1,146,444) 450,517 78,865 118,869 100,937 82,232 104,632 106,392 210,353 271,868 411,224 119,266,542 $ 106,551,334 $ 11,155,099 $ (1,294,898) $ 1,935,889 - 77 - This page is intentionally left blank - 78 - EXHIBIT S Statistical Section Narrative This part of the District's statistical comprehensive annual financial report presents detailed information as a context for understanding the information in the financial statements, note disclosures, and required supplementary information. Contents Pages Financial Trends These schedules contain trend information on how the District's financial performance and well-being have changed over time. 80-93 Revenue Capacity These schedules contain information on the District's most significant local revenue source, the property tax. 95-99 Debt Capacity These schedules present information to help assess the affordability of the District's current levels of outstanding debt and the District's ability to issue additional debt in the future. 100-102 Demographic and Economic Information These schedules offer demographic and economic indicators to help understand the environment within which the District's financial activities take place. 103-107 Operating Information These schedules contain service and infrastructure data to help the reader understand how the information in the District's financial report relates to the service the District provides and the activities it performs. 108-109 Sources: Unless otherwise noted, the information in these schedules is derived from the comprehensive annual financial reports for the relevant year. The District implemented GASB Statement 34 in 2002; schedules presenting government-wide information include information beginning that year. - 79 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NET POSITION BY COMPONENT LAST TEN YEARS (unaudited) (accrual basis of accounting) 2004 Governmental Activities Invested in capital assets, net of related debt $ Restricted Unrestricted 2005 26,780,555 $ 28,260,954 2006 $ 31,069,612 2007 $ 31,672,140 1,647,898 2,938,626 3,220,242 3,363,852 16,725,792 19,487,554 19,329,320 22,983,565 Total Governmental Activities $ 45,154,245 $ 50,687,134 $ 53,619,174 $ 58,019,557 Business-Type Activities Invested in capital assets, net of related debt $ 179,248 $ 168,157 $ 158,265 $ 160,448 Unrestricted 619,355 640,230 939,273 1,261,932 Total Business-Type Activities $ 798,603 $ 808,387 $ 1,097,538 $ 1,422,380 Total Primary Government Invested in capital assets, net of related debt $ 26,959,803 $ 28,429,111 $ 31,227,877 $ 31,832,588 Restricted Unrestricted Total Primary Government $ 1,647,898 2,938,626 3,220,242 3,363,852 17,345,147 20,127,784 20,268,593 24,245,497 45,952,848 - 80 - $ 51,495,521 $ 54,716,712 $ 59,441,937 EXHIBIT S-1 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 $ 31,952,770 $ 33,064,019 $ 35,895,983 $ 37,686,728 $ 40,044,080 3,683,076 3,664,755 3,492,623 3,356,530 3,154,823 3,099,431 27,448,430 28,724,975 27,858,029 25,892,817 26,779,772 23,597,681 $ 63,084,276 $ 65,453,749 $ 67,246,635 $ 66,936,075 $ 69,978,675 $ 72,956,355 $ $ $ $ $ $ 268,475 149,214 1,642,274 $ 1,791,488 137,982 1,525,551 $ 1,663,533 126,749 1,257,673 $ 1,384,422 115,525 1,699,887 $ 1,815,412 256,191 2013 $ 2,079,988 $ 46,259,243 2,169,808 2,336,179 $ 2,438,283 $ 46,527,718 $ 32,101,984 $ 33,202,001 $ 36,022,732 $ 37,802,253 $ 40,300,271 3,683,076 3,664,755 3,492,623 3,356,530 3,154,823 3,099,431 29,090,704 30,250,526 29,115,702 27,592,704 28,859,760 25,767,489 $ 64,875,764 $ 67,117,282 $ 68,631,057 $ 68,751,487 $ 72,314,854 - 81 - $ 75,394,638 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT CHANGE IN NET POSITION LAST TEN YEARS (unaudited) (accrual basis of accounting) 2004 EXPENSES Governmental activities: Instruction Instructional Resources & Media Services Curriculum & Instructional Staff Development Instructional Leadership School Leadership Guidance, Counseling & Evaluation Services Health Services Student (Pupil) Transportation Food Services Cocurricular/Extracurricular Activities General Administration Plant Maintenance and Operations Security and Monitoring Services Data Processing Services Debt Service - Interest on Long Term Debt Debt Service - Bond Issuance Cost and Fees Facilities Acquisition and Construction Contracted Instructional Services Between Schools Incremental Costs Associated with Chapter 41 Payments to Fiscal Agent/Member Districts of SSA $ 27,929,131 814,345 1,435,769 622,456 2,219,810 1,957,899 417,822 129,373 988,656 1,664,568 1,858,883 4,556,176 63,842 694,790 3,515,420 7,884 65,340,479 291,804 - 2005 $ 27,371,274 837,053 1,409,214 601,991 2,376,037 1,959,747 433,506 154,353 1,004,134 1,667,812 1,831,442 4,361,254 57,283 664,842 2,558,309 11,131 69,806,684 289,922 - 2006 $ 30,592,791 920,459 1,620,555 587,113 2,500,678 2,020,702 491,620 186,005 1,136,131 1,777,149 1,856,186 5,120,282 166,419 676,266 2,761,874 22,099 75,088,095 306,493 - Total governmental activities expenses 114,509,107 117,395,988 127,830,917 Business-type activities: Seay Tennis Center Academy for Lifelong Learning Total business-type activities expenses 296,914 413,257 710,171 310,345 405,310 715,655 311,077 414,092 725,169 $ 128,556,086 Total primary government expenses PROGRAM REVENUES: Governmental activities: Charges for Services Instruction Instructional Resources and Media Services School Leadership Cocurricular/Extracurricular Activities Plant Maintenance and Operations Other Operating Grants and Contributions Capital Grants and Contributions $ 115,219,278 $ 118,111,643 $ 387,843 410,157 97,246 6,107,560 526,294 $ 177,454 644,687 80,571 6,974,180 241,049 $ 209,862 738,749 105,907 8,364,769 387,908 Total governmental activities program revenues 7,529,100 8,117,941 9,807,195 Business-type activities: Charges for services: Seay Tennis Center Academy for Lifelong Learning Operating Grants and Contributions Total business-type activities program revenues 361,703 565,339 927,042 380,227 588,915 969,142 395,184 603,931 999,115 Total primary government program revenues $ Net (Expense) Revenue Governmental activities Business-type activities Total primary government net expense $ (106,980,007) 216,871 $ (106,763,136) - 82 - 8,456,142 $ 9,087,083 $ (109,278,047) 253,487 $ (109,024,560) $ 10,806,310 $ (118,023,722) 273,946 $ (117,749,776) EXHIBIT S-2 2007 $ 32,058,561 940,146 1,640,436 609,334 2,552,318 2,070,495 507,596 105,187 1,118,283 1,964,558 2,007,866 5,472,258 79,746 663,279 2,631,121 22,097 78,323,583 315,988 - 2008 $ 33,398,933 870,156 1,725,249 587,120 2,643,862 2,127,991 540,745 112,550 1,155,440 2,078,876 2,230,234 5,608,371 61,661 692,352 2,623,947 22,098 64,619,761 321,212 - 2009 $ 35,812,175 896,333 1,608,911 648,409 2,762,773 2,377,581 558,316 221,814 1,199,034 2,217,654 2,428,777 5,931,617 133,039 686,249 5,706,797 10,509 72,011,116 316,212 - $ 38,187,936 926,867 1,704,046 955,592 2,971,682 2,719,804 593,606 156,223 1,404,474 2,278,055 2,370,326 5,886,997 267,966 1,210,774 5,522,347 27,396 577,333 72,548,252 370,881 - 2011 $ 40,644,171 1,007,883 1,764,722 1,164,601 3,095,222 2,970,773 626,080 205,651 1,368,215 2,697,688 2,850,506 5,986,822 265,219 927,484 5,270,149 61,519 150,984 70,429,680 305,184 2012 $ 39,294,695 914,754 1,959,277 1,051,758 2,869,891 2,835,728 545,288 209,000 1,339,042 2,670,120 2,768,530 5,933,301 66,373 916,950 5,098,781 32,477 99,170 69,253,860 346,393 - 2013 $ 39,949,333 1,004,711 1,650,436 1,076,148 3,044,317 2,975,043 560,365 185,584 1,412,509 2,787,706 2,996,012 5,399,657 122,336 825,956 4,343,604 13,246 68,513,500 347,744 - 133,082,852 121,420,558 135,527,316 140,680,557 141,792,553 138,205,388 137,208,207 305,749 461,224 766,973 319,810 507,999 827,809 316,388 524,921 841,309 348,521 544,284 892,805 366,013 608,424 974,437 445,749 625,018 1,070,767 450,476 666,550 1,117,026 $ 141,573,362 $ 142,766,990 $ 139,276,155 $ 138,325,233 $ $ 1,168,549 74,163 63,562 1,043,515 107,573 12,043 9,277,376 831,015 $ 1,503,657 95,536 74,201 1,215,390 162,873 16,573 9,807,850 80,323 $ 1,711,648 123,606 89,303 795,834 223,748 94,463 8,810,448 422,311 $ 133,849,825 $ 122,248,367 $ 136,368,625 $ 1,210,073 191,315 87,756 733,409 95,144 31,158 8,066,747 426,954 $ 1,212,946 78,355 90,560 952,859 107,058 26,758 7,514,641 402,721 $ 1,270,179 95,028 92,216 870,571 99,773 23,783 7,099,581 553,646 $ 2010 1,336,747 76,569 79,120 844,370 106,671 13,289 7,542,095 114,297 10,842,556 10,385,898 10,104,777 10,113,158 12,577,796 12,956,403 12,271,361 398,439 670,074 1,068,513 403,746 773,805 1,177,551 373,405 744,807 1,118,212 347,958 744,381 27,065 1,119,404 474,091 894,915 33,862 1,402,868 634,381 915,686 37,668 1,587,735 631,562 942,050 40,827 1,614,439 11,911,069 $ (122,240,296) 301,540 $ (121,938,756) $ 11,563,449 $ (111,034,660) 349,742 $ (110,684,918) $ 11,222,989 $ (125,422,539) 276,903 (125,145,636) $ $ 11,232,562 $ (130,567,399) 226,599 $ (130,340,800) - 83 - $ 13,980,664 $ (129,214,757) 428,431 $ (128,786,326) $ 14,544,138 $ (125,248,985) 516,968 $ (124,732,017) $ 13,885,800 $ (124,936,846) 497,413 $ (124,439,433) HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT CHANGE IN NET POSITION LAST TEN YEARS (unaudited) (accrual basis of accounting) Net (Expense) Revenue Governmental activities Business-type activities Total primary government net expense 2004 2005 2006 $ (106,980,007) 216,871 (106,763,136) $(109,278,047) 253,487 (109,024,560) $(118,023,722) 273,946 (117,749,776) 101,990,614 7,477,632 3,253,840 1,350,192 488,658 250,000 114,810,936 109,300,071 6,031,177 3,080,691 2,521,423 22,400 120,955,762 General Revenues and Other Changes in Net Assets Governmental activities: Taxes Property taxes levied for general purposes Property taxes levied for debt service Unrestricted grants and contributions Investment earnings Miscellaneous local and intermediate revenue Transfers in Total governmental activities 97,004,809 7,110,455 2,783,434 533,596 857,277 108,289,571 Business-type activities: Investment earnings Transfer (out) Total business-type activities 845 845 6,297 (250,000) (243,703) 15,205 15,205 Total primary government $ 108,290,416 $ 114,567,233 $ 120,970,967 Change in Net Position Governmental activities Business-type activities $ 1,309,564 217,716 $ 5,532,889 9,784 $ 2,932,040 289,151 Total Primary Government $ 1,527,280 $ 5,542,673 $ 3,221,191 - 84 - EXHIBIT S-2 (cont.) 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 $(122,240,296) 301,540 (121,938,756) $ (111,034,660) 349,742 (110,684,918) $ (125,422,539) 276,903 (125,145,636) $ (130,567,399) 226,599 $ (130,340,800) $ (129,214,757) 428,431 $ (128,786,326) $ (125,248,985) 516,968 $ (124,732,017) $ (124,936,846) 497,413 $ (124,439,433) 110,086,061 5,985,264 7,343,584 3,205,711 20,059 126,640,679 93,605,112 5,756,339 13,866,853 2,824,311 46,764 116,099,379 23,302 23,302 19,366 19,366 $ 126,663,981 $ 116,118,745 $ 4,400,383 324,842 $ $ 4,725,225 $ 103,818,560 9,945,424 12,183,413 1,427,868 727 416,020 127,792,012 109,544,185 10,542,707 11,498,361 230,079 36,178 508,775 132,360,285 11,162 (416,020) (404,858) 3,065 (508,775) (505,710) 106,576,800 10,783,360 11,137,280 156,930 249,827 128,904,197 105,959,270 11,089,679 10,894,879 304,777 42,980 128,291,585 2,559 2,559 3,799 3,799 107,217,132 11,224,689 8,775,795 296,910 400,000 127,914,526 4,691 (400,000) (395,309) $ 127,387,154 $ 131,854,575 $ 128,906,756 $ 128,295,384 $ 127,519,217 5,064,719 369,108 $ 2,369,473 (127,955) $ 1,792,886 (279,111) $ (310,560) 430,990 $ 3,042,600 520,767 $ 2,977,680 102,104 5,433,827 $ 2,241,518 $ 1,513,775 $ 120,430 $ 3,563,367 $ 3,079,784 - 85 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT FUND BALANCES, GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) (modified accrual basis of accounting) General Fund Reserved Unreserved designated Unreserved Unassigned $ 23,123 1,246,664 11,764,685 - $ 24,129 14,545,458 - 2007 2006 2005 2004 $ 15,657,164 $ 16,893,669 13,034,472 14,569,587 15,657,164 16,893,669 All Other Governmental Funds Reserved for retirement of debt Reserved for other - Special Revenue Unreserved designated - Capital Projects Unreserved reported in Special Revenue Restricted Committed Unassigned 1,215,397 457,506 172,285 604,296 - 2,154,249 912,474 802,269 551,327 - 2,024,687 1,204,514 1,431,479 672,241 - 2,185,991 1,204,456 2,199,965 866,947 - Total all Other Governmental Funds 2,449,484 4,420,319 5,332,921 6,457,359 $ 15,483,956 $ 18,989,906 $ 20,990,085 $ 23,351,028 Total General Fund Total Governmental Funds Note: In 2011, the District implemented GASB statement 54 which changed the classifications of fund balance. - 86 - EXHIBIT S-3 2008 $ $ 17,967,687 2009 $ 19,114,055 2011 2010 $ 22,739,637 $ 16,516,949 2012 $ 17,369,574 2013 $ 16,730,139 17,967,687 19,114,055 22,739,637 16,516,949 17,369,574 2,442,234 1,490,344 72,574,303 1,017,724 - 2,286,491 1,581,153 44,218,659 1,162,321 - 2,115,516 1,473,335 5,050,508 1,130,591 - 3,461,449 8,058,780 - 3,265,693 7,606,042 - 3,161,700 4,402,920 (12,012) 77,524,605 49,248,624 9,769,950 11,520,229 10,871,735 7,552,608 28,037,178 $ 28,241,309 $ 24,282,747 95,492,292 $ 68,362,679 $ 32,509,587 - 87 - $ 16,730,139 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS REVENUES LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) (modified accrual basis of accounting) Local Source Revenues Local Maintenance and Debt Service Tax Investment earnings Charitable donations Tuition from Patrons Co-curricular athletic gate receipts Other Revenue from Local Sources Total Local Sources State Programs Revenues Per Capita and Foundation Other Revenue from State On-behalf Payments Total State Programs Federal Program Revenues Federal grants Total Federal Revenues Total Revenues 2004 2005 2006 2007 $104,192,243 516,166 2,868,363 396,435 410,157 2,169,597 $109,351,642 1,308,422 3,736,054 386,358 351,056 2,070,699 $114,370,086 2,414,694 5,390,242 380,750 449,379 2,318,928 $115,296,884 3,096,321 6,661,642 412,747 419,721 2,357,829 110,552,961 117,204,231 125,324,079 128,245,144 2,775,130 525,361 1,486,625 3,004,530 807,167 1,491,976 3,073,435 589,739 1,552,696 7,336,637 227,609 1,611,398 4,787,116 5,303,673 5,215,870 9,175,644 - - - - - - - - $ 115,340,077 - 88 - $ 122,507,904 $ 130,539,949 $ 137,420,788 EXHIBIT S-4 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 $ 98,410,398 2,708,238 5,969,926 418,159 622,571 2,188,407 $112,932,204 1,388,203 5,601,417 506,890 483,198 2,283,191 $119,445,087 224,063 5,656,871 463,438 488,734 2,387,024 $ 116,903,847 153,032 5,534,263 529,063 593,656 2,034,204 $ 117,227,386 302,482 5,304,348 747,671 586,152 1,777,387 $ 118,216,386 291,914 5,738,252 1,512,989 474,929 1,050,684 110,317,699 123,195,103 128,665,217 125,748,065 125,945,426 127,285,154 13,310,337 820,135 1,679,193 12,175,731 (10,609,904) - 9,619,126 223,164 1,884,293 10,994,746 336,337 2,446,658 10,845,587 606,836 2,406,633 8,775,795 204,056 2,492,384 15,809,665 1,565,827 11,726,583 13,777,741 13,859,056 11,472,235 - - 1,771,299 1,933,667 1,619,648 798,067 - - 1,771,299 1,933,667 1,619,648 798,067 $ 142,163,099 $ 141,459,473 $ 141,424,130 $ 139,555,456 $ 126,127,364 $ 124,760,930 - 89 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS EXPENDITURES AND DEBT SERVICE RATIO LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) (modified accrual basis of accounting) Instruction Instructional Resources and Media Services Curriculum Development & Staff Development Instructional Leadership School Leadership Guidance, Counseling and Evaluation Services Health Services Student (Pupil) Transportation Food Services Co-curricular/Extracurricular Activities General Administration Plant Maintenance and Operations Security and Monitoring Services Data Processing Services Debt Service - Principal on long-term debt Debt Service - Interest on long-term debt Debt Service - Bond fees Facilities Acquisition and Construction Contracted Instructional Services Between Public Schools (2) Incremental Cost Associated with Chapter 41 Total Expenditures (1) Debt service as a percentage of noncapital expenditures 2004 2005 2006 $ 26,186,834 773,144 1,374,394 582,806 2,073,048 1,834,903 388,763 129,373 958,508 1,589,581 1,764,526 4,431,036 63,842 666,896 3,140,000 3,521,669 207,601 43,608 65,340,479 291,804 $ 25,638,230 791,240 1,338,098 562,108 2,210,606 1,828,959 403,282 154,353 933,962 1,611,833 1,734,762 4,566,670 57,283 664,826 3,605,000 2,672,855 229,694 69,806,684 289,922 $ 27,805,172 847,432 1,534,839 535,895 2,256,936 1,840,879 443,211 186,005 986,333 2,008,754 1,728,934 5,474,653 51,360 638,547 3,420,000 2,884,731 1,501 75,088,095 306,493 $ 115,362,815 $ 119,100,367 $ 128,039,770 6.0% 5.5% 5.0% Notes: (1) Includes General Fund, Special Revenue Fund, Debt Service Fund, and Capital Projects Fund. Expenditures have been grouped by function category which is consistent with the Financial Accountability System Resource Guide. (2) Function category is for recording the cost of purchasing average daily attendance credits. - 90 - EXHIBIT S-5 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 $ 30,299,567 892,329 1,573,645 570,414 2,383,326 1,939,321 472,949 105,187 1,043,244 2,059,862 1,907,930 5,957,433 92,874 675,891 3,255,000 2,753,978 1,500 435,824 78,323,583 315,988 $ 31,717,369 828,170 1,663,558 553,191 2,492,394 2,009,602 508,349 112,550 1,093,116 2,093,717 2,137,145 5,476,108 94,979 717,767 3,405,000 2,607,763 63,675 1,854,912 64,619,761 321,212 $ 33,159,111 838,242 1,538,161 598,977 2,540,803 2,202,394 513,350 221,814 1,124,416 2,114,089 2,285,971 5,771,958 133,242 3,393,527 4,320,000 5,847,577 18,507 31,483,173 72,011,116 316,212 $ 33,944,196 831,964 1,636,652 846,291 2,601,724 2,411,910 521,420 156,223 1,230,614 2,117,223 2,458,180 5,404,061 114,133 1,286,342 5,060,000 5,678,686 2,501 39,303,713 72,548,252 370,881 $ 36,093,682 901,786 1,616,782 1,044,859 2,694,444 2,605,008 544,743 260,381 1,192,633 2,504,398 2,559,563 5,656,988 84,736 926,414 5,630,000 5,425,224 28,995 5,899,872 70,429,680 305,184 $ 36,332,567 843,191 1,836,332 964,449 2,612,516 2,579,018 495,732 209,000 1,246,655 2,660,784 2,576,420 5,660,916 118,888 971,384 6,630,000 5,223,085 3,000 655,809 69,253,860 346,393 $ 36,747,118 948,463 1,554,192 978,053 2,767,785 2,714,327 508,762 185,584 1,323,300 2,692,680 2,768,072 5,162,026 156,313 795,210 6,930,000 4,431,992 117,577 3,904,206 68,513,500 347,744 $ 135,059,845 $ 124,370,338 $ 170,432,640 $ 178,524,966 $ 146,405,372 $ 141,219,999 $ 143,546,904 4.5% 5.0% 7.5% 7.7% - 91 - 7.9% 8.5% 8.2% HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS, OTHER FINANCING SOURCES AND USES AND NET CHANGE IN FUND BALANCE LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) (modified accrual basis of accounting) 2005 2006 2007 (22,738) $ 3,407,537 $ 2,500,179 $ 2,360,943 Other financing sources (uses) Transfer In Transfer Out Issuance of Bonds Payment to bond refunding escrow agent Premium or Discount on Issuance of Bonds Sale of capital asset Other resources - 925,000 (675,000) 57,980,000 (62,107,523) 3,957,836 18,100 Total other financing sources (uses) - 2004 Excess of revenues over (under) expenditures Net change in fund balance $ $ - 92 - (22,738) 98,413 $ 3,505,950 982,000 (1,482,000) (500,000) $ 2,000,179 1,225,000 (1,225,000) $ 2,360,943 EXHIBIT S-6 2008 $ 1,757,026 2009 2010 $ (33,000,713) $ (36,361,867) 2,220,347 (2,220,347) 70,000,000 384,238 - 416,020 5,400,000 55,080 - 508,775 - 70,384,238 5,871,100 508,775 $ 72,141,264 $ (27,129,613) $ (35,853,092) 2011 $ (4,945,899) 2012 $ 5,017,170 (7,600,000) 3,045,000 11,320 - (4,472,409) - 93 - 204,131 480,000 (480,000) - 473,490 $ 2013 $ 204,131 $ (3,991,448) 995,000 (595,000) 22,285,000 (24,714,331) 2,062,217 32,886 $ (3,958,562) This page is intentionally left blank - 94 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT ASSESSED VALUE AND ACTUAL VALUE OF TAXABLE PROPERTY LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) EXHIBIT S-7 Fiscal Year Residential Property Commercial Property Personal Property 2004 $ 7,764,215,280 $ 1,081,391,835 $ 194,408,416 $ 2,012,763,027 $ 7,027,252,504 1.6100 2005 8,052,207,337 1,157,990,357 188,434,623 2,052,713,321 7,345,918,996 1.6100 2006 8,879,092,745 1,359,299,871 190,054,143 2,369,117,846 8,059,328,914 1.5300 2007 10,203,157,640 1,540,329,890 188,586,920 2,840,520,007 9,091,554,443 1.3557 2008 11,566,464,650 1,940,802,050 193,784,190 3,455,382,776 10,245,668,114 1.0367 2009 12,760,335,810 2,412,478,510 201,268,010 4,126,177,696 11,247,904,634 1.0950 2010 13,128,818,630 2,151,919,380 182,576,320 3,771,838,104 11,691,476,226 1.1100 2011 12,249,505,320 2,357,163,870 209,206,560 3,581,524,926 11,234,350,824 1.1150 2012 11,962,716,480 2,428,404,920 201,288,880 3,523,092,876 11,069,317,404 1.1342 2013 11,953,046,950 2,590,164,500 210,340,800 3,575,921,623 11,177,630,627 1.1342 Source: Total Taxable Assessed Value Total Direct Tax Rate Less: Tax-Exempt Property Dallas Central Appraisal District. Property in the district is reassessed every 3 years. Property is assessed at actual value; therefore, the assessed values are equal to actual values. Tax rates are per $100 of assessed value. - 95 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT DIRECT AND OVERLAPPING PROPERTY TAX RATES LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) District Direct Tax Rates Year Ended Maintenance August 31, & Operations Debt Service Total 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 1.5000 1.5000 1.4500 1.2857 0.9767 0.9950 1.0125 1.0125 1.0267 1.0267 0.1100 0.1100 0.0800 0.0700 0.0600 0.0950 0.0975 0.1025 0.1075 0.1075 1.6100 1.6100 1.5300 1.3557 1.0367 1.0900 1.1100 1.1150 1.1342 1.1342 Source: Dallas County Tax Office Note: (1) Includes both Maintenance & Operations and Debt Service rates. - 96 - EXHIBIT S-8 Overlapping Tax Rates (1) Dallas County Town of City of City of County of Highland Park University Park Dallas Dallas $ 0.2208 0.2300 0.2300 0.2300 0.2250 0.2200 0.2200 0.2200 0.2200 0.2200 0.2200 $ 0.32932 0.32601 0.32539 0.30958 0.29272 0.26836 0.26548 0.26548 0.27845 0.27845 0.27432 $ 0.6998 0.6998 0.7197 0.7417 0.7292 0.7479 0.7479 0.7479 0.7970 0.7970 0.7970 0.196 0.2039 0.2039 0.2139 0.2139 0.2281 0.2281 0.2281 0.2431 0.2431 0.2431 - 97 - Dallas County Dallas County School Community Equalization Hospital District College District $ 0.25400 0.25400 0.25400 0.25400 0.25400 0.25400 0.25400 0.27100 0.27100 0.27100 0.27600 $ 0.060000 0.077800 0.080160 0.081000 0.080400 0.089400 0.094900 0.099230 0.099670 0.119375 0.124700 District $ 0.005530 0.005460 0.005460 0.005300 0.005034 0.004714 0.004928 0.010000 0.010000 0.010000 0.010000 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT CURRENT YEAR AND NINE YEARS AGO (unaudited) PRINCIPAL PROPERTY TAXPAYERS EXHIBIT S-9 2013 Type of Property Taxpayer Highland Park Village Partners LP CFO DT III LLC SP Millenium Center, LP Caruth Preston Road SPUSV5 Sterling Plaza LP Sherry Realty Holdings USA Preston Center Pavilion RREEF Sherry Lane LP BPC CORP Inc. Intercity Investments Inc. Preston Commons LP RS Partners LTD 1 TR 8333 Douglas Corp. CLPF Berkshire LP Trammell Crow Peruna Properties, Inc. Total Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Commercial Residential Commercial Taxable Value $ $ 114,984,320 81,506,000 78,420,330 68,703,780 67,597,000 66,185,000 45,250,000 39,247,550 35,517,860 29,756,780 627,168,620 Source: Dallas County Tax Assessor - 98 - Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2004 Percentage of Total Taxable Value 1.03 % $ 0.73 0.70 0.61 0.60 0.59 0.37 0.35 0.32 0.23 Taxable Value Rank Percentage of Total Taxable Value 58,145,720 2 0.79 % 27,007,650 6 0.37 40,872,410 25,915,526 3 7 0.56 0.35 87,794,300 36,923,180 32,413,940 25,559,144 24,275,050 23,179,558 5.53 % $ 382,086,478 1 4 5 8 9 10 1.20 0.50 0.44 0.35 0.33 0.32 5.21 % HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT PROPERTY TAX LEVIES AND COLLECTIONS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) Collected Within the Fiscal Year of the Levy Percent Amount of Levy Fiscal Year Taxes Levied For the Fiscal Year (1) 2004 $ 104,212,425 $ 103,327,160 99.15% 2005 109,166,722 108,599,242 2006 114,521,429 2007 EXHIBIT S-10 Collections in Subsequent Years $ Total Collections to Date Percent Amount of Levy 795,535 $ 104,122,695 99.91% 99.48% 469,788 109,069,030 99.91% 113,867,728 99.43% 491,563 114,359,291 99.86% 115,522,702 114,738,224 99.32% 635,310 115,373,534 99.87% 2008 98,695,629 97,723,474 99.01% 111,046 97,834,520 99.13% 2009 113,494,073 112,754,006 99.35% 610,070 113,364,076 99.89% 2010 119,496,606 118,727,034 99.36% 588,702 119,315,736 99.85% 2011 116,694,954 116,056,204 99.45% 2,288 116,058,492 99.45% 2012 116,519,962 116,293,908 99.81% (45,814) 116,248,094 99.77% 2013 118,120,098 117,708,874 99.65% - 117,708,874 99.65% SOURCE: Current and prior District Annual Financial Reports. NOTE: (1) Includes supplements and corrections to the original levy calculation for the fiscal year. - 99 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT RATIOS OF GENERAL BONDED DEBT OUTSTANDING LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) Fiscal Year General Unlimited Tax Bonds (1) 2004 $ 67,020,000 Maintenance Tax Notes (1) $ - Restricted for Debt Service Net Bonded Debt Outstanding Percentage of Actual Taxable Value of Property (2) Percentage of Personal Income (3) 67,020,000 $ 2,024,687 $ 64,995,313 0.92% 1.14% Total $ EXHIBIT S-11 Total Outstanding Debt Per Capita (3) $ 2,022 2005 62,060,000 - 62,060,000 2,185,991 59,874,009 0.82% 1.03% 1,871 2006 58,640,000 - 58,640,000 2,442,234 56,197,766 0.70% 0.92% 1,756 2007 55,385,000 - 55,385,000 2,286,491 53,098,509 0.58% 0.84% 1,672 2008 121,980,000 - 121,980,000 2,442,234 119,537,766 1.17% 1.81% 3,801 2009 123,060,000 - 123,060,000 2,286,491 120,773,509 1.07% 1.79% 3,774 2010 118,000,000 - 118,000,000 2,115,516 115,884,484 0.99% 1.55% 3,604 2011 112,370,000 3,045,000 115,415,000 1,873,862 113,541,138 1.01% 1.52% 3,600 2012 106,150,000 2,635,000 108,785,000 1,597,540 107,187,460 0.97% 1.26% 3,097 2013 99,385,000 2,210,000 101,595,000 1,432,942 100,162,058 0.90% 1.16% 2,895 Source: District audited financial records. Notes: Details regarding the district's outstanding debt can be found in the notes to the financial statements. (1) General Unlimited Tax Bonds and Maintenance Tax Notes are from governmental activities. The district has no other debt. (2) See Exhibit S-7 for property value data. (3) See Exhibit S-14 for population data. - 100 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT DIRECT AND OVERLAPPING GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITES DEBT AS OF AUGUST 31, 2013 (unaudited) Name of Governmental Unit Gross Outstanding City of Dallas County of Dallas Dallas County Schools Dallas County Hospital District Dallas County Community College District $ 1,691,244,734 136,430,000 67,675,000 705,000,000 355,880,000 Total Overlapping Debt $ 2,956,229,734 Highland Park Independent School District Total Direct and Overlapping Debt 101,595,000 $ 3,057,824,734 EXHIBIT S-12 Percent Overlapping 1.14 % 7.08 7.08 7.06 6.76 Amount Overlapping Gross Debt $ 19,280,190 9,659,244 4,791,390 49,773,000 24,057,488 $ 107,561,312 100 % 101,595,000 $ 209,156,312 Ratio of Total Direct and Overlapping Debt to Assessed Valuation Per Capita Overlapping Debt 1.87% $ SOURCE: Gross Debt Outstanding and Percent Overlapping were obtained from the Municipal Advisory of Texas (Texas MAC). The methodology used in deriving Overlapping Percentages: 1) Determine the estimated shared assessed valuation of taxable property within both the Overlapping Taxing Body(s) and our District; 2) Divide that shared value by the total assessed value of taxable property within the overlapping taxing body. - 101 - 6,045 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT LEGAL DEBT MARGIN INFORMATION LAST TEN FISCAL YEAR (unaudited) Fiscal Year 2004 Total Net Debt Applicable To Limit Debt Limit $ 702,725,250 $ 64,995,313 EXHIBIT S-13 Legal Debt Margin $ Total Net Debt Applicable to the Limit as a Percentage of Debt Limit 637,729,937 9.25 2005 734,591,900 59,874,009 674,717,891 8.15 2006 805,932,891 56,197,766 749,735,125 6.97 2007 909,155,444 53,098,509 856,056,935 5.84 2008 1,024,566,811 119,537,766 905,029,045 11.67 2009 1,124,790,463 120,773,509 1,004,016,954 10.74 2010 1,169,147,623 115,884,484 1,053,263,139 9.91 2011 1,123,435,082 113,541,138 1,009,893,944 10.11 2012 1,106,931,740 107,187,460 999,744,280 9.68 2013 1,117,763,063 100,162,058 1,017,601,005 8.96 Legal Debt Margin Calculation for Fiscal Year 2013 Taxable Assessed Value Debt Limit (10% of assessed value) Total Bonded Debt Less: Restricted for Debt Service Debt applicable to limit $ $ 11,177,630,627 1,117,763,063 99,385,000 1,432,942 97,952,058 Legal debt margin $ - 102 - 1,019,811,005 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT DEMOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC STATISTICS LAST TEN FISCAL YEAR (unaudited) Fiscal Year Estimated Population (1) Personal Income 2004 32,150 $ 5,714,813,389 2005 32,000 2006 EXHIBIT S-14 Per Capita Personal Income (1,2) Unemployment Rate (3) 177,755 6.6 % 5,826,941,050 182,092 5.6 32,000 6,104,886,138 190,778 5.1 2007 31,750 6,346,119,760 199,878 4.4 2008 31,450 6,594,178,088 209,672 5.0 2009 32,000 6,755,042,989 211,095 8.1 2010 32,150 7,465,377,979 232,205 8.8 2011 31,540 7,492,179,034 237,545 8.7 2012 34,605 8,483,303,578 245,147 6.7 2013 34,600 8,660,201,479 250,295 6.5 $ Source: (1) North Central Texas Council of Governments Census (NCTCG) and Estimates. (2) US Census Bureau, 2000 census data. Years 2004 through 2013 were adjusted by the CPI. (3) Texas Workforce Commission. Unemployment rate is for Dallas County. - 103 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT TOP TEN PRINCIPAL EMPLOYERS CURRENT YEAR AND NINE YEARS AGO (unaudited) Employer (1) AMR Corp. Bank of America Texas Health Resources Dallas Independent School District Baylor Health Care System AT&T Inc. Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co. JPMorgan Chase UT Southwestern Medical Systems City of Dallas Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Verizon Communications, Inc. Albertson's, Inc. Texas Instruments Inc. 2012 Employees 24,700 20,000 19,230 18,314 17,907 15,800 14,126 13,500 13,122 12,836 169,535 Estimated Employed Workforce in 2012 1,098,888 Estimated Employed Workforce in 2004 1,077,373 EXHIBIT S-15 Rank Percentage of Total Employment 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2.25% 1.82% 1.75% 1.67% 1.63% 1.44% 1.29% 1.23% 1.19% 1.17% 2004 Employees Rank 28,000 1 17,000 19,691 15,000 14,000 16,442 4 3 6 7 5 23,000 12,500 11,200 10,600 2 8 9 10 167,433 Source: Dallas Business Journal Book of Listings. Employment information for 2013 was unavailable at the time of publication. Note: (1) Information regarding principal employers within the District is unavailable due to size of the community. - 104 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT FULL–TIME–EQUIVALENT DISTRICT EMPLOYEES BY TYPE LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) EXHIBIT S-16 Fiscal Year Instruction Teachers Librarians Educational Aides Other Professionals (instructional) Campus Administration Principal Assistant Principal Instructional Officer Teacher Supervisor Campus Support Student Services Counselor Educational Diagnostician School Nurse LSSP/Psychologist/Therapist Support and Administration Superintendent and Asst Superintendent Instructional Officer Teacher Supervisor Non-Campus Professionals Auxiliary Staff Total Percent Change 2004-2013 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 391.4 7.0 49.8 10.5 458.7 384.8 7.0 45.6 11.0 448.4 391.9 8.0 42.5 11.0 453.4 397.8 8.0 46.1 11.0 462.9 406.7 8.0 42.8 11.0 468.5 410.6 8.1 45.1 11.8 475.6 417.8 7.1 48.1 10.3 483.3 427.2 8.0 47.9 10.2 493.3 427.5 5.9 63.5 15.1 512.0 432.8 5.8 71.3 15.6 525.5 7.0 4.9 1.0 2.7 25.5 41.1 7.0 6.0 1.0 4.0 24.2 42.2 6.0 6.7 1.0 5.1 25.3 44.1 6.0 6.7 1.0 3.8 25.3 42.8 6.0 6.8 1.0 3.8 25.8 43.4 6.0 7.0 0.1 3.5 26.0 42.6 6.0 7.0 1.5 26.5 41.0 6.0 7.0 3.0 26.0 42.0 6.0 5.4 7.3 26.0 44.7 6.0 5.5 7.0 26.0 44.5 (14.3) 12.2 (100.0) 159.3 2.0 8.3 15.0 3.0 7.5 9.3 34.8 14.8 3.0 7.5 11.0 36.3 14.5 3.0 8.0 11.0 36.5 14.5 3.0 8.0 10.0 35.5 14.5 3.0 8.0 10.1 35.6 15.0 4.5 8.0 11.0 38.5 14.3 4.5 8.0 12.0 38.8 15.0 3.0 8.0 15.1 41.1 14.1 3.0 7.0 15.1 39.2 13.8 3.0 7.0 20.5 44.3 (8.0) 0.0 (6.7) 120.4 27.3 3.0 3.0 2.0 5.0 124.6 137.6 3.0 1.6 3.0 4.0 127.4 139.0 3.0 1.6 3.5 4.0 121.9 134.0 3.0 1.6 3.5 4.0 128.7 140.8 3.0 1.6 3.5 4.0 126.8 138.9 3.0 1.5 5.0 4.0 133.1 146.6 3.0 2.3 4.0 3.5 139.3 152.1 3.0 1.5 4.0 3.6 142.6 154.7 3.0 0.5 5.0 3.5 132.7 144.7 3.0 0.5 3.0 3.5 132.2 142.2 0.0 (83.3) 50.0 (30.0) 6.1 (1.0) 672.2 665.9 668.0 682.0 686.4 703.3 715.2 731.1 740.6 756.5 Source: (1) Fall Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS) Submissions with full-time equivalent employees as of the last Friday in October. Note: Full-time instructional employees of the district are employed for 187 contract days. Campus Administrators and Student Services employees are primarily employed for 200 or 215 days. Central administrative and non-campus professional staff are employed for 226 days. Non-professional support staff are employed for 230 days. Auxiliary staff are employed on an hourly basis with daily hours ranging from 8 hours to 4 hours. - 105 - 10.6 % (17.1) 43.2 48.6 14.6 12.5 % HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT TEACHER AVERAGE SALARY AND FTE COUNTS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) Fiscal Beginning Teacher 1 - 5 Years Experience Year Average Salary FTE 2004 $ 38,166 17.0 2005 39,549 2006 Average Salary $ FTE 38,522 117.0 14.0 40,064 39,785 11.0 2007 44,510 2008 6 - 10 Years Experience Average Salary $ FTE 41,443 73.6 111.8 41,981 88.0 40,802 103.1 42,631 95.8 12.1 43,956 96.0 46,315 99.4 44,950 11.9 45,750 97.2 48,059 104.7 2009 47,281 6.3 47,516 105.8 50,072 99.5 2010 49,562 13.8 48,348 94.9 50,840 90.7 2011 46,994 7.3 48,968 90.2 51,448 103.5 2012 47,456 10.8 48,873 82.8 50,667 104.1 2013 47,368 11.6 48,511 99.1 51,105 103.9 Sources: Data obtained from the Public Education Information System (PEIMS) data reported to Texas Education Agency annually. State-wide average salary was obtained from the Academic Excellence Indicator System Annual Report for State of Texas (AEIS) - 106 - EXHIBIT S-17 11 - 20 Years Experience Average Salary FTE $ 45,336 87.0 46,257 Over 20 Years Experience Average Salary $ District Total Teachers Average Salary FTE 56,177 96.9 74.0 55,429 46,684 74.5 50,279 $ FTE State-wide Average Salary 44,948 391.5 97.1 45,550 384.9 41,011 56,297 107.4 46,580 391.8 41,744 83.1 60,095 107.2 50,223 397.8 44,897 52,054 85.8 62,303 107.1 52,014 406.7 46,179 53,657 91.1 64,499 107.9 53,957 410.6 47,159 54,770 111.4 65,983 107.0 55,168 417.8 48,263 55,589 117.1 66,792 109.1 55,894 427.2 48,639 50,667 126.0 65,554 103.8 55,043 427.5 48,868 55,489 121.3 66,185 96.9 55,018 432.8 48,375 - 107 - $ 40,478 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT OPERATING STATISTICS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) Fiscal Year Enrollment (1) 2004 6,074 2005 Operating Expenditures (2) $ Cost Per Pupil 108,391,106 $ 17,845 6,166 112,547,651 2006 6,276 2007 Operating Expenditures Excluding Recapture (2) $ EXHIBIT S-18 Cost Per Pupil (FTEs) Teaching Staff (3) Pupil Teacher Ratio 43,050,627 $ 7,088 391.4 15.5 18,253 42,740,967 6,932 384.8 16.0 121,344,377 19,335 46,256,282 7,370 391.9 16.0 6,293 127,806,218 20,309 49,482,635 7,863 397.8 15.8 2008 6,324 116,196,923 18,374 51,577,162 8,156 406.7 15.5 2009 6,331 125,624,943 19,843 53,613,827 8,468 410.6 15.4 2010 6,448 127,470,727 19,769 54,922,475 8,518 417.8 15.4 2011 6,689 128,359,298 19,190 57,929,618 8,660 427.2 15.7 2012 6,804 128,896,597 18,944 59,642,737 8,766 427.5 15.9 2013 6,848 128,265,174 18,730 59,751,674 8,725 432.8 15.8 Notes: (1) Enrollment is as of the October reporting date to TEA through the Public Education Information System (PEIMS). (2) Operating expenditures are total governmental fund expenditures less debt service and capital projects. (3) Teachers (FTEs) are as of October reporting date to TEA through PEIMS and District records. - 108 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHOOL BUILDING INFORMATION LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (unaudited) EXHIBIT S-19 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 John S. Armstrong Elementary School (Constructed 1953) Square feet 61,544 Capacity 418 Enrollment 503 61,544 418 540 63,039 526 542 63,039 526 541 63,039 526 540 63,039 526 535 79,885 633 558 79,885 633 556 79,885 633 598 79,885 633 569 John S. Bradfield Elementary School (Constructed 1926) 75,858 Square feet 569 Capacity 572 Enrollment 75,858 569 580 73,887 576 600 73,887 576 613 73,887 576 651 73,887 576 650 86,603 697 643 86,603 697 651 86,603 697 703 86,603 697 701 Robert S. Hyer Elementary School (Constructed 1947) Square feet Capacity Enrollment 64,651 563 570 64,651 563 554 72,542 535 580 72,542 535 560 72,542 535 576 72,542 535 621 78,211 657 654 78,211 657 691 78,211 657 693 78,211 657 700 University Park Elementary School (Constructed 1928) Square feet Capacity Enrollment 73,050 499 617 73,050 499 663 70,997 614 676 70,997 614 645 70,997 614 613 70,997 614 649 86,287 655 677 86,287 655 679 83,287 655 705 83,287 655 696 Arch H. McCulloch Intermediate School (Constructed 1995) Square feet 108,500 961 Capacity 901 Enrollment 108,500 961 961 108,500 1,000 944 108,500 1,000 986 108,500 1,000 997 108,500 1,000 967 112,186 1,072 980 112,186 1,072 1,063 112,186 1,072 1,043 112,186 1,107 1,030 Highland Park Middle School (Constructed 1995) Square feet Capacity Enrollment 108,500 942 993 108,500 942 947 108,500 1,000 961 108,500 1,000 967 108,500 1,000 927 108,500 1,000 975 166,544 1,205 1,032 166,544 1,205 1,032 166,544 1,205 1,036 166,544 1,205 1,107 Highland Park High School (Constructed 1937) Square feet Capacity Enrollment 292,510 2,100 1,918 292,510 2,100 1,921 376,890 2,000 1,973 376,890 2,000 1,981 376,890 2,000 2,020 376,890 2,000 1,934 376,890 2,000 1,904 376,890 2,000 2,017 376,890 2,000 2,026 376,890 2,000 2,045 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 60,000 60,000 60,000 60,000 Schools Multi-Purpose Activity Building 2004 Source: (1) Square feet and functional capacity data for years 2004 and 2005 was obtained from a Capacity Study performed by VLK Architects as of July 1, 1998. (2) Square feet and functional capacity data for 2006 through 2013 was obtained from a Facility Study performed by SHW Group LLP. (3) Enrollment is as of the October reporting date to TEA through the Public Education Information System. - 109 - This page is intentionally left blank - 110 - REPORTS ON INTERNAL CONTROL, COMPLIANCE, AND FEDERAL AWARDS - 111 - This page is intentionally left blank - 112 - INDEPENDENT AUDITOR’S REPORT ON INTERNAL CONTROL OVER FINANCIAL REPORTING AND ON COMPLIANCE AND OTHER MATTERS BASED ON AN AUDIT OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS PERFORMED IN ACCORDANCE WITH GOVERNMENT AUDITING STANDARDS Board of Trustees Highland Park Independent School District 7015 Westchester Drive Dallas, TX 75205 We have audited, in accordance with the auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America and the standards applicable to financial audits contained in Government Auditing Standards issued by the Comptroller General of the United States, the financial statements of the governmental activities, the business-type activities, the discretely presented component unit, each major fund, and the aggregate remaining fund information of Highland Park Independent School District (the District), as of and for the year ended August 31, 2013, and the related notes to the financial statements, which collectively comprise the District’s basic financial statements, and have issued our report thereon dated January 15, 2014. Our report includes a reference to other auditors who audited the financial statements of the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation as described in our report on the District’s financial statements. The financial statements of the Highland Park I.S.D. Education Foundation were not audited in accordance with Government Auditing Standards. Internal Control over Financial Reporting In planning and performing our audit of the financial statements, we considered the District’s internal control over financial reporting (internal control) to determine the audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances for the purpose of expressing our opinions on the financial statements, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the District’s internal control. Accordingly, we do not express an opinion on the effectiveness of the District’s internal control. A deficiency in internal control exists when the design or operation of a control does not allow management or employees, in the normal course of performing their assigned functions, to prevent, or detect and correct, misstatements on a timely basis. A material weakness is a deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control, such that there is a reasonable possibility that a material misstatement of the entity’s financial statements will not be prevented, or detected and corrected on a timely basis. A significant deficiency is a deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control that is less severe than a material weakness, yet important enough to merit attention by those charged with governance. Our consideration of internal control was for the limited purpose described in the first paragraph of this section and was not designed to identify all deficiencies in internal control that might be material weaknesses or significant deficiencies. Given these limitations, during our audit we did not identify any deficiencies in internal control that we consider to be material weaknesses. However, material weaknesses may exist that have not been identified. - 113 - Highland Park Independent School District Page 2 Compliance and Other Matters As part of obtaining reasonable assurance about whether the District’s financial statements are free from material misstatement, we performed tests of its compliance with certain provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, and grant agreements, noncompliance with which could have a direct and material effect on the determination of financial statement amounts. However, providing an opinion on compliance with those provisions was not an objective of our audit, and accordingly, we do not express such an opinion. The results of our tests disclosed no instances of noncompliance or other matters that are required to be reported under Government Auditing Standards. Purpose of this Report The purpose of this report is solely to describe the scope of our testing of internal control and compliance and the results of that testing, and not to provide an opinion on the effectiveness of the entity’s internal control or on compliance. This report is an integral part of an audit performed in accordance with Government Auditing Standards in considering the entity’s internal control and compliance. Accordingly, this communication is not suitable for any other purpose. WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P. Dallas, Texas January 15, 2014 - 114 - INDEPENDENT AUDITOR’S REPORT ON COMPLIANCE FOR EACH MAJOR PROGRAM AND ON INTERNAL CONTROL OVER COMPLIANCE REQUIRED BY OMB CIRCULAR A-133 Board of Trustees Highland Park Independent School District 7015 Westchester Drive Dallas, TX 75205 Report on Compliance for Each Major Federal Program We have audited Highland Park Independent School District’s (the District) compliance with the types of compliance requirements described in the OMB Circular A-133 Compliance Supplement that could have a direct and material effect on each of the District’s major federal programs for the year ended August 31, 2013. The District’s major federal programs are identified in the summary of auditor’s results section of the accompanying schedule of findings and questioned costs. Management’s Responsibility Management is responsible for compliance with the requirements of laws, regulations, contracts, and grants applicable to its federal programs. Auditor’s Responsibility Our responsibility is to express an opinion on compliance for each of the District’s major federal programs based on our audit of the types of compliance requirements referred to above. We conducted our audit of compliance in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America; the standards applicable to financial audits contained in Government Auditing Standards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United States; and OMB Circular A-133, Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations. Those standards and OMB Circular A-133 require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether noncompliance with the types of compliance requirements referred to above that could have a direct and material effect on a major federal program occurred. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence about the District’s compliance with those requirements and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion on compliance for each major federal program. However, our audit does not provide a legal determination of the District’s compliance. Opinion on Each Major Federal Program In our opinion, the District complied, in all material respects, with the types of compliance requirements referred to above that could have a direct and material effect on each of its major federal programs for the year ended August 31, 2013. - 115 - Highland Park Independent School District Page 2 Report on Internal Control over Compliance Management of the District is responsible for establishing and maintaining effective internal control over compliance with the types of compliance requirements referred to above. In planning and performing our audit of compliance, we considered the District’s internal control over compliance with the types of requirements that could have a direct and material effect on each major federal program to determine the auditing procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances for the purpose of expressing an opinion on compliance for each major federal program and to test and report on internal control over compliance in accordance with OMB Circular A-133, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of internal control over compliance. Accordingly, we do not express an opinion on the effectiveness of the District’s internal control over compliance. A deficiency in internal control over compliance exists when the design or operation of a control over compliance does not allow management or employees, in the normal course of performing their assigned functions, to prevent, or detect and correct, noncompliance with a type of compliance requirement of a federal program on a timely basis. A material weakness in internal control over compliance is a deficiency, or combination of deficiencies, in internal control over compliance, such that there is a reasonable possibility that material noncompliance with a type of compliance requirement of a federal program will not be prevented, or detected and corrected, on a timely basis. A significant deficiency in internal control over compliance is a deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control over compliance with a type of compliance requirement of a federal program that is less severe than a material weakness in internal control over compliance, yet important enough to merit attention by those charged with governance. Our consideration of internal control over compliance was for the limited purpose described in the first paragraph of this section and was not designed to identify all deficiencies in internal control over compliance that might be material weaknesses or significant deficiencies. We did not identify any deficiencies in internal control over compliance that we consider to be material weaknesses. However, material weaknesses may exist that have not been identified. The purpose of this report on internal control over compliance is solely to describe the scope of our testing of internal control over compliance and the results of that testing based on the requirements of OMB Circular A-133. Accordingly, this report is not suitable for any other purpose. WEAVER AND TIDWELL, L.L.P. Dallas, Texas January 15, 2014 - 116 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHEDULE OF EXPENDITURES OF FEDERAL AWARDS YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 FEDERAL GRANTOR/ PASS-THROUGH GRANTOR/ PROGRAM OR CLUSTER TITLE FEDERAL CFDA NUMBER PASSTHROUGH ENTITY IDENTIFYING NUMBER FEDERAL EXPENDITURES U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Passed Through State Department of Education Title IV IDEA - Part B, Formula Title IV IDEA - Part B, Preschool 84.027A 84.173A 13-6600010579116600 13-6610010579116610 $ Total Special Education Cluster 782,624 15,443 798,067 Total Passed Through State Department of Education 798,067 TOTAL EXPENDITURES OF FEDERAL AWARDS $ - 117 - 798,067 HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTES TO SCHEDULE OF EXPENDITURES OF FEDERAL AWARDS YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 1. The District utilizes the fund types specified in the Texas Education Agency Financial Accountability System Resource Guide. Special Revenue Funds are used to account for resources restricted to, or committed for, specific purposes by a grantor. Federal and state awards generally are accounted for in a Special Revenue Fund. Generally, unused balances are returned to the grantor at the close of specified grant periods. 2. The accounting and financial reporting treatment applied to a fund is determined by its measurement focus. The Governmental Fund types are accounted for using a current financial resources measurement focus. All Federal grant funds were accounted for in a Special Revenue Fund which is a Governmental Fund type. With this measurement focus, only current assets and current liabilities and the fund balance are included on the balance sheet. Operating statements of these funds present increases and decreases in net current assets. The modified accrual basis of accounting is used for the Governmental Fund types. This basis of accounting recognizes revenues in the accounting period in which they become susceptible to accrual, i.e., both measurable and available, and expenditures in the accounting period in which the fund liability is incurred, if measurable, except for unmatured interest on Long-Term Debt, which is recognized when due, and certain compensated absences and claims and judgments, which are recognized when the obligations are expected to be liquidated with expendable available financial resources. Federal grant funds are considered to be earned to the extent of expenditures made under the provisions of the grant, and, accordingly, when such funds are received, they are recorded as deferred revenues until earned. 3. The period of availability for federal grant funds for the purpose of liquidation of outstanding obligations made on or before the ending date of the federal project period extended 30 days beyond the federal project period ending date, in accordance with provisions in Section H, Period of Availability of Federal Funds, Part 3, OMB Circular A133 Compliance Statement. - 118 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHEDULE OF FINDINGS AND QUESTIONED COSTS YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 I. Summary of the Auditor's Results: Financial Statements a. An unqualified opinion was issued on the financial statements. b. Internal control over financial reporting: • Material weakness(es) identified? Yes X No • Significant deficiency(ies) identified that are not considered a material weakness? Yes X None reported Yes X No c. Noncompliance material to financial statements noted. Major Programs d. Internal control over major programs: • Material weakness(es) identified? Yes X No • Significant deficiency(ies) identified that are not considered a material weakness? Yes X None reported X No e. An unqualified opinion was issued on compliance for major programs. f. Any audit findings disclosed that were required to be reported under Section 510(a) or OMB Circular A-133. Yes g. Identification of major programs: Special Education Cluster: 84.027A, 84.173A h. The dollar threshold used to distinguish between Type A and Type B programs. $300,000 i. Auditee qualified as a low-risk auditee. X - 119 - Yes No HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHEDULE OF FINDINGS AND QUESTIONED COSTS YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 II. Findings Relating to the Financial Statements Which Are Required To Be Reported in Accordance with Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards. None III. Findings and Questioned Costs for Federal Awards None - 120 - HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT SUMMARY OF PRIOR YEAR AUDIT FINDINGS YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2013 IV. Findings Relating to the Financial Statements Which Are Required To Be Reported in Accordance with Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards. None - 121 -