Agenda Item
1. FIRST READ - Amendment to the Bylaws & Policies: Board Policy DIB, New Board Regulation: DIB-R Lease Accounting
Summary: Presented by: Mr. Jonathan Lance McConkey, Comptroller, Division of Finance
Request: It is requested that the Board of Education lay the new Board Regulation DIB-R Lease Accounting on the table as a FIRST READ for public comment and Board feedback until the May 8, 2023, Board Meeting where the new regulation will receive final approval.
Why: Board regulation DIB-R Lease Accounting is presented as a new regulation. The purpose is to ensure compliance with Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Statement No. 87, Leases. The new regulation discusses district procedures and GASB 87 requirements as a guide to help the district remain compliant with the new standard.
Details: GASB Statement No. 87, Leases went into effect for all reporting periods after June 30, 2021. To ensure the district’s continued compliance with GASB 87, Finance has developed a regulation to help in the lease accounting and reporting decision making process. This regulation should be used as a guide when deciding how lease agreements should be accounted for and reported on.
Financial impact: There is no financial impact to the district.
Contact: Mr. Lance McConkey, Comptroller, Division of Finance, 678.676.0445
Mr. James Dawson, Director of Financial Reporting, Division of Finance, 678.656.4399
Mr. Stephen Mayer, Capital Assets Manager I, Division of Finance, 678.521.2423
Effective: Upon Board approval
Status: Attorney approval not required
Board Regulation DIB-R Lease Accounting
The district may enter into lease agreements when financing a right-to-use asset is more advantageous
to the district than an outright purchase of that asset. Accounting and reporting for lease agreements is
governed by GASB Statement No. 87, which developed a single model of lease accounting based on the
principle that leases are financings of the right to use an underlying asset. GASB Statement No. 87
requires recognition of a lease liability and right-to-use asset for lessees and a lease receivable and
deferred inflow of resources for a lessor.
The Finance Division will evaluate all lease agreements executed by the district to determine proper
accounting and reporting for those leases. The lease contracts will be reviewed to determine if the
agreement falls under the provisions of GASB 87.
Definitions
Lease - A lease is a contract that conveys control of the right to use another entity’s nonfinancial asset
for a period of time in an exchange or exchange-like transaction. Examples of nonfinancial assets include
buildings, land, vehicles, and equipment.
Lease Term – The period during which a lessee has a noncancelable right to use an underlying asset, plus
the following periods, if applicable:
1. Periods covered by a lessee's option to extend the lease if it is reasonably certain, based on all
relevant factors, that the lessee will exercise that option.
2. Periods covered by a lessee's option to terminate the lease if it is reasonably certain, based on
all relevant factors, that the lessee will not exercise that option.
3. Periods covered by a lessor's option to extend the lease if it is reasonably certain, based on all
relevant factors, that the lessor will exercise that option.
4. Periods covered by a lessor's option to terminate the lease if it is reasonably certain, based on
all relevant factors, that the lessor will not exercise that option.
Short-Term Lease – A lease that, at the commencement of the lease term, has a maximum possible term
under the lease contract of 12 months or less, including any options to extend, regardless of their
probability of being exercised.
Present Value – The current value of a future sum of money.
Bargain Purchase Option - a clause in a lease agreement that allows the lessee to purchase the leased
asset for substantially less than its fair market value as of the termination date of the lease.
Recognition and Measurement
Lessee Accounting:
At the commencement of a recognized lease, a lessee should recognize a lease liability and an intangible
right-to-use lease asset.
Lease Liability - A lessee initially should measure the lease liability at the present value of payments
expected to be made during the lease term. Measurement of the lease liability should include the
following, if required by a lease:
a. Fixed payments
b. Variable payments that depend on an index or a rate (such as the Consumer Price Index or a
market interest rate), initially measured using the index or rate as of the commencement of the
lease term
c. Variable payments that are fixed in substance
d. Amounts that are reasonably certain of being required to be paid by the lessee under residual
value guarantees
e. The exercise price of a purchase option if it is reasonably certain that the lessee will exercise
that option
f. Payments for penalties for terminating the lease, if the lease term reflects the lessee
exercising (1) an option to terminate the lease or (2) a fiscal funding or cancellation clause
g. Any lease incentives receivable from the lessor
h. Any other payments that are reasonably certain of being required based on an assessment of
all relevant factors.
Interest Rate - To calculate the incremental borrowing rate the district will take the risk-free rate of
return as of the lease effective date (or as close to the date as possible) plus an average additional risk
premium based upon three different banks and the credit rating of the district at the time of the
agreement.
Lease Asset- A lessee initially should measure the lease asset as the sum of the following:
a. The amount of the initial measurement of the lease liability
b. Lease payments made to the lessor at or before the commencement of the lease term, less
any lease incentives received from the lessor at or before the commencement of the lease term
c. Initial direct costs that are ancillary charges necessary to place the lease asset into service.
A lease asset will be amortized using the straight-line method over the shorter of the lease term or the
useful life of the underlying asset, unless there is a purchase option that the district is reasonably certain
to exercise. Then the leased asset will be amortized over the useful life of the underlying asset.
Furthermore, in the event the district enters into a significant agreement as a lessor the district will
apply relevant GASB 87 lessor accounting criteria.