beyond the budget blueprint: how to report on school finance

56
BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE EWA’s 67 th National Seminar Vanderbilt University, Nashville May 18, 2014 Tawnell D. Hobbs, The Dallas Morning News

Upload: bendek

Post on 25-Feb-2016

49 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE. EWA’s 67 th National Seminar Vanderbilt University, Nashville May 18, 2014 Tawnell D. Hobbs, The Dallas Morning News. Get the data!. Purchase orders Check logs Credit card information Paycheck information (salary database) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

EWA’s 67th National SeminarVanderbilt University, Nashville

May 18, 2014

Tawnell D. Hobbs, The Dallas Morning News

Page 2: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Get the data!

• Purchase orders• Check logs• Credit card information• Paycheck information (salary database)• Grants• Budgets

Page 3: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Make comparisons• Find the difference (sum, subtraction,

percentage change, percentage)

Page 4: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 5: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 6: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Know the difference between “approved budgets” and

“actual budgets”

• Budget amendments• Change orders

Page 7: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

The “budget amendment”

Page 8: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

The “change order”

Page 9: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Was the promised product delivered?

Page 10: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 11: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

What’s in that report? Is it worth the $100,000 price tag?

-- 306-page report-- Padded with school district charts and maps-- Five research studies from other groups; available on the web-- Printouts of two proposed Texas bills that never became law-- Contained basic knowledge: The magnet programs are popular

Page 12: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Next steps:• Look at specs promised in request for

proposal, or RFP• Look at contract (provides the details)

Page 13: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 14: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 15: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 16: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 17: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 18: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 19: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

• Check registers

Page 20: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 21: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

• Receipts (and background documentation)

Page 22: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 23: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 24: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 25: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 26: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Dallas ISD spent millions on extras, analysis of check register shows

By TAWNELL D. HOBBS and MATTHEW HAAGStaff WritersPublished: 18 June 2011 11:39 PM

Restaurant food and catered meals: $2.2 million.

Hotel stays and room rentals: $2.3 million.

Registration fees and travel costs: $3.8 million.

Consultants and other outside help: $44 million.

And there’s more.

The Dallas Independent School District spent at least $57 million over four years —or one year’s average base pay for 1,086 teachers — on purchases such as priceymeals, costly trips, lucrative consulting contracts and overnight stays at hotels in theDallas area and beyond. The Dallas Morning News analyzed the check register from the district’s main fundstarting with purchases from August 2006, the month after DISD ended an oftabused employee credit card program, to December 2010. The review of more than 775,000 lines of purchases, receipts and documentsprovides a look at funds that are loosely tracked and spent with little oversight.

Page 27: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Four-star hotels, conventions among Dallas ISD travel expenses

By MATTHEW HAAGStaff WriterPublished: 18 June 2011 11:21 PM

From four-star hotel rooms high above Times Square to luxurious suites overlooking SanDiego Bay, Dallas ISD employees have racked up large bills on trips to conferences,conventions and visits to other school districts.

And in some cases, district records show no receipts.

The Dallas school district spent at least $4.7 million on costs related to employee travel,Including money to cover expenses, airfare and hotel rooms, from August 2006 to December 2010. The bills range from a $2,495 registration fee for a DISD principal to attend a four-dayconference at Harvard University to $500 airfares to Southern California.

Page 28: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

(Using Microsoft ACCESS to group business purchases)

Some of the district's purchases include:

More than $300,000 spent at Atlanta Bread Co. and about $86,000 at Chick-fil-A.

Promotional items, such as mugs, wristbands, T-shirts and hats, that cost at least $1.7 million.

Renting meeting space and catering meals from Aramark Events and Catering at Infomart, costing at least $488,000.

Page 29: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 30: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Trustees to crack down on extrasBoard members vow to tackle expenses from legal services, pricey meals, room rentals

TAWNELL D. HOBBS and MATTHEW HAAGPublication Date: June 21, 2011 Page: A01 Section: NEWS Zone: STATE Edition: 1

Dallas school trustees, facing major budget cuts for the upcoming school year, vowed Monday to find ways to reduce excessive spending.

Trustees, responding to a Dallas Morning News report on Sunday that detailed questionable expenditures, said they plan to crack down on costs for legal services, pricey meals and room rentals.

New board President Lew Blackburn said he's willing to go so far as to require staffers to raise money for their own food purchases.

"I'm OK with not feeding the staff," he said.

Blackburn said he plans to lay out his thoughts on spending during a speech on board priorities at Thursday's board meeting. He predicted new procedures would be in place by January.

Page 31: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Credit Card purchases

Page 32: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Data: School district credit card purchases

Findings: District card holders made questionable purchases with their cards.

Page 33: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

An iPod on Christmas Eve $399 Boxes from The Container Store $2,489 Gift cards from Toys "R" Us $3,100 Shopping with a DISD MasterCard Priceless

Exclusive: A Dallas Morning News investigation found thousands of suspect purchases on district credit cards - and serious questions about whether anyone is watching how the tax dollars are spent

KENT FISCHER, TAWNELL D. HOBBS and MOLLY MOTLEYPublication Date: July 2, 2006

First of two parts

With little oversight, Dallas Independent School District employees swipe their district-issued credit cards hundreds of times a day, spending about $20 million a year on everything from office supplies and textbooks to meals and giveaway trinkets.

About 1,200 cards are in circulation, and they keep the district running. With them, administrators and teachers can buy day-to-day supplies without the hassle of waiting on a district purchase order. But rarely does anyone check up on the card users, review their receipts or question what they've bought.

They're spending on items like this: a $200 blanket and pillow set from The Land of Nod, $1,700 in electric scooters, $200 in moisturizer from Bath and Body Works, and a $24.95 charge to an online dating service, Americansingles.com.

The Dallas Morning News examined school district credit card transactions over 27 months, from January 2004 through March 2006 - a $41.5 million snapshot of district spending. Those and other district records showed that only a fraction of purchase receipts are scrutinized, and thousands of purchases run afoul of DISD policy and state purchasing laws. Among the findings:

Page 34: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Banned gift cards keep on giving Probably $35,000 spent after district prohibited their purchase

TAWNELL D. HOBBS, KENT FISCHER and MOLLY MOTLEYPublication Date: July 3, 2006 Page: 2A Section: NEWS Zone: STATE Edition: FIRST

Gift cards - as good as cash at most retailers - were a favorite purchase of DISD employees using district-issued credit cards.

A Dallas Morning News review of thousands of Dallas Independent School District credit card transactions from January 2004 to March 2006, found $820,000 likely spent on gift cards. The News used the district's methodology to identify the purchases: those with even dollar amounts - $30, $250 or $1,000, for example - from stores that sell the cards.

Transaction records show that employees often purchased dozens of gift cards at one time and sometimes made two or three similar gift card purchases within minutes of one another. An example: On March 12, 2004, an employee with DISD's Area 5 office made four purchases totaling $15,000 for gift cards at Wal-Mart and Target, using a district charge card.

The employee no longer works for the district and could not be reached. The district provided no documentation showing what merchandise that money ultimately bought. A $250 gift card at Wal-Mart, for example, could be redeemed for anything the retail giant sells.

DISD banned the purchase of gift cards using district credit cards last summer after an internal review showed that the spending was hard to trace. But even after the rule took effect, The News found $35,000 in purchases that appear to be gift cards.

Sherri Brokaw, DISD's director of Financial Control and Card Services, said gift card purchases caused more work for employees. They were expected to keep receipts for gift card purchases and receipts for what was bought.

"It's one more thing you had to have control of," Ms. Brokaw said.

Page 35: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

86 disciplined for DISD credit card misuse Termination, probation among punishments for procurement abusesTAWNELL D. HOBBSPublication Date: August 23, 2007 Page: 12B Section: METRO Zone: EAST Edition: EAST

More than 80 Dallas school employees investigated for misusing their district-issued credit cards have received some sort of discipline, ranging from termination to probation, according to an internal report obtained by The Dallas Morning News.

The Dallas Independent School District named 93 individuals in May who faced disciplinary action or termination for violations involving their district credit cards. Eighty-six were disciplined, according to the report.

A district spokesman said Wednesday that the disciplinary actions in the report may not be final. He added that employees can appeal recommendations for termination. He did not know the status of any appeals.

Fifteen employees received letters of termination, including three who have resigned and two who kept their jobs but were demoted. More than half the employees received multiple punishments, such as a demotion and removal of any budgetary authority.

The district reprimanded 55 people, put 48 on probation, demoted 10 and shortened contract lengths with possible nonrenewal for nine.

"That action was taken as a result of the misuse," said DISD spokesman Jon Dahlander. "Some cases are obviously more severe than others."

Mr. Dahlander said the district is limited in what it can say about personnel issues.

Page 36: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Woman gets year in DISD card scandal Prison sentence lower than expected because of aid to

investigation

MICHAEL GRABELLPublication Date: August 10, 2007 Page: 17B Section: METRO Zone: NORTH Edition: NORTH

One of the biggest spenders in the Dallas Independent School District credit card scandal was sentenced to one year in federal prison Thursday after the government asked for a lower sentence because she had aided the FBI investigation.

Gloria Orapello, a former secretary in the district's central office, pleaded guilty to felony theft for charging $100,000 in personal items on her district credit card. She had spent a total of about $450,000 on her card, about a quarter of it at an Air Force base store, according to a Dallas Morning News review of DISD credit card records.

"I am truly sorry for my actions," she told Judge Jane Boyle. "I was very selfish and didn't realize what I was doing to the children."

Before Ms. Orapello, 50, was sentenced, an FBI agent investigating the DISD credit card program testified that she had helped the FBI identify three to eight people who may face criminal charges, saving him 500 to 600 hours of work.

Agent Steven Sepeda added that Ms. Orapello had forfeited $35,000 in electronics, jewelry, clothing and the proceeds from a garage sale as restitution to the district. She also led the district's internal investigators to $50,000 in other people's property that could be turned over in restitution, he said.

Page 37: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

DISD credit cards: 2nd user sentenced Ex-secretary who spent $64,000 on herself gets 18 months in prison

KENT FISCHERPublication Date: September 25, 2007 Page: 1B Section: METRO Zone: STATE Edition: FIRST

A former secretary with the Dallas Independent School District was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison Monday for using her district credit card to steal more than $64,000.

Marsha Ollison, 43, must also make full restitution to the district and will be subject to three years' probation upon her release. Her attorney said Ms. Ollison has already repaid DISD $15,000.

Before sentencing, U.S. District Court Judge Sam Lindsay revealed that two years before joining DISD, Ms. Ollison left the former Arthur Andersen accounting firm after officials there accused her of misusing her company credit card.

"Arthur Andersen should have served as a wake-up call," Judge Lindsay said. "Apparently it did not. Less than two years later, we see the same conduct" at DISD.

Ms. Ollison is the second DISD employee convicted of misusing district credit cards. Last month, another secretary, Gloria Orapello, was sentenced to one year in prison and ordered to make $100,000 in restitution.

Ms. Ollison's attorney, Larry Jarrett, said she will appeal.

So far, 86 employees have been disciplined by DISD for misusing their district credit cards. Punishments have ranged from termination to letters of reprimand.

Page 38: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

• Salary database (and stipends)

Page 39: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 40: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 41: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 42: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

More Dallas ISD employees making six-figure salaries

By TAWNELL D. HOBBSStaff WriterPublished: 25 November 2012 11:12 PM

Budget cuts in Dallas ISD have resulted in the elimination of hundreds of positions across most salarylevels. But those in the six-figure salary range have grown and are at a high this school year.

Salaries in the district have been a source of contention for some community members who believeSuperintendent Mike Miles is setting pay too high, mainly for people in his Cabinet, where salariesrange from $180,000 to $220,000. Miles’ base salary is $300,000.

A Dallas Morning News analysis found that DISD has 129 employees, not including pending hires, whomake $100,000 or more. That’s up from 111 last school year and 121 the year prior.

Salaries for those 129 workers add up to more than $16 million annually.

Those figures are a big jump from 2008-09, when 79 employees had six-figure salaries. The steadyincrease came as the nation struggled through a stubborn recession and high unemployment.Meanwhile, DISD was rebounding from a financial debacle that resulted in hundreds of layoffs.

Page 43: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Dallas ISD superintendent concedes he made mistakes in assembling administrative staff

By MATTHEW HAAG and TAWNELL D. HOBBSStaff WritersPublished: 20 December 2012 11:19 PM

Dallas ISD Superintendent Mike Miles conceded Thursday that he mademistakes in assembling his administrative staff, possibly set some salaries toohigh and will review the pay of high-level administrators.

In an interview with The Dallas Morning News editorial board, a contrite Milessaid that before becoming superintendent on July 1, he should have allowedcompetition for some executive positions, compared top salaries with similar districtsand better explained his decisions.

“I did a poor job,” Miles said, referring to salary comparisons and communication.

Page 44: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 45: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Stipends

Page 46: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Car stipends guzzling cash Exclusive: Some in DISD getting large allowances but traveling little

TAWNELL D. HOBBS and KENT FISCHERPublication Date: November 13, 2005

Working on the Dallas school district's help desk typically doesn't involve travel; technicians answer the phone and solve computer problems.

But the five help desk workers each get $1,185 a year in car allowances. The money automatically comes as part of their pay.

All told, more than 2,300 DISD employees are getting car stipends this year, at a cost of nearly $3.7 million, according to a Dallas Morning News review of district records. In a year when DISD cut some elementary school counselors and gave teachers small raises while trying to close a $28 million budget deficit, the $3,684,798 for car allowances has escaped the ax.

The allowances, mostly ranging from $694 to $4,051 a year, are meant to reimburse employees who use their cars for official business within the district. Yet the district requires no proof of how much these employees - including administrative assistants, accountants, supervisors and top managers - travel for their jobs.

Page 47: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Who’s benefiting?(Car allowance cont’d.)

“Deputy Superintendent Ron Peace, for example, is in charge of DISD's business services. His appointment book shows that he is out of the office three or four times a week. Over the last 90 days, he's driven an estimated 300 miles on district business, according to the addresses in his appointment book and a common Internet mileage estimator.

Mr. Peace did not return phone calls, but Mr. Claxton, the district spokesman, said the calendar accurately reflects the deputy superintendent's travel during that period.

Mr. Peace's annual allowance, $4,051, works out to almost $78 per week or $935 for 90 days. Compare that with the distance traveled to his recent appointments, and the district paid him $3.12 per mile over the last three months. In comparison, the city of Dallas caps taxicab rates at $1.60 per mile.”

Page 48: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Who’s on the losing end?

(Car allowance cont’d.)

“On the flip side is orchestra teacher Emery Kochie, who is assigned to three elementary schools. Including mileage, wear and tear on his car and the cost of gas, he estimates he spends about $800 a year doing his job. Yet Mr. Kochie receives no car allowance.”

Page 49: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

District curbs travel allowances Employees had received millions in annual stipends

TAWNELL D. HOBBSPublication Date: December 16, 2005

Dallas Superintendent Michael Hinojosa's proposal to cut car allowances for hundreds of employees, including his own, was approved by school trustees Thursday.

The proposal came after The Dallas Morning News reported last month that the district spent nearly $3.7 million annually on car stipends for more than 2,300 employees, many of whom rarely travel on district business.

Trustees approved reducing the number of employees receiving the stipends to 52 top executives at an annual cost of about $212,000.

They also approved eliminating Dr. Hinojosa's $1,000 monthly car allowance, at the superintendent's recommendation.

The change in Dr. Hinojosa's contract takes effect Jan. 1; the other changes begin Sept. 1.

Employees who don't receive a car stipend, including Dr. Hinojosa, will receive the state comptroller's reimbursement rate for miles driven, now 48.5 cents a mile.

Page 50: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Red flags… Credit card purchases for even amounts Understaffing in office overseeing purchases;

unanswered questions Frequent change orders and/or budget

amendments Big budget swings A decreasing reserve, or emergency, fund Back-to-back purchases to stay under the radar

Page 51: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Tips… Don’t overload stories with numbers – think

graphics!

Page 52: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE
Page 53: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Tip…

• Make useful comparisons

Page 54: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

The Dallas Independent School District spent at least $57 million over four years - or one year's average base pay for 1,086 teachers - on purchases such as pricey meals, costly trips, lucrative consulting contracts and overnight stays at hotels in the Dallas area and beyond.

Page 55: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Remember, behind every paper report…is a database

Page 56: BEYOND THE BUDGET BLUEPRINT: HOW TO REPORT ON SCHOOL FINANCE

Questions?