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HCV Program Financial Management & Reporting

HUD Webcast Washington D.C. November 3, 2009 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. HCV Program Financial Management & Reporting. Opening Remarks David Vargas , CPA Associate Deputy Assistant Secretary. HCV Program Financial Management & Reporting. Presenter Ray Adair , MBA, CGFM

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HCV Program Financial Management & Reporting

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  1. HUD Webcast Washington D.C. November 3, 2009 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  2. Opening Remarks David Vargas, CPA Associate Deputy Assistant Secretary HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  3. Presenter Ray Adair, MBA, CGFM Vice President & Senior Associate Nan McKay and Associates, Inc. HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  4. Today's topics: How the Program is Funded Basic Elements of Financial Management Year-end Financial Reporting Basics HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  5. Topic One: How the Program is Funded HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  6. Renewal HAP Funding The Congress: Appropriates a set $ amount Requires funding for PHAs be based on VMS leasing & cost data Specifies FFY be used for VMS leasing & costs data Requires the cost data be inflated by the AAF How The Program Is Funded

  7. Renewal HAP Funding In addition, the Congress allows for certain adjustments to the cost base): First time renewals FSS escrow deposits How The Program Is Funded

  8. HAP Renewal Funding Formula Total HAP Costs From VMS (12 Month Period - FFY) New Units + FSS Escrow Contributions + = Total HAP Cost Base

  9. HAP Renewal Funding Formula Total HAP Cost Base x Annual Adjustment Factor (AAF) = CY Budget Authority

  10. HAP Renewal Funding Formula Total CY Budget Authority - NRA Offset (as applicable) = Net CY Budget Authority

  11. Primary HAP Funding Sources CY Budget Authority + NRA Balance = Total Funds Available for HAP

  12. Administrative Fee Funding The Congress: Appropriates a set $ amount Requires HAs be paid based on lease-up, times a fee rate Allows the Department to set the fee rate How The Program Is Funded

  13. Administrative Fee Formula Units Leased on 1st of Month x Applicable Fee Rate (A, B, or C) = Administrative Fees Earned

  14. Excess Administrative Fees Yearly Administrative Fees Earned Amount used to cover program administration Amounts not used become part of Unrestricted Net Assets and continue to be bound by program restrictions.

  15. Same formula as last year FFY leasing & cost data as reported in VMS moved forward to FFY 2009. Same types of adjustments to the HAP cost base No offset to NRA Outlook for 2010

  16. Topic Two: Basic elements of good HCV program financial management HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  17. Good financial management involves: Preparing a program budget Monitoring actual to budget performance Maintaining adequate cash Investing excess cash Financial Management

  18. Importance of having a HCV program budget: The program is budget based Funds have prescribed uses Funds are capped How equity can be used is controlled by statute Financial Management

  19. Importance of PUC in monitoring HAP expense: Determine trend in HAP costs (is it going up or down) Set a target for the number of vouchers to lease Set a target for monthly spending Financial Management

  20. How the PUC is calculated Financial Management Total HAP Costs Total UMLs Divided by = PUC

  21. PUC calculation example: Financial Management $500,000 In HAP 1000 UMLs Divided by PUC then equals $500

  22. Another PUC example: Financial Management $6,000,000 In ABA $500 PUC X 12 Divided by Units supported equals 1,000

  23. Yet another PUC example: Financial Management $500,000 In NRA $500 PUC X 12 Divided by Units supported equals 83

  24. Importance of maintaining cash flow: Budgets help to project Monitoring revenue and expense helps to control Deficit spending will deplete NRA can't be used to cover admin expenses Financial Management

  25. Investing excess cash: Maintain liquidity & preserve principle Limit investments to approved types Secure form HUD-51999, General Depository Agreement before depositing Maintain required collateral Financial Management

  26. Interest earned on investments: Interest earned on excess HAP funds is restricted and becomes part of NRA Interest earned on excess admin fees is unrestricted and becomes part of unrestricted net assets Financial Management

  27. VMS Overview Basics: Web based reporting template Used to monitor HA leasing & spending utilization Replaces old paper HUD-52681 Used to determine HAP renewal funding Used to determine admin fees Financial Management

  28. VMS data gathered: Leasing & HAP expense for regular & special use vouchers Certain types of administrative expenses Certain types of revenue items that ultimately impact the NRA Financial Management

  29. VMS Common Reporting Errors: Lease-up & HAP expense reported in month paid instead of month it applies Special use vouchers not reported or in wrong category Financial Management

  30. VMS Common Reporting Errors (continued): "Number of vouchers leased on the last day of the month" reported with 1st of month lease-up "HA owned units" not reported but HA has owned units Financial Management

  31. VMS Common Reporting Errors (continued): "All voucher HAP expense after the first of the month" reported with more than the pro-rate first time HAP Interest earned on HAP funds not reported or in wrong month Financial Management

  32. VMS Common Reporting Errors (continued): Fraud recovery recorded at: 100% instead of 50% full amount of repayment agreement when it is booked to the balance sheet when it should be amount actually collected Financial Management

  33. VMS Common Reporting Errors (continued): Total administrative fees earned is reported instead of expense FSS Coordinator grant is recorded instead of actual expense incurred Financial Management

  34. Charging indirect costs to the HCV program: Two methods available, indirect cost plan or fee-for-service Authority for found in OMB Cir A-87 Guidance for fee-for-service found in Supplement to HB 7475.1 Financial Management

  35. Traditional indirect cost plans: A plan document is normally prepared Indirect costs are collected in a cost pool Costs in the indirect cost pool are allocated to programs via a cost driver Financial Management

  36. Indirect Cost Plan Concept Diagram Cost Pool HCV Program Line 91810 Salary Benefits Supplies Telephone Travel Rent Utilities Etc. PH Program Line 91810 Other Program Line 91810

  37. Traditional indirect cost plans (continued): New FDS line 91810, Allocated Overhead used to record indirect costs Used by HAs covered by the operating fund rule who don't adopt fee-for-service Optional for HCV only HAs Financial Management

  38. Traditional indirect cost plans (continued): A good reference source for guidance in developing indirect cost plans is: "Cost Principles & Procedures for Developing Cost Allocation Plans" - publication of HHS Financial Management

  39. Fee-for-Service Indirect cost are collected in a pool called the COCC Indirect costs are not allocated out of the pool The COCC charges programs a fee as allowed by the Department Fee income is de-federalized Financial Management

  40. Fee-For-Service Concept Diagram PHA AMP A Central Office Cost Center (COCC) PHA AMP B HCV Program Other HUD Program

  41. Fee-for-Service (continued) The Department allows a HCV program management fee equal to the higher of: 20% of available admin funding or $12 per leased unit per month In addition a bookkeeping fee of $7.50 per leased unit may be charged Financial Management

  42. Fee-for-Service Flow of Funds Direct program administration Admin Fees Earned Unused admin fees Management Fee Unrestricted Net Assets COCC

  43. Fee-for-Service (continued) HAs began using fee-for-service last year Most adopted it entity wide because of conversion to asset management in public housing If used, there should be no indirect costs charged to the HCV program Financial Management

  44. Fee-for-Service (continued) We have provided examples you can print out of: Typical cost pool showing allocated overhead to programs Typical COCC showing fees earned from programs Financial Management

  45. Topic Three: Year-end Financial Reporting Basics HCV Program FinancialManagement & Reporting

  46. Reporting Requirements: HAs must submit year-end financial information in accordance with GAAP Authority to require is at 24 CFR 5.801 (UFRS) Also applies to HCV only HAs Data submitted electronically over the web using FDS Year-end Financial Reporting

  47. Reporting Requirements: REAC has responsibility to collect and review Generally two submissions required: Un-audited 60 days after year-end Audited 9 months after year-end Year-end Financial Reporting

  48. Differences Between VMS & FDS: Financial data is "locked" after a reporting period, VMS is not Data collected not always the same Timing of accrued expenses Year-end Financial Reporting

  49. Understanding the HCV Equity Accounts: Equity means "ownership" HCV equity is reported in three separate accounts: Invested in Capital Assets, Net of Related Debt Restricted Net Assets Unrestricted Net Assets Year-end Financial Reporting

  50. Invested in Capital Assets Net of Related Debt: Represents the "equity" in the HAs fixed assets Represents assets at cost less accumulated depreciation and associated debt Depends on HA's capitalization threshold Year-end Financial Reporting

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