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Finance 101: FTE, Funding Formulas? What does it all mean?

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Presentation on theme: "Finance 101: FTE, Funding Formulas? What does it all mean?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Finance 101: FTE, Funding Formulas? What does it all mean?
Elizabeth Grovenstein, Vice President and CFO North Carolina Community College System

2 Overview Overview of State and NCCCS Budget State Budget Process
College Budget Allocation Process Other Budget Issues Please feel free to ask questions at any point! FY

3 State General Fund Budget FY 2018-19
Area Net Appropriation % of Total Education Public Schools NCCCS UNC System $13.7 billion $9.5 billion $1.2 billion $3.0 billion 58% 40% 5% 13% Health and Human Services $5.4 billion 22% Justice and Public Safety $2.8 billion 12% All Other $2.0 billion 8% Total $23.9 billion 100% FY

4 State General Fund Appropriations for Education: FY 2018-19 (in billions)

5 Financial Support of Institutions
State G.S. 115D-31 Operating costs for instruction, administration, and support services Local G.S. 115D-32 Operation and maintenance of plant Capital construction is the legal responsibility of the county. However, G.S. 115D-31 authorizes the State to provide capital funds to local institutions, provided that it is matched on a dollar-to-dollar basis. FY

6 NCCCS Total Operating Funding
FY

7 NCCCS State Budget: FY 2008-2019
Budget Drivers: Enrollment Growth and Salary Increases Source: BD 701: FY June 30 Authorized Actual Budgets, FY Certified Budget FY

8 NCCCS State Budget per FTE: FY 2008-2018
Source: BD 701: FY June 30 Authorized Actual Budgets, Budget FTE FY

9 Biennial Budget Cycle: FY 2019-21
Summer and Fall 2018: Develop base budget Develop expansion budget request Identify reduction options, if necessary 2019 Long Session (begins in January): Adopt a two-year budget 2020 Short Session (begins in April or May): Adjust second year of the budget FY

10 Sources of Budget & Legislative Agenda Items
NCCCS Other Sources NC Association of CC Presidents (NCACCP) Finance & Legislative Committees Governor’s Budget Begins in mid-summer Legislators’ priorities/interests Approved by full NCACCP Legislative Study Commission recommendation NCACCT becoming more involved Studies done by NCCCS that are mandated by the legislature Aligns to System Strategic Plan State Board of Community Colleges approval CONSENSUS BUDGET/LEGISLATIVE PRIORITIES IS ESSENTIAL! FY

11 The Gubernatorial Process
Per the NC Constitution, the Governor shall: Serve as “Director of the Budget” Prepare and recommend a budget to the General Assembly Administer the budget as enacted by the General Assembly FY

12 Legislative Budget Process
System Office -- Works with House & Senate Education Appropriations Subcommittee Chairs Responsible for CC, UNC, & K-12 budgets House & Senate Full Appropriations Chairs Presidents & Trustees – Work with local legislative delegation System President – Speaker & President Pro Tem FY

13 State Board Approval – State Allocations to Colleges
G.S. 115D-5 (a): “The State Board of Community Colleges may adopt and execute such policies, regulations and standards…to provide for the equitable distribution of State and federal funds to the several institutions.” FY

14 State Budget Allocations
Base Allocations – All colleges get the same amount regardless of size or performance. FTE Allocations – Depends on the number of FTE students served. Performance-Based Allocations: Depends on student outcomes. FY

15 College Allotments: FY 2018-19
Attachment A College Allotments: FY $ m 59% Total Allotments: $1.49 billion Less Management Flex Cut: $0.05 billion Net Allotments: $1.44 billion $508 m 34% Purple = BASE; Red = FTE; Green = PERFORMANCE $32.6 m 2% $51.5m 3% Source: FY Summary of Budget Allocations. Note that this graph only captures funds distributed to colleges through the routine budget allocation process. This graph does NOT account for any subsequent reversions required by the Governor or allocations. FY

16 FY 2018-19 Base Allocations Curriculum Instruction $436,011
Amount Per College System-wide Amount Curriculum Instruction $436,011 $25,288,638 Con Ed Instruction $72,669 $4,214,802 Inst. & Ac. Support $2,429,489 $140,910,362 Total $2,938,169 $170,413,802 FY

17 Budget FTE 1 FTE = 512 Student Hours in Membership as defined in 1G SBCCC 100.1(5) For each instructional area (curriculum, con ed, and basic skills), a college’s budget FTE is determined by calculating the higher of : the prior year; or the average of the two previous years’ enrollment FY

18 All other continuing education courses and basic skills courses
Tiered FTE Funding Tier 1A Curriculum (CU) courses in programs leading to immediate employment and Con Ed courses that lead to same 3rd party credential Tier 1B Other CU technical, health science, lab-based science, and college-level math courses; Con Ed courses leading to a 3rd party credential for priority occupations Tier 2 All other CU courses, con. ed. courses leading to a 3rd party credential Tier 3 All other continuing education courses and basic skills courses FY

19 2018-19 BFTE Tier Values Tier 1A Tier 1B Tier 2 Tier 3 $4,583.10
Instruction – Curriculum/Basic Skills $4,583.10 $4,054.28 $3,525.46 $2,229.86 Instruction – Con. Ed. Recurring $3,838.12 $3,396.81 $2,953.78 Instruction – Con. Ed. Non-Recurring $556.26 $492.18 $428.03 Inst. & Ac. Support $1,730.00 FY

20 Performance-Based Allocations
In FY , $22.6 million was allocated to colleges based on performance on eight performance measures: Student success in College-Level English courses Student success in College-Level Math courses Progress of first-year curriculum students Curriculum student retention and graduation Licensure and certification passing rates Performance of students who transfer to a four-year institution Progress of basic skills students *Attainment of high school equivalency/adult high school diplomas by students For each measure, funds are allocated based on two factors: Quality: Funds allocated based on percentage of students who succeed on each measure Impact: Funds allocated based on the number of students who succeed on each measure *All funds allocated through Impact during transition period FY

21 Rewarding Quality: In Concept
For each measure, colleges would earn PBF based on how they compared to both baseline and excellence standards: If a college did not meet the baseline, it would receive $0 in PBF for that measure. If a college exceeded the baseline, but did not meet the excellence standard, it would receive a portion of its potential PBF for that measure. If a college met the excellence standard, it would receive 100% of potential PBF for that measure. If a college exceeded the excellence standard, it would receive more than 100% of potential PBF for that measure. Excellence Standard Baseline Standard FY

22 Budget Flexibility The General Assembly has allowed colleges to have flexibility in order to meet individual college needs Formulas are for allocation purposes only Colleges can spend the money however they choose with the following exceptions: Basic Skills funding may only be used for basic skills programs Federal vocational education funding may not be transferred Customized Training funds may not be transferred Certain State-supported allocations approved by the State Board outside the budget package FY

23 Carryforward The General Assembly has allowed colleges to carry forward certain unspent appropriations Unexpended equipment and library resources may be carried forward and spent over the next 12 months per G.S. 115D-31(c) Unexpended performance-based funding may be carried forward per G.S. 115D-31.3(g1) Customized Industry Training program funds shall not revert but shall remain available until expended per G.S. 115D-5.1(f2) FY

24 Other Budget Issues Management Flex Cuts Reversions & Spending Freezes
A budget cut enacted by General Assembly and colleges are authorized to determine where to reduce spending Reversions & Spending Freezes Governor determines will be budget shortfall and requires agencies to revert funds May also frees travel, hiring, purchasing, etc. Tuition Shortfalls/Budget Call-Backs Happens when tuition and fee receipts are less than the amount budgeted to be collected Requires colleges to reduce budgets Tuition Increases General Assembly or Governor usually propose. Revenue shortfalls or to fund new programs FY


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