Bill aims to limit excessive school district cash reserves
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[April 10, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The overall financial health of Illinois school districts
has been improving in recent years, according to a recent state report,
but a bill moving through the General Assembly seeks to rein in the
amount of money some districts are saving.
Senate Bill 1994, which passed unanimously out of the Senate last week
and now awaits action in the House, would put a cap on how much money
school districts could hold in reserves. Districts that exceed it would
be required to file a report with the state.
“They’re kind of like a nonprofit where, you know, money comes in and
resources come in, and then it needs to be spent,” the bill’s sponsor
Sen. Meg Loughran Cappel, D-Shorewood, said during an interview. “Like,
yes, you need to have savings. Yes, those are good practices. But you
can't just be sitting on all this cash and then not doing anything with
it.”
The Illinois State Board of Education publishes a report each year
measuring the financial health of all 852 school districts in the state.
The report looks at several factors such as their expenditure-to-revenue
ratio, short-term and long-term debt, and how many days’ worth of cash
on hand they keep.
ISBE uses those factors to generate an overall “financial profile” score
for each district. Over the last seven years, the latest report noted,
the statewide average score has risen steadily.
To receive ISBE’s highest rating, districts must keep the equivalent of
180 days of operating expenditures on hand. The agency also notes that
bond underwriters and financial advisers typically recommend 144 to 180
days of operating expenditures.
According to the most recent report, which includes data from the fiscal
year that ended June 30, 2021, 70 percent of districts had cash reserves
of between 100 and 359 days of expenses. But 197 districts, or 23
percent, had reserves of 360 to 720 days, and 10 districts had reserves
greater than 720 days.
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Sen. Meg Loughran Cappel, D-Shorewood,
is pictured on the Senate floor in Springfield. (Capitol News
Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
The report does not identify which districts have those large reserves.
SB 1994 would require districts to calculate their three-year average
operating expenses each year and report their cash on hand. If their
cash reserves ever exceed 2.5 times their annual average, they would
have to submit a plan to ISBE for how they intend to spend those
reserves.
Districts would not be required to spend excess reserves, but only to
submit the plan detailing how they intend to do so over the next three
years.
Cappel said that limit was negotiated with superintendents and other
officials involved in school district budgeting who had pushed back
against the original version of the bill, which would have required
districts to immediately spend down any reserves beyond 250 days of
operating expenses.
She noted that there are many reasons why a district might build up
large reserves. Some, she said, might save up so they can pay cash for
capital expenses like a new security system or to build a new elementary
school. Others might be bracing themselves for the possibility that
their heating or air conditioning system might go out.
“I don't want to stop any district, if they've got plans to build
something that's appropriate, you know, a kindergarten building or
whatever,” she said. “Of course, we want you to be able to use that. So
that's kind of where this came from.”
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