7455 - ACCOUNTING SYSTEM FOR CAPITAL ASSETS
The Board shall maintain a capital asset accounting system. The capital asset system shall maintain sufficient information.
Capital assets are defined as those tangible assets of the District:
- with a useful life in excess of one (1) year;
- with an initial cost equal to or exceeding the amount determined periodically by the District in Policy 7450 - Property Inventory;
- which are capitalized in accordance with GAAP; and
- which the District intends to hold or continue in use for an extended period of time.
Further, some items may be identified as "controlled" assets that, although they do not meet all capital asset criteria, are to be recorded on the capital asset system to maintain control.
Capital assets shall be classified as follows:
land, buildings (facilities), equipment, and intellectual property (including software) whether acquired by purchase, construction, manufacture, exchange, or through a lease accounted for as a financed purchase under Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) standards or a finance lease under Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) standards; and
additions, improvements, modifications, replacements, rearrangements, reinstallations, renovations or alterations to capital assets that materially increase their value or useful life (not ordinary repairs and maintenance).
Leased capital assets and assets which are jointly-owned shall be identified and recorded on the capital asset system.
Capital assets shall be recorded at historical cost or, if that amount is not practicably determinable, at estimated historical cost. The method(s) to be used to estimate historical costs shall be established by the Auditor.
The purchase of capital assets, the transfer of capital assets between buildings, and the disposal of capital assets shall be initiated by the District Office and require the prior written approval of the District Administrator. An asset to be disposed of by sale shall be done in accordance with Policy 7300 - Disposition of Real Property or Policy 7310 - Disposition of Personal Property.
In accordance with GAAP, assets must be depreciated over their estimated useful lives and approved by the auditor.
Such useful lives by asset class as per GASB are as follows:
- site improvement - 20 years;
- buildings - 10-50 years;
- furniture and equipment - 3-50 years;
- leased equipment - 3-50 years.
Accumulated depreciation shall be calculated on a straight-line basis and be recorded for general capital assets.
The following information shall be maintained for all capital assets:
description
asset classification (land, building, equipment, etc.)
location
purchase price
vendor
date purchased
voucher number
estimated useful life
estimated salvage value
replacement cost
accumulated depreciation
method of acquisition (purchase, trade-in, lease, donated, etc.)
appropriation
manner of asset disposal
Revised 10/19/20
Revised 2/21/22
T.C. 12/19/22
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