HomeMy WebLinkAboutResolution 2006-019 N.C.S. 01/23/2006 Resolution No. 2006-019 N.C.S.
of the City of Petaluma, California
RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF PETALUMA APPROVING THE
CITY OF PETALUMA CAPITAL ASSET POLICY
WHEREAS, the City Administrative Services Department has determined the need for a
formal Capital Asset Policy; and,
WHEREAS, the City Administrative Services Department has the responsibility for,
and has established, systems and procedures through which the objectives of accurate accounting
and financial reporting of assets, and safeguarding of assets can be enhanced; and,
WHEREAS, the City Administrative Services Department has developed a City of
Petaluma Capital Asset Policy, and submitted said Policy to the City Council for review.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council approves the City of
Petaluma Capital Asset Policy as shown in Exhibit A attached.
Under the power and authority conferred upon this Council by the Charter of said City.
RErERENCE: I hereby certify the foregoing Resolution was introduced and adopted by the ppr ved as to
Council of the City of Petaluma at a Regular meeting on the 23`~ day of January, J orm:
2006, by the following vote:
City Atto Bey
AYES: Mayor Glass, Harris, Healy, Nau, O'Brien, Torliatt
NOES: None
ABSENT: Vice Mayor Canevaro
ABSTAIN: None )
P
ATTEST: G~~
City Clerk Mayoi•
Resolution No. 2006-019 N.C:S. Page 1
Exhibit A
City of Petaluma, California
January 1, 2006
FIXED ASSET CAPITALIZATION AND INVENTORY CONTROL POLICY
Objectives
The objectives of the City of Petaluma's fixed asset policy are as follows:
Accounting and Financial Reporting Objective-To accurately account for, and. report, fixed
assets in financial reports issued to external reporting agencies, granting agencies and the
public.
Safeguarding of Assets Objective - To establish systems and procedures to protect assets from
loss or theft.
The Fixed Asset Capitalization and Inventory Control Policy provides specific guidance in
determining which fixed assets are subject to capitalization (separate accounting and
reporting), and which are subject to the inventory control (safeguarding) policies.
The Administrative Services Department is responsible for, and has established, systems and
procedures through which both objectives are met. These systems and procedures are used to
identify, process, control, track, and report the City's fixed assets.
Capitalization Policy
In general, all fixed assets, including land, building, improvements, infrastructure, equipment,
and software, with an original cost of $5,000 or more, are subject to capitalization (accounting
and reporting). Infrastructure and improvement capitalized costs must substantially increase the
life of the asset or significantly increase the value (thus repairs and maintenance costs are not
excluded). All costs associated with the purchase or construction are considered, including
ancillary costs, such as freight, site preparation, professional fees, installation, and legal claims
directly attributable to asset acquisition.
The capitalization threshold is applied to individual units of fixed assets. The threshold will
generally not be applied to components of an asset, unless large equipment is installed as part
of a larger capital project. Repairs to existing fixed assets will generally not be subject to
capitalization, unless they extend the useful life of the asset, and exceed the threshold amount.
Generally, improvements to existing fixed assets will be subject to capitalization if they exceed
the threshold amount.
Capital projects will be capitalized as "construction in progress" until completed. Costs are
reclassified from construction in progress to infrastructure, or another relevant description, the
date the completion of the project is accepted by the City Council. Direct costs, ancillary costs,
and construction period interest are included in the capitalized amount.
Resolution No. 2006-019 N.C.S. Page 2
Inventory Control Policy
Department heads are responsible for safeguarding fixed assets under their control. However,
the Administrative Services Department is responsible for establishing and maintaining systems
and procedures that enable the Department Heads to properly safeguard assets.
In general, inventory control is applied only to movable fixed assets. The City has implemented a
policy to maintain inventory records of computer equipment with a cost between $1,000 and
$5,000, and other movable assets with a cost between $2,500 and $5,000. This is in addition to
movable assets with a cost greater than $5,000, which are discussed under the Capitalization
Policy section of this document. Movable assets with a value over $2,500 ($1,000 for computer
equipment) will be barcoded (if they are physically capable of being bar coded). A physical
inventory of all barcoded items will be taken annually.
Disposal of Fixed Assets
The City Municipal Code, chapter 3.12, outlines the City's policy on asset disposals. The Code
states that any City asset, which is no longer required for use by the City, and thus surplus, with a
residual value over $500, shall be sold or disposed of as directed, by resolution, by the City
Council. Any surplus asset with a residual value under $500 shall be sold or disposed of by the
City Manager.
Depreciation/Amortization of Fixed Assets
Depreciation is the systematic and rational allocation of the estimated or actual historical cost,
or fair value at date of donation (of donated assets) over the asset's estimated useful service
life. Amortization is the allocation of the cost of intangible assets over their estimated useful life.
Estimated useful lives are based upon GASB recommendations
_ y ~ 3
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ri xfi - =A?sset~` Glass . ~ Years
. .
m. q : -
Land/Easement NA
CIP in progress NA
Site Improvements, Fencing, Landscaping, Paving, Sidewalks 20
Outdoor Equipment, Playground Equipment, Fuel Tanks 20
Buildings 50
Electric, Plumbing 30
Interior Construction, Sprinkler Systems 25
HVAC Systems, Roofing 20
Furniture 20
Carpet 7
Pipelines, Treatment Plants 50
Machinery, Mowers 15
Radios, Fax 10
Licensed Vehicles 8
Computers, Copiers 3
Resolution No. 2006-019 N.C.S. Page 3
Infrastructure Assets
The purchase or construction of infrastructure assets is approved by the City Council. In
addition, the donation of infrastructure assets is approved by Council. It is the responsibility of
the City departments involved in the purchase, construction or acceptance of donated
infrastructure assets to identify and inventory them on a regular basis. It is the responsibility of the
Administrative Services Department to account for the infrastructure assets by class and fund. It
is the responsibility of the Department Heads to ensure that proper budgeting and purchasing
guidelines are followed, and that infrastructure assets are adequately controlled and used for
appropriate City purposes.
All costs associated with the purchase or construction of an infrastructure asset will be included
in the capitalized cost, including: Design, permits, management; overhead, engineers' salary,
capitalize interest. Fair value at the date of donation will be capitalized for donated
infrastructure assets.
The value of infrastructure assets, which are no longer in existence or service, will be estimated
annually by the project engineers, and treated as infrastructure disposals.
Intangible Assets
Land easements will be recorded with land and not depreciated. Right of ways will be
recorded separately and depreciated over useful life. Only easements and right of ways with a
cost greater than $5,000 will be capitalized.
Transfer of Assets Between Funds
Assets will be recorded in the fund which currently controls or maintains the assets
Transfers of assets between proprietary funds will be recorded as a loss on disposal, in the
amount of the net book value, in the transferring fund, and other revenue, in the amount of the
net book value, in the recipient fund.
Transfers of assets between governmental funds or departments will done on the fixed assets
schedule only. No entry will be made to the general ledger.
Transfers of assets between proprietary funds and governmental funds will be recorded as
contributions to/from City/proprietary funds.
Transfers of assets purchased with grant funds will be recorded as a sale between funds,
including a transfer of cash.
Leased Assets
The City policy will be to enter into only operating leases on leased equipment.
Resolution No. 2006-019 N.C.S. Page 4