Appendix C Documentation

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NPEFS 2015-2017: Common Core of Data (CCD) National Public Education Financial Survey

Appendix C Documentation

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Appendix C



In order to assure that survey documentation enables the reader—even the nonstatistical user—to understand its contents and the use and limitations of data readily and clearly, NCES provides data file documentation for all released data files. This includes an abstract or summary that cites the methodology report and/or technical notes associated with the survey and a description of survey methodology that is consistent with the NCES standard for survey system documentation (see NCES Statistical Standards, 2014. Standard 3-4).1


NCES releases documentation for NPEFS concurrently with public use data files. The survey documentation is drafted contemporaneously with NPEFS data collection, editing, and analysis. As of the date of this submission, June 2015, the most recently published documentation for NPEFS is for the FY 2012 data files. Documentation for FY 2013 is expected to be published shortly. Given this, the Documentation for the NCES Common Core of Data National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), School Year 2011–12 (Fiscal Year 2012), NCES 2015-345 is provided in this appendix as an example of the type of documentation that will be created for the 2015 through 2017 NPEFS data collections.









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NCES 2015-345 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION


Documentation for the NCES

Common Core of Data

National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), School Year 2011–12 (Fiscal Year 2012)


Provisional File Version 1a


June 2015


Stephen Q. Cornman

National Center for Education Statistics









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NCES 2015-343

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION





U.S. Department of Education

Arne Duncan
Secretary

Institute of Education Sciences

Sue Betka

Acting Director

National Center for Education Statistics

Peggy Carr

Acting Commissioner

Administrative Data Division

Ross Santy

Associate Commissioner

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is the primary federal entity for collecting, analyzing, and reporting data related to education in the United States and other nations. It fulfills a congressional mandate to collect, collate, analyze, and report full and complete statistics on the condition of education in the United States; conduct and publish reports and specialized analyses of the meaning and significance of such statistics; assist state and local education agencies in improving their statistical systems; and review and report on education activities in foreign countries.

NCES activities are designed to address high-priority education data needs; provide consistent, reliable, complete, and accurate indicators of education status and trends; and report timely, useful, and high-quality data to the U.S. Department of Education, the Congress, the states, other education policymakers, practitioners, data users, and the general public. Unless specifically noted, all information contained herein is in the public domain.

We strive to make our products available in a variety of formats and in language that is appropriate to a variety of audiences. You, as our customer, are the best judge of our success in communicating information effectively. If you have any comments or suggestions about this or any other NCES product or report, we would like to hear from you. Please direct your comments to

NCES, IES, U.S. Department of Education
1990 K Street NW

Washington, DC 20006-5651

May 2015
The NCES Home Page address is http://nces.ed.gov. The NCES Publications and Products address is http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch.
This publication is only available online. To download, view, and print the report as a PDF file, go to the NCES World Wide Web Publications and Products address shown above.

This documentation was prepared in part under Interagency Agreement (IAA) No. ED-IES-11-1-J-0007 with the United States Census Bureau. Mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.


Suggested Citation

Cornman, S.Q. (2015). Documentation for the NCES National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), School Year 2011-12 (Fiscal Year 2012) (NCES 2015-343). National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC. Retrieved [date] from http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch.

Content Contact

Stephen Q. Cornman (202) 502-7338
[email protected]


Acknowledgments


The operations and product development for the National Public Education Finance Survey (NPEFS) are supported through an interagency agreement with the U.S. Census Bureau. Specifically a team of skilled analysts, statisticians, and information technology specialists from the Governments Division of the Census Bureau work closely with the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) to conduct the NPEFS survey. Additionally, a network of state education agency fiscal coordinators take responsibility for compiling and reporting finance data for public education activities within their respective states. While their names are too numerous to mention here, NCES and the Common Core of Data (CCD) team greatly appreciate their time, effort, and commitment toward providing timely and accurate school finance data. NCES would like to thank these talented individuals who have each contributed to the success of the CCD program.




Contents

Page


Acknowledgments iii


List of Tables v


List of Exhibits vi


I. Introduction to the NCES Common Core of Data National Public Education Financial

Survey (NPEFS), School Year 2011–12 (Fiscal Year 2012), Provisional Version 1a File 1

II. User’s Guide 2


A. NPEFS Data Collection Methodology 3


B. Imputations 8


C. Variations in the Survey Over Time 10


D. Fiscal Data Plan 11


E. State Notes 11


References 13


Appendixes


Appendix A—Record Layout and Description of Data Items A-1


Appendix B—Glossary B-1


Appendix C—State Abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) State Codes C-1


Appendix D—Imputations and Edits List D-1


Appendix E—Fiscal Data Plan Questions E-1


Appendix F—Fiscal Data Plan Responses F-1


Appendix G—Value Distribution and Field Frequencies G-1


Appendix H—State Notes H-1


Appendix I—Survey Form I-1

List of Tables


Tables


Appendix C— State Abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) State Codes


C-1. State abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) state codes,

by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012 C-2


Appendix G—Field Frequencies and Value Distribution


G-1. Number and percentage distribution of imputation flag values, by imputation flag: Fiscal year 2012 G-2


G-2. Minimum, maximum, and mean for continuous variables, by variable: Fiscal year 2012 G-5





List of Exhibits


Exhibits Page


Appendix F—Fiscal Data Plan Reponses


F-1 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 1 through 3, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year

2012 F-2


F-2 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.a.1 through 4.b.2, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-4


F-3 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.c.1 through 4.d, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-6


F-4 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.e.1 through 4.f.2, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-8


F-5 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 5 through 5.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-12


F-6 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 6 through 6.b, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

Year 2012 F-14


F-7 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 7 through 8.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-16


F-8 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 9 through 10, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-18


F-9 Fiscal data plan responses to question 11, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-20


F-10 Fiscal data plan responses to question 12, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-22


F-11 Fiscal data plan responses to question 12a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-25


F-12 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 13 through 14, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-27


F-13 Fiscal data plan responses to questions 15 through 15.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal

year 2012 F-30


I. Introduction to the NCES Common Core of Data National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), School Year 2011–12 (Fiscal Year 2012), Provisional File Version 1a

This documentation is for the provisional version 1a file of the National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS) for school year (SY) 2011–12, fiscal year 2012 (FY 12) conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics’ (NCES). It contains a brief description of the data collection, along with information required to understand and access the data file.

The NPEFS survey provides state-level aggregate finance data for revenues and expenditures for public elementary and secondary education. The expenditure functions include instruction, instructional staff support services, pupil support services, general administration, school administration, operations and maintenance, student transportation, other support services (such as business services), food services, enterprise operations, and total current expenditures. Objects reported within a function include salaries, employee benefits, purchased services, supplies, and equipment.

The finance data described in this documentation are from the NPEFS, a component of the Common Core of Data (CCD). The CCD is the primary NCES database on public elementary and secondary education in the United States. The other four surveys in the CCD are the Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey, the Local Education Agency Universe Survey, the State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education, and the School District Finance Survey (F-33). The NPEFS data are useful to chief officers of state education agencies (SEAs); policymakers in the executive and legislative branches of federal and state governments; education policy and public policy researchers; the press; and citizens interested in information about education finance.

Congress authorizes NCES to collect these data through the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (20 U.S.C. § 9543). NCES and the Governments Division of the U.S. Census Bureau collaborate to collect public education finance data, with the Census Bureau acting as the primary collection agent for both NPEFS and the School District Finance Survey (F-33).

SEAs in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S. Island Areas (American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands) report aggregated state-level finance data to the NPEFS survey. The data file is organized by state or jurisdiction and contains revenue data by funding source, expenditure data by function and object,2 and average daily attendance (ADA) data. The file also includes total student membership data from the SY 2011–12 CCD State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education version 1a file.3

The NCES accounting handbook, Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2014 Edition (Allison 2014), provides a set of standards and guidance for school system accounting. The handbook gives common definitions for detailed account classifications, which are aggregated to form the data items collected in NPEFS. The use of the accounting handbook by SEAs facilitates the comparability of data across states.

II. User’s Guide

The FY 12 NPEFS data file contains 56 records (one for each state or jurisdiction). Each record contains 314 fields (4 record identification fields, 155 data fields, and 155 imputation flag fields).

The appendixes of this document provide the following information:

  • Appendix A—record layout for the data file;

  • Appendix B—glossary with definitions of key variables;

  • Appendix C—state abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI)4 state codes;

  • Appendix D—state-by-state list of imputations and edits;

  • Appendix E—fiscal data plan questions;

  • Appendix F—state-by-state responses to the fiscal data plan questions;

  • Appendix G—frequencies of imputation flags and minimum, maximum, and mean of numeric variables;

  • Appendix H—fiscal year definitions and specific state notes; and

  • Appendix I—the survey form.

File Versions

NCES maintains strict version control of NPEFS files. The versions are identified by one numeric character and one alphabetic character. The number corresponds with the release version (e.g., “1” is the first release, “2” is the second release, etc.). The letter “a” also corresponds to a public release.5 For SY 2011-12 (FY 12), the “1a” file is the first provisional file release.

NCES releases a provisional file (Version 1a) after a publication using the data has been released. (NCES standards require that an NCES publication using the data be released before the data are released.) Data in provisional data files have undergone a minimum of one round of data review and editing. NCES may update the file if SEAs report revised data to address errors in a provisional data file.

Provisional NPEFS data have been subject to at least two rounds of extensive data review and editing; the data may also include revisions made by SEAs in their own review of their finance data that were submitted prior to the close of the collection period. Revisions submitted after the provisional data file has been locked will be incorporated in the final file for each fiscal year, which will be released at the same time as the release of provisional data for the following year.

File names

The names of the FY 12 releases are as follows:

  • Stfis12_1a.txt (tab-delimited text file)

  • Stfis12_1a.xls (Microsoft Excel file)

The first seven characters indicate the file contents and year, and the last two characters indicate the file version. “Stfis” stands for state fiscal, “12” stands for FY 12, and “1” indicates that the file is ready for initial release by NCES.

A. NPEFS Data Collection Methodology

SEAs in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S. Island Areas (American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands) participate in the NPEFS collection.

SEAs appoint state fiscal coordinators to work with NCES and the Census Bureau to provide accurate and comparable data across states and jurisdictions. NCES and the Census Bureau provide annual training workshops for state fiscal coordinators that are designed to improve the efficiency and efficacy of reporting NPEFS data. The annual training workshops cover the comprehensive review of data items; on-line training on data submission; discussion of reporting and editing processes; and coordinating submission of fiscal data with the state's data systems. The workshop topics are all designed to improve data quality. During these training workshops, often times the state fiscal coordinators learn more from exchanging ideas among each other than from any other source.  State fiscal coordinators also provide valuable feedback in these workshops that allows NCES to identify and address current issues related to school finance reporting so that the data continue to be relevant and timely.

Prior to reporting the NPEFS data, SEAs must compile fiscal data from the local education agencies (LEAs) that operate or support public elementary and secondary schools. SEAs usually take the opportunity to review and edit data from their LEAs to enhance data quality. SEAs also include revenues and expenditures for any state-run schools, such as schools with special education programs or juvenile justice facilities that provide education services. NCES and SEAs work cooperatively to ensure comparability between the data items requested and reported.

In addition to the state fiscal coordinator, each SEA assigns a certifying official6 who certifies that the data constitutes a true and full report of revenues, expenditures, and student attendance during the regular school year and for summer school for the public elementary and secondary schools.

The FY 12 NPEFS data collection opened on January 30, 2013 and closed on August 15, 2013. Upon receipt of a state’s submission, Census Bureau and NCES analysts review the data for possible errors or anomalies. Between August 16, 2013 and August 15, 2014, some SEAs reported revisions to correct or resolve errors in their original submission.


Missing, nonapplicable, and suppressed data

Missing data are reported as “-1” in the data file and nonapplicable data are reported as “‑2.”7 The FY 12 NPEFS Instruction Manual requests that states report “0” for data items for which no activity has occurred and “-1” for items for which activity has occurred, but for which data are missing. In some instances, a “-1” may have been reported when there was no activity. Conversely, a “0” may have been reported when, in fact, there was some activity. When producing the final file, NCES edits some “-1” and “0” responses (e.g., teacher salaries reported as “0” were edited to “-1.”). Beginning with FY 10, CCD identifies submitted NPEFS data that do not meet NCES data quality standards by reporting the data item as "-9" and the corresponding data item flag as "A." This suppression would only occur with numeric data items.



Average daily attendance data, State Per Pupil Expenditures (SPPE), and student membership counts

The report from SEAs includes average daily attendance, revenue, and expenditure data from which NCES determines the average State Per Pupil Expenditure (SPPE) for elementary and secondary education, as defined in section 9101(2) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA) (20 U.S.C. 7801(2)). SPPE is calculated by dividing net current expenditures by average daily attendance (ADA).


In addition to utilizing SPPE as general information on the financing of elementary and secondary education, the Secretary uses these data directly in calculating allocations for certain formula grant programs, including, but not limited to, Title I, Part A of the ESEA, Impact Aid, and Indian Education programs. Other programs, such as the Education for Homeless Children and Youth program under Title VII of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act and the Teacher Quality State Grants program (Title II, Part A of the ESEA), make use of SPPE data indirectly because their formulas are based, in whole or in part, on State Title I, Part A allocations.8

The NPEFS survey has two different types of pupil or student count data. Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (as amended by Title I of the Improving America’s Schools Act of 1994) requires SEAs to collect and report ADA data. ADA is the average daily attendance for the school year. Pursuant to Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, SEAs report ADA data in accordance with state law. Average daily attendance is defined by state law or regulations. ADA data in the NPEFS data file are not necessarily comparable across states because some states use their own ADA definitions and others use the NCES definition.

In the absence of state law or regulations, NCES provides an alternative method to submit ADA. NCES calculates ADA by summing the counts of resident students attending public school each day of the school year and then dividing by the total number of days that school is in session during the school year. The NCES definition requires every school or school district in a state to collect attendance every day it is in session, and to record the number of days it is in session.

The NPEFS file also includes membership data from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education. Membership is defined as the count of students on the current roll taken on the school day closest to October 1, by using either the sum of original entries and re-entries minus total withdrawals or the sum of the total present and the total absent. Student membership data from the SY 201112 CCD State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education are included in the 1a data file because it encompasses a more comparable student count across states. The variable Student Membership (MEMBR11) is the count of students enrolled on or about October 1, 2011. Because membership is collected using a consistent definition for every state, NCES uses membership, rather than average daily attendance, in the calculation of expenditures per pupil in the NPEFS reports.

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) Data

In February of 2009, Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). The ARRA legislation allocated education funds directly to the states.9 As a result of the ARRA, NCES added seven data items to the NPEFS survey in order to collect and analyze data pertaining to Title I, Impact Aid, and other ED funds. The seven additional data items provide the necessary detail to report total ARRA expenditures and their functional allocations, such as for classroom instruction or school construction10 (Office of the Federal Register 2009). NCES collected ARRA data for FY 09, FY 10, FY 11, and FY 12 in the NPEFS collection. NCES will continue to collect seven data items on the NPEFS survey, pursuant to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act11 up and until FY 14 if necessary. The ARRA data items will be completely removed from the NPEFS survey after the FY 14 data year, provided that SEAs expend all ARRA funds, either through formula or competitive grants.12

Employee Benefits Data

The NPEFS survey collects employee benefits for the functions of instruction, support services, and operation of noninstructional services. The NPEFS survey respondents are currently reporting employee benefits, which are defined as the “Amounts paid by the school district on behalf of employees (amounts not included in gross salary but in addition to that amount). Such payments are fringe benefits payments and although not directly paid to employees, nevertheless are part of the cost of personal services.” 13 The definition of employee benefits is derived from the NCES school finance accounting handbook, Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2014 Edition (Allison 2014). NPEFS does not collect actuarially determined annual required contributions; 14 accrued annual requirement contribution liability;15 or the actuarial value of pension plan assets.16

Reference Sources for Data Definitions


Four reference sources are used in conjunction with NPEFS variable descriptions and state reporting:


  • Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2014 Edition (Allison 2015) can be accessed online at http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2015347. This publication contains standard account codes, classification criteria, and definitions for reporting school system financial information, providing a system by which fiscal data can be reported in a comprehensive and uniform manner.

  • Governmental Accounting, Auditing, and Financial Reporting (Gauthier 2005) can be purchased from the Government Finance Officers Association.

  • Government Finance and Employment Classification Manual (U.S. Census Bureau 2006) can be accessed online at http://www2.census.gov/govs/pubs/classification/2006_classification_manual.pdf.

  • NPEFS Survey Instruction Manual includes a summary of definitions needed to respond to the survey (NCES 2012).

Use of Crosswalk Software

Since the FY 89 data collection, the Census Bureau has been utilizing “crosswalk” software to assist states in their reporting and to improve the comparability of data across states. This software converts a state’s existing accounting reports to uniform federal standards, as described in the NCES accounting handbook, Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2014 Edition (Allison 2015). The following states used crosswalk software provided by NCES in the FY 12 collection: Alabama, California, Illinois, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.

Data editing

NPEFS survey staff engages in data editing, which is an iterative and interactive process that includes procedures for detecting and correcting errors in the data. Data editing minimizes errors and ensures the data are complete, accurate, and consistent across the data file. In accordance with NCES Statistical Standard 4-1, NPEFS data are checked for “credibility based on range tolerances to determine if responses fall within a prespecified reasonable range” and are properly documented. The data are also checked “for consistency based on checks across variables within individual records for non-contradictory responses.” (NCES 2014).


After an SEA submits NPEFS data, the survey staff conducts a comprehensive review

of the data and edit checks. These checks include but are not limited to:


  • trend analysis for multiple years;

  • large value and percentage fluctuations;

  • zero dollar values;

  • appropriate usage of data flags;

  • sum checks;

  • comparison of record layouts to record layouts the SEA submitted in the previous fiscal year;

  • comparisons of membership between the state non-fiscal files and the NPEFS file;

  • comparison of min/max/mean of all numeric data items to ensure the percentage changes of the means between the previous and current year’s data are in a reasonable range;

  • and adequate comments from respondents explaining any data anomalies.

The NPEFS staff prepares an edit report that identifies potential errors or anomalies. Notification of any arithmetic errors and comments containing NCES’ understanding of specific missing data items are also included in the edit report.

States are asked to correct arithmetic errors, verify or correct data that fail edit checks, complete missing items, and explain any extraordinary changes from the previous year’s data. NCES or the Census Bureau may make requests for clarification, reconciliation, or other inquiries pertaining to the data. SEAs can respond directly to these requests for clarification and/or reconciliation or resubmit data to resolve data issues on their own initiative.17 Data that remain missing or uncorrected are imputed based on values derived from other “fully reporting”18 states or other related data elements from within the state.

NPEFS survey analysts prepare follow-up questions for SEA respondents based on the results of these edit checks. SEAs are asked to explain all undocumented data anomalies and correct any data errors. If the SEA is unable to provide an explanation or revision for these anomalies, NPEFS survey analysts will edit or impute the data based on a set of business rules.

Student membership edits

Every school year, SEAs report student membership counts by grade on the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education. The NPEFS data file includes total student membership reported on the State Nonfiscal Survey that includes grades prekindergarten through grade 12 (plus ungraded). If the reported fiscal data excludes prekindergarten programs, total membership should also exclude prekindergarten membership. As part of the collection process, NCES asks SEAs to review student membership data from the State Nonfiscal Survey and verify that the membership data are consistent with the programs covered in the revenues and expenditures data reported in NPEFS. Three states (Nebraska, Utah, and Wyoming) indicated that the state FY 12 fiscal data reported in NPEFS excluded prekindergarten programs. In these three states, the NPEFS student membership variable excludes prekindergarten membership.

Illinois and Wisconsin did not report finance data for charter schools in the FY 12 NPEFS survey. NCES edited student membership for Illinois and Wisconsin by excluding charter school students from NPEFS student membership.

B. Imputations

Imputation is a procedure that uses available information and some plausible assumptions to derive substitute values for missing values in a data file (NCES 2003). Currently, the Herriot imputation methodology (Monaco and Wang 1995) is used to impute for missing items in the NPEFS data file. For an allocation, the Herriot method calculates the average proportion of the total from the states for each of the detailed variables. This average is divided by the sum of the averages from each of the detailed variables and is rescaled to one by dividing by the sum of the detail averages. The purpose of imputations is to provide a complete data file that allows for both cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis, as well as comparability of data across states.

Imputations modify values for cases or records where data are not reported (missing) or are incorrectly reported. In some cases, a state may not be able to track funds for a certain program or purpose. If these data elements are imputed, the appropriate totals and subtotals are either increased or decreased to include the imputed data elements. In other cases, states are able to provide a subtotal but are unable to provide details that are more specific. The imputed allocation of these subtotals does not affect the totals or subtotals.

SEAs inform the Census Bureau where data are included so that funds are deducted and distributed appropriately. SEAs review the results of the imputations imposed and certify the imputed value’s reasonableness to the best of their knowledge based on their available data. After the imputation process is complete, the Census Bureau creates data files for the current and prior fiscal years. The Census Bureau uploads these files to the NCES secure data transfer site for review. The NCES members site allows the Census Bureau to transfer data to NCES in a secure environment.

If SEAs have reason to believe the initial imputation is not a reasonable representation of their data, the state may choose to make changes to the data. If states make changes to data or fill in missing items that were previously imputed, the Census Bureau will run a second round of imputations. The certified data from the first round are not re imputed even if the uncertified first-round imputations resulted in the updating of some relevant data. In the second round version of the file, imputations are only applied to missing data for states that update their data submission for that fiscal year. Empirical testing has shown that a re-imputation of the entire file did not substantially change the imputed data enough to justify the additional burden of asking states to recertify the revised imputation. The data flags in the NPEFS data file identify data items that were imputed.

Contains,” “Combined with,” and “Totals” imputations based on the “Herriot Imputation Method”

The Herriot Imputation Method is used to distribute a reported subtotal across two or more unreported categories using the ratio of each subcategory to the grand total as the basis of the final distribution. This is used when the ratio of a data item to the grand total has less variance across states than the ratio of that item to the subtotal. The computation of this method involves using the average ratio of each item to be imputed to the grand total across all “fully reporting” states to calculate the unreported subcategories and then raking the imputed items to the reported subtotal. These imputations do not affect any totals or subtotals.

Imputations identified in Appendix D as being “Combined with,” “Contains,” or “Supplemented by” use the Herriot Imputation Method. These are cases where a state is unable to report explicitly into the NCES CCD category sets but are able to report a subtotal. For example, the statement “A contains B, C, and D by T” in Appendix D indicates that the reported value of A is actually the subtotal of A, B, C, and D where T is the grand total. The “Herriot Imputation Method” is then applied to impute the final values of A, B, C, and D.

Impute/Import” imputations

The Herriot Method is not necessary when the variance of the item to the subtotal across reporting states is sufficiently low. In this case, the imputation method can be simplified by comparing the missing components to the subtotal rather than the grand total. If the subtotal is reported but the distribution of that subtotal across items is unknown, then the “Impute/Import” function uses the ratio of one or more elements to the subtotal, averaged across “fully reporting” states to distribute the reported subtotal into one or more item components. In Appendix D, the syntax for “Impute/Import” imputations is “A Impute/Import T” where A is a single item or array of items that are components of the total T.

Impute based on” imputations

Statements with “impute based on” indicate that the first item was reported as missing and the missing value was assigned based on information from the variables following “based on.” In some cases, the subtotal may have been incomplete. When a component of the subtotal is not reported, and it is known that the subtotal does not include the unreported item, the ratio used in the “impute/import” procedure must be modified. The average subtotal is calculated across “fully reporting” states and the missing item is compared to that modified subtotal. For example, “A imputed based on (T-A)” implies that A, in the target state, is not included in T. Therefore, the average ratio of A to the total excluding A across the “fully reporting” states is applied to T in the target state to estimate A in the target state. Totals must then be recalculated after the imputation, as the imputed value can now be included in the grand total.

Distribute by” imputations

In some cases, the state may have reported a positive value for an item that should actually be zero. In these cases, the value of the misreported item is redistributed into several other reported items based on the known distribution of the target items. For example, the statement “A distributed by destination/salary B, C, D, E, F” can be interpreted as, the value reported as “A” has been prorated into B, C, D, E, and F based on the reported distribution of B, C, D, E, and F. “A” is then set to zero. In these cases, since B, C, D, E, and F were all reported, data from any other states are not necessary to perform the calculation.

Data flags

For each variable, a companion flag indicates whether the value was reported by the state or was placed there by NCES using one of several imputation or edit methodologies. The flags are as follows:

R – As reported by the state

A – Edited by the analyst (formerly labeled “Adjusted”)

I – Imputed based on a method other than prior year’s data19

T – Total based on sum of internal or external detail


The companion cell in each case is identified by the name of the data cell preceded by an “I.” Appendix D explains any action taken by NCES with regard to each variable.

C. Variations in the Survey Over Time

NPEFS underwent a major revision in FY 89, acquiring its present name in that year and greatly increasing the number of data items collected. Since that year, items have been added to and deleted from the survey, as follows:

  • Beginning with the FY 92 survey:

Food Services expenditures were broken out by object, adding the data items Food Services – Salaries (E3A11), Food Services – Employee Benefits (E3A12), Food Services – Purchased Services (E3A13), Food Services – Supplies (E3A14), and Food Services – Other (E3A16).

Enterprise Operations expenditures were broken out by object, adding the data items Enterprise – Salaries (E3B11), Enterprise – Employee Benefits (E3B12), Enterprise – Purchased Services (E3B13), Enterprise – Supplies (E3B14), and Enterprise – Other (E3B16).

Facilities Acquisition and Construction Services - Nonproperty expenditures were broken out into Buildings Built and Alterations Performed by LEA’s Own Staff (E611) and Buildings Built and Alterations Performed by Contractors (E612). In addition, Facilities Acquisition and Construction Services – Property expenditures were broken out into Land (E62A) and Buildings (E62B). STE6, the sum of all of the Facilities Acquisitions and Construction Services items, was added.

  • Beginning with FY 98 survey:

The Facilities Acquisition and Construction Services breakouts listed above (items E611, E612, E62A, and E62B) were discontinued.

  • Beginning with FY 04 survey:

Teacher salaries expenditures were broken out by program, adding the data items Teacher Salaries – Regular Programs (E11A), Teacher Salaries – Special Education Programs (E11B), Teacher Salaries – Vocational Education Programs (E11C), and Teacher Salaries – Other Education Programs (E11D).

A data item for textbooks expenditures (E2) was added.

  • Beginning with FY 09 survey:

Seven items for expenditures from the ARRA funds were added:

Instructional Expenditures From ARRA Funds (ARRASTE1), Total Current Expenditures From ARRA Funds (ARRATE5), Community Service Nonproperty and Direct Cost Programs From ARRA Funds (ARRAE81Z), Property Expenditures From ARRA Funds (ARRATE10), School Construction Expenditures From ARRA Funds (ARRASTE6), Expenditures From Title I Received Under ARRA (ARRATLEIZ), and Direct Program Support Expenditures From ARRA Funds (ARRASTE4).

D. Fiscal Data Plan

NCES collects information from each state to help process the data and to gain a better understanding of what programs and/or policies are connected with the data items and definitions. The FY 12 fiscal data plan questionnaire appears in Appendix E, and the responses for each state or jurisdiction appear in Appendix F. The fiscal data plan responses are presented as reported by SEAs with minimal editing by NCES. The responses to the fiscal data plan are not included on the data file.

E. State Notes

The state notes contain information from state data providers regarding any significant changes in the data they are reporting. These comments are reported in this documentation as stated by the respondents with minimal editing by NCES. The beginning and end dates of the fiscal year are also reported for each state.

References


Allison, G.S. (2014). Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2014 Edition (NCES 2015–347). National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC. Retrieved March 31, 2015, from http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2015347.


Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (20 U.S.C. § 9543), Title I of Public Law 107-279, November 5, 2002,§151, accessed June 10, 2013 http://www2.ed.gov/policy/rschstat/leg/PL107-279.pdf


Gauthier, Stephen J. (2005). Governmental Accounting, Auditing, and Financial Reporting

2005. Chicago, IL: Government Finance Officers Association.


Monaco, D., and Wang, S. (1995). Evaluation of the Common Core of Data (CCD) Finance Data Imputations. Technical Report, National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC.


National Center for Education Statistics, The National Public Education Financial Survey FY 2012 Instruction Booklet, accessed June 10, 2013 https://surveys.nces.ed.gov/ccdnpefs/pdf/NPEFSManual.pdf.


Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. (2009). Federal Register Vol. 74, No. 154. Vol. 74, No. 197. Washington, DC. Retrieved December 15, 2011 from http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?collectionCode=FR&browsePath=2009

Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. (2014). Federal Register Vol. 78, No. 23. Washington, DC. Retrieved April 10, 2014 from https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2014/01/15/2014-00650/submission-of-data-by-state-educational-agencies-submission-dates-for-state-revenue-and-expenditure


Keaton, P. (2013). Documentation to the Common Core of Data State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education: School Year 2011–12 (NCES 2014-036). National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC. Retrieved April 10, 2014 from http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/stnfis.asp

U.S. Census Bureau (2006). Government Finance and Employment Classification Manual. Retrieved April 1, 2014, from http://www2.census.gov/govs/pubs/classification/2006_classification_manual.pdf.


U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2014). NCES Statistical Standards (NCES 2014-097). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved May 22, 2014, from http://nces.ed.gov/statprog/2012/.



The tab-delimited file (Stfis12_1a.txt) has the following layout and description: 56 physical records, 1 per observation – 314 fields in the file.

Missing data are reported as “-1” in the data file, and nonapplicable data are reported as “-2.” For data type, N = numeric and AN = alphanumeric.



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

SURVYEAR

N

1

FISCAL YEAR OF SURVEY (2012)

FIPS

AN

2

AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARDS INSTITUTE (ANSI) STATE CODE

STABR

AN

3

STATE ABBREVIATION

STNAME

AN

4

NAME OF THE STATE OR TERRITORY

R1A

N

5

LOCAL REVENUES PROPERTY TAX

R1B

N

6

LOCAL REVENUES NONPROPERTY TAX

R1C

N

7

LOCAL REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENT PROPERTY TAX

R1D

N

8

LOCAL REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENT NONPROPERTY TAX

R1E

N

9

LOCAL REVENUES INDIVIDUAL TUITION

R1F

N

10

LOCAL REVENUES TUITION FROM LEAS

R1G

N

11

LOCAL REVENUES TRANSPORTATION FEES FROM INDIVIDUAL

R1H

N

12

LOCAL REVENUES TRANSPORTATION FEES FROM LEAS

R1I

N

13

LOCAL REVENUES EARNINGS ON INVESTMENTS

R1J

N

14

LOCAL REVENUES FOOD SERVICE

R1K

N

15

LOCAL REVENUES STUDENT ACTIVITIES

R1L

N

16

LOCAL REVENUES OTHER REVENUES

R1M

N

17

LOCAL REVENUES TEXTBOOK REVENUES

R1N

N

18

LOCAL REVENUES SUMMER SCHOOL

STR1

N

19

LOCAL REVENUES SUBTOTAL

(equals R1A + R1B + R1C + R1D + R1E + R1G + R1I + R1J + R1K + R1L + R1M + R1N)

R2

N

20

INTERMEDIATE REVENUES

R3

N

21

STATE REVENUES

R4A

N

22

FEDERAL REVENUES DIRECT GRANTS

R4B

N

23

FEDERAL REVENUES THRU STATE

R4C

N

24

FEDERAL REVENUES THRU INTERMEDIATE AGENCIES

R4D

N

25

FEDERAL REVENUES OTHER SOURCES

STR4

N

26

FEDERAL REVENUES SUBTOTAL

(equals R4A + R4B + R4C + R4D)

R5

N

27

REVENUES FROM OTHER SOURCES

TR

N

28

TOTAL REVENUES FROM ALL SOURCES

(equals STR1 + R2 + R3 + STR4)

E11

N

29

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES SALARIES

E12

N

30

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

E13

N

31

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES

E14

N

32

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES TUITION TO PRIVATE AND OUT-OF-STATE SCHOOLS

E15

N

33

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES TUITION TO OTHER LEAS IN-STATE

E16

N

34

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES

E17

N

35

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES PROPERTY

E18

N

36

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES OTHER

STE1

N

37

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL

(equals E11 + E12 + E13 + E14 + E16 + E18)

E11A

N

38

TEACHER SALARIES REGULAR PROGRAMS

E11B

N

39

TEACHER SALARIES SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS

E11C

N

40

TEACHER SALARIES VOCATIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS

E11D

N

41

TEACHER SALARIES OTHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS

E2

N

42

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES TEXTBOOKS

E212

N

43

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E213

N

44

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E214

N

45

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E215

N

46

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

E216

N

47

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E217

N

48

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E218

N

49

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES OTHER SERVICES

TE21

N

50

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SALARIES SUBTOTAL

(equals E212 + E213 + E214 + E215 + E216 + E217 + E218)

E222

N

51

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E223

N

52

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E224

N

53

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E225

N

54

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

E226

N

55

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E227

N

56

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E228

N

57

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS OTHER SERVICES

TE22

N

58

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SUBTOTAL

(equals E222 + E223 + E224 + E225 + E226 + E227 + E228)

E232

N

59

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E233

N

60

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E234

N

61

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E235

N

62

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

E236

N

63

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E237

N

64

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E238

N

65

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES OTHER SERVICES

TE23

N

66

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PURCHASED SERVICES SUBTOTAL

(equals E232 + E233 + E234 + E235 + E236 + E237 + E238)

E242

N

67

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E243

N

68

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E244

N

69

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E245

N

70

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

E246

N

71

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E247

N

72

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E248

N

73

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES OTHER SERVICES

TE24

N

74

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUPPLIES SUBTOTAL

(equals E242 + E243 + E244 + E245 + E246 + E247 + E248)

E252

N

75

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E253

N

76

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E254

N

77

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E255

N

78

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

E256

N

79

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E257

N

80

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E258

N

81

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY OTHER SERVICES

TE25

N

82

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES PROPERTY SUBTOTAL

(equals E252 + E253 + E254 + E255 + E256 + E257 + E258)

E262

N

83

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

E263

N

84

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

E264

N

85

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

E265

N

86

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

E266

N

87

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

E267

N

88

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

E268

N

89

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER SERVICES

TE26

N

90

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES OTHER SUBTOTAL

(equals E262 + E263 + E264 + E265 + E266 + E267 + E268)

STE22

N

91

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

(equals E212 + E222 + E232 + E242 + E262)

STE23

N

92

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

(equals E213 + E223 + E233 + E243 + E263)

STE24

N

93

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

(equals E214 + E224 + E234 + E244 + E264)



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

STE25

N

94

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

(equals E215 + E225 + E235 + E245 + E265)

STE26

N

95

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

(equals E216 + E226 + E236 + E246 + E266)

STE27

N

96

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

(equals E217 + E227 + E237 + E247 + E267)

STE28

N

97

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL OTHER SERVICES

(equals E218 + E228 + E238 + E248 + E268)

STE2T

N

98

SUPPORT EXPENDITURES TOTAL SUPPORT SERVICES

(equals TE21 + TE22 + TE23 + TE24 + TE26)

E3A11

N

99

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SALARIES

E3A12

N

100

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

E3A13

N

101

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES PURCHASED SERVICES

E3A14

N

102

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SUPPLIES

E3A2

N

103

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES PROPERTY

E3A16

N

104

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES OTHER

E3A1

N

105

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SUBTOTAL

(equals E3A11 + E3A12 + E3A13 + E3A14 + E3A16)

E3B11

N

106

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SALARIES

E3B12

N

107

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

E3B13

N

108

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE PURCHASED SERVICES

E3B14

N

109

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SUPPLIES

E3B2

N

110

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE PROPERTY

E3B16

N

111

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE OTHER

E3B1

N

112

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SUBTOTAL

(equals E3B11 + E3B12 + E3B13 + E3B14 + E3B16)

STE3

N

113

NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES TOTAL

(equals E3A1 + E3B1)

E4A1

N

114

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TEXTBOOKS

E4A2

N

115

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TEXTBOOKS (PROPERTY)

E4B1

N

116

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TRANSPORT

E4B2

N

117

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TRANSPORT (PROPERTY)

E4C1

N

118

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

E4C2

N

119

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EMPLOYEE BENEFITS (PROPERTY)

E4D

N

120

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT PRIVATE SCHOOL STUDENT

E4E1

N

121

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT OTHER

E4E2

N

122

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT OTHER (PROPERTY)

STE4

N

123

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT SUBTOTAL

(equals E4A1 + E4B1 + E4C1 + E4E1)

TE5

N

124

CURRENT EXPENDITURES

E61

N

125

FACILITIES ACQUISITION NONPROPERTY

E62

N

126

FACILITIES ACQUISITION PROPERTY (LAND & BUILDINGS)

E63

N

127

FACILITIES ACQUISITION PROPERTY (EQUIPMENT)

STE6

N

128

FACILITIES ACQUISITION NONPROPERTY & PROPERTY TOTAL

(equals E61 + E62 + E63)

E7A1

N

129

OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE INTEREST

E7A2

N

130

OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE REDEMPTION

STE7

N

131

OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE SUBTOTAL

(equals E7A1 + E7A2)

E81

N

132

COMMUNITY SERVICE NONPROPERTY

E82

N

133

COMMUNITY SERVICE PROPERTY

E9A

N

134

DIRECT COST PROGRAM NONPUBLIC SCHOOL

E9B

N

135

DIRECT COST PROGRAM ADULT EDUCATION

E9C

N

136

DIRECT COST PROGRAM COMMUNITY COLLEGE

E9D

N

137

DIRECT COST PROGRAM OTHER

E91

N

138

DIRECT COST PROGRAM PROPERTY



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

STE9

N

139

DIRECT COST PROGRAM SUBTOTAL

(equals E9A + E9B + E9C + E9D)

TE10

N

140

PROPERTY TOTAL

(equals E17 + TE25 + E3A2 + E3B2 + E62 + E63 + E82 + E91)

TE11

N

141

TOTAL EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION

(equals TE5 + E61 + E81 + STE9 + TE10)

X12C

N

142

EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I

X12D

N

143

EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I CARRYOVER

X12E

N

144

EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V, PART A

X12F

N

145

EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V, PART A CARRYOVER

TX12

N

146

TOTAL EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297

(equals R1E + R1G + R1J + R1K + R1M + R1N + X12C + X12D + X12E + X12F )

NCE13

N

147

NET CURRENT EXPENDITURES

(equals TE5 TX12)

ADA

N

148

ADA (STATE AND NCES DEFINITION)

A14A

N

149

ADA (STATE DEFINITION)

A14B

N

150

ADA (NCES DEFINITION)

PPE15

N

151

PER PUPIL EXPENDITURES

MEMBR11

N

152

TOTAL STUDENT MEMBERSHIP

ARRASTE1

N

153

INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

ARRATE5

N

154

TOTAL CURRENT EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

ARRAE81Z

N

155

COMMUNITY SERVICE NONPROPERTY AND DIRECT COST PROGRAMS FROM ARRA FUNDS

ARRATE10

N

156

PROPERTY EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

ARRASTE6

N

157

SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

ARRATLEIZ

N

158

EXPENDITURES FROM TITLE I RECEIVED UNDER ARRA

ARRASTE4

N

159

DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

IR1A

AN

160

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES PROPERTY TAX

IR1B

AN

161

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES NONPROPERTY TAX

IR1C

AN

162

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENT PROPERTY TAX

IR1D

AN

163

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENT NONPROPERTY TAX

IR1E

AN

164

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES INDIVIDUAL TUITION

IR1F

AN

165

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES TUITION FROM LEAS

IR1G

AN

166

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES TRANSPORT FEES FROM INDIVIDUAL

IR1H

AN

167

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES TRANSPORT FEES FROM LEAS

IR1I

AN

168

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES EARNINGS ON INVESTMENT

IR1J

AN

169

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES FOOD SERVICE

IR1K

AN

170

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES STUDENT ACTIVITIES

IR1L

AN

171

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES OTHER REVS

IR1M

AN

172

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES TEXTBOOK REVS

IR1N

AN

173

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES SUMMER SCHOOL

ISTR1

AN

174

IMP FLAG LOCAL REVENUES SUBTOTAL

IR2

AN

175

IMP FLAG INTERMEDIATE REVENUES

IR3

AN

176

IMP FLAG STATE REVENUES

IR4A

AN

177

IMP FLAG RED REV DIRECT GRANTS

IR4B

AN

178

IMP FLAG FEDERAL REVENUES THRU STATE

IR4C

AN

179

IMP FLAG FEDERAL REVENUES THRU INTERMEDIATE AGENCIES

IR4D

AN

180

IMP FLAG FEDERAL REVENUES OTHER SOURCES

ISTR4

AN

181

IMP FLAG FEDERAL REVENUES SUBTOTAL

IR5

AN

182

IMP FLAG OTHER SOURCES OF REVENUES

ITR

AN

183

IMP FLAG TOTAL REVENUES FROM ALL SOURCES

IE11

AN

184

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE SALARIES

IE12

AN

185

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

IE13

AN

186

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES

IE14

AN

187

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE TUITION TO PRIVATE AND OUT-OF-STATE SCHOOLS

IE15

AN

188

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE TUITION TO OTHER LEAS IN-STATE

IE16

AN

189

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

IE17

AN

190

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE PROPERTY

IE18

AN

191

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE OTHER

ISTE1

AN

192

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL

IE11A

AN

193

IMP FLAG TEACHER SALARIES REGULAR PROGRAMS

IE11B

AN

194

IMP FLAG TEACHER SALARIES SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS

IE11C

AN

195

IMP FLAG TEACHER SALARIES VOCATIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS

IE11D

AN

196

IMP FLAG TEACHER SALARIES OTHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS

IE2

AN

197

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURE TEXTBOOKS

IE212

AN

198

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE213

AN

199

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE214

AN

200

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE215

AN

201

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE216

AN

202

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE217

AN

203

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE218

AN

204

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES OTHER SERVICES

ITE21

AN

205

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SALARIES SUBTOTAL

IE222

AN

206

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE223

AN

207

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE224

AN

208

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE225

AN

209

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE226

AN

210

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE227

AN

211

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE228

AN

212

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS OTHER SERVICES

ITE22

AN

213

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SUBTOTAL

IE232

AN

214

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE233

AN

215

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE234

AN

216

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE235

AN

217

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE236

AN

218

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE237

AN

219

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE238

AN

220

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES OTHER SERVICES

ITE23

AN

221

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PURCHASED SERVICES SUBTOTAL

IE242

AN

222

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE243

AN

223

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE244

AN

224

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE245

AN

225

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE246

AN

226

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE247

AN

227

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE248

AN

228

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES OTHER SERVICES

ITE24

AN

229

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUPPLIES SUBTOTAL

IE252

AN

230

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE253

AN

231

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE254

AN

232

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE255

AN

233

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE256

AN

234

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE257

AN

235

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE258

AN

236

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY OTHER SERVICES

ITE25

AN

237

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE PROPERTY SUBTOTAL

IE262

AN

238

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER INSTRUCTIONAL STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

IE263

AN

239

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

IE264

AN

240

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

IE265

AN

241

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

IE266

AN

242

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

IE267

AN

243

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

IE268

AN

244

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER SERVICES

ITE26

AN

245

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE OTHER SUBTOTAL



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

ISTE22

AN

246

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES

ISTE23

AN

247

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF SUPPORT

ISTE24

AN

248

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL GENERAL ADMINISTRATION

ISTE25

AN

249

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION

ISTE26

AN

250

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE

ISTE27

AN

251

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL PUPIL TRANSPORTATION

ISTE28

AN

252

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE SUBTOTAL OTHER SERVICES

ISTE2T

AN

253

IMP FLAG SUPPORT EXPENDITURE TOTAL SUPPORT SERVICES

IE3A11

AN

254

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SALARIES

IE3A12

AN

255

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

IE3A13

AN

256

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES PURCHASED SERVICES

IE3A14

AN

257

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SUPPLIES

IE3A2

AN

258

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES PROPERTY

IE3A16

AN

259

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES OTHER

IE3A1

AN

260

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOOD SERVICES SUBTOTAL

IE3B11

AN

261

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SALARIES

IE3B12

AN

262

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

IE3B13

AN

263

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE PURCHASED SERVICES

IE3B14

AN

264

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SUPPLIES

IE3B2

AN

265

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE PROPERTY

IE3B16

AN

266

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE OTHER

IE3B1

AN

267

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES ENTERPRISE SUBTOTAL

ISTE3

AN

268

IMP FLAG NONINSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES TOTAL

IE4A1

AN

269

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TEXTBOOKS

IE4A2

AN

270

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TEXTBOOKS (PROP)

IE4B1

AN

271

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TRANSPORTATION

IE4B2

AN

272

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT TRANSPORTATION (PROP)

IE4C1

AN

273

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

IE4C2

AN

274

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EMPLOYEE BENEFITS (PROP)

IE4D

AN

275

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT PRIVATE SCHOOL STUDENT

IE4E1

AN

276

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT OTHER

IE4E2

AN

277

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT OTHER (PROPERTY)

ISTE4

AN

278

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT SUBTOTAL

ITE5

AN

279

IMP FLAG CURRENT EXPENDITURES

IE61

AN

280

IMP FLAG FACILITIES ACQUISITIONS NON PROPERTY

IE62

AN

281

IMP FLAG FACILITIES ACQUISITIONS PROPERTY(LAND/BUILDINGS)

IE63

AN

282

IMP FLAG FACILITIES ACQUISITIONS EQUIPMENT

ISTE6

AN

283

IMP FLAG FACILITIES ACQUISITIONS TOTAL

IE7A1

AN

284

IMP FLAG OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE INTEREST

IE7A2

AN

285

IMP FLAG OTHER USE REDEMPTION

ISTE7

AN

286

IMP FLAG OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE SUBTOTAL

IE81

AN

287

IMP FLAG COMMUNITY SERVICE NONPROPERTY

IE82

AN

288

IMP FLAG COMMUNITY SERVICE PROPERTY

IE9A

AN

289

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM NONPUBLIC SCHOOL

IE9B

AN

290

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM ADULT EDUCATION

IE9C

AN

291

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM COMMUNITY COLLEGE

IE9D

AN

292

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM OTHER

IE91

AN

293

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM PROPERTY

ISTE9

AN

294

IMP FLAG DIRECT COST PROGRAM SUBTOTAL

ITE10

AN

295

IMP FLAG PROPERTY TOTAL

ITE11

AN

296

IMP FLAG TOTAL EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION

IX12C

AN

297

IMP FLAG EXCLUSIVE FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I

IX12D

AN

298

IMP FLAG EXCLUSIVE FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I CARRYOVER

IX12E

AN

299

IMP FLAG EXCLUSIVE FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V, PART A

IX12F

AN

300

IMP FLAG EXCLUSIVE FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V, PART A CARRYOVER

ITX12

AN

301

IMP FLAG TOTAL EXCLUSION FOR PL 100 297



Variable name


Data type

Data element order



Description

INCE13

AN

302

IMP FLAG NET CURRENT EXPENDITURES

IADA

AN

303

IMP FLAG ADA (STATE AND NCES DEFINITION)

IA14A

AN

304

IMP FLAG ADA (STATE DEFINITION)

IA14B

AN

305

IMP FLAG ADA (NCES DEFINITION)

IPPE15

AN

306

IMP FLAG PER PUPIL EXPENDITURES

IMEMBR11

AN

307

IMP FLAG TOTAL STUDENT MEMBERSHIP

IARRASTE1

AN

308

IMP FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

IARRATE5

AN

309

IMP FLAG TOTAL CURRENT EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

IARRAE81Z

AN

310

IMP FLAG COMMUNITY SERVICE NONPROPERTY AND DIRECT COST PROGRAMS FROM ARRA FUNDS

IARRATE10

AN

311

IMP FLAG PROPERTY EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

IARRASTE6

AN

312

IMP FLAG SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS

IARRATLEIZ

AN

313

IMP FLAG EXPENDITURES FROM TITLE I RECEIVED UNDER ARRA

IARRASTE4

AN

314

IMP FLAG DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT EXPENDITURES FROM ARRA FUNDS


This glossary applies to the Common Core of Data National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS). For additional detail, it is suggested that the data user consult the NCES accounting handbook, Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2009 Edition (Allison, Honegger, and Johnson 2009). When applicable, line numbers corresponding to the handbook are listed in parentheses, and corresponding NPEFS variable names are listed in brackets.


average daily attendance: Average daily attendance (ADA) is defined by state law or regulations. In their absence, ADA should be calculated by summing the counts of resident students attending public school each day of the school year and then dividing by the total number of days that school is in session during the school year. Students who reside in one state and attend public school in another state should be counted in the state where they reside. [ADA, A14A, and A14B.]


CCD: Common Core of Data. A group of public elementary/secondary education surveys of NCES. CCD data are collected from the administrative records systems of each state’s department of education.


community services: A functional category of expenditures (3300) for such services as swimming pools, day care centers, and programs for the elderly. [E81 and E82.]


current expenditures: Funds spent operating local public schools and local education agencies, including such expenses as salaries for school personnel, student transportation, school books and materials, and energy costs, but excluding capital outlay, interest on school debt, payments to private schools, and payments to public charter schools. [TE5 is the total of STE1, STE2T, and STE3.]


debt services: A subfunction (5100) within the expenditure function “other uses” (5000). It includes only long-term debt service with obligations exceeding 1 year. [E7A1 and E7A2.]


direct cost programs: A category of expenditures for programs not part of public elementary and secondary education. These programs include community colleges, adult education, and nonpublic school support. [E9A, E9B, E9C, E9D, E91, and subtotal STE9. NOTE: STE9 does not include E91.]


direct program support: Expenditures made by state education agencies (SEAs) for, or on behalf of, local education agencies (LEAs). The majority of these expenditures are for teacher’s retirement funds. The remainder are for textbooks, busing, and special programs, such as education for disabled students. Although states often report these expenditures in the appropriate function, they are sometimes lumped together under the heading “direct program support,” in which case NCES distributes them by function and object after consultation with state officials. Direct program support for public elementary and secondary education is reported in the data file as zero. [E4A1, E4A2, E4B1, E4B2, E4C1, E4C2, E4D, E4E1, E4E2, and subtotal STE4. NOTE: STE4 does

not include E4A2, E4B2, E4C2, E4D, and E4E2.]


employee benefits: Expenditures (200) made in addition to gross salary that are not paid directly to employees. Employee benefits include amounts paid by, or on behalf of, an LEA for retirement contributions, health insurance, social security contributions, unemployment compensation, worker’s compensation, tuition reimbursements, and other employee benefits. [E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E3A12, and E3B12. Variables E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, and E228 sum to TE22.]


enterprise operations: A subfunction (3200) of noninstructional services (3000). Enterprise operations are activities that are financed, at least in part, by user charges, similar to a private business. These operations are sometimes subsidized by LEAs. Food services expenditures are reported under food services, even if they are run as an enterprise. [E3B11, E3B12, E3B13, E3B14, E3B2, E3B16, and subtotal E3B1. NOTE: E3B1 does not include E3B2.]


equipment: An object subcategory (730) within facilities acquisition and construction services (4000). It includes the initial purchase of property items such as books for a newly constructed school or addition. Replacement equipment is labeled property and is reported by function. [E63]


expenditures: All amounts of money paid out by a school system, net of recoveries and other correcting transactions, other than for retirement of debt, purchase of securities, extension of loans, and agency transactions. Expenditures include only external transactions of a school system and exclude noncash transactions such as the provision of perquisites or other in-kind payments.


expenditures from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds: The Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA, PL 111-5) provided states with additional federal funds to support public education. These funds are allocated through existing programs such as Title I, Impact Aid, and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), and also directly through the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund. The following seven items for expenditures from ARRA funds are collected in NPEFS:


instruction expenditures from ARRA funds: Total current expenditures for instruction from ARRA funds, including current expenditures for activities directly associated with the interaction between teachers and students, including teacher salaries and benefits, supplies (such as textbooks), and purchased instructional services. [ARRASTE1]


total current expenditures for public elementary-secondary education from ARRA funds: Include expenditures for instruction, support services, and noninstruction, functions 1000 through 3200, that are made from ARRA funds. [ARRATE5]


total current expenditures for community services, adult education, and other programs outside of public elementary-secondary education from ARRA funds: Expenditures from ARRA funds for the community services nonproperty item and direct cost programs subtotal, including Non-Public School


Programs (500), Adult/Continuing Education Programs (600), and Community Services Programs (800). [ARRAE81Z]


property expenditures from ARRA funds: Include all property expenditures from ARRA funds for Instruction (1000), Support Services (2000), Food Services (3100), and Enterprise Operations (3200). [ARRATE10]


school construction expenditures from ARRA funds: Include all school construction expenditures from ARRA funds reported under Facilities Acquisition and Construction Services. [ARRASTE6]


expenditures from the Title I funds received under ARRA: Expenditures from the Title I program received under ARRA. [ARRATLEIZ]


direct program support from ARRA funds: Expenditures from ARRA funds that are made by state governments for and on behalf of school districts. [ARRASTE4]


facilities acquisition and construction services: An expenditure function (4000) that includes the acquisition of land and buildings; building construction, remodeling, and additions; the initial installation or extension of service systems and other built-in equipment; and site improvement. [E61, E62, E63, and subtotal STE6.]


federal revenues: Include direct grants-in-aid to schools or agencies, funds distributed through a state or intermediate agency, and revenues in lieu of taxes to compensate a school district for nontaxable federal institutions within a district’s boundary. [R4A, R4B, R4C, R4D, and subtotal STR4.]


food services: A subfunction (3100) of noninstructional services (3000). Food services are activities that provide food to students and staff in a school or LEA. These services include preparing and serving regular and incidental meals or snacks in connection with school activities as well as delivery of food to schools. [E3A11, E3A12, E3A13, E3A14, E3A2, E3A16, and subtotal E3A1. NOTE: E3A1 does not include E3A2.]


function: A category of expenditure defining the activity supported by the service or commodity bought.


general administration: One of nine subfunctions (2300) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes expenditures for the board of education and administration of LEAs. [E214, E224, E234, E244, E254, E264, and subtotal STE24. NOTE: STE24 does not include E254.]


instruction: Current expenditures for activities directly associated with the interaction between teachers and students, including teacher salaries and benefits, supplies (such as textbooks), and purchased instructional services. [E11, E12, E13, E14, E15, E16, E17, E18, and subtotal STE1. Variables E15 and E17 are not included in STE1.]


instructional staff support services: One of nine subfunctions (2200) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes instructional staff training, educational media (library and audiovisual), and other instructional staff support services. [E213, E223, E233, E243, E253, E263, and subtotal STE23. NOTE: STE23 does not

include E253.]


intermediate sources of revenue: Education agencies with fundraising capabilities that operate between the state and local government levels. One example is New York’s Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES). Intermediate revenues are included in local revenue totals. [R2]


local education agency (LEA): The government agency at the local level whose primary responsibility is to operate public schools or to contract for public school services.


local revenues: Include revenues from such sources as local property and nonproperty taxes, investments, and student activities such as textbook sales, transportation and tuition fees, and food service revenues. [R1A, R1B, R1C, R1D, R1E, R1F, R1G, R1H, R1I, R1J, R1K, R1L, R1M, R1N, and subtotal STR1. R1F and R1H are not included in STR1.]


NPEFS: National Public Education Financial Survey, a component of the Common Core of Data (CCD).


object: A category of expenditure defining the service or commodity bought.


operations and maintenance: One of nine subfunctions (2600) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes expenditures for the supervision of operations and maintenance, the operation of buildings, the care and upkeep of grounds and equipment, vehicle operations (other than student transportation) and maintenance, and security. [E216, E226, E236, E246, E256, E266, and subtotal STE26. NOTE: STE26 does not include E256.]


other support services: Combines three of nine subfunctions (2500, 2800, and 2900). It includes expenditures for business support services (activities concerned with the fiscal operation of the LEA), central support services (activities, other than general administration, which support each of the other instructional and support services programs, including planning, research, development, evaluation, information, and data processing services), and other support services expenditures not reported elsewhere. [E218, E228, E238, E248, E258, E268, and subtotal STE28. NOTE: STE28 does not

include E258.]


property: One of six expenditure objects (700). Property includes expenditures for initial, additional, and replacement furniture and fixtures such as desks, file cabinets, computers, copying machines, printing equipment, and other equipment. Property expenditures are not included in current expenditure subtotals. [E17, E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258, E3A2, E3B2, E62, E63, E82, E91, and subtotal TE10.

Property variables are excluded from all totals and subtotals in the file except for


variables TE25, TE10, and TE11. Support services subtotal TE25 is the sum of E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, and E258.]


purchased services: One of six expenditure objects. It is for professional and technical services and the renting of equipment. [E13, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E3A13, and E3B13. TE23 is the sum of E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237,

and E238.]


revenues: Additions to assets that do not incur an obligation that must be met at some future date, do not represent exchanges of fixed assets, and are available for expenditure by the local education agencies in the state. Revenues include funds from local, intermediate, state, and federal sources.


salaries: One of six expenditure objects (100). It includes the gross salaries of permanent and temporary staff on the payroll of LEAs, including those substituting for permanent employees. Salaries for full- and part-time staff are included along with overtime and salaries for staff on sabbatical leave. Also included are supplemental amounts for additional duties such as coaching or supervising extracurricular activities, bus supervision, and summer school teaching. [E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E3A11, and E3B11. Support services subtotal TE21 is the sum of E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, and E218.]


school administration: One of nine subfunctions (2400) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes expenditures for the office of the principal, full-time department chairpersons, and graduation expenses. [E215, E225, E235, E245, E255, E265, and subtotal STE25. STE25 does not include E255.]


state revenues: Include both direct funds from state governments and funds in lieu of taxation. Revenues in lieu of taxes are paid to compensate a school district for nontaxable state institutions or facilities within the district’s boundary. [R3]


student membership: Annual headcount of students enrolled in school on October 1 or the school day closest to that date. In any given year, some small schools will not have any students.


student support services: One of nine subfunctions (2100) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes attendance and social work, guidance, health, psychological services, speech pathology, audiology, and other student support services. [E212, E222, E232, E242, E252, E262, and subtotal STE22. NOTE: STE22

does not include E252.]


student transportation: One of nine subfunctions (2700) within the expenditure function support services (2000). It includes expenses for the supervision, vehicle operation, monitoring, and vehicle servicing and maintenance associated with student transportation services. [E217, E227, E237, E247, E257, E267, and subtotal STE27. NOTE: STE27 does not include E257.]


supplies: One of six expenditure objects (line item 600). Supplies are items that are consumed, wear out, or deteriorate through use, or items that lose their identity through fabrication or incorporation into different or more complex units or substances. These include expenditures for general supplies; paper and other materials required for printing and copying; and books, periodicals, and reference materials. [E16, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E3A14, and E3B14. Support services subtotal TE24 is the sum of E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, and E248.]


support services: An expenditure function (2000) divided into nine subfunctions: student support services (2100), instructional staff support (2200), general administration (2300), school administration (2400), operations and maintenance (2600), student

transportation (2700), and other support services (2500, 2800, 2900). [Support services subtotal STE2T is the sum of subtotals STE22, STE23, STE24, STE25, STE26, STE27, and STE28. STE2T is also the sum of subtotals TE21, TE22, TE23, TE24 and TE26.]


teacher salaries - other programs: Salaries for teachers in programs other than regular education, special education or vocational education. Include salaries in alternative education programs. [E11D]


teacher salaries - regular education: Salaries for teachers in regular education programs, grades: Prekindergarten, Kindergarten, Ungraded and Grades 1 through

12. Missing data are included in the amount reported for Instruction Salaries. Include salaries in alternative education programs. [E11A]


teacher salaries - special education: Salaries for teachers in special education programs, relating to intellectual disability, orthopedic impairment, emotional disturbance, developmental delay, specific learning disabilities, multiple disabilities, hearing impairment, other health impairments, visual impairments including blindness, autism, deaf-blindness, traumatic brain injury, and speech or language impairments. Include salaries in alternative education programs. [E11B]


teacher salaries - vocational education: Salaries for teachers in vocational and technical programs. Include salaries in alternative education programs. [E11C]


textbook expenditures: Expenditures for textbooks used in instructing students. Missing data are included in the amount reported Instruction Supplies. [E2]

Appendix C—State Abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) State Codes

Table C-1. State abbreviations and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) state codes, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012


State or jurisdiction

State abbreviation1

ANSI

state code2

State or State

jurisdiction abbreviation1

ANSI

state code2

Alabama

AL

01

New Jersey

NJ

34

Alaska

AK

02

New Mexico

NM

35

Arizona

AZ

04

New York

NY

36

Arkansas

AR

05

North Carolina

NC

37

California

CA

06

North Dakota

ND

38

Colorado

CO

08

Ohio

OH

39

Connecticut

CT

09

Oklahoma

OK

40

Delaware

DE

10

Oregon

OR

41

District of Columbia

DC

11

Pennsylvania

PA

42

Florida

FL

12

Rhode Island

RI

44

Georgia

GA

13

South Carolina

SC

45

Hawaii

HI

15

South Dakota

SD

46

Idaho

ID

16

Tennessee

TN

47

Illinois

IL

17

Texas

TX

48

Indiana

IN

18

Utah

UT

49

Iowa

IA

19

Vermont

VT

50

Kansas

KS

20

Virginia

VA

51

Kentucky

KY

21

Washington

WA

53

Louisiana

LA

22

West Virginia

WV

54

Maine

ME

23

Wisconsin

WI

55




Wyoming

WY

56

Maryland

MD

24




Massachusetts

MA

25

American Samoa

AS

60

Michigan

MI

26




Minnesota

MN

27

Guam

GU

66

Mississippi

MS

28





Missouri


MO


29

Commonwealth of the

Northern Mariana Islands MP


69

Montana

MT

30




Nebraska

NE

31

Puerto Rico

PR

72

Nevada

NV

32




New Hampshire

NH

33

U.S. Virgin Islands

VI

78

1 U.S. Postal Service state abbreviation codes.

2 American National Standards Institute state codes (01–78).

SOURCE: U.S. Census Bureau, Geography Division, Geographic Standards and Criteria Branch. (2012) “Codes for the Identification of the States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Insular Areas of the United States” (INCITS 38:2009).


The following is a state-by-state list of the imputations and edits in the fiscal year 2012 stfis12_1a NPEFS data file. Data elements are denoted by the variable names in the data file. For more information, see section II.B. “Imputations” in the User’s Guide and Appendix A—Record Layout and Description of Data Elements in the documentation.

ALASKA

R1D contains R1C using TR


ARIZONA

E4B1 distribute by destination E217, E227, E237, E247, E267

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268

E81 impute based on (TE11-E81) R1L contains R1N using TR

TE25 totals E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258 using TE11


ARKANSAS

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E3A12 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E3A11

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


CALIFORNIA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268

E4E2 distribute by destination E17, E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258, E3A2


CONNECTICUT

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E3A12 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E3A11

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268

E4E2 distribute by destination E17, E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258, E3A2 E62 contains E61, E63 using TE11

E81 impute based on (TE11-E81) E82 impute based on (TE11-E82) R5 impute/import TR


FLORIDA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


GEORGIA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


IDAHO

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E3A12 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E3A11

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18 R1E contains R1N using TR


ILLINOIS

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268

E62 contains E61 using TE11


INDIANA

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218


LOUISIANA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


MAINE

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215


MARYLAND

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E225, E228 using E11, E212, E213, E215, E218


MASSACHUSETTS

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


E4E2 distribute by dest. E17, E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258, E3A2


MINNESOTA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268

E62 contains E61 using TE11


MISSISSIPPI

E62 contains E63 using TE11


MISSOURI

E13 contains E18 using TE11 E61 contains E63 using TE11


NEBRASKA

E62 contains E61 using TE11 E81 contains E82 using TE11 R4B contains R4C using TR


NEW HAMPSHIRE

E62 contains E63 using TE11


NEW JERSEY

R4A contains R4D using TR


NEW YORK

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


RHODE ISLAND

E4C1 distribute by salary E12, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E3A12 using E11, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E3A11

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268




SOUTH DAKOTA

E62 contains E61 using TE11


VIRGINIA

E62 contains E63 using TE11 R1D contains R1C using TR


WASHINGTON

E15 contains E14 using TE11


WEST VIRGINIA

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


WISCONSIN

E4E1 distribute by destination E11, E12, E13, E16, E18, E212, E213, E214, E215, E216, E217, E218, E222, E223, E224, E225, E226, E227, E228, E232, E233, E234, E235, E236, E237, E238, E242, E243, E244, E245, E246, E247, E248, E262, E263, E264, E265, E266, E267, E268


AMERICAN SAMOA

E268 contains E238, E248 using TE11


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

E61 contains E63 using TE11


U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS

TE25 totals E252, E253, E254, E255, E256, E257, E258 using TE11


National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS) FY 2012 Fiscal Data Plan


Direct Program Support / State Payments on Behalf of the Local Education Agency (LEA)


Note: Both the NPEFS and Annual Survey of School System Finances (F-33) use your responses to questions 1-4 below to analyze and process the Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf of the LEA sections of the surveys. It is critical that these questions be completed as accurately as possible so that state expenditures on behalf of local education agencies are reflected correctly on the NPEFS and F- 33 surveys.


In some instances, the amounts requested in question 4 are missing in the Fiscal Data Plan, yet are included within the Direct Program Support section of NPEFS. If applicable to your state, the amounts reported in question 4 below should match the amounts reported within the Direct Program Support section of NPEFS unless the Direct Program Support amounts have been functionalized within the survey. If the amounts have been functionalized, then Direct Program Support payments will still need to be broken out and reported separately under question 4.


  1. In your state, do local education agencies receive funds from the state classified as Direct Program Support (NPEFS)/State Payments on Behalf of the LEA (F-33)?


    • Yes (Please go to question 2.)


    • No (Please go to question 5.)



  1. Are these amounts reported in NPEFS?


    • Yes (Please go to question 2a.)


    • No (Please go to question 3.)


2a. If yes, where are these amounts reported in NPEFS? (Check all that apply.)


      • Revenues

      • Expenditures


  1. How are these amounts reported in F-33?


    • Provided as district-by-district data


    • Provided as state totals data


    • Provided only on data plan


    • Amounts are not reported in F-33


  1. Please provide the TOTAL Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf of LEA amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions).


4a. Textbooks for Public School Students

  1. Non-Property $


  1. Property Only $


4b. Transportation for Public School Students

  1. Non-Property $


  1. Property Only $



4c. Employee Benefits for Public School Employees

  1. Non-Property $


  1. Property Only $


4d. If you are reporting Direct Program Support expenditures for Employee Benefits, please indicate the general categories of benefits these expenditures support: (Check all that apply.)


    • Retirement

    • Health Insurance

    • Other (please specify)



4e. Direct Program Support for Private School Students

  1. Non-Property $


  1. Property Only $



4f. Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students

  1. Non-Property $


If applicable, please specify program name(s)


  1. Property Only $


If applicable, please specify program name(s)



District Activities vs. Student Activities




Note: LEAs often confuse District Activities with Student Activities. Before answering question 5, please ensure that the correct definitions for District Activities and Student Activities are completely understood. District activity funds reflect school district finances and should be included within the finances reported on NPEFS. School activity funds are generally fiduciary in nature (i.e., managed by student organizations, not school districts) and should be excluded from finances reported on NPEFS. Please read the complete definitions that are provided in the Financial Accounting for Local and State School Systems: 2009 Edition.




  1. Does your state report District Activities?



    • Yes


    • No



5a. If answer is no, please provide an explanation:



.


American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA)


  1. Are you including ARRA Revenues in the amounts you report for Federal Revenues?


Yes


No


6a. If answer is yes, please indicate where in the Revenue from Federal Sources section ARRA Revenues are reported. (Check all that apply.)


  • Grants-in-Aid Direct from the Federal Government

  • Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State

  • Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through other Intermediate Agencies

  • Other Revenue from Federal Sources


6b. If answer is no, please provide an explanation:



.




  1. Are you including expenditures from ARRA funds in your reporting of expenditures in the main part of the NPEFS survey (For example: expenditures for instruction, support services, etc.)?



    • Yes


    • No


7a. If answer is no, please provide an explanation:



.


ARRA Expenditure Exhibit Section


Note: Before answering questions 8-9 below, please note that ARRA expenditure amounts are requested in section 7 of the NPEFS web form. It has been determined that there is some confusion on how to respond to the first two categories in the ARRA exhibit section. The first category requests the amount of ARRA funds that was expended for instruction-related current expenditures, while the second category requests the amount of ARRA funds that was expended for all current expenditures (which should include the instruction expenditures from the first category).


  1. Do you have ARRA expenditures for Instruction?


    • Yes


    • No


8a.If no, please explain



  1. Do you have Total Current Expenditures for ARRA?


    • Yes


    • No


9a. If no, please explain





Flag Fields


Note: The NPEFS web form has flag fields containing M (missing) and N (non-applicable) flag values for each category. NCES and the Census Bureau are striving to ensure respondents are assigning flag values correctly so that “missing,” and “nonapplicable” zeroes can be properly distinguished. Please read the complete definitions provided in the NPEFS Instruction Booklet (p. 22).


  1. Please indicate that you understand the proper usage of flag fields and that you will be using them when reporting throughout the web form.


    • Yes


    • No


Prekindergarten (PK) Data



  1. Please indicate below if finance data for PK students is included in NPEFS and F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012: (Check all that apply.)

  • Included in FY 2011 NPEFS

  • Included in FY 2012 NPEFS

  • Included in FY 2011 F-33

  • Included in FY 2012 F-33


Finance Data for Districts with Charter Schools


  1. Please indicate below if your state maintains finance data for any of the following types of districts: (Check all that apply.)


  • Districts where all associated schools are charter schools


  • Districts where all associated schools are noncharter schools


  • Districts where some associated schools are charter schools and some are noncharter schools


  • Other (Please explain)


12a. Please indicate below if finance data for charter schools is included in NPEFS and F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012: (Check all that apply.)

  • Included in FY 2011 NPEFS

  • Included in FY 2012 NPEFS

  • Included in FY 2011 F-33

  • Included in FY 2012 F-33




NPEFS Average Daily Attendance (ADA)


  1. When calculating ADA on the NPEFS survey, do you include summer school attendance?

    • Yes (Please go to question 13a.)

    • No



13a. If yes, what weight or adjustment do you use with these data when adding them into the state total ADA?








NPEFS Student Membership


  1. NCES often uses student membership from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey to calculate per pupil expenditures. When we use student membership data with NPEFS finance data, should we adjust the membership data to agree with finance data?


    • Yes


    • No


School-level Finance Data



  1. Does your state currently maintain school-level finance data?


    • Yes, for all public schools in the state (including charter schools).


    • Yes, for all public schools in the state except charter schools.


    • No. State does not maintain school-level finance data, or only has the data for some schools.


15a. If you make school-level financial data available on your website, please provide the URL:


Exhibit F-1. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 1 through 3, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012 In your state, do

local education agencies receive funds from the state classified as Direct Program Support

(NPEFS)/State Payments on Behalf of the LEA (F-33)?

Are these amounts reported in NPEFS?

If yes, where are these amounts reported in NPEFS?

Q. 2.a



How are these amounts reported in F-33?


State or jurisdiction

Q. 1

Q. 2

Revenues

Expenditures

Q. 3

Alabama

No

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Arizona

No

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

California

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Provided only on data plan

Colorado

No

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Delaware

No

District of Columbia

No

Florida

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Hawaii

No

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Illinois

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

State totals

Iowa

No

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Kentucky

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Maine

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

State totals

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Michigan

No

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Mississippi

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Missouri

No

Montana

No

Nebraska

No

Nevada

No

New Hampshire

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

State totals

New Jersey

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

New Mexico

No

New York

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

North Carolina

No

North Dakota

No

Ohio

No

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

Oregon

No

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Yes

Amounts not reported in F-33

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District-by-district

See notes at end of exhibit.




Exhibit F-1. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 1 through 3, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued


Do local education agencies in your state receive Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf monies from the state?





Are these amounts reported in NPEFS?






If yes, where are these amounts reported in NPEFS?

Q. 2.a





How are these amounts reported in F- 33?


State or jurisdiction

Q. 1

Q. 2

Revenues

Expenditures

Q. 3

South Carolina


South Dakota

Yes


Yes

Yes


Yes

Yes


Yes

Yes


Yes

State totals District-by- district

Tennessee


Texas

No


Yes


Yes


Yes


Yes

District-by- district

Utah

No


Vermont


Yes


Yes


Yes


Yes

District-by- district

Virginia

No

Washington West Virginia


Wisconsin

No Yes


Yes

Yes


Yes

Yes


Yes


Yes

District-by- district Amounts not reported in F-33

Wyoming

No

Other jurisdictions American Samoa


No





Guam Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands

No



Yes



Yes





Yes



State totals



Puerto Rico



Yes



Yes





Yes

Amounts are not reported in F-33

U.S. Virgin Islands

No

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.





Shape28 Exhibit F-2. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.a.1 through 4.b.2, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012 Please provide the TOTAL Direct Program Support/State Payments on

Behalf of LEA amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those

reported under their appropriate functions)





State or jurisdiction

Textbooks for Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.a.1

Textbooks for Public School Students (Property only) Q.4.a.2

Transportation for Public School Students (Non- Property)

Q.4.b.1

Transportation for Public School Students (Property only) Q.4.b.2

Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas

$0

0

$0

0

$0

0

$0

0

California

0

0

0

0

Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida

0


0

0


0

0


0

0


0

Georgia Hawaii Idaho

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Illinois

0

0

0

0

Indiana

0

0

0

0

Iowa Kansas

0

0

0

0

Kentucky

0

0

0

0

Louisiana

0

0

0

0

Maine

0

0

0

0

Maryland

0

0

0

0

Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Mississippi

51,837

0

0

0

Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire


0


0


0


0

New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota

0

238,048,960

0

0

0

2,838,239,642

0

0

Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Rhode Island

0

0

0

0

See notes at end of exhibit.




Shape29 Exhibit F-2. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.a.1 through 4.b.2, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf

amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their

appropriate functions) Textbooks for




State or jurisdiction

Public School

Students (Non- Property) Q.4.a.1

Textbooks for

Public School Students (Property only) Q.4.a.2

Transportation for

Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.b.1

Transportation

for Public School Students (Property only) Q.4.b.2

South Carolina

$32,987,008

$0

$80,561,613

$25,471,768

South Dakota Tennessee Texas

Utah

0

176,469,069

0


0

19,542,860

0


Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Wisconsin

0

0

0

0

Shape30 Shape31 Shape32 Shape33 Wyoming † † Other

jurisdictions

American


Samoa

Guam

Commonwealth





of





the Northern





Mariana Islands

0

0

0

0

Puerto Rico

0

0

0

0

U.S. Virgin





Islands

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.



Exhibit F-3. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.c through 4.d, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012 Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state

(include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)

If you are reporting Direct Program Support expenditures

Employee Benefits for Public School Employees

Q.4.c

for Employee Benefits, please indicate the general categories of benefits these expenditures support Q.4.d


State or jurisdiction

Non-Property Q.4.c.1

Property Q.4.c.2


Retirement

Health Insurance


Other

Alabama

Alaska

$253,723,886

$0

Yes

Arizona

Arkansas

59,676,671

0

Yes

Yes

California

1,213,272,001

0

Yes

Colorado

Connecticut

847,558,128

0

Yes

Yes

Delaware District of Columbia






Florida

0

0

Georgia

0

0

Yes

Yes

Hawaii



Idaho



1,379,435



0





Yes.

Unemployment insurance

Illinois

2,401,233,998

0

Yes

Indiana

981,381,531

0

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Kansas



Kentucky

314,466,992



978,781,672

0



0

Yes



Yes



Yes

Yes. Life insurance, HRA, debt service, technology


Louisiana


0


0



Yes. Specification not available

Maine

169,634,324

0

Yes

Maryland

811,008,017

0

Yes

Massachusetts

939,895,000

0

Yes

Michigan

Minnesota

0

0

Mississippi

2,922,874

0

Yes

Yes

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

0

0

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.



Exhibit F-3. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.c through 4.d, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state

(include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)

If you are reporting Direct Program Support expenditures for Employee Benefits, please indicate the

Employee Benefits for Public School Employees

Q.4.c

general categories of benefits these expenditures support

Q.4.d


State or jurisdiction

Non-Property

Q.4.c.1

Property

Q.4.c.2 Retirement

Health

Insurance Other

New Jersey New Mexico







New York North Carolina North Dakota

$949,015,669







12,988,986,916

$0







0

Yes







Yes







Yes

Yes. Workers compensation, life insurance, unemployment insurance, disability insurance

Ohio

Oklahoma

33,792,333

0

Yes

Oregon

Pennsylvania

0

0

Rhode Island

80,007,927

0

Yes

South Carolina

0

0

South Dakota

0

0

Tennessee

Texas

1,168,112,518

Yes

Yes

Yes

Utah

Vermont

51,672,307

0

Yes

Virginia

Washington

West Virginia

451,696,668

0

Yes

Yes

Wisconsin

0

0

Wyoming

Other jurisdictions American Samoa






Guam Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands



0



0







Puerto Rico

0

0

U.S. Virgin Islands

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.



Exhibit F-4. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 4.e.1 through 4.f.2, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012

Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)









State or jurisdiction

Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.e.1


Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Property) Q.4.e.2



Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.f.1








Program Name(s) Q.4.f.1





Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Property) Q.4.f.2








Program Name(s) Q.4.f.2

Alabama

Alaska

$0

$0

$0

$0

Arizona

Arkansas


California

0


0

0


0

77,597,816


1,275,795,022

Some charter schools

0


24,237,799

Some charter schools

Colorado

0

0

0

Child Nutrition programs run by

0


State Technical High

Connecticut

23,839,096

0

446,499,495

state agencies

13,506,398

School programs

Delaware District of Columbia












Florida






0






0






475,375,171

FL School for Deaf

& Blind, FL Virtual School, McKay Scholarships, and FL Tax Credit Scholarships






0








Georgia



0



0



29,522,571

State Schools for Blind & Deaf, Virtual School



0



Hawaii



Idaho



0



0



3,191,584

Idaho Dept. of Juvenile Corrections



0




Illinois


0


0


31,901,450

Direct Support Other


0


Indiana

0

0

0

0

Iowa

Kansas

0

0

0

0

Kentucky

0

0

4,123,473

Voc. Ed.

0



Louisiana



22,165,815



0



58,105,012

LSDVI, SSD,

Louisiana Special Education Center



0



Maine

0

0

0

0

See notes at end of exhibit.

Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)









State or jurisdiction

Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.e.1


Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Property) Q.4.e.2

Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.f.1








Program Name(s) Q.4.f.1





Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Property) Q.4.f.2







Program Name(s) Q.4.f.2

Maryland

$0

$0

$0


Massachusetts

$0

Massachusetts Commonwealth



Massachusetts



0



0



345,503,516

Commonwealth charter school current expenditures



44,165,836

charter school capital outlay expenditures

Michigan






Minnesota






0






0






43,670,956

BIA Tribal Schools, Department of Corrections, Faribault Academies, Perpich Center for the Arts, Enrollment Options






0











MS School for


MS School for Deaf/Blind, Art


Mississippi


5,486,801


0


15,029,548

Deaf/Blind, Art School and MSMS


112,631

School and MSMS

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada New Hampshire


0


0


0



0




New Jersey



0



0



370,113,308

Debt service for state issued school construction bonds.



0



New Mexico

1,614,398,4

District payments to

New York

22

0

930,709,570

charter schools

0

North Carolina

North Dakota

Ohio




Oklahoma




0




0




165,671,581

Commodities/Student Assessment/Career Tech Expenditures for Salaries







Oregon

106,101,36

Pennsylvania


Rhode Island

8


0

0


0

0


0


0


69,648,322

School Housing Aid

South Carolina


South Dakota

0


0

0


0

1,925,041


6,755,587

Community Education


Connecting Schools

0


270,113

Connecting Schools

Tennessee

See notes at end of exhibit.

Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)









State or jurisdiction

Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.e.1


Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Property) Q.4.e.2


Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.f.1








Program Name(s) Q.4.f.1

Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Property) Q.4.f.2







Program Name(s) Q.4.f.2





Amachi, B & M Gates Grant - Tx High







School Project Eval, Best Buddies,







Campus Turnaround Team Support,







Charter School Technical Assist Network,







Communities in Schools, Early Childhood







Education, Early Childhood School







Readiness Program, Early Childhood







State Ctr. at UTHSC - School Readiness







Model, Early College High School and T-







STEM, Educator Excellence Awards







Program, Project Share Support Center,







Online Teacher Mentor Program, Math







and Science Diagnostic Platform







Universal Screener, Online Platform







Statewide Licenses, FSP-







Assessment/HB3, FSP-Funding for the







Texas Youth Commission, FSP-Incentive







Aid, Funding for Dyslexia, Funding for







Regional Education Service Centers, GR-







Adult Education, GR-MOE Temporary







Assistance for Needy Families, GR-







School Lunch Matching, Humanities







Texas, Juvenile Justice Alternative







Education Program, Non-Ed Community







Based Support, Online College Prep







(Formerly part of SSI), Reading







Diagnostic/TPRI/TEJAS Lee Assessment,







Reasoning Mind , Regional Day School -







Deaf, Specialty License Plate Fees,







Statewide Services for Students with







Visual Impairments, Steroid Testing,







Student Success Initiative, Supplemental







Education and Academic Readiness ,







Teach for America, TEKS Review and







Revision, Texas Academic Innovation,







Texas Advanced Placement Incentive,







Textbooks and Instructional Materials,




Texas




$892,222,385

Virtual School Program, Windham School District



Utah

Vermont

$0

$0

$0

$0

Virginia

See notes at end of exhibit.

Please provide the Total Direct Program Support/State Payments on Behalf amounts in your state (include all amounts, even those reported under their appropriate functions)









State or jurisdiction


Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.e.1



Direct Program Support for Private School Students (Property) Q.4.e.2

Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Non- Property) Q.4.f.1









Program Name(s) Q.4.f.1



Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (Property) Q.4.f.2








Program Name(s) Q.4.f.2

Washington





West Virginia





$1,840,529





$0





$0









$20,177,224

Tools for School, 21st Century Technology

Wisconsin

142,418,815

0

53,398,700

State charter schools

0

Wyoming

Other jurisdictions American Samoa



















Guam Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands





$0





$0





$0









$0





Puerto Rico

55,741,739

0

0

0

U.S. Virgin Islands







  • Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-5. Fiscal data plan responses to question 5 through 5.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012






State or jurisdiction

Does your state report District Activities?

Q. 5



If answer is no, please provide an explanation.

Q. 5.a

Alabama

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Arkansas

Yes




California




No

In California, revenues for extra-curricular activities are typically collected and managed by student organizations rather than by school districts. Incidental revenues that school districts do collect for extra-curricular activities are reported as other local revenue.

Colorado

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Delaware

Yes

District of Columbia

No

Florida

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Hawaii

Yes

Idaho

Yes

Illinois

Yes

Indiana

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Kentucky

Yes

Louisiana

Yes

Maine

Yes





Maryland





No

Until the last fiscal year 2011, Maryland consistently reported Student Activities as Enterprise Operation expenditures with the matching revenue as District Activities Revenue. In accordance with the clarification in this Data Plan Note, we are no longer reporting Student Activities expenditures and the matching District Activity Revenue, starting with FY 2012 NPEFS.

Massachusetts

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Mississippi

Yes

Missouri

Yes

Montana

Yes

Nebraska

Yes

Nevada

Yes

New Hampshire

Yes

New Jersey

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

New York

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

North Dakota

Yes

Ohio


Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-5. Fiscal data plan responses to question 5 through 5.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued






State or jurisdiction

Does your state report District Activities?

Q. 5




If answer is no, please provide an explanation.

Q. 5.a

South Carolina

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Texas

Yes

Utah

Yes



Vermont



Yes

The State is aware of the differences, however, it cannot be known with certainty whether the LEA's are accounting separately for the activities since Vermont does not currently collect data by fund.

Virginia

No

Virginia does not have District Activities Revenue to report.

Washington

Yes

West Virginia

Yes

Wisconsin

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa

Yes

We are a unitary system and thus function as both an LEA and an SEA.

Guam

No

We are a government entity.

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands



No



Puerto Rico

Yes


U.S. Virgin Islands


No

The department is headed by a Commissioner, there are no boards. Funds are distributed by population and needs.

  • Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-6. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 6 through 6.b, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012

Shape42




If answer is yes, please indicate where in the Revenue from Federal

Sources section ARRA Revenues are reported.









State or jurisdiction


Are you including ARRA

Revenues in the amounts you report for Federal Revenues? Q.6






Grants-in-Aid Direct from the Federal Government Q.6.a







Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State Q.6.a


Grants-in- Aid from the Federal Government through other Intermediate Agencies Q.6.a





Other Revenue from Federal Sources Q.6.a






If answer is no, please provide an explanation. Q.6.b

Alabama

Yes

Yes

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Yes

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes


Yes


Yes



Yes


Florida

Yes

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Yes

Yes

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Illinois

Yes

Yes

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kentucky

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Maine

Yes

Yes

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Mississippi

Yes

Yes

Yes

Missouri

Yes

Yes

Montana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Nebraska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Nevada

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Hampshire

Yes

Yes

New Jersey

Yes

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

Yes

New York

Yes

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

Yes

North Dakota

Yes

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.



Exhibit F-6. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 6 through 6.b, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued




If answer is yes, please indicate where in the Revenue from

Federal Sources section ARRA Revenues are reported.









State or jurisdiction




Are you including ARRA Revenues in the amounts you report for Federal Revenues?

Q.6






Grants-in-Aid Direct from the Federal Government Q.6.a






Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State Q.6.a


Grants-in- Aid from the Federal Government through other Intermediate Agencies Q.6.a





Other Revenue from Federal Sources Q.6.a







If answer is no, please provide an explanation.

Q.6.b

Ohio

Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

Yes

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

Yes

Vermont

Yes

Yes

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Washington

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

West Virginia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Wisconsin

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Yes

Other Jurisdictions




American Samoa




No




Yes










Our expenditures under ARRA funding ended in FY 2011.

Guam

Yes

Yes


Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands




No













All ARRA

Expenditures were reported in FY 2011.

Puerto Rico

Yes

Yes



Virgin Islands



No









No ARRA

revenues received in 2012.

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-7. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 7 through 8.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012











State or jurisdiction

Are you including expenditures from ARRA funds in your reporting of expenditures in the main part of the NPEFS survey (For example: expenditures for instruction, support services, etc.)?

Q.7








If answer is no, please provide an explanation. Q.7.a









Do you have ARRA expenditures for Instruction?

Q.8










If answer is no, please provide an explanation. Q.8.a

Alabama

Yes

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Yes

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes



Yes


Florida

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Yes

Yes

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Illinois

Yes

Yes

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Kentucky

Yes

Yes

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Maine

Yes

Yes

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Mississippi

Yes

Yes

Missouri

Yes

Yes

Montana

Yes

Yes

Nebraska

Yes

Yes

Nevada

Yes

Yes

New Hampshire

Yes

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-7. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 7 through 8.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued














State or jurisdiction

Are you including expenditures from ARRA funds in your

reporting of expenditures in the main part of the NPEFS survey (For

example: expenditures for instruction, support services, etc.)?

Q.7










If answer is no, please provide an explanation. Q.7.a











Do you have ARRA expenditures for Instruction?

Q.8












If answer is no, please provide an explanation. Q.8.a

New Jersey

Yes

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

Yes

New York

Yes

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

Yes

North Dakota

Yes

Yes

Ohio

Yes

Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

Yes

Vermont

Yes

Yes

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Washington

Yes

Yes

West Virginia

Yes

Yes

Wisconsin

Yes

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Yes

Other Jurisdictions


American Samoa



No

We have no ARRA programs this year. Our funding ended in FY 2011.



No

We have no ARRA programs this year. Our funding ended in FY 2011.

Guam

Yes

Yes

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands



No


All ARRA Expenditures were reported in FY 2011.



No


All ARRA Expenditures were reported in FY 2011.

Puerto Rico

Yes

Yes

Virgin Islands

Yes

Yes

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Shape43 Exhibit F-8. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 9 through 10, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012







State or jurisdiction




Do you have Total Current Expenditures for ARRA?

Q.9





If answer is no, please provide an explanation.

Q.9.a

Please indicate that you understand the proper usage of flag fields and that you will be using them when reporting throughout the web form.

Q.10

Alabama

Yes

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Yes

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes



Yes

Florida

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Yes

Yes

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Illinois

Yes

Yes

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Kentucky

Yes

Yes

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Maine

Yes

Yes

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Mississippi

Yes

Yes

Missouri

Yes

Yes

Montana

Yes

Yes

Nebraska

Yes

Yes

Nevada

Yes

No

New Hampshire


Yes



Yes

New Jersey

Yes

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

Yes

New York

Yes

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

Yes

North Dakota

Yes

Yes

Ohio

Yes

Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Shape44 Exhibit F-8. Fiscal data plan responses to questions 9 through 10, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012-—continued







State or jurisdiction




Do you have Total Current Expenditures for ARRA?

Q.9





If answer is no, please provide an explanation.

Q.9.a

Please indicate that you understand the proper usage of flag fields and that you will be using them when reporting throughout the web form.

Q.10

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

Yes

Vermont

Yes

Yes

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Washington

Yes

Yes

West Virginia

Yes

Yes

Wisconsin

Yes

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Yes

Other jurisdictions

American Samoa


No

We have no ARRA programs this year. Our funding ended in FY 2011.


Yes

Guam

Yes

Yes

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands



No


All ARRA Expenditures were reported in FY 2011.



Yes

Puerto Rico

Yes

Yes

U.S. Virgin Islands


Yes



Yes

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Shape45 Exhibit F-9. Fiscal data plan responses to question 11, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012



Please indicate if finance data for PK students is included in NPEFS and

F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012:



State or jurisdiction


Included in FY 2011 NPEFS Q.11


Included in FY 2012 NPEFS Q.11


Included in FY 2011 F-33 Q.11


Included in FY 2012 F-33 Q.11

Alabama

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes


Yes


Yes


Yes

Florida

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Illinois

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kentucky

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Maine

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Mississippi

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Missouri

Montana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Nebraska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Nevada

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Hampshire


Yes


Yes


Yes


Yes

New Jersey

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New York

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

North Dakota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Ohio

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Shape46 Exhibit F-9. Fiscal data plan responses to question 11, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued



Please indicate if finance data for PK students is included in NPEFS and

F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012:



State or jurisdiction


Included in FY 2011 NPEFS Q.11


Included in FY 2012 NPEFS Q.11


Included in FY 2011 F-33 Q.11


Included in FY 2012 F-33 Q.11

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Vermont

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Washington

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

West Virginia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Wisconsin

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Wyoming

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa


Yes


Yes



Guam

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands




Yes




Yes







Puerto Rico

Yes

Yes

Virgin Islands

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-10. Fiscal data plan responses to question 12, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012


Please indicate if your state maintains finance data for any of the following types of districts:












State or jurisdiction





Districts where all associated schools are charter schools Q.12






Districts where all associated schools are noncharter schools Q.12

Districts where some associated schools are charter schools and some are noncharter schools Q.12











Other Q.12











Other (Please explain)

Q.12

Alabama

Yes

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Yes

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes


Yes




Florida

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Yes



Idaho









Yes

Idaho collects an annual financial report and an audit report from each public school district and each individual charter school.


Illinois





Yes

Illinois is unable to include charter schools in our finance data at this time.

Indiana

Yes



Iowa





Yes



Yes



All charter schools in Iowa must be part of a public school district. Most districts have no charter schools.





Kansas









Yes





Yes





Kansas charter schools are treated the same as regular accredited schools and finance data is collected only at the LEA level on the USD budget. We do not collect school level finance data.

Kentucky

Yes




Louisiana




Yes




Yes




Yes




The answers above assume districts are equivalent to Local Education Agencies (LEAs). Type 2 and Type 5 charters are LEAs.

Maine

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-10. Fiscal data plan responses to question 12, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued


Please indicate if your state maintains finance data for any of the following types of districts:












State or jurisdiction





Districts where all associated schools are charter schools Q.12






Districts where all associated schools are noncharter schools Q.12

Districts where some associated schools are charter schools and some are noncharter schools Q.12











Other Q.12











Other (Please explain)

Q.12





Maryland

















Yes

Maryland charter schools are public schools. Accordingly, all charter school finance data are in the total data of the local public schools reported to the Maryland State Department of Education.

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Mississippi

Missouri

Yes

Yes

Montana

Yes

Montana currently has no charter schools.

Nebraska


Nevada





Yes

Charter schools are reported separately from school districts, individually.

New Hampshire







New Jersey





Yes

Charter schools report their own finance data independent of any school district.

New Mexico

Yes

New York

Yes






North Carolina






Yes






Yes






Yes






In NC, we have charters and regular districts. Our district = county. Charter schools is chartered only by the state (not district) so we have some counties that include both charters and regular LEA's. We maintain finances for both types.

North Dakota

Ohio

Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Yes

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

Yes

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Yes

Tennessee

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-10. Fiscal data plan responses to question 12, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued


Please indicate if your state maintains finance data for any of the following types of districts:













State or jurisdiction






Districts where all associated schools are charter schools Q.12







Districts where all associated schools are noncharter schools Q.12

Districts where some associated schools are charter schools and some are noncharter schools Q.12











Other Q.12











Other (Please explain)

Q.12

Vermont

Yes

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Washington

Yes



West Virginia





Yes





WV does not have charter schools, so all of the schools are therefore noncharter schools.

Wisconsin

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa






Guam

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
















Puerto Rico

Yes

Virgin Islands

Yes

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Shape49 Exhibit F-11. Fiscal data plan responses to question 12.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012



Please indicate below if finance data for charter schools is included in

NPEFS and F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012:



State or jurisdiction


Included in FY 2011 NPEFS Q.12.a


Included in FY 2012 NPEFS Q.12.a


Included in FY 2011 F-33 Q.12.a


Included in FY 2012 F-33 Q.12.a

Alabama

Alaska

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Arizona

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Arkansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

California

Yes

Yes

Colorado

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

Yes

Delaware

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

District of Columbia


Yes


Yes


Yes


Yes

Florida

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Georgia

Yes

Yes

Hawaii

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Idaho

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Illinois

Indiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Iowa

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kansas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kentucky

Louisiana

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Maine

Maryland

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Massachusetts

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Michigan

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Minnesota

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Mississippi

Missouri

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Hampshire





New Jersey

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Mexico

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New York

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

North Carolina

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

North Dakota

Ohio

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Oklahoma

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Oregon

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Pennsylvania

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Rhode Island

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Shape50 Exhibit F-11. Fiscal data plan responses to question 12.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued



Please indicate below if finance data for charter schools is included in

NPEFS and F-33 data for fiscal years 2011 and 2012:



State or jurisdiction


Included in FY 2011 NPEFS Q.12.a


Included in FY 2012 NPEFS Q.12.a


Included in FY 2011 F-33 Q.12.a


Included in FY 2012 F-33 Q.12.a

South Carolina

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

South Dakota

Tennessee

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Texas

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Utah

Yes

Yes

Vermont

Virginia

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Washington

West Virginia

Wisconsin

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Wyoming

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa





Guam

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands













Puerto Rico

Virgin Islands

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-12. Fiscal data plan responses to question 13 through 14, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012














State or jurisdiction








When calculating ADA on the NPEFS survey, do you include summer school attendance?

Q.13












If yes, what weight or adjustment do you use with these data when adding them into the state total ADA?

Q.13.a

NCES often uses student membership from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey to calculate per pupil expenditures. When we use student membership data with NPEFS finance data, should we adjust the membership data to agree with finance data?

Q.14

Alabama

No

No

Alaska

No

Yes

Arizona

No

No

Arkansas

No

Yes

California

No

No

Colorado

No

Yes

Connecticut

Yes

No

Delaware

No

No





District of Columbia






Yes

LEAs were guided to sum the total student days in attendance for summer school year to the total student days in attendance for the regular school year for the numerator of the ADA calculation. For the denominator, only the number of days schools in regular school year were included.






No

Florida

Yes

None

Yes

Georgia

No

No

Hawaii

No

Yes

Idaho

No

Yes

Illinois

No

No

Indiana

No

Yes




Iowa




Yes

Total student days in attendance for summer school are added to total days in the regular school year prior to dividing by the average number of regular school year days per the instructions.




No








Kansas








Yes

Student full time equivalency (FTE) is calculated on the web application used to collect summer school data.

Districts enter the total student headcount and total minutes per day and total number of days in session. FTE is computed by taking total minutes per day (headcount X minutes per day X days in session) divided by 60 minutes to get the total hours per day instruction. This result is divided by 1,116 hours to get student FTE.








No

Kentucky

No

Yes

Louisiana

No

No

Maine

No

Yes

Maryland

No

No

Massachusetts

Yes

20%

Yes

Michigan

No

Yes

Minnesota

No

No

Mississippi

No

No

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-12. Fiscal data plan responses to question 13 through 14, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued















State or jurisdiction









When calculating ADA on the NPEFS survey, do you include summer school attendance?

Q.13













If yes, what weight or adjustment do you use with these data when adding them into the state total ADA?

Q.13.a

NCES often uses student membership from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey to calculate per pupil expenditures. When we use student membership data with NPEFS finance data, should we adjust the membership data to agree with finance data?

Q.14

Missouri

Yes

The Summer School is added to the Regular Term ADA.

No

Montana

No

No

Nebraska

No

Yes

Nevada

No

Yes

New Hampshire


No



No

New Jersey

No

No

New Mexico

No

Yes

New York

No

No

North Carolina

No

No



North Dakota



Yes

Translated to ADA using attendance hours and credit hours. Example:120 attendance hours/120 credit hours times .25 = .25 ADA.



No

Ohio

No

Yes

Oklahoma

No

No

Oregon

No

Yes

Pennsylvania

No

Yes

Rhode Island

No

Yes

South Carolina

No

Yes

South Dakota

No

Yes

Tennessee

No

Yes

Texas

No

No

Utah

No

Yes

Vermont

No

Yes






Virginia






Yes

Each school division's summer attendance is weighted by (Summer Days in Session/Regular Year Days in Session) for the given division. For example, if division X had 180 days in regular session and 15 days in summer school, the summer attendance would be multiplied by 15/180 = 0.833 before adding into the total ADA.






Yes

Washington

No

Yes

West Virginia

No

Yes


Wisconsin


Yes

We calculate a weighted average to get summer school ADA on the same basis as regular school year.


Yes

Wyoming

No

Yes

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-12. Fiscal data plan responses to question 13 through 14, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued















State or jurisdiction









When calculating ADA on the NPEFS survey, do you include summer school attendance?

Q.13













If yes, what weight or adjustment do you use with these data when adding them into the state total ADA?

Q.13.a

NCES often uses student membership from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey to calculate per pupil expenditures. When we use student membership data with NPEFS finance data, should we adjust the membership data to agree with finance data?

Q.14

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa


No



Yes

Guam

No

No

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands




No







Puerto Rico

No

No

Virgin Islands

No

No

Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Exhibit F-13. Fiscal data plan responses to question 15 through 15.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012








State or jurisdiction



Does your state currently maintain school-level finance data? Q.15






If you make school-level financial data available on your website, please provide the URL:

Q.15.a


Alabama

Yes, except charter schools


Alaska

No

Arizona

No

Arkansas

Yes

California

No

Colorado

No

Connecticut

No

Delaware

No

District of Columbia


Yes


Florida

Yes

http://public2.fldoe.org/TransparencyReports/CostReportSelectionPage.aspx

Georgia

Yes


Hawaii

Yes, except charter schools


Idaho

No

Illinois

No

Indiana

No

Iowa

No

Kansas

No


Kentucky

Yes, except charter schools


Louisiana

No

Maine

No

Maryland

No

Massachusetts

Yes

Michigan

No

Minnesota

Yes

http://w20.education.state.mn.us/MDEAnalytics/Data.jsp

Mississippi

No

Missouri

No

Montana

No

Nebraska

No

Nevada

No

New Hampshire


No


New Jersey

No

New Mexico

No

New York

No

North Carolina

Yes

North Dakota

No

See notes at end of exhibit.


Exhibit F-13. Fiscal data plan responses to question 15.a, by state or jurisdiction: Fiscal year 2012—continued








State or jurisdiction



Does your state currently maintain school-level finance data? Q.15






If you make school-level financial data available on your website, please provide the URL:

Q.15.a

Ohio

No

Oklahoma

Yes

https://sdeweb01.sde.ok.gov/OCAS_Reporting/default.aspx?Year=2012

Oregon

No

Pennsylvania

No


Rhode Island


Yes

http://media.ride.ri.gov/construction/93-All-Expenditure-Account-Strings-with- Descriptions-no-421-422.xlsx

South Carolina

Yes

South Dakota

No

Tennessee

No

Texas

Yes

http://www.tea.state.tx.us/index2.aspx?id=2147495078&menu_id=645&menu_id2=789

Utah

No

Vermont

No

Virginia

No

Washington

No

West Virginia

No

Wisconsin

No

Wyoming

No

Other Jurisdictions

American Samoa


Yes




Guam

Yes, except charter schools



Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands


Yes, except charter schools




Puerto Rico

No

Virgin Islands

No

  • Not available.

Not applicable.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS)," fiscal year 2012, provisional Version 1a.


Number





Percent


Flags





Flags

Variable

Description

Total

R

A

I

T


R

A

I

T

IR1A

FLAG LOCAL REV PROPERTY TAX

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1B

FLAG LOCAL REV NON PROPERTY TAX

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1C

FLAG LOCAL REV LOC GOVT PROP TAX

56

54

2

0

0


96.4

3.6

0.0

0.0

IR1D

FLAG LOCAL REV LOC GOVT NON PROP TAX

56

54

2

0

0


96.4

3.6

0.0

0.0

IR1E

FLAG LOCAL REV INDIVID TUITION

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IR1F

FLAG LOCAL REV TUITION FR LEA’S

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1G

FLAG LOCAL REV TRANSPORT FEES INDIV

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1H

FLAG LOCAL REV TRANSPORT FEES LEA’S

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1I

FLAG LOCAL REV EARNINGS ON INVESTMT

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1J

FLAG LOCAL REV FOOD SERVICE

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1K

FLAG LOCAL REV STUDENT ACTIVITIES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1L

FLAG LOCAL REV OTHER REVS

56

54

2

0

0


96.4

3.6

0.0

0.0

IR1M

FLAG LOCAL REV TEXTBOOK REVS

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR1N

FLAG LOCAL REV SUMMER SCHOOL

56

53

3

0

0


94.6

5.4

0.0

0.0

ISTR1

FLAG LOCAL REV SUBTOTAL

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR2

FLAG INTERMED REVENUES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR3

FLAG STATE REVENUES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR4A

FLAG FED REV DIRECT GRANTS

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IR4B

FLAG FED REV THRU STATE

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IR4C

FLAG FED REV THRU INTERMED AGENCIES

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IR4D

FLAG FED REV OTHER SOURCES

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

ISTR4

FLAG FED REV SUBTOTAL

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IR5

FLAG REV FR OTHER SOURCES

56

55

0

1

0


98.2

0.0

1.8

0.0

ITR

FLAG TOTAL REVENUE FROM ALL SOURCES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE11

FLAG INSTR EXP SALARIES

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

IE12

FLAG INSTR EXP EMP BENEFITS

56

38

18

0

0


67.9

32.1

0.0

0.0

IE13

FLAG INSTR EXP PURCHASED SERVICES

56

40

16

0

0


71.4

28.6

0.0

0.0

IE14

FLAG INSTR EXP TUITION

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IE15

FLAG INSTR EXP TUIT TO OTHER LEA’S

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IE16

FLAG INSTR EXP SUPPLIES

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

IE17

FLAG INSTR EXP PROPERTY

56

52

4

0

0


92.9

7.1

0.0

0.0

IE18

FLAG INSTR EXP OTHER

56

40

16

0

0


71.4

28.6

0.0

0.0

ISTE1

FLAG INSTR EXP SUBTOTAL

56

37

0

0

19


66.1

0.0

0.0

33.9

IE11A

FLAG INSTR EXP REGULAR PROGRAM SALARIES

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IE11B

FLAG INSTR EXP SPECIAL EDUCATION SALARIES

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IE11C

FLAG INSTR EXP VOCATIONAL SALARIES

56

53

3

0

0


94.6

5.4

0.0

0.0

IE11D

FLAG INSTR EXP OTHER PROGRAMS SALARIES

56

53

3

0

0


94.6

5.4

0.0

0.0

IE2

FLAG INSTR EXP TEXTBOOKS

56

44

12

0

0


78.6

21.4

0.0

0.0

IE212

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY STUDENTS

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE213

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY INST STAFF

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE214

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY GEN ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE215

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY SCH ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE216

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY OPER & MAIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE217

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY STUDENT TRANSP

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE218

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY OTHER SERVICES

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

ITE21

FLAG SUP EXP SALARY SUBTOTAL

56

42

0

0

14


75.0

0.0

0.0

25.0

IE222

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE STUDENTS

56

38

18

0

0


67.9

32.1

0.0

0.0

IE223

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE INST STAFF

56

38

18

0

0


67.9

32.1

0.0

0.0

IE224

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE GEN ADMIN

56

39

17

0

0


69.6

30.4

0.0

0.0

IE225

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE SCH ADMIN

56

38

18

0

0


67.9

32.1

0.0

0.0

IE226

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE OPER & MAIN

56

40

16

0

0


71.4

28.6

0.0

0.0

IE227

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE PUPIL TRANSP

56

40

16

0

0


71.4

28.6

0.0

0.0

IE228

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE OTHER SERV

56

39

17

0

0


69.6

30.4

0.0

0.0

ITE22

FLAG SUP EXP EMP BENE SUBTOTAL

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

IE232

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV STUDENTS

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE233

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV INST STAFF

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE234

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV GEN ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

See notes at end of table.



Number





Percent


Flags





Flags

Variable

Description

Total

R

A

I

T


R

A

I

T

IE235

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV SCH ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE236

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV OPER & MAIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE237

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV PUPIL TRANSP

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE238

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV OTHER SERV

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

ITE23

FLAG SUP EXP PURCH SV SUBTOTAL

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

IE242

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES STUDENTS

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE243

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES INST STAFF

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE244

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES GEN ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE245

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES SCH ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE246

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES OPER & MAIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE247

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES PUPIL TRANSP

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE248

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES OTHER SERV

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

ITE24

FLAG SUP EXP SUPPLIES SUBTOTAL

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

IE252

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY STUDENTS

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE253

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY INST STAFF

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE254

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY GEN ADMIN

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE255

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY SCH ADMIN

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE256

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY OPER & MAIN

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE257

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY PUPIL TRANSP

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

IE258

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY OTHER SERV

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

ITE25

FLAG SUP EXP PROPERTY SUBTOTAL

56

51

0

0

5


91.1

0.0

0.0

8.9

IE262

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER INST STUDENTS

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE263

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER INST STAFF

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE264

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER GEN ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE265

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER SCH ADMIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE266

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER OPER & MAIN

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE267

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER PUPIL TRANSP

56

42

14

0

0


75.0

25.0

0.0

0.0

IE268

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER OTHER SERV

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

ITE26

FLAG SUP EXP OTHER SUBTOTAL

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

ISTE22

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL STUDENTS

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

ISTE23

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL INST STAFF

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

ISTE24

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL GEN ADMIN

56

39

0

0

17


69.6

0.0

0.0

30.4

ISTE25

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL SCH ADMIN

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

ISTE26

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL OPER & MAIN

56

40

0

0

16


71.4

0.0

0.0

28.6

ISTE27

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL PUPIL TRANSP

56

40

0

0

16


71.4

0.0

0.0

28.6

ISTE28

FLAG SUP EXP SUBTOTAL OTHER SERVICES

56

39

0

0

17


69.6

0.0

0.0

30.4

ISTE2T

FLAG SUP EXP TOTAL SUPPORT SERVICES

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

IE3A11

FLAG NONINST SERV FOOD SERV SALARIES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3A12

FLAG NONINST SERV FOOD SERV EMP BEN

56

52

4

0

0


92.9

7.1

0.0

0.0

IE3A13

FLAG NONINST SERV FOOD SERV PURCH

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3A14

FLAG NONINST SERV FOOD SERV SUPPLIES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3A2

FLAG NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV PROP

56

52

4

0

0


92.9

7.1

0.0

0.0

IE3A16

FLAG NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV OTHER

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3A1

FLAG NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV SUBTOT

56

52

0

0

4


92.9

0.0

0.0

7.1

IE3B11

FLAG NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE SALARIES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B12

FLAG NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRS EMP BENE

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B13

FLAG NON INSTR SERV ENTRPRS PUR SERV

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B14

FLAG NON INSTR SERV ENTERPRISE SUPPLIES

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B2

FLAG NON INSTR SERV ENTERPRISE PROP

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B16

FLAG NON INSTR SERV ENTERPRISE OTHER

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE3B1

FLAG NON INSTR SERV ENTERPRIS SUBTOT

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ISTE3

FLAG NON INSTR SERV TOTAL

56

52

0

0

4


92.9

0.0

0.0

7.1

IE4A1

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP TEXTBOOKS

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE4A2

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP TEXTBOOKS (PROP)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE4B1

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP TRANSPORT

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IE4B2

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP TRNSPRT (PROP)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE4C1

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP EMP BENE

56

48

8

0

0


85.7

14.3

0.0

0.0

See notes at end of table.




Number





Percent


Flags





Flags

Variable

Description

Total

R

A

I

T


R

A

I

T

IE4C2

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP EMP BEN (PROP)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE4D

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP PRIV SCH STUDNT

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE4E1

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP OTHER

56

41

15

0

0


73.2

26.8

0.0

0.0

IE4E2

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP OTHER (PROPERTY)

56

52

4

0

0


92.9

7.1

0.0

0.0

ISTE4

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP SUBTOTAL

56

38

0

0

18


67.9

0.0

0.0

32.1

ITE5

FLAG CURRENT EXPENDITURES

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

IE61

FLAG FACILITIES AQUIS NONPROPERTY

56

49

7

0

0


87.5

12.5

0.0

0.0

IE62

FLAG FACILITIES AQUIS PROP (LAND/BLDS)

56

48

8

0

0


85.7

14.3

0.0

0.0

IE63

FLAG FACILITIES AQUIS EQUIPMENT

56

50

6

0

0


89.3

10.7

0.0

0.0

ISTE6

FLAG FACILITIES AQUIS TOTAL

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE7A1

FLAG OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE INTEREST

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE7A2

FLAG OTHER USE REDEMPTION

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ISTE7

FLAG OTHER USE DEBT SERV SUBTOTAL

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE81

FLAG COMM SERV NONPROPERTY

56

53

1

2

0


94.6

1.8

3.6

0.0

IE82

FLAG COMM SERV PROPERTY

56

54

1

1

0


96.4

1.8

1.8

0.0

IE9A

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG NONPUB SCH

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE9B

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG ADULT ED

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE9C

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG COMM COLLEGE

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE9D

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG OTHER

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IE91

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG PROPERTY

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ISTE9

FLAG DIRECT COST PROG SUBTOTAL

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ITE10

FLAG PROPERTY TOTAL

56

47

0

0

9


83.9

0.0

0.0

16.1

ITE11

FLAG TOTAL EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

IX12C

FLAG EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IX12D

FLAG EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I CO

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IX12E

FLAG EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V PART A

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IX12F

FLAG EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V PART A CO

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ITX12

FLAG TOTAL EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297

56

54

0

0

2


96.4

0.0

0.0

3.6

INCE13

FLAG NET CURRENT EXPENDITURES

56

41

0

0

15


73.2

0.0

0.0

26.8

IADA

FLAG ADA (STATE AND NCES DEFINITION)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IA14A

FLAG ADA (STATE DEFINITION)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IA14B

FLAG ADA (NCES DEFINITION)

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IPPE15

FLAG PER PUPIL EXPENDITURES

56

53

0

0

3


94.6

0.0

0.0

5.4

IMEMBR11

FLAG TOTAL STUDENT

56

46

10

0

0


82.1

17.9

0.0

0.0

IARRASTE1

FLAG INSTRUCTIONAL EXP FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IARRATE5

FLAG TOTAL CURRENT EXP FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IARRAE81Z

FLAG COMM SERV NONPROPERTY FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IARRATE10

FLAG PROPERTY EXP FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IARRASTE6

FLAG SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION EXP FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

IARRATLEIZ

FLAG EXP FROM TITLE I UNDER ARRA

56

55

1

0

0


98.2

1.8

0.0

0.0

IARRASTE4

FLAG DIRECT PROG SUP EXP FROM ARRA

56

56

0

0

0


100.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

NOTE: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Flag "R" denotes "As reported by the state." Flag "A" denotes "Edited." Flag "I" denotes "Imputed based on a method other than prior year's data." Flag "T" denotes "Total based on sum of internal or external detail."

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Finance Survey (NPEFS)," Fiscal year 2012, provisional version 1a file.



Table G-2. Minimum, maximum, and mean for continuous variables, by variable: Fiscal year 2012



Variable



Description

Number of

states reporting



Missing


Not applicable



Minimum



Maximum



Mean


R1A


LOCAL REV PROPERTY TAX


40


0


16


960,573


20,766,668,787


4,324,829,211

R1B

LOCAL REV NON PROPERTY TAX

31

0

25

2,963

1,849,293,630

371,533,164

R1C

LOCAL REV LOC GOVT PROP TAX

22

0

34

168,400

11,418,316,044

1,946,365,700

R1D

LOCAL REV LOC GOVT NON PROP TAX

24

0

32

166,594

3,292,301,886

396,936,339

R1E

LOCAL REV INDIVID TUITION

56

0

0

0

126,643,814

17,369,471

R1F

LOCAL REV TUITION FR LEA'S

56

0

0

0

2,208,930,360

128,222,424

R1G

LOCAL REV TRANSPORT FEES INDIVID

56

0

0

0

17,007,776

1,779,634

R1H

LOCAL REV TRANSPORT FEES LEA'S

56

0

0

0

194,516,263

6,347,234

R1I

LOCAL REV EARNINGS ON INVESTMT

56

0

0

0

285,072,869

22,550,480

R1J

LOCAL REV FOOD SERVICE

56

0

0

0

642,983,791

113,112,699

R1K

LOCAL REV STUDENT ACTIVITIES

56

0

0

0

696,516,704

72,880,442

R1L

LOCAL REV OTHER REVS

56

0

0

0

2,869,577,568

297,493,302

R1M

LOCAL REV TEXTBOOK REVS

56

0

0

0

96,269,668

3,673,294

R1N

LOCAL REV SUMMER SCHOOL

56

0

0

0

27,672,794

2,153,261

STR1

LOCAL REV SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

0

31,250,483,018

4,760,605,691

R2

INTERMED REVENUES

56

0

0

0

307,453,975

32,419,813

R3

STATE REVENUES

53

0

3

10,527,859

37,079,384,443

5,164,464,193

R4A

FED REV DIRECT GRANTS

56

0

0

0

524,548,984

70,030,034

R4B

FED REV THRU STATE

56

0

0

0

7,562,066,951

1,001,725,567

R4C

FED REV THRU INTERMED AGENCIES

56

0

0

0

126,194,440

12,756,083

R4D

FED REV OTHER SOURCES

56

0

0

0

233,994,851

30,327,220

STR4

FED REV SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

33,334,061

8,260,860,914

1,114,838,903

R5

REV FR OTHER SOURCES

56

0

0

0

7,305,784,617

763,978,557

TR

TOTAL REVENUE FROM ALL SOURCES

56

0

0

65,214,080

65,808,328,762

10,795,660,875

E11

INSTR EXP SALARIES

56

0

0

20,797,568

22,845,108,454

3,783,825,964

E12

INSTR EXP EMP BENEFITS

56

0

0

3,374,003

10,879,677,566

1,379,143,172

E13

INSTR EXP PURCHASED SERVICES

56

0

0

707,956

2,295,046,574

263,768,100

E14

INSTR EXP TUITION

56

0

0

0

755,681,445

89,977,061

E15

INSTR EXP TUITION TO OTHER LEA'S

56

0

0

0

2,337,114,895

140,368,084

E16

INSTR EXP SUPPLIES

56

0

0

696,026

1,445,810,976

222,641,809

E17

INSTR EXP PROPERTY

56

0

0

0

169,899,750

38,726,438

E18

INSTR EXP OTHER

56

0

0

0

226,114,801

23,765,692

STE1

INSTR EXP SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

29,684,950

36,402,729,940

5,763,121,797

E11A

INSTR EXP REGULAR PROGRAM SALARIES

55

1

0

756,298

16,460,505,498

2,541,655,760

E11B

INSTR EXP SPECIAL EDUCATION SALARIES

55

1

0

1,809,079

5,608,034,000

591,568,732

E11C

INSTR EXP VOCATIONAL SALARIES

53

3

0

93,777

953,803,000

109,227,217

E11D

INSTR EXP OTHER PROGRAMS SALARIES

53

3

0

503,691

2,097,857,130

182,769,388

E2

INSTR EXP TEXTBOOKS

45

11

0

1,630,462

238,048,960

48,603,818

E212

SUP EXP SALARY STUDENTS

56

0

0

0

1,987,842,828

342,700,059

E213

SUP EXP SALARY INST STAFF

56

0

0

2,627,410

1,968,460,634

254,897,859

E214

SUP EXP SALARY GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

545,987

406,447,446

78,780,796

E215

SUP EXP SALARY SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

3,299,292

2,605,426,991

363,031,847

E216

SUP EXP SALARY OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

600,829

2,166,749,256

312,928,747

E217

SUP EXP SALARY STUDENT TRANSP

56

0

0

35,734

614,701,418

133,695,350

E218

SUP EXP SALARY OTHER SERVICES

56

0

0

1,232,331

1,329,455,320

149,263,182

TE21

SUP EXP SALARY SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

10,449,425

10,855,108,562

1,635,297,840

E222

SUP EXP EMP BENE STUDENTS

56

0

0

0

702,549,515

122,137,315

E223

SUP EXP EMP BENE INST STAFF

56

0

0

412,365

697,927,120

88,792,507

E224

SUP EXP EMP BENE GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

86,074

285,646,992

34,463,392

E225

SUP EXP EMP BENE SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

656,492

965,700,159

128,860,473

E226

SUP EXP EMP BENE OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

141,138

1,002,168,407

131,251,052

E227

SUP EXP EMP BENE PUPIL TRANS

56

0

0

10,961

285,349,020

56,615,042

E228

SUP EXP EMP BENE OTHER SERV

56

0

0

107,126

596,564,516

61,866,497

TE22

SUP EXP EMP BENE SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

1,601,464

4,328,024,646

623,986,280

E232

SUP EXP PURCH SV STUDENTS

56

0

0

15,722

340,024,325

50,451,704

E233

SUP EXP PURCH SV INST STAFF

56

0

0

301,523

628,308,790

62,042,923

E234

SUP EXP PURCH SV GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

222,744

359,395,589

59,394,516

E235

SUP EXP PURCH SV SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

0

184,624,815

17,442,607

E236

SUP EXP PURCH SV OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

992,912

1,453,626,245

244,319,203

E237

SUP EXP PURCH SV PUPIL TRANSP

56

0

0

19,170

1,866,217,316

171,619,315

E238

SUP EXP PURCH SV OTHER SERV

56

0

0

76,989

560,795,341

76,687,778

TE23

SUP EXP PURCH SV SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

2,522,915

4,499,318,272

681,958,046



Table G-2. Minimum, maximum, and mean for continuous variables, by variable: Fiscal year 2012—Continued



Variable



Description

Number of

states reporting



Missing


Not applicable



Minimum



Maximum



Mean









E242

SUP EXP SUPPLIES STUDENTS

56

0

0

21,348

58,614,935

9,671,176

E243

SUP EXP SUPPLIES INST STAFF

56

0

0

49,252

179,375,129

30,290,319

E244

SUP EXP SUPPLIES GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

14,954

26,164,803

4,364,012

E245

SUP EXP SUPPLIES SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

0

73,732,440

7,775,944

E246

SUP EXP SUPPLIES OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

356,931

1,730,865,566

201,082,751

E247

SUP EXP SUPPLIES PUPIL TRANSP

56

0

0

0

236,381,609

45,826,707

E248

SUP EXP SUPPLIES OTHER SERV

56

0

0

18,495

107,919,411

16,376,260

TE24

SUP EXP SUPPLIES SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

1,271,171

2,362,557,355

315,387,170

E252

SUP EXP PROPERTY STUDENTS

56

0

0

0

7,801,442

1,389,479

E253

SUP EXP PROPERTY INST STAFF

56

0

0

0

116,016,349

12,848,079

E254

SUP EXP PROPERTY GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

2,047

14,282,824

1,400,459

E255

SUP EXP PROPERTY SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

0

6,786,889

1,323,095

E256

SUP EXP PROPERTY OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

23,960

224,517,210

19,199,574

E257

SUP EXP PROPERTY PUPIL TRANSP

56

0

0

0

100,743,475

21,628,520

E258

SUP EXP PROPERTY OTHER SERV

56

0

0

0

59,412,819

11,758,326

TE25

SUP EXP PROPERTY SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

85,878

399,471,488

69,547,531

E262

SUP EXP OTHER STUDENTS

56

0

0

0

86,500,753

4,064,336

E263

SUP EXP OTHER INST STAFF

56

0

0

0

37,108,890

3,942,314

E264

SUP EXP OTHER GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

0

111,155,751

12,982,063

E265

SUP EXP OTHER SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

0

36,098,607

2,801,704

E266

SUP EXP OTHER OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

0

152,117,212

7,125,550

E267

SUP EXP OTHER PUPIL TRANSP

56

0

0

0

86,215,738

3,988,456

E268

SUP EXP OTHER OTHER SERV

56

0

0

0

340,214,198

21,413,321

TE26

SUP EXP OTHER SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

1,455,936

436,384,635

56,317,743

STE22

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL STUDENTS

56

0

0

37,094

3,069,455,015

529,024,589

STE23

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL INST STAFF

56

0

0

4,855,496

3,451,830,164

439,965,921

STE24

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL GEN ADMIN

56

0

0

1,748,744

1,035,930,643

189,984,779

STE25

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL SCH ADMIN

56

0

0

4,587,465

3,831,330,827

519,912,576

STE26

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL OPER & MAIN

56

0

0

4,578,186

5,775,902,691

896,707,303

STE27

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL PUPIL TRANSP

56

0

0

1,133,953

2,784,793,821

411,744,871

STE28

SUP EXP SUBTOTAL OTHER SERV

56

0

0

1,451,129

2,522,529,090

325,607,039

STE2T

SUP EXP TOTAL SUPPORT SERVICES

56

0

0

26,734,887

20,615,171,982

3,312,947,078

E3A11

NONINST SERV FOOD SERV SALARIES

56

0

0

235,932

742,729,482

119,422,424

E3A12

NONINST SERV FOOD SERV EMP BENE

56

0

0

47,304

351,742,512

45,898,092

E3A13

NONINST SERV FOOD SERV PURCH SERV

56

0

0

0

234,245,529

39,396,255

E3A14

NONINST SERV FOOD SERV SUPPLIES

56

0

0

322,078

1,183,263,132

178,676,127

E3A2

NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV PROPERTY

56

0

0

0

37,144,605

5,984,338

E3A16

NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV OTHER

56

0

0

0

32,577,048

4,454,901

E3A1

NONINSTR SERV FOOD SERV SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

9,288,076

2,377,551,705

387,847,798

E3B11

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE SALARIES

56

0

0

0

77,401,871

5,380,097

E3B12

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE EMP BENE

56

0

0

0

36,079,872

1,819,767

E3B13

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE PURCH SERV

56

0

0

0

66,423,656

3,164,888

E3B14

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE SUPPLIES

56

0

0

0

112,643,449

5,267,963

E3B2

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE PROPERTY

56

0

0

0

15,498,853

751,042

E3B16

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE OTHER

56

0

0

0

120,309,690

3,855,694

E3B1

NONINSTR SERV ENTERPRISE SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

0

261,266,379

19,488,410

STE3

NONINSTR SERV TOTAL

56

0

0

9,288,076

2,525,383,927

407,336,208

E4A1

DIRECT PROG SUP TEXTBOOKS

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4A2

DIRECT PROG SUP TEXTBOOKS 9 PROP

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4B1

DIRECT PROG SUP TRANSPORT

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4B2

DIRECT PROG SUP TRANSPORT (PROP)

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4C1

DIRECT PROG SUP EMP BENE

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4C2

DIRECT PROG SUP EMP BENE (PROP)

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4D

DIRECT PROG SUP PRIV SCH STUDENT

56

0

0

0

142,418,815

6,340,406

E4E1

DIRECT PROG SUP OTHER

56

0

0

0

0

0

E4E2

DIRECT PROG SUP OTHER (PROPERTY)

56

0

0

0

0

0

STE4

DIRECT PROG SUP SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

0

0

0

TE5

CURRENT EXPENDITURES

56

0

0

68,774,983

57,975,188,702

9,483,405,084

E61

FACILITIES AQUIS NONPROPERTY

56

0

0

0

5,989,751,615

657,286,130

E62

FACILITIES AQUIS PROP (LAND & BLDS)

56

0

0

0

549,900,645

58,668,286

E63

FACILITIES AQUI PROP (EQUIPMENT)

56

0

0

0

345,437,883

40,193,930

STE6

FACILITIES AQUIS NONPROP & PROP TOTAL

56

0

0

0

6,441,835,962

756,148,346


Table G-2. Minimum, maximum, and mean for continuous variables, by variable: Fiscal year 2012—Continued





Variable




Description

Number of

states reporting



Missing


Not applicable




Minimum




Maximum




Mean

E7A1

OTHER USE DEBT SERVICE INTEREST

56

0

0

0

3,047,060,249

316,148,924

E7A2

OTHER USE DEBT SERV REDEMPTION

56

0

0

0

4,356,784,324

563,042,852

STE7

OTHER USE DEBT SERV SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

0

5,570,776,836

879,191,776

E81

COMM SERV NONPROPERTY

56

0

0

0

362,803,169

57,331,371

E82

COMM SERV PROPERTY

56

0

0

0

14,043,888

692,052

E9A

DIRECT COST PROG NONPUB SCH

56

0

0

0

452,884,300

20,478,347

E9B

DIRECT COST PROG ADULT ED

56

0

0

0

486,202,099

34,921,397

E9C

DIRECT COST PROG COMM COLLEGE

56

0

0

0

27,057,269

546,555

E9D

DIRECT COST PROG OTHER

56

0

0

0

1,442,070,207

28,414,715

E91

DIRECT COST PROG PROPERTY

56

0

0

0

16,412,354

691,513

STE9

DIRECT COST PROG SUBTOTAL

56

0

0

0

2,173,511,385

84,361,014

TE10

PROPERTY TOTAL

56

0

0

85,878

965,952,296

215,255,131

TE11

TOTAL EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION

56

0

0

69,961,409

65,517,480,054

10,497,638,731

X12C

EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I

56

0

0

0

1,674,423,509

234,526,795

X12D

EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE I CARRYOVER

56

0

0

0

469,986,671

53,261,473

X12E

EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V

56

0

0

0

5,300,143

130,834

X12F

EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297 TITLE V PART A CARRYOVER

56

0

0

0

42,347,679

1,390,230

TX12

TOTAL EXCLUS FOR PL 100 297

56

0

0

805,012

2,571,896,927

500,278,131

NCE13

NET CURRENT EXPENDITURES

56

0

0

67,969,971

55,403,291,775

8,983,126,953

ADA

ADA (STATE AND NCES DEFINITION)

56

0

0

9,731

6,034,192

837,285

A14A

ADA (STATE DEFINITION)

29

0

27

71,910

6,034,192

1,116,754

A14B

ADA (NCES DEFINITION)

27

0

29

9,731

1,659,616

537,114

PPE15

PER PUPIL EXPENDITURES

56

0

0

4,569

20,290

11,000

MEMBR11

STUDENT MEMBERSHIP

55

1

0

11,011

6,214,204

907,737

ARRASTE1

INSTRUCTIONAL EXP FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

434,844,304

51,572,776

ARRATE5

TOTAL CURRENT EXP FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

491,542,507

78,938,976

ARRAE81Z

COMM SERV NONPROPERTY FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

8,984,185

488,625

ARRATE10

PROPERTY EXP FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

22,395,319

4,199,485

ARRASTE6

SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION EXP FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

266,704,745

7,021,593

ARRATLEIZ

EXP FROM TITLE I UNDER ARRA

55

1

0

0

164,780,646

16,387,364

ARRASTE4

DIRECT PROG SUP EXP FROM ARRA

56

0

0

0

2,643,119

101,757

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "National Public Education Finance Survey (NPEFS)," Fiscal year 2012, provisional version stfis120a file.


The following notes describe known anomalies in state data reported to the collection agent. Unless otherwise noted, each anomaly recorded here applies to fiscal year 2012 (FY 12). The absence of “Notes” for a state indicates that the state’s data did not contain any known anomalies. States are in order by their American National Standards Institute (ANSI) code.

Alabama

Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30

Notes:

    • Students do not pay fees for transportation (R1G).

    • The chart of accounts for LEAs does not include a separate code for revenue for tuition, fees, and charges paid by students to attend summer school.

    • Grants for most ARRA funds ended in FY 11.

    • The Sylacauga City School System received $16 million in bond proceeds from the city council.

    • The Limestone County School System recorded a significant increase in tuition from vocational education.

    • Expenditures charged to indirect cost were significantly lower because those costs were covered by ARRA funds.

    • There was a significant increase in expenditures on computer hardware and other equipment, most notably in the Birmingham City and Madison City School Systems with increases shown in Mobile County and Huntsville City School Systems.

    • There were no expenditures for Community Services, Property (E82).


Alaska


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Instruction Support Services, Supplies (E243) data was reviewed and was found correct as it was reported by the school districts in their financial statements. The amount reported here is a result of the end of ARRA funding. There were fluctuations in many districts; however, the Anchorage School District is solely responsible for the large overall decrease with their ARRA expenditures alone decreasing by $8 million.

  • The ratio of Food Purchased Services to Food Expenditures Subtotal is substantially different from the prior year because of the Northwest Arctic Borough School District, which changed from employing school district employees for food service to entering into a contract for services. Many districts had insignificant fluctuations up and down, but this district alone was responsible for an increase of $2 million.


Arizona

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • In FY 12, Arizona added a summary page to its Annual Financial Report (AFR) that collects detail data that aligns with the majority of the expenditures as outlined in NPEFS. In prior years, some of these expenditures were accounted for on the aggregate and placed into objects based on historical percentages. The new level of reporting detail has allowed the Arizona Department of Education to accurately assign expenditures to correct NPEFS function and object codes on the survey.




Arkansas

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Several districts received extra payments for revenue in lieu of taxes in FY 12.

    • The ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue is substantially different from the prior year due to the large influx of ARRA revenue in FY 11. ARRA revenue was greatly reduced in FY 12 as many sources expired.

    • The decrease in Instruction, Salaries (E11) is due to the decrease in ARRA funds in FY 12.

    • The $9.5 million decrease in Instruction, Property (E17) expenditures is due to the decrease in ARRA revenue in FY 12 as compared to FY 11.


California

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • In California, revenues for District Activities (R1K) are typically collected and managed by student organizations rather than by school districts. Incidental revenues that school districts do collect for District Activities are reported as Other Revenue From Local Sources (R1L).

    • California LEAs do not collect tuition from students to attend summer school (R1N).

    • California LEAs do not derive revenues from the sale or rental of textbooks (R1M).

    • The decrease in Grants-in-Aid From The Federal Government Through Other Intermediate Agencies (R4C) is due to the expiration of the ARRA funding and the decrease in the State’s Workforce Investment Act’s (WIA) discretionary funding.

    • In February 2009, to help mitigate severe cuts to state funding for education, California passed flexibility provisions that allowed LEAs to use funds from about 40 state categorical programs (including the instructional materials funding) for any educational purpose from 2008–09 through 2012–13. The flexibility provisions also suspended the process and procedures for adopting instructional materials, including framework revisions, until the 2012–13 school year. In FY 11, the "flexibility" timelines were extended through 2014–15. From analysis of underlying financial data, approximately 73% (or $62,027,530) of the decrease in Textbook Expenditures for Classroom Instruction (E2) was due to the flexibility provisions.


Colorado

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

    • Colorado received a substantial amount of ARRA funds in FY 11, accounting for the increase in Federal Sources of Revenue Subtotal (STR4).

    • General Administration Support Services, Purchased Services (E234) increased due to a termination fee that was expensed when Denver Public Schools refinanced $792 million in Certificates of Participation (COP).

    • There were Property decreases across the board due to extreme statewide budget cutting.


    • Food Services Operations, Purchased Service (E3A13) expenditures increase is due to eight school districts changing from fixed-fee food service contracts to cost- reimbursable food service contracts.

Connecticut

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Connecticut adjusted its data collection form for the 2011-12 school year and it captured Transportation Fees from Individuals (R1G) for the first time. The adjustment is the combination of a general drop among the various categories of Other Revenue from Local Sources across Connecticut and the initial over-reporting of Other Revenue from Local Sources by a Regional Education Services Center that was revised subsequent to the reporting of the NPEFS data for the prior year.

    • The change in the Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State (R4B) is due to the reduction in the ARRA funding. The change in the Ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue is due to the reduction in the ARRA funding.

    • Connecticut does not collect data from local school districts for District Activities (R1K).

    • The state legislature adjusted the state grant supporting special education services provided to local school districts for the 2010-11 school year along with the state grant for pupil transportation services in order to meet maintenance of effort goals. School district and municipal budgets were impacted along with expenditures.


Delaware

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The ARRA funds were still in use through December of 2012. The expected decreases will be reflected when the FY 13 report is completed.

    • The State of Delaware’s accounting system was changed on July 1, 2010. The coding of transactions for the school districts/charters was significantly altered. Old account codes were replaced with fewer new codes. As a result, Districts/charters are still navigating and learning how to code and capture expenditures in the appropriate categories. We hope to have the data normalized within the next couple of years. .


District of Columbia

Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30

Notes:

    • D.C. LEAs do not receive revenues from state sources (R3).

    • Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State (R4B) decreased from FY 11 to FY 12 because ARRA funds were no longer available.

    • As D.C. LEAs have become more educated about NPEFS category definitions, they have classified their finances differently (and more accurately) for FY 12. These classification changes explain the large variances in some revenue and expenditure amounts from the prior year.


Florida


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • The decrease in Total Revenue per pupil, Federal Revenue Subtotal, Grants-in-Aid from Federal Government though State, and Ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue are all due to reduction of ARRA funds and other federal stimulus funds received in FY 12 compared to amounts received in FY 11.

  • Florida does not collect expenditure data for the specific amounts sent to charter schools.


Georgia

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Tuition from other LEAs within the State (R1F) increased for the first time in 5 years.

    • There was a significant decline in federal revenue as ARRA funds are depleting.

    • As overall revenues declined, including fewer bonds issued, less was spent on property expenditures.

    • There was a decline in property acquisition for the current fiscal year. Last year a metro Atlanta district made a major land purchase.

    • A large metro area in Atlanta began reporting their school activity accounts in School Administration Support Services, Other (E265) this fiscal year. This contributed to an increase in expenditures.

    • The majority of expenditures in Support Services, Student Transportation continue to increase this fiscal year. This includes salaries, benefits, supplies, and fuel.

    • The increase in Adult Education expenditures (E9B) is the result of one district that did not report any expenditure in FY 11 but had significant expenditures for the current fiscal year.

    • State Per Pupil Expenditure (PPE15) decreased this fiscal year because expenditures did not increase at the same rate as ADA.


Hawaii


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:


Idaho


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Several school districts issued bonds during FY 12 causing an increase in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) compared to FY 11.

  • The increase in Instruction Support Services, Supplies (E243) for FY 12 is due to a reduction in state funding that affected the FY 11 figure.




Illinois


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30


Notes:

    • The increase in Instruction Support Services, Property (E253) is due to districts re- categorizing equipment from Supplies to Property to better classify them as non- capitalized equipment.


Indiana


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Tuition from Individuals (R1E) decreased $2,909,817 from FY 11 to FY 12. Transfer tuition refers to transfers between Indiana public school corporations. Students who transfer before ADM count day are given a credit on their transfer tuition bill for state tuition support received. The amount of this credit has significantly decreased transfer tuition revenue to school corporations. Additionally, some school corporations have adopted policies allowing them to not charge transfer tuition.

  • The increase in Revenue from Intermediate Sources (R2) is due to Hammond Academy of Science and Technology recording large revenue to an account called Riverboat Distributions in FY 12. According to the school, the funds were disbursed to the Hammond Academy of Science and Technology from the City of Hammond to support the construction of a brand new facility in downtown Hammond. The City of Hammond uses its Riverboat Distributions to support a number of civic projects aimed for the improvement of the municipality. The Hammond Academy of Science and Technology facility is one such project.

  • The increase in Direct Support Expenditures Subtotal (STE4) is due to an increase in teachers’ pension funding in FY 12 to improve the fund’s fiscal standing.


Iowa


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • There was a large increase in FY 10 and FY 11 due to ARRA funding. The amount of ARRA revenues in FY 12 was significantly lower.

    • More Title I Carryover dollars were available in FY 12 since districts had more total Title I dollars available in FY 10, FY 11, and FY 12 due to Title I ARRA.


Kansas


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Revenues and expenditures decreased as ARRA funds are depleting.

  • The city of Olathe primarily contributed to the increase in the capital outlay fund.

  • There was a significant increase in reporting for Student Support Services, Property (E252). Olathe comprised the majority of the increase in the capital outlay fund. In addition, Kansas City reported gifts and grants funds this fiscal year and zero last year.

  • There was a significant increase in School Administration Support Services, Other (E265) this year as 5 of the top 10 districts reported expenditures this fiscal year but not last year.


    • There was a significant increase in Operations and Maintenance Support Services, Other (E266) primarily because Kansas City constructed two new elementary buildings in 2013.


Kentucky

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue is substantially different from the prior year due to the decrease in ARRA monies.

    • Instruction, Other Expenditures (E18) increased because one district made an audit adjustment of $1.9 million, which accounts for most of the $2,146,080 difference from the prior year.

    • Other Support Services, Purchased Services (E238) increased due to a district that had an increase on expenditures for criminal checks and a payment for a management audit.


Louisiana

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The increase in District Activities (R1K) is due to the reclassification of the Annual Financial Report (AFR).

    • The increase in Summer School Revenues (R1N) is due to the reclassification of the AFR.

    • The increase in Other Revenue from Local Sources (R1L) is due to the reclassification of the AFR. Judgments are included in this section and several districts received large settlements from litigation in FY 12.

    • Federal Revenues decreased in part due to the absence of ARRA funding.

    • The decrease in Instruction, Other (E18) expenditures is due to the reclassification of the AFR, which allowed districts to use appropriate codes instead of coding to “Miscellaneous Expenditures”.

    • Student Support Services, Employee Benefits (E222) increased due to increases in salaries and the cost of healthcare and retirement benefits.

    • Instruction Support Services, Purchased Services (E233) increased due to the reclassification of the AFR. In addition, several districts received federal grants for professional development.

    • Instruction Support Services, Supplies (E243) decreased due to the reclassification of the AFR, which breaks out supplies into technology related supplies and materials and supplies.

    • School Administration Support Services, Purchased Services (E235) increased due to the reclassification of the AFR, which expands what is included in “Communication” expenditures in general.

    • School Administration Support Services, Supplies (E245) increased due to the purchase of furniture and instructional supplies by several LEA’s.

    • Student Transportation Support Services, Property (E247) increased due to the purchase of buses by several LEA's.


    • The decrease in Other Support Services, Other expenditures (E268) is due to district wide workstation upgrades in the prior year and decreased or discontinued IT services.

    • The increase in Direct Program Support for Private School Students (E4D) is due to an adjustment in NCES reporting after dialogue with NCES staff. Non-public school program data were reported under Direct Cost Programs (Section 6) in prior years.

    • The decrease in the Direct Support Subtotal (STE4) is due to an adjustment in NCES reporting after dialogue with NCES staff. Three state-run schools are now reporting detailed financial information to the state.

    • The decrease in Non-Public School Program expenditures (E9A) is due to an adjustment in NCES reporting after dialogue with NCES staff. Non-public school program data are now reported as Direct Program Support for Private School Students in Section.


Maine


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • The decline in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) is due to one time money designated to only the approved school units, with no new projects scheduled to bond in FY 12. Therefore, this decline is anticipated and accurate.

  • The change in the Ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue is due to the decline in ARRA funds from FY 11 to FY 12.

  • The decline in Title I expenditures is due to ARRA funds no longer being available. The remainder, as well as the carryover expenditures increase, is due to the State moving from a cash management (advance) model to a strictly reimbursement model; school units now need to prove expenditure before funds are drawn down. In some cases, carryover funds "advanced" to school units were requested to be returned and many units were not timely in requesting their reimbursement prior to the end of the fiscal year.


Maryland

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Federal revenue decreased as ARRA funds were depleted for FY 12.

    • There was a significant increase in Other Revenue From Local Sources (R1L) attributed mainly to Prince George’s County ($32 million) and Baltimore City ($28 million); however, the other 22 LEAs had a decrease of about $7 million.

    • Enterprise Operations expenditures decreased significantly for FY 12 and were corrected for FY 11. Amounts were excluded from District Activities because they come from the student activity funds that are managed by student organizations and not districts.

    • The decrease in Direct Cost Programs subtotal (STE9) is linked to the decrease of Non-Public School Program (E9A) expenditures. Non-Public School Program expenditures were those pass-through transfers of Federal Funds to Private Schools. The spending in this program was decreased by nearly $5 million for the current fiscal year, which was attributed mainly to Baltimore City.


    • The majority of LEAs raised the redemption of their debt principal from the previous year, leading to an increase in debt interest and principal payments.


Massachusetts

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Massachusetts does not collect Textbook Revenues (R1M).

    • Instruction, Employee Benefits (E12) includes imputed share of state payments to retirees totaling $793 million. This is also reflected in the ratio of salaries to total instruction.

    • Massachusetts School Building Authority payments to districts rose from $631 million in FY11 to $832 million in FY12. The money is used primarily by districts to pay off short-term bans for current projects, and is reported as Purchase of Land and Buildings.

    • Attendance decline reflects overall pattern of enrollment.


Michigan

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Federal revenues decreased as ARRA funds were reduced significantly from prior years.

    • Instruction, Salaries (E11) decreased by 2.69% most likely due to retirements and hiring of lower paid teachers. In addition, there are less teachers because of declining enrollment.

    • Food Services Operations, Salaries (E3A11) have been reduced as more districts contract with private vendors to provide the service.

    • There continues to be a decline in the number of kindergarten through 12th grade pupils.


Minnesota

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Earnings on Investments (R1I) decrease is largely attributed to fifteen Independent School Districts limited to four fund types including Post-Employment Benefits Irrevocable Trust Fund, Post-Employment Benefits Revocable Trust Fund, Debt Service Fund, and the Building Construction Fund.

    • Other Sources of Revenue (R5) increase is attributed to an increase in proceeds from the sale of bonds for funding the Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB) liability in the Operating Fund.

    • Grants-in-Aid Direct from the Federal Government (R4A) increase is largely attributed to a multi-year federal grant received by the Northeast Service Cooperative to expand broadband capabilities in Northeast Minnesota.

    • The decline in local revenues is attributed to a decrease in "property tax shift recognition revenue" from FY 11 to FY 12.

    • The expenditures reported as Title V, Part A (X12C) represent amounts that SRSA districts choose to REAP-Flex from Title II funding for Title V, Part A expenditures.


According to the A-133 Compliance Supplement (dated June 2012), the REAP-Flex provisions allow eligible SRSA districts the flexibility to target ‘applicable funding’ including Title II, Part A (84.367) , to other Federal programs including Title V, Part A (34.298).


Mississippi

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The increase in Other Revenue from Local Sources (R1L) is due to an increase in the amount of 16th Section Revenue reported to us by districts. 16th Section Revenue is revenue derived from leasing and managing land that was set aside as Public School Trust Land. An example would be a hunting lease where 16th Section Land is leased to an individual.

    • The decrease in Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government Through the State (R4B) is due to the fact that funds for State Fiscal Stabilization Fund (SFSF) were sent to districts during FY 11 and not in FY 12. In addition, the majority of ARRA funds were drawn down prior to FY 12.

    • Districts purchased more school buses in FY 12 than in FY 11. These purchases caused an increase in Student Transportation Support Services, Property (E257).


Missouri

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The decreases in federal revenue are largely due to the decrease in ARRA funds in FY 12 in comparison to the prior year.

    • The redemption of principal increased significantly from FY 11 to FY 12.


Montana

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Ratio of Federal Revenue to Total Revenue decreased due to the ending of ARRA funds.

    • Current year SPPE (PPE15) decrease is due to the loss of ARRA funds.


Nebraska

Fiscal Year: September 1–August 31

Notes:

    • There was a decrease in Federal Sources of Revenue because state bonds were refinanced.

    • LEAs paid down and issued fewer bonds for FY 12.

    • There was an increase of preschool/daycare programs sponsored by LEAs.

    • There are no longer Title V, Part A funds available for carryover expenditures.



Nevada

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30


Notes:

    • The decrease in Instruction Supplies (E16) is due to the ending of ARRA and Education Jobs Fund grants. Additionally, a bond program, which funds supplies, is ending.

    • The large increase in General Administration Support Services, Other (E264) is due to Washoe County School District, which had a lawsuit brought by property owners at Lake Tahoe - Incline Village. The property owners succeeded in getting their property values reduced for tax purposes, and therefore Washoe County School District had to refund nearly $10,000,000 in school support related tax revenue. WCSD is expecting that this was a one-time event.

    • The increase in School Administration Support Services, Purchased Services (E235) is due to the significant growth of charter schools using Educational Management Organizations (EMO) for their schools and the increase in fees.

    • The increase in Food Services Operations, Supplies (E3A14) was primarily due to increases in World food prices along with the servicing of 3,600,000 more meals in FY 12 compared to FY 11.


New Hampshire

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Total property expenditures decreased from the prior year. In June 2011, NH Legislature placed a moratorium on new school building projects. It may be the second year 2014-15 before we see an increase in spending. All school building projects in NH are funded to State General Fund there is no long-term borrowing on the part of the State.

    • Average Daily Attendance (ADA) decreased from prior year - The ADA reported is correct. New Hampshire has been seeing a steady decline in recent years in total enrollments resulting in lower attendance numbers reported.


New Jersey

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Textbook Revenues (R1M) increased primarily due to a school district that reported textbook sale/leaseback revenue.

    • Tuition from Individuals (R1E) increased due to many school districts now offering parent-paid prekindergarten and full-day kindergarten programs.

    • Many school districts used FY 12 revenue increases for equipment purchases, leading to an increase in Property throughout the survey.


New Mexico

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

      • The increase in Other Support Services, Other (E268) is due to the Federal Medical Assistance Percentages (FMAP) rate decreasing. In FY 11, New Mexico's state match was approximately 25% due to the Enhanced Federal Medical Assistance


Percentages (FMAP). In FY 12, New Mexico's state match increased to approximately 31%.


New York

Fiscal Year: April 1–March 31

Notes:

    • The increase in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) is the result of wide spread Bond Refunding in FY 12.

    • Other Revenue from Local Sources (R1L) increased $533 million from the prior year. This is due to an increase in Other Revenue from Local Sources reported by New York City (NYC)of $430 million. NYC financial managers confirmed this increase in Local Source of Revenue. NYC managers reported this increase was a result of the decline in federal funds in FY 12.

    • The increase in Other Support Services, Purchased Services (E238) is due to the inclusion of $160 million in School District Boards of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) expenditures. BOCES is an Educational Services Agency within NYS that provides NYS school districts with purchased educational services.

    • Operations and Maintenance Support Services, Other (E266) increased $1.2 Million. Districts reported increases and decreases in Special Aid Fund expenditures.

    • Other Support Services, Other (E268) decreased $18 million. This expenditure category is comprised of nineteen expenditure accounts. Five accounts declined a total of $16 million. In this account, the decrease was common in FY 12.

    • The increase in Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students (E4E1) is due to the increase of Charter School students.

    • Other Uses Subtotal (STE7) increased due to Debt Interest and Principal paid which increased $1.6 billion in FY 12. This is the result of wide spread Bond Refunding.


North Carolina

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The decrease in Facilities Acquisition & Construction Services, Property Expenditures (E62) is due to a purchase of new sites and purchase of existing buildings in FY 11.

    • While most ARRA values have decreased, the increase in ARRA Property Expenditures (ARRATE10) is due to the purchase of computer hardware totaling

$4.4 million.


North Dakota

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Other Sources of Revenue (R5) increased dramatically because of bond sales to support major building projects in a number of larger districts.

  • The Fargo school district increased expenditures in Instruction, Other (E18) expenditures by $2 million.

  • Textbook expenditures are not broken out. The expenditures are included in supplies.


  • School districts were eligible for school bus replacement grants due to oil impacted roads. One school district reported $1.3 million in equipment expenditures, which contributed to the increase in Student Transportation Support Services, Property (E257).

  • The increase in Facilities Acquisition & Construction Services, Non-Property Expenditures (E61) is primarily due to 12 districts reporting $60 million in new projects compared to 4 districts completing projects of $20 million the previous year.

  • The decrease in Facilities Acquisition & Construction Services, Property Expenditures (E62) is primarily due to 2 districts completing major projects of $4.7 million the previous year.


Ohio


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • Summer School Revenues (R1N) fluctuates significantly from year to year.

  • Facilities Acquisition & Construction Services, Property Expenditures (E62) fluctuates significantly from year to year. FY 12 was a year with relatively low property expenditures in this category.


Oklahoma

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Federal revenues decreased as ARRA Funds were reduced significantly from prior years.

    • There was a significant change in Other Local Government Units, Non-Property Tax (R1D) because of the decrease in Oklahoma City MAPS project revenue.

    • There was an increase in Other Revenue from Local Sources (R1L) because of an increase in student athletic and school activities revenues.

    • There was an increase in Tuition Payments (E14) this fiscal year because of the increase in alternative and special education tuition payments made within the state.

    • The ratio of Food Purchased Services to Food Expenditures Subtotal is substantially different from the prior year due to school districts purchasing more food service equipment and increasing the amount of food purchased.

    • There was one school district that began an after school daycare program and hired one employee. This contributed to an increase in Enterprise Operations, Salaries (E3B11) for the current fiscal year.

    • There was a significant increase in total Property (TE10) as more bonds were issued and districts built more school sites.






Oregon


    • The ratio of Federal Revenue (STR4) to Total Revenue (TR) is substantially different from the prior year because of ARRA grants coming to a close, which led to an overall reduction in revenues.

    • The decrease in Textbook Expenditures for Classroom Instruction (E2) is due to one-time spending of federal stimulus grants that took place in FY 11.


Pennsylvania

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • Overall Federal Revenue decreased due to the decrease in ARRA funding in the current year.

    • District Activities (R1K) revenue increased due to the inclusion of all governmental fund specifically the Athletic Fund figures.

    • Other Revenue from Local Sources (R1L) and Other Sources of Revenue (R5) increased due to the inclusion of all governmental funds figures.

    • District Activities/ADA ratio changed due to the inclusion of all governmental funds figures.


Rhode Island

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The increase in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) is the result of new debt/bond issuance.

    • The decrease in federal revenue is caused by the loss of continued ARRA funding.

    • Overall expenditures in food services increased because of declines in economic conditions which results in greater numbers of students participating.


South Carolina

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • The Charleston County School District approved a motion to place a 1% Educational Capital Improvement states and use tax on the November 2010 ballot for consideration with proceeds to be used for rebuilding and renovating a number of schools. The new tax became effective March 2011 and $22,321,000 in revenues were recognized that year. FY 12 was the first full year of implementation and $71,241,000 was recognized in FY 12 accounting for an increase of $48,920,000 in Non-property Tax (R1B) for the district.

    • Several new schools have been constructed recently.

    • The increase in Other Support Services, Supplies (E248) is due to a district that completed the first phase of a project that will provide each student with a computing technology device. The project also caused an increase in Other Support Services, Property (E258).


South Dakota


    • South Dakota does not collect Textbook Revenues (R1M).


Tennessee

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • There was a decrease in Tuition from other LEAs within the State (R1H) because Memphis City Schools no longer serve Haywood County schools.

    • Throughout the state, less students are paying for lunch and there was a decrease in summer school participation.

    • A new account code was established to identify and capture centralized revenue. Centralized revenues are now reported under Grants-in-Aid From the Federal Government Through the State (R4B). It was previously recorded under Other Revenue from Federal Sources (R4D).

    • Food Services Operations Supplies (E3A14) increased due to USDA mandates to revise lunch menus.

    • Johnson City incurred $14,296,420 in expenditures for school indebtedness by other agencies, which led to an increase in Facilities Acquisition & Construction Services, Property Expenditures (E62).


Texas


Fiscal Year: September 1–August 31

Notes:

  • The ratio of Federal Revenue (STR4) to Total Revenue (TR) is substantially different from the prior year because Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State declined by $1.7 Billion between FY 11 and FY 12.

  • The increase in Other Support Services, Other (E268) is due to an increase of $201 million for Debt Service Funds, Debt Service & Other Debt Service Fees.

  • The decrease in SPPE (PPE15) is due to a decline in Net Current Expenditures and an increase in ADA.


Utah


Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • The increase in District Activities (R1K) revenue is a result of charter school enrollment increases.

  • With the economic downturn and reduced funding, transportation equipment purchases were delayed in prior years, resulting in the purchase of more transportation equipment (E257) in FY 12.







Vermont


    • Transportation Fees from Individuals (R1G) are dependent upon individual agreements between students and receiving districts and fluctuates annually based upon demand for services.

    • The revenue categories have been updated this year to eliminate all duplicate sources of funds and many of the prior revenue codes have been modified so that revenue categories reflect their appropriate amounts.

    • Federal ARRA and Jobs funds were received through the State and provided to the LEA's. The elimination of these one-time funds has resulted in a significant reduction to this reporting category.

    • The difference in the Ratio of Local to Total Revenues is due to the modification of revenue codes to their appropriate categories.

    • The line for Tuition and Voucher Payments to Other LEAs and Charter Schools Within the State (E15) has been updated to account for all duplicate expenditures. This category previously reported Tuition Payments to Other LEAs within the state plus a portion of other duplicate expenditures. [The amount of Tuition paid to other LEAs within Vermont was $63,851,066.]

    • The Vermont legislature appropriates a payment from the State's general fund to the Vermont State Teachers' Retirement Fund. This PERS fund is administered by the State Treasurer's Office on behalf of Vermont teachers per Title 16 of the Vermont Statutes Annotated. This transaction was not recorded in FY11.


Virginia

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • There was a significant increase in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) because of an increase in proceeds from local bond issues.

    • There was a significant increase in Tuition Payments Outside the State, to Private Schools (E14).

    • There were significant increases in support services because of technology hardware replacements, health services (internal service charges), improvement of instruction expenditures, and capital outlay replacements charged to the office of the principal.

    • There was a significant increase in Food Services Operations, Other (E3A16) because there was an increase in food services expenditures charged to internal services and other uses of funds.


Washington

Fiscal Year: September 1–August 31

Notes:

    • Salaries Paid to Teachers in Other Programs from Grades Pre-K to 12 (E11d) decreased substantially due to a decrease in state funding and a reduction in programs offered by the LEAs.

    • The increase in Student Support Services, Supplies (E242) is due to two new activity codes (Instructional Professional Development and Instructional Technology) that were added for FY 12. In prior years, these activities were blended across multiple functions.


    • Direct Cost Programs, Adult Education (E9B) reduction is a continuation of ongoing program cuts.


West Virginia

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • The majority of the increase in Other Sources of Revenue (R5) is due to an increase in extraordinary items in the amount of $473,350,564. This extraordinary item was recorded as the result of the WV Legislature making a change to the LEA OPEB Liability. The State of WV assumed the OPEB liability for all state-aid eligible employees from the county boards of education for the years 2008 through 2011. After extensive research and discussions with GASB, it was determined that the proper treatment of the assumption of the liability because of the legislative change was through an extraordinary item. Because there was no error in the prior year treatment of the liability/expense, it was not proper to make a prior period adjustment directly to fund balance. For the assumption of the FY 12 OPEB liability for state aid eligible employees, the accounting treatment was handled differently. The FY 12 amounts were treated as a reduction of the overall OPEB expense/liability for the year. No revenue was recognized, as the state aid not actually make any payments on behalf of the LEAs.

  • Other Uses (STE7) increased primarily due to the refunding of bonds by multiple LEAs.

  • Overall SPPE (PPE15) decreased for multiple reasons. First, due to a legislative change, the OPEB accrual for FY 12 was substantially less than FY 11. In FY 11, the OEPB expenses were accrued for all employees. In FY 12, the State of WV assumed the OPEB liability for all state aid eligible county board of education employees, which accounts for approximately 86% of the personnel employed. Second, the legislative appropriation for the unfunded retirement liability decreased approximately

$22.5 million between FY 11 and FY 12. The amounts appropriated annually are based on an actuarial valuation of the Teachers' Retirement System.


Wisconsin

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

  • During FY 12, three school districts received settlements from a lawsuit filed against a bank for misconduct arising from the marketing and sale of securities to those districts. The amount received was $35,372,762.

  • A reduction in state aid paid to districts contributed to layoffs and many retirements for teaching staff.

  • New bus purchases increased by approximately $3.2 million this year, which led to an increase in Student Transportation Support Services, Property (E257).

  • During FY 12, the Wisconsin eliminated collective bargaining and as a result required all district employees to begin paying half of their retirement contribution amounting to approximately 6 percent of their wages. In addition, many districts increased their employee contributions to their health insurance premiums.


  • There was a significant decrease in Non-Property Expenditures (E61) because loans decreased, and for existing loans, not all loan revenue is expended in the same year.

  • There was a significant decrease in Property Expenditures (E62) as there was a drop in the number of approved referendums, which meant equipment could not be purchased.

  • There was a reduction in SPPE as state aid was reduced.


Wyoming

Fiscal Year: July 1 – June 30

Notes:

  • Food Services Operations, Employee Benefits (E3A12) expenditures primarily decreased due to outsourcing food services to a contractor.

  • ARRA federal revenues have decreased since most was received during 2010-11. The result is lower federal revenues in proportion to total revenue.


American Samoa

Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30

Notes:

  • State spending is up due to increases in Capital Improvement Projects (CIP) and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) projects.

  • The increases in spending for Instruction, Supplies (E16) and Instruction, Other (E18) are due to additional purchases for school instructional supplies using carryover funds from the Consolidated Grant.

  • Many fluctuations in Support Services sub-functions are due to the elimination of No Drug Free Grant Expenses for FY 12.

  • Instruction Support Services, Salaries (E213) increased by $948,095 (47.14%). In order to meet the definitions of LEA and SEA staff under the consolidated grant several positions classified as SEA were repositioned as school based staff. This caused the increase in spending in this data item. Support staff that were housed under another funding source were moved to this data item and paid out of carryover funds from the consolidated grant.

  • Instruction Support Services, Employee Benefits (E223) increased because additional staff moved under support services.

  • General Administration Support Services, Purchased Services (E234) increased due to a contract with the University of Hawaii Bachelor of Education (B.Ed) cohort program.

  • The increase in Food Services Operations, Purchased Services (E3A13) is due to an expanded school lunch program to private schools.

  • The decrease in Food Services Operations, Supplies (E3A14) is due to a reduction in purchased goods because most purchases for these items were included in the cost of the contract in previous years, and had little demand for additional supply purchases from remaining stock when management company's contract ended.

  • A new Longitudinal Data system is providing more accurate ADA reporting.


Guam


Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30

Notes:

  • Guam Department of Education has a new financial management system that reclassified functions throughout NPEFS for FY 12. This system cannot be used for adjusting FY 11 data because a new account code structure was also adopted. Teacher salaries (Special Exhibit Items) and Purchased Services (across Support Services functions) were reclassified into the correct objects with the adoption of the new system.

  • The purchase of the financial management system led to an increase in Operations and Maintenance Support Services, Property (E256).

  • Due to the classification of depreciation and lease payments with the new financial management system, expenditures for Other Support Services, Other (E268) increased significantly.

  • Revenue from Local Sources, Non-Property Tax (R1B) increased compared to FY 11. The local government appropriated over $40 million for specific projects including replacing funding provided in FY 11 by the Education Jobs Program ($20 million), for the lease of a new high school ($6.7 million) and appropriations were made to cover

$8.1 million in retirement benefits.

  • The decrease in Food Services Operations, Supplies (E3A14) is due to more outsourcing for food services.

  • The large decrease in Facilities Acquisition & Construction, Property Expenditures (E62) is due to large purchases in FY 11. There were no further facilities purchases in FY 12.


Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30 Notes:

    • There are no ARRA funds included for FY 12. Therefore, there is a significant change in revenue and expenditures.

    • The increase in Instruction Support Services, Salaries (E213) is due to hiring of employees based on a projected allocation.

    • SPPE (PPE15) decreased due to slight decline in student population.


Puerto Rico

Fiscal Year: July 1–June 30

Notes:

    • There was a decrease in revenue, mainly due to a decrease in ARRA funds received during FY 12.

    • The significant changes in payroll expenses are mainly due to the overall decrease in payroll expense as a result of the reduction in personnel at Puerto Rico Department of Education (PRDE) with the implementation of two particular laws. One of these laws included a mandatory reduction in payroll expenses and the other provided early retirement benefits to the personnel. The current personnel at PRDE had to be assigned to the different areas within PRDE according to the agency's primary needs.


    • There was an increase in the number of special education students enrolled, which caused an increase in legal expenses as well as on compensation expenses under the Special Education Program. This contributed to increased expenditures across the board.


Virgin Islands

Fiscal Year: October 1–September 30

Notes:

    • The Government of the Virgin Islands reduced it legal authorized appropriation level to the Department of Education due to shortfalls in generating revenues.

    • Government wide 8% cut implemented to salaries and hiring freeze implemented government wide.

    • Reduced purchase of food supplies due to increased federal commodity issued to the Virgin Islands and slightly reduced student consumption. Enterprise reduction is due to reduced funding to the athletic programs due to government wide revenue shortfalls.


ED Form 2447

OMB Number 1850-0067

Approval Expires: January 31, 2016





U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION NATIONAL CENTER FOR EDUCATION STATISTICS


THE NATIONAL PUBLIC EDUCATION FINANCIAL SURVEY


Fiscal Year 2012





NAME OF STATE

NAME OF PERSON PREPARING THIS REPORT

TELEPHONE NUMBER

(Include area code, extension)






RETURN COMPLETED FORM TO:


U.S. Census Bureau ATTN: Governments Division Washington, D.C. 20233-6800






According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required to respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this information collection is 1850-0067. The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average 94 hours, including the time to review instructions, search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete and review the information collection. If you have any comments concerning the accuracy of the time estimate(s) or suggestions for improving this survey, please write to: U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C. 20202-4651. If you have comments or concerns regarding the status of our individual survey, write directly to: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Elementary/Secondary and Libraries Studies Division, Washington, D.C. 20008-5651.




CERTIFICATION: I hereby certify that to the best of my knowledge and belief, the data reported in sections I-XV, below, constitute a true and

full report of revenues, expenditures, and student attendance during the regular school year and for summer school for the public elementary and secondary schools under this jurisdiction for purposes of public law 97-35, as revised by the Elementary and Secondary Act of 1965.

TYPE/PRINT NAME OF AUTHORIZED OFFICIAL

SIGNATURE OF AUTHORIZED OFFICIAL



TITLE





SECTION 1

Shape79



PUBLIC ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION REVENUES FROM ALL SOURCES

Shape80



I. REVENUE FROM LOCAL SOURCES (1000)


Current Amount Flag

a. Property Tax (1110)



b. Non-property Tax (1120-1190)



c. Other Local Government Units-Property Tax (1210)



d. Other Local Government Units-Non-Property Tax (1220-1290)



e. Tuition from Individuals (1310)



f. Tuition from other LEAs within the State (1321)



g. Transportation Fees from Individuals (1410)



h. Transportation Fees from other LEAs within the State (1421)



i. Earnings on Investments (1500-1540; not 1532)



j. Food Services (excluding federal reimbursements) (1600-1650)



k. District Activities (1700-1790)



l. Other Revenue From Local Sources (1320-1350, 1420-1440, 1800, 1900-1990;

not 1321, 1421,1940)



m. Textbook Revenues (1940)



n. Summer School Revenues (not 1650)



LOCAL SOURCES OF REVENUE SUBTOTAL (1000) [Sum a-e, g, i-n.]




II. REVENUE FROM INTERMEDIATE SOURCES (2000)




III. REVENUE FROM STATE SOURCES (3000)




IV. REVENUE FROM FEDERAL SOURCES (4000)


a. Grants-in-Aid Direct from the Federal Government (4100,4300)



b. Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through the State (4200,4500)



c. Grants-in-Aid from the Federal Government through other Intermediate Agencies (4700)



d. Other Revenue from Federal Sources (4800,4900)



FEDERAL SOURCE OF REVENUE SUBTOTAL (4000) [Sum a-d]




V. OTHER SOURCES OF REVENUE (5000, 6000)




TOTAL REVENUE




SECTION 2

Shape81



PUBLIC ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION EXPENDITURES

Shape82


I. INSTRUCTION (1000)

Current Amount Flag

1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500; exclude 560)



4. Tuition (562,563,565,569)



5. Tuition to other LEAs within the State (561, 564, 566, 567)



6. Supplies (600)



7. Property (700)



8. Other (810, 890)



INSTRUCTION SUBTOTAL (1000) [Sum 1-4, 6, & 8 only.]




INSTRUCTION, continued (1000)

Shape83


Special Exhibit Items


1. Salaries (100) paid to teachers by program



A. Salaries paid to teachers in regular education programs (Objects 111 and 113; Program #100)



B. Salaries paid to special education teachers (Object 111 and 113; Program

#200)



C. Salaries paid to vocational education teachers (Object 111 and 113; Program

#300)



D. Salaries paid to teachers in other programs providing instruction to grades pre- kindergarten through grade 12 and ungraded students (Objects 111 and 113; Programs #400 and #900)




2. Textbook expenditures for classroom instruction (Function 1000, Object 640)





SECTION 3A

Shape84


II. SUPPORT SERVICES (2000)

Shape85


SUPPORT SERVICES, STUDENTS (2100)

Current Amount Flag

1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES STUDENTS EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2100) [Sum 1-4

& 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, INSTRUCTION (2200)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES INSTRUCTION EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2200) [Sum

1-4 & 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, GENERAL ADMINISTRATION (2300)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2300) [Sum 1-4 & 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION (2400)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL

(2400) [Sum 1-4 & 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE 2600)

Current Amount Flag

1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2600) [Sum 1-4 & 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, STUDENT TRANSPORTATION (2700)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES STUDENT TRANSPORTATION EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2700) [Sum 1-4 & 6 only.]




SUPPORT SERVICES, OTHER SUPPORT SERVICES (2500, 2900)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



SUPPORT SERVICES OTHER EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2500, 2900) [Sum 1-

4 & 6 only.]




ALL SUPPORT SERVICES TOTAL - BY OBJECT (100,200,etc.)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



ALL SUPPORT SERVICES EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (2100-2900) [Sum 1-4 &

6 only.]




III. OPERATION OF NON-INSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES (3000)

Shape89


FOOD SERVICES OPERATIONS (3100)

Current Amount Flag

1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



FOOD SERVICES EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (3100) [Sum 1-4 & 6

only.]




ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS (3200)


1. Salaries (100)



2. Employee Benefits (200)



3. Purchased Services (300-500)



4. Supplies (600)



5. Property (700)



6. Other (810, 890)



ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL (3200) [Sum 1-4 & 6

only.]




SECTION 5

Shape90


IV. DIRECT PROGRAM SUPPORT

Current Amount Flag

a1. Textbooks for Public School Children



a2. Textbooks; Property (700) only



b1. Transportation for Public School Children



b2. Transportation; Property (700) only



c1. Employees Benefits for Public School Employees



c2. Employees Benefits; Property (700) only



d. Direct Program Support for Private School Students



e1. Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students



e2. Other Direct Program Support for Public School Students; Property (700) only



DIRECT SUPPORT EXPENDITURES SUBTOTAL

[Sum a1,b1,c1, and e1.]




V. CURRENT EXPENDITURES

[Sum Subtotals for Instruction(1000), Support Services (2000), Non-Instruction (3000 - exclude 3300: Community Services), and Direct Program Support (exclude Direct Program Support for Private School Students). Exclude Property (700).]





SECTION 6

Shape94


VI. FACILITIES ACQUISITION & CONSTRUCTION SERVICES (4000)

Current Amount Flag

1. Non-Property Expenditures (Construction) (4100-4900)



2. Property Expenditures [Include Land and Improvements (710), Land and Existing Buildings (720), and Infrastructure (740).]



3. Equipment (730)




VII. OTHER USES (5000)

[Include debt service payments (principal and interest).]

Shape95


Debt Service (5100)


1. Interest (832)



2. Redemption of Principal (831)



OTHER USES SUBTOTAL (5000)




VIII. COMMUNITY SERVICES (3300)



1. Non-Property (Objects 100-600, 800)



2. Property (700)




IX. DIRECT COST PROGRAMS


a. Non-Public School Programs (Program #500)



b. Adult Education (Program #600)



c. Community College (Program #700)



d. Other



d1. Direct Cost Programs; Property (700)



DIRECT COST PROGRAMS SUBTOTAL [Exclude Property (700).]




X. PROPERTY (700)





XI. TOTAL EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION

[Sum Current Expenditures (V), F.A.C.S.Non-property Expenditures (VI), Community Services (VIII), Direct Cost Programs (IX), and Property (X). Exclude Other Uses (VII).]





Shape97

Shape98


The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, abbreviated ARRA (Pub.L. 111- 5), is an economic stimulus package enacted by the 111th United States Congress in February 2009. The Act includes spending in education providing funds to implement longitudinal data systems to improve student achievement.



Do you have any ARRA expenditure data to report? oYes oNo



American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)


a. Current expenditures for public elementary-secondary education instruction (function 1000, objects 100-600, 810, 890).



b. Total current expenditures for public elementary-secondary education (functions 1000, 2000, 3100, 3200, objects 100-600, 810, 890).



c. Current expenditures for community services, adult education and other programs outside of public elementary-secondary education (programs 500, 600, 800).



d. Property expenditures (functions 1000-3200, object 700).



e. School construction expenditures (function 4000, all objects).



f. Expenditures for the Title I reported in Section 7d. Exclusions from Current Expenditures for State per Pupil Expenditures programs that were included in the data items above.



g. Direct Program Support





1 In general, survey methodology documentation for data files must include the following:

1. Description of data collection methods;

2. Weighting and imputation procedures;

3. Description of editing, error resolution, and imputation flags;

4. Guidelines for processing the data;

5. The reference year for the data;

6. Unweighted frequency counts, and response rates;

7. Information on how to use replicate weights or PSUs and stratum for variance estimation; and

8. Procedures for using weights to produce estimates.



2 Function is defined as a category of expenditure defining the activity supported by the service or commodity bought, while object is defined as a category of expenditure defining the service or commodity bought. For more definitions of terms used in this report, please see Appendix B–Glossary.

3 U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education," SY 2011–12, Provisional Version 1a.

4 ANSI state codes replace the Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) state codes previously issued by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Island Areas. ANSI state code values map directly to the retired FIPS state code values.

5 Letters “b” through “z” are used for internal version control.

6 NCES requires that each Chief State School Officer designate in writing a certifying official to be responsible for authenticating the submission for their state. The certifying official must be a fiscal official at the highest level in the SEA (U.S.Department of Education 2012).

7 For example, in states where none of the school districts have independent tax-raising authority, the variables Local Revenue Property Tax (R1A) and Local Revenue Nonproperty Tax (R1B) are reported as “-2.”

8 “Department of Education, Notice of Submission of Data by State Education Agencies: Submission Dates for State Revenue and Expenditure Reports for Fiscal Year (FY) 2013-, Revisions to Those Reports, and Revisions to Prior Fiscal Year Reports” 79 Federal Register, (15 January 2014) pp. 2648-50.


9 http://www.recovery.gov/About/Pages/The_Act.aspx; retrieved December 15, 2011.

10 “Department of Education, Notice of Proposed Information Collection Requests” 74 Federal Register 154 (12 August 2009) pp. 40573-40574; “Department of Education, Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request” 74 Federal Register 197 (14 October 2009) p. 52752.

11 As a result of the ARRA, NCES added seven data items to the NPEFS survey in order to collect and analyze data pertaining to Title I, Impact Aid, and other ED funds.

12 The Education Department General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) allows grantees to carry over 1 additional year any Federal Education funds that were not obligated in the period for which they were appropriated. For grants that are forward-funded, grantees can have up to 27 months to obligate appropriated funds beginning as early as July 1of the federal fiscal year.

13 The NPEFS survey instruction manual provides that employee benefits “include amounts paid by, or on behalf of, an LEA for fringe benefits such as group insurance (including health benefits for current and retired employees), social security contributions, retirement contributions, tuition reimbursements, unemployment compensation, worker's compensation, and other benefits such as unused sick leave (NCES 2012).

14 Actuarially determined annual required contributions are the annual required contribution (ARC) that incorporates both the cost of benefits in the current year and the amortization of the plan’s unfunded actuarial accrued liability.

15 The accrued annual requirement contribution liability is the difference between actuarially determined contributions and actual payments made to the pension fund.

16 Actuarial value of pension plan assets is the value of cash, investments, and other property belonging to a pension plan as used by an actuary for the purpose of an actuarial valuation.

17 “Department of Education, Notice of Submission of Data by State Education Agencies: Submission Dates for State Revenue and Expenditure Reports for Fiscal Year (FY) 2013, Revisions to Those Reports, and Revisions to Prior Fiscal Year Reports” 79 Federal Register (15 January 2014) pp. 2648-50.

18 Fully reporting states must have positive values for all fields.

19 For some NCES surveys, imputations of missing data items are performed by applying a growth factor to data reported in a prior year. This type of growth-rate imputation is not performed for the NPEFS survey. “I” is assigned the value of “Imputed based on a method other than prior year’s data” to maintain consistency in the meaning of imputation flags across NCES surveys.

iii


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