Yorba Linda: city adopts unclaimed funds policy, water district sees bond rating comments, school district adds student board member, sets extra teacher pay for teaching extra classes
Meriting
attention this week are interesting items from recent City Council
and water and school district agendas and meetings.
First,
from
the Yorba Linda City Council:
A new
policy regarding uncashed, city-issued checks and unrefunded deposits
held in city accounts – some dating as far back as 1993 – has
been adopted. It applies to cash held for at least three years “that
will likely never be claimed,” according to a report to the
council.
The
policy sets procedures and public notice requirements for a currently
eligible $20,000 in uncashed checks and about $677,000 in deposits
for swimming pools and planning and engineering matters that will be
transferred to the city's general fund.
Future
write-off amounts, allowed under state law, are expected to be
significantly smaller once the backlog of unclaimed funds has been
eliminated.
Second,
from the Yorba Linda Water District:
Reasons
for a Fitch Ratings AA designation for a $29 million bond sale
earlier this year to refund a 2008 bond issue and fund $6 million in
upgrades to the Fairmont pump station include the district's “strong
financial profile,” “healthy debt profile” and “strong
operating profile.”
However,
Fitch, one of three nationally recognized rating companies, also
noted: “The rating is lower than suggested by the financial metrics
due to continued concerns about the district's governance and the
electorate's willingness to accept rates that guarantee full cost
recovery.”
Fitch
added: “The rating could be revised upward if adopted rates
continue to produce strong financial performance and political
tensions dissipate. Alternately, the rating ultimately could come
under downward pressure if the district and community fail to reach a
consensus on rates that lead to full cost recovery and continued
solid financial performance.”
Third,
from the Placentia-Yorba Linda school district:
Each
semester a high school senior is appointed as a non-voting member of
the district's board of trustees to report on student activities and
offer student viewpoints during discussions. The position is rotated
among the district's high schools.
This
semester's representative is Kiara Espericueta from the La Entrada
High School campus at Yorba Linda Boulevard and Casa Loma Avenue. La
Entrada is the district's fully accredited school for independent
study that offers personalized diploma programs.
And so
far this year, trustees have approved 61 teachers to teach an extra
period each day for extra pay. Forty high school teachers are
teaching six periods daily instead of the usual five periods, while
21 middle school teachers are teaching seven periods daily instead of
six.
The
extra pay per teacher amounts to one-sixth or one-seventh of contract
salaries or a yearly range from $8,274 to $17,128 at high schools and
from $7,092 to $14,682 at middle schools, depending on each teacher's
placement on the district's salary schedule.
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