HA Resolution 2019-004 Cash Mgmt Policy
RESOLUTION NO. HA 2019 – 004
A RESOLUTION OF THE LA QUINTA HOUSING
AUTHORITY ADOPTING A CASH MANAGEMENT
POLICY
WHEREAS, a cash management policy provides standard guidelines to
City employees or other persons whose assigned duties involve handing cash
for the proper and consistent procedures for receiving, processing, and handing
cash; and
WHEREAS, cash management policies provide transparency,
accountability, and consistency; and
WHEREAS, cash management policies enable the Finance Department
and the City Manager to maintain a system of financial controls for the proper
receipt, tracking, and reporting of city funds.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the La Quinta Housing
Authority of the City of La Quinta, California, as follows:
SECTION 1. The Cash Management Policy attached hereto as Exhibit A, and
incorporated herein by reference, shall govern cash handling practices in order
to ensure proper and consistent procedures for receiving, processing and
handling cash.
SECTION 2. This Policy, as applicable, shall constitute the procedures and rules
governing the collection of revenues pursuant to Chapter 3.10 of the La Quinta
Municipal Code.
SECTION 3. Severability. If any provision of this Resolution or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, such invalidity shall not
affect other provisions or applications of this Resolution which can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions
of this Resolution are severable. The Authority hereby declares that it would
have adopted this Resolution irrespective of the invalidity of any particular
portion thereof.
SECTION 4. This Resolution shall become effective upon its adoption.
Resolution No. HA 2019 – 004
Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
Page 3 of 11
CASH MANAGEMENT POLICY
1. PURPOSE
The purpose of this Cash Management Policy is to provide guidelines for standard
citywide cash handling practices in order to ensure proper and consistent procedures
for receiving, processing, and handling cash.
2. SCOPE
This policy applies to all City Funds, employees, departments, volunteers, vendors, or
other persons whose assigned duties involve handling City cash or funds must comply
with the policies and procedures contained herein. Departments are responsible for
ensuring that every employee, volunteer, vendor, or other person whose assigned
duties involve handling City cash or funds adheres to this Policy.
3. GENERAL POLICY
It is City of La Quinta’s (City) policy to protect the City’s assets, including cash, from
theft, loss and misuse; and to ensure that the City receives, accurately records, and
promptly deposits all cash and cash equivalents to which the City is entitled. Cash:
may be comprised of, but not limited to coin, currency, checks, money orders, debit
and credit card transactions, and electronic fund transfers.
The City currently has designated revenue collection sites including:
a. Finance Department
b. The Hub
c. Wellness Center
d. Museum & Library
e. SilverRock Golf Course
f. Special Events - On an as needed basis, there may be situations requiring
establishment of temporary receipting points, which collect cash on an ad-
hoc basis (e.g. community festivals, golf tours).
4. MANAGEMENT OF CASH
All City bank accounts shall be carried in the name of the City with additional secondary
designations within the bank account name as to the purpose of the bank account,
where appropriate (e.g. SilverRock Golf Resort, La Quinta Housing Authority).
5. CASH RECEIPTING
Cash receipting, for the purpose of this policy, encompasses the following:
a. Accounting for cash as it is received
b. Pre-numbered consecutive receipts to be provided for cash received
c. Adequate separation of duties (collection, depositing, and reconciling)
d. Refunds, voids, and cash over/short transactions
EXHIBIT A
Resolution No. HA 2019 – 004
Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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6. SEGREGATION OF DUTIES
Collection of cash, deposit preparation, and reconciliation duties shall be performed by
separate individuals, but at a minimum, reconciliation should be done by a separate
person. The employee who physically collects the cash cannot be the same individual
performing the reconciliation duties. In the event segregation of duties is not possible,
the department shall work with the Finance Department to establish agreed upon
internal control procedures.
7. FINANCE DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBILITY
It is the responsibility of the Finance Department to track and ensure the timely deposit
of City funds collected or generated at authorized locations and account for all funds
submitted by all revenue collection sites. The Finance Department will assist and
provide materials needed to departments and cashiers as follows:
a. Provide cash handling training to City departments and employees.
b. Perform cash deposit reconciliations between bank records and cash
receipt vouchers that are input into the financial system. Any
discrepancies resulting from errors by the bank or the City will be resolved
by the Finance Department.
c. Provide revenue collection sites with a change fund to allow cashiers to
give change to customers.
The Finance Department is responsible for establishing citywide practices, providing
forms, and other actions necessary to implement the Cash Management Policy.
8. DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBILITY
Cash handling involves special control measures that must be monitored continually by
supervisory personnel within each department that maintains cash in order to detect
any weaknesses. Department heads are responsible for conducting periodic reviews of
their department cash handling activities to ensure these procedures are understood
and followed consistently by staff.
The responsibilities of City employees and their supervisors who are involved in the
handling of cash on behalf of the City include:
a. Cash receipting
b. Distribution of petty cash
c. Reconciling of cash receipts
d. Depositing of cash
e. Safeguarding of cash
f. Reporting of cash transactions and variances
9. SAFEGUARDING OF CASH
The City shall maintain, as deemed appropriate, physical security systems (i.e. safes,
alarms, panic buttons, motion detectors, security cameras, etc.) to ensure the safety
of personnel and funds in areas where cash is collected, reconciled, and stored. In
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Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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addition, access to counter, cash handling, and storage areas will be restricted to
authorized personnel.
The safeguarding of cash relates to the processing, storing, and transporting of cash
and to the safekeeping of keys and safe combinations. Each location maintains at least
one safe that is used to hold cash, change boxes, point of sale cash drawers, bank
deposits, and transaction records/receipts. Safes have adequate locking mechanisms
and keys to change boxes are kept in locked cabinets. To ensure internal controls,
access is limited to select personnel and combinations are updated regularly and never
shared.
The employee is responsible for verifying the cash drawer contains the designated
starting balance prior to processing any payments. Verification of cash in drawer will
take place in the area designated for balancing drawers. The employee is responsible
for the contents, security, and keys for the cash drawer at all times. The employee must
lock all cash and cash equivalents in a drawer or other secure location whenever leaving
the workstation, including for break and lunch periods. The employee shall maintain
adequate change in their drawers. Change can be requested through a supervisor or
directly from the Finance Department.
Cash funds must not be left unattended. Cash shall always be stored in a locked,
secured location until it is deposited. Access to the secured area should be limited to
authorized individuals only.
10. DEPOSITING OF FUNDS
All cash collections are to be deposited. Collections may not be reserved for petty cash
or used to pay department expenses. Deposits of cash on hand shall be made no less
than weekly.
In order to maintain an efficient cashiering service at the cash collection sites where
the City accepts payments, the City’s policy regarding reasonable amounts and
denominations of coinage the City will accept as a form of payment is:
a. City personnel will not accept over $10.00 in unrolled coins or $20.00 in
rolled coins in sleeves per payment.
b. Customers will indicate their name and phone number on each roll in order
to provide contact information in the event questions arise on the coin roll.
Regular reconciliations are to be prepared at the departmental level to confirm that all
receipts have been recorded in the point of sale system. A designated employee at the
departmental level prepares deposits and a separate employee documents those
reconciliations. The supervisor shall keep a log on overages/shortages by cashier. This
log shall be reviewed to identify areas of improvement in cash handling procedures. On
any overage/shortage the cashier shall prepare a written explanation as to what
occurred and attach it to the reconciliation. The Finance Department shall ensure all
transactions are properly recorded in the general ledger.
Resolution No. HA 2019 – 004
Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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11. PROCESSING INCOMING MAIL
All correspondence shall be forwarded to the appropriate department to open incoming
checks, sort, and enter them into the check log before forwarding to the appropriate
staff member for processing. A reconciliation of the check log should be performed on
a regular basis to ensure that all checks are being processed in the appropriate point
of sale system, and accounted for in deposits.
12. REPORTABLE LOSSES
Any instance of known or suspected loss or misappropriation of cash or checks shall be
reported to the Finance Director, Department Director, and Human Resources
immediately. In the event of a robbery or burglary, police authorities should be notified
immediately along with Human Resources and the City Manager.
13. RETURNED CHECKS
Upon receipt of a non-sufficient funds (NSF) check, the Finance Department will provide
a copy of the returned check to the appropriate department and request the original
transaction information to adjust the appropriate cash and revenue accounts to which
the monies were originally recorded. If the check was applied to an accounts receivable
invoice, a new invoice will be generated showing the amount unpaid. The Finance
Department will promptly notify the payer via a letter after the NSF check is received.
The payer has ten (10) business days after receipt of the letter to respond to the City.
Payer must renegotiate the payment with cash, cashier’s check, money order, or
credit/debit card. All checks returned by the bank for non-sufficient funds or other
reasons may be subject to a returned check fee as adopted in the Citywide fee schedule.
14. REFUNDS, VOIDS, AND CASH DISCREPANCIES
All refunds, voids, and cash discrepancies transactions are to be reviewed and
authorized by the employee’s supervisor - cash discrepancies occur where the physical
cash holdings differ to that specified by the cash receipting system.
Refunds are typically not permitted to be processed at locations which take payments
and handle cash. If a customer requires a refund, a request shall be submitted through
the Finance Department. All refunds and voided transactions shall have the following
supporting documentation:
a. Transaction date
b. Customer name, address, phone number, and signature
c. Original customer receipt
d. Reason for the refund or voided transaction
e. Amount and form of payment
f. Signature of cashier requesting the refund or void
g. Signature of supervisor approving the transaction
In the case of an overage or shortage, every effort should be made to locate amounts
causing the out of balance condition regardless of the amount. The employee and
supervisor must sign an over/short report with an indication of the reason, if known,
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Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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for the difference.
15. UNCLAIMED PROPERTY
Finance may void and reissue old/stale dated checks in an effort to notify/pay vendors
for City checks that remain outstanding prior to one year. Unclaimed property is
considered unclaimed after a period of time that a check remains outstanding. The City
shall follow Escheatment and Unclaimed Property Procedures established in the
Accounts Receivables Write-Offs and Unclaimed Property Policy.
16. DISBURSEMENT OF CITY FUNDS
Electronic distribution, such as wire transfers, of funds will be initiated by the Finance
Department. Authority to transfer monies shall be properly documented and verified by
the Finance Department. All wire transfer requests must provide the following:
a. Wiring instructions from beneficiary
b. Wire transfer of funds document(s) properly completed and signed by the
employee requesting the wire transfer and the Department Director or
designee.
c. Backup documentation supporting the wire (invoice, purchase order
number, memo, City Council approval if applicable, etc.)
d. All wire transfers will require a dual-approval process whereby initiation
and approval of the wire will be completed by separate members of the
finance staff.
17. PETTY CASH FUNDS
The Purchasing and Contracting Policy of the City will establish a maximum size for
petty cash payments from the petty cash fund. Petty cash should be used as a
convenient method to pay small claims and is not intended for larger or frequent
payments, which should be paid through Accounts Payable. The petty cash fund must
be kept in a safe or locked cabinet under the control of the responsible person within
the department. The petty cash fund must at all times contain the authorized amount
in cash and/or paid vouchers. The fund may not be used for personal loans, cashing
checks, or for salaries.
To replenish the petty cash fund, a Petty Cash Reimbursement Form must be
completed. The form would show persons reimbursed, the amounts, and account
numbers to be charged and signature of the cash disbursement. All receipts must be
attached with approvals from the signing authority for the account charged. Funds
received from any source must not be added to the petty cash fund, funds must be
processed per the procedures for the revenue collection site.
18. RECONCILIATION
Each business day, designated employee(s) shall ensure payments processed and
payments received are reconciled. Management shall review and approve the overall
daily cash receipt reconciliation to ensure all cash receipts are accounted for and match
to the daily cash deposit, prior to submission to the Finance Department.
Resolution No. HA 2019 – 004
Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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19. AUDITS
The Finance Department conducts random audits at least twice a year at every location
which handles payments. The audits include verifying cash tills, change boxes, and
petty cash balances to the amounts allocated and recorded by the Finance Department.
20. CASH HANDLING POLICY REVIEW
The Finance Director shall review this Policy annually to ensure careful and responsible
management over City resources and if applicable recommend any changes to the City
Manager and City Council.
21. FEDERALLY FUNDED PROCUREMENTS
The following section outlines the allowable costs for grants, contracts, and sub-awards
at the City of La Quinta. The policy is justified by the requirement of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) Title 2 Grants and Agreements, Part 200 Uniform Administrative
Requirements, Cost Principles and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards, commonly
known as Uniform Grant Guidance (UGG). It provides the basic criteria to determine
direct allowable and indirect allocable costs on federally funded programs regardless of
the funding agency sponsoring the program. The City’s shall adhere to the UGG
Administrative Requirements as updated.
200.305 Payment
Generally, the City receives payments of federal award funds on a reimbursement basis.
In some cases, the City may receive an advance of federal grant funds.
a. Reimbursements
The City will request reimbursement for actual expenditures incurred
under federal grants at least quarterly, or more often as deemed
appropriate.
Reimbursement requests will be submitted with appropriate
documentation and signed by the City’s designated representative. All
reimbursements are based on actual disbursements, not on obligations.
The City will maintain supporting documentation of federal expenditures
(invoices, payroll records, etc.) and will make such documentation
available to awarding agencies upon request.
b. Advances
When the City receives advance payments of federal grant funds, it must
minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United
States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement of those
funds on allowable costs of the applicable federal program. (2 CFR
200.305)
To the extent available, the City will disburse funds available from program
income (including repayments to a revolving fund), rebates, refunds,
contract settlements, audit recoveries, and interest earned on such funds
before requesting additional cash payments. (2 CFR 200.305)
The City will maintain advance payments of federal awards in insured,
interest-bearing accounts whenever not precluded by the Federal award
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Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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grant guidance or whenever the exceptions per 2 CFR 200.305(8) do not
apply. Interest amounts up to $500 per year may be retained by the City
for administrative expense. Any additional interest earned on Federal
advance payments deposited in interest-bearing accounts must be
remitted annually to the Department of Health and Human Services
Payment Management System (PMS) through an electronic medium using
either Automated Clearing House (ACH) network or a Fedwire Funds
Service payment. [2 CFR 200.305(9)]
Allowable Costs
2 CFR, part 200, subpart E, Cost Principles identifies direct and indirect costs that can
be charged to federal awards; it also identifies those costs that cannot be charged to
grant agreements and that are considered unallowable expenses. The City adopts the
five tests provided by this regulation to determine the allowability of costs applied to
federally funded services:
a. Reasonability: For a cost to be considered reasonable, it must be
necessary for fulfillment of the grant objective; acquired by means
consistent with federal and state laws and regulations, and consistent with
City policies and practices.
b. Allocability: A cost is allocable to a program if the goods/services
involved are charged in accordance with the relative benefits received by
that program. To be considered allocable, a cost must be incurred solely to
advance the work under the sponsored program or benefit both the
sponsored program and other programs of the City in proportions that can
be approximated through use of the City cost allocation methods not to
exceed the limit imposed by the grant agreements.
c. Consistency: Similar costs are treated as direct or Facilities and
Administration (F & A) costs when incurred in like circumstances. Costs
that are generally charged as direct cost to a sponsored program should
not be included as F&A costs on other projects when incurred for the same
purposes. Where the City treats a particular type of cost as a direct cost of
sponsored programs, all costs incurred for the same purpose in like
circumstances shall be treated as direct costs of all other activities of the
City.
d. Limitation: Cost must conform to any limitations or exclusions in the
sponsored agreement.
e. Documentation: Cost must be adequately documented.
Expenditures must be aligned with approved budgeted items. Any deviation from the
approved award budget will require prior approval from the awarding agency.
Allowability of costs will be determined prior to obligating and spending federal funds
on a proposed good or service. State and City rules or policy must also be considered.
Whichever allowability requirements are stricter will govern whether a cost is allowable.
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Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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a. Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the
following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal awards per
2 CFR 200.403:
Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award
and be allocable thereto under these principles.
Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or
in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost items.
Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to
both federally financed and other activities of the City.
Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a
Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for the same
purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award
as an indirect cost.
Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching
requirements of any other federally financed program in either the
current or a prior period. Also, reference § 200.306, Cost sharing or
matching, paragraph (b).
Be adequately documented. Also, reference §§ 200.300, Statutory
and national policy requirements, through 200.309, Period of
performance, of 200 CFR Part 200.
Direct Costs
Direct costs are those costs that can be identified specifically with a particular award,
costs that can be directly assigned to an activity with a high degree of accuracy will
be directly imputed to that activity. Identification with the grant rather than the
nature of the goods and services involved is the determining factor in distinguishing
direct from indirect F&A costs of grant agreements. Examples of some of the costs
charged directly include:
a. Personnel salaries/fringe benefits
b. Capital expenditures
c. Software
d. Consultants
e. Equipment
f. Materials and supplies
Facilities and Administrative Costs (Indirect/Overhead Costs)
Costs incurred for common or joint objectives that cannot be identified specifically
with a sponsored program are treated as indirect costs. Examples of indirect costs
include:
a. Utilities
b. Maintenance and operation
c. Building and equipment expenses
d. Administrative costs
Most grant agreements include a percentage of the direct cost to cover these charges
known as the Facilities and Administrative Cost Rate (F&A), refer to individual grant
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Cash Management Policy
Adopted: October 15, 2019
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agreement guideline for indirect cost rate.
Federal regulations limit instances where administrative costs can be charged directly
to grants and contracts. An exception may be made if there is extensive use of such
expenses, the expenses have been properly justified/documented in the
grant/contract proposal, and they have been approved as a direct cost by the
appropriate federal agency. Examples below list the types of expenses that are
generally not allowable as a direct cost:
a. Administrative and clerical salaries and wages
b. Printing and copying costs
c. Office supplies
d. Postage and mail
e. Telephone and internet
22. POLICY REVIEW
The Finance Director for the City/Housing Authority and administrators of federal
funds shall review this Policy annually and recommend any changes to the City
Manager/Executive Director and City Council/Housing Authority.