[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 11]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR1767.41]

[Page 895-955]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
    CHAPTER XVII--RURAL UTILITIES SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
 
PART 1767--ACCOUNTING REQUIREMENTS FOR RUS ELECTRIC BORROWERS--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart B--Uniform System of Accounts
 
Sec. 1767.41  Accounting methods and procedures required of all RUS borrowers.

    All RUS borrowers shall maintain and keep their books of accounts 
and all other books and records which support the entries in such books 
of accounts in accordance with the accounting principles prescribed in 
this section. Interpretations Nos. 133, 134, 137, 403, 404, 602, 606, 
618, 627, 628, and 629 adopt and implement the provisions of standards 
issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). Each 
interpretation includes a synopsis of the requirements of the standard 
as well as specific accounting requirements and interpretations required 
by RUS. The synopsis provides general information to assist borrowers in 
determining whether the standard applies to an individual cooperative's 
operations. The synopsis is not intended to change the requirements of 
the FASB standards unless it is set forth in the section entitled RUS 
Accounting Requirements in each interpretation. If a particular borrower 
believes a conflict exists between the FASB standard and an RUS 
interpretation, the borrower shall contact the Director, PASD, to seek 
resolution of the issue.

[[Page 896]]



                             Numerical Index

            Num- ber                               Title

101                               Work Order Procedures
102                               Line Conversion
103                               Sacrificial Anodes and the Replacement
                                   of a Neutral
104                               Terminal Facilities
105                               Pole Top Disconnect Switch
106                               Steel Pole Reinforcers
107                               Mobile Substations
108                               Security Lights
109                               Joint Use
110                               First Clearing and Grading of Land and
                                   Rights of Way
111                               Engineering Contracts for System
                                   Planning
112                               Determination of Availability of
                                   Service
113                               Temporary Facilities (Services)
114                               Construction Work-in-Progress Damaged
                                   or Destroyed by Storm
115                               Liquidated Damages
116                               Nonrefundable Payments for
                                   Construction
117                               Refunds of Overpayments for Materials
                                   and Equipment
118                               Load Control Equipment
119                               Special Equipment
120                               Meter Sockets and Meters
121                               Minimum--Maximum Voltmeters
122                               Retrofitting Demand Meters
123                               Transformer Conversions
124                               Transclosures
125                               Retirement Units
126                               Establishment of Continuing Property
                                   Records
127                               Continuing Property Records for
                                   Buildings
128                               Sale of Property
129                               Gain or Loss on the Sale of an Office
                                   Building
130                               Salvage and Obsolete Material
131                               Plant Acquisition Adjustments
132                               General Plant
133                               Plant Abandonments and Disallowances
                                   of Plant Cost
134                               Utility Plant Phase-in Plans
135                               Accounting for Removal or Relocation
                                   of Electric Facilities Resulting from
                                   the Action of Others
136                               Storm Damage
137                               Impairment of Long-Lived Assets.
138                               Automatic Meter Reading Systems-
                                   Turtles.
139                               Global Positioning Systems.
140                               Radio-Based Automatic Meter Reading
                                   Systems.
201                               Supplemental Financing
301                               Forfeited Customers' Deposits
401                               Computer Software Costs
402                               Legal Expenses
403                               Leases
404                               Consolidated Financial Statements
501                               Patronage Capital Assignments
502                               Patronage Capital Retirements
503                               Operating and Nonoperating Margins
504                               Patronage Capital from G&T
                                   Cooperatives
505                               Patronage Capital Furnished by Other
                                   Cooperative Service Organizations
506                               Forfeited Membership Fees
601                               Employee Benefits
602                               Compensated Absences
603                               Employee Retirement and Group
                                   Insurance
604                               Deferred Compensation
605                               Life Insurance Premium on Life of a
                                   Borrower Employee
606                               Pension Costs
607                               Unproductive Time
608                               Training Costs, Attendance at
                                   Meetings, etc.
609                               Maintenance and Operations
610                               Financial Forecast
611                               Advertising Expense
612                               Special Power Cost Study
613                               Mapping Costs
614                               Member Relations Costs
615                               Statewide Fees
616                               Power Supply/Distribution Cooperative
                                   Borrowings
617                               Rate Discount Allowed by the Power
                                   Cooperative to Distribution
                                   Cooperative Owning Connecting
                                   Transmission Lines
618                               Theft Losses not Covered by Insurance
619                               Self Billing
620                               Purchase Rebates
621                               Integrity Fund
622                               In-Substance Defeasance
623                               Satellite or Cable Television Services
624                               Pollution Control Bonds
625                               Prepayment of Debt
626                               Rural Economic Development Loan and
                                   Grant Program
627                               Postretirement Benefits
628                               Postemployment Benefits
629                               Investments in Debt and Equity
                                   Securities
630                               Split Dollar Life Insurance.
631                               Special Early Retirement Plan.



                          Subject Matter Index

                                                                  Number

                                A

Abandonments--Plant.............................................     133
Acquisition Adjustments--Plant..................................     131
Advertising Expenses............................................     611

[[Page 897]]


Assignments--Patronage Capital..................................     501
Attendance at Meetings..........................................     608
Automatic Meter Reading Systems--Radio-Based....................     140
Automatic Meter Reading Systems--Turtles........................     138
Availability of Service--Determination of.......................     112
                                B

Benefits--Employee..............................................     601
Bonds--Pollution Control........................................     624
Borrowing--Power Supply Cooperative/Distribution Cooperative....     616
Buildings--Continuing Property Records..........................     127
Buildings, Office--Gain or Loss on Sale of......................     129
                                C

Cable Television Services.......................................     623
Capital Credits--Assignment.....................................     501
Capital Credits--G&T Cooperative................................     504
Capital Credits--Other Service Cooperatives.....................     505
Capital Credits--Retirement.....................................     502
Compensated Absences............................................     602
Computer Software Costs.........................................     401
Consolidated Financial Statements...............................     404
Construction Work in Progress Damaged or Destroyed by Storm.....     114
Continuing Property Records--Buildings..........................     127
Continuing Property Records--Establishment of...................     126
Contributions--Nonrefundable....................................     116
Conversion--Line................................................     102
Conversion--Transformer.........................................     123
Customers' Deposits--Forfeited..................................     301
                                D

Damaged or Destroyed Construction Work in Progress..............     114
Damages--Liquidated.............................................     115
Debt--Prepayment of.............................................     625
Debt Securities--Investments in.................................     629
Deferred Compensation...........................................     604
Demand Meters--Retrofitting.....................................     122
Determination of Availability of Service........................     113
Disallowances of Plant Costs....................................     133
Disconnect Switch--Pole Top.....................................     105
Discounts Allowed by Power Cooperative to Distribution               617
 Cooperative Owning Transmission Lines..........................
Distribution Cooperative/Power Supply Cooperative Borrowing.....     616
                                E

Early Retirement Plan...........................................    631.
Economic Development Loan and Grant Program.....................     626
Employee Benefits...............................................     601
Equity Securities--Investments in...............................     629
                                F

Fees--Statewide.................................................     615
Financial Forecast..............................................     610
Financial Statements--Consolidated..............................     404
Financing--Supplemental.........................................     201
First Clearing and Grading of Land and Rights of Way............     110
Forfeited Customer Deposits.....................................     301
Forfeited Membership Fees.......................................     506
                                G

Gain or Loss on Sale of Office Building.........................     129
General Plant...................................................     132
Generation and Transmission (G&T) Capital Credits...............     504
Global Positioning Systems......................................     139
                                I

Impairment of Long-Lived Assets.................................     137
In-substance Defeasance.........................................     622
Insurance--Employee Retirement and Group........................     603
Insurance--Premium on Life of a Borrower Employee...............     605
Insurance--Split Dollar.........................................     630
Integrity Fund..................................................     621
Investments in Debt and Equity Securities.......................     629
                                J

Joint Use.......................................................     109
                                L

Land--First Clearing and Grading................................     110
Leases..........................................................     403
Legal Expenses..................................................     402
Life Insurance Premiums on Life of a Borrower Employee..........     605
Life Insurance--Split Dollar....................................     630
Line Conversion.................................................     102
Line Relocations................................................     135
Liquidated Damages..............................................     115
Load Control Equipment..........................................     118
Long-Lived Assets-Impairment....................................     137
                                M

Maintenance and Operations......................................     609
Mapping Costs...................................................     613
Margins--Operating and Nonoperating.............................     503
Material--Salvage and Obsolete..................................     130
Materials and Supplies--Refund for Overpayments.................     117
Member Relation Costs...........................................     614
Membership Fees--Forfeited......................................     506
Meter Reading Systems--Radio-Based..............................     140
Meter Reading Systems--Turtles..................................     138
Meter Sockets and Meters........................................     120
Minimum--Maximum Voltmeters.....................................     121
Mobile Substations..............................................     107
                                N

Neutral--Replacement of.........................................     103

[[Page 898]]


Nonoperating Margins............................................     503
Nonrefundable Payments for Construction.........................     116
                                O

Obsolete Material...............................................     130
Operating and Nonoperating Margins..............................     503
Operations Costs................................................     609
                                P

Patronage Capital Assignments...................................     501
Patronage Capital Furnished by Other Cooperative Service             505
 Organizations..................................................
Patronage Capital from G&T Cooperatives.........................     504
Patronage Capital Retirements...................................     502
Payments for Construction--Nonrefundable........................     116
Pension Costs...................................................     606
Phase-in Plans..................................................     134
Plant Abandonments..............................................     133
Plant Acquisition Adjustments...................................     131
Plant Costs--Disallowances......................................     133
Plant--General..................................................     132
Pole Reinforcers--Steel.........................................     106
Pole Top Disconnect Switch......................................     105
Pollution Control Bonds.........................................     624
Postemployment Benefits.........................................     628
Postretirement Benefits.........................................     627
Power Cost Study................................................     612
Power Supply/Distribution Cooperative Borrowing.................     616
Prepayment of Debt..............................................     625
Property--Sale of...............................................     128
Purchase Rebates................................................     620
                                R

Radio-Based Automatic Meter Reading Systems.....................     140
Rate Discount Allowed by Power Cooperative to a Distribution         617
 Cooperative Owning Transmission Lines..........................
Rebates--Purchase...............................................     620
Refunds for Overpayments for Materials and Supplies.............     117
Reimbursement for Line Relocations..............................     135
Relocations of Lines............................................     135
Replacement of a Neutral........................................     103
Retirement Units................................................     125
Retirements--Patronage Capital..................................     502
Retrofitting Demand Meters......................................     122
Rights of Way--First Clearing and Grading.......................     110
Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Program...............     626
                                S

Sacrificial Anodes and the Replacement of a Neutral.............     103
Sale of an Office Building......................................     129
Sale of Property................................................     128
Salvage and Obsolete Material...................................     130
Satellite Television Services...................................     623
Securities--Investments in Debt and Equity......................     136
Security Lights.................................................     108
Self Billing....................................................     619
Software Costs..................................................     401
Special Early Retirement Plan...................................     631
Special Equipment...............................................     119
Special Power Cost Study........................................     612
Split Dollar Life Insurance.....................................     630
Statewide Fees..................................................     615
Steel Pole Reinforcers..........................................     106
Storm Damage....................................................     136
Substation--Mobile..............................................     107
Supplemental Financing..........................................     201
System Planning--Engineering Contracts..........................     111
                                T

Temporary Facilities (Services).................................     113
Terminal Facilities.............................................     104
Theft Losses not Covered by Insurance...........................     618
Training Costs, Attendance at Meetings, etc.....................     608
Transclosures...................................................     124
Transformer Conversions.........................................     123
Turtles--Automatic Meter Reading Systems........................     138
                                U

Unproductive Time...............................................     607
                                V

Voltmeters--Minimum/Maximum.....................................     121
                                W

Work Order Procedures...........................................     101



                       101   Work Order Procedures

    When a minor item of property is removed from service and not 
replaced, a retirement work order is not required except in the case of 
a conductor. The cost of the minor item shall remain in the appropriate 
plant account until the retirement unit, of which it is a part, is 
retired. However, as conductor is recorded in feet and is not part of 
any specific retirement unit, conductor shall be retired even though the 
amount taken down and not replaced is less than a retirement unit (two 
spans).
    When minor items of plant are removed and not replaced, material 
salvaged shall be recorded on a material salvage ticket. Items of 
material recorded on this ticket shall be charged to the materials and 
supplies account and credited in the miscellaneous columns of the 
Materials Register to the

[[Page 899]]

Accumulated Provision for Depreciation. In this example, it is assumed 
that the cost of removal is nil. If, however, costs are incurred during 
the removal of minor items of plant, these costs shall reduce the credit 
to the Accumulated Provision for Depreciation.
    When a staking sheet supporting a single work order reflects a 
combination of new construction and replacements, or system 
improvements, the predominant cost shall be the governing factor in 
determining the amount of cost RUS will finance. To illustrate, assume 
that a service is to be run to a new home near the end of an existing 
line. On inspection, the pole from which the service is to be run is 
found to be in very poor physical condition and must be replaced. In 
addition, a single span of wire and a service are presently connected to 
this pole which serve no purpose. The home originally served has been 
demolished and the existing span, pole, and service were retired. In 
other words, what started out to be simply the installation of a new 
service now includes the retirement of a span of wire, a pole, and a 
service; the replacement of a pole; and the running of a new service. 
Assuming the replacement of the pole is the costliest part of this 
project, the construction and retirement activity shall be classified as 
an ordinary replacement even though the work includes new construction 
and retirements without replacement.

                          102   Line Conversion

    If it is necessary to move a conductor from one location to another 
on a pole assembly during the conversion of a line from one phase to 
another phase, the cost of moving the conductor is capitalizable as a 
system improvement.

        103   Sacrificial Anodes and the Replacement of a Neutral

    Many utilities conduct studies to determine whether sacrificial 
anodes are needed to protect underground cable against corrosion. The 
following procedures shall be followed to account for sacrificial anodes 
and the replacement of a neutral:
    1. If the study results in the installation of sacrificial anodes, 
the cost of the study shall be capitalized to Account 367, Underground 
Conductors and Devices. If the study does not result in the installation 
of anodes, the cost shall be charged to Account 594, Maintenance of 
Underground Lines.
    2. Costs incurred in the first installation are capitalizable even 
though anodes are considered minor items of property. However, only the 
first costs of installation shall be capitalized. All subsequent 
replacements of anodes shall be expensed.
    3. Sacrificial anodes do not constitute a record unit; therefore, 
the cost of anodes shall be added to the cost of the underground cable 
unit.
    4. Because a neutral is part of an underground cable record unit, 
and is not, in and of itself, a record unit, the cost to replace a 
corroded neutral shall be charged to Account 594, Maintenance of 
Underground Lines.

                        104  Terminal Facilities

    Borrowers are sometimes required to construct terminal facilities in 
the transmission line of another utility in order to receive power from 
their power supplier. The document executed between the borrower and the 
utility is normally referred to as a ``License Agreement''. The license 
agreement may stipulate that certain items of the terminal facilities 
are to be transferred to, and become the property of, the other utility 
upon completion of the construction. The accounting for this type of 
transaction shall be as follows:
    1. All construction costs incurred shall be charged to a work order. 
Upon completion of the construction and accumulation of all costs, the 
cost of the facilities that become the property of another utility shall 
be transferred from construction work-in-progress to Account 303, 
Miscellaneous Intangible Plant. The cost of the plant for which the 
borrower retains title shall be charged to the appropriate plant 
accounts.
    2. The cost of the facilities recorded in Account 303 shall be 
amortized to Account 405, Amortization of Other Electric Plant, over the 
contract term or the estimated useful service life of the plant, 
whichever is shorter. If the related contract or contracts for this 
power supply are terminated, the

[[Page 900]]

unamortized balance shall be expensed, in the current period, in Account 
557.

                    105   Pole Top Disconnect Switch

    The installation of pole top service disconnect switches, where 
title is retained by the utility, shall be capitalized in Account 371, 
Installations on Customers' Premises. If a switch cabinet is purchased 
with a current transformer included as an integral part of the cabinet, 
the entire cost of the switch shall be charged to Account 371. If the 
current transformer is installed outside of the switch cabinet, the 
transformer, meter, and meter base, together with the first installation 
costs, shall be capitalized, upon purchase, in Account 370, Meters.
    Payments received from the customer toward construction costs shall 
be credited to Account 371, Installations on Customers' Premises. Such 
payments, together with any amount not financed by RUS, shall be entered 
in column 9 of the RUS Form 219, Inventory of Work Orders. The 
associated maintenance costs shall be charged to Account 587, Customer 
Installations Expenses, or to Account 597, Maintenance of Meters, as 
appropriate.
    When pole top disconnect switches are installed and title is held by 
the customer, the cost of the material shall be charged to Account 456, 
Other Electric Revenues and the receipts from the sale of line material 
shall be credited to Account 456. The portion of the receipts for resale 
material as well as that for installation shall be credited to Account 
415, Revenues from Merchandising, Jobbing, and Contract Work. The cost 
of resale material sold and the cost of installation shall be charged to 
Account 416, Costs and Expenses of Merchandising, Jobbing and Contract 
Work.
    Future maintenance costs incurred by the cooperative that are not 
billed to the customer shall be charged to Account 587, Customer 
Installations Expenses.

                      106   Steel Pole Reinforcers

    The cost associated with the purchase and installation of steel pole 
reinforcers shall be charged to Account 593, Maintenance of Overhead 
Lines.

                        107   Mobile Substations

    Mobile substations shall be accounted for in a manner similar to 
that for a spare and are, therefore, included as part of transmission or 
distribution station equipment, depending upon the use of the mobile 
substation. The mobile substation, together with the trailer on which it 
is permanently mounted, shall be capitalized upon purchase. A general 
purpose truck or tractor used to relocate a mobile substation and 
trailer shall be classified as transportation equipment.
    The composite depreciation rate used for transmission plant or 
distribution plant, as appropriate, shall be applied to the mobile 
substation.

                          108   Security Lights

    Where a pole supports both a secondary wire and a security light, 
the cost of the pole shall be charged to Account 364, Poles, Towers, and 
Fixtures, even though the plant investment in security lights is 
recorded in Account 371, Installations on Customers' Premises.

                             109   Joint Use

    There are many cases in which an electric utility and a 
communications utility enter into an agreement that provides for joint 
use of poles. Under the terms of these agreements, either utility may 
occupy the poles of the other upon payment of a stipulated annual 
rental. If such joint occupancy necessitates the use of a higher than 
standard pole, the new pole shall be provided at the expense of the 
utility having the need for the higher pole.
    When an electric utility replaces, at its own expense, a standard 
pole belonging to the communications utility with a higher pole, the 
cost of the higher pole, less net salvage (if any) of the pole replaced, 
shall be charged to the account in which the pole rental is included.
    Contributions made to an electric utility by a communications 
utility for the costs incurred in stubbing joint use electric poles 
shall be credited to Account 593, Maintenance of Overhead Lines. The 
cost of pole stubbing on electric plant distribution facilities shall be 
charged to Account 593.

[[Page 901]]

    An investment in outside plant that is held in joint ownership shall 
be recorded in the appropriate plant accounts at its cost to the 
utility. For continuing property record purposes, jointly owned property 
units shall be priced at their cost to the utility and shall be 
appropriately segregated in the CPRs to indicate joint ownership.

       110   First Clearing and Grading of Land and Rights of Way

    Utility accounting practice requires the costs associated with the 
first clearing and grading of land and rights of way and any resulting 
damage thereto, to be included in the accounts for structures and 
improvements or equipment to which such costs relate. Since the first 
clearing, as well as clearing which is ``directly occasioned by the 
building of a structure,'' is done, not for the purpose of enhancing the 
value of the land or the rights of way, but for the purpose of 
constructing plant, these costs are more directly related to the 
construction of plant than to the purchase of land or rights of way. The 
accounts shall be charged as follows:

    1. For overhead transmission pole lines, Account 356, Overhead 
Conductors and Devices;
    2. For overhead distribution lines, Account 365, Overhead Conductors 
and Devices; and
    3. For underground distribution lines, Account 366, Underground 
Conduit, for a conduit installation; or Account 367, Underground 
Conductors and Devices, for a direct burial installation.

             111   Engineering Contracts for System Planning

    Engineering costs for long-range system plans shall be charged to 
Account 183, Preliminary Survey and Investigation Charges, as incurred. 
The cost of engineering services incurred in preparing a long-range 
system plan represents a legitimate component of the total cost of 
construction of all system improvements detailed in the plan. The amount 
of engineering costs to be associated with any specific system 
improvement is the annual costs incurred up to the time of the 
allocation (not previously allocated), plus that portion of the initial 
cost which relates to the particular construction in question. If any 
major system improvement included in the engineering plan is not 
constructed, or if the study is superseded by another complete study, 
the cost of that portion of the original study not resulting in 
construction shall be charged to Account 182.2, Unrecovered Plant and 
Regulatory Study Costs, if the costs are to be recovered through future 
rates. Costs recorded in Account 182.2 shall be amortized to Account 
407, Amortization of Property Losses, Unrecovered Plant and Regulatory 
Study Costs, as the costs are recovered through the rates. Any costs 
included in Account 182.2 that are disallowed for rate-making purposes 
shall be charged to Account 426.5, Other Deductions.
    The allocation of engineering services to the various construction 
projects requires the exercise of judgment. In some cases, system 
improvements are continuous over a period of months or years, thus 
permitting the engineering cost to be spread monthly as overhead in 
relation to the direct costs incurred in construction. (If a substantial 
amount of retirement work is performed in connection with system 
improvements, a proportionate share of the engineering cost shall be 
allocated on the basis of direct retirement labor.) If the system 
improvements detailed in the plan are not performed in a continuous 
manner, the engineering cost shall be allocated on the basis of the 
estimated costs of the various larger system improvement projects which 
result from the long-range plan.
    If construction is performed by contract, the engineering cost 
applicable thereto shall be transferred from Account 183 to Account 107, 
Construction Work-in-Progress--Electric, and thereby spread to the 
appropriate plant accounts on the basis of contract costs.
    In the case of system improvement construction performed on the 
basis of work orders, engineering costs shall be transferred to Account 
107, Construction Work-in-Progress--Electric, and included in total work 
order costs as either overhead or special services. If engineering 
services are not readily identifiable with individual work orders, they 
shall be capitalized as overhead. If engineering costs for each

[[Page 902]]

work order are readily separable from the engineering costs for all 
other work orders, they shall be capitalized as special services.
    In summarizing system improvement work orders on the RUS Form 219, 
Inventory of Work Orders, the amount of engineering costs previously 
approved for advance on the long range plan, if any, shall be deducted 
to determine the balance of loan funds subject to advance by RUS.

             112   Determination of Availability of Service

    Costs relating to the determination of availability of service, 
rates, and similar items for individual applicants shall be charged to 
Account 912, Demonstrating and Selling Expenses. If it is expected that 
construction will result, the costs incurred to provide service, 
including staking, shall be charged to Account 107, Construction Work-
in-Progress--Electric. If construction does not result, Account 107 
shall be credited and Account 426.5, Other Deductions, shall be charged.

                  113   Temporary Facilities (Services)

    Plant installed for temporary use, a period of less than 1.ar, shall 
be recorded in Account 185, Temporary Facilities, net of any payments 
received from customers. Upon retirement, this net cost plus cost of 
removal, less any salvage value, shall be cleared to Account 451, 
Miscellaneous Service Revenues.
    When a temporary service is installed at the site of a building 
under construction, the location of the permanent service entrance and 
the load and its characteristics are usually known. The temporary 
service is of the proper capacity and is so located or has sufficient 
slack, that it can be relocated to serve the new building as a permanent 
service. Under these conditions, the service shall be charged to Account 
369, Services, when first installed. The cost of moving and attaching 
the service to the permanent service entrance shall be charged to 
Account 593, Maintenance of Overhead Lines or Account 594, Maintenance 
of Underground Lines, as appropriate.

    114   Construction Work-in-Progress Damaged or Destroyed by Storm

    When installed plant, not yet completed or completed but not yet 
placed in service, has been damaged or destroyed by storm, the cost of 
the repair and restoration shall be added to the cost of construction 
and capitalized if the plant was constructed under force account or work 
order construction, and the utility paid for the cost of the repairs. If 
the plant was constructed under contract, the contractor is required to 
deliver the plant in new condition. Therefore, any repairs required 
prior to the completion of construction and acceptance by the utility, 
are ordinarily borne by the contractor.

                        115   Liquidated Damages

    Liquidated damages are amounts paid by or assessed against 
contractors for the completion of construction after an agreed upon 
date. Liquidated damages shall be credited to Account 107, Construction 
Work-in-Progress--Electric. Since these damages accrue during the 
construction period, they become one of the components of construction 
cost. Even though a portion of these damages may compensate the utility 
for costs which are not ``identifiable,'' no portion of the damages 
shall be credited to revenue or expense.
    When a contractor has been paid in full from loan funds or from 
funds to be reimbursed by loan funds without a deduction for liquidated 
damages, the amount of liquidated damages received shall be deposited in 
the Construction Fund. This amount shall be reflected by a decrease in 
column 5, ``Total Expenditures to Date,'' of the RUS Form 595, Financial 
Requirement and Expenditure Statement, and as an increase in column 6, 
``Cash Balance.'' If liquidated damages are obtained by withholding an 
equivalent amount from the contractor's payment, the net result will be 
the same.

              116   Nonrefundable Payments for Construction

    Nonrefundable payments (contributions) from customers and developers 
for underground construction shall

[[Page 903]]

first be credited to Account 107.2, Construction Work-in-Progress--Force 
Account. When the constructed plant is unitized and distributed to the 
individual plant accounts, the contributions shall be credited to those 
plant accounts which gave rise to the contribution.
    When a customer or developer furnishes a trench or other service in 
connection with buried plant, the cooperative shall debit Account 107.2 
with the actual or estimated cost of the service performed, and account 
for the credit as set forth above.

        117   Refunds of Overpayments for Materials and Equipment

    Refunds of overpayments for materials and equipment previously 
purchased are occasionally received as the result of legal action 
brought against electrical suppliers for price fixing in violation of 
antitrust laws. Such refunds shall be accounted for as follows:

    1. The refund shall first be applied to any litigation costs that 
were incurred.
    2. Refunds for special equipment items shall be accounted for, in 
detail, on the Summary of Special Equipment Costs and credited against 
the appropriate plant accounts.
    3. Other material or equipment items that were installed through 
work orders or a materials furnished contract shall be adjusted on an 
amended work order. The amended work order shall include full details of 
the refund.
    4. Continuing property records shall be adjusted to reflect the 
above transactions.
    5. Amounts approved for advance on the RUS Form 595, Financial 
Requirement and Expenditure Statement, and on the loan budget records, 
shall be adjusted. For special equipment items, the adjustment shall be 
requested in a letter to RUS. For materials installed by work order or 
contract, the adjustments shall be made through credits shown on the RUS 
Form 219, Inventory of Work Orders.
    6. Refunds for material currently in stock shall be credited to 
Account 154, Plant Materials and Operating Supplies.
    7. If the material was used in maintenance activities or operations, 
the refund shall be credited to the appropriate maintenance or 
operations expense account.
    8. Refunds for materials or equipment financed from loan funds shall 
be deposited in the Construction Fund--Trustee Account or remitted to 
RUS as a special payment on a note. Other refunds shall be deposited in 
the general funds.

                      118   Load Control Equipment

    The primary purpose of a Load Management System is to optimize load 
dispatch and to reduce or minimize system peaks in order to reduce 
purchases of power or to delay or eliminate the need for construction of 
new plant. A Load Management System may be used on integrated systems, 
or on generation, transmission, or distribution systems separately. The 
telemetry equipment used for data acquisition and interpretation may be 
included at various points on a system, such as generation, 
transmission, or distribution substation, switchyards or on consumers' 
premises.
    An effective load control program should be coordinated with the G&T 
and requires full participation of all member distribution systems. The 
G&T monitors the power load of the total member distribution system to 
predict the time of the system's peak load. An optimal load control 
strategy is developed by the G&T and is passed on from the G&T computer 
system to the load control computer systems of the member distribution 
cooperatives.
    The equipment at the member distribution system level is the type 
actually being used by an integrated power system to operate a load 
control program. The equipment used may vary from one integrated power 
system to another. The selection of equipment used is determined by the 
information needs of the integrated power system, and the method 
selected to operate the load control system.
    Some equipment performs only SCADA-type functions. This equipment is 
included with the equipment that performs only load control functions 
because SCADA-type equipment is an integral part of a load control 
program. An effective load control strategy requires current information 
on loads so that member distribution systems can

[[Page 904]]

determine the actual loads to be shed and the duration of the load 
control.
    The function and location of the load control equipment are the 
primary factors in determining the account in which the equipment shall 
be recorded. The following example depicts a common load control system 
and the associated accounting. Equipment type may vary, thereby 
necessitating the use of accounts not prescribed below. In all 
instances, however, the function and location of the equipment shall 
dictate the appropriate account classification.

                              G&T Borrower

    1. Coordinating System Equipment

    Coordinating System Equipment is the data acquisition, processing 
and control hardware and software used to coordinate the load control 
efforts of the member distribution system. Generally, this equipment is 
dedicated to load control use and is not shared with other electric 
utility activities.
    The purpose of the G&T load control computer system is to reduce or 
minimize the peak power requirements of the entire member distribution 
system. This involves load dispatching to control transmission circuits 
and breakers. The computer system for load control shall, therefore, be 
recorded in Account 353, Station Equipment, with the associated 
operating expenses recorded in Account 561, Load Dispatching, and 
maintenance expenses recorded in Account 570, Maintenance of Station 
Equipment.
    2. Coordinating System Communications Link

    The G&T load control computer system is usually linked to the load 
control computer system for each member distribution system by a radio 
or telephone link that is dedicated to that purpose and is not shared 
with other communication activities. Under such circumstances, 
communications equipment shall be classified in Account 353, Station 
Equipment. If the communications equipment is shared with general use or 
voice communications equipment, however, the equipment shall be 
classified in Account 397, Communication Equipment.

    3. Depreciation

    Load control equipment shall be recorded in separate subaccounts of 
the primary plant accounts detailed above and shall be depreciated based 
upon the owner's estimate of the equipment's useful service life.

                          Distribution Borrower

    1. Member System Equipment

    Member system equipment is the data acquisition, processing and 
control hardware and software used as a subset to the overall load 
control efforts by the integrated power system.
    The member system computer for each distribution member system 
accepts the control strategy from the G&T coordinating system and 
develops the tables that determine the control loads that are to be shed 
and the duration of the load control. The member system computer for 
each distribution system monitors the usage at each of its delivery 
points. This usage data is then transmitted to the G&T coordinating 
system for use in developing load projects and evaluating control 
strategies for the integrated power system. The member system computer 
is generally dedicated to load control use and is not shared with other 
electric utility operations.
    The member computer system shall be recorded in Account 362, Station 
Equipment. The associated operating expenses shall be recorded in 
Account 581, Load Dispatching, and maintenance expenses shall be 
recorded in Account 592, Maintenance of Station Equipment.

    2. Substation Remote Controllers

    Substation Remote Controllers are located at the distribution 
substation. They accept control signals from the member system computer 
and couple the signal to the portion of the distribution system to which 
it is connected. Substation Remote Controllers also serve as a receiver 
of inbound signals from transponders located in the distribution system. 
They also send data back to the member system computer.
    Substation Remote Controllers shall be recorded in Account 362, 
Station Equipment. The associated operating expenses shall be recorded 
in Account

[[Page 905]]

582, Station Expenses, and maintenance expenses shall be recorded in 
Account 592, Maintenance of Station Equipment.

    3. Substation Injection Units

    Substation Injection Units are used only in power line based systems 
and are located in distribution substations. A major function of the 
Substation Injection Unit is to receive load control signals from the 
member system computer and inject them into the power line based system 
to be transmitted to the Load Control Receivers. Substation Injection 
Units can also perform control and SCADA functions similar to those 
performed by Substation Remote Controllers.
    Substation Injection Units shall be recorded in Account 362, Station 
Equipment. The associated operating expenses shall be recorded in 
Account 582, Station Expenses, and maintenance expenses shall be 
recorded in Account 592, Maintenance of Station Equipment.

    4. Remote Terminal Units

    Remote Terminal Units perform electric utility SCADA functions in a 
distribution substation or delivery point. These functions include 
monitoring equipment for abnormal operating conditions, monitoring 
analog quantities such as conductor voltage or substation load, and 
controlling of certain equipment within the substation.
    Remote Terminal Units shall be recorded in Account 362, Station 
Equipment. The associated operating expenses shall be recorded in 
Account 582, Station Expenses, and maintenance expenses shall be 
recorded in Account 592, Maintenance of Station Equipment.

    5. Line Device Transponder

    A Line Device Transponder directly controls a piece of distribution 
apparatus, such as a voltage regulator or a power factor correction 
capacitor, located on a distribution feeder and not accessible to a 
Remote Terminal Unit. The Line Device Transponder actuates the control 
functions and reports back to the member system computer upon completion 
of the requested action. This transponder is located at the site of the 
distribution apparatus being controlled.
    Line Device Transponders shall be recorded in Account 368, Line 
Transformers. The associated operating expense shall be recorded in 
Account 583, Overhead Line Expenses, or Account 584, Underground Line 
Expenses, as appropriate, and maintenance expenses shall be recorded in 
Account 595, Maintenance of Line Transformers.

    6. Communications Verification Transponders

    Communication Verification Transponders are used to respond to 
inquiries from Substation Remote Controllers. In power line based 
systems, these transponders are used to verify the performance of the 
communications system. They are also used during adverse system 
operations to isolate sections of the distribution system that are 
experiencing an outage.
    Communication Verification Transponders shall be recorded in Account 
362, Station Equipment. The associated operating expenses shall be 
recorded in Account 582, Station Expenses, and maintenance expenses 
shall be recorded in Account 592, Maintenance of Station Equipment.

    7. Load Control Receivers

    The Load Control Receiver, also known as a load control switch, is 
located at the site of the consumer's load. These receivers directly 
control the electric supply to an end-use appliance, such as an electric 
water heater, central air conditioning compressor, or irrigation pump. 
The amount of time that an appliance will be turned off by the load 
control receiver is preset. When the member system computer determines 
that load shedding is necessary, it sends a signal to the communication 
link which then sends signals directly to the Load Control Receivers. In 
a power line based system, the signal from the communications link is 
sent by radio or telephone line to the Substation Injection Units, which 
then signals the Load Control Receivers to shut down the appliances for 
the present time. In nonpower line based systems, the signal from the 
communications link is sent by radio directly to the Load Control 
Receivers.
    Load Control Receivers are located on the consumer's side of the 
meter. When the member distribution system retains title to the Load 
Control Receivers and assumes full responsibility

[[Page 906]]

for maintenance and replacement of the equipment, it shall be classified 
in Account 371, Installations on Customer's Premises. Load Control 
Receivers that are donated or given to consumers shall be charged to 
Account 908, Customer Assistance Expenses.
    Operating and maintenance expenses applicable to Load Control 
Receivers recorded in Account 371 shall be charged to Account 587, 
Customer Installations Expenses, and Account 598, Maintenance of 
Miscellaneous Distribution Plant, respectively. Expenses applicable to 
Load Control Receivers donated or given to consumers shall be recorded 
in Account 908, Customer Assistance Expenses.
    Load Control Receivers may be moved on a continual basis from one 
customer location to another and are, therefore, considered to be 
special equipment items. When ownership is maintained by the member 
distribution cooperative, Load Control Receivers shall be accounted for 
in accordance with the special equipment procedures outlined in 
Accounting Interpretation No. 119 of this section.

    8. Communication Links

    The communication link in the member distribution systems between 
the Member System Computer, the Substation Remote Controllers or 
Substation Injection Units, Remote Terminal Units, Line Device 
Transponders, Communication Verification Transponders, and Load Control 
Receivers is usually accomplished by radio, telephone line, or power 
line based system. The communication links are normally dedicated to the 
SCADA and load control functions being served. Under such circumstances, 
communications equipment shall be recorded in Account 362, Station 
Equipment. If, however, the communication equipment used is shared with 
general use or voice communications equipment, the equipment shall be 
charged to Account 397, Communication Equipment.

    9. Depreciation

    Load control equipment shall be recorded in separate subaccounts of 
the primary plant accounts detailed above and shall be depreciated based 
upon the manufacturer's estimate of the equipment's useful service life.

                         119   Special Equipment

    Special Equipment items are classified as such because they are 
continually being moved from one location to another due to load changes 
and maintenance practices. The USoA provides accounting that differs 
from that used for other types of materials. The cost, new, of special 
equipment items shall be capitalized at the time of purchase; it shall 
not be charged to Account 154 as is the case with other materials. The 
first installation cost, as well as all incidental costs necessary to 
prepare the equipment for use, shall be capitalized with the material 
upon purchase. All subsequent costs of removing, resetting, changing, 
renewing oil, and repairing constitute operations and maintenance 
expenses. The capitalized cost of special equipment items, including the 
first installation, shall be removed from the electric plant accounts 
only when the items are abandoned or retired from the system.
    Meters, line-type transformers, oil circuit reclosers, 
sectionalizers, current and potential transformers, meter sockets, and 
other metering equipment listed in Account 370, Meters, as well as pole-
type and underground voltage regulators in Account 368, Line 
Transformers, are considered to be special equipment items. Similarly, 
load control receivers (load control switches) recorded in Account 371, 
Installations on Customers' Premises, are considered to be items of 
special equipment. (See Interpretation No. 118.) Transformers, voltage 
regulators, metering equipment, and current and potential transformers 
for substations are not.
    Special equipment items which are classified as nonusable shall be 
segregated in the warehouse and retired from service. The Summary of 
Special Equipment Costs shall be retitled Summary of Special Equipment 
Costs Retired and used for this purpose. A journal entry reflecting this 
information shall be prepared and posted to the books. Since loan funds 
for special equipment, including first installation costs, are approved 
for advance by RUS upon receipt of the borrower's written estimate of 
funds required, and not on

[[Page 907]]

the basis of an Inventory of Work Orders, it is improper to take a 
credit for any salvage involved in the retirement of special equipment 
on the Inventory of Work Orders.

                     120   Meter Sockets and Meters

    When a utility furnishes meter sockets, ownership by the utility of 
the meter socket or base, as well as the meter itself, is established by 
virtue of them being furnished without cost to the consumer by the 
cooperative. While no agreement as to ownership between the cooperative 
and the property owner exists, cooperative ownership is implied by long 
standing practice and tradition in the electric utility industry.

                    121   Minimum--Maximum Voltmeters

    A minimum--maximum voltmeter is used to record the minimum and 
maximum voltages at a specific line location over a period of time. It 
is normally installed on a pole in connection with a 1\1/2\ kVA 
transformer, a meter base and connecting wires, and other small items of 
materials. Meter bases are ordinarily set for these voltmeters 
throughout the system, and a lesser number of voltmeters are rotated 
among them periodically to obtain voltage readings. An average system 
may have one voltmeter to two installations, with a maximum of 20 or 25 
voltmeters for the whole system.
    Minimum--maximum voltmeters shall be recorded, through work orders, 
in Account 370, Meters, when installed. The cost of the transformers 
shall remain in Account 368, Line Transformers, with the cost of the 
meter bases remaining in Account 370, Meters. The miscellaneous material 
used in installing the transformer and the meter base shall be charged 
to Account 370, Meters.
    Maintenance expense shall be charged to either Account 595, 
Maintenance of Line Transformers, or Account 597, Maintenance of Meters, 
as appropriate. Costs associated with reading the voltmeters shall be 
charged to Account 583, Overhead Line Expenses, and the cost of 
relocating or changing the complete installation or any part thereof, 
other than retirement of the meter base, shall be charged to Account 
583, Overhead Line Expenses, or Account 586, Meter Expenses.

                    122   Retrofitting Demand Meters

    A demand meter measures the amount of electricity used over a period 
of time in kilowatt-hours (kWh) and indicates the maximum kilowatts (kW) 
required at any one time by means of a pointer.
    Electronic or solid state demand meters have a direct readout which 
reads kilowatt demand to two decimal places. The use of a direct readout 
demand meter may result in increased revenues as pointer readings tend 
to register lower than actual usages.
    The process of retrofitting a demand meter replaces the pointer with 
a direct readout. The cost of such a replacement is usually expensed as 
a minor item of property; however, since the use of a direct readout 
results in a substantial betterment, the excess cost of the replacement 
over the estimated cost, at current prices, of replacing the pointer 
without the betterment is capitalized.

                      123   Transformer Conversions

    The conversion of an overhead transformer to an underground 
transformer constitutes a betterment and shall, therefore, be 
capitalized.

                           124   Transclosures

    Transclosures are enclosures or cabinets in which line transformers 
are mounted. The cost of transclosures that are purchased separately 
from the transformer shall be charged to Account 154, Plant Materials 
and Operating Supplies, when received, and capitalized, upon 
installation, to Account 368, Line Transformers, as a separate unit of 
property. If the case and the transformer are inseparable, the unit is 
considered a transformer and shall be capitalized upon purchase.

                         125   Retirement Units

                                Services

    A retirement unit shall consist of a complete service rather than 
the individual wires comprising that service. If each separate wire of a 
service were

[[Page 908]]

treated as a retirement unit, the retirement unit would represent a 
comparatively small cost. Such a small unit of property would 
substantially increase the number of retirement work orders. The 
complete service shall, therefore, be considered a retirement unit.

                               Minor Items

    When minor items of property are added separately from complete 
retirement units, the costs of these items shall be included in work 
orders, and by unitizing all costs of completed construction for a 
month, these minor items shall be spread to the retirement units of 
which they normally form a part. For example, to convert a two-phase 
line to a three-phase line requires the addition of a conductor, an 
insulator and a pole-top pin. A pole-top pin is typically capitalized as 
a component of the cost of the pole to which it is attached. Assuming 
this is the only work order for the month, the cost of this pin shall be 
charged to the conductor, so that its cost is included in the total cost 
of the project. In actual practice, however, this does not happen as it 
is normal to have a number of work orders for a given month, which 
include the setting of poles. In allocating the cost of all construction 
projects for the month, part of the cost of pole-top pins shall be 
allocated to poles even though the work orders on which they were 
capitalized did not include poles.
    The retirement and replacement of isolated single retirement units 
cannot be charged to maintenance; a retirement and construction work 
order shall be used.

           126   Establishment of Continuing Property Records

    The costs of installing a system of continuing property records 
shall be charged to Account 930.2, Miscellaneous General Expenses, and 
may include:

    1. Labor and expenses incurred in developing an inventory of 
property;
    2. Labor and material costs incurred in connection with developing 
pole records including map preparation and pole cards; and
    3. Labor and material costs (ledger sheets, etc.) incurred in 
connection with the installation of the record system.

             127   Continuing Property Records for Buildings

    When establishing continuing property records for a building where 
there is no detailed breakdown of contract costs, it is necessary to 
estimate the cost of the each component part. It should be noted that 
the establishment of continuing property records is not required for 
buildings; however, if CPRs are not maintained, all repairs including 
the replacement of major component parts shall be expensed in the period 
incurred.

                         128   Sale of Property

    All proceeds deposited in the Construction Fund account from the 
sale of property, regardless of materiality, shall be reflected on the 
RUS Form 595, Financial Requirement and Expenditure Statement. Proceeds 
from the sale of property shall be reported on the Form 595, by budget 
purpose, as a reduction in total expenditures to date, column 5; and an 
increase in the cash balance, column 6.
    Proceeds from the sale of property shall not be used to maintain an 
``Employee Fund.'' A utility may, pursuant to board policy, use general 
funds for employee welfare equivalent in amount to proceeds received 
from the sale of scrap property. If general funds, in an amount 
equivalent to proceeds received from the sale of scrap property, are 
used for employee welfare, Account 926, Employee Pensions and Benefits, 
shall be charged.

          129   Gain or Loss on the Sale of an Office Building

    A gain on the sale of an office building shall be recorded in 
Account 421.1, Gain on the Disposition of Property, with a loss recorded 
in Account 421.2, Loss on the Disposition of Property. If the gain or 
loss will materially distort current year's net margins, such gain or 
loss is reportable as an extraordinary item in Account 434, 
Extraordinary Income, or Account 435, Extraordinary Deductions.

[[Page 909]]

                   130   Salvage and Obsolete Material

    The value of material salvaged from the retirement of units of 
property reduces the loss on the retirement and shall be so applied. The 
value assigned to salvage shall be credited to Account 108.8, Retirement 
Work-in-Progress, which results in reducing net charges to the provision 
for depreciation when the work order is completed and cleared.
    If salvage is sold, any difference between the realized value and 
the estimated value of the salvaged material shall be charged or 
credited to the appropriate provision for depreciation.
    Salvage resulting from maintenance where no retirement units are 
involved shall be debited to the materials and supplies account, and 
credited to the appropriate maintenance account.
    Occasionally a utility will have a loss due to obsolescence of 
materials on hand. If the loss is due to obsolescence of new material, 
the loss shall be charged to Account 426.5, Other Deductions. If the 
loss is due to obsolescence of used material, the loss shall be charged 
to the appropriate subaccount of Account 108, Accumulated Provision for 
Depreciation.

                   131   Plant Acquisition Adjustments

    Plant acquisition adjustments shall be amortized to the operating 
expense accounts. These adjustments are recorded in Account 114, 
Electric Plant Acquisition Adjustments, and amortized to Account 406, 
Amortization of Electric Plant Acquisition Adjustments, or Account 425, 
Miscellaneous Amortization, as required by the regulatory commission 
having jurisdiction. Accounts 406 and 425 shall be closed to operating 
margins.

                           132   General Plant

    When the unit method of depreciation is used for general plant 
items, gains and losses on sales, trades or disposals of equipment shall 
be recorded as such. If the composite method of depreciation is used, 
gains or losses on the disposal of general plant items shall be recorded 
in the appropriate depreciation reserve account.
    A truck which is used only for transporting power operated equipment 
mounted thereon shall be charged, together with the installed equipment, 
to Account 396, Power Operated Equipment. If the same type of truck is 
used for transporting materials and supplies, tools and work equipment, 
personnel, or other items, the cost of the truck shall be charged to 
Account 392, Transportation Equipment.
    Depreciation and other expenses relating to power operated equipment 
shall be accumulated in a subaccount of Account 184, Clearing Accounts, 
and distributed monthly on an equitable basis to the accounts properly 
chargeable.
    Depreciation expense on vehicles and other work equipment, furniture 
and office equipment, and other such plant used in the construction of 
utility plant, is a proper component of construction cost. To avoid a 
duplicate advance of funds, however, the amount of depreciation on such 
items that has previously been financed from loan funds shall be 
deducted from Inventories of Work Orders submitted to RUS. This amount 
shall be specifically identified, and shown either monthly or annually 
as a single item in column 9 on the RUS Form 219, Inventory of Work 
Orders.

        133   Plant Abandonments and Disallowances of Plant Costs

    In December 1986, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued 
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 90, Regulated 
Enterprises--Accounting for Abandonments (Statement No. 90) and 
Disallowances of Plant Costs. This section provides an overview of the 
requirements outlined in Statement No. 90 together with the specific 
accounts that shall be used to record a plant abandonment or a 
disallowance of plant costs.

                           Plant Abandonments

    When an abandonment becomes probable, the cost of the abandoned 
asset shall be removed from Construction Work-in-Progress or Plant-in-
Service, as applicable. Before making this transfer, however, a 
determination must be made as to whether recovery of the allowed cost is 
likely to be provided with a full return on the investment during the 
period from the time

[[Page 910]]

the abandonment becomes probable, to the time when recovery is 
completed, or with a partial or no return on the investment. This 
determination shall be made based upon the facts and circumstances of 
the specific abandonment, and past practices and current policies of 
regulatory jurisdiction.
    If a full return on the investment is likely to be provided, any 
disallowance of all or part of the cost of abandoned plant that is both 
probable and reasonably estimated shall be recognized as a loss in the 
current year with the carrying basis of the asset reduced by an equal 
amount. The remaining cost of abandoned plant shall be recorded as a 
separate new asset.
    If partial or no return on the investment is likely to be provided, 
any disallowance of abandoned plant costs that is both probable and 
reasonably estimated shall be recognized as a loss. The present value of 
the future revenues expected to be provided to recover the allowable 
cost of the abandoned plant and return on the investment, if any, shall 
be reported as a separate new asset. The discount rate used to compute 
the present value shall be the borrower's incremental borrowing rate, 
which is the rate that the borrower would have to pay to borrow an 
equivalent amount for a period equal to the expected recovery period. In 
determining the value of expected future revenues, the borrower shall 
consider the probable time period before the recovery is expected to 
begin and the probable time period over which recovery is expected to be 
provided.
    The amount of the new asset shall be adjusted from time to time, as 
necessary, if new information indicates that the estimates used to 
record the new asset have changed. The carrying value of the new asset, 
however, shall not be adjusted for changes in the incremental borrowing 
rate. The amount of any adjustments shall be recorded as a gain or loss.
    During the period between the date on which a new asset is 
recognized and the date on which recovery begins, the carrying amount 
shall be increased by accruing a carrying charge. The rate used to 
accrue the carrying charge shall be:

    1. If a full return on the investment is likely, a rate equal to the 
allowed overall cost of capital in the jurisdiction in which recovery is 
expected to be provided shall be used.
    2. If partial or no return is likely, the asset shall be amortized 
in a manner that will produce a constant return on the unamortized 
investment in the new asset equal to the rate at which the expected 
revenues were discounted.

    Due to the nonprofit environment in which electric cooperatives 
operate, full recovery of interest expense on plant related long-term 
debt equates to full recovery of the rate of return for an investor-
owned utility. Therefore, if a cooperative is permitted full recovery of 
the interest expense incurred on the long-term debt borrowed to finance 
construction of an abandoned plant, no discounting of the asset is 
required nor is accrual of the carrying charge permitted.
    If, at the time the provisions of Statement No. 90 are first 
applied, the borrower elects to restate the financial statements, the 
financial statements for all periods presented shall be restated and the 
financial statements shall disclose the nature of the restatement and 
its effect on margins before extraordinary items, net margins, and 
patronage capital at the beginning of the earliest period presented. If 
the borrower elects not to restate the financial statements, the effect 
of applying Statement No. 90 shall be reported as a change in accounting 
principle and the financial statements shall disclose the nature of the 
change and the effect of applying Statement No. 90 on margins before 
extraordinary items and net margins.
    The specific accounts that shall be used to record transactions 
involving plant abandonments are as follows:

    1. In the year of the abandonment, the unrecoverable portion of the 
cost of abandoned plant included in construction work-in-progress shall 
be recognized as a loss by a charge to Account 426.5, Other Deductions, 
and a credit to Account 107, Construction Work-in-Progress.
    2. The balance of the cost remaining in the construction work-in-
progress account shall be credited to Account

[[Page 911]]

107 and charged to Account 182.2, Unrecovered Plant and Regulatory Study 
Costs.
    3. The difference between the charge to Account 182.2 and the 
present value of expected future revenues for recovery of the new asset, 
shall be recorded as a credit to Account 182.2 and a debit to Account 
426.5. The credit to Account 182.2 shall be segregated from the amount 
charged to Account 182.2 by the use of a separate subaccount. Statement 
No. 90 does not require this segregation; however, it is necessary under 
the USoA to provide for the appropriate segregation of operating and 
nonoperating income.
    4. During the waiting period for recovery of the new asset to begin, 
carrying charges shall be accrued by a debit toAccount 182.2 with a 
concurrent credit to Account 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income. 
Debits to Account 182.2 shall be treated as reductions to the credit 
subaccount of Account 182.2.
    5. The borrower shall amortize the amount debited to Account 182.2 
by charges to operating income, consistent with the way the amortized 
amounts are recovered through rates. These charges to income shall be 
recorded in Account 407, Amortization of Property Losses, Unrecovered 
Plant and Regulatory Study Costs.
    6. As the recoverable amount recorded in Account 182.2 is recovered 
through rates, the borrower shall accrue income by charges to Account 
182.2 and credits to Account 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income. 
Accruals shall be computed by applying the same rate used to derive the 
present value of the asset established in Account 182.2, to the 
unamortized balance in that account. Accrued amounts charged to Account 
182.2 shall be treated as reductions to the credit subaccount 
withinAccount 182.2.
    Prior to implementing the accounting prescribed above, the borrower 
shall submit the details of each plant abandonment to RUS for approval.

           Disallowances of Costs of Recently Completed Plant

    When it becomes probable that a portion of the cost of recently 
completed plant will be disallowed for rate making purposes and a 
reasonable estimate of the amount of the disallowance can be made, the 
estimated amount of the probable disallowance shall be deducted from the 
reported cost of the plant and recognized as a loss. If a portion of the 
costs is explicitly, but indirectly disallowed, the equivalent amount of 
the cost shall be deducted from the reported cost of the plant and 
recognized as a loss. The specific accounts that shall be used to record 
transactions involving the disallowance of plant costs are as follows:

    1. Estimated disallowed plant costs which the borrower records as a 
credit to Account 101, Electric Plant-in-Service, shall be charged to 
Account 426.5, Other Deductions.
    2. If the loss qualifies as an extraordinary item under the criteria 
set forth in General Instruction No. 7 of the USoA, the borrower shall 
record the loss in Account 435, Extraordinary Deductions. To be 
considered extraordinary, an item shall be more than five percent of 
income computed before extraordinary items. If a borrower believes that 
a loss of less than five percent should be treated as an extraordinary 
item; the borrower shall, with commission approval, record the loss in 
Account 435 and report the loss as an extraordinary item. If the 
borrower is not subject to state commission jurisdiction, RUS approval 
is required.

                   134   Utility Plant Phase-in Plans

    In August 1987, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued 
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 92, Regulated 
Enterprises--Accounting for Phase-in Plans (Statement No. 92). This 
section provides an overview of the requirements outlined in Statement 
No. 92.
    The term phase-in plan is used to refer to any method of recognition 
of allowable costs in rates that meets all of the following criteria:

    1. The method was adopted by the regulator in connection with a 
major, newly completed plant of the regulated enterprise or one of its 
suppliers or a major plant scheduled for completion in the near future.

[[Page 912]]

    2. The method defers the rates intended to recover allowable costs 
beyond the period in which those allowable costs would be charged to 
expense under generally accepted accounting principles applicable to 
enterprises in general.
    3. The method defers the rates intended to recover allowable costs 
beyond the period in which those rates would have been ordered under the 
rate-making methods routinely used prior to 1982 by that regulator for 
similar allowable costs of that regulated enterprise.

    If a phase-in plan is ordered by a regulator in connection with a 
plant on which no substantial physical construction had been performed 
before January 1, 1988, none of the allowable costs that are deferred 
for future recovery by the regulator under the plan for rate-making 
purposes, shall be capitalized for general-purpose financial reporting 
purposes (financial reporting).
    If a phase-in plan is ordered by a regulator in connection with a 
plant completed before January 1, 1988, or a plant on which substantial 
physical construction had been performed before January 1, 1988, the 
criteria specified below shall be applied to that plan. If the phase-in 
plan meets all of those criteria, all allowable costs that are deferred 
for future recovery by the regulator under the plan shall be capitalized 
for financial reporting purposes as a separate asset (a deferred 
charge). If any one of those criteria is not met, none of the allowable 
costs that are deferred for future recovery by the regulator under the 
plan shall be capitalized for financial reporting. The criteria for 
determining whether capitalization is appropriate are:

    1. The allowable costs in question are deferred pursuant to a formal 
plan that has been agreed to by the regulator;
    2. The plan specifies the timing of recovery of all allowable costs 
that will be deferred under the plan;
    3. All allowable costs deferred under the plan are scheduled for 
recovery within 10 years of the date when the deferral began; and
    4. The percentage increase in rates scheduled under the plan for 
each future year is no greater than the percentage increase in rates 
scheduled under the plan for each immediately preceding year. That is, 
the scheduled percentage increase in year two is no greater than the 
percentage increase granted in year one, the scheduled percentage 
increase in year three is no greater than the percentage increase in 
year two, etc.

    By definition, a phase-in plan approved prior to 1982 that contains 
provisions contrary to those detailed above is not subject to the 
provisions of Statement No. 92. This exemption, however, only relates to 
a specific utility and a specific regulator. For example, a utility 
cannot use a phase-in plan approved by its regulator for a different 
utility as justification for its phase-in plan exceeding the 10-year 
limit imposed by Statement No. 92.
    A phase-in plan is a method of rate making intended to moderate a 
sudden increase in rates while providing the regulated enterprise with 
recovery of its investment and a return on that investment during the 
recovery period. A disallowance is a rate-making action that prevents 
the regulated enterprise from recovering either some amount of its 
investment or some amount of return on its investment. Statement No. 90 
specifies the accounting for disallowances of plant costs (see item 133 
of this regulation). If a method of rate making that meets the criteria 
for a phase-in plan includes an indirect disallowance of plant costs, 
that disallowance shall be accounted for in accordance with Statement 
No. 90. Cumulative amounts capitalized under phase-in plans shall be 
reported as a separate asset in the balance sheet. The net amount 
capitalized in each period or the net amount of previously capitalized 
allowable costs recovered during each period shall be reported as a 
separate item of other income or expense in the income statement. 
Allowable costs capitalized shall not be reported as reductions of other 
expenses.
    The terms of any phase-in plan in effect during the year or ordered 
for future years shall be disclosed in the financial statements. 
Statement No. 92 does not permit capitalization for financial reporting 
of allowable costs deferred for future recovery by the regulator 
pursuant to a phase-in plan that does not meet the criteria or a phase-

[[Page 913]]

in plan related to plant on which substantial physical construction was 
not completed before January 1, 1988. Nevertheless, the financial 
statements shall include disclosures of the net amount deferred at the 
balance sheet date for rate-making purposes, and the net change in 
deferrals for rate-making purposes during the year for those plans.
    If the provisions of Statement No. 92 are applied retroactively, the 
financial statements of all periods presented shall be restated. In 
addition, the restated financial statements shall, in the year that 
Statement No. 92 is first applied, disclose the nature of any 
restatement and its effect on margins before extraordinary items, net 
margins, and on patronage capital at the beginning of the earliest 
period presented. If the financial statements for prior years are not 
restated, the effects of applying Statement No. 92 to existing phase-in 
plans shall be reported as a change in accounting principle and the 
financial statements shall disclose the effect of adopting Statement No. 
92 on margins before extraordinary items and net margins.
    The application of Statement No. 92 to an existing phase-in plan 
shall be delayed if both of the following conditions are met:

    1. The enterprise has filed a rate application to have the plan 
amended to meet the criteria of Statement No. 92 or intends to do so as 
soon as practicable; and
    2. It is reasonably possible that the regulator will change the 
terms of the phase-in plan so that it will meet the criteria of 
Statement No. 92.

    If the above conditions are met, the provisions of Statement No. 92 
shall be applied to the existing phase-in plan on the earlier of the 
date when one of the conditions ceases to be met or the date when the 
final rate order is received, amending or refusing to amend the phase-in 
plan. However, if the enterprise delays filing its application for the 
amendment or the regulator does not process the application in the 
normal period of time, the application of Statement No. 92 shall not be 
further delayed.
    In applying the criteria of Statement No. 92 to a plan that was in 
existence prior to the first fiscal year beginning after December 15, 
1987, and that was revised to meet that criteria, the 10-year criterion 
and the requirement concerning the percentage increase shall be measured 
from the date of the amendment rather than from the date of the first 
scheduled deferrals under the original plan. All phase-in plans must 
receive RUS approval prior to implementation.

   135   Accounting for Removal or Relocation of Electric Facilities 
                   Resulting from the Action of Others

    Under arrangements with another party, a borrower agrees, or is 
obliged, to remove, relocate, rearrange, or otherwise make changes in 
utility property, other than for the purpose of rendering utility 
service to the other party, for which the utility is reimbursed for all 
or a portion of the costs incurred.

                            Plant Accounting

    The relocation of the line shall be accounted for as follows:

    1. If all of the assemblies in the line are retired or completely 
removed and later reinstalled or if the line is constructed in a new 
location before the old line is removed, construction and retirement 
work orders shall be prepared except for the costs relating to special 
equipment items (transformers, oil circuit reclosers, etc.) which shall 
be charged to operations expense.
    2. If a line is moved in its entirety to a new location except for 
isolated retirement units (such as at the end of the line) or poles not 
suitable for resetting, the cost of moving the portion of line that is 
moved intact shall be charged to maintenance expense while the cost 
related to the change in isolated retirement units or the replacement of 
poles not suitable for resetting shall be accounted for through use of 
construction and retirement work orders.
    3. If a line is moved intact without any change in assemblies, the 
cost shall be charged to maintenance expense.

[[Page 914]]

                              Reimbursement

    If the borrower receives reimbursement for the costs related to the 
relocation of the line, the reimbursement shall be accounted for by 
crediting operation and maintenance expenses to the extent of actual 
expenses occasioned by the plant changes and crediting the remainder to 
the accumulated provision for depreciation, unless contractual terms 
definitely characterize residual or specific amounts as applicable to 
the cost of replacement. In the latter event, appropriate credits shall 
be entered in the plant accounts.
    Reimbursement received from a telephone company for adding a pole or 
replacing a present pole with a taller pole under joint use contracts 
falls within this latter category. In this instance, appropriate credits 
are charged against the plant accounts.

                                Financing

    The total reimbursement, less any portion for operations and 
maintenance costs, shall be entered in the ``Contributions in Aid of 
Construction'' section at the bottom of the Construction Work Order. 
When the Inventory of Work Orders (RUS Form 219) is prepared, enter only 
enough of the contribution in column 9 to reduce to zero the amount in 
column 10, ``Loan Funds Subject to Advance by RUS.'' This entry is made 
although none of the reimbursement received is recorded in the 
accounting records as a contribution in aid of construction.

                           136   Storm Damage

    As a result of recent hurricane, flood, and ice storm damage, the 
Rural Utilities Service (RUS) has received several inquiries concerning 
the proper accounting for storm damage costs and the associated funds 
received from the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA).
    Storm damage costs should be accounted for under the work order 
procedure. Units of property destroyed or otherwise removed from service 
must be reflected on retirement work orders and units of property 
installed must be shown on construction work orders. To ensure that the 
accounting for construction and retirement costs is as accurate as 
possible, an effort should be made to accurately accumulate material, 
labor, and overhead costs. Even when extreme care has been exercised, 
however, it may still be necessary to use estimates to develop the 
appropriate cost figures.
    When a storm occurs, a utility typically incurs a large retirement 
loss, all or a part of which should be charged to the accumulated 
provision for depreciation. Storm damage costs over and above 
construction and retirement costs represent maintenance expense. 
Maintenance costs include the costs of resagging lines, straightening 
poles, and replacing minor items of property. When extensive damage has 
occurred, the need to restore the property to an operating condition 
without delay usually results in excessive costs being incurred. 
Standard property unit costs may be used as a guide in determining the 
amount to be capitalized. It should be noted, however, that when 
standard property unit costs are used, all excess costs are charged to 
maintenance expense.
    Because of the storm's destruction, property is retired prematurely 
and as a result, extraordinary retirement losses occur. When such 
extraordinary losses occur, they should be recorded in the year in which 
the losses are incurred. If the recording of such losses will materially 
distort the income statement, such losses may be charged to Account 435, 
Extraordinary Deductions. These costs may be deferred and amortized to 
future periods only if the provisions of Statement of Financial 
Accounting Standards No. 71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types 
of Regulation (Statement No. 71), are applied. Under the provisions of 
Statement No. 71, a utility may defer certain costs, provided such costs 
are included in the utility's rate base and recovered through future 
rates. If an RUS borrower elects to apply the provisions of Statement 
No. 71, RUS approval is required. To obtain RUS approval, a borrower 
must submit:
    a. A detailed description of the plan including the nature of the 
expense item, the amount of the deferral, the specific time period for 
rate recovery, and justifying support for the time period selected;

[[Page 915]]

    b. The accounting journal entries being used by the cooperative to 
record the expense deferral and amortization of the deferred costs;
    c. A copy of the state Commission order authorizing recovery of the 
deferred costs through future rates, or in the absence of commission 
jurisdiction, a resolution from the cooperative's board of directors 
authorizing such recovery; and
    d. A statement from the borrower's certified public accountant (CPA) 
or CPA firm indicating that the deferral and amortization of these costs 
is in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
    To assist in the restoration of the damaged facilities, the Federal 
government often provides assistance through FEMA. Under current FEMA 
procedures, FEMA provides funds for the restoration of facilities based 
upon the cost estimates submitted by the entity requesting assistance. 
If the FEMA grant is for less than 100 percent of the cost estimates, 
FEMA does not specify which costs are to be reimbursed. When the funds 
are received, therefore, they should be accounted for by crediting 
construction, retirement, maintenance expense, and administrative 
expense in direct proportion to the total costs incurred. For example, 
if total storm damage costs are $1,000,000 with $450,000 incurred for 
maintenance, $300,000 for retirement, $200,000 for construction, and 
$50,000 for administrative costs, the FEMA reimbursement should be 
accounted for by applying 45 percent of the funds received as a credit 
to maintenance expense, 30 percent as a credit to retirement costs, 20 
percent as a credit to construction, and 5 percent as a credit to 
administrative and general costs.

                       Accounting Journal Entries
Dr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in Progress--      $1,015.17
 Storm Damage...........................
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............       $1,015.17
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To transfer the removal costs recorded in Column 11 of Retirement Work
 Order 4401X to Account 108.8X.................................
Dr. 107.4, Construction Work in Progress-      $4,141.55
 -Storm Damage..........................
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............       $4,141.55
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To remove material salvaged in the -------------------- rebuild from
 Account 107.4. The original entry debited Account 154, Plant Materials
 and Operating Supplies, and credited Account 107.4. (See Column 12 of
 Retirement Work Order 4401X.).................................
Dr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in Progress--    $312,230.41
 Storm Damage...........................
    Cr. 364, Poles Towers and Fixtures..  ..............     $133,377.55
    Cr. 365, Overhead Conductors and      ..............       59,683.08
     Devices............................
    Cr. 368, Lines Transformers.........  ..............       19,704.60
    Cr. 369, Services...................  ..............       97,651.23
    Cr. 373, Street Lighting and Signal   ..............        1,813.95
     Systems............................
To remove the original cost of property destroyed and retired from the
 classified plant accounts. This retirement is recorded, in detail, on
 Retirement Work Order 4401X. It is understood that this
 retirement covers all distribution property retired or destroyed in the
 -------------------- area exclusive of substations and special
 equipment items (meters, meter sockets, current and potential
 transformers, transformers, voltage regulators, oil circuit reclosers
 (OCR), and sectionalizers).............................................
Dr. 108.6, Accumulated Provision for         $309,104.03
 Depreciation of Distribution Plant.....
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............     $309,104.03
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To record the net loss due to the retirement of distribution lines in
 the -------------------- area. (See Retirement Work Order 4401X.)..............................................................
Dr. 364, Poles, Towers and Fixtures.....      $99,075.40
Dr. 365, Overhead Conductors and Devices      104,142.22
Dr. 368, Line Transformers..............       25,036.07
Dr. 369, Services.......................       28,865.08
Dr. 373, Street Lighting and Signal             2,101.60
 Systems................................
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............     $259,220.37
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To record, in the proper classified plant accounts, Construction Work
 Order 4401 covering the -------------------- rebuild..........
This entry includes:
    Material Issued.....................     $150,336.49
    Less: Materials Returned............       15,631.39
                                         -------------------------------
    Net Material Used...................      134,705.10

[[Page 916]]


    Labor and overhead estimated by           124,515.27
     using standard record unit costs...
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................      259,220.37
                                         ===============================
Dr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in Progress--       2,384.00
 Storm Damage...........................
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............       $2,384.00
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To transfer the removal costs associated with the retirement of old
 transmission lines ($1,966) and substations ($418) to Account 107.4.
 This cost is shown in Column 11 of Retirement Work Order 4400X)...............................................................
Dr. 107.4, Construction Work in Progress-      $1,939.74
 -Storm Damage..........................
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............       $1,939.74
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To remove material salvaged from transmission lines ($1,545.74) and
 substations ($394.00) from Account 107.4. The original entry debited
 Account 154 and credited Account 107.4. (See Column 12 of Retirement
 Work Order 4400X.)............................................
Dr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in Progress--    $162,172.06
 Storm Damage...........................
    Cr. 355, Poles and Fixtures.........  ..............      $47,738.45
    Cr. 356, Overhead Conductors &        ..............       80,304.11
     Devices............................
    Cr. 362, Station Equipment..........  ..............       34,129.50
To remove the original cost of transmission lines and substations
 destroyed and retired from the classified plant accounts. (See
 Retirement Work Order 4400X.) (New substations were built and
 separately accounted for on Work Order 4406.).................
Dr. 108.5, Accumulated Provision for         $128,462.82
 Depreciation of Transmission Plant.....
Dr. 108.6, Accumulated Provision for           34,153.50
 Depreciation of Distribution Plant.....
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............     $162,616.32
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To record the net loss due to the retirement of transmission lines
 ($128,462.82) and substations ($34,153.50). (See Retirement Work Order
 4400X):.......................................................



------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           Transmission
                                            Substations        plant
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Original Cost...........................      $34,129.50     $128,042.56
Add: Cost of Removal....................          418.00        1,966.00
                                         -------------------------------
                                               34,547.50      130,008.56
Less: Material Salvaged.................          394.00        1,545.74
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................       34,153.50      128,462.82
                                         ===============================
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Dr. 355, Poles and Fixtures.............     $161,784.05
Dr. 356, Overhead Conductors and Devices      124,704.77
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............     $286,488.82
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To record, in the proper classified plant accounts, the costs of a 69 kV
 transmission line (--------------------) as detailed in Work Order
 4400. This work order includes construction costs as follows:.
Material Used (Net).....................     $171,665.62
    Labor and overhead estimated by           114,823.20
     using standard record unit costs...
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................      286,488.82
                                         ===============================
Dr. 107.4, Construction Work in Progress-        $329.40
 -Storm Damage..........................
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............         $329.40
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To correct the journal entry for cash received from the sale of scrapped
 meters and transformers. The original entry credited Account 107.4 at
 the time of receipt....................................................
    Transformers........................         $318.00
    Meters..............................           11.40
                                         -------------------------------
    Net Materials Used..................          329.40
                                         ===============================
Dr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in Progress-- ..............     $137,671.22
 Storm Damage...........................
    Cr. 365, Overhead Conductors and      ..............       $4,557.00
     Devices............................
    Cr. 368, Line Transformers..........  ..............      112,815.22
    Cr. 370, Meters.....................  ..............       20,299.00

[[Page 917]]


To remove the cost of meters, transformers, and OCRs lost or destroyed
 from the primary plant accounts. (See Retirement Work Order 4402X.)..............................................................
    737 Transformers....................     $112,815.22
    31 OCRs.............................        4,557.00
    1,532 Meters........................       20,299.00
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................      137,671.22
                                         ===============================
Dr. 108.6, Accumulated Provision for         $137,341.82
 Depreciation of Distribution Plant.....
    Cr. 108.8X, Retirement Work in        ..............     $137,341.82
     Progress...........................
To record the net loss due to the retirement of meters, transformers,
 and OCRs. (See Retirement Work Order 4402X.)..................
    Original Cost.......................     $137,671.22
    Salvaged Realized...................          329.40
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................      137,341.82
                                         ===============================
Dr. 186, Miscellaneous Deferred Debits..       $1,319.85
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............       $1,319.85
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To record the engineering costs associated with future construction work
 in the -------------------- area.......................................
Dr. 593, Maintenance of Overhead Lines..         $607.24
Dr. 595, Maintenance of Line                   19,365.86
 Transformers...........................
Dr. 597, Maintenance of Meters..........        6,595.56
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............      $26,568.66
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To charge the costs of repairing damaged meters, transformers, voltage
 regulators, and OCRs to the appropriate expense accounts. Repair costs
 were originally charged to Account 107.4...............................



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        593             595             597
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Meters..........................................................  ..............  ..............       $6,595.56
Transformers....................................................  ..............      $18,869.95  ..............
Voltage Regulators..............................................  ..............          495.91  ..............
Oil Circuit Reclosers...........................................         $607.24  ..............  ..............
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
      Total.....................................................          607.24       19,365.86        6,595.56
                                                                 ===============================================
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Dr. 920, Administrative and General           $32,000.00
 Salaries...............................
Dr. 921, Office Supplies and Expenses...        4,421.69
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............      $36,421.69
     Progress--Storm Damage.............
To charge the administrative costs incurred to obtain the FEMA grant to
 the appropriate expense accounts. Administrative costs were originally
 charged to Account 107.4...............................................
    Salaries............................      $32,000.00
    Office Supplies.....................        4,421.69
                                         -------------------------------
      Total.............................      $36,421.69
                                         ===============================
Dr. 571, Maintenance of Overhead Lines..       $3,675.60
Dr. 593, Maintenance of Overhead Lines..       33,080.40
    Cr. 107.4, Construction Work in       ..............      $36,756.00
     Progress Storm Damage..............
To allocate expenses remaining in Account 107.4 to distribution and
 transmission maintenance expense. It was estimated that only 10 percent
 is applicable to transmission..........................................
Dr. 426.5, Other Deductions.............     $275,000.00
Dr. 435, Extraordinary Deductions
Dr. 182.1, Extraordinary Property Losses
    Cr. 108.5, Accumulated Provision for  ..............      $35,000.00
     Depreciation of Transmission Plant.
    Cr. 108.6, Accumulated Provision for  ..............      240,000.00
     Depreciation of Distribution Plant.
To restore the accumulated provisions for depreciation to their
 appropriate levels based upon a study of plant currently in service....



    Note: Account 426.5, Other Deductions, should be used to record the 
retirement loss as a current period expense. Account 435, Extraordinary 
Deductions, may be used when the loss will materially distort the income 
statement. Account 182.1, Extraordinary Property Losses, should be used 
when such costs are being deferred under the provisions of Statement No. 
71.

[[Page 918]]

Costs recorded in this account should be amortized to Account 407, 
Amortization of Property Losses, as the costs are recovered through 
rates.

Dr. 131.1, Cash--General................   $1,000,000.00
    Cr. 253, Other Deferred Credits.....  ..............   $1,000,000.00
To record the receipt of funds from the Federal Emergency Management
 Administration (FEMA)..................................................
Dr. 253, Other Deferred Credits.........   $1,000,000.00
    Cr. 108.5, Accumulated Provision for  ..............      $74,205.00
     Depreciation of Transmission Plant.
    Cr. 108.6, Accumulated Provision for  ..............      191,575.00
     Depreciation of Distribution Plant.
    Cr. 186, Miscellaneous Deferred       ..............          872.00
     Debits.............................
    Cr. 355, Poles and Fixtures.........  ..............      129,056.00
    Cr. 356, Overhead Conductors and      ..............       99,408.00
     Devices............................
    Cr. 364, Poles, Towers and Fixtures.  ..............       78,916.00
    Cr. 365, Overhead Conductors and      ..............       82,840.00
     Devices............................
    Cr. 368, Line Transformers..........  ..............       20,056.00
    Cr. 369, Services...................  ..............       23,108.00
    Cr. 373, Street Lighting and Signal   ..............        1,744.00
     Systems............................
    Cr. 426.5, Other Deductions.........  ..............      219,220.00
    Cr. 571, Maintenance of Overhead      ..............        2,900.00
     Lines..............................
    Cr. 593, Maintenance of Overhead      ..............       26,600.00
     Lines..............................
    Cr. 595, Maintenance of Line          ..............       15,300.00
     Transformers.......................
    Cr. 597, Maintenance of Meters......  ..............        5,200.00
    Cr. 920, Administrative and General   ..............       25,491.00
     Salaries...........................
    Cr. 921, Office Supplies and          ..............        3,509.00
     Expenses...........................
To allocate FEMA funds to the proper accounts...........



                            Summary of Costs
Maintenance:
    Account 571, Maintenance of Overhead Lines..........       $3,675.60
    Account 593, Maintenance of Overhead Lines..........       33,687.24
    Account 595, Maintenance of Line Transformers.......       19,365.86
    Account 597, Maintenance of Meters..................        6,595.56
                                                         ---------------
      Total Maintenance Costs...........................       63,324.26
                                                         ===============
Retirement Loss:
    Account 108.5, Accumulated Provision for                   93,462.82
     Depreciation of Transmission Plant.................
    Account 108.6, Accumulated Provision for                  240,599.35
     Depreciation of Distribution Plant.................
    Account 426.5, Other Deductions.....................      275,000.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total Retirement Loss.............................      609,062.17
                                                         ===============
Construction:
    Account 186, Miscellaneous Deferred Debits..........        1,319.85
    Account 355, Poles and Fixtures.....................      161,784.05
    Account 356, Overhead Conductors and Devices........      124,704.77
    Account 364, Poles, Towers and Fixtures.............       99,075.40
    Account 365, Overhead Conductor and Devices.........      104,142.22
    Account 368, Line Transformers......................       25,036.07
    Account 369, Services...............................       28,865.08
    Account 373, Street Lighting and Signal Systems.....        2,101.60
                                                         ---------------
      Total Construction Cost...........................      547,029.04
                                                         ===============
Administrative:
    Account 920, Administrative and General Salaries....      $32,000.00
    Account 921, Office Supplies and Expenses...........        4,421.69
                                                         ---------------
      Total Administrative Cost.........................       36,421.69
                                                         ===============
    Maintenance.........................................       63,324.26
    Retirement Loss.....................................      609,062.17
    Construction........................................      547,029.04

[[Page 919]]


    Administrative......................................       36,421.69
                                                         ---------------
      Total Costs.......................................    1,255,837.16
                                                         ===============
                       Distribution of FEMA Funds
Maintenance: 63,324.26/1,255,837.16=.0504=5.0%
Retirement: 609,062.17/1,255,837.16=.4850=48.5%
Construction: 547,029.04/1,255,837.16=.4356 = 43.6%
Administrative: 36,421.69/1,255,837.16=.0290=2.9%
Maintenance: $1,000,000.00x5.0%=........................      $50,000.00
Retirement: $1,000,000.00x48.5%=........................      485,000.00
Construction: $1,000,000.00x43.6%=......................      436,000.00
Administrative: $1,000,000.00x2.9%=.....................       29,000.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total.............................................    1,000,000.00
                                                         ===============
                 Distribution of FEMA Funds--Maintenance
Account 571: 3,675.60/63,324.26=.0580=5.8%
Account 593: 33,687.24/63,324.26=.5320=53.2%
Account 595: 19,365.86/63,324.26=.3058=30.6%
Account 597: 6,595.56/63,324.26=.1041=10.4%
Account 571: $50,000.00x5.8%=...........................       $2,900.00
Account 593: $50,000.00x53.2%=..........................       26,600.00
Account 595: $50,000.00x30.6%=..........................       15,300.00
Account 597: $50,000.00x10.4%=..........................        5,200.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total.............................................       50,000.00
                                                         ===============
               Distribution of FEMA Funds--Retirement Loss
Account 108.5: 93,462.82/609,062.17=.1535=15.3%
Account 108.6: 240,599.35/609,062.17=.3950=39.5%
Account 426.5: 275,000.00/609,062.17=.4515=45.2%
Account 108.5: $485,000.00x15.3%=.......................      $74,205.00
Account 108.6: $485,000.00x39.5%=.......................      191,575.00
Account 426.5: $485,000.00x45.2%=.......................      219,220.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total.............................................      485,000.00
                                                         ===============
                Distribution of FEMA Funds--Construction
Account 186: 1,319.85/547,029.04=.0024=.2%
Account 355: 161,784.05/547,029.04=.2958=29.6%
Account 356: 124,704.77/547,029.04=.2280=22.8%
Account 364: 99,075.40/547,029.04=.1811=18.1%
Account 365: 104,142.22/547,029.04=.1904=19.0%
Account 368: 25,036.07/547,029.04=.0457=4.6%
Account 369: 28,865.08/547,029.04=.0528=5.3%
Account 373: 2,101.67/547,029.04=.0038=.4%
Account 186: $436,000.00x.2%=...........................         $872.00
Account 355: $436,000.00x29.6%=.........................      129,056.00
Account 356: $436,000.00x22.8%=.........................       99,408.00
Account 364: $436,000.00x18.1%=.........................       78,916.00
Account 365: $436,000.00x19.0%=.........................       82,840.00
Account 368: $436,000.00x4.6%=..........................       20,056.00
Account 369: $436,000.00x5.3%=..........................       23,108.00
Account 373: $436,000.00x.4%=...........................        1,744.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total.............................................      436,000.00
                                                         ===============
               Distribution of FEMA Funds--Administrative
Account 920: 32,000.00/36,421.69=.8786=87.9%
Account 921: 4,421.69/36,421.69=.1213=12.1%
Account 920: $29,000.00x87.9%=..........................      $25,491.00
Account 921: $29,000.00x12.1%=..........................        3,509.00
                                                         ---------------
      Total.............................................       29,000.00
                                                         ===============



[[Page 920]]

                   137 Impairment of Long-Lived Assets

    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 121, Accounting for 
the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be 
Disposed of (Statement No. 121), requires reporting entities to review 
all long-lived assets and certain identifiable intangibles that are to 
be held, used, or disposed of by that entity for impairment whenever 
events and changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of 
the asset may not be recoverable. If the sum of the expected future cash 
flows (undiscounted and without interest charges) is less than the 
carrying value of the asset, the entity must recognize an impairment 
loss. The impairment loss is measured as the amount by which the 
carrying amount of the asset exceeds the fair value of the asset. The 
impairment loss is reported as a component of income from continuing 
operations before income taxes for entities presenting an income 
statement and in the statement of activities of not-for-profit 
organizations. Statement No. 121 does not apply to assets included in 
the scope of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 90, 
Regulated Enterprises--Accounting for Abandonments and Disallowances of 
Plant Costs.

                        Assets To Be Held or Used

    Entities are required to review long-lived assets and certain 
identifiable intangibles whenever events or changes in circumstances 
indicate that the carrying value of the asset may not be recoverable. 
For example:
    1. A significant decrease in the market value of an asset;
    2. A significant change in the extent or manner in which an asset is 
used;
    3. A significant physical change in an asset;
    4. A significant adverse change in legal factors or in the business 
climate that could affect the value of an asset;
    5. An adverse action or assessment by a regulator;
    6. An accumulation of costs significantly in excess of the amount 
originally expected to acquire or construct an asset; and
    7. A current period operating or cash flow loss combined with a 
history of operating or cash flow losses or a projection or forecast 
that demonstrates continued losses associated with an asset used for the 
purpose of producing revenue.
    The impairment of the asset is measured by estimating the future 
cash flows expected to result from the use of the asset and its 
disposition. Assets are grouped at the lowest level for which there are 
identifiable cash flows that are largely independent of the cash flows 
of other groups of assets. Future cash flows are those cash inflows that 
are expected to be generated by the asset less the cash outflows 
expected to be necessary to maintain those inflows. If the future cash 
flows (undiscounted and without interest charges) are less than the 
carrying value of the asset, an impairment loss must be recognized. If 
the expected future cash flows are greater than the carrying value of 
the asset, no impairment loss exists.
    The impairment loss is the amount by which the carrying amount 
(acquisition cost less accumulated depreciation) of the asset exceeds 
the fair value of the asset. The fair value of the asset is the amount 
for which the asset could be bought or sold in an arms-length 
transaction between willing parties. A quoted market price is the best 
evidence of fair value. If this information is not available, the fair 
value should be based upon the best information available. Consideration 
should be given to the price of similar assets and valuation techniques 
such as the present value of the expected future cash flows discounted 
at a rate representative of the risk involved, option-pricing models, 
matrix pricing, option-adjusted spread models, and fundamental analysis. 
All available information should be considered when using the above 
pricing techniques.
    If an impairment is recognized, the carrying value of the asset is 
reduced to the lower of its fair value or its carrying value and, if 
depreciable, depreciated over the remaining useful life. Previously 
recognized impairment losses cannot be restored. If the asset was 
acquired in a business combination and there is goodwill resulting from

[[Page 921]]

the transaction, the goodwill is included in the asset grouping and 
reduced or eliminated before any adjustment is made to the carrying 
value of the asset.
    The following financial statement disclosures are required in the 
period in which the impairment is recognized:
    1. A description of the impaired assets and the facts and 
circumstances surrounding the impairment;
    2. The amount of the impairment and how fair value was determined;
    3. The caption in the income statement or the statement of 
activities in which the impairment loss is aggregated if that loss has 
not been presented as a separate caption or reported parenthetically on 
the face of the statement; and
    4. If applicable, the business segment(s) affected.

                          Assets To Be Disposed

    Statement No. 121 also applies to all long-lived assets and certain 
identifiable intangibles for which management, having the authority to 
approve the action, has committed to a plan of disposal except those 
assets covered by APB No. 30, Reporting the Results of Operations--
Reporting the Effects of Disposal of a Segment of a Business, and 
Extraordinary, Unusual and Infrequently Occurring Events and 
Transactions. An asset to be disposed of is carried at the lower of its 
carrying amount (acquisition cost less accumulated depreciation) or its 
fair value less cost to sell.
    The fair value of the asset to be disposed of is computed in the 
same manner as that for an asset to be held or used by the entity. 
Selling costs include the incremental direct cost to transact the sale--
broker commissions, legal fees, title transfer, and other closing costs 
that must be incurred before legal title can be transferred. Costs such 
as insurance, security service, and utilities are generally excluded 
unless these costs are part of a contractual agreement that obligates 
the entity to incur such costs in the future. If the asset's fair value 
is based upon current market price or the current selling price for a 
similar asset, the fair value is considered a current amount and is not 
discounted. If, however, the fair value is based upon discounted 
expected future cash flows and if the sale is to occur beyond one year, 
the cost to sell must also be discounted. Assets covered by this 
statement are not depreciated (amortized) while being held for disposal.
    Subsequent revisions in estimates of fair value less cost to sell 
are reported as adjustments to the carrying amount of the asset to be 
disposed of as long as the carrying amount of the asset does not exceed 
the original carrying amount.
    The following financial statement disclosures are required in the 
period in which the impairment is recognized:
    1. A description of the assets to be disposed of including the facts 
and circumstances leading to the expected disposal, the expected 
disposal date, and the carrying amount of those assets;
    2. If applicable, the business segment(s) in which the assets to be 
disposed of are held;
    3. The amount, if any, of the impairment loss resulting from the 
adoption of this statement;
    4. The gain or loss, if any, resulting from subsequent revisions in 
the estimates of fair value less cost to sell;
    5. The caption in the income statement or statement of activities in 
which the gains or losses are aggregated if those gains or losses have 
not been presented as a separate caption or reported parenthetically on 
the face of the statement; and
    6. The results of operations for assets to be disposed of to the 
extent that those results are included in the entity's results of 
operations for the period and can be identified.

                         Accounting Requirements

    All borrowers must adopt the accounting prescribed by Statement No. 
121.

                    Effective Date and Implementation

    Statement No. 121 is effective for financial statements for fiscal 
years beginning after December 15, 1995. Impairment losses resulting 
from the application of this statement to assets that are held or used 
by the entity must be reported in the period in which

[[Page 922]]

the recognition criteria are first applied and met. Impairment losses 
attributable to assets to be disposed of must be reported as the 
cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle as prescribed in 
Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 20, Accounting Changes.

             Accounting Journal Entries--Implementation Date

    If a borrower has impaired assets that are held or used at the 
implementation date, the following entry should be recorded:

Dr. 426.5, Other Deductions
Cr. 300 Series of Accounts, Plant Accounts
To record the adoption of Statement No. 121 for the impairment of assets 
    that are held or used.

    If a borrower has impaired assets to be disposed of at the 
implementation date, the following entry should be recorded:

Dr. 435.1, Cumulative Effect on Prior Years of a Change in Accounting 
    Principle
Cr. 300 Series--Plant Accounts
To record the adoption of Statement No. 121 for assets that are to be 
    disposed.

      Accounting Journal Entries--Subsequent to Implementation Date

    If an asset that is either held, used or to be disposed of becomes 
impaired, the following entry should be recorded:

Dr. 426.5, Other Deductions
Cr. 300 Series--Plant Accounts
To record the impairment of a plant asset.

    If a borrower makes a subsequent revision in the estimate of the 
fair value less the cost to sell of an asset to be disposed of, the 
following entry should be recorded:

Dr. 300 Series--Plant Accounts
Cr. 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income
To revise the fair value of an asset to be disposed.

              138  Automatic Meter Reading Systems--Turtles

    Automatic meter reading systems were developed from technology 
called power line carrier communication systems. One such system, 
developed by Hunt Technologies, Inc., is called by its brand name, the 
Turtle system. In addition to its function as an automated reading 
device, the Turtle can provide outage detection, power failure counts, 
and other potential applications. The current Turtle system does not 
have the capability for applications such as collection of load survey 
or interval data. A Turtle system consists of:
    1. A meter reader mounted (retrofitted) inside the meter;
    2. A receiver located in each substation; and
    3. Monitoring and programming equipment (software and personal 
computer) usually located in the headquarters building.
    The system transmits continuous information one way from the meter 
to a receiver located in the substation. The receiver constantly 
monitors every Turtle meter served by the substation. The substation 
receiver can be sized to monitor up to 3,000 Turtle meter readers at the 
same time. The data is then transmitted to the headquarters monitoring 
equipment via telephone line or an equivalent communication system.
    The technical literature and other information provided by the 
manufacturer indicates that this system can only be used for remote 
meter reading, outage detection, power failure counts, and phase 
identification. At this time, there is no indication that the system 
supports other functions such as home security. Therefore, the 
accounting prescribed for the Turtle meter reading devices and support 
equipment relates only to electric utility operations.

                         Accounting Requirements

    The function of the equipment is the primary factor in determining 
the account in which the equipment shall be recorded. The components of 
the Turtle automatic meter reading system shall be recorded in Account 
370, Meters. The cost of the meter reader encoding device and 
retrofitting the meter with

[[Page 923]]

the meter reader unit shall be capitalized to the cost of the existing 
meter. Any associated operating expenses shall be charged to Account 
586, Meter Expenses, with maintenance expenses charged to Account 597, 
Maintenance of Meters.
    Separate continuing property records shall be established for the 
meters, either fitted or retrofitted with the device; the receiver; the 
personal computer; and the system software. The meters, receivers, and 
personal computer shall be depreciated over the manufacturer's estimated 
useful service life. The system software shall be depreciated over the 
estimated useful service life of the program not to exceed 5 years.

                     139  Global Positioning Systems

    The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a worldwide radio-navigation 
system formed from a network of 24 satellites and their ground stations. 
Utilities are using this advanced technology geographic data collection 
system to update and modernize their system maps. GPS uses a system of 
satellites orbiting the earth to establish plant locations with pinpoint 
accuracy. By triangulating from three satellites and using radio signals 
to measure distances and locate items, system-wide maps can be created 
of the utility's service area. A field inventory is then taken of the 
utility's plant and plotted onto the map. The GPS consists of base 
station equipment, remote station equipment, the GPS program, and 
mapping conversion software.
    All equipment associated with GPS is dedicated to the mapping 
effort. The base station is installed at a fixed location and ties 
satellite measurements into a solid local reference. The remote station 
is a portable receiver that is taken into the field to determine 
locations and is moved from site to site. The GPS program is the 
application software that operates the station equipment and is used by 
layout technicians to gather information of existing and new facilities 
in the field. The conversion software is used for converting the GPS and 
inventory information gathered in the field into a form usable by the 
mapping program.

                         Accounting Requirements

    The function and location of the equipment are the primary factors 
in determining the account in which the equipment shall be recorded. The 
components of the GPS shall be accounted for as follows:
    1. Remote and Base Station Equipment. The cost of the equipment, 
both remote and fixed, shall be capitalized in a subaccount of Account 
391, Office Furniture and Equipment.
    2. GPS Program and Conversion Software for Mapping. The cost of GPS 
program and conversion software shall be capitalized in a subaccount of 
Account 391, Office Furniture and Equipment.
    3. GPS/GIS Field Inventory of System. The cost of performing a GPS/
GIS survey and field inventory of the existing system, by either a 
consultant or the utility's own forces, shall be charged to Account 588, 
Miscellaneous Distribution Expenses.

            140  Radio-Based Automatic Meter Reading Systems

    Radio-based automatic meter reading technology allows meters 
equipped with a low-power radio device called an ERT (Encoder, Receiver, 
Transmitter) to be read from a remote location. The ERT device can 
either be retrofitted to an existing meter or purchased installed in a 
new meter. The ERT device ``encodes'' energy consumption and transmits 
this information to a radio transceiver equipped handheld computer. The 
data collected and stored in the handheld computer is then uploaded to a 
billing computer using specialized software for that purpose.

                         Accounting Requirements

    The function of the equipment is the primary factor in determining 
the account in which the equipment shall be recorded. The components of 
the radio-based automatic meter reading system shall be recorded in 
Account 370, Meters. The cost of the meter reader encoding device and 
retrofitting the meter with the meter reader unit shall be capitalized 
to the cost of the existing meter. Any associated operating expenses 
shall be charged to Account 586, Meter Expenses, with maintenance

[[Page 924]]

expenses charged to Account 597, Maintenance of Meters.
    Separate continuing property records shall be established for the 
meters, either fitted or retrofitted with the device; the handheld 
computer; and the upload software. The meters and handheld computer 
shall be depreciated over the manufacturer's estimated useful service 
life. The upload software shall be depreciated over the estimated useful 
service life of the program not to exceed 5 years.

                      201   Supplemental Financing

    Many borrowers secure additional financing from sources other than 
RUS. CFC was established to provide a source of supplemental financing. 
Although the accounting provided in this section refers to CFC, it is 
applicable to other sources of supplemental financing as well.

    1. Membership Fees
    When a membership fee is paid to CFC, the payment shall be recorded 
as a debit to Account 123.23, Other Investments in Associated 
Organizations.
    2. Subscriptions
    The subscription agreement to purchase Capital Term Certificates 
(CTCs) is a binding obligation to pay an initial subscription in equal 
annual payments over the first three years and an additional annual 
subscription payable in the fourth through fifteenth years.
    The annual subscriptions to CFC for the fourth through fifteenth 
years is 2.0 percent of total operating revenues after deducting the 
cost of power. Using the best data available, each borrower shall 
estimate the amount of CTCs that are required to be purchased. Estimates 
are not expected to be precise and adjustments shall be made when future 
projections indicate a change is needed. When the agreement to purchase 
CTCs is made, an entry shall be recorded debiting Account 123.21, 
Subscriptions to Capital Term Certificates--Supplemental Financing, and 
crediting Account 224.11, Other Long-Term Debit--Subscriptions. When the 
CTCs are actually purchased, the following entries shall be recorded:
Dr. 224.11, Other Long-Term Debt--Subscriptions
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
Dr. 123.22, Investments in Capital Term Certificates--Supplemental 
Financing
    Cr. 123.21, Subscriptions to Capital Term Certificates--Supplemental 
Financing

    3. Interest Receipts
    Interest accrues monthly to the holder of CTCs at a rate in 
accordance with the terms of the CFC Invitation to Subscribe. The 
accrual of interest and the receipt of interest proceeds shall be 
recorded as follows:

Dr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
    Cr. 419, Interest and Dividend Income
To record the monthly accrual of interest.
Dr. 131.1, Cash--General
    Cr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
To record the receipt of interest proceeds from the investment in CTCs.
    Note: Any amounts received in excess of the previous accruals shall 
be credited to Account 419.
    Interest penalties may be charged by CFC for late payments on any 
subscription from the date that the payment was due to the date that the 
payment was actually received. Such charges shall be expensed to Account 
431, Other Interest Expense.
    4. Notes
    If a note is due more than one year after the date of the note, the 
appropriate subaccount of Account 224, Other Long-Term Debt, shall be 
credited. If the note is due less than one year from the date of the 
note, Account 231, Notes Payable, shall be credited.
    When a loan from CFC has been consummated and a note is executed, 
Account 224.13, Supplemental Financing Notes Executed--Debit, shall be 
debited; and Account 224.12, Other Long-Term Debt--Supplemental 
Financing, credited. When a loan from another source has been 
consummated, Account 224.15, Notes Executed--Other--Debit, shall be 
debited; and Account 224.14, Other Long-Term Debt--Miscellaneous, 
credited.
    5. Loan Proceeds
    Cash proceeds from unsecured short-term loans shall be deposited 
into the General Fund Account. Cash proceeds

[[Page 925]]

from all secured loans shall be deposited into the Construction Fund 
Trustee Account.
    From two to seven percent, depending upon the class of borrower and 
its debt-equity ratio, of each CFC loan is applied to the purchase of 
Capital Term Certificates. At the time of a borrower's first requisition 
under the CFC loan, the following entry shall be recorded:

Dr. 131.2, Cash--Construction Fund--Trustee
Dr. 123.22, Investments in Capital Term Certificates--Supplemental 
Financing
    Cr. 224.13, Supplemental Financing Notes Executed--Debit
To record the requisition of funds from CFC.

    6. Capital Credits
    As a result of borrowing from CFC or other lenders organized on a 
cooperative basis, a borrower may receive capital credit allocations. 
These allocations are usually based upon the borrower's participation in 
the lending program with participation measured by the amount of 
interest expense and conversion costs incurred.
    To account for patronage capital allocations from cooperative 
lenders, the following journal entries shall be recorded:

Dr. 123.1, Patronage Capital from Associated Cooperatives
    Cr. 424, Other Capital Credits and Patronage Capital Allocations
To record the allocation of capital credits from a cooperative lender.
    Note: If any portion of the interest expense was capitalized as a 
component of construction cost, a similar portion of the capital credit 
allocation shall be credited to construction rather than to Account 424. 
The portion credited to construction shall be determined by applying the 
percentage of interest expense charged to construction for that 
particular lender to the interest expense incurred for that lender.
Dr. 131.1, Cash--General
    Cr. 123.1, Patronage Capital from Associated Cooperatives
To record the cash receipt of patronage capital credits from cooperative 
lenders.

                   301   Forfeited Customers' Deposits

    Customers may be required to make deposits to guarantee payment of 
amounts billed for electric service. When a customer discontinues 
service, the customer's deposit shall first be applied to unpaid energy 
bills, with the balance remitted by check to the customer. If the check 
is returned, it shall be voided and the original entry that was made 
when the check was issued shall be reversed.
    Unclaimed balances of customer deposits shall remain in Account 235, 
Customer Deposits, until the legal liability of the cooperative to make 
such a refund has elapsed. When there is no further legal liability to 
refund the deposit and if it does not escheat to the state, it shall be 
transferred to Account 144, Accumulated Provision for Uncollectible 
Customer Accounts--Credit, retaining full information of all 
particulars.

                      401   Computer Software Costs

    Computer software consists of programs and routines (sets of 
computer instructions) which direct the operation of the computer. 
Software may refer to generalized routines useful in computer operations 
or to programs for specific applications such as payroll.
    The distinction between generalized software and application 
software is important. Generalized software provides operating support 
for individual applications. This would include programs for such tasks 
as making printouts of machine-readable records, sorting records, 
organizing and maintaining files, translating programs written in a 
symbolic language into machine-language instructions, and scheduling 
jobs through the computer. These programs are generally furnished by the 
manufacturer.
    Application software consists of a set of instructions for 
performing a particular data processing task. Application programs are 
generally written by the user installation, but are frequently obtained 
as prewritten packages from software vendors. Application software 
includes programs such as payroll, billing, general ledger, as well as 
engineering or managerial applications.

[[Page 926]]

    Costs incurred with the purchase or development of computer software 
shall be accounted for as follows:
    1. Capitalize in a subaccount of Account 391, Office Furniture and 
Equipment, all costs for generalized software. Depreciate the cost over 
the service life (or remaining life) of the main hardware (i.e., 
containing central processor). If the purchase invoice does not break 
out or assign a cost to the ``generalized software,'' it is appropriate 
to include the full amount in hardware costs. Capitalize in a separate 
subaccount of Account 391, all costs for applications software 
determined to have a service life of over one year. Depreciate the cost 
over the estimated useful service life of the program. This depreciation 
period shall not exceed five (5) years. RUS realizes, however, that 
there may be circumstances that justify a useful life longer than 5 
years. When this is the case and it is management's intent to utilize 
these programs over an extended period, written justification shall be 
submitted to RUS for approval.
    2. Expense in Account 921, Office Supplies and Expenses, in the 
period incurred, all costs associated with the maintenance, updating, 
and conversion of files or revision of all software, and all costs for 
software with a useful life of less than 1 year. Also expense in Account 
921, the unamortized cost of all software determined, during the year, 
to be no longer used by or useful to the cooperative. Such costs that 
are clearly applicable to any category of operating expenses other than 
the administrative and general category, however, shall be included in 
the appropriate account in such category. In accordance with the USoA, 
no portion of such costs shall be capitalized to construction or 
retirement activities.
    In determining the total cost of purchased or internally developed 
software, the following items shall be included:
    a. Costs incurred for feasibility studies if they result in the 
purchase or development of software;
    b. All costs related to the actual purchase or development of the 
software. These costs must be specifically identifiable with the 
software and properly supported by time cards, invoices, or other 
documents; and
    c. All costs incurred in ``testing and debugging'' the software.
    Computer software costs are properly chargeable to Account 107, 
Construction Work in Progress, provided that the following criteria are 
met:
    1. The computer program is specifically dedicated to performing a 
construction related activity, and
    2. The cost of the software is itemized separate and apart from 
other hardware and software costs.
    The cost of software programs meeting the above requirements and 
having an estimated useful service life in excess of 1 year shall be 
recorded in Account 186, Miscellaneous Deferred Debits, and amortized to 
Account 107, Construction Work in Progress, over the estimated service 
life of the program not to exceed 5 years.
    All costs related to training personnel in the use of software shall 
be expensed as incurred.
    The accounting in this section is not intended to apply to 
immaterial amounts. When it is deemed that the costs of the 
recordkeeping necessary to amortize these costs outweigh the benefits to 
the members, software costs shall be expensed in the year incurred.
    For computer costs relating to load control equipment, refer to Item 
118 of this section.

                          402   Legal Expenses

    Utilities may incur legal expenses which pertain to construction 
activities, loan activities, or general services. The proper accounting 
treatment for legal expenses is as follows:

    1. Legal fees incurred in connection with a construction project, 
including the court costs directly related thereto, which can be 
identified and supported as such, shall be capitalized in Account 107, 
Construction Work-in-Progress, as a cost of construction.
    2. Legal fees specifically identified and properly supported as 
resulting from activities designed to obtain long-term debt, shall be 
deferred in Account 181, Unamortized Debt Expense.
    3. Legal fees for all other services and fees which cannot be 
properly identified will require expensing to either Account 417.1, 
Expenses of Nonutility

[[Page 927]]

Operations, or Account 923, Outside Services Employed, as appropriate.

    To properly support the capitalization or deferral of legal fees, 
the attorney shall provide an itemization of services performed and the 
corresponding costs. Only those costs specifically identified by the 
attorney as being related to construction or loan activities shall be 
capitalized or deferred as described above.

                              403   Leases

    Lease transactions shall be accounted for as either a capital lease 
or an operating lease depending upon whether or not the lease meets the 
criteria for classification as a capital lease. The definitions for 
capital and operating leases and the criteria used to determine which 
method shall be used are as follows:

                               Definitions

    1. Capital Lease: A lease that transfers substantially all of the 
benefits and risks inherent in the ownership of the property to the 
lessee, who accounts for the lease as an acquisition of an asset and the 
incurrence of a liability.
    2. Operating Lease: An operating lease is a simple rental agreement 
which does not meet the criteria for a capital lease. Under the terms of 
an operating lease, the lessee records the rental payments due over the 
term of the lease as rent expense.

                                Criteria

    A lease agreement shall be classified as a capital lease if one or 
more of the following criteria is met:

    1. Ownership of the property is transferred to the lessee by the end 
of the lease term;
    2. The lease contains a bargain purchase option;
    3. The lease term is equal to 75 percent or more of the estimated 
useful life of the leased property; or
    4. The present value of the lease payments at the inception of the 
lease equals or exceeds 90 percent of the fair market value of the 
leased property.

    A lease agreement qualifying as a capital lease shall be recorded in 
either Account 101.1, Property Under Capital Leases;Account 120.6, 
Nuclear Fuel Under Capital Leases; or Account 121, Nonutility Property, 
as appropriate, at the present value (at the beginning of the lease 
term) of the minimum lease payments. If, however, this amount exceeds 
the fair value of the leased property at the inception of the lease, the 
asset shall be recorded at its fair market value. An offsetting credit 
shall be recorded in Account 227, Obligations Under Capital Leases--
Noncurrent, with the current portion recorded in Account 243, 
Obligations Under Capital Leases--Current. Assets recorded in Account 
101.1 shall be classified separately according to the detailed accounts 
(301-399) provided for electric plant in service.
    Monthly payments made under the lease obligation shall be charged to 
rent expense, fuel expense, or construction work-in-progress as they 
become payable. Similarly, the leased asset and the associated 
obligation shall be reduced by the current amount due.
    The following journal entries shall be used by the lessee to record 
capital lease transactions:

Dr. 101.1, Property Under Capital Leases
    Cr. 243, Obligations Under Capital Leases--Current
    Cr. 227, Obligations Under Capital Leases--Noncurrent
To record the capital lease agreement.
Dr. 550, Rents
    Cr. 232, Accounts Payable
Dr. 243, Obligations Under Capital Leases--Current
    Cr. 101.1, Property Under Capital Leases
To record the monthly rental payment due.
Dr. 232, Accounts Payable
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the monthly lease payment.
    Operating leases which are simple rental agreements do not require 
the recording of an asset or a liability. The entries that are required 
to record an operating lease by the lessee are as follows:

Dr. 550, Rents
    Cr. 232, Accounts Payable
To record the monthly rental payment due.
Dr. 232, Accounts Payable

[[Page 928]]

    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the monthly lease payment.

    For purposes of illustration, the journal entries presented in this 
interpretation debit Account 550, Rents. However, Account 507, Rents 
(steam power generation); Account 525, Rents (nuclear power generation); 
Account 540, Rents (hydraulic power generation); Account 550, Rents 
(other power production); Account 567, Rents (transmission expense); 
Account 589, Rents (distribution expense); and Account 931, Rents 
(general and administrative), should be charged, as appropriate, 
depending upon the function of the equipment being leased.

                 404   Consolidated Financial Statements

    In October 1987, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued 
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 94, Consolidation of All 
Majority-Owned Subsidiaries (Statement No. 94). For purposes of 
reporting to RUS, Statement No. 94 shall be applied as follows:
    1. An RUS borrower that is a subsidiary of another entity shall 
prepare and submit to RUS separate financial statements even though this 
financial information is presented in the parent's consolidated 
statements.
    2. In those cases in which an RUS borrower has a majority-ownership 
in a subsidiary, the borrower must prepare consolidated financial 
statements in accordance with the requirements of Statement No. 94. 
These consolidated statements must also include supplementary schedules 
presenting a Balance Sheet and Income Statement for each majority-owned 
subsidiary included in the consolidated statements.
    Although Statement No. 94 requires the consolidation of majority-
owned subsidiaries, RUS Forms 7 and 12 must be prepared on an 
unconsolidated basis.

                   501   Patronage Capital Assignments

    Accounting for patronage capital and margins may vary depending upon 
the individual cooperative's bylaws. The comments contained in this 
section relate to the application of the standard bylaw provisions.
    The entries required, at year's end, to record patronage capital 
transactions where there is no major merchandising program are as 
follows:

Dr. 219.1, Operating Margins
Dr. 219.2, Nonoperating margins
    Cr. 201.2, Patronage Capital Assignable
To record the amount of patronage capital assignable.
Dr. 201.2, Patronage Capital Assignable
    Cr. 201.1, Patronage Capital Credits
To record the allocation of patronage capital to the patrons' accounts.

    The procedure for determining the amount of patronage capital 
assignable to the individual patron on a total dollar basis is as 
follows:

    1. Determine the total amount to be assigned for the year (Account 
201.2).
    2. Determine patronage from electric service, the total of 
consumers' billings (Accounts 440-447).
    3. Determine the percentage factor to be used in calculating 
patronage capital to be credited to each consumer account. Divide ``1'' 
by ``2''.
    4. Determine the amount of capital to be credited to each consumer. 
Multiply the individual consumer's billings for the year by the 
percentage factor obtained in ``3'' above.

    The procedure for determining the amount of patronage capital 
assignable to the individual patron on a dollar basis, less the cost of 
power, is as follows:

    1. Determine the total amount to be assigned for the year.
    2. Determine the total amount of revenue received from each 
classification of customers.
    3. Determine the total cost of power for each classification of 
customers. (For example, use cost per kWh sold).
    4. For each classification of customers subtract the amount obtained 
in ``3'' from the amount obtained in ``2,'' to obtain the total amount 
received, less cost of power, by classification of customers.
    5. Add the amounts obtained in ``4'' to obtain the total amount of 
revenue, less cost of power.
    6. Divide the total amount received, less cost of power for each 
classification of customers (amounts obtained in ``4''), by the total 
amount received, less

[[Page 929]]

cost of power for all customers (amount obtained in ``5'') to obtain the 
prorata percentage for each classification of customers.
    7. Multiply the total amount to be allocated (amount obtained in 
``1'') by the prorata percentage for each classification of customers 
(obtained in ``6'') to obtain the amount to be assigned each 
classification of customers.
    8. Divide the amount to be assigned each classification of customers 
(amount obtained in ``7'') by the total amount received from the 
classification of customers (amount obtain in ``2'') to obtain the 
percentage factor for each classification of customers.
    9. Determine the total amount received from each individual 
customer.
    10. Multiply the total amount received from each individual customer 
(amount obtained in ``9'') by the percentage factor for his 
classification (amount obtained in ``8'') to obtain the amount of 
capital to be assigned each individual customer.

    After calculating the patronage capital to be credited to each 
customer, there is usually a small balance remaining. This small balance 
shall remain in Account 201.2, Patronage Capital Assignable, and shall 
be added to the amount to be assigned in the following year.
    Proper records shall be maintained to support all capital credit 
transactions. As a minimum, these records shall show, for each patron, 
the amount of capital credited for each year as well as the amount and 
date retired for each year.
    The process of transferring capital credits from the Patronage 
Capital Assignable accounts to the Patrons' Capital Credits Assigned 
accounts or to the Patrons' Capital Credits accounts and the making of 
entries to individual patron's records constitutes an assignment of 
capital credits. This holds true for recordkeeping purposes as well as 
from a legal point of view. This assignment shall be followed by formal 
notification to patrons within a reasonable period of time.
    In the event that a distribution cooperative incurs a net loss, that 
loss shall not be allocated to its members (patrons). The loss shall be 
accumulated and offset by future nonoperating margins.

                   502   Patronage Capital Retirements

    As the board of directors has the responsibility for determining 
whether the financial condition of the cooperative will permit 
retirement of capital credits and whether the proposed retirement 
complies with mortgage and bylaw provisions, the authorization for the 
retirement shall be set forth in the board minutes. The entries to 
record the general retirement of capital credits shall be as follows:

Dr. 201.1, Patronage Capital Credits
    Cr. 238.1, Patronage Capital Payable
To record the board of directors' authorization to make payments of 
capital credits.
Dr. 238.1, Patronage Capital Payable
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General.
To record actual cash payments of capital credits.
    Note: To provide better control over the payment of patronage 
capital credits, a special checking account should be established in an 
amount equal to the authorized general retirement. Special prenumbered 
checks shall be used for each general retirement of patronage capital.
    To strengthen internal control and to facilitate the settlement of 
estates, the board should adopt a policy specifying exactly how payments 
of capital credits shall be made to the estates of deceased patrons. 
Payments made to estates shall be recorded as follows:

Dr. 201.1, Patronage Capital Credits
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the payment of capital credits when an estate is settled by 
refunding 100 cents on the dollar.
Dr. 201.1, Patronage Capital Credits
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
    Cr. 217, Retired Capital Credits--Gain
To record the payment of capital credits when an estate is settled for 
less than the full amount of capital credited to the deceased customer's 
account.
Dr. 217, Retired Capital Credits--Gain
    Cr. 201.2, Patronage Capital Assignable
To record the reallocation to current patrons of the amount of the 
discount, if provided for in the bylaws.


[[Page 930]]


    If a capital credit check is returned due to an inability to locate 
the patron, it shall be held pending a recheck of available records to 
ascertain the correct address of the patron. If it is determined that 
the patron cannot be located, the check shall be cancelled and the 
amount of the check debited to Account 131.1, Cash--General, and 
credited to Account 217, Retired Capital Credits--Gain. If the state, 
however, has unclaimed property laws to which the amount is subject, the 
amount shall be credited to Account 253, Other Deferred Credits, until 
final disposition has been made. A notation shall be made in the records 
of the former patron to facilitate payment if his or her whereabouts is 
subsequently determined.
    If the records show that a number of former patrons have moved and 
left no forwarding address, it is not necessary to prepare a capital 
credit retirement check for these patrons when a general retirement of 
capital credits is made. When setting funds aside to make a general 
retirement, however, appropriate amounts shall be included to cover 
payments due these patrons. The cooperative shall then make a reasonable 
effort to locate these patrons through publication of their names in the 
newsletter or local newspaper. If the patrons are not located, the 
amounts set aside and the credits to their accounts shall be handled in 
a manner similar to those for whom payment checks are returned.
    Under the standard bylaw provisions recommended by RUS, it is not 
proper to use capital credits that were assigned to former patrons to 
liquidate their delinquent bills. When the standard bylaws are in effect 
and collection efforts have failed, the balance of an uncollectible 
bill, after application of customers deposits and membership fees, shall 
be charged against the accumulated provision for uncollectible accounts. 
If the patron has capital credits assigned to him or her, these remain 
untouched except for a notation to indicate the amount of the unpaid 
bill. When a general retirement of capital credits is made at some 
future date, amounts which would otherwise be due the patron may be 
applied to satisfy the unpaid bill with the balance refunded to him or 
her.

                503   Operating and Nonoperating Margins

    Occasionally questions arise concerning the accounting for the 
balances in Accounts 218, Capital Gains and Losses; 219.3, Other 
Margins; 219.4, Other Margins and Equities-Prior Periods; 434, 
Extraordinary Income; and 435, Extraordinary Deductions. The balance in 
these accounts shall be accounted for as follows:

    1. The balance in Account 219.4, Other Margins and Equities--Prior 
Periods, shall be transferred, at year's end, to Account 219.1 or 219.2, 
as appropriate. Accounts 219.1 and 219.2 are then closed to Account 
201.2, Patronage Capital Assignable, unless otherwise provided for in 
the bylaws.
    2. The balances in Account 434, Extraordinary Income, and Account 
435, Extraordinary Deductions, shall be cleared to Account 219.2 at 
year's end.
    3. The balances in Account 219.3, Other Margins, and Account 218, 
Capital Gains and Losses, shall remain in these accounts unless they are 
allocated to patrons or used to absorb future losses as provided for in 
the bylaws of the cooperative.

    When a cooperative is engaged in a major merchandising activity, all 
costs properly chargeable to the merchandising activity shall be 
allocated as such to offset the associated revenue. Nonoperating margins 
generated from this source shall be prorated annually on a patronage 
basis and credited to those patrons accounts from whom such amounts were 
obtained. Merchandising activities of this nature may require a bylaw 
provision allowing for the allocation of margins generated by a major 
merchandising activity separate from other operating or nonoperating 
margins.
    If, at the time of the adoption of the bylaw provisions for the 
allocation of nonoperating margins, there are prior years' losses 
resulting in debit balances in Accounts 218, Capital Gains and Losses; 
219.1, Operating Margins; 219.2, Nonoperating Margins; or 219.3, Other 
Margins; the credit balances in Accounts 218, 219.2, or 219.3 resulting 
from

[[Page 931]]

prior years' operations shall be transferred, to the extent necessary, 
to offset such deficits. If the board determines that amounts shall be 
allocated to prior years' patrons, the credit balances remaining in 
these accounts shall be transferred to Account 201.2, Patronage Capital 
Assignable.
    If there are current year's losses resulting in debit balances in 
either Account 219.1 or 219.2, credit balances in Accounts 219.2, 219.3, 
and 218 shall be transferred, to the extent necessary, to offset such 
deficits. Remaining credit balances allocable to patrons shall be 
transferred to Account 1.2.

              504   Patronage Capital from G&T Cooperatives

    When a cooperative receives capital credits from a G&T cooperative, 
the transaction shall be recorded by a debit to Account 123.1, Patronage 
Capital from Associated Cooperatives, and a credit to Account 423, 
Generation and Transmission Cooperative Capital Credits. This entry 
shall be made priorto the closing of the cooperative's books even 
though, in most cases, the notice of the G&T allocation is not received 
until after the close of the year to which it relates. If precise 
information cannot be obtained from the G&T within a reasonable time, 
capital credits shall be recorded on an estimated basis. The difference 
between the estimated amount and the actual shall be recognized in the 
following year unless the difference is material.
    A distribution cooperative shall not recognize its proportionate 
share of losses incurred by the G&T. G&T losses shall be accumulated and 
offset as provided for in the bylaws. Unlike distribution cooperatives, 
a G&T has the option to offset accumulated losses with future operating 
and/or nonoperating margins.

     505   Patronage Capital Furnished by Other Cooperative Service 
                              Organizations

    Utilities may obtain long-term and short-term loans, telephone or 
data processing services, or may purchase oil, gasoline, materials, 
insurance, and various items from cooperative or mutual enterprises. 
These enterprises often make patronage refunds or provide evidence that 
an amount equal to such a refund has been credited to the utility as an 
investment of capital. The refund may be in the form of cash in the year 
following the purchase or it may be deducted from the next invoice. The 
notice of patronage credited to the borrower's account may indicate that 
such capital may be retired at some future date upon certain conditions 
having been met. The following provides the accounting journal entries 
for these types of transactions:

    1. Insurance policy refunds from mutual companies, in cash or as 
credits against subsequent purchases, shall be credited to the 
appropriate expense account. If sufficient information is not available 
to credit the refunds to the appropriate expense accounts, they shall be 
credited to Account 165, Prepayments, and reduce premiums for the 
current year.
    2. Patronage capital allocations from cooperatives, other than 
mutual insurance companies, shall be credited, in the year that the 
allocation notice is received, to Account 424, Other Capital Credits and 
Patronage Allocations, or to construction work-in-progress, as 
appropriate. The allocation of patronage capital credits between Account 
424 and construction work-in-progress shall be made on an equitable 
basis. For example, patronage capital allocations received from a 
cooperative money lender are allocated between Account 424 and 
construction work-in-progress based upon the ratio of interest charged 
to construction for that particular lender to total interest expense 
incurred for that lender. Patronage capital allocations received from a 
material supplier are allocated based upon the ratio of materials 
charged to construction to total materials purchased.
    3. The face amount of patronage capital certificates received by the 
cooperative from the purchase of goods or services from cooperative 
money lenders (CFC), oil dealers, material suppliers, pole treating 
plants, communications services, and others shall be charged to either 
Account 123.1, Patronage Capital from Associated Cooperatives, or 
Account 124, Other Investments, as appropriate. Account 123.1 shall 
include investments in only

[[Page 932]]

those cooperatives, or enterprises, that are directly related to the 
electric utility industry and controlled by the electric cooperatives. 
These include statewide cooperatives, power cooperatives, and NRECA. 
Other investments in oil cooperatives and insurance companies shall be 
charged to Account 124.

                     506   Forfeited Membership Fees

    The bylaws of each cooperative prescribe certain rules and 
regulations concerning membership in the cooperative. Among these are 
provisions for forfeiture of membership fees. Some bylaws provide for 
application of membership fees against any unpaid accounts at the time 
of termination of service. Any remaining balance may be refunded to the 
member. Balances that cannot be refunded to the member due to an 
inability to locate the member or due to bylaw restriction, shall be 
credited to Account 208, Donated Capital, provided they do not escheat 
to the state. If disposition of the fees cannot be determined 
immediately, the amount involved shall be transferred to Account 253, 
Other Deferred Credits, until the determination is made.

                         601  Employee Benefits

    The costs of employees' fringe benefits (hospitalization, 
retirement, holiday, sick and vacation pay, etc.) shall be accumulated 
in an appropriate clearing account and allocated monthly on the basis of 
payroll. Vacation costs shall be accrued monthly by appropriate credits 
to an accrual account. These monthly accruals shall be allocated on the 
basis of direct payroll costs to construction, retirement, and the 
applicable operations, maintenance, and administrative expense accounts.
    Sick leave costs are not normally accrued unless the employee is 
entitled to be paid for accumulated sick leave at the termination of 
employment. Salary payments and the associated employee pensions and 
benefits and social security and other payroll taxes for an employee who 
is actually sick shall be charged to the same account or accounts to 
which his or her salary is normally charged.

                        602  Compensated Absences

    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 43, Accounting for 
Compensated Absences (Statement No. 43), requires employers to accrue a 
liability as an employee earns the right to be paid for future absences. 
Four criteria were established for this accrual:
    1. The employer's obligation for payment for future absences is 
attributable to employees' services already performed.
    2. The obligation relates to employee rights which vest or 
accumulate. Vested rights are considered those for which the employer is 
obligated to make payment even if the employee terminates. Rights which 
accumulate are those earned but unused rights to compensated absences 
which may be carried forward to one or more periods, subsequent to the 
period in which they are earned.
    3. Payment of the compensation is probable.
    4. The amount can be reasonably estimated.
    A company's liability shall be estimated based upon payments it 
expects to make as a result of employees' work already performed. If a 
reasonable estimate cannot be made, the company shall disclose that fact 
in the financial statements.
    Statement No. 43 does not apply to severance or termination pay, 
postretirement benefits, deferred compensation, stock or stock options, 
group insurance, or other long-term fringe benefits.
    The entries required to account for the accrual of compensated 
absences are as follows:

Dr. 435.1, Cumulative Effect on Prior Years of a Change in Accounting 
    Principle
Cr. 242.3, Accrued Employees' Vacation and Holidays
To record the liability for benefits earned in prior years.

Dr. 107, Construction Work in Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work in Progress
Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Cr. 242.3, Accrued Employees Vacation and Holidays

[[Page 933]]

To record the liability for benefits earned in the current period.

              603  Employee Retirement and Group Insurance

    Some borrowers have group insurance or retirement plans or both for 
their employees. As a general rule the cost of these programs is borne 
partially by the cooperative and partially by its employees. The 
cooperative may pay the full cost in advance and recover the employee's 
share through payroll deductions. The accounting for these transactions 
is as follows:
    1. The cooperative's advanced payment of premiums on insurance and 
retirement agreements shall be charged to Account 165, Prepayments, for 
the employers portion, and Account 143, Other Accounts Receivable, for 
the employee's portion.
    2. The cost of the employer's portion of a retirement and group 
insurance program shall be charged to construction and retirement 
activities and the applicable operations, maintenance, and 
administrative expense accounts based upon a specific identification 
with employees' labor costs charged therein or, in the absence of 
specific employee identification, based upon direct labor dollars or 
direct labor hours depending upon which allocation technique provides 
the most equitable distribution of costs.

                       604  Deferred Compensation

    Many utilities participate in the NRECA Deferred Compensation 
Program. Based upon the provisions of the program, the following 
accounting entries shall be made:

Dr. 186.XX, Miscellaneous Deferred Debits--Deferred Compensation
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To increase the deferred compensation provision by the amount of the 
    annual deposit to NRECA's Deferred Compensation Fund.

Dr. 128, Other Special Funds--Deferred Compensation
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the annual deposit to NRECA's Deferred Compensation Fund.

Dr. Construction Work in Progress, Retirement Work in Progress, or the 
    Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense 
    Accounts, as appropriate.
Cr. 186.XX, Miscellaneous Deferred Debits--Deferred Compensation
To record monthly accrual of deferred compensation.

    Note: If an employee joins the deferred compensation program during 
the year, use entry 1 to record the additional deposit to the 
NRECA Deferred Compensation Fund and increase the monthly accrual in 
entry 2 to reflect this deposit.

    NRECA provides borrowers that participate in the deferred 
compensation program with an annual account statement disclosing the 
activity for each Homestead Fund investment including the number of 
shares owned, interest income, dividend income, capital gains/losses, 
and the value of the shares owned at statement date. Funds may be 
invested in the Short-term Bond Fund, the Value Fund, the Short-term 
Government Securities Fund, and the Daily Income Fund. Depending upon 
the Homestead Fund selected, invested funds may earn interest and 
dividend income and may experience unrealized holding gains or losses. 
Based upon the information provided on the annual statement, the 
following journal entries shall be recorded to recognize the increase or 
decrease in the fund assets:

Dr. 128, Other Special Funds--Deferred Compensation
Cr. 419, Interest and Dividend Income
Cr. 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income
To record an increase in the fund value as of December 31, 19xx, 
    resulting from interest and dividend income and from unrecognized 
    holding gains on trading securities.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record an increase in the liability to the employee resulting from an 
    increase in the investment account.

Dr. 426.5, Other Deductions
Cr. 128, Other Special Funds--Deferred Compensation

[[Page 934]]

To record a decrease in fund value as of December 31, 19xx, resulting 
    from unrecognized holding losses on trading securities.

Dr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
Cr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
To record a decrease in the liability to the employee resulting from a 
    decrease in the investment account.

    Payments made to participating employees because of retirement or 
separation for other reasons shall be recorded using the following 
entries:

Dr. 131.1, Cash--General
Cr. 128, Other Special Funds--Deferred Compensation
To record the receipt of funds from NRECA.

and

Dr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record payment to employee for deferred compensation.

    If the borrower has elected to bear the market risk of the funds 
which guarantee that the amount of money an employee receives will not 
be less than the amount of salary deferred, the following entry shall be 
recorded if total payment(s) from NRECA are less than the amount of 
salary deferred:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record payment to employee for deferred compensation. Payment was 
    made because amount returned did not equal salary deferred.

    Appropriate disclosure of the terms of the program shall be made in 
the notes to the financial statements.

       605   Life Insurance Premium on Life of a Borrower Employee

    Some borrowers insure the life of the manager and/or key employees 
with the borrower being named as the beneficiary. Such arrangements 
shall be accounted for as follows:

    1. Charge Account 426.2, Life Insurance, for the net amount of the 
premium paid each year on the insurance policy.
    2. At the anniversary date of the policy each year, charge Account 
124, Other Investments, and credit Account 426.2, Life Insurance, with 
the amount of the annual increase in the cash surrender value of the 
policy; provided such increase is less than the net premium paid for 
that year. If the annual increase in the surrender value exceeds the net 
premium paid for the same year, only that portion of the surrender value 
increase equal to the net premium paid shall be credited to Account 
426.2. The remainder is to be credited to Account 419, Interest and 
Dividend Income.
    3. Upon retirement of the insured employee and surrender of the 
insurance policy, charge Account 131.1, Cash--General, and credit 
Account 124, Other Investments, for the amount received from the 
insurance company. If it is decided to grant to the retiring insured 
employee all, or any portion, of the cash received upon surrender of the 
policy, Account 926, Employee Pensions and Benefits, shall be charged 
and Account 131.1 credited for the amount paid to the retiring employee.
    4. If the insured employee dies within his term of service, charge 
Account 131.1, Cash--General, for the face amount of the policy paid by 
the insurance company. Credit Account 124, Other Investments, for the 
cash surrender value previously charged thereto, and credit the 
remainder to Account 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income.

                           606  Pension Costs

    With the issuance of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 
87, Employers' Accounting for Pensions (Statement No. 87), there have 
been significant changes in the accounting and reporting requirements 
relating to pension costs. This section will highlight the accounting 
and reporting requirements for the major types of pension plans. It 
should be noted, however, that the definitions and accounting procedures 
outlined in this section relate to financial accounting and they may 
differ from those used for tax accounting.

[[Page 935]]

                      Defined Benefit Pension Plans

    A defined benefit pension plan is a plan that defines an amount of 
pension benefit to be provided, usually as a function of one or more 
factors such as age, years of service, or compensation. In a defined 
benefit plan, the employer promises to provide, in addition to current 
wages, retirement income payments in future years after the employee 
retires or terminates service. Generally, the amount of benefit to be 
paid depends upon a number of future events that are incorporated into 
the plan's benefit formula, after including how long the employee and 
any survivors live, how many years of service the employee renders, and 
the employee's compensation in the years immediately before retirement 
or termination.
    Under a defined benefit plan, the determination of pension costs, 
assets, liabilities, and the disclosures in the financial statements 
require many calculations and assumptions to be made. This section 
provides a general overview of the accounting and reporting requirements 
associated with a defined benefit pension plan. Consult Statement No. 87 
for guidance in making the necessary calculations and assumption.
    The accounting and reporting requirements related to a defined 
benefit pension plan are as follows:
    1. The following components shall be included in the periodic 
recognition of net pension cost by an employer sponsoring a defined 
benefit pension plan:
    a. The service cost component recognized in a period shall be 
determined as the actuarial present value of benefits attributed by the 
pension plan formula to employee service during that period. The 
measurement of the service cost component requires use of an attribution 
method and assumptions.
    b. The interest cost component recognized in a period shall be 
determined as the increase in the projected benefit obligation due to 
the passage of time. Measuring the projected benefit obligation as a 
present value requires accrual of an interest cost at rates equal to the 
assumed discount rates.
    c. For a funded plan, the actual return on plan assets, if any, 
shall be determined based upon the fair value of plan assets at the 
beginning and the end of the period, adjusted for contributions and 
benefit payments.
    d. Plan amendments (including initiation of a plan) often include 
provisions that grant increased benefits based upon services rendered in 
prior period. Because plan amendments are granted with the expectation 
that the employer will realize economic benefits in future period, 
Statement No. 87 does not require the cost of providing such retroactive 
benefits (prior service cost) to be included in net periodic pension 
cost entirely in the year of the amendment but provides for recognition 
during the future service periods of those employees active at the date 
of the amendment who are expected to receive benefits under the plan.
    The cost of retroactive benefits (including benefits that are 
granted to retirees) is the increase in the projected benefit obligation 
at the date of the amendment. Except as noted below, prior service cost 
shall be amortized by assigning an equal amount to each future period of 
service of each employee active at the date of the amendments who is 
expected to receive benefits under the plan. If all or almost all of the 
plan's participants are inactive, the cost of retroactive plan 
amendments affecting benefits of inactive participants shall be 
amortized based upon the remaining life expectancy of those participants 
rather than the remaining service period.
    To reduce the complexity and detail of the computations required, 
consistent use of an alternative amortization approach that more rapidly 
reduces the unrecognized cost of retroactive amendments is acceptable. 
For example, a straight-line amortization of the cost over the average 
remaining service period of employees expected to receive benefits under 
the plan is acceptable. The alternative method used shall be disclosed.
    In some situations, a history of regular plan amendments and other 
evidence may indicate that the period during which the employee expects 
to realize economic benefits from an amendment granting retroactive 
benefits is shorter than the entire remaining service period of the 
active employees. Identification of such situations

[[Page 936]]

requires an assessment of the individual circumstances and the substance 
of the particular plan situation. In those circumstances, the 
amortization of prior service cost shall be accelerated to reflect the 
more rapid expiration of the employer's economic benefits and to 
recognize the cost in the periods benefited.
    A plan amendment can reduce rather than increase the projected 
benefit obligation. Such a reduction shall be used to reduce an existing 
unrecognized prior service cost, and the excess, if any, shall be 
amortized on the same basis as the cost of benefit increases.
    e. Gains and losses are changes in the amount of either the 
projected benefit obligation or plan assets resulting from experience 
different from that assumed and changes in assumptions. Gains and losses 
include amounts that have been realized. Because gains and losses may 
reflect refinements in estimates as well as real changes in economic 
values, and because some gains in one period may be offset by losses in 
another or vice versa, the recognition of gains and losses as components 
of net pension cost of the period in which they arise is not required.
    The expected return on plan assets shall be determined based upon 
the expected long-term rate of return on plan assets and the market-
related value of plan assets. The market-related value of plan assets 
shall be either fair value or a calculated value that recognizes changes 
in fair value in a systematic and rational manner over not more than 5 
years. Different ways of calculating market-related value may be used 
for different classes of assets but the manner of determining market-
related value shall be applied consistently from year to year for each 
asset class.
    Asset gains and losses are the differences between the actual return 
on assets during a period and the expected return on assets for that 
period. Assets gains and losses include both changes reflected in the 
market-related value of assets and changes not yet reflected in the 
market-related value (that is, the difference between the fair value of 
assets and the market-related value). Asset gains and losses not yet 
reflected in market-related values are not required to be amortized.
    As a minimum, amortization of an unrecognized gain or loss 
(excluding asset gains and losses not yet reflected in market-related 
value) shall be included as a component of net pension cost for a year 
if, as of the beginning of the year, that unrecognized net gain or loss 
exceeds 10 percent of the greater of the projected benefit obligation or 
the market-related value of plan assets. If amortization is required, 
the minimum amortization shall be that excess divided by the average 
remaining service period of active employees expected to receive 
benefits under the plan. If all or almost all of a plan's participants 
are inactive, the average remaining life expectancy of the inactive 
participants shall be used instead of average remaining service life.
    Any systematic method of amortization of gains and losses may be 
used in lieu of the minimum specified in the previous paragraph provided 
that the minimum is used in any period in which the minimum is greater 
(i.e., reduces the net balance by more), the method is applied 
consistently, the method is applied similarly to both gains and losses, 
and the method is disclosed.
    The gain or loss component of net periodic pension cost shall 
consist of the difference between the actual return on plan assets and 
the expected return on plan assets and amortization of the unrecognized 
net gain or loss from previous periods.
    2. A liability (unfunded accrued pension cost) shall be recognized 
if the net periodic pension cost recognized pursuant to Statement No. 87 
exceeds amounts the employer has contributed to the plan. An asset 
(prepaid pension cost) shall be recognized if the net periodic pension 
cost is less than the amounts the employer has contributed to the plan.
    If the accumulated benefit obligation exceeds the fair value of plan 
assets, the employer shall recognize a liability (including unfunded 
accrued pension cost) that is at least equal to the unfunded accumulated 
benefit obligation. Recognition of an additional minimum liability is 
required if an unfunded accumulated benefit obligation exists

[[Page 937]]

and an asset has been recognized as a prepaid pension cost, the 
liability already recognized as unfunded accrued pension cost is less 
than the unfunded accumulated benefit obligation, or no accrued or 
prepaid pension cost has been recognized.
    If an additional minimum liability is recognized, an equal amount 
shall be recognized as an intangible asset, provided that the asset does 
not exceed the amount of unrecognized prior service cost. If an 
additional liability required to be recognized exceeds unrecognized 
prior service cost, the excess (which represents a net loss not yet 
recognized as a net periodic pension cost) shall be reported as a 
separate component (reduction) of equity.
    When a new determination of the amount of additional liability is 
made to prepare a balance sheet, the related intangible asset and 
separate component of equity shall be eliminated or adjusted, as 
necessary.
    3. An employer sponsoring a defined benefit pension plan shall 
disclose the following information:
    a. A description of the plan including employee groups covered, type 
of benefit formula, funding policy, types of assets held and significant 
nonbenefit liabilities, if any, and the nature and effect of significant 
matters affecting comparability of information for all period presented.
    b. The amount of net periodic pension cost for the period showing 
separately the service cost component, the interest cost component, the 
actual return on assets for the period, and the net total of other 
components.
    c. A schedule reconciling the funded status of the plan with amounts 
reported in the employer's balance sheet, showing separately, the fair 
value of plan assets, the projected benefit obligation identifying the 
accumulated benefit obligation and the vested benefit obligation, the 
amount of unrecognized prior service cost, the amount of unrecognized 
net gain or loss including asset gains and losses not yet reflected in 
market-related value), the amount of any remaining unrecognized net 
obligation or net asset existing at the date of initial application of 
Statement No. 87, the amount of any additional liability recognized, and 
the amount of net pension asset or liability recognized in the balance 
sheet (which is the net result of combining the previous six items).
    d. The weighted-average assumed discount rate and rate of 
compensation increase (if applicable) used to measure the projected 
benefit obligation and the weighted-average expected long-term rate of 
return on plan assets.
    e. If applicable, the amount and type of securities of the employer 
and related parties included in plan assets, and the approximate amount 
of annual benefits of employees and retirees covered by annuity 
contracts issued by the employer and related parties. Also, if 
applicable, the alternative amortization periods used.
    f. An employer that sponsors two or more separate defined benefit 
pension plans shall determine net periodic pension cost, liabilities, 
and assets by separately applying the provisions of Statement No. 87 to 
each plan. In particular, unless an employer clearly has a right to use 
the assets of one plan to pay benefits of another, a liability required 
to be recognized for one plan shall not be reduced or eliminated because 
another plan has assets in excess of its accumulated benefit obligation 
or because the employer has prepaid pension cost related to another 
plan.
    The required disclosures may be aggregated for all of an employer's 
single-employer defined benefit plans, or plans may be disaggregated 
into groups so as to provide the most useful information. Plans with 
assets in excess of the accumulated benefit obligation, however, shall 
not be aggregated with plans that have accumulated benefit obligations 
that exceed plan assets.

                            Annuity Contracts

    An annuity contract is a contract in which an insurance company 
unconditionally undertakes a legal obligation to provide specified 
benefits to specific individuals in return for a fixed consideration or 
premium. An annuity contract is irrevocable and involves the transfer of 
significant risk from the employer to the insurance company. Some 
annuity contracts (participating annuity contracts) provide that the

[[Page 938]]

purchaser (either the plan or the employer) may participate in the 
experience of the insurance company. Under these contracts, the 
insurance company ordinarily pays dividends to the purchaser. If the 
substance of a participating contract is such that the employer remains 
subject to all or most of the risks and rewards associated with the 
benefit obligation covered and the assets transferred to the insurance 
company, that contract is not an annuity contract for purposes of 
Statement No. 87.
    To the extent that benefits currently earned are covered by annuity 
contracts, the cost of these benefits shall be the cost of purchasing 
the contracts, except as noted below. That is, if all benefits 
attributed by the plan's benefits formula to service in the current 
period are covered by nonparticipating annuity contracts, the cost of 
the contracts determines the service cost component of net pension cost 
for that period.
    Benefits provided by the pension benefit formula beyond benefits 
provided by annuity contracts (for example, benefits related to future 
compensation levels) shall be accounted for according to the provisions 
applicable to plans not involving insurance contracts.
    Benefits covered by annuity contracts shall be excluded from the 
projected benefit obligation and the accumulated benefit obligation. 
Except as noted below, annuity contracts shall be excluded from plan 
assets.
    Some annuity contracts provide that the purchaser (either the plan 
or the employer) may participate in the experience of the insurance 
company. Under these contracts, the insurance company ordinarily pays 
dividends to the purchaser, the effect of which is to reduce the cost of 
the plan. The purchase price of a participating annuity contract 
ordinarily is higher than the price of an equivalent contract without 
participation rights. The cost of the participation right shall be 
recognized, at the date of purchase, as an asset. In subsequent periods, 
the participation right shall be measured at its fair value if the 
contract is such that the fair value is reasonably estimable. Otherwise, 
the participation right shall be measured at its amortized cost (not in 
excess of its net realizable value), and the cost shall be amortized 
systematically over the expected dividend period under the contract.

                Other Contracts with Insurance Companies

    Insurance contracts that are, in substance, equivalent to the 
purchase of annuities shall be accounted for as such. Other contracts 
with insurance companies shall be accounted for as investments and 
measured at fair value. For some contracts, the best available evidence 
of fair value may be contract value. If a contract has a determinable 
cash surrender value or conversion value, that is presumed to be its 
fair value.

                       Defined Contribution Plans

    A defined contribution pension plan is a plan that provides pension 
benefits in return for services rendered, provides an individual account 
for each participant, and has terms that specify how contributions to 
the individual's accounts are to be determined rather than the amount of 
pension benefits the individual is to receive. Under a defined 
contribution plan, the pension benefits a participant will receive 
depend only upon the amount contributed to the participant's account, 
the returns earned on investments of those contributions, and 
forfeitures of other participants' benefits that may be allocated to the 
participant's account.
    To the extent that a plan's defined contributions to an individual's 
account are to be made for periods in which that individual renders 
services, the net pension cost for a period shall be the contribution 
called for in that period. If a plan calls for contributions for periods 
after an individual retires or terminates, the estimated cost shall be 
accrued during the employee's service period.
    An employer that sponsors one or more defined contribution plans 
shall disclose the following separately from its defined benefit plan 
disclosures:
    1. A description of the plan(s) including employee groups covered, 
the basis for determining contributions, and the nature and effect of 
significant matters affecting comparability of information for all 
periods presented.

[[Page 939]]

    2. The amount of cost recognized during the period.
    A pension plan having characteristics of both a defined benefit plan 
and a defined contribution plan requires careful analysis. If the 
substance of the plan is to provide a defined benefit, as may be the 
case with some ``target benefit'' plans, the accounting and disclosure 
requirements shall be determined in accordance with the provisions 
applicable to a defined benefit plan.

                           Multiemployer Plans

    A multiemployer plan is a pension plan to which two or more 
unrelated employers contribute, usually pursuant to one or more 
collective-bargaining agreements. A characteristic of multiemployer 
plans is that assets contributed by one participating employer may be 
used to provide benefits to employees of other participating employers 
since assets contributed by an employer are not segregated in a separate 
account or restricted to provide benefits only to employees of that 
employer.
    An employer participating in a multiemployer plan shall recognize as 
net pension cost, the required contribution for the period and shall 
recognize as a liability, any contributions due and unpaid. The required 
contribution includes both current costs and prior service costs. If an 
employer elects to fund prior service cost in full at the inception of 
the plan, the total payment becomes the employer's required 
contribution, and accordingly, its pension cost for the period.
    The following provisions are applicable to RUS borrowers 
participating in a multiemployer pension plan:
    1. An electric utility participating in a multiemployer plan may 
defer current period pension expenses if the provisions of Statement of 
Financial Accounting Standards No. 71 (Statement No. 71), Accounting for 
the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, are applied.
    Under the provisions of Statement No. 71, pension costs may be 
deferred provided such costs are recovered through future rates.
    2. An electric utility instituting an amendment to the NRECA 
Retirement and Security plan enters into a contractual agreement to pay 
the costs incurred (prior service pension costs) for the amendment. In 
such cases, the agreement is noncancelable and payable regardless of 
continued participation in the plan.
    Since the utility is unconditionally committed to making these 
payments and such payments are not contingent upon the utility's 
continued participation in the plan, the recognition of that liability 
is appropriate. The costs associated with this liability shall be 
expensed, in their entirety, when the liability is recognized.
    The accounting journal entries required to record the transactions 
associated with a multiemployer pension plan are as follows:

                    Sample 1--Current Pension Expense

    The journal entry required to record the normal costs associated 
with the NRECA Retirement and Security Program is as follows:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the payment of pension costs to NRECA.

    Note: This entry shall not be recorded during the moratorium.

                 Sample 2--Prior Service Pension Expense

    The journal entries required to record the prior service costs 
associated with the NRECA Retirement and Security Program are as 
follows:
    1. If the RUS borrower elects to pay the prior service pension costs 
in full, and there is no deferral of costs under the provision of 
Statement No. 71, the following entry shall be recorded:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the payment of prior service pension costs to NRECA.

    2. If the RUS borrower elects to finance prior service pension costs 
over a period of years and there is no deferral

[[Page 940]]

of costs under the provisions of Statement No. 71, the following entries 
shall be recorded:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
To record the liability to NRECA for prior service pension costs.

Dr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
Dr. 427, Interest on Long-Term Debt
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the annual payment to NRECA for prior service pension costs.

    3. If the RUS borrower elects to finance prior service pension costs 
over a period of years and such costs are being deferred and amortized 
in accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 71, the following 
entries shall be recorded:

Dr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
Cr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
To record the liability to NRECA for prior service pension costs.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record the amortization of deferred prior service pension costs.

Dr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
Dr. 427, Interest on Long-Term Debt
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the annual payment to NRECA for prior service pension costs.

    4. If the RUS borrower elects to pay the prior service pension costs 
in full and such costs are being deferred and amortized in accordance 
with the provisions of Statement No. 71, the following entries shall be 
recorded:

Dr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the payment to NRECA for prior service pension costs.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record the amortization of deferred prior service pension costs.

    It should be noted that although the above entries relate 
specifically to the NRECA Retirement and Security Program, they are 
applicable to all multiemployer pension plans.
    An employer that participates in one or more multiemployer plans 
shall disclose the following separately from disclosures for a single-
employer plan:
    1. A description of the multiemployer plan(s) including the employee 
groups covered, the type of benefits provided (defined benefit or 
defined contribution), and the nature and effect of significant matters 
affecting comparability of information for all periods presented.
    2. The amount of cost recognized during the period.

                         Multiple-Employer Plans

    A multiple-employer plan is, in substance, aggregations of single-
employer plans combined to pool their assets for investment purposes to 
reduce the cost of plan administration. Under a multiple-employer plan, 
assets are segregated and specifically identified to an employer. In 
addition, such plans may have features that allow participating 
employers to have different benefit formulas. Such plans shall be 
considered single-employer plans for financial accounting purposes and 
each employer's accounting shall be based upon its respective interest 
in the plan.

                         607   Unproductive Time

    Lost time relating to construction, operations and maintenance shall 
be allocated on the basis of direct payroll costs to the appropriate 
construction, operations or maintenance accounts in the month incurred. 
Lost time is defined as time on duty during which productive work is not 
performed due to inclement weather conditions, material shortages, 
machine repairs, or other reasons.
    If lost time attributable to construction has a material effect on 
the construction accounts in any one month, these costs shall be 
deferred and distributed over a reasonable period of

[[Page 941]]

time by means of a predetermined percentage based upon direct labor.

            608  Training Costs, Attendance at Meetings, Etc.

    Utilities engage in many types of training programs. Seminars are 
conducted for directors, managers, office managers, attorneys, 
engineers, and others. Bookkeepers and office managers attend 
accountants' meetings. Safety engineers attend safety schools and 
subsequently conduct regular safety meetings at the cooperative. Costs 
incurred for the various types of training activities shall be accounted 
for as follows:
    1. Managers' and directors' expenses to attend the NRECA national 
and state conventions shall be charged to Account 930.2, Miscellaneous 
General Expenses.
    2. Management or engineering seminar fees, salary time attending 
such seminars including the associated pensions and benefits expense and 
payroll taxes, and the related per diem and expenses shall be charged to 
the functional expense accounts. Salaries paid to employees shall also 
be charged to the appropriate functional expense account. Fees and 
expenses for directors' attendance shall be charged to Account 930.2, 
Miscellaneous General Expenses.
    3. When the office manager, bookkeeper, or work order clerk attends 
a state or regional accounting meeting, their salary time and the 
associated employee pensions and benefits and social security and other 
payroll taxes shall be charged to the account to which the employees' 
time is ordinarily charged.
    4. Employees' salary time employee and the associated pensions and 
benefits and social security and other payroll taxes spent attending 
regular safety meetings conducted by the cooperative shall be charged to 
the account to which the employees' time is ordinarily charged.
    5. A safety engineer's salary time and the associated employee 
pensions and benefits and social security and other payroll taxes spent 
attending a statewide safety school shall be charged to Account 925, 
Injuries and Damages.
    6. The salary time and the associated employee pensions and benefits 
and social security and other payroll taxes spent by a manager or line 
foreman conducting weekly safely meetings shall be charged to the 
appropriate functional expense accounts including Account 590, 
Maintenance, Supervision and Engineering, and Account 920, 
Administrative and General Services.

                    609   Maintenance and Operations

    ``Operations'' is the general term used to describe activities 
involved in the delivery of electric service, by means of a distribution 
system, to the end user. It pertains to the use of the utility's 
electric plant facilities and does not include activities intended to 
prevent or remedy an impending or actual breakdown of those facilities. 
These activities are classified as maintenance.
    ``Maintenance'' is the general term used to describe the activities 
involved in the upkeep and repair, but not the enlargement or 
improvement, of property owned or leased and operated by the company. It 
does not include the replacement of retirement units.

                        610   Financial Forecast

    Costs incurred and salaries paid to perform a 10-year financial 
forecast shall be charged to Account 920, Administrative and General 
Salaries. Related office supplies and expenses shall be charged to 
Account 921, Office Supplies and Expenses. When a forecast is performed 
by an outside consultant, the cost shall be charged to Account 923, 
Outside Services Employed.

                        611   Advertising Expense

    The cost of advertising and the cost of informing the public about 
the electric cooperative's activities shall be charged to Account 930.2, 
Miscellaneous General Expenses.
    Most of a cooperative's advertising is instructional in nature and 
relates the cooperative's history and current activities. This type of 
advertising activity should not be confused with that directed towards 
the enactment of a specific law or laws directed toward obtaining a 
specific decision from a regulatory body. Political advertising of the 
type defined above shall be charged

[[Page 942]]

to Account 426.4, Expenditures for Certain Civic, Political, and Related 
Activities.

                     612   Special Power Cost Study

    A special power cost study is defined as a study to determine 
whether sufficient power will be available in the future. If additional 
power or power sources are needed, the study determines whether 
generation or purchase will supply the lesser cost. The study also 
indicates when additional power will be needed. As costs are incurred, 
they shall be charged to a subaccount of Account 186, Miscellaneous 
Deferred Debits. Upon completion of the study, the costs shall be 
charged to Account 557, Other Expenses, or amortized to Account 557 over 
a period of time not to exceed 5 years.

                           613   Mapping Costs

    The purpose of posting completed work orders to system maps is to 
improve the operation of the system. These costs shall, therefore, be 
charged to Account 588, Miscellaneous Distribution Expenses. However, 
the cost of system mapping in the planning stage of construction is an 
acceptable overhead cost of the resulting construction.

                      614   Member Relations Costs

    Many electric cooperatives hire employees whose duties concern a 
mixture of power use and member relations activities. The salaries for 
these employees shall be charged to Account 930.2, Miscellaneous General 
Expenses, except as provided below:

    1. Account 912, Demonstrating and Selling Expenses, shall be charged 
with all labor, material, advertising, and other expenses incurred in 
promotional, demonstrating, and selling activities; the objective of 
which is to promote or retain the use of utility services by present or 
prospective customers.
    2. Account 930.1, General Advertising Expenses, shall be charged 
with labor, material, and other expenses incurred in advertising and 
related activities, the cost of which by their content and purpose, are 
not provided for elsewhere.
    3. Account 416, Costs and Expenses of Merchandising, Jobbing, and 
Contract Work, shall be charged with all costs specifically related to 
merchandising activities when the utility is engaged in a major 
merchandising program.
    4. Account 426.4, Expenditures for Certain Civic, Political, and 
Related Activities, shall be charged with expenditures for the purpose 
of influencing public opinion with respect to the election or 
appointment of public officials, referenda, legislation, or ordinances 
(either with respect to the possible adoption of new referenda, 
legislation or ordinances or repeal or modification of existing 
referenda, legislation or ordinances); or approval, modification, or 
revocation of franchises; or for the purpose of influencing the 
decisions of public officials. Account 426.4 shall not include 
expenditures which are directly related to appearances before regulatory 
or other governmental bodies in connection with the borrower's existing 
or proposed operations.

                          615   Statewide Fees

    Additional fees collected by a statewide association from its 
members for construction of a statewide building shall be charged to 
Account 930.2, Miscellaneous General Expenses. Any amounts that are to 
be repaid by the state association shall be charged to Account 143, 
Other Accounts Receivable, or Account 123.23, Other Investments in 
Associated Organizations, depending upon the terms of the repayment.

         616   Power Supply/Distribution Cooperative Borrowings

    When a power supply cooperative borrows money from a distribution 
cooperative as the result of a long-term loan agreement, the money shall 
be recorded on the books of the power supply cooperative as general 
funds unless restricted to a specific purpose. If restricted, the funds 
shall be recorded in Account 128, Other Special Funds. The resulting 
liability shall be recorded in Account 224, Other Long-Term Debt.
    The transaction shall be charged to Account 123.23, Other 
Investments in Associated Organizations, on the books of the 
distribution cooperative.

[[Page 943]]

  617   Rate Discount Allowed by the Power Cooperative to Distribution 
            Cooperatives Owning Connecting Transmission Lines

    A distribution cooperative purchases power from a power cooperative. 
The distribution cooperative owns and operates the transmission line 
between the power cooperative's facilities and the distribution 
facilities. Because of this, power is sold at the standard rate at which 
the power cooperative sells to other distribution cooperatives who do 
not own their transmission lines, less a discount. The discount or 
reduction in rate is based upon the distribution cooperative's expense 
in operating and maintaining its transmission facilities. The contract 
between the power cooperative and the distribution cooperative must 
specifically state that the member shall receive a reduced rate or 
discount from the seller's rate to other member cooperatives.
    Under this type of arrangement, the distribution cooperative shall 
record the cost of purchased power by charging the net amount to Account 
555, Purchased Power.

               618  Theft Losses not Covered by Insurance

    Utilities may suffer losses as a result of thefts of cash, materials 
and supplies, equipment, or electric plant-in-service that is not 
covered by insurance. The charges for nominal uninsured losses shall be 
recorded in the following accounts:
    1. Cash--Account 924, Property Insurance, shall be charged.
    2. Plant materials and operating supplies--Account 163, Stores 
Expense Undistributed, shall be charged.
    3. Equipment--Account 163, Stores Expense Undistributed, shall be 
charged for stores equipment; and Account 184, Transportation Expense--
Clearing, for transportation and garage equipment. The appropriate 
miscellaneous operations or administrative expense account (Account 506, 
524, 539, 549, 566, 588, 905, 910, 916, or 930.2, as appropriate) shall 
be charged for all other equipment.
    4. Electric Plant-in-Service--A retirement work order shall be 
prepared for electric plant constituting a unit of property. The loss 
due to retirement shall be charged to Account 108.6, Accumulated 
Provision for Depreciation of Distribution Plant. If the plant does not 
constitute a retirement unit, the loss shall be charged to the 
appropriate maintenance expense account.

                           619   Self Billing

    To maintain the books of accounts on an accrual basis, bills for 
customers who self bill and have not sent in a reading or remittance, 
shall be estimated. A journal entry shall be made to record the 
estimated revenue and kWh sold by debiting accounts receivable and 
crediting the appropriate revenue accounts. The estimated bill shall be 
posted to the customer's account and identified by an appropriate symbol 
indicating that it is an estimate. Reconciliation with the general 
ledger control is made in the usual manner.

                         620   Purchase Rebates

    Some vendors from which electric cooperatives purchase plant 
materials and supplies and merchandise for resale are making purchase 
rebates based upon the quantity or dollar volume of purchases. These 
``quantity discounts'' may be in the form of cash or credit memoranda, 
in the form of prepaid package travel arrangements, or a combination of 
such methods. The rebate shall be accounted for as a reduction in the 
cost of the material or appliances upon which it was based.
    In some instances, the rebate may be for material or appliances that 
are no longer in stock or cannot be identified. If the rebate is based 
upon the purchase of plant materials and operating supplies that are 
normally charged to Account 154, Plant Materials and Operating Supplies, 
a credit shall be made to Account 163, Stores Expense Undistributed. If 
the rebate is based upon appliances and equipment held for merchandising 
or contract work, the credit shall be spread over the items in Account 
155, Merchandise. To avoid materially distorting the cost of the 
remaining appliances, if a portion of the items upon which the rebate 
was based are no longer in stock, a portion of the credit shall be 
prorated to Account 416, Cost and Expenses of Merchandising, Jobbing, 
and Contract Work, on the

[[Page 944]]

basis of the number of items sold to the quantity remaining in stock.
    If the rebate is in the form of a travel package or travel 
arrangements, the value of the rebate shall be estimated and recorded as 
a reduction of the cost of the material or appliances upon which it was 
based in a manner similar to that of the cash rebates discussed above. 
The beneficiary of the travel or travel allowance shall be designated by 
or in accordance with policy established by the board of directors. The 
contra charge to the reduction in cost shall be to an appropriate 
account depending upon the relationship of the recipient to the 
cooperative. For employees, this shall be Account 926, Employee Pensions 
and Benefits; for directors or patrons, Account 930.2, Miscellaneous 
General Expenses.

                          621   Integrity Fund

    The CFC Integrity Fund was established to assist borrowers in their 
attempts to stop takeover bids by investor-owned utilities. A borrower 
makes a contribution to the Integrity Fund in the form of cash or 
patronage capital refunds. CFC retains the contribution for a 5-year 
period during which time the borrower earns interest on the balance in 
its account. Each year, the borrower receives a statement indicating 
(both for the total fund and the individual borrower's share) the amount 
contributed, interest earned, disbursements made, and the ending 
balance. The disbursements from the fund are allocated to each 
contributing borrower's account based upon their individual account 
balances. At the end of the 5-year period, the balance in the account, 
if any, is refunded to the contributing borrower.
    Since the contributing borrower will receive a refund only if its 
funds are not totally disbursed, the contribution shall be charged to 
expense in Account 426.1, Donations. If any part of the contribution is 
returned at the end of the 5-year period, the refund shall be credited 
to Account 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income.

                      622   In-Substance Defeasance

    An in-substance defeasance has been defined as the process whereby a 
debtor irrevocably places cash or other assets in a trust to be used 
solely for the purpose of satisfying scheduled payments of both 
principal and interest related to a specific debt obligation. Under the 
structural arrangements of an in-substance defeasance, the probability 
that the debtor will be required to make additional future debt payments 
is remote. In these specific circumstances, debt has been determined to 
be extinguished even though the debtor has not been legally released 
from his obligations under the debt instrument.
    The trust established in a defeasance transaction is restricted as 
to the nature of the assets held. The trust must be funded with monetary 
assets that are essentially risk free as to the amount, timing, and 
collection of interest and principal. For debt denominated in United 
States dollars, ``risk free'' assets are limited to:

    1. Direct obligations of the United States government;
    2. Obligations guaranteed by the United States government; and
    3. Securities that are backed by United States government 
obligations as collateral under an arrangement by which the interest and 
principal payments on the collateral, flow immediately through to the 
holder of the security.

    The monetary assets of the trust must provide cash flows sufficient 
to coincide with the scheduled interest and principal payments on the 
defeased debt. If the trust is expected to pay the costs associated with 
the defeasance, such as trustee fees, these costs must be considered in 
determining the amount of funds required by the trust.
    The principles of in-substance defeasance apply only to debt with 
specific maturities and fixed payment schedules and, as such, do not 
apply to debt with variable terms in which advance determination of debt 
service requirements is not possible.
    Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) address the 
extinguishment of debt in Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 26, 
and Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 76, Extinguishment of 
Debt. In accordance with these two statements, debt which has been 
defeased remains recorded in the regulated books of account as do the 
assets placed in the irrevocable

[[Page 945]]

trust. They are not, however, recognized as an asset and liability for 
financial reporting purposes. The transaction, including the total 
amount of debt outstanding and the total amount of debt that is 
considered extinguished at the end of the period, must be disclosed in 
the footnotes to the financial statements as long as the debt remains 
outstanding.
    Debt is frequently extinguished before its scheduled maturity. Debt 
may be extinguished by the use of the borrower's general funds, or by 
the reacquisition of another debt issue at a different interest rate or 
varying terms. As these assets are expected to be revenue producing 
during those years, both the assets and the revenue they generate may be 
utilized to meet maturing debt payments. Therefore, in most instances, 
the dollar value of the assets initially placed in the trust do not 
equal the dollar value of the outstanding principal balance. The 
difference represents an ``economic '' gain or loss to the borrower.
    To provide consistency in reporting among all RUS borrowers, any 
gain or loss that is recognized for financial statement purposes should 
be reported in accordance with the provisions of General Instruction No. 
17 of this part. Therefore, the gain or loss should be amortized (for 
reporting purposes) in equal monthly amounts over the remaining life of 
the original debt issue or the remaining life of the new issue. The gain 
or loss may be reported in the current period only in those instances in 
which it is immaterial to the financial statements.
    The RUS Form 7, Financial and Statistical Report, and the RUS Form 
12, Operating Report--Financial, must, however, reflect the actual 
amounts recorded in the books and records of the borrower.

              623   Satellite or Cable Television Services

    Many electric borrowers have become involved in either providing 
satellite or cable television services or obtaining satellite or cable 
television services for their own use. This section outlines the 
accounting to be followed when recording transactions involving 
satellite or cable television services.
    1. Separate Subsidiary

    If a borrower provides satellite or cable television services 
through a separate subsidiary, the investment in the subsidiary shall be 
recorded in Account 123.11, Investment in Subsidiary Companies. The net 
income or loss of the subsidiary shall be debited or credited to Account 
123.11, as appropriate, with an offsetting entry to Account 418.1, 
Equity in Earnings of Subsidiary Companies.

    2. Segment of Current Operations

    If a borrower provides satellite or cable television services as 
part of its normal operations, the investment in satellite or cable 
television equipment shall be recorded in Account 121, Nonutility 
Property. All income associated with these services shall be recorded in 
Account 417, Revenues from Nonutility Operations, and the associated 
expenses shall be charged to Account 417.1, Expenses of Nonutility 
Operations.

    3. Sale and Installation of Satellite or Cable Television Equipment

    If a borrower sells or installs satellite or cable television 
equipment, the equipment purchased for resale shall be recorded in 
Account 156, Other Materials and Supplies, until sold. The revenues 
generated from such sales or installations shall be recorded in Account 
415, Revenues from Merchandising, Jobbing, and Contract Work, and the 
associated expenses shall be charged to Account 416, Costs and Expenses 
of Merchandising, Jobbing, and Contract Work.

    4. Equipment Purchased for Own Use

    If a borrower purchases satellite or cable television equipment for 
its own use, the investment in the equipment shall be recorded in 
Account 397, Communication Equipment.

                      624   Pollution Control Bonds

    The construction and installation of pollution control facilities 
are often financed by issuing tax exempt municipal securities. The funds 
generated from the sale of these securities are deposited into an 
account that is controlled by a designated trustee. The funds under the 
control of the trustee

[[Page 946]]

are usually invested, earning interest, until they are needed.
    Interest expense accrued on the pollution control bonds during the 
construction period shall be capitalized in Account 107, Construction 
Work-in-Progress. After construction is complete, all subsequent 
accruals of interest expense shall be charged to Account 427, Interest 
on Long-Term Debt.
    Interest income earned during the construction period shall be 
recorded as a debit to Account 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable, 
and a credit to Account 107, Construction Work-in-Progress. Upon 
notification of receipt of the interest in the trustee account, Account 
221.XX, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds, shall be debited and 
Account 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable shall be credited. Upon 
completion of construction, Account 419, Interest and Dividend Income, 
shall be credited for the amount of interest income earned during the 
period.
    The entries required to account for the transactions associated with 
the issuance of pollution control bonds are as follows:

Dr. 221.XX, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds--Trustee
    Cr. Account 221.X1, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds
To record the sale of pollution control bonds.
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
    Cr. 232, Accounts Payable
To record costs incurred in construction of pollution control 
facilities.
Dr. 131.1, Cash--General Funds
    Cr. 221.XX, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds--Trustee
To record the transfer of funds from the trustee.
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
    Cr. 221.XX, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds--Trustee
To record interest expense on pollution control bonds.
Dr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
    Cr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
To record earnings from investments made by the trustee.
Dr. 221.XX, Long-Term Debt--Pollution Control Bonds--Trustee
    Cr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
To record receipt of interest income by the trustee account.
Dr. XXX, Various Plant Accounts
    Cr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
To close completed construction to the primary plant accounts.

                        625   Prepayment of Debt

    Many RUS borrowers have decided to redeem (prepay) their issues of 
long-term debt. As a result of this redemption, the borrower may incur a 
gain (discount) or a loss (penalty) on the early extinguishment of debt. 
The accounting for this gain or loss is highlighted in this section.
    If debt is redeemed without refunding (paid with general funds), the 
gain or loss incurred shall be recorded in Account 189, Unamortized Loss 
on Reacquired Debt, or Account 257, Unamortized Gain on Reacquired Debt, 
as appropriate. The borrower shall amortize the recorded deferral on a 
monthly basis over the remaining life of the old debt issue. Amounts so 
amortized shall be charged to Account 428.1, Amortization of Loss on 
Reacquired Debt, or credited to Account 429.1, Amortization of Gain on 
Reacquired Debt--Credit, as appropriate.
    If the debt is redeemed with refunding (refinanced), the gain or 
loss incurred shall be recorded in Account 189 or Account 257, as 
appropriate. The borrower may elect to account for the deferrals as 
follows:

    1. Write them off immediately when the amounts are insignificant;
    2. Amortize them by equal monthly amounts over the remaining life of 
the old debt issue; or
    3. Amortize them by equal monthly amounts over the life of the new 
debt issue.

    Once an election has been made, it shall be applied on a consistent 
basis. Regardless of the option selected, the amortization shall be 
charged to either Account 428.1 or 429.1, as appropriate.
    Where a regulatory authority having jurisdiction over the borrower 
specifically disallows the rate principle of amortizing gains or losses 
on the redemption of long-term debt without refunding, and does not 
apply the gain or

[[Page 947]]

loss to interest charges in computing the borrower's rates, the 
alternative method may be used to account for gains or losses relating 
to the redemption of long-term debt with or without refunding. The 
alternative method requires that gains or losses be recorded in Account 
421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income, or Account 426.5, Other 
Deductions, as incurred. When the alternative method is used, the 
borrower shall include a footnote to the financial statements stating 
the reason for using this method and its treatment for rate making 
purposes.

         626   Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Program

    On December 21, 1987, Section 313, Cushion of Credits Payments 
Program, was added to the Rural Electrification Act. Section 313 
establishes a Rural Economic Development Subaccount and authorizes the 
Administrator of the Rural Utilities Service to provide zero interest 
loans or grants to RE Act borrowers for the purpose of promoting rural 
economic development and job creation projects.
    Subpart B, Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Program, 7 CFR 
Part 1703, sets forth the policies and procedures relating to the zero 
interest loan program and for approving and administering grants.
    The accounting journal entries required to record the transactions 
associated with a rural economic development loan are as follows:

Dr. 224.17, RUS Notes Executed--Economic Development--Debit
    Cr. 224.16, Long-Term Debt--RUS Economic Development Notes Executed

    To record the contractual obligation to RUS for the Economic 
Development Notes.

Dr. 131.12, Cash--General--Economic Development Funds
    Cr. 224.17, RUS Notes Executed--Economic Development--Debit

    To record the receipt of the economic development loan funds.

Dr. 123, Investment in Associated Organizations or
Dr. 124, Other Investments
    Cr. 131.12, Cash--General--Economic Development Funds

    To record the disbursement of Economic development loan funds to the 
project.
Dr. 131.1, Cash--General Funds
    Cr. 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income

    To record payment received from the project for loan servicing 
charges.

Dr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
    Cr. 419, Interest and Dividend Income

    To record the interest earned on the investment of rural economic 
development loan funds.

Dr. 426.1, Donations or
Dr. 426.5, Other Deductions
    Cr. 131.1, Cash--General Funds

    To record the payment of interest earned in excess of $500.00 on the 
investment of rural economic development loan funds.
    Note: Interest earned in excess of $500.00 must be used for the 
rural economic development project for which the loan funds were 
received or returned to RUS.
Dr. 131.12, Cash--General--Economic Development Funds
    Cr. 123, Investment in Associated Organizations or
    Cr. 124, Other Investments

    To record receipt of the repayment, by the project, of economic 
development loan funds.

Dr. 224.16, Long-Term Debt--RUS Economic Development Notes Executed
    Cr. 131.12, Cash--General--Economic Development Funds

    To record the repayment, to RUS, of the economic development loan 
funds.
    The accounting journal entries required to record the transactions 
associated with a rural economic development grant are as follows:

Dr. 131.13, Cash--General--Economic Development Grant Funds
    Cr. 224.18, Other Long-Term Debt--Grant Funds;
    Cr. 208, Donated Capital; or
    Cr. 421, Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income

    To record grant funds disbursed by RUS. If the grant agreement 
requires repayment of the funds upon termination of the revolving loan 
program, Account 224.18 should be credited. If the grant agreement 
states that there

[[Page 948]]

is absolutely no obligation for repayment upon termination of the 
revolving loan program, the funds should be accounted for as a permanent 
infusion of capital by crediting Account 208. If, however, the grant 
agreement is silent as to the final disposition of the grant funds, 
Account 421 should be credited.

Dr. 123.3, Investment in Associated Organizations--Federal Economic 
Development Loans
    Cr. 131.13, Cash--General--Economic Development Grant Funds

    To record advances of Federal funds to associated organizations for 
authorized rural economic development projects.

Dr. 124.1, Other Investments--Federal Economic Development Loans
    Cr. 131.13, Cash--General--Economic Development Grant Funds

    To record advances of Federal funds to nonassociated organizations 
for authorized rural economic development projects.

Dr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
    Cr. 419, Interest and Dividend Income

    To record the accrual of interest on loans made to associated and 
nonassociated organizations with Federal funds for authorized rural 
economic development projects.

Dr. 131.14, Cash--General--Economic Development Non-Federal Revolving 
Funds
    Cr. 123.3, Investment in Associated Organizations--Federal Economic 
Development Loans or
    Cr. 124.1, Other Investments--Federal Economic Development Loans

    To record repayment of loans made with Federal funds.

Dr. 123.4, Investment in Associated Organizations--Non-Federal Economic 
Development Loans
    Cr. 131.14, Cash--General--Economic Development Non-Federal 
Revolving Funds

    To record advances of non-Federal funds to associated organizations 
for authorized rural economic development projects.

Dr. 124.2, Other Investments--Non-Federal Economic Development Loans
    Cr. 131.14, Cash--General--Economic Development Non-Federal 
Revolving Funds

    To record advances of non-Federal funds to nonassociated 
organizations for authorized rural economic development projects.

Dr. 171, Interest and Dividends Receivable
    Cr. 419, Interest and Dividend Income

    To record the accrual of interest on loans made to associated and 
nonassociated organizations with non-Federal funds for authorized rural 
economic development projects.

Dr. 131.14, Cash--General--Economic Development Non-Federal Revolving 
Funds
    Cr. 123.4, Investment in Associated Organizations--Non-Federal 
Economic Development Loans or
    Cr. 124.2, Other Investments--Non-Federal Economic Development Loans

    To record repayment of loans made with non-Federal funds.

                      627  Postretirement Benefits

    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 106, Employers' 
Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other than Pensions (Statement 
No. 106), requires reporting entities to accrue the expected cost of 
postretirement benefits during the years the employee provides service 
to the entity. For purposes of applying the provisions of Statement No. 
106, members of the board of directors are considered to be employees of 
the cooperative. Prior to the issuance of Statement No. 106, most 
reporting entities accounted for postretirement benefit costs on a 
``pay-as-you-go'' basis; that is, costs were recognized when paid, not 
when the employee provided service to the entity in exchange for the 
benefits.
    As defined in Statement No. 106, a postretirement benefit plan is a 
deferred compensation arrangement in which an employer promises to 
exchange future benefits for an employee's current services. 
Postretirement benefit plans may be funded or unfunded. Postretirement 
benefits include, but are not limited to, health care, life insurance, 
tuition assistance, day care, legal services, and housing

[[Page 949]]

subsidies provided outside of a pension plan.
    This statement applies to both written plans and to plans whose 
existence is implied from a practice of paying postretirement benefits. 
An employer's practice of providing postretirement benefits to selected 
employees under individual contracts with specified terms determined on 
an employee-by-employee basis does not, however, constitute a 
postretirement benefit plan under the provisions of this statement.
    Postretirement benefit plans generally fall into three categories: 
single-employer defined benefit plans, multi-employer plans, and 
multiple-employer plans.
    The accounting requirements set forth in this interpretation focus 
on single-and multiple-employer plans. The accounting requirements set 
forth in Statement No. 106 for multiemployer plans or defined 
contribution plans shall be adopted for borrowers electing those types 
of plans.
    Under the provisions of Statement No. 106, there are two components 
of the postretirement benefit cost: the current period cost and the 
transition obligation. The transition obligation is a one-time accrual 
of the costs resulting from services already provided. Statement No. 106 
allows the transition obligation to be deferred and amortized on a 
straight-line basis over the average remaining service period of the 
active employees. If the average remaining service life of the employees 
is less than 20 years, a 20-year amortization period may be used.

                         Accounting Requirements

    All RUS borrowers must adopt the accrual accounting provisions and 
reporting requirements set forth in Statement No. 106. The transition 
obligation and accrual of the current period cost must be based upon an 
actuarial study. This study must be updated to allow the borrower to 
comply with the measurement date requirements of Statement No. 106; 
however, the study must, at a minimum, be updated every five years. RUS 
will not allow electric borrowers to account for postretirement benefits 
on a ``pay-as-you-go'' basis.
    The deferral and amortization of the transition obligation does not 
require RUS approval provided that it complies with the provisions of 
Statement No. 106. If, however, a borrower elects to expense the 
transition obligation in the current period and subsequently defer this 
expense in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards 
No. 71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, the 
deferral must be approved by RUS. In those states in which the 
commission will not allow the recovery of the transition obligation 
through future rates, the transition obligation must be expensed, in its 
entirety, in the year in which Statement No. 106 is adopted. A portion 
of the transition obligation may be charged to construction and 
retirement activities provided such charges are properly supported.

                    Effective Date and Implementation

    For plans outside the United States and for defined benefit plans of 
employers that (a) are nonpublic enterprises and (b) sponsor defined 
benefit postretirement plans with no more than 500 plan participants in 
the aggregate, Statement No. 106 is effective for fiscal years beginning 
after December 15, 1994. For all other plans, Statement No. 106 is 
effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1992.
    RUS borrowers must comply with the implementation dates set forth in 
Statement No. 106. At the time of the adoption of Statement No. 106, 
rates must be in place sufficient to recover the current period expense 
and any amortization of the transition obligation. A copy of a board 
resolution or commission order, as appropriate, indicating that the 
transition obligation and current period expense have been included in 
the borrower's rates must be submitted to RUS.

            Accounting Journal Entries--Transition Obligation

    The journal entries required to record the transition obligation are 
as follows:
    1. If the borrower elects to expense the transition obligation in 
the current period and there is no deferral of costs, the following 
entry shall be recorded:


[[Page 950]]


Dr. 435.1, Cumulative Effect on Prior Years of a Change in Accounting 
    Principle

or

Dr. 926, Employee Pensions and Benefits
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record the current period recognition of the transition obligation 
    for postretirement benefits. Note: A portion of the transition 
    obligation may be charged to construction and retirement activities 
    provided such charges are properly supported.

    2. If the borrower elects to defer and amortize the transition 
obligation in accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 71, the 
following entry shall be recorded:

Dr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record the deferral of the transition obligation under the provisions 
    of Statement No. 71.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record the amortization of postretirement benefits expenses as they 
    are recovered through rates in accordance with Statement No. 71.

    3. The deferral and amortization of the transition obligation under 
the provisions of Statement No. 106 is considered to be an off balance 
sheet item. If, therefore, the borrower elects to defer and amortize the 
transition obligation on a straight-line basis over the average 
remaining service period of the active employees or 20 years in 
accordance with Statement No. 106, no entry is required. Instead, the 
transition obligation is recognized as a component of postretirement 
benefit cost as it is amortized. It should be noted, however, that the 
amount of the unamortized transition obligation must be disclosed in the 
notes to the financial statements.

           Accounting Journal Entries--Current Period Expense

    The current period postretirement expense should be recorded by the 
following entry:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record current period postretirement benefit expense.
Dr. 228.3X, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits--Funded
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record cash payments on a ``pay-as-you-go'' basis for postretirement 
    benefits.

                    Accounting Journal Entry--Funding

    If a borrower elects to voluntarily fund its postretirement benefits 
obligation in an external, irrevocable trust, the following entry shall 
be recorded:

Dr. 228.3X, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits--Funded
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the funding of postretirement benefits expense into an 
    external, irrevocable trust.

    If a borrower elects to voluntarily fund its postretirement benefits 
obligation in an investment vehicle other than an external, irrevocable 
trust, the following entry shall be recorded:

Dr. 128, Other Special Funds
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the funding of postretirement benefits expense into an 
    investment vehicle other than an external, irrevocable trust.

                      628  Postemployment Benefits

    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 112, Employers' 
Accounting for Postemployment Benefits (Statement No. 112) establishes 
the standards of financial accounting and reporting for employers who 
provide benefits to former or inactive employees after employment but 
before retirement. Inactive employees are those who are not currently 
rendering service to the employer but who have not

[[Page 951]]

been terminated, including employees who are on disability leave, 
regardless of whether they are expected to return to active service. For 
purposes of applying the provisions of Statement No. 112, former members 
of the board of directors are considered to be employees of the 
cooperative.
    Postemployment benefits include benefits provided to former or 
inactive employees, their beneficiaries, and covered dependents. They 
include, but are not limited to, salary continuation, supplemental 
benefits (including workmen's compensation), health care, job training 
and counseling, and life insurance coverage. Benefits may be provided in 
cash or in kind and may be paid upon cessation of active employment or 
over a specified period of time.
    The cost of providing postemployment benefits is considered to be a 
part of the compensation provided to an employee in exchange for current 
service and should, therefore, be accrued as the employee earns the 
right to be paid for future postemployment benefits. Applying the 
criteria set forth in Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 
43, Accounting for Compensated Absences, a postemployment benefit 
obligation is accrued when all of the following conditions are met:
    1. The employer's obligation for payment for future absences is 
attributable to employees' services already performed;
    2. The obligation relates to employee rights that vest or 
accumulate. Vested rights are considered those rights for which the 
employer is obligated to make payment even if the employee terminates. 
Rights that accumulate are those earned, but unused rights to 
compensated absences that may be carried forward to one or more periods 
subsequent to the period in which they are earned;
    3. Payment of the compensation is probable; and
    4. The amount can be reasonably estimated.
    If all of these conditions are not met, the employer must account 
for its postemployment benefit obligation in accordance with Statement 
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 5, Accounting for Contingencies 
(Statement No. 5) when it becomes probable that a liability has been 
incurred and the amount of that liability can be reasonably estimated.
    If an obligation for postemployment benefits is not accrued in 
accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 5 or Statement No. 43 
only because the amount cannot be reasonably estimated, the financial 
statements should disclose that fact.

                         Accounting Requirements

    All RUS borrowers must adopt the accrual accounting provisions and 
reporting requirements set forth in Statement No. 112 as of the 
statement's implementation date. A portion of the cumulative effect may 
be charged to construction and retirement activities provided such 
charges are properly supported. If a borrower elects to defer the 
cumulative effect of implementing Statement No. 112 in accordance with 
the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 71, 
Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, the deferral 
must be approved by RUS.

                    Effective Date and Implementation

    Statement No. 112 is effective for fiscal years beginning after 
December 15, 1993. Previously issued financial statements should not be 
restated.
    RUS borrowers must comply with the implementation date set forth in 
Statement No. 112. At the time of the adoption of Statement No. 112, 
rates must be in place sufficient to recover the current period expense.

                       Accounting Journal Entries

    The journal entries required to account for postemployment benefits 
are as follows:

Dr. 435.1, Cumulative Effect on Prior Years of a Change in Accounting 
    Principle
Dr. 107, Construction Work in Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work in Progress
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record the cumulative effect of implementing Statement No. 112.

    Note: A portion of the cumulative effect may be charged to 
construction and retirement activities provided such charges are

[[Page 952]]

properly supported. Account 435.1 is closed to Account 219.2, 
Nonoperating Margins.

    If the borrower elects to defer and amortize the cumulative effect 
in accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 71, the following 
entry shall be recorded:

Dr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record the deferral of the cumulative effect of implementing 
    Statement No. 112 in accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 
    71.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work in Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work in Progress
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record the amortization of the cumulative effect of implementing 
    Statement No. 112 as it is recovered through rates in accordance 
    with Statement No. 71.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work in Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work in Progress
Cr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
To record current period postemployment benefit expense.

    Note: If postemployment benefits are accrued under the criteria set 
forth in Statement No. 43, this journal entry is made on a monthly 
basis. If, however, the accrual is based upon the provisions of 
Statement No. 5, this is a one-time entry unless the liability is 
reevaluated and subsequently adjusted.

             629   Investments in Debt and Equity Securities

    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 115, Accounting for 
Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities (Statement No. 115), 
establishes the standards of financial accounting and reporting for 
investments in debt securities and for investments in equity securities 
that have readily determinable fair values. Statement No. 115 does not 
apply to investments in equity securities accounted for under the equity 
method nor to investments in consolidated subsidiaries.
    At the time of acquisition, an entity must classify debt and equity 
securities into one of three categories: held-to-maturity, available-
for-sale, or trading. At the balance sheet date, the appropriateness of 
the classifications must be reassessed.
    Investments in debt securities are classified as held-to-maturity 
and are measured at amortized cost in the balance sheet only if the 
reporting entity has the positive intent and ability to hold these 
securities to maturity. Debt securities are not classified as held-to-
maturity if the entity has the intent to hold the security only for an 
indefinite period; for example, if the security would become available 
for sale in response to changes in market interest rates and related 
changes in the security's prepayment risk, needs for liquidity, changes 
in the availability of and the yield on alternative investments, changes 
in funding sources and terms, and changes in foreign currency risk.
    Investments in debt securities that are not classified as held-to-
maturity and equity securities that have readily determinable fair 
values are classified as either trading securities or available-for-sale 
securities and are measured at fair value in the balance sheet. Trading 
securities are those securities that are bought and held principally for 
the purpose of selling them in the near future. Trading generally 
reflects active and frequent buying and selling and trading securities 
are generally used with the objective of generating profits on short-
term differences in prices. Available-for-sale securities are those 
investments not classified as either trading securities or held-to-
maturity securities.
    Statement No. 115 requires unrealized holding gains and losses for 
trading securities to be included in earnings in the current period. 
Unrealized holding gains and losses for available-for-sale securities 
are excluded from earnings; however, they are reported as a net amount 
in a separate component of shareholders' equity until realized.
    For individual securities classified as either available-for sale or 
held-to-maturity, an entity must determine whether a decline in the 
security's fair value below the amortized cost is other

[[Page 953]]

than temporary. If the decline in fair value is determined to be 
permanent, that is, it is probable that the entity will not be able to 
collect all amounts due under the contractual terms of the security, the 
realized loss is accounted for in earnings of the current period. The 
new cost basis is not adjusted upward for subsequent recoveries in the 
fair value. Subsequent increases in the fair value of available-for-sale 
securities are included in the separate component of equity. Subsequent 
decreases are also included in the separate component of equity.
    All trading securities are reported as current assets in the balance 
sheet and individual held-to-maturity and available-for-sale securities 
are classified as either current or noncurrent, as appropriate. Cash 
flows from the purchase, sale, or maturity of available-for-sale 
securities and held-to-maturity securities are classified in the 
statement of cash flows as cash flows from investing activities and 
reported gross for each security classification.

                         Accounting Requirements

    All RUS borrowers must adopt the accounting, reporting, and 
disclosure requirements set forth in Statement No. 115 as of the 
statement's implementation date. Unrealized holding gains or losses for 
trading securities shall be recorded in either Account 421, 
Miscellaneous Nonoperating Income, or Account 426.5, Other Deductions, 
as appropriate. Unrealized holding gains or losses for available-for-
sale securities held by the corporate entity are recognized as a 
component of stockholder's equity in Account 215.1, Unrealized Gains and 
Losses--Debt and Equity Securities. A contra account of the investment 
account shall be debited or credited accordingly. Unrealized gains and 
losses for available-for-sale securities held in a decommissioning fund 
shall increase or decrease, as appropriate, the reported value of the 
fund.

                    Effective Date and Implementation

    Statement No. 115 is effective for fiscal years beginning after 
December 15, 1993. At the beginning of the entity's fiscal year, the 
entity must classify its debt and equity securities on the basis of the 
entity's current intent. This statement may not be applied retroactively 
to prior years' financial statements. For fiscal years beginning prior 
to December 16, 1993, reporting entities are permitted to apply 
Statement No. 115 as of the end of a fiscal year for which annual 
financial statements have not previously been issued.

                    630  Split Dollar Life Insurance

    The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association Split Dollar 
Life Insurance provides life insurance benefits to cooperative 
employees. The benefits provided under this policy consist of two 
components, the face value of the insurance policy and the accumulated 
cash surrender value. While the employee is the owner of the policy, the 
employee must sign a collateral assignment giving the cooperative 
absolute right to the cash surrender value of the policy. Under the 
terms of this collateral assignment, the employee must reimburse the 
cooperative for the premiums paid upon the employee's termination of 
employment or attainment of the age of 62 if the employee wishes to 
maintain the insurance coverage. If death occurs prior to either of 
these events, the premiums paid to date by the cooperative are deducted 
from the death benefits payable to the policy beneficiary.

                         Accounting Requirements

    Financial Accounting Standards Board Technical Bulletin 85-4, 
Accounting for Purchase of Life Insurance (Bulletin 85-4), states that 
the amount that could be realized under an insurance contract as of the 
date of the financial statements should be reported as an asset. The 
change in the cash surrender or contract value of that asset during the 
period should be reported as an adjustment to the premiums paid in 
determining the expense or income to be recognized for the period. The 
cooperative shall, therefore, record the cash surrender value of the 
policy as an asset because of its absolute right to receive that value 
based upon the employee's collateral assignment. Any receivable that may 
occur as a result of the employee reimbursement for the premiums paid is 
contingent upon the employee electing to maintain the insurance coverage 
after

[[Page 954]]

termination of employment or reaching the age of 62 and is not recorded 
as an asset on the cooperative's records.

                       Accounting Journal Entries

    The journal entries required to account for the NRECA Split Dollar 
Life Insurance Program are as follows:

Dr. 124, Other Investments
Cr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
To record an increase in the cash surrender value of the insurance 
    contract.

or

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Cr. 124, Other Investments
To record a decrease in the cash surrender value of the insurance 
    contract.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General
To record the premium cost of the insurance contract.

                   631  Special Early Retirement Plan

    The Special Early Retirement Plan (SERP) being offered through the 
National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA) constitutes an 
amendment to its Retirement and Security (R&S) program. The SERP is 
often chosen as a vehicle through which the cooperative may reduce the 
size of its workforce or replace more highly paid employees with lower 
paid entry level employees. If an employee covered by an NRECA 
retirement plan chose to retire before his/her normal retirement date, 
that employee would receive an actuarially reduced benefit. However, 
when a cooperative elects to offer a SERP, no such reduction is 
required. The cooperative selects the criteria under which an employee 
will be eligible to participate such as age, years of service, or a 
combination of age and benefit service requirements. As with other 
amendments to the R&S program, NRECA calculates the cost of the plan 
based upon the criteria selected by the cooperative and allows the 
cooperative to pay the cost immediately or on an installment basis.
    Under this plan, the employee receives full retirement benefits in 
the form of either an immediate lump-sum settlement or annuity payments. 
It is not unusual for the cooperative to add an incentive to encourage 
participation such as medical or life insurance, either in whole or in 
part, until age 65. The actuarial analysis provided by NRECA includes 
the cost of the SERP and the estimated reduction and/or increase in 
costs associated with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 
106, Employer's Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than 
Pensions (Statement No. 106).

     Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 87, Employer's 
               Accounting for Pensions (Statement No. 87)

    In accordance with the provisions of Statement No. 87, the costs 
associated with an amendment to a multiemployer plan are recognized when 
they become due and payable. Since NRECA calculates the amount due and 
payable at the time of the amendment, the entire amount due, whether 
paid immediately or financed through NRECA or any other institution, 
must be recognized as an expense at that time. This cost may, however, 
be deferred in accordance with the provisions of Statement of Financial 
Accounting Standards No. 71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types 
of Regulation (Statement No. 71).

                       Accounting Journal Entries

    The journal entry required to record the additional pension costs 
associated with the SERP is as follows:

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General

or

Cr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
To record the prior service pension costs incurred as a result of 
    adopting the SERP.


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    If the borrower elects to defer and amortize the cost in accordance 
with Statement No. 71, the following entries shall be recorded:

Dr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
Cr. 131.1, Cash--General

or

Cr. 224, Other Long-Term Debt
To record, under the provisions of Statement No. 71, the deferral of the 
    prior service pension costs incurred as a result of adopting the 
    SERP.

Dr. Various Operations, Maintenance, and Administrative Expense Accounts
Dr. 107, Construction Work-in-Progress
Dr. 108.8, Retirement Work-in-Progress
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record the amortization of deferred prior service pension costs as 
    they are recovered through rates in accordance with Statement No. 
    71.

                            Statement No. 106

    In the event that net reductions in postretirement benefits result 
from this plan amendment, the reductions are recognized as follows:
    1. The amount of the reduction shall first reduce any existing 
unrecognized prior service cost;
    2. Any remaining reductions shall next reduce any unrecognized 
transition obligation; and
    3. Any remaining reduction shall be recognized in a manner 
consistent with the accounting for prior service postretirement benefit 
costs.
    In accordance with Statement No. 106, prior service postretirement 
benefit costs are recognized in equal amounts in each remaining year of 
service for active plan participants. Because it is an off-balance sheet 
item, only a memorandum entry is required to reduce the amount of 
unrecognized prior service cost.
    At adoption, Statement No. 106 permitted the recognition of the 
transition obligation in one of two ways. The transition obligation was 
recognized over the longer of the average remaining service period of 
current plan participants or 20 years, or it may have been recognized 
immediately. If the delayed recognition option was chosen under 
Statement No. 106, this, too, was an off-balance sheet item that 
requires only a memorandum entry to reduce the amount of unrecognized 
transition obligation. However, if the immediate recognition option was 
chosen, the cooperative either recorded the expense in that year or, 
with RUS approval, deferred the expense under the provisions of 
Statement No. 71. If the expense were recorded, in total, in the year of 
adoption, no unrecognized transition obligation remains to reduce. If, 
however, the transition obligation was deferred in accordance with 
Statement No. 71, the journal entry required to effect the reduction in 
Statement No. 106 expense is as follows:

Dr. 228.3, Accumulated Provision for Pensions and Benefits
Cr. 182.3, Other Regulatory Assets
To record a reduction in the deferred Statement No. 106 transition 
    obligation resulting from the adoption of the SERP.

    Note: The dollar value of this entry must not exceed the deferral 
shown on the balance sheet.

    If, after the two previous reductions have been made, any net credit 
remains, it shall be recognized in a manner consistent with prior 
service costs; that is, as an off balance sheet item that is amortized 
over the remaining service lives (to full eligibility) of the active 
plan participants. The annual amortization reduces amounts normally 
charged to the various operations, maintenance, and administrative 
expense accounts and Account 228.3 as postretirement benefit expenses.

[58 FR 59825, Nov. 10, 1993, as amended at 59 FR 27436, May 27, 1994; 60 
FR 55430, 55435-55438, Nov. 1, 1995; 62 FR 42319-42321, 42323, 42330, 
Aug. 6, 1997]

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