Which of the following is included in the introductory section of the annual comprehensive financial report Acfr )?

City management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of these financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. This includes the design, implementation and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair presentation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement.

The Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR) has three major sections: introductory, financial and statistical. The introductory section furnishes general information on the government’s structure, services and environment. The financial section contains all basic financial statements and required supplementary information, as well as information on all individual funds and discreetly presented component units not reported separately in the basic financial statements. The statistical section provides trend data and nonfinancial data useful in interpreting the basic financial statements and is especially important for evaluating economic conditions.

The Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada (GFOA) awarded a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting to these Lee’s Summit Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports. To be awarded a certificate of achievement, a government must publish an easily readable and efficiently organized Annual Comprehensive Financial Report. This report must satisfy both generally accepted accounting principles and applicable legal requirements. 

June 30, 2021 June 30, 2016
June 30, 2020 June 30, 2015
June 30, 2019 June 30, 2014
June 30, 2018 June 30, 2013
June 30, 2017 June 30, 2012

The Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR) is presented in three sections: Introductory, Financial, and Statistical. The introductory section includes the transmittal letter, the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting, the City’s organizational chart and a list of principal officials. The Financial section includes the MD&A , the basic financial statements and the combining and individual fund financial statements and schedules, as well as the independent auditor’s report on the financial statements and schedules. The Statistical section includes selected financial and demographic information, generally presented on a multi-year basis.

The City is required to undergo an annual single audit in conformity with the provisions of the Single Audit Act as amended and the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Circular A-133, Audits of State and Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations. Information related to this Single Audit, includes the schedule of expenditures of federal awards, findings and questioned costs, and independent auditors’ reports on internal control and compliance with applicable laws and regulations, and is available as a separate document.

Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports

Summaries / Status

Summary of Statement No. 44 Economic Condition Reporting: The Statistical Section—an amendment of NCGA Statement 1 (Issued 5/04)

This Statement amends the portions of NCGA Statement 1, Governmental Accounting and Financial Reporting Principles, that guide the preparation of the statistical section. The statistical section presents detailed information, typically in ten-year trends, that assists users in utilizing the basic financial statements, notes to basic financial statements, and required supplementary information to assess the economic condition of a government.

Three shortcomings have been identified in the statistical section since NCGA Statement 1 was issued in 1979. First, NCGA Statement 1 presented a list of fifteen required schedules with no additional explanation of the nature of the information they were to contain. As a result, some governments prepared their statistical sections differently from others, thereby diminishing the usefulness and comparability of the information. Second, the statistical section requirements were oriented to general purpose local governments. Consequently, other types of governments had little guidance on how to adapt the requirements to their circumstances, resulting in incomplete and inconsistent application of the standards and, therefore, additional loss of comparability and usefulness.

Third, the requirements for the statistical section did not encompass the new information that governments are presenting as a result of GASB Statement No. 34, Basic Financial Statements—and Management’s Discussion and Analysis—for State and Local Governments.

The statistical section is a required part of a comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR), although governments are not required to prepare a statistical section if they do not present their basic financial statements within a CAFR. These circumstances are not altered by this Statement. However, this Statement does apply to any statistical section that accompanies a government’s basic financial statements. The provisions of this Statement are effective for statistical sections prepared for periods beginning after June 15, 2005.

How the Changes in This Statement Improve Financial Reporting

This Statement improves the understandability and usefulness of statistical section information by addressing the comparability problems that have developed in practice and by adding information from the new financial reporting model for state and local governments required by Statement 34. In order to clarify that the requirements are applicable to all types of state and local governmental entities that prepare a statistical section, this Statement establishes the objectives of the statistical section and the five categories of information it contains—financial trends information, revenue capacity information, debt capacity information, demographic and economic information, and operating information. The more specific requirements of this Statement should be adapted by each type of government in order to meet the overarching objectives.

The more specific requirements of this Statement explain more clearly than prior standards the types of information that should be presented in each category of statistical section information. The prior requirements are clarified and updated to better meet user needs. For example, whereas NCGA Statement 1 required a schedule of “miscellaneous statistics,” this Statement specifies that a statistical section should include ten-year trends in three types of operating information—government employment levels, operating statistics, and capital asset information. This Statement also clarifies certain features of previously required information, such as which governmental funds to include in information about trends in changes in fund balances.

This Statement adds new information that users have identified as important and eliminates certain previous requirements. For instance, a government’s statistical section should now include trend information on governmental fund balances and principal employers. On the other hand, governments are no longer required to present in their statistical sections information that users have identified as less useful, such as special assessment levies and collections, construction activity, and bank deposits. Additionally, statistical sections do not have to include a separate schedule of debt service ratios; the most useful information from that schedule will be presented with the changes in fund balances information. The most significant new information added to the statistical section is the government-wide, accrual-based information required by Statement 34. The statistical section will include ten-year trend information about net assets and changes in net assets. The debt information presented in the statistical section will also be more comprehensive due to the inclusion of information from the government-wide financial statements and notes. Finally, this Statement further improves the understandability and usefulness of statistical section information by requiring governments to augment their schedules with notes regarding sources, methodologies, and assumptions, and to provide narrative explanations of (a) the objectives of statistical section information, (b) unfamiliar concepts, (c) relationships between information in the statistical section and elsewhere in the financial report, and (d) atypical trends and anomalous data that users would not otherwise understand.
 



Unless otherwise specified, pronouncements of the GASB apply to financial reports of all state and local governmental entities, including general purpose governments; public benefit corporations and authorities; public employee retirement systems; and public utilities, hospitals and other healthcare providers, and colleges and universities. Paragraph 2 discusses the applicability of this Statement.

What is the introductory section of the CAFR?

The Introductory section orients and guides the reader through the report. The Financial section presents the entity's basic financial statements as well as notes to the statements and the independent auditors' report.

What should be included in the introduction of a financial report?

It includes items of revenues, expenses, gains, and losses. It also provides information on operations carried out by the enterprise.

What are the three main sections of the report ACFR?

The ACFR consists of three sections: Introductory, Financial and Statistical. The Introductory section orients and guides the reader through the report.

Which of the following should be included in the introductory section of a local government's comprehensive annual financial report?

Which of the following should be included in the introductory section of a local government's comprehensive annual financial report? Letter of transmittal. Which of the following is a required part of a local government's management's discussion and analysis (MD&A) as part of its financial statements?