N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 200.9
(c) School district or local government reimbursement to approved programs shall conform to the provisions of this section and articles 81 and 89 of the Education Law.
(5) Special act school districts, BOCES, and public school districts shall maintain accounts in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles as determined for public entities by the State Comptroller in accordance with section 36 of the General Municipal Law.
(e) Financial reporting requirements for approved programs.
(1) Tuition rates for existing approved private programs and special act school districts shall be based on financial reports, as prescribed by the commissioner, supported by financial statements certified by a licensed or certified public accountant independent of the program's operation. Annual financial reports and financial statements for either the fiscal year, July 1st through June 30th, or for the calendar year, January 1st through December 31st, as applicable, shall be required to be submitted to the commissioner's designated representative. Tuition rates for existing approved BOCES' and public school district programs shall be based on financial reports as required by the commissioner and/or the State Comptroller.
(i) Financial reports.
(a) Financial reports for all programs shall provide information that will allow analysis of revenues and expenses by program including but not limited to enrollment and staffing data. Additionally, the following requirements shall apply:
(ii) Financial statements.
(3) Programs seeking initial approval shall submit a programmatic application to the commissioner's designated representative, in accordance with section 200.7 of this Part.
(ii) Tuition rates for the first two school years of operation for other than special class programs, shall be based on financial and related statistical information submitted to the commissioner on required budget forms.
(f) Principles governing reimbursement rates for approved programs.
(1) Reimbursement to special education programs shall be subject to the following principles:
(iv) Adjustments shall be made to reported financial data. Such adjustments may include but not be limited to:
(i) interest expense on working capital loans if conditions do not exist that warrant the loan. Documentation that the loan is warranted may include but not be limited to:
(2) Tuition reimbursement methodology. The commissioner shall develop and recommend the reimbursement methodology to be used in the calculation of tuition rates for programs approved under articles 81 and 89 of the Education Law to the Director of the Budget. In accordance with section 4410(10)(a)(i) of the Education Law, the commissioner's municipal task force shall submit an annual report by December 31st of each year to the commissioner providing recommendations on the preschool rate-setting methodology for the following school year. The Director of the Budget, in consultation with the commissioner, shall approve the reimbursement methodology. Any modification to the approved methodology, including but not limited to the nondirect care cost parameter, the hold harmless percentage, the rate of growth adjustment factor, the annual inflation factor and other factors to be applied in determining the tuition rate for the school year, shall require the approval of the Director of the Budget.
(vi) Per diem rates shall be controlled by the total cost screen. The total cost screen calculation shall use a per diem rate for each education program for both the rate year and the previous year. A per diem rate shall be arrived at by dividing the total reimbursable costs by the total care days used in the tuition rate calculation. Total care days shall equal the number of days in session multiplied by the full-time-equivalent (FTE) student enrollment. For 12-month programs, this will be the care days for 10 months plus the care days for the July and August component. The total cost screen shall consist of two types:
(ix) The tuition rate for programs for preschool students with disabilities receiving special education itinerant services pursuant to section 4410(1)(k) of the Education Law, shall be established using the reimbursement methodology as set forth in paragraph (1) of this subdivision and subparagraphs (i) through (viii) of this paragraph, with the following modifications:
(x) For the purpose of this subparagraph, integrated special class programs are defined as those programs employing a special education teacher and one or more supplementary school personnel in a classroom made up of no more than twelve preschool students with and without disabilities, or a classroom that is made up of no more than twelve preschool students with disabilities staffed by a special education teacher and one or more supplementary school personnel that is housed in the same physical space as a preschool class of students without disabilities taught by a non-special education teacher. The tuition rate for preschool programs operating a special class as defined in section 200.16 of this Part in an integrated setting serving students with and without disabilities shall be established in accordance with the provisions set forth in paragraph (1) of this subdivision and subparagraphs (i) through (viii) of this paragraph, with the following additional provisions:
(xi) Establishment of coordination rates by municipalities for service providers coordinating two or more related services pursuant to section 4410(10)(c) of the Education Law.
(a) A standardized method for calculating coordination rates for two or more related services established by the commissioner and approved in advance by the Director of the Budget shall include the following provisions:
(b) Municipalities must annually submit to the commissioner the coordination rates established, as well as documentation describing the method used to calculate such rates.
(3) Tuition rate adjustments may be made to an approved tuition rate for the following reasons:
(i) Tuition rate appeals. A program may appeal the existing approved tuition rate for the current school year for the reasons specified in clauses (a) through (d) of this subparagraph if it can demonstrate that the program would have insufficient resources to meet the educational needs of the student population being served. Programs shall submit rate appeals in writing, including supporting documentation, in the specific format required by the commissioner and may request an opportunity to make an oral appeal presentation. The commissioner shall provide programs with a specific response to each appeal issue. Programs may file a tuition rate appeal for the current school year for the following reasons:
(iii) Reconciliation rates.
(b) For the 1995-96 base year and thereafter.
(4) Regional maximum per trip rates for students receiving transportation services under section 4410 of the Education Law.
(i) Definitions. As used in this paragraph:
(ii) Regional maximum per trip rate methodology.
(v) Appeals. Upon submission of the final claim for school year, municipalities may appeal the regional maximum per trip rate if the actual transportation expenses exceeded the regional maximum per trip rate times the number of one-way trips, provided the reason for that excess was due solely to the increase in the number of students with unusual transportation related needs due to medical or behavior conditions. Municipalities must provide all relevant documentation to the appeal. Any regional transportation maximum per trip rate amended on appeal must be approved by the Director of the Division of the Budget.
(g) Procedures during close-down period.
The owner(s) or operator(s) of an approved private program electing to cease operation, transfer ownership or voluntarily terminate the status as an approved program shall comply with the requirements of section 200.7(e) of this Part. For purposes of this subdivision, the close-down period means the period of time beginning with the date of the commissioner's receipt of notice and ending on the date of the program's cessation of operation, transfer of ownership or voluntary termination of its status as an approved program. Reimbursement shall be determined in accordance with the provisions set forth in paragraphs (f)(1) and (2) of this section. Financial reporting requirements following close down shall be in accordance with the provisions set forth in paragraph (e)(1) of this section. Such financial reports and financial statements shall be submitted to the commissioner no later than 90 days following close down.
(h) State aid for maintenance payments to private schools.
(d) Accounting requirements for approved programs.
(a) Definitions.
As used in this section: