Title: Section 12: Management Issues 1
1Food Purchasing for Child Care Centers
- Section 12
- Management Issues
2Lesson Objectives
The learner will be able to
- list management issues related to food
purchasing, - explain the two types of methods acceptable for
handling inventory and decide which one is best
for the center,
3Lesson Objectives
The learner will be able to
- identify policies that the board of
directors/owners of the center should make, - write a purchase plan for the center,
4Lesson Objectives
The learner will be able to
- develop an internal control plan, and
- explain how to develop a budget and use it as a
working tool.
5Management Issues
- Inventory
- Board/owner policies
- Purchase plan
- Internal controls
- Budgeting
6Inventory
- Two acceptable methods
- Food usage
- Purchases equal to food usage
7Food Usage
8Food Usage
- Best for high-dollar-value inventory (more than
7 calendar days)
9Purchases Equal to Food Usage
- If inventory is well-controlled, purchases
food used
10General Inventory Rule
- Once a container (box, bag, case) is opened, it
is not counted as part of the inventory.
11Board/Owner Policies
- Represent good business practice
- Reviewed annually
12Board/Owner Policies
- Employees authorized to make purchases
- Standard of conduct
- Purchasing documents needing approval
- Type of inventory
13Board/Owner Policies
- Employees who will
- sign invoices
- write checks
- prepare the Federal claim for reimbursement
- keep accounting records
14Purchase Plan
- Results of
- Market analysis
- Market baskets
- IFBs/RFPs
- Presented to board/owners for approval
15Internal Control
- Multiple staff members responsible for performing
duties related to a certain task
16Internal Control . . .
- . . . safeguards the financial resources of a
center.
17Internal Control Plan
18Internal Control Plan
19Budgeting
- Center director must present a budget to the
board of directors/owners.
20Purchasing Process . . .
- . . . includes planning and managing a food
budget that allows the center to - meet CACFP meal pattern requirements and
- serve a quality food product to children.
21Budget
- Normally for 1 year
- A financial guide for that year
22Planning the Budget
Projected number of meals served in the year
- You will need
- calendar for the year
- schedule of days the center operates
- meal count records for previous year
23Planning the Budget
Why not use actual meal counts for the past year?
- Number of days in a month you serve varies
- Enrollment could increase/decrease
24Operating Years
- Calendar year January to December
- Federal fiscal year October to September
- State fiscal year
- Varies by State
- Often July to June
- Center fiscal year varies by center
- School year varies by State
25Activity 15 Answers
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
26Activity 15 Answers
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
27Activity 15 Answers
- May
- 20 x 39 780
- 20 x 47 940
- 20 x 51 1,020
- November
- 18 X 39 702
- 18 x 49 882
- 18 x 52 936
28Activity 15 Answers
29Planning the Budget
How much money will be spent for each meal?
- Sophisticated accounting records
- Past years costs
- Total expenditures for preparing the budget
- Monthly expenditures for managing the budget
30Planning the Budget
How much money will be spent for each meal?
- New centers
- Federal reimbursement rate for free meals
- X
- for food costs
31New Center Budget
- Contact State Agency to get percentage to use
in estimating food budget
32New Center Budget
Federal Reimbursement Rate X Percentage (from
State Agency)
Example 2.32 (2005/06 Federal rate for
lunch) X 65 ( from State Agency) 1.51
(budgeted for each lunch)
33Activity 16 Answers
Snack rate (2005/06 Federal rate) 0.63 _at_ 50
0.32 0.63 _at_ 60 0.38 0.63 _at_ 65 0.41
34Budget Amount
- Budget amount for 1 month
number of meals X
amount per meal spent on food
35Budget Amount
- Budget amount for October lunch
1,150 X
1.51 1,736.50
36Food Budget
37Managing the Budget
- The budget must provide current information.
38Budget as Working Tool
- Maintain a budget report for each month
- Record amount budgeted for the month at the top
- Subtract each invoice or grocery receipt
39Budget as Working Tool
40Budget Report
- Only whole dollar amounts
- Speed important
41Important!
- The working budget report should not stop a
center from making the purchases necessary to
provide the meals as planned.
42Budgeted Amount
If higher than planned, ask
- Has the enrollment increased?
- Has there been an unusual event such as a freezer
failing and food spoiling? - Have there been price increases?
43Budgeted Amount
If lower than planned, ask
- Are the menus meeting meal patterns?
- Are the portion sizes adequate?
- Has enrollment decreased?
- Have there been price decreases?
44Remember!