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CITY OF LITTLE CANADA, MINNESOTA <br />NOTES TO BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS <br />DECEMBER 31, 2020 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />NOTE 1 SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED) <br />I. Special Assessments (Continued) <br />In the government-wide financial statements the City recognizes special assessment revenue in the <br />period that the assessment roll was adopted by the City Council. In the fund financial statements <br />current and delinquent special assessments received by the City are recognized as revenue for the <br />current year. All remaining delinquent and deferred special assessments receivable are offset by <br />deferred inflows of resources in the governmental funds. <br /> <br />J. Inventories <br />The original cost of materials and supplies has been recorded as expenditures at the time of <br />purchase. The City does not maintain material amounts of inventories of goods and supplies. <br /> <br />K. Prepaid Items <br />Certain payments to vendors reflect costs applicable to future accounting periods and are recorded <br />as prepaid items in both government-wide and fund financial statements. Prepaid items are reported <br />using the consumption method and recorded as expenditures/expenses at the time of consumption. <br /> <br />L. Capital Assets <br />Capital assets, which include land, buildings, improvements, equipment, infrastructure (utility <br />systems, roads, bridges, sidewalks, and similar items), and intangible assets such as easements are <br />reported in the applicable governmental or business-type activities columns in the government- <br />wide financial statements. Such assets are capitalized at historical cost, or estimated historical cost <br />for assets where actual historical cost is not available. Donated assets are recorded as capital assets <br />at their acquisition value at the date of donation. The City defines capital assets as those with an <br />initial, individual cost of $5,000 with an estimated useful life in excess of one year. The cost of <br />normal maintenance and repairs that do not add to the value of the asset or materially extend asset <br />lives are not capitalized. <br /> In the case of the initial capitalization of general infrastructure (those reported by governmental <br />activities) the City chose to include all such items, regardless of their acquisition date or amount. <br />The City was able to estimate the historical cost for the initial reporting of these assets through <br />back-trending (i.e. estimating the current replacement cost of the infrastructure to be capitalized <br />and using an appropriate price-level index to deflate the cost of the infrastructure to the acquisition <br />year or estimated acquisition year). <br /> <br />Capital assets are recorded in the government-wide and proprietary fund financial statements, but <br />are not reported in the governmental fund financial statements. <br /> <br /> <br />55