

Line 65 Other education and community budget Young people’s learning and development Grants devolved to post-16 provision – gross expenditure.LA/corporate expenditure attributable to post-16 provision.High needs budget for post-16 provision.Record special education units attached to primary/secondary schools on RO1 lines 20 & 30. Local authority / corporate expenditure attributable to special schools.Grants devolved to special schools – gross expenditure.High needs budget for special schools and alternative provision.Delegated special school and alternative provision budgets.Line 40 Special schools and alternative provision Local authority / corporate expenditure attributable to secondary schools.Grants devolved to secondary schools – gross expenditure.High needs budget for secondary education.Record expenditure gross of income from the Education and Skills Funding Agency grant for sixth forms, which should be recorded only on RG line 716. Include special education units attached to secondary schools.

#CAMDEN COUNTY CONSERVATION DISTRICT STANDARD NOTES CODE#
These notes should be read in conjunction with RO General Guidance 2021-22 and CIPFA’s Service Reporting Code of Practice (SeRCOP) 2021-22. The Pennsylvania State Conservation Commission guides them in their operations, and they belong to both the Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts and the National Association of Conservation.Specific guidance notes for completing the revenue outturn (RO) suite of forms. Directors, appointed by the County Executive, serve four-year terms, and meet monthly to set policy, hear progress reports, and plan the District’s work.

The current board consists of three farmers and three public directors and one county commissioner. Donations and fundraising activities help fund educational programs. The District is funded by three major sources: county government, state government and user fees.

Currently, fourteen employees work in these program areas, most under delegation agreement or contract with state agencies. The past half-century has seen the District employ its own staff to address a variety of resource management concerns: agricultural nutrient management, biosolids application, as well as soil conservation erosion and sediment control from urban development sites, farmland preservation, conservation education, and watershed protection. Governed by a volunteer board of citizen directors, it was staffed by employees of the Soil Conservation Service in the US Department of Agriculture, who worked with farmers to develop farm conservation plans. At that time, its primary purpose was to address soil erosion from mostly agricultural properties. It is one of sixty-six conservation districts in Pennsylvania and nearly 3,000 nationwide. The Lehigh County Conservation District was established by the Lehigh County Commissioners on September 26, 1946, at the request of a significant number of landowners in the county.
