Monetary and Policy Committee Meetings | Date | 24 | 21 | 21 | 25 | 23 | 20 | 25 | 22 | 19 | 24 | 21 | 19 |
Day | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | Friday | |
Time | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM | 2:00 PM |
The procedure for preparing the annual budget of the Local Government Institution from January 01 to December 31 is Section 168 of the Pradeshiya Sabha Act No. 15 of 1987.
No. | Task | Deadline | Responsibility |
01 | Issuing instructions for budget preparation | April 01 | Municipal Commissioner/Secretary |
02 | Submitting proposals from divisional committees and members | June 30 | Divisional Committees and Members |
03 | Submitting income and expenditure reports from respective departments | June 30 | Heads of Departments |
04 | Preparing preliminary estimates | July 01 | Accountant/Bookkeeper/Budget Record Officer |
05 | Obtaining instructions from the finance committee | July 31 | Municipal Commissioner/Secretary |
06 | Review by Honorable Mayor/Chairman | August 01 | Honorable Mayor/Chairman |
07 | Deciding budget policies and presenting them to the council | August 31 | Honorable Mayor/Chairman |
08 | Preparing departmental budget estimates | September 30 | Heads of Departments |
09 | Preparing the final budget estimates | October 31 | Accountant/Bookkeeper/Budget Record Officer |
10 | Reviewing the draft budget by the finance standing committee | November 01 | Municipal Commissioner/Secretary |
11 | Preparing the budget message | November 20 | Honorable Mayor/Chairman |
12 | Preparing the draft budget document | November 30 | Honorable Mayor/Chairman |
13 | Approving the draft budget document | December 01 | Council |
14 | Submitting the draft budget document for a second reading if necessary | December 15 | Honorable Mayor/Chairman |
15 | Printing and distributing the budget document | December 31 | Municipal Commissioner/Secretary |
The following programs should be considered by a local government in preparing its budget.
Expenditure is classified under the following major expenditure heads for each of the above programs.
Local Government Institutions are independent institutions. The powers vested in them by ordinances and acts have been clarified in the said acts as to how the council fund is constituted and under what subjects the fund should be used.
Also, an accounting system specific to local government institutions has been introduced for this purpose. It is expected that the money received by the council fund is properly accounted for and that the money is spent only for the specified expenses.
The special feature of the existing accounting system of local government institutions is that receipts and payments are recorded on a cash basis for a year starting from January 01 and ending on December 31 and at the end of the year (it can also be done at the end of a quarter.) In preparing the accounts, the said receipts are calculated on an accrual basis as income and the payments as expenses. At the end of the year, if there is any income to be collected from the account for the year, it is carried forward as arrears of income and at the end of the year, the amount is transferred to the creditors for further expenditure. The income and expenditure for the year are calculated and if there is a surplus or deficit, it is transferred to the accumulated fund and the accounts are settled.
To accomplish this task, a uniform accounting system was not used in the local government bodies, namely the Metropolitan Councils, Urban Councils, Suburban Councils and Village Councils. The rules and financial control systems used for each local government institution were included, but there was no clear set of rules regarding financial management.
In order to create unity instead of the various accounting systems that existed, an accounting system was introduced by Gazette Notification No. 96 dated January 25, 1974, which was consistent with the program budget system and was introduced as the “Wikramanayake Accounting System”. Moreover, the accounting system was based on the double-entry accounting system, and suitable forms and documents were also introduced and these documents were also named as self-balancing accounting documents.
Self-balancing accounting documents are documents that balance vertically and horizontally, including billing and receipts.
With the introduction of the “Wikramanayake Accounting System” for Municipal Councils and Urban Councils, it is stated that the final accounts should be prepared on or before March 31 of the following year and submitted to the Auditor General, but this is not implemented as a rule. In the case of Pradeshiya Sabhas, as per the rules published in the Gazette Extraordinary, Part IV (b) No. 554/5 of 17 April 1989, the final accounts should be prepared on or before March 31 of the following year and submitted to the Auditor General, as per rule 168(1). Bank reconciliation reports should be submitted as evidence of the verification of cash balances. Copies of the final accounts should be sent to the Commissioner of Local Government and the Assistant Commissioner of Local Government.
Procurement
The General Assembly and the Finance Committee shall act as the Tender Board in accordance with the Pradeshiya Sabha Rules 178 of 1988
The rules and instructions of the Pradeshiya Sabha Rules 178 of 1988 and the Procurement Guidelines of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka 2006 and the Procurement Procedures Code 2006 shall be followed.
A supplementary budget estimate should be prepared for a budget document prepared by a Pradeshiya Sabha for a particular year, in which the expected allocation limit is exceeded or for a non-allocated item or expenditure item. After preparing the supplementary budget estimate, a proposal should be submitted to the Maha Sabha and approved. It should then be included in the annual budget.
After adjusting the balance of the institution’s cash account, the bank reconciliation statement is prepared. The balance of the statement sent by the bank,
The value of the checks not presented to the bank during that period should be reduced.
The bank should add or subtract the errors and omissions that have occurred in the reporting of transactions as appropriate.
Furthermore, if there is any remaining amount, it should be added to the balance of the bank statement.
The bank reconciliation statement prepared after adjusting in this way should be sent to the Audit Superintendent and the Assistant Commissioner of Local Government for audit before the 10th of every month. In addition, if the checks issued by the institution have not been presented to the bank for 06 months, they should be treated as income in accordance with Financial Regulation 394.
(PDF of the relevant Gazette for this year will be provided.)
Gazette Number and Date – 2363 – 2023/12/15
Supplier Registration
Tax and Fee Registrations
Procedure Setting
Circulars used for salary preparation
ඉහත එක් එක් වැඩසටහන් අනුව පහත සදහන් ප්රධාන වැය ශිර්ෂ යටතේ වියදම් වර්ග කර දක්වයි.
ආයතනයේ මුදල් ගිණුමේ ශේෂය සංශෝධනය කිරිමෙන් පසු බැංකු සැසදුම් ප්රකාශනය පිළියෙල කරනු ලබයි.ඉන්පසු බැංකුවෙන් එවන ලද ප්රකාශනයේ ශේෂයට,
මේ ආකාරයට ගැලපිම් කිරිමෙන් පසු සාදන බැංකු සැසදුම් ප්රකාශනය සෑම මසකම 10 වන දිනට පෙර විගණනය කිරිම සදහා විගණන අධිකාරි වෙත හා පළාත් පාලන සහකාර කොමසාරිස්තුමා වෙත යැවිය යුතුය.මිට අමතරව ආයතනය විසින් නිකුත් කළ චෙක්පත් මාස 06ක් යනතුරැත් බැංකුව වෙත ඉදිරිපත් කර නොමැති නම් මුදල් රෙගුලාසි 394 අනුව සහ ආදායමට ගත යුතුයි.
ප්රාදේශිය සභාවක් යම් කිසි වර්ෂයක් වෙනුවෙන් සකස් කරන අයවැය ලේඛණයක අපේක්ෂිත ප්රතිපාදන සිමාවක් ඉක්මවමින් හෝ ප්රතිපාදනයක් වෙන් නොකළ අයශිර්ෂයකි හෝ වැය ශිර්ෂයක් වෙනුවෙන් පරිපුරක අයවැය ඇස්තමේන්තුවක් පිළියෙල කළ යුතු වේ.ඤඑම පරිපුරක අයවැය ඇස්තමේන්තුව සකස් කිරිමෙන් පසු මහසභාව වෙත යෝජනාවක් ඉදිරිපත් සම්මත කර ගත යුතුය.ඉන්පසු එය වාර්සික අයවැයට ඇතුළත් කළ යුතු වේ.