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CITY OF PARIS, TEXAS <br />Notes to Financial Statements (Continued) <br />September 30, 2024 <br />L Summarof Significant Accounting Policies (Continued) <br />G. Assets, Liabilities, and Equity (Continued) <br />7. Leases (Continued) <br />City as Lessee (Continued) <br />exercise. In determining the lease term, management considers all facts and circumstances that create an economic <br />incentive to exercise an extension option, or not exercise a termination option. Extension options or periods <br />after termination options are only included in the lease term if the lease is reasonably certain to be extended. <br />Leases with payments that depend on an index or rate, such as the Consumer Price Index or market rate, are <br />initially measured using the index or rate as of the commencement of the lease term. Leases with periodic <br />percentage rent increases or flat rate increases that are specified in the lease terms are included in the <br />measurement of the lease liability. <br />The City calculates the amortization of the discount on the lease liability and reports that amount as outflows of <br />resources or interest expense for the period. Payments are allocated first to accrued interest liability and then <br />to the lease liability. <br />The City amortizes the right -to -use lease asset on a straight-line basis over the shorter of the lease term or the useful <br />life of the underlying asset. However, if a lease contains a purchase option that the City has determined is <br />reasonably certain of being exercised, the lease asset is amortized over the useful life of the underlying asset. <br />If the underlying asset is non -depreciable, such as land, the lease asset is not amortized. The City reports the <br />amortization of the lease asset as an outflow of resources, amortization expense, which is combined with <br />depreciation expense related to other capital assets for financial reporting purposes. <br />The City accounts for the partial or full lease termination by reducing the carrying values of the lease asset and lease <br />liability, and recognizing a gain or loss for the difference. However, if the lease is terminated as a result of <br />the City purchasing an underlying asset from the lessor, the lease asset will be reclassified to the appropriate <br />class of owned asset. <br />Leases that are considered a short-term lease (12 months or less), transfers ownership of the underlying asset, assets <br />held as investments, or contain variable payments based on future performance of the City or usage of the <br />underlying assets are not included in the measurement of the lease liability. The City recognizes payments <br />for short-term leases and variable payments as expense in the period in which the City incurs the obligation <br />for those payments. <br />8. Subscription -Based Information Technology Arrangements (SBITA) <br />The City has noncancellable contracts with SBITA vendors for the right to use information technology (IT) <br />software, alone or in combination with tangible capital assets (the underlying IT assets). The City recognizes <br />a subscription liability, reported with long-term debt, and a right -to -use subscription asset (an intangible <br />asset), reported with other capital assets, in the government -wide financial statements. <br />At the commencement of a SBITA, the City initially measures the subscription liability at the present value <br />of payments expected to be made during the subscription term. Subsequently, the subscription liability is <br />reduced by the principal portion of SBITA payments made. The subscription asset is initially measured as <br />the initial amount of the subscription liability, adjusted for SBITA payments made at or before the SBITA <br />commencement date, plus certain initial implementation costs. Subsequently, the subscription asset is <br />amortized on a straight-line basis over the shorter of the subscription term or the useful life of the underlying <br />IT assets. <br />46 <br />