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OMB A21 for the Department Administrator

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Title: OMB A21 for the Department Administrator


1
OMB A-21 for the Department Administrator
  • NCURA Region II Spring Meeting
  • April 24, 2006

2
Panelists
  • Kevin Ashman, Assistant Business Manager,
    Department of Chemistry Chemical Biology,
    Cornell University, kda1_at_cornell.edu
  • Deborah Shackelford, Grant PublicationsAdminist
    rator, Center for Technology in Education, Johns
    Hopkins University, dshack_at_jhu.edu
  • Jeffrey Silber, Senior Director, Sponsored
    Program Services, Cornell University,
    jas9_at_cornell.edu

3
Salaries are reasonable in relation to work
performed
  • Why J.10 is Really Important
  • Kevin Ashman

4
Payroll Distribution and Certification
  • The apportionment of employees' salaries and
    wages which are chargeable to more than one
    sponsored agreement or other cost objective will
    be accomplished by methods which will produce
    an equitable distribution of charges for
    employee's activities.
  • In the use of any methods for apportioning
    salaries, it is recognized that, in an academic
    setting, teaching, research, service, and
    administration are often inextricably
    intermingled. A precise assessment of factors
    that contribute to costs is not always feasible,
    nor is it expected. Reliance, therefore, is
    placed on estimates in which a degree of
    tolerance is appropriate.

5
Payroll Distribution
  • The government wants to pay its fair share.
  • Auditors want to make sure that it is not a penny
    more.
  • Payroll must
  • be incorporated into the official records of the
    institution.
  • reasonably reflect the activity for which the
    employee is compensated by the institution.
  • encompass both sponsored and all other activities
    on an integrated basis, but may include the use
    of subsidiary records.

6
Payroll Distribution
  • The distribution must
  • Be certified by the employee or someone having a
    suitable means of verification that the work was
    performed.
  • Have detail at the individual sponsored agreement
    level.
  • Provide for independent internal evaluations to
    ensure the system's effectiveness and
    compliance.
  • Three methods cited as examples in A-21.

7
Distribution Methods
  • Plan Confirmation
  • A plan is developed and modified through-out
    the year.
  • At least once a year the results are confirmed.
  • After the Fact Activity Reports
  • Salaries are allocated to various activities.
  • Several times a year (ranging from monthly to
    semi-annually) the reports must be certified.

8
Benefits to the Institution
  • For systems which meet these standards, the
    institution will not be required to provide
    additional support or documentation for the
    effort actually performed.
  • Proper payroll certification means that time
    cards or activity logs often required for
    government contractors are not required.

9
Payroll Certification Issues
  • Perhaps the highest priority in the federal audit
    community.
  • Concern that costs are shifted from one agreement
    or activity to another without a reasonable
    basis.
  • Several high profile, high dollar paybacks have
    occurred in recent years.
  • Wall Street Journal article . . . dirty little
    secret of university medical research the
    misuse of taxpayers' funds.http//www.post-gazet
    te.com/pg/05228/554819.stm

10
Problems that May Occur
  • Budgeted, not actual, effort is used as basis of
    allocation.
  • Mismatch of effort and salary.
  • Lack of timely certification.
  • Revision of certified effort.
  • Failure to meet effort commitment.
  • Improper handling of NIH salary cap.

11
You want to spend the money on what?!
  • The Ins and Outs of Section J
  • Deborah Shackelford

12
Section J
  • Principles to be applied in establishing the
    allowability of certain items involved in
    determining cost.
  • Guidance on 54 specific areas.
  • Not all types of costs listed. May have to
    interpret based on the treatment provided for
    similar or related items of cost.
  • Terms in sponsored agreements override A-21.
  • Limitations set forth in government policy result
    in some reasonable university business expenses
    being unallowable.

13
Direct or Indirect?
  • Section J classifies certain specific costs as
    direct or indirect. For others it is silent.
  • Further discussions of direct versus indirect are
    in Sections D, E, F.
  • Since the early 1990s Administrative and Clerical
    expenses have been defined as generally indirect,
    but Exhibit C lists exceptions.
  • Incorporated CAS standards require consistent
    treatment of costs.

14
Allowable or not?
  • Section C says for costs to be allowable
  • they must be reasonable
  • they must be allocable to sponsored agreements
    under the principles and methods provided herein
  • they must be given consistent treatment through
    application of those generally accepted
    accounting principles appropriate to the
    circumstances and
  • they must conform to any limitations or
    exclusions set forth in these principles or in
    the sponsored agreement as to types or amounts of
    cost items.
  • Above section C terms override Section J.

15
Common Questions of Allowability
  • Advertising/PR (J.1)
  • Alcohol (J.3)
  • Alumni Activities (J.4)
  • Bad Debt/Collection Costs (J.6)
  • Defense Costs (J.13)
  • Donations (J.15)
  • Entertainment (J.17)
  • Fines (J.19)
  • Fund Raising (J.20)
  • Goods for Personal Use (J.22)

16
Common Questions of Allowability
  • Housing for Officers (J.23)
  • Lobbying (J.28)
  • Sponsored Agreement Losses (J.29)
  • Memberships (J.33)
  • Preagreement Costs (J.36) (see also A-110)
  • Proposal Costs (J.38)
  • Scholarships (J.45)
  • Selling and Marketing (J.46)
  • Student Activities (J.48)

17
What is this overhead tax, anyway?
  • Composition of FA Rates
  • Jeffrey Silber

18
What are FA costs?
  • FA costs are those that are incurred for common
    or joint objectives and therefore cannot be
    identified readily and specifically with a
    particular sponsored project, an instructional
    activity, or any other institutional activity.
  • Real costs paid on or behalf of institution.

19
FA Components Administration
  • General Administration
  • Central administration
  • Accounting, audit, purchasing, etc.
  • Departmental Administration
  • Deans offices
  • Departmental offices
  • Faculty administrative effort
  • Sponsored Program Administration
  • Pre- and post- award
  • Student Administration

20
FA Components Facilities
  • Building Depreciation
  • Equipment Depreciation
  • Interest
  • Buildings and equipment
  • Operation Maintenance of Plant
  • Utilities
  • Libraries

21
What is the FA rate?
  • The allocation of actual costs, using a valid
    methodology, to all institutional activities,
    divided by that activity base.
  • MathematicallyINDIRECT COSTS FA RateDIRECT
    COSTS
  • All costs in the base bear the rate whether or
    not charged.

22
Creation of an FA rate
  • Simplified method for small institutions. For
    the rest it is a major project.
  • Generally, two types of rates Predetermined and
    Fixed with Carry Forward.
  • Developed over many months, typically using a
    specialized modeling tool.
  • Submitted, typically, to either HHS or ONR.
  • Cognizant agency performs a site visit.
  • Rate is then negotiated.

23
Use of FA Recovery
  • Payments are a recovery. Actual costs were paid
    by or on behalf of the institution. Sometimes
    many years before.
  • Once the funds come in they are mostly
    unrestricted. Larger institutions may be
    required to reinvest a portion. Rarely a
    problem.
  • Some institutions distribute recovery on a
    formulaic basis to units and PIs.

24
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