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What Every P.I./Administrator Should Know

What Every P.I./Administrator Should Know. Session will attempt to answer What are the General Rules or Truisms? Cut across job responsibilities Set of principles that guide sponsored project enterprise What is the Basic Vocabulary? Cross cutting and shared. 81.

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What Every P.I./Administrator Should Know

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  1. What Every P.I./AdministratorShould Know • Session will attempt to answer • What are the General Rules or Truisms? • Cut across job responsibilities • Set of principles that guide sponsored project enterprise • What is the Basic Vocabulary? • Cross cutting and shared 81

  2. What Every P.I./AdministratorShould Know (Con’t) • A different way of looking at SPA • Different cut on information than Roles and Responsibilities • Different cut on information than life cycle workshops • Format • 21 topical areas 82

  3. What Every P.I./AdministratorShould Know (Con’t) • General Rules • Major Federal Regulations • Cost Sharing/Matching • Salary/Effort Commitments and Reporting • Travel and Business Expenses • Equipment Purchases 83

  4. What Every P.I./AdministratorShould Know (Con’t) • Indirect Costs • Consultant/Subcontract Expense • Budgeting/Rebudgeting • Performance Periods • Unallowable Costs • Cost Transfers • Program Income 84

  5. What Every P.I./AdministratorShould Know (Con’t) • Monthly Financial Reviews • Agency Reporting • Invoicing • Recharge(Service) Centers • Regulatory Compliance • Other Research Related Policies • Problem Indicators • Know Your Resources 85

  6. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowGeneral Rules • Read the Guidelines • Talk to a program officer • Follow all instructions • Share proposal drafts with colleagues • Get to know institutional rules • Get to know institutional processes 86

  7. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowGeneral Rules (Con’t) • Understand who the key players are and their roles • Ensure PI status and obtain institutional approval, if necessary • Cost must be related to the project charge • Cost must be reasonable – prudent person test 87

  8. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowGeneral Rules (Con’t) • Allocate cost benefiting multiple projects: • Based on proportionate benefit received, where possible • Based on any reasonable basis, where necessary • Cost may not be assigned base on fund availability, award expiration date or other inappropriate criteria • Charges may not exceed project award 88

  9. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowGeneral Rules (Con’t) • Pre-award costs, where permitted, limited to 90 days • Unexpended funds may often, but not always, be carried forward • Read and follow terms and conditions 89

  10. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMajor Federal Regulations • Office of Management and Budget Circulars http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/ • A 21 Cost Principles for Educational Institutionshttp://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a021/print/a21_2004.html • A 110 Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals and Other Nonprofit Organizationshttp://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a110/a110.html 90

  11. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMajor Federal Regulations (Con’t) • Office of Management and Budget Circulars (Con’t) • A 133 Audits of Institutions of Higher Education and Other Nonprofit Institutions http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a133/a133.html • Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) http://farsite.hill.af.mil/ • Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/cfr-table-search.html 91

  12. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMajor Federal Regulations (Con’t) • Federal Demonstration Partnership (FDP) Terms and Conditions http://thefdp.org/ • Agency Specific FDP Terms and Conditions • Agency Specific Regulations: • NIH (PHS) Grants Policy Statement http://grants1.nih.gov/grants/policy/policy.htm • NSF Grant Policy Manual http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=gpm 92

  13. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMajor Federal Regulations (Con’t) • Agency Specific Regulations (Con’t): • NASA Grant and Cooperative Agreement Handbook http://ec.msfc.nasa.gov/hq/grcover.htm • Department of Defense Grant and Agreement Regulations http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/html/32106r.htm • Education Department Grants Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) http://www.ed.gov/policy/fund/reg/edgarReg/edgar.html 93

  14. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMajor Federal Regulations (Con’t) • Other Federal and Non-Federal Regulations http://researchadmin.uchicago.edu/regulations/ 94

  15. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Sharing/Matching • Cost sharing/matching represents costs of carrying out a project not charged to the project/award. • Types of cost sharing: • Required cost sharing or matching is a programmatic requirement – often expressed as a percent of budget request or by requirement of faculty effort without compensation 95

  16. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Sharing/Matching (Con’t) • Types of cost sharing (Con’t) • Voluntary committed cost sharing is not required, but is offered to enhance a proposal’s competitiveness • Voluntary uncommitted cost sharing occurs when investigator chooses to devote additional time (not promised/not accounted for) • Voluntary cost sharing, including effort without salary, must be prudently allocated 96

  17. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Sharing/Matching (Con’t) • Required cost sharing should not generally exceed amount required • Commitments to cost share must be approved by the institution • Source of cost sharing must be secured prior to submission of proposal • Cost sharing commitments on Federal projects cannot be satisfied from other Federal projects 97

  18. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Sharing/Matching (Con’t) • Salary requests (BSD and off-quarter) and charges to projects should reflect effort committed • Cost sharing must be readily verifiable from University records • Cost sharing commitments over $100,000 require approval of University Budget Office and Provost (all units but BSD) 98

  19. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowSalary/Effort Commitments and Reporting • P.I. determines level of effort to be committed by personnel • Personnel effort shown on budgets should be in accordance with agency guidelines • Salary caps apply only to relevant agency • Salaries charged should be consistent with effort • Significant variances in effort require redistribution 99

  20. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowSalary/Effort Commitments and Reporting (Con’t) • No redistribution required for short-term fluctuations • Monthly effort monitoring reports provide guidance to departments • Annual October effort certification by exempt employees and academic staff confirms effort • Time card system constitutes effort certification for non-exempt employees 100

  21. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowTravel and Business Expenses • Generally limited to commercial coach fare and U.S. carriers • Meals other than the traveler's are unallowable “Business” meals • Entertainment expenses are unallowable 101

  22. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowTravel and Business Expenses (Con’t) • Expenses must conform with University Financial Policy No. 1202 http://adminet.uchicago.edu/admincompt/finpolic/1202.shtml • Must conform with University guidelines for “Buying and Paying for Goods and Services” http://cps.uchicago.edu/uchicago/ 102

  23. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowEquipment Purchases • Definition of equipment has changed to $5,000 • Justify equipment needs at budget stage, include make and model • General purpose, as opposed to specialized scientific, equipment requires special justification 103

  24. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowEquipment Purchases (Con’t) • If equipment cost allocated to sponsored award, principal purpose must be project-related • Equipment purchases during the last 60 days of terminal year may be problematic • Rebudgeting into or out of equipment impacts indirect cost recovery 104

  25. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowEquipment Purchases (Con’t) • Equipment items are added to University’s inventory • University has title to most equipment, but Sponsor may choose to retain title • Sponsors require reporting of equipment they retain title to and may require reporting of other equipment 105

  26. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowIndirect Costs • Also known as: overhead, facilities and administrative (F & A), indirect cost allowance (ICA) • Includes costs which are necessary to support projects, but which cannot be precisely allocated to individual projects 106

  27. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowIndirect Costs (Con’t) • Includes costs such as: • Facilities (utilities, maintenance, security, etc.) • Libraries • Departmental administration (school/division/department) • General administration (President, Provost, Legal, URA, Comptroller, Purchasing, etc) 107

  28. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowIndirect Costs (Con’t) • Indirect costs are charged by multiplying a defined based of expenditures by a rate • Most federal awards have rates applied to MTDC – modified total direct costs • Most non-federal awards (industry, non-profit and clinical trials) have rates applied to TDC – total direct costs 108

  29. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowIndirect Costs (Con’t) • Federal rates are fixed by a negotiated agreement between the University and its cognizant agency • Separate federal rates for on-campus and off-campus activities • University policy provides for full indirect costs unless funding agency policy requires a lower rate 109

  30. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowIndirect Costs (Con’t) • Waiver of indirect costs requires institutional approval and is discouraged • When lower rate is applied, the institution loses real dollars • Only URA (or in BSD, ORS) should contact sponsor to verify policy and rates 110

  31. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowConsultants/Subawards • University personnel cannot be compensated as consultants on University administered projects • Some agencies have limits to what a consultant may charge per day 111

  32. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowConsultants/Subawards (Con’t) • To hire a consultant on a sponsored project requires completion of Sponsored Consultant Agreement • The Sponsored Consultant Invoice should be used to request payment • Consultants must be independent contractors in keeping with IRS requirements 112

  33. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowConsultants/Subawards (Con’t) • Agency approval is required to issue a subaward • Subrecipients included in a proposal must submit a budget, statement of work, copy of indirect cost agreement, letter/cover sheet indicating institutional approval • Subaward agreements are negotiated by URA 113

  34. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowBudgeting/Rebudgeting • Budgeting should reflect program needs within confines of agency policy • Budget should meet test for allowability and reasonableness 114

  35. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowBudgeting/Rebudgeting (Con’t) • Justification of all costs required, but certain categories are especially sensitive: • Non-project specific general office supplies • Clerical and administrative salaries • Rebudgeting occurs when spending differs from budget 115

  36. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowBudgeting/Rebudgeting (Con’t) • Modest rebudgeting generally allowed without agency approval • Rebudgeting of 25% or more may be problematic (e.g. signal change in scope) • Significant rebudgeting of key personnel time indicates a scope change 116

  37. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowBudgeting/Rebudgeting (Con’t) • Rebudgeting may affect indirect cost recovery and amount of funds available for direct costs • Obtain agency approval where required 117

  38. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowPerformance Periods • Necessary to incur cost within performance and pre-award period • May generally extend performance period through no-cost extension • Unused funds not sufficient reason for no-cost extension 118

  39. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowUnallowable Costs (Con’t) • “Unallowable cost” is a federal term denoting a cost not reimbursable under federal grants and contracts. • Federal regulations prohibit certain costs, most common: • Alcoholic beverages • Entertainment • Fines and penalties 119

  40. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowUnallowable Costs (Con’t) • Federal regulations prohibit certain costs, most common (con’t): • Fundraising/alumni activities • Internal interest charges • Meals • Student aid, except in the case of training awards • Travel tickets in excess of coach 120

  41. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowUnallowable Costs (Con’t) • Individual awards may designate additional costs as “unallowable” • University Financial Policy No. 1013 addresses unallowable costs • Unallowable costs may be charged to other sources when appropriate 121

  42. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowUnallowable Costs (Con’t) • Unallowable costs are charged to unique subaccounts or 6-digit accounts • Any costs not reimbursable by the sponsoring agency will become the responsibility of the PI/department 122

  43. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Transfers • A cost transfer moves expenses from one 10-digit account to another. • Cost transfers are needed to distribute clearing account expenses, correct salary distribution estimates, correct clerical and bookkeeping errors, transfer pre-award costs, etc. • Federal regulations address cost transfers 123

  44. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Transfers (Con’t) • University Financial Policy No. 2111 addresses cost transfers • Guidelines for processing cost transfers are on the Web http://adminet.uchicago.edu/admincompt/costtran/intro_policy.html • Transfers should be the exception, not the routine • Transfers should be done on a timely basis 124

  45. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowCost Transfers (Con’t) • Transfers must explain why the transfer is necessary • Explanation that simply states “to correct error” is not sufficient; how error occurred must be explained 125

  46. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowProgram Income (Con’t) • Program income is income directly generated from a sponsored project award • Federal regulations address how income may be used to: • increase award funds • fund required cost sharing/matching • decrease award funds 126

  47. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowProgram Income (Con’t) Program Income (Con’t) • University Financial Policy No. 2107 addresses program income 127

  48. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMonthly Acct./Financial Reviews • P.I.s and their administrators should review accounts monthly • Use of administrative staff encouraged but P.I. must be active in monthly review 128

  49. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMonthly Acct./Financial Reviews (Con’t) • University provides standard accounting reports • Monthly AMO 90, Account Statement in Whole Dollars • Monthly AMO 91, Report of Transactions • Monthly and Biweekly Payroll Registers • Business Objects reporting 129

  50. What Every P.I./Administrator Should KnowMonthly Acct./Financial Reviews (Con’t) • Review reports to ensure that: • Costs are allowable • Cost allocations comply with University Financial Policy No. 2109 • Costs, which should have been charged, are reflected • Charges are consistent with P.I.’s expectations 130

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