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Appendix to 2 CFR Part 220 provides
principles for determining the costs applicable to research and
development, training, and other sponsored work performed by colleges and universities under grants, contracts, and other agreements with the Federal government. Program directors and fiscal officers can refer to this appendix to strengthen their knowledge in these areas.
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The following is an excerpt from
2 CFR Part 220 Cost Principles for Educational Institutions (OMB Circular A-21).
Appendix
to 2 CFR Part 220
Table of Contents
A. Purpose and Scope
- Objectives
- Policy guides
- Application
- Inquiries
B. Definition of Terms
- Major functions of an institution
- Sponsored agreement
- Allocation
- Facilities and administrative (F&A) costs
C. Basic Considerations
- Composition of total costs
- Factors affecting allowability of costs
- Reasonable costs
- Allocable costs
- Applicable credits
- Costs incurred by State and local
governments
- Limitations on allowance of costs
- Collection of unallowable costs
- Adjustment of previously negotiated F&A cost rates containing
unallowable
costs
- Consistency in estimating, accumulating
and reporting costs
- Consistency in allocating costs incurred
for the same purpose
- Accounting for unallowable costs
- Cost accounting period
- Disclosure statement
D. Direct Costs
- General
- Application to sponsored agreements
E. F&A Costs
- General
- Criteria for distribution
F. Identification and Assignment of F&A Costs
- Definition of Facilities and
Administration.
- Depreciation and use allowances
- Interest
- Operation and maintenance expenses
- General administration and general
expenses
- Departmental administration expenses
- Sponsored projects administration
- Library expenses
- Student administration and services
- Offset for F&A expenses otherwise provided for by the Federal
Government
G. Determination and Application of F&A Cost Rate or Rates
- F&A cost pools
- The distribution basis
- Negotiated lump sum for F&A costs
- Predetermined rates for F&A costs
- Negotiated fixed rates and carry-forward
provisions
- Provisional and final rates for F&A
costs
- Fixed rates for the life of the sponsored
agreement
- Limitation on reimbursement of
administrative costs
- Alternative method for administrative
costs
- Individual rate components
- Negotiation and approval of F&A rate
- Standard format for submission
H. Simplified Method for Small Institutions
- General
- Simplified procedure
I. Reserved
J. General Provisions for Selected Items of Cost
- Advertising and public relations costs
- Advisory councils
- Alcoholic beverages
- Alumni/ae activities
- Audit and related services
- Bad debts
- Bonding costs
- Commencement and convocation costs
- Communication costs
- Compensation for personal services
- Contingency provisions
- Deans of faculty and graduate schools
- Defense and prosecution of criminal and civil proceedings, claims,
appeals and
patent infringement
- Depreciation and use allowances
- Donations and contributions
- Employee morale, health, and welfare
costs
- Entertainment costs
- Equipment and other capital expenditures
- Fines and penalties
- Fund raising and investment costs
- Gains and losses on depreciable assets
- Goods or services for personal use
- Housing and personal living expenses
- Idle facilities and idle capacity
- Insurance and indemnification
- Interest
- Labor relations costs
- Lobbying
- Losses on other sponsored agreements or
contracts
- Maintenance and repair costs
- Material and supplies costs
- Meetings and conferences
- Memberships, subscriptions and
professional activity costs
- Patent costs
- Plant and homeland security costs
- Pre-agreement costs
- Professional service costs
- Proposal costs
- Publication and printing costs
- Rearrangement and alteration costs
- Reconversion costs
- Recruiting costs
- Rental costs of buildings and equipment
- Royalties and other costs for use of
patents
- Scholarships and student aid costs
- Selling and marketing
- Specialized service facilities
- Student activity costs
- Taxes
- Termination costs applicable to sponsored
agreements
- Training costs
- Transportation costs
- Travel costs
- Trustees
K. Certification of Charges
A. Purpose and Scope
1. Objectives. This Appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development, training, and other sponsored work performed by colleges and universities under grants, contracts, and other agreements with the Federal Government. These agreements are referred to as sponsored agreements.
2. Policy guides. The successful application of these cost accounting principles requires development of mutual understanding between representatives of universities and of the Federal Government as to their scope, implementation, and interpretation. It is recognized that--
a. The arrangements for Federal agency and institutional participation in the financing of a research, training, or other project are properly subject to negotiation between the agency and the institution concerned, in accordance with such government wide criteria or legal requirements as may be applicable.
b. Each institution, possessing its own unique combination of staff, facilities, and experience, should be encouraged to conduct research and educational activities in a manner consonant with its own academic philosophies and institutional objectives.
c. The dual role of students engaged in research and the resulting benefits to sponsored agreements are fundamental to the research effort and shall be recognized in the application of these principles.
d. Each institution, in the fulfillment of its obligations, should employ sound management practices.
e. The application of these cost accounting principles should require no significant changes in the generally accepted accounting practices of colleges and universities. However, the accounting practices of individual colleges and universities must support the accumulation of costs as required by the principles, and must provide for adequate documentation to support costs charged to sponsored agreements.
f. Cognizant Federal agencies involved in negotiating facilities and administrative (F&A) cost rates and auditing should assure that institutions are generally applying these cost accounting principles on a consistent basis. Where wide variations exist in the treatment of a given cost item among institutions, the reasonableness and equitableness of such treatments should be fully considered during the rate negotiations and audit.
Application. These principles shall be used
in determining the allowable costs of work performed by colleges and
universities under sponsored agreements. The principles shall also
be used in determining the costs of work performed by such
institutions under subgrants, cost-reimbursement subcontracts, and
other awards made to them under
sponsored agreements. They also shall be used as a guide in the pricing of fixed-price contracts and subcontracts where costs are used in determining the appropriate price. The principles do not apply to:
a. Arrangements under which Federal financing is in the form of loans, scholarships, fellowships, traineeships, or other fixed amounts based on such items as education allowance or published tuition rates and fees of an institution.
b. Capitation awards.
c. Other awards under which the institution is not required to account to the Federal Government for actual costs incurred.
d. Conditional exemptions.
(1) OMB authorizes conditional exemption from OMB administrative requirements and cost principles for certain Federal programs with statutorily-authorized consolidated planning and consolidated administrative funding, that are identified by a Federal agency and approved by the head of the Executive department or establishment. A Federal agency shall consult with OMB during its consideration of whether to grant such an exemption.
(2) To promote efficiency in State and local program administration, when Federal non-entitlement programs with common purposes have specific statutorily-authorized consolidated planning and consolidated administrative funding and where most of the State agency's resources come from non-Federal sources, Federal agencies may exempt these covered State-administered, non-entitlement grant programs from certain OMB grants management requirements. The exemptions would be from all but the allocability of costs provisions of subsection C.3 of Appendix A to 2 CFR part 225 Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments (OMB Circular A-87), Section C, subpart 4 to 2 CFR part 220 Cost Principles for Educational Institutions (OMB Circular A-21), and subsection A.4 of Appendix A to 2 CFR part 230 Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations,'' (OMB Circular A-122), and from all of the administrative requirements provisions of 2 CFR part 215, Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations (OMB Circular A-110), and the agencies' grants management common rule (see Sec. 215.5 of this subtitle).
(3) When a Federal agency provides this flexibility, as a prerequisite to a State's exercising this option, a State must adopt its own written fiscal and administrative requirements for expending and accounting for all funds, which are consistent with the provisions of 2 CFR part 225 (OMB Circular A-87), and extend such policies to all subrecipients. These fiscal and administrative requirements must be sufficiently specific to ensure that: Funds are used in compliance with all applicable Federal statutory and regulatory provisions, costs are reasonable and necessary for operating these programs, and funds are not to be used for general expenses required to carry out other responsibilities of a State or its subrecipients.
4. Inquiries. All inquiries from Federal agencies concerning the cost principles contained in this Appendix to 2 CFR part 220, including the administration and implementation of the Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) (described in Sections C.10 through C.13) and disclosure statement (DS-2) requirements, shall be addressed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Office of Federal Financial Management, in coordination with the Cost Accounting Standard Board (CASB) with respect to inquiries concerning CAS. Educational institutions' inquiries should be addressed to the cognizant agency.

B. Definition of Terms
1. Major functions of an institution refers to instruction, organized research, other sponsored activities and other institutional activities as defined below:
a. Instruction means the teaching and training activities of an institution. Except for research training as provided in subsection b, this term includes all teaching and training activities, whether they are offered for credits toward a degree or certificate or on a non-credit basis, and whether they are offered through regular academic departments or separate divisions, such as a summer school division or an extension division. Also considered part of this major function are departmental research, and, where agreed to, university research.
(1) Sponsored instruction and training means specific instructional or training activity established by grant, contract, or cooperative agreement. For purposes of the cost principles, this activity may be considered a major function even though an institution's accounting treatment may include it in the instruction function.
(2) Departmental research means research, development and scholarly activities that are not organized research and, consequently, are not separately budgeted and accounted for. Departmental research, for purposes of this document, is not considered as a major function, but as a part of the instruction function of the institution.
b. Organized research means all research and development activities of an institution that are separately budgeted and accounted for. It includes:
(1) Sponsored research means all research and development activities that are sponsored by Federal and non-Federal agencies and organizations. This term includes activities involving the training of individuals in research techniques (commonly called research training) where such activities utilize the same facilities as other research and
development activities and where such activities are not included in the instruction function.
(2) University research means all research and development activities that are separately budgeted and accounted for by the institution under an internal application of institutional funds. University research, for purposes of this document, shall be combined with sponsored research under the function of organized research.
c. Other sponsored activities means programs and projects financed by Federal and non-Federal agencies and organizations which involve the performance of work other than instruction and organized research. Examples of such programs and projects are health service projects, and community service programs. However, when any of these activities are undertaken by the institution without outside support, they may be
classified as other institutional activities.
d. Other institutional activities means all activities of an institution except:
(1) Instruction, departmental research, organized research, and other sponsored activities, as defined above;
(2) F&A cost activities identified in Section F of this Appendix; and
(3) Specialized service facilities described in Section J.47 of this Appendix. Other institutional activities include operation of residence halls, dining halls, hospitals and clinics, student unions, intercollegiate athletics, bookstores, faculty housing, student apartments, guest houses, chapels, theaters, public museums, and other similar auxiliary enterprises. This definition also includes any other categories of activities, costs of which are "unallowable" to sponsored agreements, unless otherwise indicated in the agreements.
2. Sponsored agreement, for purposes of this Appendix, means any grant, contract, or other agreement between the institution and the Federal Government.
3. Allocation means the process of assigning a cost, or a group of costs, to one or more cost objective, in reasonable and realistic proportion to the benefit provided or otherequitable relationship. A cost objective may be a major function of the institution, a particular service or project, a sponsored agreement, or an F&A cost activity, as described in Section F of this Appendix. The process may entail assigning a cost(s) directly to a final cost objective or through one or more intermediate cost objectives.
4. Facilities and administrative (F&A) costs, for the purpose of this Appendix, means costs 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. F&A costs are synonymous with "indirect"
costs, as previously used in this Appendix and as currently used in attachments A and B to this Appendix. The F&A cost categories are described in Section F.1 of this Appendix.

C. Basic Considerations
1. Composition of total costs. The cost of a sponsored agreement is comprised of the allowable direct costs incident to its performance, plus the allocable portion of the allowable F&A costs of the institution, less applicable credits as described in subsection C.5 of this Appendix.
2. Factors affecting allowability of costs. The tests of allowability of costs under these principles are: 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.
3. Reasonable costs. A cost may be considered reasonable if the nature of the goods or services acquired or applied, and the amount involved therefore, reflect the action that a prudent person would have taken under the circumstances prevailing at the time the decision to incur the cost was made. Major considerations involved in the
determination of the reasonableness of a cost
are: whether or not the cost is of a type generally recognized as
necessary for the operation of the institution or the performance
of the sponsored agreement; the restraints or requirements imposed
by such factors as arm's-length bargaining, Federal and State laws
and regulations, and sponsored
agreement terms and conditions; whether or not the individuals concerned acted with due prudence in the circumstances, considering their responsibilities to the institution, its employees, its students, the Federal Government, and the public at large; and, the extent to which the actions taken with respect to the incurrence of the cost are
consistent with established institutional policies and practices applicable to the work of the institution generally, including sponsored agreements.
4. Allocable costs.
a. A cost is allocable to a particular cost objective (i.e., a specific function, project, sponsored agreement, department, or the like) if the goods or services involved are chargeable or assignable to such cost objective in accordance with relative benefits received or other equitable relationship. Subject to the foregoing, a cost is allocable to a sponsored agreement if it is incurred solely to advance the work under the sponsored agreement; it benefits both the sponsored agreement and other work of the institution, in proportions that can be approximated through use of reasonable methods, or it is necessary to the overall operation of the institution and, in light of the principles provided in this Appendix, is deemed to be assignable in part to sponsored projects. Where the purchase of equipment or other capital items is specifically authorized under a sponsored agreement, the amounts thus authorized for such purchases are assignable to the sponsored agreement regardless of the use that may subsequently be made of the equipment or other capital items involved.
b. Any costs allocable to a particular sponsored agreement under the standards provided in this Appendix may not be shifted to other sponsored agreements in order to meet deficiencies caused by overruns or other fund considerations, to avoid restrictions imposed by law or by terms of the sponsored agreement, or for other reasons of convenience.
c. Any costs allocable to activities sponsored by industry, foreign governments or other sponsors may not be shifted to federally-sponsored agreements.
d. Allocation and documentation standard.
(1) Cost principles. The recipient institution is responsible for ensuring that costs charged to a sponsored agreement are allowable, allocable, and reasonable under these cost principles.
(2) Internal controls. The institution's financial management system shall ensure that no one person has complete control over all aspects of a financial transaction.
(3) Direct cost allocation principles. If a cost benefits two or more projects or activities in proportions that can be determined without undue effort or cost, the cost should be allocated to the projects based on the proportional benefit. If a cost benefits two or
more projects or activities in proportions that cannot be determined because of the interrelationship of the work involved, then, notwithstanding subsection b, the costs may be allocated or transferred to benefited projects on any reasonable basis, consistent with subsections C.4.d. (1) and (2) of this Appendix.
(4) Documentation. Federal requirements for documentation are specified in this Appendix, 2 CFR Part 215, "Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations," and specific agency policies on cost transfers. If the institution authorizes the principal investigator or other individual to have primary responsibility, given the requirements of subsection C.4.d. (2) of this Appendix, for the management of sponsored agreement funds, then the institution's documentation requirements for the actions of those individuals (e.g., signature or initials of the principal investigator
or designee or use of a password) will normally be considered sufficient.
5. Applicable credits.
a. The term "applicable credits" refers to those receipts or negative expenditures that operate to offset or reduce direct or F&A cost items. Typical examples of such transactions are: purchase discounts, rebates, or allowances; recoveries or indemnities on losses; and adjustments of overpayments or erroneous charges. This term also
includes "educational discounts" on products or services provided specifically to educational institutions, such as discounts on computer equipment, except where the arrangement is clearly and explicitly identified as a gift by the vendor.
b. In some instances, the amounts received from the Federal Government to finance institutional activities or service operations should be treated as applicable credits. Specifically, the concept of netting such credit items against related expenditures should be applied by the institution in determining the rates or amounts to be charged to
sponsored agreements for services rendered whenever the facilities or other resources used in providing such services have been financed directly, in whole or in part, by Federal funds. (See Sections F.10, J.14, and J.47 of this Appendix for areas of potential application in the matter of direct Federal financing.)
6. Costs incurred by State and local governments. Costs incurred or paid by State or local governments on behalf of their colleges and universities for fringe benefit programs, such as pension costs and FICA and any other costs specifically incurred on behalf of, and in direct benefit to, the institutions, are allowable costs of such institutions whether or not these costs are recorded in the accounting records of the institutions, subject to the following:
a. The costs meet the requirements of
subsections C.1 through 5 of this Appendix.
b. The costs are
properly supported by cost allocation plans in accordance with
applicable Federal cost accounting principles.
c. The costs are
not otherwise borne directly or indirectly by the Federal
Government.
7. Limitations on allowance of costs.
Sponsored agreements may be subject to statutory requirements that
limit the allowance of costs. When the maximum amount allowable
under a limitation is less than the total amount determined in
accordance with the principles in this Appendix, the amount not
recoverable under a sponsored agreement may not be charged to
other sponsored agreements.
8. Collection of unallowable costs, excess
costs due to noncompliance with cost policies, increased costs due
to failure to follow a disclosed accounting practice and increased
costs resulting from a change in cost accounting practice. The
following costs shall be refunded (including interest) in
accordance with applicable Federal agency
regulations:
a. Costs specifically identified as
unallowable in Section J of this Appendix, either directly or
indirectly, and charged to the Federal Government.
b. Excess costs
due to failure by the educational institution to comply with the
cost policies in this Appendix.
c. Increased costs due to a noncompliant
cost accounting practice used to estimate, accumulate, or report
costs.
d.
Increased costs resulting from a change in accounting
practice.
9. Adjustment of previously negotiated F
&A cost rates containing unallowable costs. Negotiated F&A
cost rates based on a proposal later found to have included costs
that are unallowable as specified by law or regulation, Section J
of this Appendix, terms and conditions of sponsored agreements,
or, are unallowable because they are clearly not allocable to
sponsored agreements, shall be adjusted, or a refund shall be
made, in accordance with the requirements of this section. These
adjustments or refunds are designed to correct the proposals used
to establish the rates and do not constitute a reopening of the
rate negotiation. The adjustments or refunds will be made
regardless of the type of rate negotiated (predetermined, final,
fixed, or provisional).
a. For rates covering a future fiscal
year of the institution, the unallowable costs will be removed
from the F&A cost pools and the rates appropriately
adjusted.
b.
For rates covering a past period, the Federal share of the
unallowable costs will be computed for each year involved and a
cash refund (including interest chargeable in accordance with
applicable regulations) will be made to the Federal Government.
If cash refunds are made for past periods covered by provisional
or fixed rates, appropriate adjustments will be made when the
rates are finalized to avoid duplicate recovery of the unallowable costs by the
Federal Government.
c. For rates covering the current period,
either a rate adjustment or a refund, as described in
subsections a and b, shall be required by the cognizant agency.
The choice of method shall be at the discretion of the cognizant
agency, based on its judgment as to which method would be most
practical.
d.
The amount or proportion of unallowable costs included in each
year's rate will be assumed to be the same as the amount or
proportion of unallowable costs included in the base year
proposal used to establish the rate.
10. Consistency in estimating,
accumulating and reporting costs.
a. An educational institution's
practices used in estimating costs in pricing a proposal shall
be consistent with the educational institution's cost accounting
practices used in accumulating and reporting costs.
b. An educational institution's cost
accounting practices used in accumulating and reporting actual
costs for a sponsored agreement shall be consistent with the
educational institution's practices used in estimating costs in
pricing the related proposal or application.
c. The grouping of homogeneous costs in
estimates prepared for proposal purposes shall not per se be
deemed an inconsistent application of cost accounting practices
under subsection a when such costs are accumulated and reported
in greater detail on an actual cost basis during performance of
the sponsored agreement.
d. Attachment A to this Appendix also
reflects this requirement, along with the purpose, definitions,
and techniques for application, all of which are
authoritative.
11. Consistency in allocating costs
incurred for the same purpose.
a. All costs incurred for the same
purpose, in like circumstances, are either direct costs only or
F&A costs only with respect to final cost objectives. No
final cost objective shall have allocated to it as a cost any
cost, if other costs incurred for the same purpose, in like
circumstances, have been included as a direct cost of that or
any other final cost objective. Further, no final cost objective
shall have allocated to it as a direct cost any cost, if other
costs incurred for the same purpose, in like circumstances, have
been included in any F&A cost pool to be allocated to that
or any other final cost objective.
b. Attachment A to this Appendix reflects
this requirement along with its purpose, definitions, and
techniques for application, illustrations and interpretations,
all of which are authoritative.
12. Accounting for unallowable costs.
a. Costs expressly unallowable or
mutually agreed to be unallowable, including costs mutually
agreed to be unallowable directly associated costs, shall be
identified and excluded from any billing, claim, application, or
proposal applicable to a sponsored agreement.
b. Costs which
specifically become designated as unallowable as a result of a
written decision furnished by a Federal official pursuant to
sponsored agreement disputes procedures shall be identified if
included in or used in the computation of any billing, claim, or
proposal applicable to a sponsored agreement. This
identification requirement applies also to any costs incurred
for the same purpose under like circumstances as the costs
specifically identified as unallowable under either this
subsection or subsection a.
c. Costs which, in a Federal official's
written decision furnished pursuant to sponsored agreement
disputes procedures, are designated as unallowable directly
associated costs of unallowable costs covered by either
subsection a or b shall be accorded the identification required
by subsection b.
d. The costs of any work project not
contractually authorized by a sponsored agreement, whether or
not related to performance of a proposed or existing sponsored
agreement, shall be accounted for, to the extent appropriate, in
a manner which permits ready separation from the costs of
authorized work projects.
e. All unallowable costs covered by
subsections a through d shall be subject to the same cost
accounting principles governing cost allocability as allowable
costs. In circumstances where these unallowable costs normally
would be part of a regular F&A cost allocation base or
bases, they shall remain in such base or bases. Where a directly
associated cost is part of a category of costs normally included
in a F&A cost pool that shall be allocated over a base
containing the unallowable cost with which it is associated,
such a directly associated cost shall be retained in the F&A
cost pool and be allocated through the regular allocation
process.
f.
Where the total of the allocable and otherwise allowable costs
exceeds a limitation-of-cost or ceiling-price provision in a
sponsored agreement, full direct and F&A cost allocation
shall be made to the sponsored agreement cost objective, in
accordance with established cost accounting practices and
standards which regularly govern a given entity's allocations to
sponsored agreement cost objectives. In any determination of a
cost overrun, the amount thereof shall be identified in terms of
the excess of allowable costs over the ceiling amount, rather
than through specific identification of particular cost items or
cost elements.
g. Attachment A reflects this requirement,
along with its purpose, definitions, techniques for application,
and illustrations of this standard, all of which are
authoritative.
13. Cost accounting period.
a. Educational institutions shall use
their fiscal year as their cost accounting period, except
that:
(1) Costs of a F&A function which
exists for only a part of a cost accounting period may be
allocated to cost objectives of that same part of the period
on the basis of data for that part of the cost accounting
period if the cost is material in amount, accumulated in a
separate F&A cost pool or expense pool, and allocated on
the basis of an appropriate direct measure of the activity or
output of the function during that part of the period.
(2) An annual
period other than the fiscal year may, upon mutual agreement
with the Federal Government, be used as the cost accounting
period if the use of such period is an established practice of
the educational institution and is consistently used for
managing and controlling revenues and disbursements, and
appropriate accruals, deferrals or
other adjustments are made with respect to such annual
periods.
(3)
A transitional cost accounting period other than a year shall
be used whenever a change of fiscal year occurs.
b. An educational institution shall
follow consistent practices in the selection of the cost
accounting period or periods in which any types of expense and
any types of adjustment to expense (including prior-period
adjustments) are accumulated and allocated.
c. The same cost accounting period shall
be used for accumulating costs in a F&A cost pool as for
establishing its allocation base, except that the Federal
Government and educational institution may agree to use a
different period for establishing an allocation base,
provided:
(1) The practice is necessary to
obtain significant administrative convenience,
(2) The practice
is consistently followed by the educational institution,
(3) The annual
period used is representative of the activity of the cost
accounting period for which the F&A costs to be allocated
are accumulated, and
(4) The practice can reasonably be
estimated to provide a distribution to cost objectives of the
cost accounting period not materially different from that
which otherwise would be obtained.
d. Attachment A
reflects this requirement, along with its purpose, definitions,
techniques for application and illustrations, all of which are
authoritative.
14. Disclosure Statement.
a. Educational institutions that
received aggregate sponsored agreements totaling $25 million or
more subject to this Appendix during their most recently
completed fiscal year shall disclose their cost accounting
practices by filing a Disclosure Statement (DS-2), which is
reproduced in Attachment B to this Appendix. With the approval
of the cognizant agency, an educational institution may meet the
DS-2 submission by submitting the DS-2 for each business unit
that received $25 million or more in sponsored agreements.
b. The DS-2 shall
be submitted to the cognizant agency with a copy to the
educational institution's audit cognizant office.
c. Educational
institutions receiving $25 million or more in sponsored
agreements that are not required to file a DS-2 pursuant to 48
CFR 9903.202-1 shall file a DS-2 covering the first fiscal year
beginning after the publication date of this revision, within
six months after the end of that fiscal year. Extensions beyond
the above due date may be granted by the cognizant agency on a
case-by-case basis.
d. Educational institutions are
responsible for maintaining an accurate DS-2 and complying with
disclosed cost accounting practices. Educational institutions
must file amendments to the DS-2 when disclosed practices are
changed to comply with a new or modified standard, or when
practices are changed for other reasons. Amendments of a DS-2
may be submitted at any time. If the change is expected to have
a material impact on the educational institution's negotiated
F&A cost rates, the revision shall be approved by the
cognizant agency before it is implemented. Resubmission of a
complete, updated DS-2 is discouraged except when there are
extensive changes to disclosed practices.
e. Cost and
funding adjustments. Cost adjustments shall be made by the
cognizant agency if an educational institution fails to comply
with the cost policies in this Appendix or fails to consistently
follow its established or disclosed cost accounting practices
when estimating, accumulating or reporting the costs of
sponsored agreements, if aggregate cost impact on sponsored
agreements is material. The cost adjustment shall normally be
made on an aggregate basis for all affected sponsored agreements
through an adjustment of the educational institution's future
F&A costs rates or other means considered appropriate by the
cognizant agency. Under the terms of CAS-covered contracts,
adjustments in the amount of funding provided may also be
required when the estimated proposal costs were not determined
in accordance with established cost accounting practices.
f. Overpayments.
Excess amounts paid in the aggregate by the Federal Government
under sponsored agreements due to a noncompliant cost accounting
practice used to estimate, accumulate, or report costs shall be
credited or refunded, as deemed appropriate by the cognizant
agency. Interest applicable to the excess amounts paid in the
aggregate during the period of noncompliance shall also be
determined and collected in accordance with applicable Federal
agency regulations.
g. Compliant cost accounting practice
changes. Changes from one compliant cost accounting practice to
another compliant practice that are approved by the cognizant
agency may require cost adjustments if the change has a material
effect on sponsored agreements and the changes are deemed
appropriate by the cognizant agency.
h. Responsibilities. The cognizant agency
shall:
(1) Determine cost adjustments for all
sponsored agreements in the aggregate on behalf of the Federal
Government. Actions of the cognizant agency official in making
cost adjustment determinations shall be coordinated with all
affected Federal agencies to the extent necessary.
(2) Prescribe
guidelines and establish internal procedures to promptly
determine on behalf of the Federal Government that a DS-2
adequately discloses the educational institution's cost
accounting practices and that the disclosed practices are
compliant with applicable CAS and the requirements of
Attachment A to this Appendix.
(3) Distribute to all affected agencies
any DS-2 determination of adequacy and/or
noncompliance.

D. Direct Costs
1. General. Direct costs are those costs
that can be identified specifically with a particular sponsored
project, an instructional activity, or any other institutional
activity, or that can be directly assigned to such activities
relatively easily with a high degree of accuracy. Costs incurred
for the same purpose in like circumstances must be treated
consistently as either direct or F&A costs. Where an
institution treats a particular type of cost as a direct cost of
sponsored agreements, all costs incurred for the same purpose in
like circumstances shall be treated as direct costs of all
activities of the institution.
2. Application to sponsored agreements.
Identification with the sponsored work rather than the nature of
the goods and services involved is the determining factor in
distinguishing direct from F&A costs of sponsored agreements.
Typical costs charged directly to a sponsored agreement are the
compensation of employees for performance of work under the
sponsored agreement, including related fringe benefit costs to the
extent they are consistently treated, in like circumstances, by
the institution as direct rather than F&A costs; the costs of
materials consumed or expended in the performance of the work; and
other items of expense incurred for the sponsored agreement,
including extraordinary utility consumption.
The cost of materials supplied from stock or
services rendered by specialized facilities or other institutional
service operations may be included as direct costs of sponsored
agreements, provided such items are consistently treated, in like
circumstances, by the institution as direct rather than F&A
costs, and are charged under a recognized method of computing actual
costs, and conform to generally accepted cost accounting practices
consistently followed by the institution.

E. F&A Costs
1. General. F&A 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. See Section F.1 of this Appendix for a discussion of the components
of F&A costs.
2. Criteria for distribution.
a. Base period. A base period for
distribution of F&A costs is the period during which the
costs are incurred. The base period normally should coincide
with the fiscal year established by the institution, but in any
event the base period should be so selected as to avoid
inequities in the distribution of costs.
b. Need for cost
groupings. The overall objective of the F&A cost allocation
process is to distribute the F&A costs described in Section
F of this Appendix to the major functions of the institution in
proportions reasonably consistent with the nature and extent of
their use of the institution's
resources.
In order to achieve this objective, it may
be necessary to provide for selective distribution by establishing
separate groupings of cost within one or more of the F&A cost
categories referred to in subsection E.1 of this Appendix. In
general, the cost groupings established within a category should
constitute, in each case, a pool of those items of expense that are
considered to be of like nature in terms of their relative
contribution to (or degree of remoteness from) the particular cost
objectives to which distribution is appropriate.
Cost groupings should be established
considering the general guides provided in subsection E.2.c. of this
Appendix. Each such pool or cost grouping should then be distributed
individually to the related cost objectives, using the distribution
base or method most appropriate in the light of the guides set forth
in subsection E.2.d. of this Appendix.
c. General considerations on cost
groupings. The extent to which separate cost groupings and
selective distribution would be appropriate at an institution is
a matter of judgment to be determined on a case-by-case basis.
Typical situations which may warrant the establishment of two or
more separate cost groupings (based on account classification or
analysis) within an F&A cost category include but are not
limited to the following:
(1) Where certain items or categories
of expense relate solely to one of the major functions of the
institution or to less than all functions, such expenses
should be set aside as a separate cost grouping for direct
assignment or selective allocation in accordance with the
guides provided in subsections b and d.
(2) Where any
types of expense ordinarily treated as general administration
or departmental administration are charged to sponsored
agreements as direct costs, expenses applicable to other
activities of the institution when incurred for the same
purposes in like circumstances must, through separate cost
groupings, be excluded from the F&A costs allocable to
those sponsored agreements and included in the direct cost of
other activities for cost allocation purposes.
(3) Where it is determined that
certain expenses are for the support of a service unit or
facility whose output is susceptible of measurement on a
workload or other quantitative basis, such expenses should be
set aside as a separate cost grouping for distribution on such
basis to organized research, instructional, and other
activities at the institution or
within the department.
(4) Where activities provide their own
purchasing, personnel administration, building maintenance or
similar service, the distribution of general administration
and general expenses, or operation and maintenance expenses to
such activities should be accomplished through cost groupings
which include only that portion of central F&A costs (such
as for overall management) which are properly allocable to
such activities.
(5) Where the institution elects to treat
fringe benefits as F&A charges, such costs should be set
aside as a separate cost grouping for selective distribution
to related cost objectives.
(6) The number of separate cost groupings
within a category should be held within practical limits,
after taking into consideration the materiality of the amounts
involved and the degree of precision attainable through less
selective methods of distribution.
d. Selection of distribution method.
(1) Actual conditions must be taken
into account in selecting the method or base to be used in
distributing individual cost groupings. The essential
consideration in selecting a base is that it be the one best
suited for assigning the pool of costs to cost objectives in
accordance with benefits derived; a traceable cause and effect
relationship; or logic and reason, where neither benefit nor
cause and effect relationship is determinable.
(2) Where a cost
grouping can be identified directly with the cost objective
benefited, it should be assigned to that cost objective.
(3) Where the
expenses in a cost grouping are more general in nature, the
distribution may be based on a cost analysis study which
results in an equitable distribution of the costs. Such cost
analysis studies may take into consideration weighting
factors, population, or space occupied if appropriate. Cost
analysis studies, however, must be appropriately documented in
sufficient detail for subsequent review by the cognizant
Federal agency, distribute the costs to the related cost
objectives in accordance with the relative benefits derived,
be statistically sound, be performed specifically at the
institution at which the results are to be used, and be
reviewed periodically, but not less frequently than every two
years, updated if necessary, and used consistently. Any
assumptions made in the study must be stated and explained.
The use of cost analysis studies and periodic changes in the
method of cost distribution must be fully justified.
(4) If a cost
analysis study is not performed, or if the study does not
result in an equitable distribution of the costs, the
distribution shall be made in accordance with the appropriate
base cited in Section F, unless one of the following
conditions is met: it can be demonstrated that the use of a
different base would result in a more equitable allocation of the costs, or that a more
readily available base would not increase the costs charged to
sponsored agreements, or the institution qualifies for, and
elects to use, the simplified method for computing F&A
cost rates described in Section H of this Appendix.
(5)
Notwithstanding subsection E.2.d.(3) of this Appendix,
effective July 1, 1998, a cost analysis or base other than
that in Section F of this Appendix shall not be used to
distribute utility or student services costs. Instead,
subsections F.4.c and F.4.d may be used in the recovery of
utility costs.
e. Order of distribution.
(1) F&A costs are the broad
categories of costs discussed in Section F.1 of this
Appendix.
(2)
Depreciation and use allowances, operation and maintenance
expenses, and general administrative and general expenses
should be allocated in that order to the remaining F&A
cost categories as well as to the major functions and
specialized service facilities of the institution. Other cost
categories may be allocated in the order determined to be most
appropriate by the institutions. When cross allocation of
costs is made as provided in subsection (3), this order of
allocation does not apply.
(3) Normally an F&A cost category
will be considered closed once it has been allocated to other
cost objectives, and costs may not be subsequently allocated
to it. However, a cross allocation of costs between two or
more F&A cost categories may be used if such allocation
will result in a more equitable allocation of costs. If a
cross allocation is used, an appropriate modification to the
composition of the F&A cost categories described in
Section F of this Appendix is
required.

F. Identification and Assignment of F&A
Costs
1. Definition of Facilities and
Administration. F&A costs are broad categories of costs.
"Facilities" is defined as depreciation and use allowances,
interest on debt associated with certain buildings, equipment and
capital improvements, operation and maintenance expenses, and
library expenses. "Administration" is defined as general
administration and general expenses, departmental administration,
sponsored projects administration, student administration and
services, and all other types of expenditures not listed
specifically under one of the subcategories of Facilities
(including cross allocations from other pools).
2. Depreciation and
use allowances.
a. The expenses under this heading are
the portion of the costs of the institution's buildings, capital
improvements to land and buildings, and equipment which are
computed in accordance with Section J.14 of this Appendix.
b. In the absence
of the alternatives provided for in Section E.2.d of this
Appendix, the expenses included in this category shall be
allocated in the following manner:
(1) Depreciation or use allowances on
buildings used exclusively in the conduct of a single
function, and on capital improvements and equipment used in
such buildings, shall be assigned to that function.
(2) Depreciation or use allowances on
buildings used for more than one function, and on capital
improvements and equipment used in such buildings, shall be
allocated to the individual functions performed in each
building on the basis of usable square feet of space,
excluding common areas such as hallways, stairwells, and rest
rooms.
(3)
Depreciation or use allowances on buildings, capital
improvements and equipment related to space (e.g., individual
rooms, laboratories) used jointly by more than one function
(as determined by the users of the space) shall be treated as
follows. The cost of each jointly used unit of space shall be
allocated to benefiting functions on the basis of:
(a) The employee full-time
equivalents (FTEs) or salaries and wages of those individual
functions benefiting from the use of that space; or
(b)
Institution-wide employee FTEs or salaries and wages
applicable to the benefiting major functions (see Section
B.1 of this Appendix) of the institution.
(4) Depreciation or use allowances on
certain capital improvements to land, such as paved parking
areas, fences, sidewalks, and the like, not included in the
cost of buildings, shall be allocated to user categories of
students and employees on a full-time equivalent basis. The
amount allocated to the student category shall be assigned to
the instruction function of the institution. The amount
allocated to the employee category shall be further allocated
to the major functions of the institution in proportion to the
salaries and wages of all employees applicable to those
functions.
c. Large research facilities. The
following provisions apply to large research facilities that are
included in F&A rate proposals negotiated after January 1,
2000, and on which the design and construction begin after July
1, 1998. Large facilities, for this provision, are defined as
buildings with construction costs of more than $10 million. The
determination of the Federal participation (use) percentage in a
building is based on institution's estimates of building use
over its life, and is made during the planning phase for the
building.
(1) When an institution has large
research facilities, of which 40 percent or more of total
assignable space is expected for Federal use, the institution
must maintain an adequate review and approval process to
ensure that construction costs are reasonable.
(a)The review process shall address
and document relevant factors affecting construction costs,
such as:
i. Life cycle costs ii. Unique research needs iii. Special building needs iv. Building site preparation v. Environmental consideration vi. Federal construction code
requirements vii. Competitive
procurement practices
(b) The approval process shall
include review and approval of the projects by the
institution's Board of Trustees (which can also be called
Board of Directors, Governors or Regents) or other
independent entities.
(2) For research facilities costing
more than $25 million, of which 50 percent or more of total
assignable space is expected for Federal use, the institution
must document the review steps performed to assure that
construction costs are reasonable. The review should include
an analysis of construction costs and a comparison of these
costs with relevant construction data, including the National
Science Foundation data for research facilities based on its
biennial survey, "Science and Engineering Facilities at
Colleges and Universities." The documentation must be made
available for review by Federal negotiators, when
requested.
3. Interest.
Interest on debt associated with certain buildings, equipment and
capital improvements, as defined in Section J.25 of this Appendix,
shall be classified as an expenditure under the category
Facilities. These costs shall be allocated in the same manner as
the depreciation or use allowances on the buildings, equipment and
capital improvements to which the interest relates.
4. Operation and
maintenance expenses.
a. The expenses under this heading are
those that have been incurred for the administration,
supervision, operation, maintenance, preservation, and
protection of the institution's physical plant. They include
expenses normally incurred for such items as janitorial and
utility services; repairs and ordinary or normal alterations
of buildings, furniture and equipment; care of grounds;
maintenance and operation of buildings and other plant
facilities; security; earthquake and disaster preparedness;
environmental safety; hazardous waste disposal; property,
liability and all other insurance relating to property; space and capital leasing;
facility planning and management; and, central receiving. The
operation and maintenance expense category should also include
its allocable share of fringe benefit costs, depreciation and
use allowances, and interest costs.
b. In the
absence of the alternatives provided for in Section E.2.d of
this Appendix, the expenses included in this category shall be
allocated in the same manner as described in subsection E.2.b
for depreciation and use allowances.
c. For F&A
rates negotiated on or after July 1, 1998, an institution that
previously employed a utility special cost study in its most
recently negotiated F&A rate proposal in accordance with
Section E.2.d of this Appendix, may add a utility cost
adjustment (UCA) of 1.3 percentage points to its negotiated
overall F&A rate for organized research. Exhibit B to this
Appendix displays the list of eligible institutions. The
allocation of utility costs to the benefiting functions shall
otherwise be made in the same manner as described in
subsection F.4.b of this Appendix. Beginning on July 1, 2002,
Federal agencies shall reassess periodically the eligibility
of institutions to receive the UCA.
d. Beginning on
July 1, 2002, Federal agencies may receive applications for
utilization of the UCA from institutions not subject to the
provisions of subsection F.4.c of this
Appendix.
5. General administration and general
expenses.
a.The expenses under this heading are
those that have been incurred for the general executive and
administrative offices of educational institutions and other
expense of a general character which do not relate solely to
any major function of the institution; i.e., solely to
instruction, organized research, other sponsored activities,
or other institutional activities.
The general administration and general
expense category should also include its allocable share of fringe
benefit costs, operation and maintenance expense, depreciation and
use allowances, and interest costs. Examples of general
administration and general expenses include: those expenses incurred
by administrative offices that serve the entire university system of
which the institution is a part; central offices of the institution
such as the President's or Chancellor's office, the offices for
institution-wide financial management, business services, budget and
planning, personnel management, and safety and risk management; the
office of the General Counsel; and, the operations of the central
administrative management information systems. General
administration and general expenses shall not include expenses
incurred within non-university-wide deans' offices, academic
departments, organized research units, or similar organizational
units. (See subsection F.6. of this Appendix, Departmental
administration expenses.)
b. In the absence of the alternatives
provided for in Section E.2.d of this Appendix, the expenses
included in this category shall be grouped first according to
common major functions of the institution to which they render
services or provide benefits. The aggregate expenses of each
group shall then be allocated to serviced or benefited
functions on the modified total cost basis. Modified total
costs consist of the same elements as those in Section G.2 of
this Appendix. When an activity included in this F&A cost
category provides a service or product to another institution
or organization, an appropriate adjustment must be made to
either the expenses or the basis of allocation or both, to
assure a proper allocation of costs.
6. Departmental administration
expenses.
a. The expenses under this heading are
those that have been incurred for administrative and
supporting services that benefit common or joint departmental
activities or objectives in academic deans' offices, academic
departments and divisions, and organized research units.
Organized research units include such units as institutes,
study centers, and research centers. Departmental
administration expenses are subject to the following
limitations.
(1) Academic deans' offices.
Salaries and operating expenses are limited to those
attributable to administrative functions.
(2) Academic
departments:
(a) Salaries and fringe benefits
attributable to the administrative work (including bid and
proposal preparation) of faculty (including department
heads), and other professional personnel conducting
research and/or instruction, shall be allowed at a rate of
3.6 percent of modified total direct costs. This category
does not include professional business or professional
administrative officers. This allowance shall be added to
the computation of the F&A cost rate for major
functions in Section G of this Appendix; the expenses
covered by the allowance shall be excluded from the
departmental administration cost pool. No documentation is
required to support this allowance.
(b) Other administrative and
supporting expenses incurred within academic departments
are allowable provided they are treated consistently in
like circumstances. This would include expenses such as
the salaries of secretarial and clerical staffs, the
salaries of administrative officers and assistants,
travel, office supplies, stockrooms, and the like.
(3) Other fringe benefit costs
applicable to the salaries and wages included in subsections
F.6.a.(1) and (2) of this Appendix are allowable, as well as
an appropriate share of general administration and general
expenses, operation and maintenance expenses, and
depreciation and/or use allowances.
(4) Federal
agencies may authorize reimbursement of additional costs for
department heads and faculty only in exceptional cases where
an institution can demonstrate undue hardship or detriment
to project performance.
b. The following guidelines apply to
the determination of departmental administrative costs as
direct or F&A costs.
(1) In developing the departmental
administration cost pool, special care should be exercised
to ensure that costs incurred for the same purpose in like
circumstances are treated consistently as either direct or
F&A costs. For example, salaries of technical staff,
laboratory supplies (e.g., chemicals), telephone toll
charges, animals, animal care costs, computer costs, travel costs,
and specialized shop costs shall be treated as direct cost
wherever identifiable to a particular cost objective. Direct
charging of these costs may be accomplished through specific
identification of individual costs to benefiting cost
objectives, or through recharge centers or specialized
service facilities, as appropriate under the
circumstances.
(2) The salaries of administrative and
clerical staff should normally be treated as F&A costs.
Direct charging of these costs may be appropriate where a
major project or activity explicitly budgets for
administrative or clerical services and individuals involved
can be specifically identified with the project or activity.
"Major project" is defined as a project that requires an
extensive amount of administrative or clerical support,
which is significantly greater than the routine level of
such services provided by academic departments. Some
examples of major projects are described in Exhibit C to
this Appendix.
(3) Items such
as office supplies, postage, local telephone costs, and
memberships shall normally be treated as F&A
costs.
c. In the absence of the alternatives
provided for in Section E.2.d of this Appendix, the expenses
included in this category shall be allocated as follows:
(1) The administrative expenses of
the dean's office of each college and school shall be
allocated to the academic departments within that college or
school on the modified total cost basis.
(2) The
administrative expenses of each academic department, and the
department's share of the expenses allocated in subsection
F.6.b.(1) of this Appendix shall be allocated to the
appropriate functions of the department on the modified
total cost basis.
7. Sponsored projects administration.
a. The expenses under this heading are
limited to those incurred by a separate organization(s)
established primarily to administer sponsored projects,
including such functions as grant and contract administration
(Federal and non-Federal), special security, purchasing,
personnel, administration, and editing and publishing of
research and other reports. They include the salaries and
expenses of the head of such organization, assistants, and
immediate staff, together with the salaries and expenses of
personnel engaged in supporting activities maintained by the
organization, such as stock rooms, stenographic pools and the
like. This category also includes an allocable share of fringe
benefit costs, general administration and general expenses,
operation and maintenance expenses, depreciation/use
allowances. Appropriate adjustments will be made for services
provided to other functions or organizations.
b. In the
absence of the alternatives provided for in Section E.2.d of
this Appendix, the expenses included in this category shall be
allocated to the major functions of the institution under
which the sponsored projects are conducted on the basis of the
modified total cost of sponsored projects.
c. An
appropriate adjustment shall be made to eliminate any
duplicate charges to sponsored agreements when this category
includes similar or identical activities as those included in
the general administration and general expense category or
other F&A cost items, such as accounting, procurement, or
personnel administration.
8. Library expenses.
a. The expenses under this heading are
those that have been incurred for the operation of the
library, including the cost of books and library materials
purchased for the library, less any items of library income
that qualify as applicable credits under Section C.5 of this
Appendix. The library expense category should also include the
fringe benefits applicable to the salaries and wages included
therein, an appropriate share of general administration and
general expense, operation and maintenance expense, and
depreciation and use allowances. Costs incurred in the
purchases of rare books (museum-type books) with no value to
sponsored agreements should not be allocated to them.
b. In the absence of the alternatives
provided for in Section E.2.d of this Appendix, the expenses
included in this category shall be allocated first on the
basis of primary categories of users, including students,
professional employees, and other users.
(1) The student category shall
consist of full-time equivalent students enrolled at the
institution, regardless of whether they earn credits toward
a degree or certificate.
(2) The professional employee
category shall consist of all faculty members and other
professional employees of the institution, on a full-time
equivalent basis.
(3) The other users category shall
consist of all other users of library
facilities.
c. Amount allocated in subsection
E.8.b of this Appendix shall be assigned further as
follows:
(1) The amount in the student
category shall be assigned to the instruction function of
the institution.
(2) The amount in the professional
employee category shall be assigned to the majorfunctions of
the institution in proportion to the salaries and wages of
all faculty members and other professional employees
applicable to those functions.
(3) The amount in the other users
category shall be assigned to the other institutional
activities function of the
institution.
9. Student administration and
services.
a. The expenses under this heading are
those that have been incurred for the administration of
student affairs and for services to students, including
expenses of such activities as deans of students, admissions,
registrar, counseling and placement services, student
advisers, student health and infirmary services, catalogs, and
commencements and convocations. The salaries of members of the
academic staff whose responsibilities to the institution
require administrative work that benefits sponsored projects
may also be included to the extent that the portion charged to
student administration is determined in accordance with
Section J.10 of this Appendix. This expense category also
includes the fringe benefit costs applicable to the salaries
and wages included therein, an appropriate share of general
administration and general expenses, operation and
maintenance, and use allowances and/or depreciation.
b. In the absence of the alternatives
provided for in Section E.2.d of this Appendix, the expenses
in this category shall be allocated to the instruction
function, and subsequently to sponsored agreements in that
function.
10. Offset for F&A expenses
otherwise provided for by the Federal Government.
a. The items to be accumulated under
this heading are the reimbursements and other payments from
the Federal Government that are made to the institution to
support solely, specifically, and directly, in whole or in
part, any of the administrative or service activities
described in subsections F.2 through 9 of this Appendix.
b. The items
in this group shall be treated as a credit to the affected
individual F&A cost category before that category is
allocated to benefiting
functions.

G. Determination and Application of F&A
Cost Rate or Rates
1. F&A cost pools.
a.
(1) Subject to subsection b, the
separate categories of F&A costs allocated to each major
function of the institution as prescribed in Section F shall
be aggregated and treated as a common pool for that function.
The amount in each pool shall be divided by the distribution
base described in subsection G.2 of this Appendix to arrive at
a single F&A cost rate for each function.
(2) The rate for
each function is used to distribute F&A costs to
individual sponsored agreements of that function. Since a
common pool is established for each major function of the
institution, a separate F&A cost rate would be established
for each of the major functions described in Section B.1 of
this Appendix under which sponsored agreements are carried
out.
3) Each
institution's F&A cost rate process must be appropriately
designed to ensure that Federal sponsors do not in any way
subsidize the F&A costs of other sponsors, specifically
activities sponsored by industry and foreign governments.
Accordingly, each allocation method used to identify and
allocate the F&A cost pools, as described in Sections E.2
and F.2 through F.9 of this Appendix, must contain the full
amount of the institution's modified total costs or other
appropriate units of measurement used to make the
computations. In addition, the final rate distribution base
(as defined in subsection G.2 of this Appendix) for each major
function (organized research, instruction, etc., as described
in Section B.1 of this Appendix) shall contain all the
programs or activities that utilize the F&A costs
allocated to that major function. At the time a F&A cost
proposal is submitted to a cognizant Federal agency, each
institution must describe the process it uses to ensure that
Federal funds are not used to subsidize industry and foreign
government funded programs.
b. In some instances a single rate basis
for use across the board on all work within a major function at
an institution may not be appropriate. A single rate for
research, for example, might not take into account those
different environmental factors and other conditions which may
affect substantially the F&A costs applicable to a
particular segment of research at the institution. A particular
segment of research may be that performed under a single
sponsored agreement or it may consist of research under a group
of sponsored agreements performed in a common environment. The
environmental factors are not limited to the physical location
of the work. Other important factors are the level of the
administrative support required, the nature of the facilities or
other resources employed, the scientific disciplines or
technical skills involved, the organizational arrangements used,
or any combination thereof. Where a particular segment of a
sponsored agreement is performed within an environment which
appears to generate a significantly different level of F&A
costs, provisions should be made for a separate F&A cost
pool applicable to such work. The separate F&A cost pool
should be developed during the regular course of the rate
determination process and the separate F&A cost rate
resulting there from should be utilized; provided it is
determined that such F&A cost rate differs significantly
from that which would have been obtained under subsection G.1.a
of this Appendix, and the volume of work to which such rate
would apply is material in relation to other sponsored
agreements at the institution.
2. The distribution basis. F&A costs
shall be distributed to applicable sponsored agreements and other
benefiting activities within each major function (see Section B.1)
on the basis of modified total direct costs, consisting of all
salaries and wages, fringe benefits, materials and supplies,
services, travel, and subgrants and subcontracts up to the first $25,000 of each subgrant or
subcontract (regardless of the period covered by the subgrant or
subcontract). Equipment, capital expenditures, charges for patient
care and tuition remission, rental costs, scholarships, and
fellowships as well as the portion of each subgrant and
subcontract in excess of $25,000 shall be excluded from modified
total direct costs. Other items may only be excluded where
necessary to avoid a serious inequity in the distribution of
F&A costs. For this purpose, a F&A cost rate should be
determined for each of the separate F&A cost pools developed
pursuant to subsection G.1 of this Appendix. The rate in each case
should be stated as the percentage that the amount of the
particular F&A cost pool is of the modified total direct costs
identified with such pool.
3. Negotiated lump sum for F&A costs.
A negotiated fixed amount in lieu of F&A costs may be
appropriate for self-contained, off-campus, or primarily
subcontracted activities where the benefits derived from an
institution's F&A services cannot be readily determined. Such
negotiated F&A costs will be treated as an offset before
allocation to instruction, organized research, other sponsored
activities, and other institutional activities. The base on which
such remaining expenses are allocated should be appropriately
adjusted.
4. Predetermined rates for F&A costs.
Public Law 87-638 (76 Stat. 437) authorizes the use of
predetermined rates in determining the "indirect costs" (F&A
costs in this Appendix) applicable under research agreements with
educational institutions. The stated objectives of the law are to
simplify the administration of cost-type research and development contracts (including grants) with
educational institutions, to facilitate the preparation of their
budgets, and to permit more expeditious closeout of such contracts
when the work is completed. In view of the potential advantages
offered by this procedure, negotiation of predetermined rates for
F&A costs for a period of two to four years should be the norm
in those situations where the cost experience and other pertinent
facts available are deemed sufficient to enable the parties
involved to reach an informed judgment as to the probable level of
F&A costs during the ensuing accounting periods.
5. Negotiated fixed rates and
carry-forward provisions. When a fixed rate is negotiated in
advance for a fiscal year (or other time period), the over- or
under-recovery for that year may be included as an adjustment to
the F&A cost for the next rate negotiation. When the rate is
negotiated before the carry-forward adjustment is determined, the
carry-forward amount may be applied to the next subsequent rate
negotiation. When such adjustments are to be made, each fixed rate
negotiated in advance for a given period will be computed by
applying the expected F&A costs allocable to sponsored
agreements for the forecast period plus or minus the carry-forward
adjustment (over- or under-recovery) from the prior period, to the
forecast distribution base. Unrecovered amounts under lump-sum
agreements or cost-sharing provisions of prior years shall not be
carried forward for consideration in the new rate negotiation.
There must, however, be an advance understanding in each case
between the institution and the cognizant Federal agency as to
whether these differences will be considered in the rate
negotiation rather than making the determination after the
differences are known. Further, institutions electing to use this
carry-forward provision may not subsequently change without prior
approval of the cognizant Federal agency. In the event that an
institution returns to a post determined rate, any over- or
under-recovery during the period in which negotiated fixed rates
and carry-forward provisions were followed will be included in the
subsequent post determined rates. Where multiple rates are used,
the same procedure will be applicable for determining each
rate.
6.
Provisional and final rates for F&A costs. Where the cognizant
agency determines that cost experience and other pertinent facts
do not justify the use of predetermined rates, or a fixed rate
with a carry-forward, or if the parties cannot agree on an
equitable rate, a provisional rate shall be established. To
prevent substantial overpayment or underpayment, the provisional
rate may be adjusted by the cognizant agency during the
institution's fiscal year. Predetermined or fixed rates may
replace provisional rates at any time prior to the close of the
institution's fiscal year. If a provisional rate is not replaced
by a predetermined or fixed rate prior to the end of the
institution's fiscal year, a final rate will be established and
upward or downward adjustments will be made based on the actual
allowable costs incurred for the period involved.
7. Fixed rates for
the life of the sponsored agreement.
a. Federal agencies shall use the
negotiated rates for F&A costs in effect at the time of the
initial award throughout the life of the sponsored agreement.
"Life" for the purpose of this subsection means each competitive
segment of a project. A competitive segment is a period of years
approved by the Federal funding agency at the time of the award.
If negotiated rate agreements do not extend through the life of
the sponsored agreement at the time of the initial award, then
the negotiated rate for the last year of the sponsored agreement
shall be extended through the end of the life of the sponsored
agreement. Award levels for sponsored agreements may not be
adjusted in future years as a result of changes in negotiated
rates.
b. When
an educational institution does not have a negotiated rate with
the Federal Government at the time of the award (because the
educational institution is a new grantee or the parties cannot
reach agreement on a rate), the provisional rate used at the
time of the award shall be adjusted once a rate is negotiated
and approved by the cognizant agency.
8. Limitation on reimbursement of
administrative costs.
a. Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection G.1.a of this Appendix, the administrative costs
charged to sponsored agreements awarded or amended (including
continuation and renewal awards) with effective dates beginning
on or after the start of the institution's first fiscal year
which begins on or after October 1, 1991, shall be limited to
26% of modified total direct costs (as defined in subsection G.2
of this Appendix) for the total of General Administration and
General Expenses, Departmental Administration, Sponsored
Projects Administration, and Student Administration and Services
(including their allocable share of depreciation and/or use
allowances, interest costs, operation and maintenance expenses,
and fringe benefits costs, as provided by Sections F.5, F.6, F.7
and F.9 of this Appendix) and all other types of expenditures
not listed specifically under one of the subcategories of
facilities in Section F of this Appendix.
b. Existing
F&A cost rates that affect institutions' fiscal years which
begin on or after October 1, 1991, shall be unilaterally amended
by the cognizant Federal agency to reflect the cost limitation
in subsection G.8.a of this Appendix.
c. Permanent rates
established prior to this revision that have been amended in
accordance with subsection G.8.b of this Appendix may be
renegotiated. However, no such renegotiated rate may exceed the
rate which would have been in effect if the agreement had
remained in effect; nor may the administrative portion of any
renegotiated rate exceed the limitation in subsection a.
d. Institutions
should not change their accounting or cost allocation methods
which were in effect on May 1, 1991, if the effect is to change
the charging of a particular type of cost from F&A to
direct, or reclassify costs, or increase allocations, from the
administrative pools identified in subsection to the other
F&A cost pools or fringe benefits. Cognizant Federal
agencies are authorized to permit changes where an institution's
charging practices are at variance with acceptable practices
followed by a substantial majority of other
institutions.
9. Alternative method for administrative
costs.
a. Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection 1.a, an institution may elect to claim fixed
allowance for the "Administration" portion of F&A costs. The
allowance could be either 24% of modified total direct costs or
a percentage equal to 95% of the most recently negotiated fixed
or predetermined rate for the cost pools included under
"Administration" as defined in Section F.1 of this Appendix,
whichever is less, provided that no accounting or cost
allocation changes with the effects described in subsection
G.8.d of this Appendix have occurred. Under this alternative, no
cost proposal need be prepared for the "Administration" portion
of the F&A cost rate nor is further identification or
documentation of these costs required (see subsection G.9.c of
this Appendix). Where a negotiated F&A cost agreement
includes this alternative, an institution shall make no further
charges for the expenditure categories described in Sections
F.5, F.6, F.7 and F.9 of this Appendix.
b. In negotiations
of rates for subsequent periods, an institution that has elected
the option of subsection a may continue to exercise it at the
same rate without further identification or documentation of
costs, provided that no accounting or cost allocation changes
with the effects described in subsection G.8.d of this Appendix
have occurred.
c. If an institution elects to accept a
threshold rate, it is not required to perform a detailed
analysis of its administrative costs. However, in order to
compute the facilities components of its F&A cost rate, the
institution must reconcile its F&A cost proposal to its
financial statements and make appropriate adjustments and
reclassifications to identify the costs of each major function
as defined in Section B.1 of this Appendix, as well as to
identify and allocate the facilities components. Administrative
costs that are not identified as such by the institution's
accounting system (such as those incurred in academic
departments) will be classified as instructional costs for
purposes of reconciling F&A cost proposals to financial
statements and allocating facilities costs.
10. Individual rate components. In order
to satisfy the requirements of Section J.14 of this Appendix and
to provide mutually agreed upon information for management
purposes, each F&A cost rate negotiation or determination
shall include development of a rate for each F&A cost pool as
well as the overall F&A cost rate.
11. Negotiation and approval of F&A
rate.
a. Cognizant agency assignments. "A
cognizant agency" means the Federal agency responsible for
negotiating and approving F&A rates for an educational
institution on behalf of all Federal agencies.
(1) Cost negotiation cognizance is
assigned to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
or the Department of Defense's Office of Naval Research (DOD),
normally depending on which of the two agencies (HHS or DOD)
provides more funds to the educational institution for the
most recent three years. Information on funding shall be
derived from relevant data gathered by the National Science
Foundation. In cases where neither HHS nor DOD provides
Federal funding to an educational institution, the cognizant
agency assignment shall default to HHS. Notwithstanding the
method for cognizance determination described above, other
arrangements for cognizance of a particular educational
institution may also be based in part on the types of research
performed at the educational institution and shall be decided
based on mutual agreement between HHS
and DOD.
(2)
Cognizant assignments as of December 31, 1995, shall continue
in effect through educational institutions' fiscal years
ending during 1997, or the period covered by negotiated
agreements in effect on December 31, 1995, whichever is later,
except for those educational institutions with cognizant
agencies other than HHS or DOD. Cognizance for these
educational institutions shall transfer to HHS or DOD at the
end of the period covered by the current negotiated rate
agreement. After cognizance is established, it shall continue
for a five-year period.
b. Acceptance of rates. The negotiated
rates shall be accepted by all Federal agencies. Only under
special circumstances, when required by law or regulation, may
an agency use a rate different from the negotiated rate for a
class of sponsored agreements or a single sponsored
agreement.
c.
Correcting deficiencies. The cognizant agency shall negotiate
changes needed to correct systems deficiencies relating to
accountability for sponsored agreements. Cognizant agencies
shall address the concerns of other affected agencies, as
appropriate.
d.
Resolving questioned costs. The cognizant agency shall conduct
any necessary negotiations with an educational institution
regarding amounts questioned by audit that are due the Federal
Government related to costs covered by a negotiated
agreement.
e.
Reimbursement. Reimbursement to cognizant agencies for work
performed under Part 220 may be made by reimbursement billing
under the Economy Act, 31 U.S.C. 1535.
f. Procedure for establishing
facilities and administrative rates. The cognizant agency shall
arrange with the educational institution to provide copies of
rate proposals to all interested agencies. Agencies wanting such
copies should notify the cognizant agency. Rates shall be
established by one of the following methods:
(1) Formal negotiation. The cognizant
agency is responsible for negotiating and approving rates for
an educational institution on behalf of all Federal agencies.
Non-cognizant Federal agencies, which award sponsored
agreements to an educational institution, shall notify the
cognizant agency of specific concerns (i.e., a need to
establish special cost rates) that could affect the
negotiation process. The cognizant agency shall address the concerns of all
interested agencies, as appropriate. A pre-negotiation
conference may be scheduled among all interested agencies, if
necessary. The cognizant agency shall then arrange a
negotiation conference with the educational institution.
(2) Other than formal negotiation. The
cognizant agency and educational institution may reach an
agreement on rates without a formal negotiation conference;
for example, through correspondence or use of the simplified
method described in this Appendix.
g. Formalizing determinations and
agreements. The cognizant agency shall formalize all
determinations or agreements reached with an educational
institution and provide copies to other agencies having an
interest.
h.
Disputes and disagreements. Where the cognizant agency is unable
to reach agreement with an educational institution with regard
to rates or audit resolution, the appeal system of the cognizant
agency shall be followed for resolution of the
disagreement.
12. Standard Format for Submission. For
facilities and administrative (F&A) rate proposals submitted
on or after July 1, 2001, educational institutions shall use the
standard format, shown in Attachment C to this Appendix, to submit
their F&A rate proposal to the cognizant agency. The cognizant
agency may, on an institution-by- institution basis, grant exceptions from all
or portions of Part II of the standard format requirement. This
requirement does not apply to educational institutions that use
the simplified method for calculating F&A rates, as described
in Section H of this Appendix.

H. Simplified Method for Small
Institutions
1. General.
a. Where the total direct cost of work
covered by Part 220 at an institution does not exceed $10
million in a fiscal year, the use of the simplified procedure
described in subsections H.2 or 3 of this Appendix, may be used
in determining allowable F&A costs. Under this simplified
procedure, the institution's most recent annual financial report
and immediately available supporting information shall be
utilized as basis for determining the F&A cost rate
applicable to all sponsored agreements. The institution may use
either the salaries and wages (see subsection H.2 of this
Appendix) or modified total direct costs (see subsection H.3 of
this Appendix) as distribution basis.
b. The simplified
procedure should not be used where it produces results that
appear inequitable to the Federal Government or the institution.
In any such case, F&A costs should be determined through use
of the regular procedure.
2. Simplified procedure--Salaries and
wages base.
a. Establish the total amount of
salaries and wages paid to all employees of the institution.
b. Establish an
F&A cost pool consisting of the expenditures (exclusive of
capital items and other costs specifically identified as
unallowable) that customarily are classified under the following
titles or their equivalents:
(1) General administration and general
expenses (exclusive of costs of student administration and
services, student activities, student aid, and scholarships).
In those cases where expenditures have previously been
allocated to other institutional activities, they may be
included in the F&A cost pool. The total amount of
salaries and wages included in the F&A cost pool must be
separately identified.
(2) Operation and maintenance of physical
plant; and depreciation and use allowances; after appropriate
adjustment for costs applicable to other institutional
activities.
(3) Library.
(4) Department administration
expenses, which will be computed as 20 percent of the salaries
and expenses of deans and heads of departments.
c. Establish a salary and wage
distribution base, determined by deducting from the total of
salaries and wages as established in subsection a the amount of
salaries and wages included under subsection H.2.b of this
Appendix.
d.
Establish the F&A cost rate, determined by dividing the
amount in the F&A cost pool, subsection H.2.b of this
Appendix, by the amount of the distribution base, subsection
H.2.c of this Appendix.
e. Apply the F&A cost rate to direct
salaries and wages for individual agreements to determine the
amount of F&A costs allocable to such
agreements.
3. Simplified
procedure--Modified total direct cost base.
a. Establish the total costs incurred by
the institution for the base period.
b. Establish a F&A cost pool consisting
of the expenditures (exclusive of capital items and other costs
specifically identified as unallowable) that customarily are
classified under the following titles or their equivalents:
(1) General administration and general
expenses (exclusive of costs of student administration and
services, student activities, student aid, and scholarships).
In those cases where expenditures have previously been
allocated to other institutional activities, they may be
included in the F&A cost pool. The modified total direct
costs amount included in the F&A cost pool must be
separately identified.
(2) Operation and maintenance of
physical plant; and depreciation and use allowances; after
appropriate adjustment for costs applicable to other
institutional activities.
(3) Library.
(4) Department
administration expenses, which will be computed as 20 percent
of the salaries and expenses of deans and heads of
departments.
c. Establish a modified total direct
cost distribution base, as defined in Section G.2 of this
Appendix, that consists of all institution's direct
functions.
d.
Establish the F&A cost rate, determined by dividing the
amount in the F&A cost pool, subsection b, by the amount of
the distribution base, subsection c.
e. Apply the F&A cost rate to the
modified total direct costs for individual agreements to
determine the amount of F&A costs allocable to such
agreements.

I. Reserved
J. General Provisions for Selected Items of
Cost
Sections J.1 through 54 of this Appendix
provide principles to be applied in establishing the allowability of
certain items involved in determining cost. These principles should
apply irrespective of whether a particular item of cost is properly
treated as direct cost or F&A cost. Failure to mention a
particular item of cost is not intended to imply that it is either
allowable or unallowable; rather, determination as to allowability
in each case should be based on the treatment provided for similar
or related items of cost. In case of a discrepancy between the
provisions of a specific sponsored agreement and the provisions
below, the agreement should govern.
1. Advertising
and public relations costs.
a. The term advertising costs means the
costs of advertising media and corollary administrative costs.
Advertising media include magazines, newspapers, radio and
television, direct mail, exhibits, electronic or computer
transmittals, and the like.
b. The term public relations includes
community relations and means those activities dedicated to
maintaining the image of the institution or maintaining or
promoting understanding and favorable relations with the
community or public at large or any segment of the public.
c. The only allowable advertising costs
are those that are solely for:
(1) The recruitment of personnel
required for the performance by the institution of obligations
arising under a sponsored agreement (See also section J.42.b
of this Appendix, Recruiting);
(2) The procurement of goods and
services for the performance of a sponsored agreement;
(3) The disposal of scrap or surplus
materials acquired in the performance of a sponsored agreement
except when non-Federal entities are reimbursed for disposal
costs at a predetermined amount; or
(4) Other
specific purposes necessary to meet the requirements of the
sponsored agreement.
d. The only allowable public relations
costs are:
(1) Costs specifically required by the
sponsored agreement;
(2) Costs of communicating with the
public and press pertaining to specific activities or
accomplishments which result from performance of sponsored
agreements (these costs are considered necessary as part of
the outreach effort for the sponsored agreement); or
(3) Costs of
conducting general liaison with news media and government
public relations officers, to the extent that such activities
are limited to communication and liaison necessary keep the
public informed on matters of public concern, such as notices
of Federal contract/grant awards,
financial matters, etc.
e. Costs identified in subsections c and
d if incurred for more than one sponsored agreement or for both
sponsored work and other work of the institution, are allowable
to the extent that the principles in sections D. ("Direct
Costs") and E. ("F & A Costs") of this Appendix are
observed.
f. Unallowable advertising and public
relations costs include the following:
(1) All advertising and public
relations costs other than as specified in subsections J.1.c,
1.d and 1.e of this Appendix.
(2) Costs of meetings, conventions,
convocations, or other events related to other activities of
the institution, including:
(a) Costs of displays,
demonstrations, and exhibits;
(b) Costs of meeting rooms, hospitality
suites, and other special facilities used in conjunction
with shows and other special events; and
(c) Salaries
and wages of employees engaged in setting up and displaying
exhibits, making demonstrations, and providing
briefings;
(3) Costs of
promotional items and memorabilia, including models, gifts,
and souvenirs;
(4) Costs of advertising and public
relations designed solely to promote the
institution.
2. Advisory councils. Costs incurred by
advisory councils or committees are allowable as a direct cost
where authorized by the Federal awarding agency or as an indirect
cost where allocable to sponsored agreements.
3. Alcoholic
beverages. Costs of alcoholic beverages are unallowable.
4. Alumni/ae
activities. Costs incurred for, or in support of, alumni/ae
activities and similar services are unallowable.
5. Audit costs and
related services.
a. The costs of audits required by, and
performed in accordance with, the Single Audit Act, as
implemented by Circular A-133, "Audits of States, Local
Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations" are allowable. Also
see 31 U.S.C. 7505(b) and section ----.230 ("Audit Costs") of
Circular A-133.
b. Other audit costs are allowable if
included in an indirect cost rate proposal, or if specifically
approved by the awarding agency as a direct cost to an award.
c. The cost of
agreed-upon procedures engagements to monitor subrecipients who
are exempted from A-133 under section ----.200(d) are allowable,
subject to the conditions listed in A-133, section ----.230
(b)(2).
6. Bad Debt. Bad debts, including losses
(whether actual or estimated) arising from un- collectable
accounts and other claims, related collection costs, and related
legal costs, are unallowable.
7. Bonding costs.
a. Bonding costs arise when the Federal
Government requires assurance against financial loss to itself
or others by reason of the act or default of the institution.
They arise also in instances where the institution requires
similar assurance. Included are such bonds as bid, performance,
payment, advance payment, infringement, and fidelity bonds.
b. Costs of
bonding required pursuant to the terms of the award are
allowable. Costs of bonding required by the institution in the
general conduct of its operations are allowable to the extent
that such bonding is in accordance with sound business practice
and the rates and premiums are reasonable under the
circumstances.
8. Commencement and convocation costs.
Costs incurred for commencements and convocations are unallowable,
except as provided for in Section F.9 of
this Appendix.
9.
Communication costs. Costs incurred for telephone services, local
and long distance telephone calls, telegrams, postage, messenger,
electronic or computer transmittal services and the like are
allowable.
10.
Compensation for personal services.
a. General. Compensation for personal
services covers all amounts paid currently or accrued by the
institution for services of employees rendered during the period
of performance under sponsored agreements. Such amounts include
salaries, wages, and fringe benefits (see subsection J.10.f of
this Appendix). These costs are allowable to the extent that the
total compensation to individual employees conforms to the
established policies of the institution, consistently applied,
and provided that the charges for work performed directly on
sponsored agreements and for other work allocable as F&A
costs are determined and supported as provided below. Charges to
sponsored agreements may include reasonable amounts for
activities contributing and intimately related to work under the
agreements, such as delivering special lectures about specific
aspects of the ongoing activity, writing reports and articles,
participating in appropriate seminars, consulting with
colleagues and graduate students, and attending meetings and
conferences. Incidental work (that in excess of normal for the
individual), for which supplemental compensation is paid by an
institution under institutional policy, need not be included in
the payroll distribution systems described below, provided such
work and compensation are separately identified and documented
in the financial management system of the institution.
b. Payroll
distribution.
(1) General Principles.
(a) The distribution of salaries and
wages, whether treated as direct or F&A costs, will be
based on payrolls documented in accordance with the
generally accepted practices of colleges and universities.
Institutions may include in a residual category all
activities that are not directly charged to sponsored
agreements, and that need not be distributed to more than
one activity for purposes of identifying F&A costs and
the functions to which they are allocable. The components of
the residual category are not required to be separately
documented.
(b) 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—
(1) Be in accordance with Sections
A.2 and C of this Appendix;
(2) Produce an equitable distribution
of charges for employee's activities; and
(3)
Distinguish the employees' direct activities from their
F&A activities.
(c) 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.
(d) There is
no single best method for documenting the distribution of
charges for personal services. Methods for apportioning
salaries and wages, however, must meet the criteria
specified in subsection J.10.b.(2) of this Appendix.
Examples of acceptable methods are contained in subsection
c. Other methods that meet the criteria specified in
subsection J.10.b.(2) of this Appendix also shall be deemed
acceptable, if a mutually satisfactory alternative agreement
is reached.
(2) Criteria for Acceptable
Methods.
(a) The payroll distribution system
will be incorporated into the official records of the
institution; reasonably reflect the activity for which the
employee is compensated by the institution; and encompass
both sponsored and all other activities on an integrated
basis, but may include the use of subsidiary records.
(Compensation for incidental work described in subsection a need not be
included.)
(b) The method must recognize the
principle of after-the-fact confirmation or determination so
that costs distributed represent actual costs, unless a
mutually satisfactory alternative agreement is reached.
Direct cost activities and F&A cost activities may be
confirmed by responsible persons with suitable means of
verification that the work was performed. Confirmation by
the employee is not a requirement for either direct or
F&A cost activities if other responsible persons make
appropriate confirmations.
(c) The payroll distribution system
will allow confirmation of activity allocable to each
sponsored agreement and each of the categories of activity
needed to identify F&A costs and the functions to which
they are allocable. The activities chargeable to F&A
cost categories or the major functions of the institution
for employees whose salaries must be apportioned (see
subsection J.10.b.(1)(b) of this Appendix), if not initially
identified as separate categories, may be subsequently
distributed by any reasonable method mutually agreed to,
including, but not limited to, suitably conducted surveys,
statistical sampling procedures, or the application of
negotiated fixed rates.
(d) Practices vary among
institutions and within institutions as to the activity
constituting a full workload. Therefore, the payroll
distribution system may reflect categories of activities
expressed as a percentage distribution of total
activities.
(e) Direct and F&A charges may be
made initially to sponsored agreements on the basis of
estimates made before services are performed. When such
estimates are used, significant changes in the corresponding
work activity must be identified and entered into the
payroll distribution system. Short-term (such as one or two
months) fluctuation between
workload categories need not be considered as long as the
distribution of salaries and wages is reasonable over the
longer term, such as an academic period.
(f) The system
will provide for independent internal evaluations to ensure
the system's effectiveness and compliance with the above
standards.
(g) For systems which meet these
standards, the institution will not be required to provide
additional support or documentation for the effort actually
performed.
c. Examples of Acceptable Methods for
Payroll Distribution:
(1) Plan-Confirmation: Under this
method, the distribution of salaries and wages of professorial
and professional staff applicable to sponsored agreements is
based on budgeted, planned, or assigned work activity, updated
to reflect any significant changes in work distribution. A
plan-confirmation system used for salaries and wages charged
directly or indirectly to sponsored agreements will meet the
following standards:
(a) A system of budgeted, planned,
or assigned work activity will be incorporated into the
official records of the institution and encompass both
sponsored and all other activities on an integrated basis.
The system may include the use of subsidiary records.
(b) The system
will reasonably reflect only the activity for which the
employee is compensated by the institution (compensation for
incidental work described in subsection a need not be
included). Practices vary among institutions and within
institutions as to the activity constituting a full
workload. Hence, the system will reflect categories of
activities expressed as a percentage distribution of total
activities. (See Section H of this Appendix for treatment of
F&A costs under the simplified method for small
institutions.)
(c) The system will reflect activity
applicable to each sponsored agreement and to each category
needed to identify F&A costs and the functions to which
they are allocable. The system may treat F&A cost
activities initially within a residual category and
subsequently determine them by alternate methods as
discussed in subsection J.10.c.(2)(c) of this Appendix.
(d) The system
will provide for modification of an individual's salary or
salary distribution commensurate with a significant change
in the employee's work activity. Short-term (such as one or
two months) fluctuation between workload categories need not
be considered as long as the distribution of salaries and
wages is reasonable over the longer term, such as an
academic period. Whenever it is apparent that a significant change in work activity
that is directly or indirectly charged to sponsored
agreements will occur or has occurred, the change will be
documented over the signature of a responsible official and
entered into the system.
(e) At least annually a statement will
be signed by the employee, principal investigator, or
responsible official(s) using suitable means of verification
that the work was performed, stating that salaries and wages
charged to sponsored agreements as direct charges, and to
residual, F&A cost or other categories are reasonable in
relation to work performed.
(f) The system
will provide for independent internal evaluation to ensure
the system's integrity and compliance with the above
standards.
(g) In the use of this method, an
institution shall not be required to provide additional
support or documentation for the effort actually
performed.
(2)
After-the-fact Activity Records: Under this system the
distribution of salaries and wages by the institution will be
supported by activity reports as prescribed below.
(a) Activity reports will reflect
the distribution of activity expended by employees covered
by the system (compensation for incidental work as described
in subsection a need not be included).
(b) These
reports will reflect an after-the-fact reporting of the
percentage distribution of activity of employees. Charges
may be made initially on the basis of estimates made before
the services are performed, provided that such charges are
promptly adjusted if significant differences are indicated
by activity records.
(c) Reports will reasonably reflect the
activities for which employees are compensated by the
institution. To confirm that the distribution of activity
represents a reasonable estimate of the work performed by
the employee during the period, the reports will be signed
by the employee, principal investigator, or responsible
official(s) using suitable means of verification that the
work was performed.
(d) The system will reflect activity
applicable to each sponsored agreement and to each category
needed to identify F&A costs and the functions to which
they are allocable. The system may treat F&A cost
activities initially within a residual category and
subsequently determine them by alternate methods as
discussed in subsection J.10.b.(2)(c) of this Appendix.
(e) For
professorial and professional staff, the reports will be
prepared each academic term, but no less frequently than
every six months. For other employees, unless alternate
arrangements are agreed to, the reports will be prepared no
less frequently than monthly and will coincide with one or
more pay periods.
(f) Where the institution uses time
cards or other forms of after-the-fact payroll documents as
original documentation for payroll and payroll charges, such
documents shall qualify as records for this purpose,
provided that they meet the requirements in subsections
J.10.c.(2)(a) through (e) of this
Appendix.
(3) Multiple Confirmation Records:
Under this system, the distribution of salaries and wages of
professorial and professional staff will be supported by
records which certify separately for direct and F&A cost
activities as prescribed below.
(a) For
employees covered by the system, there will be direct cost
records to reflect the distribution of that activity
expended which is to be allocable as direct cost to each
sponsored agreement. There will also be F&A cost records
to reflect the distribution of that activity to F&A
costs. These records may be kept jointly or separately (but
are to be certified separately, see below).
(b) Salary and
wage charges may be made initially on the basis of estimates
made before the services are performed, provided that such
charges are promptly adjusted if significant differences
occur.
(c) Institutional records will
reasonably reflect only the activity for which employees are
compensated by the institution (compensation for incidental
work as described in subsection a need not be included).
(d) The system will reflect activity
applicable to each sponsored agreement and to each category
needed to identify F&A costs and the functions to which
they are allocable.
(e) To confirm that distribution of
activity represents a reasonable estimate of the work
performed by the employee during the period, the record for
each employee will include:
(1) The signature of the employee
or of a person having direct knowledge of the work,
confirming that the record of activities allocable as
direct costs of each sponsored agreement is appropriate;
and,
(2)
The record of F&A costs will include the signature of
responsible person(s) who use suitable means of
verification that the work was performed and is consistent
with the overall distribution of the employee's
compensated activities. These signatures may all be on the
same document.
(f) The reports will be prepared
each academic term, but no less frequently than every six
months.
(g)
Where the institution uses time cards or other forms of
after-the-fact payroll documents as original documentation
for payroll and payroll charges, such documents shall
qualify as records for this purpose, provided they meet the
requirements in subsections J.10.c.(3)(a) through (f) of
this Appendix.
d. Salary rates for faculty members.
(1) Salary rates for academic year.
Charges for work performed on sponsored agreements by faculty
members during the academic year will be based on the
individual faculty member's regular compensation for the
continuous period which, under the policy of the institution
concerned, constitutes the basis of his salary. Charges for
work performed on sponsored agreements during all or any
portion of such period are allowable at the base salary rate.
In no event will charges to sponsored agreements, irrespective
of the basis of computation, exceed the proportionate share of
the base salary for that period. This principle applies to all
members of the faculty at an institution. Since
intra-university consulting is assumed to be undertaken as a
university obligation requiring no compensation in addition to
full-time base salary, the principle also applies to faculty
members who function as consultants or otherwise contribute to
a sponsored agreement conducted by another faculty member of
the same institution. However, in unusual cases where
consultation is across departmental lines or involves a
separate or remote operation, and the work performed by the
consultant is in addition to his regular departmental load,
any charges for such work representing extra compensation
above the base salary are allowable provided that such
consulting arrangements are specifically provided for in the
agreement or approved in writing by the sponsoring agency.
(2) Periods
outside the academic year.
(a) Except as otherwise specified
for teaching activity in subsection J.10.d.(2)(b) of this
Appendix, charges for work performed by faculty members on
sponsored agreements during the summer months or other
period not included in the base salary period will be
determined for each faculty member at a rate not in excess
of the base salary divided by the period to which the base
salary relates, and will be limited to charges made in
accordance with other parts of this section. The base salary period used in
computing charges for work performed during the summer
months will be the number of months covered by the faculty
member's official academic year appointment.
(b) Charges for teaching activities
performed by faculty members on sponsored agreements during
the summer months or other periods not included in the base
salary period will be based on the normal policy of the
institution governing compensation to faculty members for
teaching assignments during such periods.
(3) Part-time faculty. Charges for
work performed on sponsored agreements by faculty members
having only part-time appointments will be determined at a
rate not in excess of that regularly paid for the part-time
assignments. For example, an institution pays $5000 to a
faculty member for half-time teaching during the academic
year. He devoted one-half of his remaining time to a sponsored
agreement. Thus, his additional compensation, chargeable by
the institution to the agreement, would be one-half of $5000,
or $2500.
e. Non institutional professional
activities. Unless an arrangement is specifically authorized by
a Federal sponsoring agency, an institution must follow its
institution-wide policies and practices concerning the
permissible extent of professional services that can be provided
outside the institution for noninstitutional compensation. Where
such institution-wide policies do not exist or do not adequately
define the permissible extent of consulting or other
noninstitutional activities undertaken for extra outside pay,
the Federal Government may require that the effort of
professional staff working on sponsored agreements be allocated
between institutional activities, and non-institutional
professional activities. If the sponsoring agency considers the
extent of non-institutional professional effort excessive,
appropriate arrangements governing compensation will be
negotiated on a case-by-case basis.
f. Fringe benefits.
(1) Fringe benefits in the form of
regular compensation paid to employees during periods of
authorized absences from the job, such as for annual leave,
sick leave, military leave, and the like, are allowable,
provided such costs are distributed to all institutional
activities in proportion to the relative amount of time or
effort actually devoted by the employees. See subsection
J.11.f.(4) of this Appendix for treatment of sabbatical
leave.
(2) Fringe
benefits in the form of employer contributions or expenses for
social security, employee insurance, workmen's compensation
insurance, tuition or remission of tuition for individual
employees are allowable, provided such benefits are granted in
accordance with established educational institutional
policies, and are distributed to all
institutional activities on an equitable basis. Tuition
benefits for family members other than the employee are
unallowable for fiscal years beginning after September 30,
1998. See Section J.45.b, Scholarships and student aid costs,
of this Appendix for treatment of tuition remission provided
to students.
(3) Rules for pension plan costs are as
follows:
(a) Costs of the institution's
pension plan which are incurred in accordance with the
established policies of the institution are allowable,
provided such policies meet the test of reasonableness, the
methods of cost allocation are equitable for all activities,
the amount of pension cost assigned to each fiscal year is
determined in accordance with
subsection
(b), and the cost assigned to a
given fiscal year is paid or funded for all plan
participants within six months after the end of that year.
However, increases to normal and past service pension costs
caused by a delay in funding the actuarial liability beyond
30 days after each quarter of the year to which such costs
are assignable are unallowable.
(b) The amount of pension cost assigned
to each fiscal year shall be determined in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles. Institutions may
elect to follow the "Cost Accounting Standard for
Composition and Measurement of Pension Cost" (48 Part
9904-412).
c) Premiums paid for pension plan
termination insurance pursuant to the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-406) are
allowable. Late payment charges on such premiums are
unallowable. Excise taxes on accumulated funding
deficiencies and prohibited transactions of pension plan
fiduciaries imposed under ERISA are also unallowable.
(4) Rules for sabbatical leave are as
follows:
(a) Costs of leave of absence by
employees for performance of graduate work or sabbatical
study, travel, or research are allowable provided the
institution has a uniform policy on sabbatical leave for
persons engaged in instruction and persons engaged in
research. Such costs will be allocated on an equitable basis
among all related activities of the institution.
(b) Where sabbatical leave is
included in fringe benefits for which a cost is determined
for assessment as a direct charge, the aggregate amount of
such assessments applicable to all work of the institution
during the base period must be reasonable in relation to the
institution's actual experience under its sabbatical leave
policy.
(5) Fringe benefits may be assigned to
cost objectives by identifying specific benefits to specific
individual employees or by allocating on the basis of
institution-wide salaries and wages of the employees receiving
the benefits. When the allocation method is used, separate
allocations must be made to selective groupings of employees,
unless the institution demonstrates that costs in relationship
to salaries and wages do not differ significantly for
different groups of employees. Fringe benefits shall be
treated in the same manner as the salaries and wages of the
employees receiving the benefits. The benefits related to
salaries and wages treated as direct costs shall also be
treated as direct costs; the benefits related to salaries and
wages treated as F&A costs shall be treated as F&A
costs.
g. Institution-furnished automobiles.
That portion of the cost of institution-furnished automobiles
that relates to personal use by employees (including
transportation to and from work) is unallowable regardless of
whether the cost is reported as taxable income to the
employees.
h.
Severance pay.
(1) Severance pay is compensation in
addition to regular salary and wages which is paid by an
institution to employees whose services are being terminated.
Costs of severance pay are allowable only to the extent that
such payments are required by law, by employer-employee
agreement, by established policy that constitutes in effect an
implied agreement on the institution's part, or by
circumstances of the particular employment.
(2) Severance
payments that are due to normal recurring turnover and which
otherwise meet the conditions of subsection J.10.h.(1) of this
Appendix may be allowed provided the actual costs of such
severance payments are regarded as expenses applicable to the
current fiscal year and are equitably distributed among the
institution's activities during that period.
(3) Severance
payments that are due to abnormal or mass terminations are of
such conjectural nature that allowability must be determined
on a case-by-case basis. However, the Federal Government
recognizes its obligation to participate, to the extent of its
fair share, in any specific payment.
(4) Costs
incurred in excess of the institution's normal severance pay
policy applicable to all persons employed by the institution
upon termination of employment are
unallowable.
11. Contingency provisions. Contributions
to a contingency reserve or any similar provision made for events
the occurrence of which cannot be foretold with certainty as to
time, intensity, or with an assurance of their happening, are
unallowable, except as noted in the cost principles in this
Appendix regarding self-insurance, pensions, severance and
post-retirement health costs.
12. Deans of faculty and graduate schools.
The salaries and expenses of deans of faculty and graduate
schools, or their equivalents, and their staffs, are
allowable.
13. Defense and prosecution of criminal
and civil proceedings, clains, appeals and patent infringement.
a . Definitions. "Conviction," as used
herein, means a judgment or conviction of a criminal offense by
any court of competent jurisdiction, whether entered upon
verdict or a plea, including a conviction due to a plea of nolo
contendere.
"Costs," include, but are not limited to,
administrative and clerical expenses; the cost of legal
services, whether performed by in-house or private counsel; the
costs of the services of accountants, consultants, or others
retained by the institution to assist it; costs of employees,
officers and trustees, and any similar costs incurred before,
during, and after commencement of a judicial or administrative
proceeding that bears a direct relationship to the
proceedings.
"Fraud," as used herein, means--
(1) Acts of fraud or corruption or
attempts to defraud the Federal Government or to corrupt its
agents;
(2)
Acts that constitute a cause for debarment or suspension (as
specified in agency regulations), and
(4) Acts which
violate the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C., sections 3729-3731,
or the Anti-kickback Act, 41 U.S.C., sections 51 and 54.
"Penalty," does not include restitution, reimbursement, or
compensatory damages. "Proceeding," includes an investigation.
c. (1) Except as otherwise described
herein, costs incurred in connection with any criminal, civil or
administrative proceeding (including filing of a false
certification) commenced by the Federal Government, or a State,
local or foreign government, are not allowable if the
proceeding
(a) Relates to a violation of, or
failure to comply with, a Federal, State, local or foreign
statute or regulation, by the institution (including its
agents and employees); and
(b) Results in any of the following
dispositions:
(i) In a criminal proceeding, a
conviction.
(ii) In a civil or administrative
proceeding involving an allegation of fraud or similar
misconduct, a determination of institutional liability.
(iii) In the
case of any civil or administrative proceeding, the
imposition of a monetary penalty.
(iv) A final
decision by an appropriate Federal official to debar or
suspend the institution, to rescind or void an award, or to
terminate an award for default by reason of a violation or
failure to comply with a law or regulation.
(v) A
disposition by consent or compromise, if the action could
have resulted in any of the dispositions described in
subsections J.13.b.(1)(b)(i) through (iv) of this
Appendix.
(2) If more than one proceeding involves
the same alleged misconduct, the costs of all such proceedings
shall be unallowable if any one of them results in one of the
dispositions shown in subsection
c. If a proceeding referred to in
subsection J.13.b. of this Appendix is commenced by the
Federal Government and is resolved by consent or compromise
pursuant to an agreement entered into by the institution and
the Federal Government, then the costs incurred by the
institution in connection with such proceedings that are
otherwise not allowable under subsection b. may be allowed to
the extent specifically provided in such agreement.
d. If a proceeding referred to in
subsection J.13.b. of this Appendix is commenced by a State,
local or foreign government, the authorized Federal official
may allow the costs incurred by the institution for such
proceedings, if such authorized official determines that the
costs were incurred as a result of--
(1) A specific term or condition of
a federally-sponsored agreement; or
(2) Specific
written direction of an authorized official of the
sponsoring agency.
d. Costs incurred in connection with
proceedings described in subsection J.13.b of this Appendix,
but which are not made unallowable by that subsection, may be
allowed by the Federal Government, but only to the extent
that:
(1) The costs are reasonable in
relation to the activities required to deal with the
proceeding and the underlying cause of action;
(2) Payment of the costs incurred,
as allowable and allocable costs, is not prohibited by any
other provision(s) of the sponsored agreement;
(3) The costs are not otherwise
recovered from the Federal Government or a third party,
either directly as a result of the proceeding or otherwise;
and,
(4)
The percentage of costs allowed does not exceed the
percentage determined by an authorized Federal official to
be appropriate considering the complexity of procurement
litigation, generally accepted principles governing the
award of legal fees in civil actions involving the United
States as a party, and such other factors as may be appropriate. Such percentage shall not
exceed 80 percent. However, if an agreement reached under
subsection c has explicitly considered this 80 percent
limitation and permitted a higher percentage, then the full
amount of costs resulting from that agreement shall be
allowable.
f. Costs incurred by the institution
in connection with the defense of suits brought by its
employees or ex-employees under section 2 of the Major Fraud
Act of 1988 (Pub. L. 100-700), including the cost of all
relief necessary to make such employee whole, where the
institution was found liable or settled, are unallowable.
g. Costs of
legal, accounting, and consultant services, and related costs,
incurred in connection with defense against Federal Government
claims or appeals, or the prosecution of claims or appeals
against the Federal Government, are unallowable.
h. Costs of
legal, accounting, and consultant services, and related costs,
incurred in connection with patent infringement litigation,
are unallowable unless otherwise provided for in the sponsored
agreements.
i. Costs, which may be unallowable under
this section, including directly associated costs, shall be
segregated and accounted for by the institution separately.
During the pendency of any proceeding covered by subsections
J.13.b and f of this Appendix, the Federal Government shall
generally withhold payment of such costs. However, if in the
best interests of the Federal Government, the Federal
Government may provide for conditional payment upon provision
of adequate security, or other adequate assurance, and
agreement by the institution to repay all unallowable costs,
plus interest, if the costs are subsequently determined to be
unallowable.
4. Depreciation and use allowances.
a. Institutions may be compensated for
the use of their buildings, capital improvements, and
equipment, provided that they are used, needed in the
institutions' activities, and properly allocable to sponsored
agreements. Such compensation shall be made by computing
either depreciation or use allowance. Use allowances are the
means of providing such compensation when depreciation or
other equivalent costs are not computed. The allocation for
depreciation or use allowance shall be made in accordance with
Section F.2 of this Appendix. Depreciation and use allowances
are computed applying the following rules:
b. The
computation of depreciation or use allowances shall be based
on the acquisition cost of the assets involved. The
acquisition cost of an asset donated to the institution by a
third party shall be its fair market value at the time of the
donation.
c.
For this purpose, the acquisition cost will exclude:
(1) The cost of land;
(2) Any
portion of the cost of buildings and equipment borne by or
donated by the Federal Government, irrespective of where
title was originally vested or where it is presently
located; and
(3) Any portion of the cost of
buildings and equipment contributed by or for the
institution where law or agreement prohibits
recovery.
d. In the use of the depreciation
method, the following shall be observed:
(1) The period of useful service
(useful life) established in each case for usable capital
assets must take into consideration such factors as type of
construction, nature of the equipment, technological
developments in the particular area, and the renewal and
replacement policies followed for the individual items or
classes of assets involved.
(3) The depreciation method used to
charge the cost of an asset (or group of assets)
(4) to
accounting periods shall reflect the pattern of consumption
of the asset during its useful life. In the absence of clear
evidence indicating that the expected consumption of the
asset will be significantly greater in the early portions
than in the later portions of its useful life, the
straight-line method shall be presumed to be the appropriate
method. Depreciation methods once used shall not be changed
unless approved in advance by the cognizant Federal agency.
The depreciation methods used to calculate the depreciation
amounts for F&A rate purposes shall be the same methods
used by the institution for its financial statements. This
requirement does not apply to those institutions (e.g.,
public institutions of higher education) which are not
required to record depreciation by applicable generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
(3) Where the depreciation method is
introduced to replace the use allowance method, depreciation
shall be computed as if the asset had been depreciated over
its entire life (i.e., from the date the asset was acquired
and ready for use to the date of disposal or withdrawal from
service). The aggregate amount of use allowances and
depreciation attributable to an asset (including imputed
depreciation applicable to periods prior to the conversion
to the use allowance method as well as depreciation after
the conversion) may be less than, and in no case, greater
than the total acquisition cost of the asset.
(4) The entire
building, including the shell and all components, may be
treated as a single asset and depreciated over a single
useful life. A building may also be divided into multiple
components. Each component item may then be depreciated over
its estimated useful life. The building components shall be
grouped into three general components of a building:
building shell (including construction and design costs),
building services systems (e.g., elevators, HVAC, plumbing
system and heating and air-conditioning system) and fixed
equipment (e.g., sterilizers, casework, fume hoods, cold
rooms and glassware/washers). In exceptional cases, a
Federal cognizant agency may authorize an institution to use
more than these three groupings. When an institution elects
to depreciate its buildings by its components, the same
depreciation methods must be used for F&A purposes and
financial statement purposes, as described in subsection
d.2.
(5) Where the depreciation method is
used for a particular class of assets, no depreciation may
be allowed on any such assets that have outlived their
depreciable lives. (See also subsection J.14.e.(3) of this
Appendix)
e. Under the use
allowance method, the following shall be observed:
(1) The use
allowance for buildings and improvements (including
improvements such as paved parking areas, fences, and
sidewalks) shall be computed at an annual rate not exceeding
two percent of acquisition cost. The use allowance for
equipment shall be computed at an annual rate not exceeding
six and two-thirds percent of acquisition cost. Use
allowance recovery is limited to the acquisition cost of the
assets. For donated assets, use allowance recovery is
limited to the fair market value of the assets at the time
of donation.
(2) (2) In
contrast to the depreciation method, the entire building
must be treated as a single asset without separating its
"shell" from other building components under the use
allowance method. The entire building must be treated as a
single asset, and the two-percent use allowance limitation
must be applied to all parts of the building. The
two-percent limitation, however, need not be applied to
equipment or other assets that are merely attached or
fastened to the building but not permanently fixed and are
usedas furnishings, decorations or for specialized purposes
(e.g., dentist chairs and dental treatment units, counters,
laboratory benches bolted to the floor,dishwashers, modular
furniture, and carpeting). Such equipment and assets will be
considered as not being permanently fixed to the building if
they can be removed without the need for costly or extensive
alterations or repairs to the building to make the space
usable for other purposes. Equipment and assets that meet
these criteria will be subject to the 6\2/3\ percent
equipment use allowance.
(3) A reasonable use allowance may
be negotiated for any assets that are considered to be fully depreciated,
after taking into consideration the amount of depreciation
previously charged to the Federal Government, the estimated
useful life remaining at the time of negotiation, the effect
of any increased maintenance charges, decreased efficiency
due to age, and any other factors pertinent to the
utilization of the asset for the purpose contemplated.
(4) Notwithstanding subsection
J.14.e.(3) of this Appendix, once an institution converts
from one cost recovery methodology to another, acquisition
costs not recovered may not be used in the calculation of
the use allowance in subsection J.14.e.(3) of this
Appendix.
f. Except as otherwise provided in
subsections J.14.b. through e. of this Appendix, a combination
of the depreciation and use allowance methods may not be used,
in like circumstances, for a single class of assets (e.g.,
buildings, office equipment, and computer equipment).
g. Charges for use
allowances or depreciation must be supported by adequate
property records, and physical inventories must be taken at
least once every two years to ensure that the assets exist and
are usable, used, and needed. Statistical sampling techniques
may be used in taking these inventories. In addition, when the
depreciation method is used, adequate
depreciation records showing the amount of depreciation taken
each period must also be maintained.
h. This section applies to the largest
college and university recipients of Federal research and
development funds as displayed in Exhibit A, List of Colleges
and Universities Subject to Section J.14.h of this Appendix.
(1) Institutions shall expend
currently, or reserve for expenditure within the next five
years, the portion of F&A cost payments made for
depreciation or use allowances under sponsored research
agreements, consistent with Section F.2 of this Appendix, to
acquire or improve research facilities. This provision applies
only to Federal agreements, which reimburse F&A costs at a
full negotiated rate. These funds may only be used for
liquidation of the principal of debts incurred to acquire
assets that are used directly for organized research
activities, or payments to acquire, repair, renovate, or
improve buildings or equipment directly used for organized
research. For buildings or equipment not exclusively used for
organized research activity, only appropriately proportionate
amounts will be considered to have been expended for research
facilities.
(2) An assurance that an amount equal to
the Federal reimbursements has been appropriately expended or
reserved to acquire or improve research facilities shall be
submitted as part of each F&A cost proposal submitted to
the cognizant Federal agency which is based on costs incurred
on or after October 1, 1991. This assurance will cover the
cumulative amounts of funds received and expended during the
period beginning after the period covered by the previous
assurance and ending with the fiscal year on which the
proposal is based. The assurance shall also cover any amounts
reserved from a prior period in which the funds received
exceeded the amounts expended.
15. Donations and contributions.
a. Contributions or Donations rendered.
Contributions or donations, including cash, property, and
services, made by the institution, regardless of the recipient,
are unallowable.
b. Donated services received. Donated or
volunteer services may be furnished to an institution by
professional and technical personnel, consultants, and other
skilled and unskilled labor. The value of these services is not
reimbursable either as a direct or F&A cost. However, the
value of donated services may be used to meet cost sharing or
matching requirements in accordance with 2 CFR Part 215.
c. Donated
property. The value of donated property is not reimbursable
either as a direct or F&A cost, except that depreciation or
use allowances on donated assets are permitted in accordance
with Section J.14. The value of donated property may be used to
meet cost sharing or matching requirements, in accordance with 2
CFR Part 215.
16. Employee morale, health, and welfare
costs and costs.
a. The costs of employee information
publications, health or first-aid clinics and/or infirmaries,
recreational activities, employee counseling services, and any
other expenses incurred in accordance with the institution's
established practice or custom for the improvement of working
conditions, employer-employee relations, employee morale, and
employee performance are allowable.
b. Such costs will be equitably
apportioned to all activities of the institution. Income
generated from any of these activities will be credited to the
cost thereof unless such income has been irrevocably set over to
employee welfare organizations.
c. Losses resulting from operating food
services are allowable only if the institution's objective is to
operate such services on a break-even basis. Losses sustained
because of operating objectives other than the above are
allowable only where the institution can demonstrate unusual
circumstances, and with the approval of the cognizant Federal
agency.
17. Entertainment costs. Costs of
entertainment, including amusement, diversion, and social
activities and any costs directly associated with such costs (such
as tickets to shows or sports events, meals, lodging, rentals,
transportation, and gratuities) are unallowable.
18. Equipment and
other capital expenditures.
a. For purposes of this subsection, the
following definitions apply:
(1) "Capital Expenditures" means
expenditures for the acquisition cost of capital assets
(equipment, buildings, and land), or expenditures to make
improvements to capital assets that materially increase their
value or useful life. Acquisition cost means the cost of the
asset including the cost to put it in place. Acquisition cost
for equipment, for example, means the net invoice price of the
equipment, including the cost of any modifications,
attachments, accessories, or auxiliary apparatus necessary to
make it usable for the purpose for which it is acquired.
Ancillary charges, such as taxes, duty, protective in transit
insurance, freight, and installation may be included in, or
excluded from the acquisition cost in accordance with the
institution's regular accounting practices.
(2) "Equipment" means an article of
nonexpendable, tangible personal property having a useful life
of more than one year and an acquisition cost which equals or
exceeds the lesser of the capitalization level established by
the institution for financial statement purposes, or
$5000.
(3) "Special purpose equipment" means
equipment which is used only for research, medical,
scientific, or other technical activities. Examples of special
purpose equipment include microscopes, x-ray machines,
surgical instruments, and spectrometers.
(4) "General purpose equipment" means
equipment, which is not limited to research, medical,
scientific or other technical activities. Examples include
office equipment and furnishings, modular offices, telephone
networks, information technology equipment and systems, air
conditioning equipment, reproduction and printing equipment,
and motor vehicles.
b. The following rules of allowability
shall apply to equipment and other capital expenditures:
(1) Capital expenditures for general
purpose equipment, buildings, and land are unallowable as
direct charges, except where approved in advance by the
awarding agency.
(2) Capital expenditures for special
purpose equipment are allowable as direct costs, provided that
items with a unit cost of $5000 or more have the prior
approval of the awarding agency.
(3) Capital expenditures for improvements
to land, buildings, or equipment which materially increase
their value or useful life are unallowable as a direct cost
except with the prior approval of the awarding agency.
(4) When
approved as a direct charge pursuant to subsections J.18.b(1)
through (3) of this Appendix, capital expenditures will be
charged in the period in which the expenditure is incurred, or
as otherwise determined appropriate by and negotiated with the
awarding agency.
(5) Equipment and other capital
expenditures are unallowable as indirect costs. However, see
section J.14 of this Appendix, Depreciation and use
allowances, for rules on the allowability of use allowances or
depreciation on buildings, capital improvements, and
equipment. Also, see section J.43 of this Appendix, Rental
costs of buildings and equipment, for rules on the
allowability of rental costs for land, buildings, and
equipment.
(6) The unamortized portion of any
equipment written off as a result of a change in
capitalization levels may be recovered by continuing to claim
the otherwise allowable use allowances or depreciation on the
equipment, or by amortizing the amount to be written off over
a period of years negotiated with the cognizant
agency.
19. Fines and penalties. Costs resulting
from violations of, or failure of the institution to comply with,
Federal, State, and local or foreign laws and regulations are
unallowable, except when incurred as a result of compliance with
specific provisions of the sponsored agreement, or instructions in
writing from the authorized official of the sponsoring agency
authorizing in advance such payments.
20. Fund raising and investment costs.
a. Costs of organized fund raising,
including financial campaigns, endowment drives, solicitation of
gifts and bequests, and similar expenses incurred solely to
raise capital or obtain contributions, are unallowable.
b. Costs of
investment counsel and staff and similar expenses incurred
solely to enhance income from investments are unallowable.
c. Costs related
to the physical custody and control of monies and securities are
allowable.
21. Gain and losses on depreciable
assets.
a. (1) Gains and losses on the sale,
retirement, or other disposition of depreciable property shall
be included in the year in which they occur as credits or
charges to the asset cost grouping(s) in which the property was
included. The amount of the gain or loss to be included as a
credit or charge to the appropriate asset cost grouping(s) shall
be the difference between the amount realized on the property
and the undepreciated basis of the property.
(2) Gains and losses on the
disposition of depreciable property shall not be recognized as
a separate credit or charge under the following
conditions:
(a) The gain or loss is processed
through a depreciation account and is reflected in the
depreciation allowable under Section J.14 of this
Appendix.
(b) The property is given in exchange
as part of the purchase price of a similar item and the gain
or loss is taken into account in determining the
depreciation cost basis of the new item.
(c) A loss
results from the failure to maintain permissible insurance,
except as otherwise provided in Section J.25 of this
Appendix.
(d) Compensation for the use of the
property was provided through use allowances in lieu of
depreciation.
b. Gains or losses of any nature arising
from the sale or exchange of property other than the property
covered in subsection a shall be excluded in computing sponsored
agreement costs.
c. When assets acquired with Federal funds,
in part or wholly, are disposed of, the distribution of the
proceeds shall be made in accordance with 2 CFR Part 215,
Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements
with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other
Non-Profit Organizations (OMB Circular A-110).
22. Goods or services for personal use.
Costs of goods or services for personal use of the institution's
employees are unallowable regardless of whether the cost is
reported as taxable income to the employees.
23. Housing and personal living
expenses.
a. Costs of housing (e.g., depreciation,
maintenance, utilities, furnishings, rent, etc.), housing
allowances and personal living expenses for/of the institution's
officers are unallowable regardless of whether the cost is
reported as taxable income to the employees.
b. The term
"officers" includes current and past officers.
24. Idle facilities and idle capacity.
a. As used in this section the following
terms have the meanings set forth below:
(1) "Facilities" means land and
buildings or any portion thereof, equipment individually or
collectively, or any other tangible capital asset, wherever
located, and whether owned or leased by the institution.
(2) "Idle
facilities" means completely unused facilities that are excess
to the institution's current needs.
(3) "Idle
capacity" means the unused capacity of partially used
facilities. It is the difference between:
(a) That which a facility could
achieve under 100 percent operating time on a one-shift
basis less operating interruptions resulting from time lost
for repairs, setups, unsatisfactory materials, and other
normal delays; and
(b) The extent to which the facility
was actually used to meet demands during the accounting
period. A multi-shift basis should be used if it can be
shown that this amount of usage would normally be expected
for the type of facility involved.
(4) "Cost of idle facilities or idle
capacity" means costs such as maintenance, repair, housing,
rent, and other related costs, e.g., insurance, interest,
property taxes and depreciation or use
allowances.
b. The costs of idle facilities are
unallowable except to the extent that:
(1) They are necessary to meet
fluctuations in workload; or
(2) Although not necessary to meet
fluctuations in workload, they were necessary when acquired
and are now idle because of changes in program requirements,
efforts to achieve more economical operations, reorganization,
termination, or other causes which could not have been
reasonably foreseen. Under the exception stated in this
subsection, costs of idle facilities are allowable for a
reasonable period of time, ordinarily not to exceed one year,
depending on the initiative taken to use, lease, or dispose of
such facilities.
c. The costs of idle capacity are normal
costs of doing business and are a factor in the normal
fluctuations of usage or indirect cost rates from period to
period. Such costs are allowable, provided that the capacity is
reasonably anticipated to be necessary or was originally
reasonable and is not subject to reduction or elimination by use
on other sponsored agreements, subletting, renting, or sale, in
accordance with sound business, economic, or security practices.
Widespread idle capacity throughout an entire facility or among
a group of assets having substantially the same function may be
considered idle facilities.
25. Insurance and indemnification.
a. Costs of insurance required or
approved, and maintained, pursuant to the sponsored agreement,
are allowable.
b. Costs of other insurance maintained by
the institution in connection with the general conduct of its
activities, are allowable subject to the following limitations:
(1) Types and extent and cost of
coverage must be in accordance with sound institutional
practice;
(2) Costs of insurance or of any
contributions to any reserve covering the risk of loss of or
damage to federally-owned property are unallowable, except to
the extent that the Federal Government has specifically
required or approved such costs; and
(3) Costs of insurance on the lives of
officers or trustees are unallowable except where such
insurance is part of an employee plan which is not unduly
restricted.
c. Contributions to a reserve for a
self-insurance program are allowable, to the extent that the
types of coverage, extent of coverage, and the rates and
premiums would have been allowed had insurance been purchased to
cover the risks.
d. Actual losses which could have been
covered by permissible nsurance (whether through purchased
insurance or self-insurance) are unallowable, unless expressly
provided for in the sponsored agreement, except that costs
incurred because of losses not covered under existing deductible
clauses for insurance coverage provided in keeping with sound
management practice as well as minor losses not covered by
insurance, such as spoilage, breakage and disappearance of small
hand tools, which occur in the ordinary course of operations,
are allowable.
e. Indemnification includes securing the
institution against liabilities to third persons and other
losses not compensated by insurance or otherwise. The Federal
Government is obligated to indemnify the institution only to the
extent expressly provided for in the sponsored agreement, except
as provided in subsection J.25.d of this Appendix.
f. Insurance
against defects. Costs of insurance with respect to any costs
incurred to correct defects in the institution's materials or
workmanship are unallowable.
g. Medical liability (malpractice)
insurance is an allowable cost of research programs only to the
extent that the research involves human subjects. Medical
liability insurance costs shall be treated as a direct cost and
shall be assigned to individual projects based on the manner in
which the insurer allocates the risk to the population covered
by the insurance.
26. Interest.
a. Costs incurred for interest on
borrowed capital, temporary use of endowment funds, or the use
of the institution's own funds, however represented, are
unallowable. However, interest on debt incurred after July 1,
1982 to acquire buildings, major reconstruction and remodeling,
or the acquisition or\fabrication of capital equipment costing
$10,000 or more, is allowable.
b. Interest on debt incurred after May 8,
1996 to acquire or replace capital assets (including
construction, renovations, alterations, equipment, land, and
capital assets acquired through capital leases) acquired after
that date and used in support of sponsored agreements is
allowable, subject to the following conditions:
(1) For facilities costing over
$500,000, the institution shall prepare, prior to acquisition
or replacement of the facility, a lease-purchase analysis in
accordance with the provisions of Sec. Sec. 215.30 through
215.37 of 2 CFR part 215 (OMB Circular A-110), which shows
that a financed purchase, including a capital lease is less
costly to the institution than other operating lease
alternatives, on a net present value basis. Discount rates
used shall be equal to the institution's anticipated interest
rates and shall be no higher than the fair market rate
available to the institution from an unrelated ("arm's
length") third-party. The lease-purchase analysis shall
include a comparison of the net present value of the projected
total cost comparisons of both alternatives over the period
the asset is expected to be used by the institution. The cost
comparisons associated with purchasing the facility shall
include the estimated purchase price, anticipated operating
and maintenance costs (including property taxes, if
applicable) not included in the debt financing, less any
estimated asset salvage value at the end of the defined
period. The cost comparison for a capital lease shall include
the estimated total lease payments, any estimated bargain
purchase option, operating and maintenance costs, and taxes
not included in the capital leasing arrangement, less any
estimated credits due under the lease at the end of the
defined period. Projected operating lease costs shall be based
on the anticipated cost of leasing comparable facilities at
fair market rates under rental agreements that would be
renewed or reestablished over the period defined above, and
any expected maintenance costs and allowable property taxes to
be borne by the institution directly or as part of the lease
arrangement.
(2) The actual interest cost claimed is
predicated upon interest rates that are no higher than the
fair market rate available to the institution from an
unrelated (arm's length) third party.
(3) Investment earnings, including
interest income on bond or loan principal, pending payment of
the construction or acquisition costs, are used to offset
allowable interest cost. Arbitrage earnings reportable to the
Internal Revenue Service are not required to be offset against
allowable interest costs.
(4) Reimbursements are limited to the
least costly alternative based on the total cost analysis
required under subsection J.26.b.(1) of this Appendix. For
example, if an operating lease is determined to be less costly
than purchasing through debt financing, then reimbursement is
limited to the amount determined if leasing had been used. In
all cases where a lease-purchase analysis is required to be
performed, Federal reimbursement shall be based upon the least
expensive alternative.
(5) For debt arrangements over $1
million, unless the institution makes an initial equity
contribution to the asset purchase of 25 percent or more, the
institution shall reduce claims for interest expense by an
amount equal to imputed interest earnings on excess cash flow,
which is to be calculated as follows. Annually, non-Federal
entities shall prepare a cumulative (from the inception of the
project) report of monthly cash flows that includes inflows
and outflows, regardless of the funding source. Inflows
consist of depreciation expense, amortization of capitalized
construction interest, and annual interest cost. For cash flow
calculations, the annual inflow figures shall be divided by
the number of months in the year (i.e., usually 12) that the
building is in service for monthly amounts. Outflows consist
of initial equity contributions, debt principal payments (less
the pro rata share attributable to the unallowable costs of
land) and interest payments. Where cumulative inflows exceed
cumulative outflows, interest shall be calculated on the
excess inflows for that period and be treated as a reduction
to allowable interest cost. The rate of interest to be used to
compute earnings on excess cash flows shall be the three-month
Treasury bill closing rate as of the last business day of that
month.
(6) Substantial relocation of
federally-sponsored activities from a facility financed by
indebtedness, the cost of which was funded in whole or part
through Federal reimbursements, to another facility prior to
the expiration of a period of 20 years requires notice to the
cognizant agency. The extent of the relocation, the amount of
the Federal participation in the financing, and the
depreciation and interest charged to date may require
negotiation and/or downward adjustments of replacement space
charged to Federal programs in the future.
(7) The allowable costs to acquire
facilities and equipment are limited to a fair market value
available to the institution from an unrelated (arm's length)
third party.
c. Institutions are also subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Interest
on debt incurred to finance or refinance assets re-acquired
after the applicable effective dates stipulated above is
unallowable.
(2) Interest attributable to fully
depreciated assets is unallowable.
d. The
following definitions are to be used for purposes of this
section:
(1) "Re-acquired" assets means assets
held by the institution prior to the applicable effective
dates stipulated above that have again come to be held by the
institution, whether through repurchase or refinancing. It
does not include assets acquired to replace older assets.
(2) "Initial
equity contribution" means the amount or value of
contributions made by non-Federal entities for the acquisition
of the asset prior to occupancy of facilities.
(3) "Asset
costs" means the capitalizable costs of an asset, including
construction costs, acquisition costs, and other such costs
capitalized in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP).
27. Labor relations costs. Costs incurred
in maintaining satisfactory relations between the institution and
its employees, including costs of labor management committees,
employees' publications, and other related activities, are
allowable.
28.
Lobbying. Reference is made to the common rule published at 7 CFR
part 3018, 10 CFR parts 600 and 601, 12 CFR part 411, 13 CFR part
146, 14 CFR part 1271, 15 CFR part 28, 18
CFR part 1315, 22 CFR parts 138, 227, 311, 519 and 712, 24 CFR
part 87, 28 CFR part 69, 29 CFR part 93, 31 CFR part 21, 32 CFR part 282, 34 CFR part 82, 38 CFR part
85, 40 CFR part 34, 41 CFR part 105-69, 43 CFR part 18, 44 CFR
part 18, 45 CFR parts 93, 604, 1158, 1168
and 1230, and 49 CFR part 20, and OMB's governmentwide guidance,
amendments to OMB's governmentwide guidance, and OMB's
clarification notices published at 54 FR
52306 (12/20/89), 61 FR 1412 (1/19/96), 55 FR 24540 (6/15/90) and
57 FR 1772 (1/15/92), respectively. In addition, the following
restrictions shall apply:
a. Notwithstanding other provisions of
this Appendix, costs associated with the following activities
are unallowable:
(1) Attempts
to influence the outcomes of any Federal, State, or local
election, referendum, initiative, or similar procedure,
through in kind or cash contributions, endorsements,
publicity, or similar activity;
(2) Establishing, administering,
contributing to, or paying the expenses of a political party,
campaign, political action committee, or other organization
established for the purpose of influencing the outcomes of
elections;
(3) Any attempt to influence The
introduction of Federal or State legislation; The enactment or
modification of any pending Federal or State legislation
through communication with any member or employee of the
Congress or State legislature, including efforts to influence
State or local officials to engage in similar lobbying
activity; or any government official or employee in connection
with a decision to sign or veto
enrolled legislation;
(4) Any attempt to influence The
introduction of Federal or State legislation; or The enactment
or modification of any pending Federal or State legislation by
preparing, distributing, or using publicity or propaganda, or
by urging members of the general public, or any segment
thereof, to contribute to or participate in any mass
demonstration, march, rally, fund raising drive, lobbying
campaign or letter writing or telephone campaign; or
(5) Legislative liaison activities,
including attendance at legislative sessions or committee
hearings, gathering information regarding legislation, and
analyzing the effect of legislation, when such activities are
carried on in support of or in knowing preparation for an
effort to engage in unallowable lobbying.
b. The
following activities are excepted from the coverage of
subsection J.28.a of this Appendix:
(1) Technical and factual
presentations on topics directly related to the performance of
a grant, contract, or other agreement (through hearing
testimony, statements, or letters to the Congress or a State
legislature, or subdivision, member, or cognizant staff member
thereof), in response to a documented request (including a
Congressional Record notice requesting testimony or statements
for the record at a regularly scheduled hearing) made by the
recipient member, legislative body or subdivision, or a
cognizant staff member thereof, provided such information is
readily obtainable and can be readily put in deliverable form,
and further provided that costs under this section for travel,
lodging or meals are unallowable unless incurred to offer
testimony at a regularly scheduled Congressional hearing
pursuant to a written request for such presentation made by
the Chairman or Ranking Minority Member of the Committee or
Subcommittee conducting such hearings;
(2) Any lobbying
made unallowable by subsection J.28.a.(3) of this Appendix to
influence State legislation in order to directly reduce the
cost, or to avoid material impairment of the institution's
authority to perform the grant, contract, or other agreement;
or
(3) Any
activity specifically authorized by statute to be undertaken
with funds from the grant, contract, or other
agreement.
c. When an
institution seeks reimbursement for F&A costs, total
lobbying costs shall be separately identified in the F&A
cost rate proposal, and thereafter treated as other unallowable
activity costs in accordance with the procedures of Section
B.1.d of this Appendix.
d. Institutions shall submit as part of
their annual F&A cost rate proposal a certification that the
requirements and standards of this section have been complied
with.
e. Institutions shall maintain adequate
records to demonstrate that the determination of costs as being
allowable or unallowable pursuant to this section complies with
the requirements of this Appendix.
f. Time logs, calendars, or similar
records shall not be required to be created for purposes of
complying with this section during any particular calendar month
when:
(1) the employee engages in lobbying
(as defined in subsections J.28.a and b of this Appendix) 25
percent or less of the employee's compensated hours of
employment during that calendar month; and
(2) within the preceding five-year
period, the institution has not materially misstated allowable
or unallowable costs of any nature, including legislative
lobbying costs. When conditions in subsections J.28.f.(1) and
(2) of this Appendix are met, institutions are not required to
establish records to support the allowability of claimed costs
in addition to records already required or maintained. Also,
when conditions in subsections J.28.f. (1) and (2) of this
Appendix are met, the absence of time logs, calendars, or
similar records will not serve as a basis for disallowing
costs by contesting estimates of lobbying time spent by
employees during a calendar month.
g. Agencies shall establish procedures
for resolving in advance, in consultation with OMB, any
significant questions or disagreements concerning the
interpretation or application of this section. Any such advance
resolutions shall be binding in any subsequent settlements,
audits, or investigations with respect to that grant or contract
for purposes of interpretation of this Appendix, provided,
however, that this shall not be construed to prevent a
contractor or grantee from contesting the lawfulness of such a
determination.
h. Executive lobbying costs. Costs
incurred in attempting to improperly influence either directly
or indirectly, an employee or officer of the Executive Branch of
the Federal Government to give consideration or to act regarding
a sponsored agreement or a regulatory matter are unallowable.
Improper influence means any influence that induces or tends to
induce a Federal employee or officer to give consideration or to
act regarding a federally-sponsored agreement or regulatory
matter on any basis other than the merits of the
matter.
29. Losses on other sponsored agreements
or contracts. Any excess of costs over income under any other
sponsored agreement or contract of any nature is unallowable. This
includes, but is not limited to, the institution's contributed
portion by reason of cost-sharing agreements or any
under-recoveries through negotiation of flat amounts for F&A
costs.
30. Maintenance and repair costs. Costs
incurred for necessary maintenance, repair, or upkeep of buildings
and equipment (including Federal property unless otherwise
provided for) which neither add to the permanent value of the
property nor appreciably prolong its intended life, but keep it in
an efficient operating condition, are allowable. Costs incurred
for improvements which add to the permanent value of the buildings
and equipment or appreciably prolong their intended life shall be
treated as capital expenditures (see section J.18.a(1) of this
Appendix).
31. Material and supplies costs.
a. Costs incurred for materials,
supplies, and fabricated parts necessary to carry out a
sponsored agreement are allowable.
b. Purchased materials and supplies shall
be charged at their actual prices, net of applicable credits.
Withdrawals from general stores or stockrooms should be charged
at their actual net cost under any recognized method of pricing
inventory withdrawals, consistently applied. Incoming
transportation charges are a proper part of materials and
supplies costs.
c. Only materials and supplies actually
used for the performance of a sponsored agreement may be charged
as direct costs.
d. Where federally-donated or furnished
materials are used in performing the sponsored agreement, such
materials will be used without charge.
32. Meetings and Conferences. Costs of
meetings and conferences, the primary purpose of which is the
dissemination of technical information, are allowable. This
includes costs of meals, transportation, rental of facilities,
speakers' fees, and other items incidental to such meetings or
conferences. But see section J.17 of this Appendix, Entertainment
costs.
33.
Memberships, subscriptions and professional activity costs.
a. Costs of the institution's membership
in business, technical, and professional organizations are
allowable.
b.
Costs of the institution's subscriptions to business,
professional, and technical periodicals are allowable.
c. Costs of
membership in any civic or community organization are
unallowable.
d.
Costs of membership in any country club or social or dining club
or organization are unallowable.
34. Patent
costs.
a. The following costs relating to
patent and copyright matters are allowable:
(1) Cost of preparing disclosures,
reports, and other documents required by the sponsored
agreement and of searching the art to the extent necessary to
make such disclosures;
(2) Cost of preparing documents and
any other patent costs in connection with the filing and
prosecution of a United States patent application where title
or royalty-free license is required by the Federal Government
to be conveyed to the Federal Government; and
(3) General counseling services
relating to patent and copyright matters, such as advice on
patent and copyright laws, regulations, clauses, and employee
agreements (but see sections J.37, Professional service costs,
and J.44, Royalties and other costs for use of patents, of
this Appendix).
b. The
following costs related to patent and copyright matter are
unallowable:
(1) Cost of preparing disclosures,
reports, and other documents and of searching the art to the
extent necessary to make disclosures not required by the
award
(2)
Costs in connection with filing and prosecuting any foreign
patent application, or any United States patent application,
where the sponsored agreement award does not require conveying
title or a royalty-free license to the Federal Government,
(but see section J.44, Royalties and other costs for use of
patents, of this Appendix).
35. Plant and homeland security costs.
Necessary and reasonable expenses incurred for routine and
homeland security to protect facilities, personnel, and work
products are allowable. Such costs include, but are not limited
to, wages and uniforms of personnel engaged in security
activities; equipment; barriers; contractual security services;
consultants; etc. Capital expenditures for homeland and plant
security purposes are subject to section J.18, Equipment and other
capital expenditures, of this Appendix.
36. Preagreement
costs. Costs incurred prior to the effective date of the sponsored
agreement, whether or not they would have been allowable there
under if incurred after such date, are unallowable unless approved
by the sponsoring agency.
37. Professional service costs.
a. Costs of professional and consultant
services rendered by persons who are members of a particular
profession or possess a special skill, and who are not officers
or employees of the institution, are allowable, subject to
subparagraphs J.37.b and c of this Appendix when reasonable in
relation to the services rendered and when not contingent upon
recovery of the costs from the Federal Government. In addition,
legal and related services are limited
under section J.13 of this Appendix.
b. In determining the allowability of costs
in a particular case, no single factor or any special
combination of factors is necessarily determinative. However,
the following factors are relevant:
(1) The nature and scope of the
service rendered in relation to the service required.
(2) The
necessity of contracting for the service, considering the
institution's capability in the particular area.
(3) The past
pattern of such costs, particularly in the years prior to
sponsored agreements.
(4) The impact on the institution's
business (i.e., what new problems have arisen).
(5) Whether the
proportion of Federal work to the institution's total business
is such as to influence the institution in favor of incurring
the cost, particularly where the services rendered are not of
a continuing nature and have little relationship to work under
Federal grants and contracts.
(6) Whether the service can be performed
more economically by direct employment rather than
contracting.
(7) The qualifications of the individual
or concern rendering the service and the customary fees
charged, especially on non-sponsored agreements.
(8) Adequacy of
the contractual agreement for the service (e.g., description
of the service, estimate of time required, rate of
compensation, and termination provisions).
c. In addition to the factors in
subparagraph J.37.b of this Appendix, retainer fees to be
allowable must be supported by evidence of bona fide
services available or rendered.
38. Proposal costs. Proposal costs are the
costs of preparing bids or proposals on potential federally and
non-federally-funded sponsored agreements or projects, including
the development of data necessary to support the institution's
bids or proposals. Proposal costs of the current accounting period
of both successful and unsuccessful bids and proposals normally
should be treated as F&A costs and allocated currently to all
activities of the institution, and no proposal costs of past
accounting periods will be allocable to the current period.
However, the institution's established practices may be to treat
proposal costs by some other recognized method. Regardless of the
method used, the results obtained may be accepted only if found to
be reasonable and equitable.
39. Publication and printing costs.
a. Publication costs include the costs
of printing (including the processes of composition,
plate-making, press work, binding, and the end products produced
by such processes), distribution, promotion, mailing, and
general handling. Publication costs also include page charges in
professional publications.
b. If these costs are not identifiable with
a particular cost objective, they should be allocated as
indirect costs to all benefiting activities of the
institution.
c.
Page charges for professional journal publications are allowable
as a necessary part of research costs where:
(1) The research papers report work
supported by the Federal Government: and
(2) The charges
are levied impartially on all research papers published by the
journal, whether or not by federally-sponsored authors.
40. Rearrangement and alteration costs.
Costs incurred for ordinary or normal rearrangement and alteration
of facilities are allowable. Special arrangement and alteration
costs incurred specifically for the project are allowable with the
prior approval of the sponsoring agency.
41. Reconversion costs. Costs incurred in
the restoration or rehabilitation of the institution's facilities
to approximately the same condition existing immediately prior to
commencement of a sponsored agreement, fair wear and tear
excepted, are allowable.
42. Recruiting costs.
a. Subject to subsections J.42.b, c, and
d of this Appendix, and provided that the size of the staff
recruited and maintained is in keeping with workload
requirements, costs of "help wanted" advertising, operating
costs of an employment office necessary to secure and maintain
an adequate staff, costs of operating an aptitude and
educational testing program, travel costs of employees while
engaged in recruiting personnel, travel costs of applicants for
interviews for prospective employment, and relocation costs
incurred incident to recruitment of new employees, are allowable
to the extent that such costs are incurred pursuant to a
well-managed recruitment program. Where the institution uses
employment agencies, costs not in excess of standard commercial
rates for such services are allowable.
b. In publications, costs of help wanted
advertising that includes color, includes advertising material
for other than recruitment purposes, or is excessive in size
(taking into consideration recruitment purposes for which
intended and normal institutional practices in this respect),
are unallowable.
c. Costs of help wanted advertising,
special emoluments, fringe benefits, and salary allowances
incurred to attract professional personnel from other
institutions that do not meet the test of reasonableness or do
not conform with the established practices of the institution, are unallowable.
d. Where relocation costs incurred
incident to recruitment of a new employee have been allowed
either as an allocable direct or F&A cost, and the newly
hired employee resigns for reasons within his control within 12
months after hire, the institution will be required to refund or
credit such relocation costs to the Federal
Government.
43. Rental costs of buildings and
equipment.
a. Subject to
the limitations described in subsections b. through d. of this
section, rental costs are allowable to the extent that the rates
are reasonable in light of such factors as: rental costs of
comparable property, if any; market conditions in the area;
alternatives available; and, the type, life expectancy,
condition, and value of the property leased. Rental arrangements
should be reviewed periodically to determine if circumstances
have changed and other options are available.
b. Rental costs under "sale and lease
back" arrangements are allowable only up to the amount that
would be allowed had the institution continued to own the
property. This amount would include expenses such as
depreciation or use allowance, maintenance, taxes, and
insurance.
c. Rental costs under
"less-than-arms-length" leases are allowable only up to the
amount (as explained in subsection J.43.b of this Appendix) that
would be allowed had title to the property vested in the
institution. For this purpose, a less-than-arms-length lease is
one under which one party to the lease agreement is able to
control or substantially influence the actions of the other.
Such leases include, but are not limited to those between--
(1) Divisions of an institution;
(2) Non-Federal
entities under common control through common officers,
directors, or members; and
(3) An institution and a director,
trustee, officer, or key employee of the institution or his
immediate family, either directly or through corporations,
trusts, or similar arrangements in which they hold a
controlling interest. For example, an institution may
establish a separate corporation for the sole purpose of
owning property and leasing it back to the
institution.
d. Rental costs under leases which are
required to be treated as capital leases under GAAP are
allowable only up to the amount (as explained in subsection
J.43.b of this Appendix) that would be allowed had the
institution purchased the property on the date the lease
agreement was executed. The provisions of Financial Accounting
Standards Board Statement 13, Accounting for Leases, shall be
used to determine whether a lease is a capital lease. Interest
costs related to capital leases are allowable to the extent they
meet the criteria in section J.26 of this Appendix. Unallowable
costs include amounts paid for profit, management fees, and
taxes that would not have been incurred had the institution
purchased the facility.
44. Royalties and other costs for use of
patents.
a. Royalties on a patent or copyright or
amortization of the cost of acquiring by purchase a copyright,
patent, or rights thereto, necessary for the proper performance
of the award are allowable unless:
(1) The Federal Government has a
license or the right to free use of the patent or
copyright.
(2) The patent or copyright has been
adjudicated to be invalid, or has been administratively
determined to be invalid.
(3) The patent or copyright is considered
to be unenforceable.
(4) The patent or copyright is
expired.
b. Special care should be exercised in
determining reasonableness where the royalties may have been
arrived at as a result of less-than-arm's-length bargaining,
e.g.:
(1) Royalties paid to persons,
including corporations, affiliated with the institution.
(2) Royalties
paid to unaffiliated parties, including corporations, under an
agreement entered into in contemplation that a sponsored
agreement award would be made.
(3) Royalties paid under an agreement
entered into after an award is made to an
institution.
c. In any case involving a patent or
copyright formerly owned by the institution, the amount of
royalty allowed should not exceed the cost which would have
been allowed had the institution retained title
thereto.
45. Scholarships and student aid
costs.
a. Costs of scholarships, fellowships,
and other programs of student aid are allowable only when the
purpose of the sponsored agreement is to provide training to
selected participants and the charge is approved by the
sponsoring agency. However, tuition remission and other forms of
compensation paid as, or in lieu of, wages to students
performing necessary work are allowable provided that--
(1) The
individual is conducting activities necessary to the sponsored
agreement;
(2) Tuition remission and other support
are provided in accordance with established educational
institutional policy and consistently provided in a like
manner to students in return for similar activities conducted
in nonsponsored as well as sponsored activities; and
(3) During the academic period, the
student is enrolled in an advanced degree program at the
institution or affiliated institution and the activities of
the student in relation to the Federally-sponsored research
project are related to the degree program;
(4) The tuition
or other payments are reasonable compensation for the work
performed and are conditioned explicitly upon the performance
of necessary work; and
(5) It is the institution's practice
to similarly compensate students in non sponsored as well as
sponsored activities.
b. Charges for tuition remission and
other forms of compensation paid to students as, or in lieu of,
salaries and wages shall be subject to the reporting
requirements stipulated in Section J.10 of this Appendix, and
shall be treated as direct or F&A cost in accordance with
the actual work being performed. Tuition remission may be
charged on an average rate basis.
46. Selling and marketing. Costs of
selling and marketing any products or services of the institution
are unallowable (unless allowed under subsection J.1 of this
Appendix as allowable public relations costs or under subsection
J.38 of this Appendix as allowable proposal costs).
47. Specialized service facilities.
a. The costs of services provided by
highly complex or specialized facilities operated by the
institution, such as computers, wind tunnels, and reactors are
allowable, provided the charges for the services meet the
conditions of either subsection J.47.b. or 47.c. of this
Appendix and, in addition, take into account any items of income
or Federal financing that qualify as applicable credits under
subsection C.5. of this Appendix.
b. The costs of such services, when
material, must be charged directly to applicable awards based on
actual usage of the services on the basis of a schedule of rates
or established methodology that:
(1) Does not discriminate against
federally-supported activities of the institution, including
usage by the institution for internal purposes, and
(2) Is designed to recover only the
aggregate costs of the services. The costs of each service
shall consist normally of both its direct costs and its
allocable share of all F&A costs. Rates shall be adjusted
at least biennially, and shall take into consideration
over/under applied costs of the previous
period(s).
c. Where the costs incurred for a
service are not material, they may be allocated as F&A
costs.
d. Under
some extraordinary circumstances, where it is in the best
interest of the Federal Government and the institution to
establish alternative costing arrangements, such arrangements
may be worked out with the cognizant Federal agency.
48. Student activity costs. Costs incurred
for intramural activities, student publications, student clubs,
and other student activities, are unallowable, unless specifically
provided for in the sponsored agreements.
49. Taxes.
a. In general, taxes which the
institution is required to pay and which are paid or accrued in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles are
allowable. Payments made to local governments in lieu of taxes
which are commensurate with the local government services
received are allowable, except for--
(1) Taxes from which exemptions are
available to the institution directly or which are available
to the institution based on an exemption afforded the Federal
Government, and in the latter case when the sponsoring agency
makes available the necessary exemption certificates; and
(2) Special
assessments on land which represent capital
improvements.
b. Any refund of taxes, interest, or
penalties, and any payment to the institution of interest
thereon, attributable to taxes, interest, or penalties which
were allowed as sponsored agreement costs, will be credited or
paid to the Federal Government in the manner directed by the
Federal Government. However, any interest actually paid or
credited to an institution incident to a refund of tax,
interest, and penalty will be paid or credited to the Federal
Government only to the extent that such interest accrued over
the period during which the institution has been reimbursed by
the Federal Government for the taxes, interest, and
penalties.
50. Termination costs applicable to
sponsored agreements. Termination of awards generally gives rise
to the incurrence of costs, or the need for special treatment of
costs, which would not have arisen had the sponsored agreement not
been terminated. Cost principles covering these items are set
forth below. They are to be used in conjunction with the other
provisions of this Appendix in termination situations.
a. The cost of
items reasonably usable on the institution's other work shall
not be allowable unless the institution submits evidence that it
would not retain such items at cost without sustaining a loss.
In deciding whether such items are reasonably usable on other
work of the institution, the awarding agency should consider the
institution's plans and orders for current and scheduled
activity. Contemporaneous purchases of common items by the
institution shall be regarded as evidence that such items are
reasonably usable on the institution's other work. Any
acceptance of common items as allocable to the terminated
portion of the sponsored agreement shall be limited to the
extent that the quantities of such items on hand, in transit,
and on order are in excess of the reasonable quantitative
requirements of other work.
b. If in a particular case, despite all
reasonable efforts by the institution, certain costs cannot be
discontinued immediately after the effective date of
termination, such costs are generally allowable within the
limitations set forth in this Appendix, except that any such
costs continuing after termination due to the negligent or
willful failure of the institution to discontinue such costs
shall be unallowable.
c. Loss of useful value of special
tooling, machinery, and equipment is generally allowable if:
(1) Such special tooling, special
machinery, or equipment is not reasonably capable of use in
the other work of the institution,
(2) The interest of the Federal
Government is protected by transfer of title or by other means
deemed appropriate by the awarding agency, and
(3) The loss of
useful value for any one terminated sponsored agreement is
limited to that portion of the acquisition cost which bears
the same ratio to the total acquisition cost as the terminated
portion of the sponsored agreement bears to the entire
terminated sponsored agreement award and other sponsored
agreements for which the special tooling, machinery, or
equipment was acquired.
d. Rental costs under unexpired leases
are generally allowable where clearly shown to have been
reasonably necessary for the performance of the terminated
sponsored agreement less the residual value of such leases,
if:
(1) The amount of such rental claimed
does not exceed the reasonable use value of the property
leased for the period of the sponsored agreement and such
further period as may be reasonable, and
(2) The institution makes all
reasonable efforts to terminate, assign, settle, or otherwise
reduce the cost of such lease. There also may be included the
cost of alterations of such leased property, provided such
alterations were necessary for the performance of the
sponsored agreement, and of reasonable restoration required by
the provisions of the lease.
e. Settlement expenses including the
following are generally allowable:
(1) Accounting, legal, clerical, and
similar costs reasonably necessary for:
(a) The preparation and presentation
to the awarding agency of settlement claims and supporting
data with respect to the terminated portion of the sponsored
agreement, unless the termination is for default (see Sec.
215.61 of 2 CFR Part 215); and
(b) The termination and settlement
of subawards.
(2) Reasonable costs for the storage,
transportation, protection, and disposition of property
provided by the Federal Government or acquired or produced for
the sponsored agreement, except when institutions are
reimbursed for disposals at a predetermined amount in accordance with Sec. 215.32 through Sec.
215.37 of 2 CFR Part 215.
(3) F&A costs related to salaries
and wages incurred as settlement expenses in subsections
J.50.b.(1) and (2) of this Appendix. Normally, such F&A
costs shall be limited to fringe benefits, occupancy cost, and
immediate supervision.
f. Claims under subawards, including the
allocable portion of claims which are common to the sponsored
agreement and to other work of the institution, are generally
allowable.
g.
An appropriate share of the institution's F&A costs may be
allocated to the amount of settlements with subcontractors
and/or subgrantees, provided that the amount allocated is
otherwise consistent with the basic guidelines contained in
section E, F&A costs. The F&A costs so allocated shall
exclude the same and similar costs claimed directly or
indirectly as settlement expenses.
51. Training costs. The cost of training
provided for employee development is allowable.
52. Transportation
costs. Costs incurred for freight, express, cartage, postage, and
other transportation services relating either to goods purchased,
in process, or delivered, are allowable. When such costs can
readily be identified with the items involved, they may be charged
directly as transportation costs or added to the cost of such
items. Where identification with the materials received cannot
readily be made, inbound transportation cost may be charged to the
appropriate F&A cost accounts if the institution follows a
consistent, equitable procedure in this respect. Outbound freight,
if reimbursable under the terms of the sponsored agreement, should
be treated as a direct cost.
53. Travel costs.
a. General. Travel costs are the
expenses for transportation, lodging, subsistence, and related
items incurred by employees who are in travel status on official
business of the institution. Such costs may be charged on an
actual cost basis, on a per diem or mileage basis in lieu of
actual costs incurred, or on a combination of the two, provided
the method used is applied to an entire trip and not to selected
days of the trip, and results in charges consistent with those
normally allowed in like circumstances in the institution's
non-federally-sponsored activities.
b. Lodging and subsistence. Costs incurred by employees and officers
for travel, including costs of lodging, other subsistence, and
incidental expenses, shall be considered reasonable and
allowable only to the extent such costs do not exceed charges
normally allowed by the institution in its regular operations as
the result of the institution's written travel policy. In the
absence of an acceptable, written institution policy regarding
travel costs, the rates and amounts established under subchapter
I of Chapter 57, Title 5, United States Code ("Travel and
Subsistence Expenses; Mileage Allowances"), or by the
Administrator of General Services, or by the President (or his
or her designee) pursuant to any provisions of such subchapter
shall apply to travel under sponsored agreements (48 CFR
31.205-46(a)).
c. Commercial air travel.
(1) Airfare costs in excess of the
customary standard commercial airfare (coach or equivalent),
Federal Government contract airfare (where authorized and
available), or the lowest commercial discount airfare are
unallowable except when such accommodations would:
(a) Require circuitous routing;
(b) Require
travel during unreasonable hours;
(c)
Excessively prolong travel;
(d) Result in additional costs that
would offset the transportation savings; or
(e) Offer
accommodations not reasonably adequate for the traveler's
medical needs. The institution must justify and document
these conditions on a case-by-case basis in order for the
use of first-class airfare to be allowable in such
cases.
(2) Unless a pattern of avoidance is
detected, the Federal Government will generally not question
an institution's determinations that customary standard
airfare or other discount airfare is unavailable for specific
trips if the institution can demonstrate either of the
following:
(a)That such airfare was not
available in the specific case; or
(b) That it is
the institution's overall practice to make routine use of
such airfare.
d. Air travel by other than commercial
carrier. Costs of travel by institution-owned, -leased, or
-chartered aircraft include the cost of lease, charter,
operation (including personnel costs), maintenance,
depreciation, insurance, and other related costs. The portion of
such costs that exceeds the cost of allowable commercial air travel, as
provided for in subsection J.53.c. of this Appendix, is
unallowable.
54. Trustees. Travel and subsistence costs
of trustees (or directors) are allowable. The costs are subject to
restrictions regarding lodging, subsistence and air travel costs
provided in Section J.53 of this Appendix.

K.
Certification of Charges
1. To assure that expenditures for
sponsored agreements are proper and in accordance with the
agreement documents and approved project budgets, the annual
and/or final fiscal reports or vouchers requesting payment under
the agreements will include a certification, signed by an
authorized official of the university, which reads essentially as
follows: "I certify that all expenditures reported (or payment
requested) are for appropriate purposes and in accordance with the
provisions of the application and award documents."
2. Certification of F&A costs.
a. Policy.
(1) No proposal to establish F&A
cost rates shall be acceptable unless such costs have been
certified by the educational institution using the Certificate
of F&A Costs set forth in subsection K.2.b of this Appendix.
The certificate must be signed on behalf of the institution by
an individual at a level no lower than vice president or chief
financial officer of the institution that submits the
proposal.
(2) No F&A
cost rate shall be binding upon the Federal Government if the
most recent required proposal from the institution has not been
certified. Where it is necessary to establish F&A cost
rates, and the institution has not submitted a certified
proposal for establishing such rates in accordance with the
requirements of this section, the Federal Government shall
unilaterally establish such rates. Such rates may be based upon
audited historical data or such other data that have been
furnished to the cognizant Federal agency and for which it can
be demonstrated that all unallowable costs have been excluded.
When F&A cost rates are unilaterally established by the
Federal Government because of failure of the institution to
submit a certified proposal for establishing such rates in
accordance with this section, the rates established will be set
at a level low enough to ensure that potentially unallowable
costs will not be reimbursed.
b. Certificate. The certificate required
by this section shall be in the following form: Certificate of
F&A Costs This is to certify that to the best of my knowledge
and belief:
(1) I have reviewed the F&A cost
proposal submitted herewith;
(2) All costs included in this proposal
[identify date] to establish billing or final F&A costs rate
for [identify period covered by rate] are allowable in
accordance with the requirements of the Federal agreement(s) to
which they apply and with the cost principles applicable to
those agreements.
(3) This proposal does not include any
costs which are unallowable under applicable cost principles
such as (without limitation): advertising and public relations
costs, contributions and donations, entertainment costs, fines
and penalties, lobbying costs, and defense of fraud proceedings;
and
(4) All
costs included in this proposal are properly allocable to
Federal agreements on the basis of a beneficial or causal
relationship between the expenses incurred and the agreements to
which they are allocated in accordance with applicable
requirements. For educational
institutions that are required to file a DS-2 in accordance with
Section C.14 of this Appendix, the following statement shall be
added to the "Certificate of F&A Costs": (5) The rate proposal is prepared using the
same cost accounting practices that are disclosed in the DS-2,
including its amendments and revisions, filed with and approved
by the cognizant agency.
I declare under penalty of perjury that the
foregoing is true and correct. Institution:____________________________________________________________ Signature:______________________________________________________________ Name of
Official:_______________________________________________________ Title:__________________________________________________________________ Date of
Execution:______________________________________________________

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Appendix
to 2 CFR Part 220. Cost Principles for
Cost Principles for Educational Institutions (OMB Circular
A-21). 2006. English.
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