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2 CFR Part 225 Appendix A focuses on
general principles for determining allowable costs, such as direct
costs, indirect costs, and inter-agency services, incurred by State,
local, and federally recognized Indian tribal governments under
grants, cost reimbursement contracts, and other agreements with the
Federal Government. Program directors and fiscal officers will
find this section helpful in maintaining compliance with Federal
regulations. |
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The following is an excerpt from 2
CFR Part 225 Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian Tribal
Governments (OMB Circular A-87).
Appendix A to Part 225--General Principles
for Determining Allowable Costs
Table of Contents
A. Purpose and Scope
- Objectives
- Policy guides
- Application
B. Definitions
- Approval or authorization of the awarding or cognizant Federal
agency
- Award
- Awarding agency
- Central service cost allocation plan
- Claim
- Cognizant agency
- Common rule
- Contract
- Cost
- Cost allocation plan
- Cost objective
- Federally-recognized Indian tribal government
- Governmental unit
- Grantee department or agency
- Indirect cost rate proposal
- Local government
- Public assistance cost allocation plan
- State
C. Basic Guidelines
- Factors affecting allowability of costs
- Reasonable costs
- Allocable costs
- Applicable credits
D. Composition of Cost
- Total cost
- Classification of costs
E. Direct Costs
- General
- Application
- Minor items
F. Indirect Costs
- General
- Cost allocation plans and indirect cost proposals
- Limitation on indirect or administrative costs
G. Interagency Services
H. Required Certifications
Part
225 Table of Contents

A. Purpose and Scope
1. Objectives. This Appendix establishes principles for
determining the allowable costs incurred by State, local, and
federally-recognized Indian tribal governments (governmental
units) under grants, cost reimbursement contracts, and other
agreements with the Federal Government (collectively referred to
in this appendix and other appendices to 2 CFR part 225 as
"Federal awards"). The principles are for the purpose of cost
determination and are not intended to identify the circumstances
or dictate the extent of Federal or governmental unit
participation in the financing of a particular program or project.
The principles are designed to provide that Federal awards bear
their fair share of cost recognized under these principles except
where restricted or prohibited by law. Provision for profit or
other increment above cost is outside the scope of 2 CFR part
225.
2. Policy guides.
a. The application of these principles is based on the
fundamental premises that:
(1) Governmental units are responsible for the
efficient and effective administration of Federal awards
through the application of sound management practices.
(2) Governmental units assume responsibility for
administering Federal funds in a manner consistent with
underlying agreements, program objectives, and the terms and
conditions of the Federal award.
(3) Each governmental unit, in recognition of its own
unique combination of staff, facilities, and experience, will
have the primary responsibility for employing whatever form of
organization and management techniques may be necessary to
assure proper and efficient administration of Federal
awards.
b. Federal agencies should work with States or localities
which wish to test alternative mechanisms for paying costs for
administering Federal programs. The Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) encourages Federal agencies to test fee-for-service
alternatives as a replacement for current cost-reimbursement
payment methods in response to the National Performance Review's
(NPR) recommendation. The NPR recommended the fee-for-service
approach to reduce the burden associated with maintaining
systems for charging administrative costs to Federal programs
and preparing and approving cost allocation plans. This approach
should also increase incentives for administrative efficiencies
and improve outcomes.
3. Application.
a. These principles will be applied by all Federal
agencies in determining costs incurred by governmental units
under Federal awards (including subawards) except those with
(1) publicly-financed educational institutions subject to,
2 CFR part 220, Cost Principles for Educational Institutions
(OMB Circular A-21), and
(2) programs administered by
publicly-owned hospitals and other providers of medical care
that are subject to requirements promulgated by the sponsoring
Federal agencies. However, 2 CFR part 225 does apply to all
central service and department/agency costs that are allocated
or billed to those educational institutions, hospitals, and
other providers of medical care or services by other State and
local government departments and agencies.
b. All subawards are subject to those Federal cost
principles applicable to the particular organization concerned.
Thus, if a subaward is to a governmental unit (other than a
college, university or hospital), 2 CFR part 225 shall apply; if
a subaward is to a commercial organization, the cost principles
applicable to commercial organizations shall apply; if a
subaward is to a college or university, 2 CFR part 220 (Circular
A-21) shall apply; if a subaward is to a hospital, the cost
principles used by the Federal awarding agency for awards to
hospitals shall apply, subject to the provisions of subsection
A.3.a. of this Appendix; if a subaward is to some other
non-profit organization, 2 CFR part 230, Cost Principles for
Non-Profit Organizations (Circular A-122), shall apply.
c. These principles shall be used as a guide in the pricing
of fixed price arrangements where costs are used in determining
the appropriate price.
d. Where a Federal contract awarded to a governmental unit
requirements of that clause shall apply. In such cases, the
governmental unit and the cognizant Federal agency shall
establish an appropriate advance agreement on how the
governmental unit will comply with applicable CAS requirements
when estimating, accumulating and reporting costs under
CAS-covered contracts. The agreement shall indicate that 2 CFR
part 225 (OMB Circular A-87) requirements will be applied to
other Federal awards. In all cases, only one set of records
needs to be maintained by the governmental unit.
e. 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
Appendix A subsection C.3 of 2 CFR part 225, Cost Principles
for State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments (OMB Circular
A-87); Appendix A, Section C.4 of 2 CFR 220, Cost Principles
for Educational Institutions (Circular A-21); Appendix A,
subsection A.4 of 2 CFR 230 Cost Principles for Non-Profit
Organizations (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 (Circular A-110), and the agencies'
grants management common rule.
(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 used for general expenses required to carry out
other responsibilities of a State or its
subrecipients.

B. Definitions
- "Approval or authorization of the awarding or cognizant
Federal agency" means documentation evidencing consent prior to
incurring a specific cost. If such costs are specifically
identified in a Federal award document, approval of the document
constitutes approval of the costs. If the costs are covered by a
State/local-wide cost allocation plan or an indirect cost
proposal, approval of the plan constitutes the approval.
- "Award" means grants, cost reimbursement contracts and other
agreements between a State, local and Indian tribal government and
the Federal Government.
- "Awarding agency" means (a) with respect to a grant,
cooperative agreement, or cost reimbursement contract, the Federal
agency, and (b) with respect to a subaward, the party that awarded
the subaward.
- "Central service cost allocation plan" means the documentation
identifying, accumulating, and allocating or developing billing
rates based on the allowable costs of services provided by a
governmental unit on a centralized basis to its departments and
agencies. The costs of these services may be allocated or billed
to users.
- "Claim" means a written demand or written assertion by the
governmental unit or grantor seeking, as a matter of right, the
payment of money in a sum certain, the adjustment or
interpretation of award terms, or other relief arising under or
relating to the award. A voucher, invoice or other routine request
for payment that is not a dispute when submitted is not a claim.
Appeals, such as those filed by a governmental unit in response to
questioned audit costs, are not considered claims until a final
management decision is made by the Federal awarding agency.
- "Cognizant agency" means the Federal agency responsible for
reviewing, negotiating, and approving cost allocation plans or
indirect cost proposals developed under 2 CFR part 225 on behalf
of all Federal agencies. OMB publishes a listing of cognizant
agencies.
- "Common Rule" means the "Uniform Administrative Requirements
for Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local
Governments; Final Rule" originally issued at 53 FR 8034-8103
(March 11, 1988). Other common rules will be referred to by their
specific titles.
- "Contract" means a mutually binding legal relationship
obligating the seller to furnish the supplies or services
(including construction) and the buyer to pay for them. It
includes all types of commitments that obligate the government to
an expenditure of appropriated funds and that, except as otherwise
authorized, are in writing. In addition to bilateral instruments,
contracts include (but are not limited to): Awards and notices of
awards; job orders or task orders issued under basic ordering
agreements; letter contracts; orders, such as purchase orders,
under which the contract becomes effective by written acceptance
or performance; and, bilateral contract modifications. Contracts
do not include grants and cooperative agreements covered by 31
U.S.C. 6301 et seq.
- "Cost" means an amount as determined on a cash, accrual, or
other basis acceptable to the Federal awarding or cognizant
agency. It does not include transfers to a general or similar
fund.
- "Cost allocation plan" means central service cost allocation
plan, public assistance cost allocation plan, and indirect cost
rate proposal. Each of these terms is further defined in this
section.
- "Cost objective" means a function, organizational subdivision,
contract, grant, or other activity for which cost data are needed
and for which costs are incurred.
- "Federally recognized Indian tribal government" means the
governing body or a governmental agency of any Indian tribe, band,
nation, or other organized group or community (including any
native village as defined in Section 3 of the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act, 85 Stat. 688) certified by the Secretary of the
Interior as eligible for the special programs and services
provided through the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
- "Governmental unit'' means the entire State, local, or
federally-recognized Indian tribal government, including any
component thereof. Components of governmental units may function
independently of the governmental unit in accordance with the term
of the award.
- "Grantee department or agency" means the component of a State,
local, or federally recognized Indian tribal government which is
responsible for the performance or administration of all or some
part of a Federal award.
- "Indirect cost rate proposal" means the documentation prepared
by a governmental unit or component thereof to substantiate its
request for the establishment of an indirect cost rate as
described in Appendix E of 2 CFR part 225.
- "Local government" means a county, municipality, city, town,
township, local public authority, school district, special
district, intrastate district, council of governments (whether or
not incorporated as a non-profit corporation under State law), any
other regional or interstate government entity, or any agency or
instrumentality of a local government.
- "Public assistance cost allocation plan" means a narrative
description of the procedures that will be used in identifying,
measuring and allocating all administrative costs to all of the
programs administered or supervised by State public assistance
agencies as described in Appendix D of 2 CFR part 225.
- "State" means any of the several States of the United States,
the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any agency or
instrumentality of a State exclusive of local governments.

C. Basic Guidelines
- Factors affecting allowability of costs. To be allowable
under Federal awards, costs must meet the following general
criteria:
a. Be necessary and reasonable for proper and
efficient performance and administration of Federal
awards.
b. Be allocable to Federal awards under the
provisions of 2 CFR part 225.
c. Be authorized or not prohibited under State or local laws
or regulations.
d. Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in
these principles, Federal laws, terms and conditions of the
Federal award, or other governing regulations as to types or
amounts of cost items.
e. Be consistent with policies, regulations, and procedures
that apply uniformly to both Federal awards and other activities
of the governmental unit.
f. Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be
assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost
incurred for the same purpose in like circumstances has been
allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
g. Except as otherwise provided for in 2 CFR part 225, be
determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles.
h. Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost
sharing or matching requirements of any other Federal award in
either the current or a prior period, except as specifically
provided by Federal law or regulation.
i. Be the net of all applicable credits.
j. Be adequately documented.
2. Reasonable costs. A cost is reasonable if, in its
nature and amount, it does not exceed that which would be incurred
by a prudent person under the circumstances prevailing at the time
the decision was made to incur the cost. The question of
reasonableness is particularly important when governmental units
or components are predominately federally-funded. In determining
reasonableness of a given cost, consideration shall be given
to:
a. Whether the cost is of a type generally recognized as
ordinary and necessary for the operation of the governmental
unit or the performance of the Federal award.
b. The restraints or requirements imposed by such
factors as: Sound business practices; arm's-length bargaining;
Federal, State and other laws and regulations; and, terms and
conditions of the Federal award.
c. Market prices for comparable goods or services.
d. Whether the individuals concerned acted with
prudence in the circumstances considering their responsibilities
to the governmental unit, its employees, the public at large,
and the Federal Government.
e. Significant deviations from the established
practices of the governmental unit which may unjustifiably
increase the Federal award's cost.
3. Allocable costs.
a. A cost is allocable to a particular cost
objective if the goods or services involved are chargeable or
assignable to such cost objective in accordance with relative
benefits received.
b. All activities which benefit from the governmental
unit's indirect cost, including unallowable activities and
services donated to the governmental unit by third parties, will
receive an appropriate allocation of indirect costs.
c. Any cost allocable to a particular Federal award or
cost objective under the principles provided for in 2 CFR part
225 may not be charged to other Federal awards to overcome fund
deficiencies, to avoid restrictions imposed by law or terms of
the Federal awards, or for other reasons.
d. Where an accumulation of indirect costs will
ultimately result in charges to a Federal award, a cost
allocation plan will be required as described in Appendices C,
D, and E to this part.
4. Applicable credits.
a. Applicable credits refer to those receipts or reduction of
expenditure-type transactions that offset or reduce expense
items allocable to Federal awards as direct or indirect costs.
Examples of such transactions are: Purchase discounts, rebates
or allowances, recoveries or indemnities on losses, insurance
refunds or rebates, and adjustments of overpayments or erroneous
charges. To the extent that such credits accruing to or received
by the governmental unit relate to allowable costs, they shall
be credited to the Federal award either as a cost reduction or
cash refund, as appropriate.
b. In some instances, the amounts received from the Federal
Government to finance activities or service operations of the
governmental unit should be treated as applicable credits.
Specifically, the concept of netting such credit items
(including any amounts used to meet cost sharing or matching
requirements) should be recognized in determining the rates or
amounts to be charged to Federal awards. (See Appendix B to this
part, item 11, "Depreciation and use allowances," for areas of
potential application in the matter of Federal financing of
activities.)

D. Composition of
Cost
1. Total cost. The total cost of Federal awards is
comprised of the allowable direct cost of the program, plus its
allocable portion of allowable indirect costs, less applicable
credits.
2. Classification of costs. There is no universal rule for
classifying certain costs as either direct or indirect under every
accounting system. A cost may be direct with respect to some
specific service or function, but indirect with respect to the
Federal award or other final cost objective. Therefore, it is
essential that each item of cost be treated consistently in like
circumstances either as a direct or an indirect cost. Guidelines
for determining direct and indirect costs charged to Federal
awards are provided in the sections that follow.

E. Direct Costs
1. General. Direct costs are those that can be identified
specifically with a particular final cost objective.
2. Application. Typical direct costs chargeable to Federal
awards are:
a. Compensation of employees for the time devoted and
identified specifically to the performance of those awards.
b. Cost of materials acquired, consumed, or expended
specifically for the purpose of those awards.
c. Equipment and other approved capital expenditures.
d. Travel expenses incurred specifically to carry out the
award.
3. Minor items. Any direct cost of a minor amount may be
treated as an indirect cost for reasons of practicality where such
accounting treatment for that item of cost is consistently applied
to all cost objectives.

F. Indirect Costs
1. General. Indirect costs are those: Incurred for a common or
joint purpose benefiting more than one cost objective, and not
readily assignable to the cost objectives specifically benefitted,
without effort disproportionate to the results achieved. The term
"indirect costs," as used herein, applies to costs of this type
originating in the grantee department, as well as those incurred
by other departments in supplying goods, services, and facilities.
To facilitate equitable distribution of indirect expenses to the
cost objectives served, it may be necessary to establish a number
of pools of indirect costs within a governmental unit department
or in other agencies providing services to a governmental unit
department. Indirect cost pools should be distributed to
benefitted cost objectives on bases that will produce an equitable
result in consideration of relative benefits derived.
2.Cost allocation plans and indirect cost proposals.
Requirements for development and submission of cost allocation
plans and indirect cost rate proposals are contained in Appendices
C, D, and E to this part.
3. Limitation on indirect or administrative costs.
a. In addition to restrictions contained in 2 CFR part
225, there may be laws that further limit the amount of
administrative or indirect cost allowed.
b. Amounts not recoverable as indirect costs or
administrative costs under one Federal award may not be shifted
to another Federal award, unless specifically authorized by
Federal legislation or regulation.

G. Interagency Services.
The cost of services provided by one agency to another within the
governmental unit may include allowable direct costs of the service
plus a pro rate share of indirect costs. A standard indirect cost
allowance equal to ten percent of the direct salary and wage cost of
providing the service (excluding overtime, shift premiums, and
fringe benefits) may be used in lieu of determining the actual
indirect costs of the service. These services do not include
centralized services included in central service cost allocation
plans as described in Appendix C to this part.

H. Required Certifications. Each
cost allocation plan or indirect cost rate proposal required by
Appendices C and E to this part must comply with the
following:
1. No proposal to establish a cost allocation plan or an
indirect cost rate, whether submitted to a Federal cognizant
agency or maintained on file by the governmental unit, shall be
acceptable unless such costs have been certified by the
governmental unit using the Certificate of Cost Allocation Plan or
Certificate of Indirect Costs as set forth in Appendices C and E
to this part. The certificate must be signed on behalf of the
governmental unit by an individual at a level no lower than chief
financial officer of the governmental unit that submits the
proposal or component covered by the proposal.
2. No cost allocation plan or indirect cost rate shall be
approved by the Federal Government unless the plan or rate
proposal has been certified. Where it is necessary to establish a
cost allocation plan or an indirect cost rate and the governmental
unit has not submitted a certified proposal for establishing such
a plan or rate in accordance with the requirements, the Federal
Government may either disallow all indirect costs or unilaterally
establish such a plan or rate. Such a plan or rate 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 a
cost allocation plan or indirect cost rate is unilaterally
established by the Federal Government because of failure of the
governmental unit to submit a certified proposal, the plan or rate
established will be set to ensure that potentially unallowable
costs will not be reimbursed.

See also: 2
CFR Part 225
Appendix
B to Part 225---Selected Items of
Cost Appendix
C to Part 225--State/Local-Wide Central Service Cost Allocation
Plans Appendix
D to Part 225--Public Assistance Cost Allocation
Plans Appendix
E to Part 225--State and Local Indirect Cost Rate Proposals |
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Appendix
A to Part 225--General Principles for Determining Allowable
Costs. 2 CFR 225 Cost Principles for State,
Local, and Indian Tribal Governments (OMB CIRCULAR A-87).
2006. English. | |
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