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Overview. What is Award Management?Lifecycle of Sponsored ProjectsRoles and ResponsibilitiesOMB Circulars: A-21, A-110, A-133FDP/Expanded AuthoritiesEffort reportingProcurement/Subawards. 8. Cost sharing9. Cash management10. Closeout and audits11. Best practices12. Tools13. What if I have questions.
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1. Research Administration 102
Session 3: Award Management
Robert Andresen, Assistant Director-Postaward Services, Office of Research and Sponsored Programs randresen@rsp.wisc.edu 2-2896
Rebecca Bound, Research Administrator, College of Agricultural & Life Sciences Research Division rbound@cals.wisc.edu 5-8443
Kenneth Mount, Associate Dean, School of Medicine and Public Health kmount@facstaff.wisc.edu 3-4938
Petra Schroeder, Assistant Dean, Office of Research Services, The Graduate Schoolpschroeder@bascom.wisc.edu 5-4868
January 13, 2011 Session
3. 1. What is Award Management?
Day-to-day activities to assure compliance with award requirements (terms/conditions), from the receipt of the award through close out and beyond.
(Beyond the award includes such aspects as records retention, property control, audit activities.)
4. 1. What is Award Management? Why is responsible award management important?
Maintains relationship of trust between sponsors, institution and public (stewardship), and reputation with colleagues
Future awards depend on it
Audit findings and cost disallowances
Criminal, civil and administrative penalties (compliance)
5. 2. Lifecycle of Sponsored Projects
6. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Responsibilities are shared by:
Principal Investigators
Departments/Center staff
School/College Dean’s Office
Research and Sponsored Programs
It is important that all of the parties who share some of the responsibility work as a team.
7. 3. Roles and Responsibilities
Roles and Responsibilities Matrix on RSP website:
http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/policies/staffroles.html
Note that specifics vary between departments and divisions on campus, but you can refer to this for general guidelines and talk to your school/college research administrator for more detail regarding expectations for your unit.
8. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Expectation of Departments/Centers:
Knowledge of the terms/conditions of award and applicable University/State policies
Assist PI with overall award management
Review requests and supporting documentation for adequacy as well as allocability, allowability, reasonableness, applicability
Prepare paperwork, process transactions/adjustments in a timely manner, and secure authorized signatures
Submit/forward paperwork/transactions to appropriate Divisions for review, approval, and action
9. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Expectations of Departments/Centers (continued):
Verify fund availability and conduct periodic financial reconciliations (with projection reports to Pis)
Assure compliance with award terms/conditions andUniversity/State policies
Initiate close-out – contact RSP in a timely manner
10. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Expectations of Departments/Centers:
If you are uncertain, ask (Don’t send through something if you are not sure whether it is allowable/acceptable expecting someone else to catch it)
Look out for the interests of your investigators, but also help them to understand the need for compliance, and the shared responsibilities across campus
11. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Important reminders regarding roles and responsibilities:
Applications are submitted by the University of Wisconsin-Madison on behalf of the Principal Investigator
Research and Sponsored Programs is delegated signature authority (authorized official) by the Board of Regents for proposals, agreements, contracts, etc. related to extramural support activities of the University
Awards are accepted by the University and assigned to a Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator is responsible and accountable to the grantee for the proper conduct of the project or activity
12. 3. Roles and Responsibilities Important reminders regarding roles and responsibilities (continued):
Authorized official is held responsible by the sponsor to assure that the institution will meet the obligations
Each of us is a representative of the UW, accountable to theState of Wisconsin, and ultimately responsible for assuringefforts of good stewardship
13. 4. OMB Circulars What are OMB Circulars?
OMB is the Office of Management and Budget of the US Federal government.
Circulars are instructions or information issued by OMB, and the circulars relevant to the University guide our processes, policies and systems for administration of federal funds.
14. 4. OMB Circulars Which OMB Circulars apply to the University?
Circular A-21 addresses Cost Principles for Educational Institutions.
Circular A-110 addresses Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations.
Circular A-133 addresses Audits for States, Local Governments, and Non-profit Organizations.
15. 4. OMB Circulars Where can I find the Circulars?
Available at the OMB website:http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
Mini guides available from NCURA*:https://www.ncura.edu/prev/store/
*NCURA = National Council of Universtiy Research Administrators
16. 4. OMB A-21 What is the purpose of OMB A-21?
Applies to grants, contracts, and other agreements with educational institutions
Principles established in A-21 are designed to provide that the Federal Government bears its fair share of total costs, determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, except where restricted or prohibited by law
17. 4. OMB A-21 Requirements defined in A-21:
Institutions must treat similar costs consistently as either Direct costs or F&A* costs.
Certain types of costs will be included in the institution’s F&A cost rate and will not be charged as Direct costs to Federal projects.
*F&A = Facilities and Administration = Indirect Costs
18. 4. OMB A-21 Costs are reimbursable by the Federal Government ONLY if they are:
Necessary Reasonable
Allocable Allowable
Consistently treated Permissible
See A-21 Section C.
19. 4. OMB A-21 Necessary
Costs applied to the project MUST be necessary to accomplish the scope of work.
To be necessary, the cost applied must be absolutely essential to achieve a certain result or results.
20. 4. OMB A-21 Reasonable
If the nature of the goods or services acquired or applied to the project reflect the action that a “prudent person” would take under similar circumstances.
Emphasis would be upon one acting in good judgment.
Not excessive or extreme; fair.
21. 4. OMB A-21 Allocable
Cost is incurred solely for advancement of work on the project.
Application of cost is in proportions that can be approximated through reasonable methods.
Cost is necessary and deemed assignable to the project.
22. 4. OMB A-21 Allowable
Allowability of costs is defined specifically in OMB Circular A-21 Section J General Provisions of the cost principles.
Note: Section J does not indicate whether the cost should be treated as a direct cost or F&A cost.
23. 4. OMB A-21 Consistently treated
Like costs must be treated the same in like circumstances … consistently.
Costs may be treated as direct costs only or as F&A costs only.
24. 4. OMB A-21 Permissible
Costs must be permissible under the law
AND
Costs must be permissible under terms/conditions of the award
25. 4. OMB A-21 Costs normally treated as F&A costs:
Administrative and Clerical Salaries
Telecommunications -- Local Telephone ServiceIncluding phone equipment such as telephones, cell phones, pagers, fax machines, and line charges
PostageIncluding U.S. Postal Service, Federal Express, UPS
Office supplies
Dues and memberships
26. 4. OMB A-21 Costs normally treated as F&A costs (continued):
Subscriptions, Books, and Periodicals
General Purpose EquipmentNon-research equipment which may be used for general office purposes such as desktop computers, laptop computers, printers, fax machines, copy machines, and office furniture.
General computer services, networking costs, or other DoIT services
Staff recruitment and relocation
27. 4. OMB A-21 When is a cost eligible as an Exception?
A cost normally treated by UW-Madison as an F&A cost may be appropriate as a direct cost on a Federally sponsored project if:
The cost is necessary, reasonable, allocable, allowable, and permissible under the law, terms/conditions of the award, and the circumstances are “unlike.”
“Unlike” circumstances may be determined by the nature of the project, such as those detailedin Exhibit C of OMB Circular A-21.
28. 4. OMB A-21 Exception Review and Approval:
Investigators should provide clear justification in Federal project budgets for direct cost items that normally are treated as F&A costs.
The fact that the sponsoring agency allows such costs to remain in the awarded budget may not be interpreted as approval for these items as CAS exceptions.
School/College Dean’s Offices review andapprove CAS exceptions on sponsoredproject budgets. This institutional approvalis required by A-21.
29. 4. OMB A-21 How does all of this apply to Non-Federal awards?
General Principles of A-21 apply. -- More exceptions than on the Federal side.
Many Non-Federal Sponsors prohibit direct charging of certain types of costs.
Full Indirect Cost Recovery vs. Partial (or No) Recovery.
Bottom Line: It Depends.
30. 4. OMB A-110 What is the purpose of OMB A-110?
Sets forth standards for obtaining consistency and uniformity among Federal agencies in the administration of grants to and agreements with institutions of higher education, hospitals, and other non-profit organizations
Includes many pre-award, post-award and after the award requirements related primarily to institutional infrastructure (i.e., purchasing system, draw down of federal funds, etc.)
31. 4. OMB A-133
32. 5. FDP/Expanded Authorities FDP = Federal Demonstration Partnership
FDP is a cooperative initiative among federal agencies and institutional recipients of federal funds. It was established to increase research productivity by streamlining the administrative process and minimizing the administrative burden on principal investigators while maintaining effective stewardship of federal funds.
33. 5. FDP/Expanded Authorities Expanded Authorities include:
90 day pre-spending authority
institutionally approved no-cost extensions up to one additional year
automatic carryover of unobligated funds from one budget period to the next
Note: these do not apply to non-federally funded projects and even some federally funded projects are awarded without expanded authorities.
34. 5. FDP/Expanded Authorities Federal agencies do retain the right to override certain FDP general conditions with agency specific requirements. For general FDP terms/conditions: http://www.nsf.gov/home/grants/grants_fdp.htm
RSP has provided grids of each agency's basic requirements as it relates to business at the UW-Madison.
For NSF, NIH, UDSA, DOE, EPA:http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/awardmgt/fdpnondefense.html
For AFOSR, ONR, Army Med, Army (ARO), NASA:http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/awardmgt/fdpdefense.html
36. 6. Effort Reporting Effort Reporting is our means of providing assurance to sponsors that:
Salaries charged to sponsored projects are reasonable in relation to the work performed, and
Faculty and staff have met their commitments to sponsored projects.
Success in the effort realm depends on careful attention to important issues throughout the sponsored projects lifecycle.
37. 6. Effort Reporting Extensive information including policies and guidelines, reference materials, contact information, glossaries, FAQs, demonstration videos, calendars and forms is available at:http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/effort/index.html
Training and certification of effort is required. Consequences for failure to complete training and to certify effort are posted at: http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/effort/effortConsequences.html
38. 7. Procurement/Subawards An organization is considered a subaward when it:
has its performance measured against whether the objectives of the federal program are met;
has responsibility for programmatic decision-making;
has responsibility for adherence to applicable federal program compliance responsibilities; and
uses the federal funds to carry out a program of theorganization as compared to providing goods orservices for a program of the passthrough entity
39. 7. Procurement/Subawards
When a subaward is made to another University of Wisconsin System institution, it is called a “Shared Grant” and handled through a different process.
This process is explained on the RSP website:
http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/awardmgt/sharedgrantproc.html
40. 7. Procurement/Subawards An organization is considered a vendor when it:
provides goods and services within normal business operations;
provides similar goods and services to many different purchasers;
operates in a competitive environment;
provides goods and services that are ancillary to the operation of the federal program; and
is not subject to compliance requirements of the federal program.
41. 7. Procurement/Subawards Key questions – if the answers to the following are “yes,” this is likely a subaward:
Is there an identified investigator at the lower-tier organization? If yes, is he/she a co-investigator on the primary award?
Is the lower-tier organization free to decide how to carry out the activities requested of it?
Will there be potentially patentable or copyrightable technology created or reduced to practice from the activities of the lower-tier entity? If yes, does the entity have rights to or the right to filefor protection of its technology:
42. 7. Procurement/Subawards
... subaward questions:
Are publications anticipated from the lower-tier entity? Will individuals at the lower-tier organization be co-authors on articles?
Under federal assistance funding, is the lower-tier organization providing cost sharing or matching funds?
Norris & Youngers, “A Guide to Managing Federal Grants for Colleges and Universities,”March 2007, NACUBO/NCURA/AIS
43. 7. Procurement/Subawards
Key questions – if the answers to the following are “yes,” this is likely a vendor:
Is the activity to be performed a series of repetitive tests or activities requiring little or no discretionary judgment on behalf of the service provider?
Norris & Youngers, “A Guide to Managing Federal Grants for Colleges and Universities,”March 2007, NACUBO/NCURA/AIS
44. 7. Procurement/Subawards Monitoring:
Prime is responsible for conduct and completion of project
Progress reports should be reviewed by PI
Issue award funding in increments (e.g., yearly basis) to provide a check/balance opportunity to review progress/ performance, discuss issues, review expenditures
Invoices should be reviewed and approved by PI
F&A is charged on first $25K only (for awards calculated using MTDC); monitor to ensure this is charged correctly
45. 7. Procurement/Subawards More on monitoring:
Close-out can be a complication:
some choose to end subawards early in the final year to assure sub has 90 days to close-out and prime also has 90 days to close-out
Some choose to use modified language in award terms, reducing sub close-out period to 45 or 60 days, rather than the standard 90 days
46. 7. Incoming Subawards A few considerations on incoming subawards:
Automatic carryover from one budget period to another does not generally apply
Reports and invoices are submitted to the prime awardee, not the prime sponsor
Payments are not handled through the draw-down process, even if the subaward is federally funded
Watch end dates and deadlines carefully – we are more likely to have payment withheld for late reports and invoices on subawards than standard, direct awards
47. 8. Cost Sharing OMB Circular A-110 C.23 provides guidance in regard to satisfying Cost Sharing/Matching.
Documentation of Cost Sharing/Matching is a responsibility of the PI (with assistance from Department/Center and School/College).
Limit commitments if at all possible.
48. 8. Cost Sharing Cost sharing is subject to the same OMBrules as the sponsored project.
Where effort is voluntarily committed on a project, staff effort must be entered in WISPER at time of award so commitments are carried forwarded as Cost Share in the campus Effort Reporting system (ECRT).
49. 9. Cash Management Federal grants are funded via an institutional Letter of Credit, and cash management for these projects is handled by RSP.
Departments/Centers should monitor cash receipts on non-federal projects. For cost reimbursable awards you’ll find this information in WISDM; for others cash balance is not yet shown, so please contact your RSP accountant.
50. 10. Closeout What is Closeout?
Process to finalize all sponsor requirements at the conclusion of the award
Each award will detail the requirements but typically these include:
Final Technical (programmatic) Report
Final Property Report
Invention Report
Final Fiscal (financial) Report
51. 10. Closeout Important points to remember:
Standard timeline for completion of reconciliation and closeout is within 90 days of project end date.
Must show cost sharing
Must not show unpaid obligations
Technical reports by PI – refer to terms/conditions for submission requirements
Carefully review terms/conditions to determine the full compliment of closeout requirements (e.g., property report, data sharing)
Closeout will be covered in more detail in the next Res. Admin 102 session
52. 10. Audits What types of audits might you be involved in?
Internal Audits
State Legislative Audit Bureau (A-133 audit and other audits)
Federal Audits
Please work with your Dean’s Office and RSP on any audits. More detail on this topic will also be provided in the next Res. Admin. 102 session.
53. 11. Best Practices
Basic elements of award file (paper and/or electronic): Proposal/application and RFP Pre-award communication Notes relating to award negotiation Award document Award set-up information Correspondence related to award Copies of financial reports Evidence of financial report submission
Establish a departmental records retentionand organization scheme
54. 11. Best Practices
Carefully read all award related documents
The opportunity under which the application was made (i.e., RFP, PA)
The sponsor/agency guidelines/regulations
The sponsor/agency terms/conditions
The proposal and award
Note: many of these documents are available in the relevant WISPER and WISDM records
55. 11. Best Practices
If award is in process, request Account Number in Advance to begin project on time and to apply costs directly to Account
Request sufficient subaccounts or expanded edits at time of award
Apply costs directly to award and in timely manner
Do not purchase large quantities of supplies or major equipment in the latter stages of the award
56. 11. Best Practices Some form of “shadow system” for financial management may be needed
Periodic reconciliation to WISDM (monthly is ideal)
In person review by PI and administrative staff; first at “entrance conference” periodically thereafter
Review specifically for unallowable costs
Clear and regular communication between PI, payroll, accounting, procurement, and research administration personnel
57. 11. Best Practices Cost transfers:Apply costs to the right funding source initially whenever possible.If a transfer is necessary, full/complete documentation requiredAdhere to campus policy:http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/policies/costtransfer/index.html
Document expenses properly:Be sure appropriate receipts are on fileBe sure written explanation is included of how the expense benefited the projectIf an exceptional circumstance, be sure approvals are in place
Review effort and cost sharing commitmentsregularly
58. 11. Best Practices
Purchasing/procurement cards:Be sure detailed receipts are on fileInclude clear/complete justification of expense and related allocability informationProcess/reconcile in an established/timely manner
Be sure PI and Research Administrator(s) are fully aware of technical reporting requirements, financial reporting requirements, deliverables, special or unusual terms/conditions
Monitor subawards and subaccounts – theyare your responsibility and part of the award
59. 12. Tools Tools available on campus:
WISDM http://www.bussvc.wisc.edu/acct/sfs/index.htmlThe Wisconsin Data Mart for PeopleSoft FinancialsWISDM project management tools … My Projects, Project Search, Award Funding Action Report, WISPER Search, Old Project Search, and much more.
RSP Database Queries http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/queries.htmlDatabases of proposal and award information, human subjects training verifications, names of accountants assigned to your awards, school/college contacts, and much more.
60. 12. Tools Tools available on campus:
Two optional accounting tools:
Snapshot http://admin.engr.wisc.edu/snapshotProject Accounting Snapshot ToolContact: Becky Torrisi 262-8502 torrisi@engr.wisc.edu
FAST https://snapshot.med.wisc.edu/login/login.phpFinancial Accounting Snapshot ToolContact: Warren Emery 263-2702 wlemery@facstaff.wisc.edu
Individual departments/investigators also have their own systems, spreadsheets, etc.
61. 13. What if I have Questions? Campus contacts/experts:
Research and Sponsored Programs Post-Award:Robert Andresen 2-2896 randresen@rsp.wisc.eduRon Ravel 2-9029 rravel@rsp.wisc.edu Bonniejean Zitske 2-9727 bzitske@rsp.wisc.edu
Kathleen Wernigg 0-2904 wernigg@rsp.wisc.edu
Michael Kuntz 2-2588 mjkuntz@rsp.wisc.edu
School/College Post-Award Dean’s Officeshttp://www.rsp.wisc.edu/cnsrescont.htmlor School/College Business Services Offices