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What we'll cover today?.. Common issues that arise during proposal development and award negotiation that impact our post-award colleaguesSolutions for the pre-award administrator to be proactive and pre-empt problemsHow to coordinate and manage the process to facilitate effective project manageme
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1. Successful Pre- and Post-Award Collaborations Start with Good Proposals and Agreements Nancy Daneau, Office of Sponsored Programs
Joanne Goldstein and Michael Miller, Sponsored Programs Accounting
2. What well cover today
. Common issues that arise during proposal development and award negotiation that impact our post-award colleagues
Solutions for the pre-award administrator to be proactive and pre-empt problems
How to coordinate and manage the process to facilitate effective project management and foster good relationships
3. Budget Developmenthot potatoes Identify Cost Categories: Unidentified Costs
May cause overruns on the award
Institution shares in cost of research effort
May require sponsor approval for rebudgeting
Holds up post-award invoicing and financial reporting
Bottom line: Not in the budget? Ask.
Personnel Costs: Proposal vs. Expenditures
Reports of time and effort are certified
Bottom line: Reporting = Audits = Findings
4. Budget Developmenthot potatoes(contd)
Itemize Costs Correctly: Follow the Rules
Salary vs. Stipend
Stipends not allowable on research grants, only on training/ fellowship grants
Employer/employee relationship = salary
Trainee/fellow entitled to living allowance = stipend
Consider immigration status in allowability
Must be US citizen or permanent resident (green card) to receive stipend
Materials & Supplies vs. Equipment
Threshold for capital equipment = $3,000 at NYU, with a useful life of at least 1 year
F&A rate applied to materials and supplies, but NOT to capital equipment items
5. Budget Developmenthot potatoes(contd)
Travel: domestic vs. foreign
Domestic: in-state or out-of-state
Foreign: allowable with prior approval, certain restrictions apply
Know basis/rates for reimbursement
Use NYU per diems or actuals, not combination of both!
Understand need for detailed meal receipts, not just credit card slips
Subawards vs. subcontracts
Difference between the big S and the little s
Programmatic effort (big S) vs. goods and services (little s)
Impact on F&A/indirect cost recovery on federally funded projects
F&A assessed on only the first $25K of the big S
F&A assessed on full amount of little S
Flow-down of prime award terms and conditions required for big S, not for little s
Subrecipient monitoring required for big S, not for little s
6. Budget Developmenthot potatoes(contd)
Pieces needed for the big S
Subawardee budget, Statement of Work (SOW), institutional approvals
Impact if not on file or request to issue Sub not initiated internally
Late issuance
Late start of work by collaborator
Late invoicing and payment
Late reporting
Impacts the progress of the overall effort
Remember, your institution as prime recipient is ultimately responsible for conduct of the work and meeting sponsor requirements!
7. Budget Developmenthot potatoes(contd)
Are costs allowable, allocable, reasonable, consistently treated?
Sponsor guidelines
OMB Circular A-21
Institutional Rules
Are costs direct or F&A/indirect?
Direct: costs identifiable to a specific project
Indirect: costs incurred as part of overall operations
Ex: Direct vs. Administrative (F&A) costs
Salaries and wages of clerical/administrative staff generally *unallowable* as direct
Ex: General office supplies, unallowable as direct charges
Exception: meet the test of major project as defined in Exhibit C of A-21
Application/treatment of costs should be consistent
8. Cost Sharinghot potatoes Most institutions policies, written or not:
No cost sharing unless mandated/required by sponsor
Voluntary committed cost sharing
Faculty/key personnel time and effort stated but not fully charged to the sponsored award
Must be tracked and reported upon
Has negative impact on F&A/indirect cost recovery
Indirect Cost Waivers
Does the difference between NYUs federally negotiated rate and the reduced rate you agree to accept on the award represent cost sharing?
Only if feds approve and only applies to federal awards
9. Budget Development Hints and Tips Project the future: Look toward reality
Ask the question: What will it take to do this project?
Work budget backward starting with total costs
Compare reality with proposed budget
Plan so that every dollar is utilized to PI and institutions best advantage: ask every question to get the full cost impact from your PI
10. Budget Development Hints and Tips Impacts of poor planning:
Loss of direct cost funding available to the project
Loss of F&A/indirect cost recovery
Disallowances
Open communication reduces potential for:
Excessive, inappropriate, or late cost transfers
Manual adjustments
Disallowances
Revised invoices/financial reports
Audit findings
Loss of expanded authorities or letter of credit drawdown eligibility
11. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes Period of Performance dates
Effective date vs. execution date
Funding authorizations
Budget periods
Incremental funding
Supplemental funding
Impacts allowability of expenditures
Rebudgeting
Institutional policy
Sponsor policy/prior approval requirements
Impacts ability to get reimbursed and project planning
12. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Invoicing
Format and documentation
Standard
Sponsor specifies, non-standard with back up documentation required (negotiate!)
Tied to award type
Cost reimbursement (CR) or fixed price (FP)
Frequency
CR: in arrears monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, annually
FP: up-front, per milestones reached, at completion
Combination: tied to progress or deliverables
13. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Payment terms
Upon execution/initiation
Fixed schedule of installments
Milestone payments
Upon completion/termination
Withholding of percentage or amount
Net 30 days standard
Non-standard can impact institutions cash flow
Remember, revenue is generated based on expenditures
NOT representative of cash on hand or payments made by sponsor
Consider institutions cash outlay and outstanding A/R
14. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Deliverable/Reporting Requirements
Technical
Progress
Final
Financial
SF 269, SF 270, and SF 272 for fed grants
Sponsor specified forms
Timeframe for submission
Cost Sharing
Sponsor specified format for documentation
Letters from 3rd party contributors
School/dept to certify that cost share requirement met
15. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Property/Equipment
Annually and/or
At completion
Invention
Upon internal disclosure
At completion
Timely report submission impacts A/R, relationship between central offices with responsibility/oversight and PI/institutions reputation with sponsor
Delinquent reports = potential for sponsors to withhold funding on *all* awards
Label your institution as not responsible; can impact future competitions
16. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Problematic Terms and Conditions/Clauses
Publication
Restrictions and prior approval requirements
Impacts ability to disseminate research results
Export controls
Acceptance of controlled or proprietary technology, items covered by EAR/ITAR
Restrictions on hiring foreign students
Impact: Loss of fundamental research exclusion
Intellectual property
Internal invention disclosures
Disclosure to sponsor
Impacts: loss of ability to file provisional patents, legal battles over inventorship if proper disclosures not made
17. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Early Termination/Stop Work Orders
Coverage for non-cancellable commitments
Notifications
Account suspension by SPA changing the end date
Reconciliation of account(s)
Settlements and repayment to sponsor if necessary
Legal terms (indemnification, venue, governing law, etc.)
Require legal counsel review/approval
PI consent?
18. Award Terms & Conditionshot potatoes (contd)
Compliance
Human/animal subjects
Conflict of Interest
Committee review/approvals
Institutional policies: cost transfers, business expense, purchasing, etc.
Impacts level of risk to the PI, dept, institution
19. Award Classificationhot potatoes Award instrument
Grant, contract, subaward, subcontract
Award type
Cost reimbursement, fixed price, gifts (restricted and unrestricted)
Sponsor type
Federal, state, city, county, commercial/ private, non-profit
20. Award Classificationhot potatoes (contd)
Proper identification integral to:
Account set-up (at-risk or upon receipt of executed award)
Consistency re: data warehouse
Precedence (gift vs. grant, GRIFTS)
Integrity of financials (OMB A-110)
Audited financial statements (OMB A-133)
Impact on consistency and accuracy:
Internal reporting
External reporting
A-133 reporting
Cost accounting standards
21. Account Set-Uphot potatoes Single PI
Multiple PIs
One account shared or separate accounts for each?
PIs from different departments/divisions
Access?
Controls?
Budget years vs. cumulative project period
Separate accounts?
Carry forward
Automatic?
Prior approval required?
22. Account Set-Uphot potatoes (contd)
Interest Earned
Return to sponsor?
Use toward the project?
For use at institutions discretion?
Tracking
Reporting
Interest Income
Tracked separately from revenue
Program Income
Route to SPA; deposited to deferred revenue,
SPA increases project budget
User fees: deposit against same cost center where expense incurred
Reimbursements from 3rd parties
deposit against line expense was incurred
Cost sharing
Need to establish program/project
Identify cost share funding
Post expenditures accordingly
Certify once obligation met
23. Pre-award keys to success Training:
PIs: ask them the same questions for each proposal; explain your expectations and it will become habitual
Faculty Assistants: understand the relationship between the PI and his/her assistant and ally yourself with both
Share all training opportunities with anyone who works in the process
Serve the Greater Good:
Explain the impacts on the institution for a poorly planned budget
Remind your team that what serves the institution helps everyone
24. Pre-award keys to success (contd)
Get to know your neighborhood:
Meet and talk with all members of the community in the process during the lull
Knowing who does what and who can help during a crisis will help
Do what works for you:
If logic doesnt work, resort to emotion even guilt
If you are a teacher, teach; if you are a listener, listen use your skills to advance the process
Patience and planning will go a long way!
25. Building the bridge with post-award Building allies between pre-award and post-award:
Serve as the primary point of contact/gatekeeper between the PI, dept and the post-award team (too many cooks in the kitchen
.)
Learn about and anticipate the needs of your post-award counterparts
Educate your post-award counterpart on the specifics of each project
Communicate often, even when you think it insignificant or not in their realm
Keep people apprised of your expectations
Interact regularly, not solely when there are fires to be put out
Utilize them as the resource they are for your PIs or dept
Maintain your sense of humor!
26. Building the bridge with post-award (contd)
Understand award terms and conditions so you can negotiate the best deal for all the players
Realize sponsor restrictions and special requirements; negotiate to standardize when it makes sense and is possible
Accept differences between the variety of sponsors and awards; there is no cookie cutter solution
Job security: A day in the life of a research administrator is never without a new twist!
27. Resources
.Links Business Expenses, Expense Reimbursement policies
http://www.nyu.edu/cdv/site20/policies/policies.html
Cost Transfer Interim Guidelines:
http://www.nyu.edu/cdv/site20/cservice/spa.html
Purchasing Policies, including Purchasing Card
http://www.nyu.edu/purchasing.services/restricted/policies.html
Asset Management Procedures & Forms
http://www.nyu.edu/asset/procedures.html
OSP Policies & Procedures including NYU Policy on Distinguishing Between Gifts and Sponsored Awards
http://www.nyu.edu/osp/policies/
28. Questions/Comments?
Contact info. for follow-up questions:
Nancy Daneau, nancy.daneau@nyu.edu
Joanne Goldstein, joanne.goldstein@nyu.edu
Michael Miller, michael.miller@nyu.edu
Thanks for joining us!