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Building a Successful Cost Proposal. Post Doc Workshop February 12, 2019. Agenda. Introduction Understanding the Environment Proposal Consideration Proposal Workflow Questions. Introduction. Why is this important? Diversify funding pool Expose your research to sponsors
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Building a Successful Cost Proposal Post Doc Workshop February 12, 2019
Agenda • Introduction • Understanding the Environment • Proposal Consideration • Proposal Workflow • Questions
Introduction • Why is this important? • Diversify funding pool • Expose your research to sponsors • Encourage collaboration • Focus on federal funding- but the building blocks will apply to all cost proposals
Understanding the Environment Federal Requirements Agency Funding Opportunity
Understanding the Environment Funding Agencies Funding Opportunities
Federal Requirements • Uniform Guidance outlines cost principles relevant to proposals: • Allowable? • Reasonable? • Allocable?
Allowable • Consistently Treated- Similar costs must be treated the same in like circumstances, as either direct or indirect (CFR 200.403(d)) • Reasonable- A prudent business person would have purchased this and paid this price (CFR 200.404) • Allocable- It can be assigned to the activity under the award (CFR 200.405)
Reasonable • The cost “does not exceed that which would be incurred by a prudent person under the circumstances prevailing at the time the decision was make to incur the cost.”(CFR 200.414)
Allocable • Incurred for the project • Proportionally distributed • Necessary for the overall operation of the project
Examples of Unallowable Costs • Personnel (e.g., salary caps) • Travel: non-economy airfare • Contractors/Subawards: experience, justification
Quick Quiz • What are the 3 categories to determine if a cost is acceptable?
Proposal Considerations Funding Opportunity Regulatory Considerations Budget
Activity: Review Funding opportunity READ and LOVE your funding opportunity announcement • Who and Why? • Agency (e.g., NSF, DOE, NIH) • Purpose • What and How? • Eligibility & other specifics (e.g., cost share/matching, terms and conditions) • Due Date & budget ceiling • Submission method
Elements of your Proposal • Title & Research Abstract • Proposal Narrative (specific aims, expected outcomes, methods) • Biosketch • Budget & Budget Justification • Literature Cited • Subrecipient Documents • Other (e.g., Commitment Letter)
Regulatory Considerations • Intellectual Property • Authorship/Publication • Responsible Conduct of Research
Preparing Your Budget • Salary & Fringe • Equipment • Travel • Participant Support • Subawards • Other Direct cost • Indirect Cost • Documentation (e.g., equipment pricing)
Budget Consideration • Prior approval requirements • Equipment, subawards, etc. • Cost share (if required) • Required? • Tracking appropriately • Multi-year budgets (complex and time consuming) • Inclusion of inflation & merit increases • Itemized annual budget & cumulative summary
Salary/Personnel Salary considerations: • Name/Position • Salary • % Effort
Fringe Benefits Components: • Health care • Employer taxes • Workers compensation • Unemployment & life insurance • Retirement contributions Current Benefit Rates for Carnegie: • Employee - 33% • Post-Docs – 15% • Fellows – 7.3%
Equipment Definition • Acquisition cost of = or > $5,000 • Useful life > 1 year • Includes shipping and setup costs • Aggregate cost = $5,000 or more • Component A costs $3,000 and • Component B costs $2,500 • Need A & B for functionality? Capital Equipment • A or B can be used alone? Supplies
Travel What to consider: • Domestic vs. Foreign • Estimate lodging using per diem rates(GSA site) • Actual must not exceed per diem • Lowest coach fare and Fly America Act • Upgrade for extra legroom in coach unallowable (per UG) • Other: Auto rental, mileage reimbursement, tolls, parking, taxi
Participant Support • Costs Elements: • Stipends • Travel • Subsistence • Other (materials & supply, conference registration, tuition) • Funding purpose (outreach, to augment exposure to research)
Subawards or Vendor Funds provided to 3rd party (subaward or vendor) • Subaward vs. vendor classification
Other Direct Costs Types of Costs • Materials and supplies (special computing laptop) • Cost <$5,000 per item and used for project • Itemize • Publication costs (graphic design, photography) • Consultant services • Individual/entity providing specialized services • Consider consulting rate (itemize costs: materials, etc.) • Fees must be customary for the type of service
Indirect Costs: Definition Allocation of administrative costs that are not charged directly to the award but that are required for implementation of award • Indirect Costs Includes: • Administrative Support Staff • Utilities • Supplies • Building Costs
Indirect Costs Calculation Modified Total Direct Costs Total Direct Costs less: • Fellowship and Participant costs • Capital equipment of $5,000 or more • Portion of each subaward in excess of $25,000 • Other costs excluded per grant terms Total Indirect Costs Total Direct Cost Base (MTDC) Indirect Cost Rate 61.53%
Budget Justification • Salary: name, position, purpose • Fringe: benefit components & rates • Equipment: description, purpose, cost/pricing basis • Travel: who, where, when, purpose & detailed cost • Participant Support: who, travel, other expenses (e.g., stipend) • Subawards: purpose, cost (individual detailed budget & justification) • Other Direct cost: detailed cost per item, unit cost & purpose • Indirect Cost: Carnegie’s negotiated rate & cognizant agency
Helpful Links • Uniform Guidance: • Uniform Administrative Requirements for Federal Awards (Cost Principles, Audit Requirements) • NSF Guidance: • Proposal & Award Policies & Procedures Guide (PAPPG), January 2019 • NASA Guidance: • Grant & Cooperative Agreement Handbook • Revisions per 2 CFR 200 • DOE Guidance: • Grant Policy Guidance • GSA • GSA Per diem Rates Lookup