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Cost Sharing

Cost Sharing. James Trotter Quality Standards Manager Sponsored Projects Administration. What is Cost Sharing?. Cost sharing is sometimes referred to as “ matching ” or “ in kind ”

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Cost Sharing

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  1. Cost Sharing James Trotter Quality Standards Manager Sponsored Projects Administration

  2. What is Cost Sharing? • Cost sharing is sometimes referred to as “matching” or “in kind” • Cost sharing is defined as that portion of the total costs of a sponsored project or program not borne by the sponsor

  3. Types of Cost Sharing • Committed • Mandatory • Voluntary • Uncommitted • Voluntary (VUCS) • When Cost Sharing consists of effort, any of these three types should be identified and accounted for on effort certification statements

  4. Mandatory Cost Sharing • Will be identified in the Request For Proposals (RFP) • Required by the agency for the award to be given • Will be identified in the award documents • Must be reported to the sponsor in the financial report • Must be accounted for on Effort Certification Statements as committed C/S—it has been committed to the project

  5. Voluntary Committed • Voluntary Committed Cost Sharing is not explicitly required by the sponsoring agency but has been offered by the PI and OHSU in the application, proposal budget, or budget justification • This commitment becomes binding once it is offered and the grant or contract has been awarded • It must be accounted for in the Effort Certification process • Voluntary committed cost sharing should be minimized at all times and is discouraged as it can lower OHSU’s F&A rate

  6. VUCS • Voluntary Uncommitted Cost Sharing (VUCS) • Not explicitly required on a program and over and above that which is offered in an application • Internal agreement between the PI and OHSU • Not reported to the sponsor • Does not become part of our “research base” and has no impact on OHSU’s F&A rate • Still should be captured in the Effort Certification process as Uncommittted C/S

  7. Examples of C/S Expenses • Some examples of expenses that can be used to satisfy the cost sharing requirements are: • Effort • Supplies or equipment contributed to the project by the institution • Services or supplies donated by a third party • Reduced or waived F&A rates

  8. C/S Requirements • Costs used for committed C/S must be: • Allowable per sponsor guidelines • Verifiable • Incurred within the project period • Provide a direct benefit to the project to which it applies

  9. Effort as Cost Sharing • Committed effort on a sponsored project can be considered Cost Sharing • If mandatory or voluntary committed, Cost Sharing must be tracked and reported, and it then becomes part of our “research base”

  10. OGA and Cost Sharing • Awards with mandatory or voluntary committed cost sharing will have a Cost Sharing account set up in OGA • Must provide a Cost Sharing account, usually a departmental general fund, at time of award

  11. OGA Numbering System • Separate Cost Sharing accounts are set up in OGA using the following numbering system: • 1st year of the award - GXXXX0001ACS

  12. Numbering System (cont.) • 2nd year of the award - GXXXX0001BCS • If the main account stays an “A“ throughout the competitive segment, the Cost Sharing account will also stay an “ACS“ • Multiple cost sharing accounts will be set up if more than one general fund is provided

  13. Cost Sharing Questions?

  14. Effort Issues James Trotter Quality Standards Manager Sponsored Projects Administration

  15. Procedure Online • The full text of OHSU’s Effort Certification Procedure is available on the SPA website: http://www.ohsu.edu/research/rda/spa/docs/effortcertproc.pdf

  16. The Basics • Who? • Why? • What? • When? • How?

  17. Who? • An employee is required to complete an Effort Certification Statement if… • Activity is partially or totally devoted to a sponsored agreement (federal grant, contract or cooperative agreement, or federal money from a pass-through entity) • AND, pay is partially or totally paid from such an agreement, or represents cost sharing

  18. Who Else? • Deans, Directors, Department Chairs, and Division Heads must ensure that administrators, investigators, and employees in their units know, understand, and abide by Effort Reporting policy and procedures • Principal Investigators (PIs) must understand and abide by Effort Reporting policy and procedures

  19. And Who Else? • Departmental Effort Coordinators are generally responsible for the distribution, collection, and return of Effort Certification Statements to Sponsored Projects Administration (SPA) • SPA is responsible for creation, distribution, and collection of Effort Certification Statements and for maintenance of the Effort Reporting system

  20. Why? • OHSU’s Effort Certification system was developed in direct response to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-21 • A-21 addresses “principles for determining costs applicable to grants, contracts, and other agreements with educational institutions”

  21. More Why? • A-21 aims to ensure that the Federal Government bears its fair share of total costs • The policies and provisions in A-21 are mandatory for institutions that receive federal funds • Institutions must be able to document the distribution of charges using an acceptable method • Failure to comply with A-21 can have very serious consequences

  22. What? • The Effort Certification system: • Documents effort expended on federally sponsored projects • Shows costs associated with various university activities • Provides data to help develop the university’s Facilities & Administrative (F&A) rates • Provides data for various management reports • Documents labor cost sharing on sponsored projects

  23. More What? • Certification is the assertion, by an employee or a responsible official with suitable means of verification, that labor charges accurately reflect effort expended over the certification period

  24. When? • OHSU Effort Certification Statements are processed semi-annually for all applicable employees • Effort Certification Packets are distributed to Departmental Effort Coordinators approximately 30 days after the end of the effort period

  25. Cost Sharing on Effort Statements • In absence of salary support on a project, the department can create an ECS to reflect mandatory or committed C/S: http://www.ohsu.edu/research/rda/spa/docs/ldesctemp.pdf

  26. When and How Soon? • Departments have 35 business days from the receipt of Effort Certification materials to distribute, complete, collect, and return all Effort Certification Statements to Sponsored Projects Administration (SPA) • Failure to meet the deadline will trigger various escalating “reminders”

  27. Normal Certification

  28. Removing Suspense

  29. Hand Correction

  30. Cost Sharing

  31. And How? • Effort Certification Statement should be signed by the employee • Otherwise, the Statement may be signed by a person with suitable means of verification—such as the PI or the employee’s direct supervisor • In order to sign, the certifier needs direct knowledge of the employee’s effort

  32. How Else? • It is generally inappropriate for a Departmental Effort Coordinator or a Department Chair to sign all of the Effort Certification Statements in the unit or department • It is always appropriate for a PI to sign statements for employees on her/his projects

  33. How High? • NIH prohibits employees from receiving a salary greater than the established cap (currently $191,300 annually) • Any amount above this cap must be considered as Cost Sharing and charged to the appropriate non-federal account

  34. Better Think Twice! • What do I do if an Effort Certification Statement must be amended? • Make changes by hand and submit the amended Effort Certification Statement with all supporting documentation attached

  35. Supporting Documentation • SPA Labor Cost Transfer Approval Form • Written justification for change in effort • Signed by PI • Signed by department/institute head; (Dean if this is also PI)

  36. Effort Reporting Questions?

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