1 / 60

Property Management

Property Management ORA-1310 Property Policy and Procedures Revised May 2007 Session Objectives Review Roles & Responsibilities for Effective Property Management Increase understanding of the “Big Picture” Develop working knowledge of policies and procedures

albert
Télécharger la présentation

Property Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Property Management ORA-1310 Property Policy and Procedures Revised May 2007

  2. SessionObjectives • Review Roles & Responsibilities for Effective Property Management • Increase understanding of the “Big Picture” • Develop working knowledge of policies and procedures • Identify online systems and reference tools • Provide opportunity for Q&A

  3. Where do you, the DPA, fit into this picture? Whyis this important for SU? Multiple “Hats” that Property serves • Compliance • Financial • Business Mgmt/Asset Management • Stewardship Source of Revenue • IDC recovery • Sponsor funds

  4. Property Management Office

  5. Property Service Reps Sandy Passetti, CPPM sandram@stanford.edu 725-7890 Vicky Vargas, CPPM vvargas@stanford.edu 725-7574 Stan Dunn, CPPM standunn@stanford.edu 725-0081 Brian Bretz, CPPM bbretz@stanford.edu 725-9839

  6. Primary DPA Roles & Responsibilities • Be an Advocate for Property Management • Establish and maintain timely, complete, and accurate property records • Ensure compliance and other requirements met • Be aware of activities within your organization • Assist Staff and Faculty in handling property matters and responsibilities • Collaborate with PSR on property matters • Establish effective communications network • Attend property-related training events

  7. DPA Challenges • Property function often part-time • Level of school/departmental support • Competing Priorities • Turnover and inherited open issues • Time to attend training

  8. Key Stakeholders • Board of Trustees and University President • CFO and Provost • Associate VP - Research Administration, Controller • Central Offices • ORA, Controller’s Office (AP, Plant Accounting), ITS, Procurement, Facilities, Risk Management, Internal Audit, EH&S • Principal Investigators, Schools and Departments • Property Administration & Inventory Staff • Audit & Compliance • Sponsors • ONR and DCAA • University Daily Interactions

  9. CorePartnerships Property Management Office DPA Custodians Users ITS Property Management Process OSR and CMA Sponsors Risk Management EH&S Controller’s Office Must work in tandem for success!

  10. Financial Perspective FY2003 Capital Equipment Acquisitions (est.) $62M Stanford Acquired $25M Direct Charge Capital Equipment Includes $3.5M Donations & Transfers (FMV) Note: Annual increases in all areas

  11. Key Property Policies and Concepts • Let’s discuss key policies and concepts that affect you as DPA…..

  12. The Compliance “Umbrella” • University Policies & Procedures • Property Manual, Guide Memos • Office of Management & Budget (OMB) Circulars • A110, A21, A133 • Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) • Property Clauses and subparts • Agency-Specific Supplements • NASA, NIH, and others. • Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) • Cost Accounting Standards

  13. System of Record • Sunflower Assets (SFA) • Physical Attributes and Accountability • Oracle Fixed Assets (FA) • Financial Attributes • Oracle Grant Accounting (GA) • Agreement Attributes • Grants and Contracts • Limitations and restrictions

  14. System Interactions

  15. Accountability • Defined as:Ownership or stewardship responsibility • Three basic types • Organizational Accountability and Liability • Managing Organization (Business Unit) • Steward (Department) • Custodian (and/or User) • Sponsor Accountability • Agreement Designation • Financial Accountability • Line Item Integrity • Controller and CFO Certification of financial data

  16. Property Management Reports Audits Acquisition Receiving Identification Records Fabrication Inventory Subcontract Admin. Utilization Consumption Storage/Inactive Movement/Transfers Disposals/Excess Agreement Closures Functional Elements for Property Management Note: Each color-coded section relates to a Life Cycle Phase Ongoing PhaseII PhaseI PhaseIII

  17. Property Life Cycle Rules & Business Needs Policies & Procedures Phase I Phase II Phase III Close-out and Disposal Acquisition In Service Tracking & Reporting Reconciliation & Adjustments System Management & Audits

  18. “Capital” Equipment • SU Capital Equipment must... • Cost $5,000 or greater • Have useful life of more than one year • Fabricated items must have... • Aggregate cost of $5,000 or greater • A useful life of more than one year after completion Note: For sponsor-owned property there may be different acquisition and reporting thresholds; financial notion of “capital” for purposes of depreciation does not apply.

  19. Acquisition Cost What gets included in the cost? *Stanford Labor is tracked and recorded on fabrications for sponsored projects, but is not included on standard installations

  20. Acquisition Steps • Need identified • Funding and approvals obtained • Pre-Purchase Screening completed • Purchase Requisition processed • Asset(s) purchased or otherwise acquired • i.e. Donation, sponsor-furnished • Items received, identified, tagged and recorded in the system

  21. Pre-Purchase Screening • Checking for asset availability to avoid unnecessary or duplicative purchases • Attest on requisition to having performed screening • Auditable compliance requirement • May be a potential savings to the University Acquisition Cost Screening Level Required Cost $5K - $24,999.99 Cost > $25K Within Steward Organization Across entire SFA database Note: Occasionally, some sponsors require screening below the $5,000 threshold.

  22. Purchase Requisitions • Your role as approver • Key things to look for • Expenditure Type • Line item detail • Prior Sponsor Approval, where applicable • Complete screening attestation • Tip: Maintain suspense file - requisitions requiring additional information or otherwise on “hold”, or to track incoming capital assets for future tagging

  23. Accounting Structure THE PTAEO • P - Project • T - Task • A - Award • E - EXPENDITURE TYPE • O - Organization Please ensure the expenditure type is correct before approving the requisition; a determining criteria for populating the PO Interface in SFA

  24. Asset Category Expenditure Type Useful Life Equipment Expenditure Types • Assigned at time of Purchase Requisition • Critical to Purchasing and Classification • Key Field for Financial Reporting • Consistency and Accuracy are Key Data Mapping

  25. The “Smell Test” All acquisitions must meet the following criteria, regardless of request: • Reasonable • Is the purchase reasonable? • Allocable • Will the asset be used on the project? • Allowable • Does the project permit the purchase? Beware of end-of-period purchases on sponsored projects!

  26. Changing Purchase Data • Transactions involving capital expenditure codes: • To change expenditure type, or • To change PTA used for purchase • Use PTAE Equipment Change Template • http://ora.stanford.edu/ora/pmo/dpa_resources/reconciliation.asp • If caught BEFORE any payments are made • Send request to changemypta@lists.stanford.edu • Procurement Office will change the PO to reflect new PTA data

  27. Equipment Change Template Purchase Requisition No.: (i.e. 12345670) Department Property Administrator: (Your Name) Authorized Financial Approver(s): (Whoever has signature authority) ------------------------------------------ -SU.ID Tag Number(s) affected: (we need this for reconciliation purposes) -To Credit Project: Task: Award: Expenditure Type: Payment Date: (at least month/year – should match the invoice payment) *Amount: $ -To Debit Project: Task: Award: Expenditure Type: Payment Date: *Amount: $ Justification/Comments: (why this request is being made) Same information as a journal, just different format

  28. Agreements (Awards) • Sponsored Projects agreements identify terms and conditions for Property Management • Provides source of funding • Agreement Characteristics • Most Common Types at Stanford • Grants, Contracts, Gifts/Donations, Loans • Award Levels • Prime or Sub-awards

  29. Asset Title (Ownership) • Three options in Sunflower Asset record: • Stanford University • Federal Government • Other Agency • May change throughout asset life, title at any given time affects many factors: • Reporting • IDC eligibility • Transfer processes available • Authority to modify • Taxability • Use • Disposal For capital non-Stanford owned equipment, there are special expenditure codes

  30. Sponsor-Owned Assets • Tagging must meet Sponsor Requirements • Stanford Barcode tag ALWAYS • May also require sponsor ID tag • Special attention to Gov’t-owned assets • Change in Ownership may require removal or change of overlay (more on this in a moment):

  31. Equipment Funding Sources • Can be single source or multiple source • Stanford funds vs. sponsor funds • Restricted • Unrestricted • Gift funds • Joint funding can affect: • title • taxability • accountability • Matching funds • Cost Sharing • Donations

  32. What must be recorded in SFA? SFA - Sunflower Assets, is used to maintain the University’s official individual asset records for: • Capital equipment • Capital fabricated equipment • All sponsor-owned property, regardless of cost • Donated capital equipment • Loaned equipment of any value • Leased equipment of any value Note: Transfers of equipment to Stanford from other institutions may need to be tracked in SFA. Contact your PSR for determination.

  33. What can also be recorded in SFA? Non-capital property that the department elects to track: • Computers • Items with hazardous waste implications • Projection equipment • Cameras • Non-capital items transferred from other universities

  34. Loans v. Leases • Loans • Set time frame • No monetary consideration • Leases • Set charges (i.e. monthly billing) • Time may be open-ended • MUST go through Procurement • Use appropriate Lease expenditure type • Depending on loan type, may have different procedures. In all cases, notify PMO. • Loan part of Grant – PMO • Loan from Manufacturer – Procurement • Loan part of Contract – OSR

  35. Incoming Loans PMO Issue Loan Document • Loan on a grant • Loan on contract; no modification issued • Federal government loan • Loan part of existing or new sponsored project • Ensure appropriate terms and conditions • Process contract modification • Contact Office of Technology Licensing, as needed Refer to OSR • Equipment evaluation/testing, not usually associated with a specific government sponsored project • Director of Procurement must negotiate terms and conditions of loan • Processing requisition in iProcurement pending clarification of process Refer to Procurement

  36. Asset Identification Purpose • Identify Ownership • Standardize Designation of Asset Control Numbers • Facilitate Inventory • Deter Theft Tag placement • Readily visible and accessible • Upper right-hand corner is default location Source • Provided by PMO • Contact: Drina Adams 723-9004 Note: Must be recorded in SFA within 30 days of receipt

  37. Asset Identification, cont. If owned by the US Government, This tag is required! Overlay Options • Non-Stanford • Government-Owned • Non-Capital • Donated Other tagging options • Non-Inventory Asset • Fabrication • Lease (recommended)

  38. Untaggable Assets • An item that is too sensitive, inaccessible, or would be damaged by affixing the decal • What do you do? • Assign barcode ID tag • Record in Sunflower Assets (SFA) • Print record; affix tag to file copy • Flag SFA record as “untaggable” • Keep “untaggable” binder in office Property Record Note: Must be recorded in SFA within 30 days of receipt

  39. Asset Location • SFA/FAMIS • Location structure • Quad__Building-Floor__Room • i.e. STERN_040-01_124 • Includes off-campus locations • Areas of implication include: • Indirect Cost Recovery • Use • Audit • Inventory • Grant Compliance

  40. Location Documentation • SFA record at time of acquisition • Update SFA record if location change 30+ days • Sign-out logs for temporary moves • Off-campus location worksheet

  41. Off-Campus Assets • Two types of off-campus locations: • Stanford Space • Includes Leased buildings, remote sites • Location is in the Space registry • In SFA, use location from the list of values • Non-Stanford Space • May be business or private residence • Location not in space registry • In SFA, use “Areas not in 1-14” for Quad • Private Residence 510E-99999_9999999999 • Private Business 550E-99999_9999999999 • Requires Off-campus Worksheet • http://www.stanford.edu/dept/UPA/DPAupdate/5offcamp.xls • SLAC & PAVA = 998 & 990, no worksheet required • Add building or other location info in comments

  42. Off-Campus Worksheet

  43. Storage & Movement • Justified retention • Purpose • Storage period • Secure location • Document what is in storage • Travel • Domestic • Foreign

  44. Export Controls • Research equipment leaving the country MUST be pre-approved, including laptop computers for research personnel • Certification needed even if no license is required • Computers for administrative personnel are not restricted • Steve Eisner, Export Control Officer • Steve.eisner@stanford.edu • http://www.stanford.edu/dept/DoR/exp_controls/

  45. Utilization • Assets must be used • In support of Stanford-related job responsibilities • By Stanford staff, students or related personnel • In a Stanford-approved location • Location leads to use questions • If sponsored-owned, may require authorization for use

  46. Maintenance/Calibration • Required per manufacturer specifications or project needs • Types of information to record: • Extended warranty information • Maintenance/calibration dates • Maintenance/calibration costs • Useful in determining when replacement needed • Maintain file with supporting documentation • Information may be auditable Sponsor-owned assets MUST be maintained to manufacturer specifications

  47. Physical Inventory • Purpose • Verify accuracy of property records • Check “overall health” of property system • Frequency and Recording • Biennial inventories required • Departmental inventories discretionary • Posted in Sunflower Assets • Special inventories • Closeout of sponsored contracts • Departmental requests • Sponsor directives

  48. Physical Inventory, cont. • Process • Barcode scanning or approved alternatives • Physical verification of asset attributes, condition, location and status • Reconciliation and variance resolution required • Uses of data include • Use active items as depreciation base • Obtain Indirect Cost Recovery for depreciation • University and Sponsor Reporting • Risk Management Assessments

  49. Auditing Organizations • Office of Naval Research • Defense Contract Auditing Agency • Sponsors • Internal Audit • Price-Waterhouse Coopers • Others... Note: All property audits must be coordinated through PMO or Internal Audit

  50. Audits • As DPA, you may be asked to assist in or provide: • Sample verification • Area Access • Supporting Documentation • Acquisition Approvals • Explanation of Use • Property Process confirmation • Follow-up Actions • Assist PMO with reports • Feedback, communication, etc

More Related