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Subrecipient Monitoring NCURA Regional Conference April 25, 2007

This conference session provides an overview of federal regulations related to subawards, including the responsibilities of different stakeholders, tips for managing subawards, and examples of what other institutions are doing. It also covers the decision matrix for determining when a subaward is appropriate versus other procurement actions.

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Subrecipient Monitoring NCURA Regional Conference April 25, 2007

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  1. Subrecipient MonitoringNCURA Regional ConferenceApril 25, 2007 Jeri Muñiz Director, Sponsored Projects University of California, Irvine Csilla M. Csaplár Contract & Grant Officer Stanford University

  2. Agenda • Subaward determination • Overview of Federal regulations • What to do and who does it • Responsibilities of the PI, department administrator, central administrator • Tips and Tools during the life of the subaward • What are other institutions doing?

  3. Decision MatrixSubaward vs. other procurement action A subaward is likely appropriate if you can answer “yes” to any of the following questions: • Does the subrecipient entity’s statement of work represent an intellectually significant portion of the programmatic effort of the overall project? • Does the entity have responsibility for programmatic decision making? • Could the entity’s work result in intellectual property developed or publishable results (including co-authorship)? • Will the entity need animal and/or human subjects approvals for its portion of the work? Other procurement actions may be appropriate when the vendor: • provides the goods and services within its normal business operations; • provides similar goods or services to many different purchasers; • operates in a competitive environment; • provides goods or services that are ancillary to the operation of your entity’s sponsored project; • is not subject to compliance requirements of the Prime sponsor.

  4. Federal Regulations The following regulations guide Subawards and Subrecipient Monitoring: • OMB Circular A-133 • OMB Circular A-110 • Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) • Primarily for contract as funding mechanism

  5. OMB A-133 Sets the Stage The pass-through entity is subject to oversight per OMB Circular A-133 When the pass-through entity issues subawards it must: • Monitor the activities of its subrecipients • Ensure that federal awards are used in compliance with laws, regulations, and the provisions of agreements • Ensure performance goals are achieved • Oversight responsibilities are similar to those of a federal agency dealing with its prime recipients. A-133

  6. A-133 Expectations 1. Subaward Policies and Procedures exist that: • Adequately address your responsibilities under A-133 • Assign institutional roles and responsibilities • Address subrecipient monitoring • How is routine monitoring performed? • Is Risk Assessment policy or guidance needed? If yes, how is it implemented?

  7. A-133 Expectations, cont. 2. Evidence of Adequate Subrecipient Monitoring • A-133 Audit Monitoring • Data downloaded from Single Audit website (http://harvester.census.gov/sac/) is not sufficient by itself • Need evidence that it was reviewed by institutional official relevant to the particular subaward • How are non-A-133 entities reviewed?

  8. A-133 Expectations, cont. 3. Evidence of: • Cost-Sharing Monitoring • Directly attributable to benefiting project • Detailed backup for expenditures • Donations are be accompanied by a formal appraisal 4. Institutional policy that details expectations for adequate documentation in the following areas: • Pre-Award Reviews • Life-of-Award Monitoring • Award Closeout

  9. Proposal Preparation Stage

  10. Proposal Preparation Your PI, realizing the need for additional expertise, requests a proposal from potential subrecipient(s). Subrecipient’s proposal must include: • Statement of Work (SOW) • Budget and Justification • Subrecipient Commitment form or letter of commitment • Any other documents required by your institution or by Sponsor

  11. Proposal Preparation: PI’s role Your PI assesses the potential Subrecipient’s ability to perform the work successfully based on: • Past performance • Technical/financial resources • Proposed scope of work The PI then: • Integrates the Subrecipient’s SOW into your entity’s work statement • Includes the Subrecipient’s budget as a direct cost line item in your entity’s budget • Forwards completed proposal to Institutional Representative for review, including the Subrecipient’s proposal

  12. Proposal Preparation: Institutional Representative’s role The Institutional Representative will: • Verify it is a subaward (as opposed to another form of procurement action) • Review the proposal for completeness, accuracy, and compliance with institution and sponsor policies • Verify that the potential Subrecipient has acceptable business practices • Issue management decisions on audit findings (if applicable) • Submit the proposal to the sponsor for consideration

  13. What Should You Look For? • Subaward vs. other procurement action • Use of negotiated rates • Human subjects and/or animal subjects • Conflict of interest • Assurances and certifications • Audit status • Subrecipient Statement of Work & Deliverables • Subrecipient Budget and Budget Justification • Are fringe benefits and F&A calculated in accordance with approved rates? • What if the subrecipient doesn’t have an approved rate? • Cost-sharing commitment • Cost and Pricing Data/Certificate As advance preparation for the award, ensure all required assurances are filed and all necessary documents are obtained.

  14. Award Initiation Stage

  15. University Prime Award Consideration • Sponsor considers your institution’s proposal for acceptance • Your Institutional Representative will negotiate Terms and Conditions (T&C’s) with the sponsor as needed • An award is made to your institution The Subrecipient is subject to flow-down of T&C’s from both the prime funding source & pass-through entity(s)

  16. patti Institutional RepresentativePrepares and Issues Subaward Your Institutional Rep will: • Verify all approvals are in place • Receive and review all supplemental documentation • Prepare draft subaward agreement • Negotiate terms of subaward with Subrecipient • Send subaward to subrecipient for execution

  17. Department can influence: Statement of Work Key Personnel Period of Performance Dollar Amount Payment Terms Prior Approvals Cost Sharing Reporting Requirements Institutional Rep Determines: Intellectual Property Equipment Terms Indemnification, ITAR HIPAA, Rights in Data Publication, Termination Reference to Cost Principles Certs and Reps/Assurance Flow-Down Requirements Audit Requirements Issues Addressed in the Subaward Document

  18. Additional Subaward Approvals Required To be completed or obtained by your institution’s PI: • Fair and Reasonable Cost Analysis • Sole Source Justification (if applicable) • Prior approval for entering into a subaward (federal contracts only) Samples of forms can be found online at: ora.stanford.edu/ora/osr/osr_forms.asp

  19. Before Authorizing Work to Begin • Determine financial adequacy of the Subrecipient • Acceptable A-133 or DCAA audit, or financial questionnaire • Obtain satisfactory evidence of F&A rates/FB rates • Conduct and document formal or informal cost & pricing analysis and certificate if needed • Verify Subrecipient is not debarred or suspended • Obtain sole source justification if needed • Verify all necessary approvals have been received • Agency prior approval normally needed for contracts • Some agencies require prior review of text • Make high-risk/low-risk determination • Ensure all compliance approvals have been obtained

  20. Potential Indicators of High-Risk • A qualified audit report, or failure to have a current audit report • Inadequate response to a financial questionnaire • History of non-compliance • History of non-performance or failure to use funds for their authorized purposes • New subrecipient (or new to this type of project) • New personnel or systems • Large subaward/large percentage pass-through • Award size relative to subrecipient’s sponsored research portfolio • Criticality to overall success of pass-through entity’s project • Subrecipient in a remote location • Type of subrecipient (is the subrecipient already subject to A-133?) Let’s review a sample Risk Analysis tool!

  21. Potential Responses to High Risk Subrecipients • Corrective Action Plan • Discuss need for special monitoring with PI/department • Ask for extra contact between PI and Sub’s PI • Ask for more frequent technical reporting • Engage in “agreed-upon procedures engagements” • Add more detailed or frequent invoicing requirements • Add requirement for expenditure backup materials • Tie receipt of technical progress reports to payments • Require on-site monitoring (technical and financial) • Add more stringent termination or stop-work language for failure to comply with requirements

  22. Monitoring an Active Subaward

  23. Compliance Responsibilities of the Pass-Through Entity Your PI is primarily responsible for monitoring the subrecipient's expenses for: • Allowability • Allocability • Reasonableness • Ensuring the performance goals of the project are achieved Department administrators play a key role in this step!

  24. Compliance Responsibilities of the Subrecipient In accordance with compliance regulations, Subrecipient is responsible for: WORK - Fulfilling the program’s technical goals MONEY - Spending in accordance with T&C’s and applicable OMB Circulars • A-21 - Cost Principles for Educational Institutions • A-110 – Uniform Admin Requirements for Non-Profit Organizations • A-133 - Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations RULES - Monitoring both programmatic and financial aspects of the program • HIPAA compliance • Reports – Technical AND Financial • Human and Animal Subjects • Patents and Inventions (if applicable)

  25. During the Life of the Subaward • PI/Department monitors subrecipient’s adherence to terms of subaward • PI/Department modifies subaward (add $$, time) as appropriate • Institutional Rep ensures annual compliance (A-133, IRB, etc.) • PI approves invoices for payment • Property clauses are flowed down from prime award • Property Management Office verifies Subrecipient’s property system is “approved” • PMO sends property reports to prime sponsor (as required) • PI/Department plans for a graceful closeout at end of subaward • Note: This is not necessarily the same date as the end of your project • PI monitors scientific progress toward milestones outlined in the subaward proposal and agreement Expenditures must reflect scientific progress!

  26. PI Monitors Subrecipient’s Adherence to Terms The PI ensures that: • Technical progress is being made according to schedule • Subrecipient has proper control of property • Subrecipient is continuing to meet compliance requirements • Subrecipient is meeting reporting requirements • Required prior approvals are obtained

  27. Monitoring Subrecipient Invoices: PI • Invoices from the subrecipient allow your institution to reimburse for project related expenses • Level of detail required is specified in the subaward for: • Salaries • Travel • Equipment • Subawards • Material and Supplies • Cost-Sharing • Certification • F&A (rate and amount) • Totals • Cumulative expenditures by line item

  28. Monitoring Subrecipient Invoices: PI • Verify costs are incurred within the period of performance • Ensure expenses are aligned with technical progress • Verify cost sharing is appropriately reflected if required • Do not approve invoices for payment if technical or financial reports are delinquent • Do not approve invoices that are insufficiently detailed for you to feel confident the costs are allowable, allocable, and reasonable Communicate any deficiencies to the Subrecipient and Institutional Rep in a timely manner!

  29. Subrecipient Monitoring at Closeout

  30. Ensure a Timely Closeout • 90 days before the end date of the subaward, confer with the Subrecipient to determine whether work will be completed on time. • If not, request a no cost extension from prime. If a no cost extension is granted, pass it through to the Subrecipient. • 30-90 days before the end, request an invoice marked “Final” and remind the Subrecipient when it will be due • An invoice marked “Final” is always required.

  31. Ensure a Timely Closeout • Upon expiration… • Obtain all required reports from subrecipient • Project Performance • Technical Reports • Project Deliverables • Financial • Final Invoice • Refunds, Rebates, Credits Form (if necessary) • Subcontractor’s Release Form • Verify Fulfillment of Cost Sharing Requirements • Disallowances or disputed costs • Fulfilled Obligations • Patent • Property Reports • SB/MBE/WBE reports • Review reports to make sure they are acceptable

  32. Subaward Monitoring at Closeout • Verify fulfillment of any cost-sharing requirements • Verify receipt of invoice marked “Final” • Obtain signed Refunds, Rebates, Credits Form (if necessary) • Verify clear understanding about record retention • Audit subaward (if necessary) • Verify Subrecipient is not debarred or suspended • Verify that Subrecipient has filed an audit report (or equivalent) through subaward end date • Adjust Pass-through entity’s records if necessary to reflect changes in subaward costs

  33. What are your Institutions doing?

  34. Resources • OMB Circulars: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/index.html • Federal Demonstration Partnership: http://thefdp.org/ • Harvester Single Audit Clearinghouse: http://harvester.census.gov/sac/ • Stanford sample forms: http://ora.stanford.edu/ora/osr/osr_forms.asp

  35. Questions?

  36. Contact us! Jeri Muñiz Director, Sponsored Projects University of California, Irvine (949) 824-2897 JLMuniz@rgs.uci.edu Csilla M. Csaplár Contract & Grant Officer Stanford University (650) 498-6877 csaplar@stanford.edu

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