Indirect Cost Calculations: Beyond the Basics
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Transcript of Indirect Cost Calculations: Beyond the Basics
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Indirect Cost Calculations: Beyond the Basics
Jim Carter Huron ConsultingTuesday March 12, 2013
2:45 – 3:30 PM
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– Overview
– F&A Rate Environment
– Rate Optimization Strategies
– Space
– Review of the proposal
– Negotiations
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Overview
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Multiple forces are creating pressure to increase F&A Recovery
Pressures to increase F&A cost recovery
fund utilization effectiveness
Desire to better understand F&A
cost recovery fund allocation
University research strategic
directions and priorities
Opportunities to invest more in
conducting and developing
research
Significant and growing costs of
research
Recent work of Committees and
Task Forces
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Building Depreciation
Interest
EquipmentDepreciation
Operations& Maintenance
Library
Admin
OrganizedResearch
Instr & DeptResearch
Other SponsoredActivity
Other Inst.Activity
Faci
lity
Poo
ls
SpaceSq Ft
SpaceSq Ft
SpaceSq Ft
SpaceSq Ft
FTE &SW
MTDC
Allocation Method
DENOMINATOR
NUMERATOR
March 2013 May 2013
April 2013
New rate is in place for beginning of the new fiscal
year
April/May 2012
July 1, 2013
June/ July 2012
September/ October 2012
Space Survey completed Audit completed, Financial statements
issued
December 31, 2012
Proposal submitted to DHHS-DCA
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F&A cost rate proposal is developed based on FYE
audited financial data
Client closes fiscal year between 6/30-8/30
DHHS-DCA conducts site review and negotiates new
rate
DHHS-DCA conducts desk review of proposal
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Increasing recovery can be achieved in three main areas:
– Optimize F&A Rate Calculation
– Optimize Negotiated F&A Rate
– Manage accounting and research charging practices• Control F&A cost rate waivers• Recover more costs directly• Develop strong cost sharing policies
F&A Rate Environment
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• Geographic Location – Local costs indirect– Direct costs national
• Private vs. Public• ONR vs. DCA• Size of Undergraduate Population• Political realities
– State Budgets– Federal budget– 1.3% Utility Cost Allowance (eliminated) – 26% Admin cap
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DHHS-DCA• Responsible for 95% of the rates• Reviews conducted by negotiator• Negotiations are loosely based on
results of the review• Gap between calculated and
negotiated rate depends on:– Quality of proposal– History of past proposals– Regional prejudices
• Rates are all predetermined• Regions have autonomy over rate
issues
ONR
• ONR negotiates only 45 institutions nationwide and is a single office
• DCAA conducts audits and provides an Audit Report to ONR
• Negotiations are conducted by ONR once an audit is completed
• Negotiations are based on the Audit• Gap between calculated and
negotiated rates depends on:– Issues raised by audit– History of past proposals– Quality and Relevancy of DCAA issues
Rate Maximization Strategies
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• “In theory the system should….”• We have all the data we need• “The University reconciles the Fixed Asset system to the Financial
statements”• “We have a perpetual inventory system and ….”
• We identify all space• We can identify all our cost sharing• We scrubbed our base
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• The F&A rate calculation can be optimized in 4 ways:– Treat F&A rate calculations as an ongoing program– Minimize the on-campus Organized Research Base– Maximize costs in the Facilities-related pools
• Depreciation, O&M, Interest, Library– Maximize allocation of facilities costs to Organized Research
• Through space assignments to Organized Research
The majority of rate increases are as a result of borrowed capital and new construction for research facilities.
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• Develop campus and system programs– Strategic planning associated with rate calculations and negotiations– Maintain and develop or enhance key systems
• Building and Equipment Inventory• Space survey system• Utility metering and monitoring
– Rate Increases can only occur when submitting rates• Shorten the rate submission cycle (3 year or less)
– Strategically analyze the position of each rate• 5 year goals and objectives by universities
– Prepare annual projections on the rate
– Maximize effective recovery rate
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• Organized Research Base– On vs. Off campus identification
• Identifying the Off-campus projects correctly
– Minimize cost sharing– Organized Research vs. other base definitions (Instruction, OSA)– The ‘definition of research’ for financial reporting vs. Organized Research
• Help to minimize reclassifications from Research to other activities in the F&A proposal
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• Building and Equipment– Track equipment to building, department and room– Useful life analysis for building components– Fully depreciated equipment (clean it up, minimize risk)
• Operations and Maintenance– Identification of costs to the research buildings
• Accurate metering of utilities costs to buildings• Work order system records for maintenance and repair
– Identification of non capital O&M– Strategic spending in the base year– Analyze large off-setting credit amounts in OM pools– Accumulation of defensible statistical information
• Through documentation of all EHS costs• Through documentation of lease and rental costs
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• Space and space usage– Better use of facilities
• Maximize research activity in newer and more expensive space• Strategic space assignments to highly funded PIs• Minimize space identified for research but occupied by non research activities• Minimize vacant space
– Types of research by campus (lab vs. office based)– Maintain accurate occupant information– Consistent use of space coding– Ability to match occupants and activities in a database– Maintain occupancy data on all leases
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• Develop practices for charging faculty time to projects – incentives to charge more– Faculty want to ‘save’ money for other costs
• Other direct charging practices– Charge tech time
• Service centers charging practices and subsidies involved– Core facility management – Animal and other rates
• Cost sharing commitments that aren’t required– Minimize the use of Voluntary Uncommitted cost sharing
• Administrative costs– Documentation of internal assessments (charge back to hospitals, auxiliaries,
etc.)
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• Use overhead return policies as an incentive to charge the full rate• Service Center and Recharge Operations
– Are typically subsidized – A focus of Federal review
• Accounting transparency– Differences in costing practices that affect the FA– Creation of clear accounting transactions to track interdepartmental charging– Cost recovery policies for auxiliary and other self funded departments– Treatment of interrelated entities
• Sponsored Project Administration– Pre-award setup for appropriate identification of on-campus vs. off-campus– Classification of non-sponsored activity as research
Space
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•Define bases (OR, OSA, Service, IN)•Define pools•Applicable regulations (federal, state, etc.)•Policies and procedures may impact•Senior management and consultants•State, Federal, sponsoring agencies •Research administration, F&A staff•Department and central administrators
Base Review First
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•Campus-wide space management committee•Space management system personnel•Joint or separate surveys•F&A space (occupant) survey staff•ITS technical support and senior staff
–Space Management System (SMS)–F&A occupant/activity system
Core Space Survey Team
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Survey Team - Departmental
• Key departmental contacts list• Both fiscal and facilities managers
• Email, phone, location• Spirit of partnership• Relationships established pay dividends throughout study• Certain administrators as key advisors
Review
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• What does one point provide the University?• What does it cost the Federal Government?• How many Admin $ are required to increase the admin
component by one point?• How many Facilities $ are required to increase the facilities rate
by one point?• How much OR space is needed to increase the rate?
The value of a point
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• What three things are you most comfortable with?• What three things do you have the most concern about?• Where are there possibilities for an increase in the rate?• If you were the government where would you look to decrease the rate?
Questions Management should be asking
Negotiations
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• Timeline– Get the proposals done on time – December 31, 20XX– Negotiations are conducted on a first in first out basis– DCA may request a significant amount of information– DCA may conduct a site visit– Takes up to 1 year to negotiate
• Common issues that impact negotiations– Building componentization– Equipment inventory records– Space survey results– Prior negotiation issues– Issues with other schools
• Last Resort – DCA Grant Appeals Board – Last appeal on F&A rates was 1987– Universities want to avoid– DCA wants to avoid
ONR/DCAA has a
different approach
• What is the calculated Rate?• What can the University live with?• What is the negotiated Rate?• What is the collected Rate?
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• What did we do right?
• What can we do better next time?
• Fix it before you start the next one!
• Did the original data require any change?• Is there a consistent department number?• Do our buildings have the same name in the space and
building value?• Do we use the same building numbers for the space,
building value and equipment inventory?