Title: KEY PRINCIPLES IN EFFORT REPORTING
1KEY PRINCIPLES IN EFFORT REPORTING
- Cindy Kiel, JD, CRA
- Executive Director
- Tammy Freeman
- Effort Reporting Specialist
- UNR Office of Sponsored Projects
- www.unr.edu/ospa
- ospadmin_at_unr.edu
- 775-784-4040
2EFFORT REPORTINGGENERAL
- The Effort Reporting Regulations have been in
place for over 20 years. - UNR has not historically provided robust
education regarding what the rules are. (this is
changing). - Effort Reporting and commitment tracking is the
current hot-topic in the regulations under the
Single Audit Act and with a variety of sponsors
Inspector General offices. - Effort Reporting is one of the 1 highest
monetary and legal liability issues facing
federally funded research universities today.
3PRINCIPLE 1ALLOCABILITY
- Only salary paid for time that benefits a project
can be charged to a project. - Do not charge salary to a project for reasons of
convenience or simply because the money is there. - Cost Transfers of Salary from one project to
another or from one funding source to another are
highly suspect by auditors.
4PRINCIPLE 2CONSISTENCY
- PAFs should be processed to reflect promises made
in proposals (Committed Effort) - Proposals should reflect actual salary amounts
using Total Institutional Salary Base. - Awards should be expended using the same salary
base as what was included in the proposal - Reported Effort should be consistent with other
University paperwork including - Terms of employment, medicare/medicaid charges,
annual evaluations, role statements, service and
administrative activities, class loads, digital
metrix, etc.
5PRINCIPLE 3100
- An individual can not exceed 100 effort
including ALL institutional activities - Instruction
- Clinical Time
- Writing Proposals
- Research (including cost-shared time)
- Administrative Duties
- Service
- Time spent on these activities may not
normally be charged as a direct cost to a grant
or contract
6PRINCIPLE 4Work Week Total Hours Worked
- Salaried employees are paid to use whatever time
is necessary to complete institutional work
requirements. - There is no such thing as a 40 hour work week for
salaried employees. - Institutional activities can occur evenings,
weekends and holidays and are part of
institutional work.
7PRINCIPLE 5Effort Confirmation Drives
Payroll(not the other way around)
- A PAF sets up how a person believes he/she will
spend their time in the future. It may or may
not reflect reality as projects unfold. - Effort Reporting (Confirmation via Certification)
is an after-the-fact report of how an employee
actually spent his or her time. - If Effort does not match how payroll was
originally set up, PAF revisions and/or cost
transfers must occur immediately to make sure the
certified effort is charged in the right amounts
to the right accounts.
8PRINCIPLE 6Timeliness
- Auditors believe that the more timely an effort
report is, the more accurate and correct it is. - Hourly employees report monthly, salaried
employees report on a semester basis. - Late reports are the same as if there was no
report. - Missing or Late effort reports may result in cost
disallowances and/or removal of salary costs from
a project. - Late cost transfers are highly suspect.
9PRINCIPLE 7REASONABLENESS
- Effort charges must be allocated within or
5 salary accuracy. - Additional contract periods must have a
reasonable base salary calculation that is
consistently treated regardless of source of
funds (private, state, federal, gift all treated
similarly). - Post Docs vs. Grad Students pay-scales must be
reasonable, etc.
10PRINCIPLE 8SALARY SUPPLEMENTATION
- You can supplant (replace) existing base salary
amounts but you may not supplement base salary
amounts solely due to receipt of or because of an
increase in grant or contract funding. - You can pay additional amounts of funding for a
separate and distinct employment contract.
However, pay during this additional contract
period must be reasonable and use a calculation
based on what the employee makes during his/her
normal contract period. - Example B Contract Faculty can contract for
summer effort in addition to academic effort. - Incentive pay programs can be utilized only if
the basis for the additional pay is not solely
due to receipt of federal grant/contract funds.
11PRINCIPLE 9Significant Changes Require Sponsor
Approval
- Changes to committed effort by more than 25
require PRIOR approval from a sponsor. - Key Personnel absences for more than 90 days
require PRIOR approval from sponsor. - Changes of effort less than 25 should be
reported to the sponsor as part of your quarterly
or annual progress reports.
12PRINCIPLE 10COST SHARED EFFORT
- OMB requires cost shared effort to be tracked in
the same manner as directly charged effort. - The University tracks all mandatory cost share
(matching). - The University tracks all voluntarily committed
cost share (matching). - The University is not required to track voluntary
uncommitted cost share. - For DHHS projects subject to the salary cap, the
amount of salary over the cap should be tracked
as cost share on a project. - Note Cost Share is the cost associated with
that portion of time spent on a project that is
not charged to the project.
13THE PROBLEM
- Lack of education regarding key effort reporting
principles. - Current system of generating PARs has been broken
for two years (No LOA pickup, dropping first pay
account from report (classified), no follow-up. - Lost, missing, late, incorrectly completed
reports. - Charging salaries on the basis of convenience
rather than how projects were benefited. - Cost Transfers after the fact that dont reflect
certification of effort.
14THE PROBLEMContinued
- PARs sent to employee home department, but effort
may have been for project across department
lines. - Some employees never saw or lost reports
- Failure to recognize importance of timely and
accurate reporting. - No transparency for Chairs and Deans.
- No transparency for PIs re employees working on
their projects - Administrators without suitable means of
verification certifying on behalf of employees
15AUDIT FINDINGS - UNR
- UNR A-133 Audit Findings under the Single Audit
Act Effort Reporting Findings in 2003, 2004,
2005 (Missing, Late, Cost Transfers) - Too many significant findings can result in
debarment and suspension from receipt of federal
funds due to insufficient institutional fiscal
system controls. - Additional Internal and Inspector General Audit
findings regarding effort reporting in 2006. - Reno Gazette Journal Article stating It is
common practice at UNR to charge salaries to
projects that were not benefited by the time
charged.
16AUDIT FINDINGS -ELSEWHERE
- 2003 Northwestern University
- Penalties 5.5M for overstating effort in
inconsistency in proposing and expending practice
plan income. - 2004 Johns Hopkins
- 2.6 M for overstating time and effort on NIH
grants - 2004 Harvard
- 3.3 M for billing salaries to govt unrelated to
projects charged - 2005 Florida International University
- 11.5 M penalties for improper allocation of
charges to federal projects - 2006 U Penn
- Chronicle Article re significant findings
regarding effort reporting - 2006 University of Connecticut
- 2.5 Million Settlement with DOJ for inaccuracy in
contract salary base amounts, claiming additional
compensation (overload) salaries in violation of
OMB A-21 and failure to appropriately and
accurately document cost share - 2006 Yale
- Currently undergoing investigation
- 2006 Clark Atlanta University
- 5 Million Settlement, DA stated that salary funds
were used to run the school rather than support
the funded projects.
17THE SOLUTION
- Hired Full-Time Effort Reporting Specialist
Tammy Freeman. - Purchased MAXIMUS electronic Web-based Effort
Reporting System (GO LIVE January 2007). - Designing Effort Reporting Policy to identify
what is considered Institutional Base Effort
and what salary elements are included in Total
Institutional Salary at UNR. - Audit finding responses included new Cost
Transfer Policy (90 days for JVs 30 days for
PR-45s after certification of effort). - Providing Training Materials and Opportunities
18THE SOLUTIONBENEFITS
- Education on new system will also provide
education regarding key principles and importance
of Effort Reporting - Web Based System allows for effort reporting
anytime, anywhere using UNR NET ID Password for
logon. - Easy Certification of effort (two mouse clicks
and you are done) - Easy Change of Effort (modified can be typed
in easily- account for cost-shared time can be
added easily). - Easy Cost Transfers (PR-45s completed within the
electronic system to make sure payroll matches
certified effort)
19THE SOLUTIONBENEFITS
- Transparency of paperwork and process
- E-mail Alerts to individuals and PIs for late or
missing Effort Reports - Chairs and Deans Offices have ready access to
system to ascertain levels of compliance for
their area. - No more lost paper
- Electronic historical record kept of who did what
in the system - More accountability and reliability
20THE SOLUTIONCHALLENGES
- Short Timeline
- Cant do pilot for first round due to
inadequacies of existing system - HR database still requires manual data entry of
cost transfers - Financial system cant separately track PR-45s
done in MAXIMUS vs. as paper - LOA contracts, cost share etc. must be completed
prior to payroll capture dates timely
processing of salary set-up - Employees (especially high risk faculty funded
over 80 FTE on grants/contracts) must ensure
time billed to project is for time spent on
project not for admin duties, writing
proposals, other services and/or for running the
school. - Lack of sufficient administrative personnel for
higher level of research management.
21THE SOLUTIONCHALLENGES Continued
- May result in higher levels of captured cost
shared effort which can hurt the Universitys
bottom line. - No more after-the-fact cost transfers
- Departmental Administration must be available to
assist faculty and PIs in the certification
process (individuals not always readily available
or dont see themselves as instrumental to
research administration within their department).
- Higher emphasis on usage of memo accounts instead
of cost transfers to manage time and effort when
awards are late in arriving. - Not everyone has e-mail or net IDs
22EFFORT REPORTING SYSTEM DETAILS
- Reporting period for hourly employees will
continue to occur monthly. - Reporting period for salaried employees will
occur on a semester basis. - Fall Semester January reporting
- Spring Semester June reporting
- Summer Semester September reporting
- Reporting period for academic term LOAs will
occur annually in April
23EFFORT REPORTING SYSTEMDETAILS
- Department Coordinators, Pre-Reviewers and
Post-Reviewers (administrators responsible for
fiscal oversight for college/departments) must be
identified early for training and implementation
support. - The system draws initial data from the payroll
system as set up on individuals PAFs. - The system will include PR-45 (cost transfer)
information processed during the reporting
period. - Cost share capture details are still being
determined at this time.
24EFFORT REPORTING SYSTEMIMPORTANT PEOPLE
- Central Administrator Initiates Effort Reporting
Cycle by capturing payroll data and sending out
notification to Department Coordinators that
Reporting Cycle has begun. - Department Coordinators either begin pre-review
or notify delegated pre-reviewers to look at
pre-review screens - Does what is reported in system match what was
planned, or has there been a significant change
in committed efforts? - If so, communicate with PI regarding reason for
change discuss whether sponsor approvals must
take place. - Have over the cap salaries been appropriately
accounted for? - Has the project met required cost share
commitments? - Does something look wrong with data, salary
amount, names, etc.?
25EFFORT REPORTING SYSTEMIMPORTANT PEOPLE contd
- Certifiers
- Preference Individuals who spent their time on
sponsored projects paid or cost shared time
certify for themselves. - Certification on behalf of someone else
- Must have suitable means of verification
(e-mails, documented conversations, first hand
oversight, lab notebooks, etc. can qualify). - Only if the individual is not otherwise able or
available to certify on their own behalf. - Certifications by the individuals can not be
over-riden by a supervisor or administrator
unless initial report is allegedly fraudulent.
26Effort Reporting SystemImportant People contd
- Principal Investigator
- Designs proposals and commits effort
- Works with DCs to plan budgeted activities
- Communicates cost share requirements on projects
to DCs - Oversight to ensure all individuals who worked on
project provide timely effort reports. - Chair
- Ensures all effort reports are submitted in a
timely manner for all PIs and individuals in
his/her Department. - Dean
- Ensures all effort reports are submitted in a
timely manner for all PIs and individuals in
his/her College.
27Effort Reporting SystemImportant People contd
- Post Reviewers (Department Coordinator)
- If an individual reports effort that is different
from what was pre-reviewed, the post reviewer
opens post review screen to create cost
transfers, if necessary, to ensure proper
charging of effort to projects. - Person must have authority to approve cost
transfers. - The Post Reviewer can not change an individuals
certified effort, but can allocate effort to cost
share accounts or other activities as reported by
the certifier. - This review must occur and any necessary cost
transfers must occur within 30 days after
certification was completed .
28CONTINUED NON-COMPLIANCEIS NOT AN OPTION
- Rule 1 No one goes to jail
- Rule 2 UNR does not get fined
- Rule 3 UNR does not get debarred or suspended
from receipt of federal funds (80 Million
annually) - Rule 4 UNR employees maintain the highest
level of ethical and professional standards in
performing and fiscally managing sponsored
projects. - Consequences of Non-Compliance
- Suspension from OSP services
- Salaries moved off of OSP accounts to PI, Chair,
and Dean fa accounts if no timely certification
of effort.