Title: Basic Budget Building
1Basic Budget Building
2Please Note
- Rates used in this Tutorial are for example
purposes only and may not be up to date. - For current rates, please see our
- Proposal Fact Sheet
3Basic Budget Building
- This presentation is available on the www under
Basic Budget Building Tutorial at
http//www.umass.edu/research/ogca/proceds.htm - All underlined entries herein are hyperlinks to
other resources. You are invited to use and
share this presentation and to follow the links
for additional important information
4First Steps
- Contact OGCA by sending an email to the pre-award
research administrator responsible for reviewing
your proposal. Let them know the deadline and
provide the URL for program guidelines. - Review Sponsor guidelines for any costing rules
that could include - Ceilings on requested amount
- Indirect cost limits
- Cost-share requirements
- Direct cost restrictions (no equipment for
example) - Consult OGCA Fact Sheet for current rates
- Identify sponsor forms
- Build your budget using this basic budget
building tutorial as a starting point. Contact
OGCA with any questions.
5Two Major Budget Components
- Direct Costs
- The costs that are directly attributed to the
project. Examples include salary, supplies,
equipment, etc. - Facilities and Administrative Costs (FA).
- (Indirect Costs or Overhead)
- Pooled costs UMass incurs in support of Sponsored
Activities not directly attributable to any one
sponsored project. FA is assessed as a
percentage of direct costs.
6Two Types of Direct Costs
- Personnel (Salaries and Fringe Benefits)
- Non-Personnel
7Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Academic
- Summer
- Calendar
8Academic Year (AY) Salary
- Consult with your department head to determine
how much time you are allowed to dedicate to
research projects. Personnel effort on all ACTIVE
awards plus teaching load cannot exceed 100 .
In other words, 100 summer salary (14 weeks)
committed academic year research effort (up to
the maximum percentage allotted for research by
your department during the academic year)
Teaching load other obligations 100 - Academic Year (AY) salary is based on a 9 month
appointment - AY salary charged to the sponsor is assessed the
full fringe benefits package. The exception to
this is the non-tenure track research professor
-- this can be non-benefited
9Academic Year Salary (Contd)
- Some sponsors (e.g. NSF) do not allow payment of
academic year salary without strong justification
(strictly research appointments, etc.)
10Academic Year Salary Sample Calculation
- To charge 11 (1 month) of an academic salary of
65,000 - 11 X 65,000 7,150
- Show basis of effort according to sponsor
preference, usually represented as either of
effort or monthly. NSF requires by month, NIH by
11Personnel Budget Detail Academic Salary
12Fringe on Academic Year Salary
- Group Insurance Retirement 27.00
- Workers Comp., Unemp., Univ. Health .91
- FICA (Medicare) 1.45
- (applicable only if hired after 4/86)
- Health Welfare 11 per week
13Academic Year SalarySample Fringe Calculation
- Group Insurance 27.00 X 7,150 1,931
- Workers Comp, etc. .91 X 7,150 65
- FICA (Medicare) 1.45 X 7,150 104
- 38 weeks (AY) X 11/wk X 11 46
- Total Fringe 2,146
14Fringe Budget DetailAcademic Year Fringe
15Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Academic
- Summer
- Calendar
16Faculty Summer Salary
- Federal
- Those faculty with Academic Year (AY)
appointments can receive an additional 33 as
summer salary. For example if AY pay is
100,000, then an addition 33,000 can be charged
as summer salary. - The summer pay rate is based on the 9 month
academic year salary. - NSF permits only 2/9s, the equivalent of 2
months salary. - Industrial and Foundation
- Pay rate unrestricted negotiated with sponsor
- Personnel effort on all ACTIVE awards plus
teaching load cannot exceed 100 . In other
words, 100 summer salary (14 weeks) committed
academic year research effort (up to the maximum
percentage allotted for research by your
department during the academic year) Teaching
load other obligations 100
17Faculty Summer SalarySample Calculation
- Annual salary 54,000
- Monthly salary 54,000/9 6,000/mo
- 2 months of summer salary 12,000 charged to
the project - Show basis of effort according to sponsor
preference, usually represented as either of
effort or monthly. NSF requires by month, NIH by
18Personnel Budget DetailSummer Salary
19Faculty Summer Salary Sample Fringe Calculation
- If PI hired before April 1, 1986
- Workers Comp. .91(Summer Salary)
- If PI hired after April 1, 1986
- FICA 1.45
- Workers Comp. .91
- 2.36
- For the sample budget, assume the latter
- 2.36 X 12,000 283
20Personnel Budget DetailSummer Salary Fringe
21Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Academic
- Summer
- Calendar
22Faculty Calendar Year Appointment
- Some faculty have calendar year appointments 12
months - Full fringe is assessed same as academic
appointments - Additional compensation can only be charged to
Non-Federal sources and with Dean and Provost
written approval - only FICA Workers Comp. are
charged for fringe
23Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Summer
- Academic
- Calendar
- Other Professional (Programmer, Technician, etc.)
24Other Professional Sample Calculation
- Calendar year employees
- Sample annual salary 30,000
- Calculating effort on a basis
- 30 X 30,000 9,000
- Calculating effort on a monthly basis
- 30,000/12 months 2,500/month
- 9,000/2,500 3.6 months
- Additional compensation professional and
classified staff can be budgeted up to an
additional 12 salary from Non-Federal sources on
top of their base annual with Dept. Head and Dean
approval. Must be clearly noted in the budget as
Add comp consult with Human Resources for
allowability.
25Personnel Budget DetailOther Professional Salary
26Other Professional Sample Fringe Calculation
- Assessed at full fringe rates
- Fringe (27) Workers Comp (.91) 27.91
- 9,000 x .2791 2,512
- Health Welfare 11/week or 572 annually
- 30 effort x 572 172
- FICA (if hired after 4/1/86) 1.45
- 9,000 x .0145 131
- Total Fringe 2,512 172 131
- 2,815 for this example
27Personnel Budget DetailOther Professional Fringe
28Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Summer
- Academic
- Calendar
- Other Professional (Programmer, Technician, etc.)
- Graduate Student
29Graduate Student Stipend
- Stipend - Minimum Graduate Stipends are set by
academic areas, per student contracts. For a
memo regarding specific minimum student stipends
click here - New Recalculated Minimum Graduate Student
Employee Stipends - Example for a graduate student hired in 2003 for
20 hrs per week both academic and summer - 20 hours per week X 52 weeks 1040 hours
- 1040 X 14.12 14,685
30Personnel Budget DetailGraduate Student Stipend
31Graduate Student Sample Fringe Calculation
- GEO Health Fee assessed at 2.57 per hour
- The following examples reflect typical
appointments - 1,950 20 hours/wk X 38 weeks academic 760
hrs X 2.57/hr - 2,673 20 hours/wk X 52 weeks 1,040 hrs x
2.57/hr - 3, 392 20 hours/wk X 38 weeks academic 40
hours/wk X 14 weeks 1,320 hours x 2.57/hr
32Graduate Student Fringe Sample Fringe
Calculation (contd)
- Health Welfare
- 11/wk per student
- 572 for 52 week year
- 418 for 38 week academic year
- 154 for 14 week summer
- 572 this example
33Graduate Student Sample Fringe Calculation
(contd)
- Summer Student Payroll FICA
- If not enrolled in classes 1.45 summer payroll
(14 weeks) - 14,685/52 wks 282/wk
- 282 X 14 wks 3,954/summer
- 1.45 X 3,954 57
- 57 for this example
34Graduate Student Sample Fringe Total
- GEO Health Fee 2,673
- Health Welfare 572
- Summer Student FICA 57
- Total 3,302
- NOTE Curriculum fee is assessed on all academic
year grad student appointments but not budgeted
as fringe -- see Other for more info
35Graduate Student Fringe Calculation
- It is important to understand how the fringe
calculation is done, however we have constructed
a Graduate Student Fringe Calculator to make it
easier. It also calculates the Curriculum fee.
36Personnel Budget DetailGraduate Student Fringe
37Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Summer
- Academic
- Calendar
- Other Professional (Programmer, Technician, etc.)
- Graduate Student
- Postdoctoral Fellow
38Postdoctoral Fellow
- Salary is determined by what the market will bear
in a particular field and is usually figured on
an annual basis. Check with Department Head for
prevailing rates - 35,000 per year this example
39Personnel Budget DetailPostdoctoral Fellow Salary
40Postdoctoral Fringe
- UMass requires the budgeting of health insurance
for postdocs by either providing - 1) The full benefits package includes group
insurance and retirement - 2) Budgeting for the postdoc health plan no
retirement
41Post Doc Fringe (contd)
- 1) Full benefits
- Group Insurance Retirement 27
- Workers Comp., Unemployment, Univ. Health
.91 - FICA (Medicare) 1.45 (applicable if hired
after 4/86) - Health Welfare 11 per week
- 27 X 35,000 9,450
- .91 X 35,000 319
- 1.45 X 35,000 508
- 52 weeks X 11/wk 572
- Total Fringe 10,849
42Postdoctoral Sample Fringe Calculation (contd)
- 2) Postdoc Health Insurance plan
- Fellow only 232/mo
- Fellow and child(ren) 615/mo
- Fellow and spouse 728/mo
- Fellow, spouse child(ren) 1,111/mo
- 12 months X 232/mo 2,784
- Workers Comp and FICA are assessed as well
- .91 X 35,000 319
- 1.45 X 35,000 508
43Postdoctoral Sample Fringe Total
- Postdoc with health (no-retirement)
- Workers Comp 319
- FICA 508
- Health Insurance 2,784
- Total 3,611
44Personnel Budget Detail Postdoctoral Fellow
Fringe
45Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Summer
- Academic
- Calendar
- Other Professional (Programmer, Technician, etc.)
- Graduate Student
- Postdoctoral Fellow
- Secretarial
46Secretarial
- Secretarial salary can be charged to non-federal
projects without any restrictions. The direct
charging of secretarial services on federally
supported projects is allowed only under a
limited number of scenarios. See the policy
statement and consult with OGCA proposal staff
for guidance.
47Personnel
- Faculty Salaries
- Summer
- Academic
- Calendar
- Other Professional (Programmer, Technician, etc.)
- Graduate Student
- Post Doctoral Fellow
- Secretarial
- Undergraduate Student
48Undergraduate Student
- Undergraduate Students are hired for varying
numbers of hours per week - The pay scale for undergraduates is determined by
the job description and Human Resources
guidelines - 10 hrs/wk X 38 wks X 10/hr 3,800
49Personnel Budget Detail Undergraduate Student Pay
50Undergraduate Fringe
- Undergraduate salary is not charged fringe.
However, FICA is charged during summer employment
if the student is not enrolled in summer
classes. - Fringe 0 for this example since the student
is working during the academic year.
51Personnel Budget Detail Undergraduate Student
Fringe
52Non-personnel
53Non-personnel CostsConsultants
- A consultant lends their expertise and advice in
their given field without actually working on
the project - UMass personnel cannot be paid as consultants on
UMass grants contracts - NSF limits consultant daily rate to max of 498
per day. This rate can be used for guidance on
other federal projects but is not a requirement.
Basis for costing on non-federal grants is market
driven - Provide daily rate of pay in the budget obtain
from consultant do not guesstimate, get exact
rate
54Non-personnel Budget DetailConsultants
55Non-personnel
56Equipment
- Definition
- 1,000 unit cost or more
- Non-expendable tangible property
- Useful life of 2 years or more
- Budgeting
- List pieces of equipment separately showing unit
cost - Basis for costing costing can easily be done
on-line for items from laptops to centrifuges, or
with familiar vendors. Avoid guesstimates
57Non-personnel Budget DetailEquipment
58Non-personnel
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
59Non-personnel
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Administrative and Office Supplies
60Administrative Office Administrative Supplies
- Definition
- Pens, pencils, file folders, paper products,
including photocopy paper, film, tape, etc., and
small office machines under 100 - Budgeting
- Federal strict limitations placed on ability to
budget. NOT ALLOWABLE consult with OGCA. Not
included in sample budget for this reason - Non-federal no limits - budget as needed
- Basis of costing experience
- Range 25 - 100, depending on size of project
61Non-personnel
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Administrative and Office Supplies
- Postage and Telephone
62Administrative Postage Telephone
- Definition
- Overnight courier services, regular postage,
telephone - Budgeting
- Allowable on federal projects but only with
thorough explanation and justification. Must
detail project related need and state ability to
separately track these expenses from routine
non-project expenses for auditing purposes - Federal telephone only for long-distance or for
phone line entirely dedicated to the project
63Administrative Postage Telephone (contd)
- Limitations on costing are not typically placed
by non-federal sponsors - Basis for costing experience in related
projects with costing scaled up or down depending
on relative size of project. Check your records
and/or bookkeepers for prior accounting on
project of a similar size and type - Typical range 50 to 500 amounts vary
depending on nature of the project
64Administrative Postage TelephoneSample
calculation/justification
- Postage for mailing brochures
- 200 X .25 50
- Justification
- Mailing of brochures to candidates for
participation in the study. Brochures explain
guidelines and criteria. They are required to
properly educate possible participants prior to
screening. These costs are auditable and
accounted for separately from non-project costs
65Administrative CostsPostage TelephoneCalculati
on/Justification (contd)
- Telephone (long-distance)
- 200
- Justification
- Long distance phone calls required for follow-up
with accepted participants to run initial
interviews and to schedule and confirm
appointments for participation. These costs are
auditable and accounted for separately from
non-project costs
66Non-personnel Budget DetailAdministrative
(contd)
67Non-personnel
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Administrative and Office Supplies
- Postage and Telephone
- Subscriptions, Membership Dues
68Administrative Subscriptions, Membership Dues
- Definition
- Self-explanatory costs must be allocable to a
specific project and allowed by the sponsor - Budgeting
- Federal strict limitations placed on ability to
budget. NOT ALLOWABLE consult with OGCA. Not
included in sample budget for this reason - Non-federal no limits - budget as needed.
Should be explained/justified - Basis of costing current vendor rates
- Range variable
69Non-personnel
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Administrative and Office Supplies
- Postage and Telephone
- Subscriptions, Membership Dues
- Photocopying
70AdministrativePhotocopying
- Definition
- Both on and off-campus project-related
photocopying services - Budgeting
- Federal Allowable on federal projects but only
with thorough explanation and justification.
Must detail project related need and state
ability to separately track these expenses from
routine non-project expenses for auditing
purposes - Non-Federal no limits - budget as needed
71AdministrativePhotocopying (contd)
- Budgeting (contd)
- Basis of costing experience in related projects
with costing scaled up or down depending on
relative size of project. Check your records
and/or bookkeepers for prior accounting on
project of a similar size and type - Range variable
72AdministrativePhotocopying justification
- Sample explanation/justification
- Funds are budgeted for project-related copying
expenses incurred in the dissemination of paper
submissions, documents/reports, and
meetings/presentations required by the sponsor.
These costs are auditable and separately tracked
from routine non-project expenses
73Non-personnel Costs
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
74Non-personnel CostsSupplies
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
- Laboratory supplies, chemicals
75SuppliesLaboratory supplies, chemicals
- Definition
- Laboratory supplies and chemicals allocable to
proposed project - Budgeting
- List types and give subtotals for major items in
the budget explanation as applicable - Basis for costing check with vendors or
accounting records for prior costing on similar
projects. If new to budget building, confer with
more experienced colleagues. Avoid
over-inflating costs - Range variable, 100 - 25,000 based on project
size/type
76SuppliesLab supplies/chemicalsCalculation
- Lab supplies/chemicals
- Chemicals 5,000
- Reagents 1,000
- Antibodies 2,000
- Enzymes 500
- Disposable lab supplies
- (pipettes, media agents,
- syringes, etc.) 300
- Total 8,800
77Non-personnel Budget DetailSupplies
78Non-personnel CostsSupplies (contd)
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
- Laboratory supplies, chemicals
- Computer supplies
79Supplies -- Computer supplies
- Definition
- Computer paper, diskettes, zip disks, toner, etc
- Budgeting
- Federal
- Allowable with proper explanation and
justification - Must detail project related need and state that
these expenses are separately auditable from
non-project costs - Non-federal no restrictions
- Basis for costing
- Check with vendors, accounting records, or
colleagues for prior costing on similar projects
- Avoid over-inflating costs
- Range variable, 50 - 250 based on project
size/type
80SuppliesComputer suppliesCalculation/Justificati
on
- Computer supplies
- Cost 200
- Justification
- Computer supplies are required for project
related sponsor mandated reports. These costs
are separately auditable from non-project costs
81Non-personnel Budget DetailSupplies
82Non-personnel CostsSupplies
- The list of items in this sample budget under
Supplies are not exhaustive but provided for
illustrative purposes. Other costs that might
arise are listed below for convenience. Click
item for more information if hyperlinked - Research animals
- Software, Software Upgrades, Software Licenses
83Non-personnel Costs
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
- Travel
84Non-personnel CostsTravel
- Definition
- Airfare (domestic foreign), per diem, hotel,
conference registration, ground transportation
(taxi/limo), car rental, mileage tolls - Budgeting
- Federal
- Cannot charge business class or first class air
travel - Must utilize U.S. flag carriers at the lowest
available rates - Non-federal No airfare limitations
85Non-personnel CostsTravel (contd)
- Budgeting contd.
- Basis for costing
- Airfare check with travel agent or on-line
service. - Domestic per diem and hotel UMass limits per
diem (food) charge on domestic travel at 30.00
per day (35 for MA, NYC, DC). See federal per
diem site for suggested domestic hotel costs or
call your travel agent. - Foreign Use foreign per diem and hotel rates,
actual expenses based on prior travel or check
with travel agent and/or bookkeeper. - Mileage set at the IRS rate, currently (FY 03)
set at .375 per mile.
86Non-personnel CostsTravel (contd)
- Range
- 1,200 to 1,600 per domestic conference
- 1,500 to 3,000 per foreign conference
depending on location/duration - Non-conference travel costs vary significantly
- Do not guesstimate
- Build budget with information suggested under
Basis for costing and provide explanation
87TravelCalculation
- Domestic
- Conferences in DC (two each for PI RA)
- Airfare 550 X 2 (PI RA) X 2 trips 2,200
- Hotel 110 X 3 days X 2 X 2 1,320
- Per diem 3 days X 35/day X 2 X 2 420
- Registration 400 X 2 X 2
1,600 - Mileage (to/from Bradley) .375 X 70 miles X 2
53 - Ground transportation (to/from Dulles) 35 X 4
140 - Total 5,733
88TravelCalculation (contd)
- Foreign
- Conference in Moscow (PI)
- Airfare 950
- Hotel 5 days X 191 955
- Per diem 5 X 103 515
- Registration 400
- Mileage (to/from Bradley) 53
- Ground transportation 150
- Total 3,023
89Non-personnel Budget DetailTravel
90Non-personnel Costs
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
- Travel
- Subcontracts
91Non-personnel CostsSubcontracts
- Definition
- Generally, a subcontractor is defined as an
organization, often another university, who helps
carry out the activities of the proposed project
by performing a portion of the research using
their own facilities. They receive a
proportional share of funding from the sponsor
via UMass and will often charge their own
indirect costs
92Non-personnel CostsSubcontracts (contd)
- Procedures
- The following items must be provided to OGCA
- A letter signed by the subcontractors authorized
signatory (OGCA equivalent) - Statement of work (subcontractor specific does
not include UMass effort) - Subcontractor budget
- Indirect Cost Rate Agreement (if subcontractor is
budgeting indirects in their own budget) - Sole source justification
93Non-personnel CostsSubcontracts (contd)
- Procedures (contd)
- The first four items should be handled by the
subcontractor and forwarded to OGCA - The sole source justification is completed by the
UMass Principal Investigator. It explains why the
subcontractor is uniquely qualified to carry out
the work. Sole source justifications can be
forwarded to OGCA via email - Subcontractors should use all sponsor forms,
including any required certifications/assurances
94Non-personnel CostsSubcontracts (contd)
- Budgeting
- The subcontractor typically budgets for both
Direct Costs (DC) and Indirect Costs (IC). Take
the total of the DC and IC provided in the
subcontractor budget and roll that total into
your budget creating a line item called
Subcontracts see next slide for sample
subcontractor budget. The subcontractors total
costs are then rolled into the UMass budget under
the Subcontract line item
95Subcontractor BudgetSample
96Non-personnel Budget DetailSubcontracts
97Non-personnel Costs
- Consultant
- Equipment
- Administrative
- Supplies
- Travel
- Subcontracts
- Other Direct
98Non-personnel CostsOther Direct
- Definition the following items are often
budgeted under Other but for the sample budget,
only curriculum fee appears. - Curriculum fee
- Equipment rentals, maintenance repair
- Human subject payment
- Publication costs
- Participant support costs
- Do not use Miscellaneous as a line item
- Above items not intended to be exhaustive but are
illustrative of common items budgeted in the
Other category.
99Other Direct Calculation
- Curriculum Fee
- The rate is 6.31/hr. per Graduate Student (GS)
- 1 GS X 20 hrs/wk X 38 wks X 6.31 4,796
- Note
- No more than 760 hrs or 4,796 per GS will be
charged in an academic year - Summer effort is not charged CF
- Curriculum Fee is exempt from FA
100Non-personnel Budget DetailOther Direct
101Total Direct Cost
102Two Major Budget Components
- Direct Costs
- Facilities and Administrative Costs
103Facilities and Administrative Costs (FA,
overhead, indirect costs)
- Definition
- FA is calculated as a percentage of Direct Costs
- Rates vary depending on type of project, sponsor
type, and project location (on-campus,
off-campus) see fact sheet for specific rates.
Consult with OGCA before budgeting either the
Off-campus or Other Sponsored Activities or
Instruction rates - If the sponsors FA rate differs from the
Universitys, defer to sponsor mandated rates but
provide OGCA with a copy of the sponsors
guidelines supporting this restriction
104Facilities and Administrative Costs (contd)
- Definition (contd)
- FA is assessed either on a Modified Total Direct
Cost basis (MTDC) or a Total Direct Cost (TDC)
basis. MTDC simply means -- do not assess FA
(back them out of total before calculating FA)
on the following costs - Equipment (1,000 or more unit cost)
- Tuition (for cost-sharing purposes)
- Curriculum fee
- Rental costs of off-site facilities
- Fellowships
- Subcontractor costs in excess of 25,000
105Facilities and Administrative Costs (contd)
- Definition (contd)
- Total Direct Cost (TDC) means that the applicable
FA rate is assessed on the direct cost total.
Every rule has an exception of course never
assess FA on the curriculum fee - Budgeting
- Review sponsor guidelines and assess FA costs as
instructed. Confer with OGCA if unclear
106Facilities and AdministrativeCalculation
- Assume an on-campus research project for our
sample budget with a 55 MTDC FA rate. 55 is
therefore assessed on the total direct direct
costs less equipment, curriculum fee, and
subcontractor costs in excess of 25K. Thus the
MTDC base - 157,194 - 3,299 - (31,271- 25K) - 4,796
142,828 multiply this by 55 - 142,828 X 55 78,555
-
107FA Budget Detail
108Cost-sharingDefinition
- Definition
-
- Cost-share is that part of the projects costs
borne by the University rather than the sponsor.
Many sponsors require cost-sharing, often
specific matching (such as 11 or 12) is
required and other times agencies simply indicate
that cost- sharing is recommended and will be a
factor in the review and scoring of a proposal
109Cost-sharingWhen allowable
- When to cost-share
- To include cost-share in your proposal, sponsors
written guidelines must either require it, or
strongly suggest its inclusion. - UMass policy does not allow for voluntary
cost-sharing. If the sponsor doesnt require it,
cost-share must not appear in your budget. - Do not provide shared costs from third party
sources (Non-UMass, non-subcontractor). Confer
with OGCA if third party share is required by
sponsor.
110Cost-sharingAllowable costs
- What to cost-share
- If established that the sponsor requires or
recommends cost share, only the following costs
may be shared regardless of whether sponsoring
agency is federal or non-federal - Salaries
- Fringe
- Equipment
- Subcontractor
- Tuition waivers
- Indirect costs
- NOTE Cost share must be from UMass accounts,
not from other grants or contracts, federal or
non-federal
111Cost-sharingProcess
- All cost-shared amounts and their associated
state ledger account numbers must be listed on
the second page of the Internal Processing Form
(IPF). This cost-share must also be authorized
with a signature in the far right column, by the
individual authorized to commit the shared funds,
usually the Department Head
112Cost-shareBudgeting
113Cost-shareBudgeting
- Salaries
- Shared salary must derive from UMass funds, not
matched from other federal or non-federal grants - Shared salary can be budgeted for UMass personnel
with paid appointments. Exceptions to this rule - Faculty summer salary emeritus faculty salary
- Salary is shared only for time specifically
dedicated to the project during the proposed
project period
114Cost-shareSalaries (contd)
- Cost-shared salary is typically shown as a
percentage of the employees base appointment but
can also be budgeted in weeks or months following
the same rules of effort reporting as required
for reporting time charged to the sponsor - Keep in mind that personnel effort on all ACTIVE
awards plus teaching load cannot exceed 100 .
In other words, 100 summer salary (14 weeks)
committed (charged and cost-shared) academic
year research effort (up to the maximum
percentage allotted for research by your
department during the academic year) Teaching
load other obligations 100
115Cost-share, salariesSample calculation
- Prof. Grant wants to cost-share 1 month (11 AY)
of his academic salary. Prof. Grant makes
65,000 per academic year - 11 X 65,000 7,150
- Show basis of effort according to sponsor
preference, usually represented as either of
effort or monthly. NSF requires by month, NIH by
116Cost-share, salariesSample Calculation (contd)
- Regardless of whether funding is federal or
non-federal, secretarial salary can be
cost-shared - Secretarys salary is 30,000/calendar year and
will devote 10 to the project - 30,000 X 10 3,000
117Cost-shareFringe
118Cost-share, FringeSample Calculation on PI
Academic
- Same rules apply for budgeting shared fringe as
for charging to the sponsor - Group Insurance
- 27 X 7,150 1,931
- Workers Comp, etc.
- .91 X 7,150 65
- FICA (Medicare)
- 1.45 X 7,150 104
- Health Welfare
- 38 weeks (AY) X 11/wk X 11 46
- Total Fringe 2,146
119Cost-share, FringeSample Calculation on
Secretarial
- Same rules apply for budgeting shared fringe as
for charging to the sponsor. If secretary
benefited - Group Insurance
- 27 X 3,000 810
- Workers Comp, etc.
- .91 X 3,000 27
- FICA (Medicare)
- 1.45 X 3,000 44
- Health Welfare
- 11 week X 52 weeks X 10 57
- Total Fringe 938
120Cost-shareEquipment
- Salaries
- Fringe
- Equipment
121Cost-share - Equipment Sample Calculation
- Criteria
- Must be purchased exclusively for use on the
project from UMass funds - Must be purchased during the projects
anticipated period of performance - Sample budget
- Eye Tracker 7,995
122Cost-shareSubcontract
- Salaries
- Fringe
- Equipment
- Subcontract
123Cost-share, SubcontractSample Calculation
- Subcontractor cost-share must be signed off by
the subs OGCA. Shared items must be auditable. - When applying UMass FA on UMass shared direct
costs, the subcontractors total shared cost,
like equipment, is exempt. See slide on sharing
FA costs for further explanation. - Sample budget Sub contributes salary, fringe,
and associated FA costs 4,175
124Cost-shareTuition waiver
- Salaries
- Fringe
- Equipment
- Subcontract
- Tuition waivers
125Cost-share, Tuition Waivers Sample Calculation
- Tuition waivers are budgeted for graduate
students whose salary is being charged or
cost-shared to the grant - Student stipends must be budgeted at a minimum of
2,682 per semester to receive a waiver - Tuition waivers 2,705.50 per semester
- Calculation for sample budget
- 1 student X 2 semesters X 2,705.50 5,411
126Cost-share Facilities and Administrative Costs
(FA, overhead, indirect costs)
- Salaries
- Fringe
- Equipment
- Subcontract
- Tuition waivers
- Facilities and Administrative Costs
127Cost-share, FASample calculation
- Assess FA on shared direct costs using same rate
charged to sponsor. However, always use MTDC
basis for sharing of FA equipment and tuition
waivers are exempt from FA assessment. In
addition, do not assess FA on subcontractors
total shared costs. - Sample calculation 30,815 (7,995 4,175
5,411) 13,234 X 55 7,279
128Total BudgetSponsor UMass cost-share
129Budget Explanation and Justification
- A well developed budget is accompanied by a
budget explanation. - A complete and realistic budget justification
demonstrates that your project is well conceived.
It also tends to minimize the chances that
sponsors will arbitrarily reduce or eliminate
budget categories. Sponsors have a good idea of
what a project should cost, and generally know
when you are over or under budgeting. Follow
sponsor guidelines on minimum items required. - Explanation and justification are synonymous
terms except with federal grants where
Explanation merely details what the cost item
is while Justification conveys why a cost item
particularly Administrative costs are
allocable and necessary for the successful
completion of the project.