Title: 2004 SASFAA Conference February 1518, 2004
12004 SASFAA ConferenceFebruary 15-18, 2004
Title IV Program Compliance Issues An
Institutional Responsibility
2CASE MANAGEMENTOBJECTIVES
- To provide best in business service to schools
- To promote access to high quality
- postsecondary education and lifelong
learning - To maintain strong oversight and
comprehensive partner support
3CASE MANAGEMENT CHALLENGE
1992 Amendments Inefficient Processes Inadequate
Data and Document Control Poor Customer
Service Ineffective Targeting of Institutions for
Monitoring
4Case Management Structure
Direct Loan
Closed
AAAD
Schools
Recertification
Financial Statement
Analysis
State
Quality
Audit Resolution
Agencies
Assurance
Program Review Institutional Improvement
Default
Accrediting
Management
Agencies
5CASE MANAGEMENT PROCESS
OUTPUT
INPUTS
Application for Recertification Deficient
Audits Evaluation of Risk Accrediting
Agencies State Agencies Record of
Compliance Student and Other Complaints
Decision on actions to be taken on schools
Case Team
6 Case Management and Oversight
Case Management Process Model
7Case Management ProcessPossible Decisions
- Recertify
- Develop Strategy for Technical Assistance
- Establish Liabilities
- Transfer to Reimbursement
- Require Letter of Credit
- Conduct Program Review
- Recommend for Participation in Quality Assurance
Program - No action taken
8THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX!
INNOVATIONS
IDEAS
UNDERSTANDING
TRADITION
COMMON SENSE
CREATIVITY
ASKING FOR HELP
GOALS
CONSEQUENCES
9Compliance Issues
- Eligibility Issues
- Clock/Credit Hour Conversion
- Verification/Conflicting Documentation
- Professional Judgment
- Pell/Loan Proration (under or over awards)
- Return to Title IV Policy (R2T4)
- Ability-to-Benefit (ATB tests)
- Enrollment Status/Attendance
- Distance Education
- Cash Management (Fiscal)
- Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy (SAP)
- Compliance Audit/Financial Statements
10Non-Degree, Vocational Programs
- Eligible non-degree undergraduate programs
(certificate/diploma) - 15 weeks (instruction)
- Must provide training for gainful employment in a
recognized occupation - 600 clock hours, 16 semester/trimester hours
(must contain 480 clock hours if clock/credit
conversion required), or 24 quarter hours - May admit students without an associate degree or
equivalent - Eligible for all Title IV programs (prorating may
apply) -
11Non-Degree, Vocational Programs
- Short-Term programs (undergraduate)
- Must provide training for gainful employment in a
recognized occupation - 10 weeks (instruction)
- 300-599 clock hours (only offer in clock hours)
- Cannot be more than 50 of state required minimum
hours - Must have been legally authorized to provide and
continuously provided the program during the 12
months preceding the application date - FFEL and Direct loans only
12Short Term Programs
- Substantiated completion rate of at least 70.
- Substantiated placement rate of at least 70 in
related job fields, - Rates must be reported in the annual audit
(financial/compliance). - If rates not met, the program is not eligible for
the next award year. - Can apply for re-approval of the program once it
again meets the program eligibility requirements. - Must get Department approval for each short-term
program prior to awarding funds
13Non-Degree, Vocational Programs
- Graduate/professional non-degree programs
- 10 weeks (instruction)
- 8 semester, 12 quarter or 300 clock hours
- Admit only students with an associate degree or
higher
14Eligibility IssuesAdditional LocationsEFFECTIV
E 7/1/2001
- ALL institutions must report to the Department if
they wish to add an additional location offering
50 or more of an eligible program - reporting consists of submitting electronic
application and required supporting documentation - However, only schools that meet certain criteria
have to wait for our approval before disbursing
IV aid to students at those locations
(provisionally certified, reimbursement/cash
monitoring, acquired assets of another school
that provided education at that location during
the preceding year, and the other school
participated in IV, would be subject to loss of
eligibility due to default rates if location is
added, or Secretary previously notified school
that it must apply for approval of additional
locations)
15Eligibility References
- www.eligcert.ed.gov (electronic application)
- 2003-2004 FSA Handbook, Vol. 2, pages 2, 306-312
- Dear Colleague Letter - GEN-97-6
- 34 CFR 600.10
- 34 CFR 600.20-21
- 34 CFR 668.8 (programs)
16Adding New Programs
- Report the new programs through EAPP within 10
calendar days of the change - Must always have state and accrediting agency
approval - make certain that the program is included under
the notice of accreditation from a nationally
recognized accrediting agency (unless the agency
does not require that particular program be
accredited) - Eligibility of an added educational program must
be determined by the Department before the FSA
program funds can be awarded - A revised ECAR and Approval Letter is issued for
the school, and the school is eligible as of the
date of the Departments determination.
17Adding New Programs
- May add a new program and disburse FSA funds
without Dept. approval if - - the added program leads to an associate,
bachelors, professional, or graduate degree (and
the school has already been approved to offer
programs at that level) or - the added program provides at least a 10-week (of
instructional time) program of 8 semester hours,
12 quarter hours, or 600 clock hours, and
prepares students for gainful employment in the
same or related recognized occupation as an
educational program that the Secretary already
has designated as an eligible program at the
school. - must have received both the required state and
accrediting agency approvals.
18Clock/Credit Hour Conversion (03-04 FSA Hdbk,
Vol.2, pages 18-21, 668.8(k)(l))
- 1 semester or trimester credit hour must include
at least 30 hours of instruction - 1 quarter credit hour must include at least 20
hours of instruction - Example
- - 900 clock hours 30 semester hours
- 30
- - 1500 clock hours 75 quarter hours
- 20
- Applies to undergraduate vocational education
programs (even if always offered in credit hours,
need to determine the number of clock hours in
program)
19Clock/Credit Hour Conversion
- Exceptions
- (1) program is at least 2 academic years in
length and provides an associate, bachelors or
professional degree (must be defined by
state/accrediting body as a degree program) OR - (2) each course within the program is acceptable
for full credit towards that institutions
associate, bachelors or professional degree
(Federal Register 7/23/1993, Vol. 58, No. 140,
page 39619) OR - (3) a public or private nonprofit hospital-based
school of nursing that awards a diploma at the
completion of the schools program of education
20Clock/Credit Hour Conversion
- (1) Program eligibility
- - program providing at least 16 semester or
trimester credit hours or 24 quarter credit hours
must include at least 480 clock hours of
instruction (at least 15 weeks in length) - (2) Number of credit hours for Title IV purposes
- - determine the maximum number of credit hours
you can pay a student for (conversion credit
hours may be less than original number - may
decrease Title IV funding) - The resulting number of credit hours may not be
rounded upward.
21Clock/Credit Hour Conversion(34 CFR 600.2)
- A clock hour is based on an actual hour of
attendance (60-minute period), though each hour
may include a 10-minute break. - A school may not schedule several hours of
instruction without breaks, and then count clock
hours in 50-minute increments - - cannot say 7 hours of instruction 8.4 clock
hours (420 minutes divided by 50 minutes 8.4) - - 7 real-time attendance hours 7 clock hours
22Clock/Credit Hour Conversion
- ED will only approve credit hours up to the
amount that is approved by the state and
accrediting agencies (and schools, if applicable)
AND meets our clock to credit hour formula.
23Verification/Conflicting Documentation03/04 FSA
HDBK, App./Verification Guide, Ch. 3 4 34 CFR
668.36, 51-61
- Verification the process of checking the
accuracy of information supplied on the Free
Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) used
to reduce fraud and abuse handled by the
financial aid office - Verification items
- Household size
- Number enrolled in college
- Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
- U.S. income tax paid
- Certain untaxed income and benefits (social
security benefits, child support, EIC, IRA/Keogh
deductions, foreign income exclusion, interest on
tax-free bonds)
24Verification/Conflicting Documentation
- Conflicting documentation (668.16(f))
- adequate system to resolve discrepancies in the
information received from different sources with
respect to a students application for IV
financial aid. - Problems/Issues (incomplete verification)
- missing documentation (tax return, verification
worksheets, etc.) - missing signatures (student, parent, preparer)
- 30 verification not met
- ISIR not reprocessed
- Verification Selection Process Improved
- Target applicants likely to have made errors on
FAFSA significantly affecting aid (especially
Pell recipients) - Schools may see change in number selected for
verification - ED will encourage verification of all selected
applicants
25Professional Judgment (PJ) (03/04 FSA HDBK, AVG,
page 28-29, 62 GEN-03-07)
- Adjusting data elements used to calculate EFC
- Dependency Overrides
- Adjusting Cost of Attendance
- Reasonable decisions on a case-by-case basis
- Adequate Documentation supporting unusual
circumstances - Examples include high medical expenses,
unemployment, high child care costs - Unreasonable judgment includes reducing income
based on vacation expenses or tithing - However, none of the conditions listed below,
singly or in combination, qualify as unusual
circumstances or merit a dependency override - 1) Parents refuse to contribute to the students
education - 2) Parents are unwilling to provide information
on the application or for verification - 3) Parents do not claim the student as a
dependent for income tax purposes - 4) Student demonstrates total self-sufficiency.
26 Pell and FFEL/DL Prorations (03/04 FSA
HDBK, Vol. 3, page 44 Vol. 8, page 26 34 CFR
682.204, 685.203, 690.63)
- Pell (Formula 4 clock hour nonterm credit
hour) - Weeks when majority of your full-time students
complete hours in the program or academic year
more quickly than the weeks defined in the
academic year definition - Hours when the program/ remaining period is
shorter than an academic year - Loans (all schools - no more fixed prorations as
of 10/1/98) - 1. Final period of study (end of which a student
completes the program) that is shorter than an
academic year - maximum loan amount x of credit or clock
hours enrolled - of hours in academic year
- 2. Program of study that is less than a full
academic year in length, the lesser of - the above calculation
- OR
- maximum loan amount x of weeks in
program - of weeks in academic year
27Return to Title IV Policy (R2T4)
- Effective October 7, 2000
- New written policy explaining R2T4 (including
official withdrawal procedures) - Unofficial withdrawal procedures
- Explain all other refund policies (state,
institutional, accrediting, etc.) - Ability to identify withdrawn students
- Calculations performed properly (optional
Department worksheets and software) - Downside adjustments reported to Dept. (Pell
System, COD) - Reconciliation
-
28Return to Title IV Policy (R2T4)
- Was money returned? (offset, elec. refund,
check) - Timeframes
- Late Refunds (Program Reviews/Audits)
- Within 30 days of date of determination
- www.fsadownload.ed.gov - software/R2T4
- 2003-2004 FSA Handbook, Vol. 2, Chapter 6 June
2001 Blue Book DCL - GEN-00-24 Federal
Registers - 8/6/99 nprm 11/1/99 final 34 CFR
668.22 Return of Title IV worksheets
29Ability-to-Benefit Tests (ATB) 34 CFR 668,
Subpart J Federal Register Sept. 4, 2002
- Test Administrators
- - Assessment Centers
- - Independent (no affiliation with school or
personnel) - - certified by test publisher
- - publisher scores test
- Approved Tests (scale scores)
- - must be administered in accordance with
procedures set by publisher (retest, time limits,
etc.) - Documentation
- - type of test, date taken, approved scores,
test administrator info. - Eligibility
- - cannot have more than 50 of regular enrolled
students admitted without a H.S. diploma/GED,
unless offer at least a 2-year degree -
-
30Enrollment Status(34 CFR 668.21, 164 674.9
675.9, 676.9 682.604-605 690.75)
- Enrollment status can impact students Title IV
eligibility - Student must attend at least one day of class
- R2T4 calculation required for 60 or less
attendance - Grade Levels (1st, 2nd, etc.)
- Half-time requirement for FFEL and DL loans
- Pell recalculations (required/optional)
- Satisfactory Academic Progress
- What are schools procedures to identify
enrollment status (especially prior to disbursing
aid)
31Distance Education
- Telecommunication vs. correspondence courses
- 50 limitations telecommunication/correspondence
courses offered and number of correspondence
students - Consequences of offering no degrees or less than
50 of your programs lead to a degree - Limitations on contracting out distance education
courses - Telecommunication program must be at least one
academic year in length - 03/04 FSA HDBK, Vol. 2, Chapter 12
32Cash Management
- Bank account notification (federal funds)
- Interest bearing
- Required for Perkins for DL, Pell, FWS and FSEOG
only if over 3 million drawndown - Interest over 250 must be returned to the
Department - Early/late disbursements
- 10 days prior to start of class (calendar
mid-points, starting new payment period - 30 days for first-time, first-year borrowers
- FSA Credit balances (14 days)
- Required school notifications
- holding credit balances, prior-year charges,
crediting FWS funds, loan cancellations,
crediting loan funds, etc.)
33Cash Management
- Excess cash (3 day rule tolerance levels)
- Matching requirements (campus-based)
- Perkins (ICC 1/3 of FCC), FWS (ICC 25),
FSEOG (ICC 25) - Reconciliation
- How often (monthly?)
- Balance year-end totals
- Compare Dept. reports, bank statements, school
ledgers - Clear audit trail
- Trace individual drawdowns (which programs,
students) - Trace funds returned to the Dept.
- 2003-2004 FSA Handbook, Vol. 2, chapter 5 Vol.
4 - June 2001 Blue Book January 2000 Audit Guide
- 34 CFR 668.161-167 (subpart K)
34Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy (SAP)
- develop, publish and monitor SAP policy
- as strict or stricter than non-IV students
- applied consistently to all students within
categories - contain all required components
- qualitative measure (GPA)
- quantitative measure (maximum time frame)
- appeal procedures
- reinstatement of eligibility
- probationary periods (optional)
- class completion issues (remedial courses, etc.)
- 03/04 FSA Hdbk., Vol. 1, pages 8-12 Vol. 2,
pages 57-58 - 34 CFR 668.16(e) 668.32(f) 668.34
35Compliance/Financial Audits and A-133 Audits
- Proprietary Schools
- Both audits must be submitted simultaneously
within 6 months of the end of the schools fiscal
year (single packet). - Public and Private, Non-Profit Schools
- Must be submitted within 9 months of the end of
the schools fiscal year (subject to Single Audit
Act deadlines). - Submitted to Federal Audit Clearinghouse
- Bureau of the Census
- PO Box 5000
- Jeffersonville, IN 47199-5000
36eZ-Audit
- eZ-Audit will provide schools with a paperless
single point of submission for financial
statements and compliance audits through the web - ALL schools must submit audits due on or after
6/16/03 - Temporary postponement for A-133s until after
3/1/04 - A-133 schools must still send copies to the
Clearinghouse - A designee from your school will simply sign on
to eZ-Audit (www.ezaudit.ed.gov), enter summary
audit and financial data directly from your
report into a web form, attach an electronic
version of the report, and submit - Electronic Annc. 1/21 3/5 3/20, 4/7, 6/3,
9/15, 12/12 - eZ-Audit User Guide (Elec. Ann. 3/31/03)
- Federal Register - May 16, 2003, Vol. 68, No. 95
- Questions - 1-877-263-0780 fsaezaudit_at_ed.gov
37NEXT STEPS
- Where do you go from here?
38Communication
- Internal
- Within offices
- Between offices (periodic meetings, workshops,
etc.) - With students/parents
- External
- Between schools
- U.S. Department of Education
- Accrediting Agencies
- State Agencies
- Guaranty Agencies and Lenders
39Adequate Staff
- 668.16 Standards of administrative capability
- b)(1) Designates a capable individual to be
responsible for administering all the Title IV,
HEA programs in which it participates and for
coordinating those programs with the
institution's other Federal and non-Federal
programs of student financial assistance The
Secretary may consider other factors in
determining whether an individual is capable,
including, but not limited to, the individual's
successful completion of Title IV, HEA program
training provided or approved by the Secretary,
and previous experience and documented success in
administering the Title IV, HEA programs
properly
40Adequate Staff cont
- (2) Uses an adequate number of qualified persons
to administer the Title IV, HEA programs in which
the institution participates. The Secretary
considers the following factors to determine
whether an institution uses an adequate number of
qualified persons -- - (i) The number and types of programs in which the
institution participates - (ii) The number of applications evaluated
- (iii) The number of students who receive any
student financial assistance at the institution
and the amount of funds administered - (iv) The financial aid delivery system used by
the institution - (v) The degree of office automation used by the
institution in the administration of the Title
IV, HEA programs - (vi) The number and distribution of financial aid
staff and - (vii) The use of third-party servicers
41Computer EquipmentFederal Register, 12/22/2000
34 CFR 668.16(o)
- Minimum hardware and software - effective
1/1/2002 - 800MHz Processor, 128 MB RAM, 20 GB hard drive,
56K modem, monitor and video card for SVGA, 24x
CD-ROM, Windows 98, 2000 or NT 4.0, dedicated
phone line, etc. - Institutions should be aware that capacity
requirements (processor speed, available memory,
hard drive storage, etc.) are greatly affected by
specific factors at each institution, including
which EDExpress and other Departmental functions
the institution uses, the number of records
processed, and institutional database interfaces. - Since the Title IV, HEA program delivery system
will continually to be upgraded, we recommend
that institutions include in their automated data
processing budgets, on a regular basis, plans for
appropriate hardware and software upgrades and
enhancements.
42Training and Technical Assistance
- Why?
- Knowledge (refresh, improve, increase)
- Changes (new procedures, policies, technology
upgrades) - Back-up personnel, cross-training, succession
planning - How?
- Associations, conferences, workshops
- Guaranty Agencies, Accrediting Bodies, State
Agencies, Servicers - U.S. Department of Education Training
- www.ed.gov/offices/OSFAP/training/index.html
- FSA Coach (Computer Tutorial)
www.fsacoach.ed.gov - FSA Assessments self-evaluation compliance tool
- ifap.ed.gov tools for schools
- Atlanta Case Management Team
- Management Assessment or technical assistance
visits
43Pell and Campus-BasedAdministrative Cost
Allowance (ACA)
- If your school receives an ACA, the ACA
should only be used to help pay the costs of
administering the Pell and Campus-Based
programs. - Help offset administrative costs, such as
salaries, furniture, travel, supplies, and
equipment - Use for service fees for maintaining bank
accounts - Computer costs associated with Perkins Loan
billing - Cover expenses for carrying out the student
consumer information services requirements. - Use up to 10 of the ACA attributable to the
schools FWS Program expenditures to offset
expenses incurred for its community service
program. - (03/04 FSA HDBK, Vol.3, page 72, Vol.4 page 6
34 CFR 673.7, 690.10)
44Resources, References Contacts
- www.ifap.ed.gov (informational resource center)
- Audit Guides, Blue Book, FISAP Instructions,
Common Origination and Disbursement
(COD)materials, Counselors Handbooks, Dear
Colleague/Partner Letters, Default rate guide,
Direct Loan Bulletins, EDE Technical Reference,
Electronic Announcements, FAFSAs, Federal
Registers, Federal Student Aid Handbooks, NSLDS
Reference Materials, 2001 Program Review Guide,
Regulation Compilations - Websites
- NSLDS, FISAP, COD, Direct Loan, schools portal,
students portal, SAIG enrollment, FSA Tech,
GAPS, FAA Access on the Web - U.S. Department of Education Contacts
- - Sources of Assistance for Schools
www.fsadownload.ed.gov -
45Contacts
- Joe Kern (Philadelphia) VA
215-656-8566 joe.kern_at_ed.gov - David Bartnicki (Atlanta) -
AL, FL, GA, MS, NC, SC
404-562-6290 david.bartnicki_at_ed.gov - Tom Beckerle (Kansas City) KY, TN 816-268-0418
tom.beckerle_at_ed.gov