Title: Project Management: What do you really need to know
1Project Management What do you really need to
know?
- Winnie Ennenga, Director
- Office of Grant and Contract Services
October 29, 2003
2Which of these costs are not allowable
expenditures in awards to NAU?
- Tuition for graduate research assistants
- Conference travel split between two sponsored
projects - Professional memberships
- Clerical salaries
- Transfer of cost overruns to other federal
projects - First class air travel
- Alcoholic beverages
- Supplies and materials
- General-purpose equipment
3Can a sponsor impose requirements like these on
NAU?
- Restrictions or prohibitions on the publication
of research results - Sponsor ownership of intellectual property
- Unilateral modification of the scope of work by
the sponsor - Repayment of award funds if cost sharing
requirements are not met
4Answers to these questions can be found in
- The funding mechanism used to make an award
- Gift
- Sponsored Project
- The type of award
- Assistance Agreement
- Procurement
- Sponsor policies, laws and administrative
regulations - Award-specific terms and conditions
- Institutional policies and procedures
- The proposal
5Funding Mechanisms
- Gifts
- Sponsor chooses recipient
- Usually discretionary
- No strings
- Work with NAU Foundation
- Sponsored Projects
- Recipient chooses Sponsor
- Always restricted
- Always Strings
- Work with Office of Grant and Contract Services
(OGCS)
6What is a Sponsored Project?
- The proposed project binds the University to a
specific scope or area of work - A detailed (line item) budget is required
- Financial and technical reports are required
- The award is subject to external audit
- The project has a specified performance period or
completion date - Regulatory approvals are required
- The agreement provides for this disposition of
property (tangible or intangible)
7Most common types of sponsored project awards
- Assistance Agreements
- Grants
- Cooperative Agreements
- Procurements
- Contracts
8Assistance Agreements Grants
- Support is for a public purpose
- Project is conceived and developed by the
principal investigator - Sponsor has no substantial involvement in the
project - No guaranteed deliverables
- No penalty for failure
9Assistance Agreements Cooperative Agreements
- Support is for a public purpose
- Project is conceived by the sponsor and developed
in collaboration with the principal investigator - Sponsor has substantial involvement in the
conduct of the project
10Procurements Contracts
- Project benefits the sponsor
- Project is conceived by the sponsor
- Sponsor exercises some direction or control
- Includes specific deliverables and time frames
- Provides legal remedy for breach
11Summary
- The funding mechanism and type of award affect
the type of project you will be able to conduct,
and the amount of direction or control the
investigator has over the project. - You need to know what type of award will be
issued BEFORE you begin to write the proposal.
12Sponsor Policies, Laws and Administrative
Requirements
- Federal awards are administered in accordance
with the OMB Circulars and the Federal
Acquisition Regulations (FAR) - The purpose is to give instructions to federal
agencies which they are required to implement - Establishes the maximum requirements for the
government and, accordingly, the minimum
standards for institutions - Agency interpretations of the Circulars are
contained in the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR) or agency-specific policy manuals
13Summary
- A working knowledge of the circulars will help
you determine what is allowable and unallowable
before you incur the cost (or have the item
struck from the award budget) and also to know
when an exceptions can be made and how to justify
it. - To avoid post-award blues, read at least parts of
A-21 and A-110 BEFORE you write a proposal.
14Award Specific Terms and Conditions
- May allow actions which otherwise would not be
allowable, or prohibit otherwise allowable
actions. - Typical inclusion is to document cost sharing
requirements - Restrictions on participants (e.g., programs
intended to foster increased participation of
minorities or women in science may have
participation requirements or limitations)
15Institutional Policies and Procedures
- Submitting Proposals, Reviewing and Accepting
Awards to Northern Arizona University
16What are the requirements for submitting
proposals through the University?
- Review 3 handouts
- Guideline for Submitting Proposals
- Proposal Review Checklist
- Forms package
17What are some of the things our office looks at
when we review awards for acceptance or
declination?
- Payment Provisions
- Fixed Price Agreement
- Line Item Restrictions
- Excessive Documentation
- Detailed Invoicing
- Indirect Costs (FA, Overhead)
- Cost Sharing Requirements
- Scope of Work
- Project has been approved internally and is
consistent with the unit/college/university
mission - Any clarification required prior to acceptance?
- Technical Direction
- Unreasonable Sponsor Involvement
- Unilateral Changes
- Inspection and Acceptance
- Payment Tied to Deliverables
- Penalties for failure
- Publication
- Unreasonable Delays
- Prohibition or restriction
18What are some of the things our office looks at
when we review an award for acceptance or
rejection?
- Intellectual Property
- Ownership
- Indirect Cost Issues
- Use issues
- License Terms
- Reporting Requirements
- Technical
- Financial
- Property
- Intellectual Property
- Termination
- Right to Terminate
- Default Penalties
19Post-Award Project Management Activities
- Negotiation and acceptance of award
- Key personnel
- Activation of grant account
- Issuance of subcontracts
- Time and effort reporting
- Documentation of cost share
- Financial reporting and invoicing
20Post-Award Project Management Activities
- Management of intellectual property
- Compliance monitoring
- Humans Misconduct Biohazards
- Animals COI Radiation safety
- Monitoring of technical reporting
- Subrecipient monitoring
- Project close-out and audit
- Records archiving
21Discussion
22Budget Preparation
- Does the budget reflect the scope of work?
- Are salary rates correct?
- Are anticipated cost increases built in for
multi-year projects? - Are tenure/promotion increases built in for
junior faculty if appropriate? - If secretarial/clerical costs are budgeted, are
the duties clearly project specific as opposed to
general administrative work? - Are fringe benefit rates correct?
- Are proposed consultant fees within sponsor
limits?
23Preparing the Budget
- Is equipment purchase allowed by the sponsor?
- Does proposed foreign travel meet sponsor
limitations? - Are indirect costs included if paid by the
sponsor - Are subcontracts identified and justified?
- Are proposed cooperating institution(s)/organizati
on(s) - financially stable?
- able to comply with flow-down provisions?
- committed in writing?
- Are there cost sharing requirements?
- Is cost-sharing overly excessive?
- Is the budget justification sufficiently detailed
and accurate?
24Format of the Proposed Budget
- Budget Cost Categories
- Salaries and Wages
- Employee-Related Expenses (ERE)
- Equipment
- Travel
- Student Support / Participant Support
- Other Direct Costs
- Consultants
- Subcontracts
- Indirect Costs
25Salaries and Wages
- Cost of personnel paid on NAU payroll for effort
directly related to the project - Costs based on ACTUAL salary rates or an amount
within the salary range of the job classification
for person to be hired - Summer Salary vs. Academic Salary
- Administrative and Clerical Staff Salaries (OMB
Circular A-21, f.6.b.) - Normally not allowed as direct charges to
federally sponsored projects
26Salaries and Wages
- Administrative and Clerical Staff Salaries (OMB
Circular A-21, F.6.b.) - Exception the project meets the criteria of a
major project and the employees can be
specifically identified with the project activity - Circumstances for direct charging these salaries
should be clearly described in the budget
justification
27Employee-Related Expenses (ERE) / Fringe Benefits
- Explanation rounded estimates based on the
projected cost of health, dental, life,
disability, FICA and medicare, unemployment, and
retirement benefits relative to the employees
salary/wages, FTE and number of dependents
28Employee-Related Expenses (ERE) / Fringe Benefits
(FB)
- Average ERE rates for faculty and staff vary over
a wide range from 8.65 for non-benefit eligible
staff to as high as 75 for an employee with
dependents. - Student rates include only workers compensation
during the academic year, and FICA/Social
Security if the student is not enrolled full
time.
29Employee-Related Expenses (ERE) / Fringe Benefits
(FB)
- Full-time (20 hours/week) Graduate Research
Assistants also receive a partial tuition benefit
(1,200 per year) and an insurance benefit
(1,126) - The greatest portion of the benefit package is
the cost of health insurance, which is increasing
at about 7.5 per year!
30Equipment
- Definition
- Most federal agencies define equipment as
non-expendable tangible property with an
acquisition cost of 5,000 or more per unit and
having a useful life of more than one year - NAU uses an acquisition cost of 2,500 or more
with a useful life of at least one year
31Equipment
- Special Purpose vs. General Purpose
- "Special purpose equipment" means equipment which
is used only for research, medical, scientific,
or other technical activities. Examples include
microscopes and spectrometers - "General purpose equipment" means equipment, the
use of which is not limited only to research,
medical, scientific or other technical
activities. Examples include office equipment and
furnishings, reproduction and printing equipment
and automatic data processing equipment - Unallowable unless approved in advance by the
sponsor
32Equipment
- Required Information
- Specific product information and specifications,
per item cost (including shipping, tax,
installation) - List items in budget by name and estimated cost
(based on actual price quotes) - Budget Justification
- Include an explanation of the use of the
equipment on the project
33Travel
- Cost of trips necessary for the performance of
the project - Includes transportation, lodging, subsistence and
related items - Required Information name of traveler,
destination, reason for trip, dates of travel,
airfare and per diem rates - Distinguish between domestic and foreign
- Fly American Act
34Student Support / Participant Support
- Student Support stipends, tuition, registration
fees, student health insurance, student travel - Participant Support subsistence allowances,
travel allowances and registration fees paid to
or on behalf of participants or trainees in
connection with meetings, conferences, training
projects
35Other Direct Costs
- Supplies and Materials consumables used in the
performance of the project (e.g. laboratory /
instructional supplies, data processing supplies,
raw materials) - Communication Costs (e.g. long distance, fax,
postage and mailing) - Miscellaneous (e.g. computer services,
publication charges, animal charges)
36Consultants
- Possesses specialized knowledge and skills,
provides a specific product or service and may
function autonomously in determining when and how
the work will be accomplished - Review sponsor guidelines for restrictions on
maximum daily rates - Review NAU Purchasing Policy, Guide to Using
Independent Contractors
37Subcontracts
- Transfer of scientific or programmatic efforts
through an award to another organization - Subcontractors Proposal should include statement
of work, detailed budget, period of performance,
identify key personnel - Sole Source Justification vs. Bid
38Indirect Costs (IDC) / Facilities and
Administrative Costs (FA)
- Definition per OMB Circular A-21
- costs that are incurred for a common or joint
objectives and, therefore, cannot be identified
readily and specifically with a particular
sponsored project, an instructional activity, or
any other institutional activity
39Indirect Costs
- Current Rates based on a Salaries and Wages Base
- On Campus 47.8 of salaries and wages, excluding
ERE - Off Campus 20.9 of salaries and wages,
excluding ERE - NAU is currently undergoing a rate study to move
to a Modified Total Direct Cost Base
40Budget Justification
- Detailed explanation of budget items in narrative
format - Should include calculation of amounts included in
the budget, in particular - Administrative and clerical costs
- Special equipment needs
- Consultants and subcontractors
41Reminders
- Do not pad the budget
- Do not underestimate costs