Title: Understanding the Federal Indirect Rate Calculation
1Understanding the Federal Indirect Rate
Calculation
- Federal Restricted Indirect Cost Rates for School
Districts - Pam Peppers
- Supervisor of School District/ESD Financial
Reporting - (360) 725-6304
- pam.peppers_at_k12.wa.us
2Federal Indirect Cost Rates
- What is an indirect cost rate?
- How do districts determine which rate to use?
- What does fixed with carry-forward mean?
- What is a distorting item?
- What is an indirect expenditure?
- What is a space and occupancy plan?
- How is the indirect rate calculated?
- The districts grant application is requiring the
5 year agreement OSPI receives from DOE. Where
can I find the 5 year agreement? - Things to consider for the indirect pool and
base. - Why was the indirect rate on the FY 05-06 F-196
different than the rate calculated on the FY
03-04 F-196?
3What Is An Indirect Cost Rate?
- An indirect cost rate is the maximum percent of
dollars the district can expend from state and
federal grants for administrative costs. Certain
grants may have a more restrictive administrative
cap. Indirect cost rates (limits) ensure that
state and federal moneys are expended for
intended uses and for allowable costs, including
expenditures directly traceable to the program
(direct expenditures) plus a limited allowance
for overhead or indirect expenditures. -
- Two rates are calculated for each district and
are unique to each district - A fixed with carry-forward indirect cost rate
is calculated for each district for all of its
restricted federal grants. - A fixed with carry-forward indirect cost rate
is calculated for all of its unrestricted federal
grants.
4How Do Districts Determine Which Rate To Use?
- Typically, restricted rates must be used for all
federal awards where supplement but not
supplant is in the authorizing language. Almost
all U.S. Department of Education federal programs
fall into this category. The restricted rate is
the lower of the two rates. - Unrestricted rates may be used for those federal
grants that do not have a supplant provision.
The unrestricted rate uses the same calculation
as the restricted rate except expenditures for
maintenance and grounds are included, resulting
in a higher rate. - If there is a question as to which rate you
should use, consult the district grant writer or
contact OSPI if the grant flows through our
agency.
5What Does Fixed With Carry-Forward Mean?
- A fixed with carry-forward provision is a rate
computed and fixed for a specified future school
year based on an estimate of that school years
level of operations. However, when the actual
costs of that school year become known, the
difference between the estimated costs and the
actual costs is carried forward as an
adjustment to a subsequent school year for which
a rate is established. - For example
- The 04-05 F-196 is used to calculate a rate of
3.6 for the 06-07 school year (2-year lag). - If the actual rate calculated at the end of the
06-07 school year is 5.7, then the adjusted rate
of 5.7 will be used for the 08-09 school year.
6What Is A Distorting Item?
- For purposes of the indirect cost process,
distorting items are activities that do not occur
regularly each year or are one-time in nature
(rather than ongoing). These activities
distort the regular and normal expenditures of
the district. Districts will need to determine
and document expenditures they consider
significant and distorting. - Distorting items reduce the direct expenditure
base (the denominator) which increases the
indirect rate.
7Distorting Items
- Flow-through grants, contingencies, election
expenses, renovations and alterations, and fines
and penalties charged in Program 97 are specific
types of distorting items. - Flow-through grants are awards received by a
school district and passed through to another
district. The students in the district receiving
the award do not benefit by the flow-through
award. If the grant amount is 100,000, and the
district passes 25,000 to another district, the
amount of flow-through is 25,000. - Although the federal language includes
contingencies as a distorting item, they are
generally not applicable to school districts. - Election expenses charged to Program 97 are
considered distorting if they are significant.
8Distorting Items (cont.)
- Renovations and alterations may be considered
distorting if the expenditures are unusual,
unexpected, and significant. For example, this
winters windstorm tore portions of the roof off
2 of the districts schools, causing not only roof
damage but flooding as well. If the repair costs
are significant this may be considered a
distorting item. Remember that any general fund
expenditures coded to Object 9 (Capital Outlay)
are always excluded from the indirect calculation
so some of the costs may be excluded. Typically,
these types of repairs are expended in the
Capital Projects Fund and are not included in the
federal rate calculation. - Fines and penalties assessed against the district
by LI, OSHA, WISHA, or IRS late fees for filing
late payroll taxes may be considered distorting
if significant.
9What Is An Indirect Expenditure?
- Indirect costs (expenditures) are agency wide,
general management costs (i.e., activities for
the direction and control of the agency as a
whole). General management costs consist of
administrative activities necessary for the
general operation of the agency, such as
accounting, budgeting, payroll preparation,
personnel services, purchasing, and centralized
data processing. -
- In theory, costs like heat, light, accounting,
payroll, and personnel might be charged directly
to specific programs if little meters could
record minutes in a cross-cutting manner.
However, this is not practical therefore,
indirect cost rates are used to distribute those
indirect expenditures.
10Indirect Expenditures
- Audit costs charged to Program 97, Activity 11,
but not charged directly to another program, may
be included in the indirect expenditure pool. - Legal costs are generally not includable in the
indirect expenditure pool. - Costs for the Superintendent or Assistant
Superintendent charged completely to Activity 12,
but allocable to Activity 13 or 14 and 72-75 are
considered indirect expenditures and are included
in the calculation on the F-196. This pertains
to small schools whose superintendents wear
multiple hats and have many responsibilities in
addition to being the superintendent. - Other manual entry items included in the indirect
expenditure pool are - Public relations costs, charged to Program 97,
Activity 15. - Termination leave for federally supported staff
not charged to Program 97. - Pupil Management Safety costs recorded in
Program 97, Activity 25, if the district has a
cost allocation plan. - Information Services recorded in Program 97,
Activity 72. - Space and occupancy costs.
11What Is A Space And Occupancy Plan?
- Space and occupancy maintenance costs associated
with organization wide service functions, such as
accounting, payroll, or personnel, may be
included as general management costs if a space
allocation or use study supports the allocation.
- As an example, if the district has done an
analysis of the total square footage for the
central administration building, and the business
office occupies 25 of that total square footage,
25 of allowable expenditures may be included in
the indirect pool. Therefore, 25 of the
expenditures for the central administration
building costs for supervision, grounds,
operation of buildings, maintenance, utilities,
security, and insurance may be included in the
indirect pool (numerator).
12How Is The Indirect Rate Calculated?
- The simple answer is the numerator (indirect
expenditures) divided by the denominator (direct
expenditures) equals the district indirect rate. - The calculation on the F-196 Schedule for
Determining School District Federal Restricted
Indirect Cost Rates Including Fixed With
Carry-Forward Calculation is a standardized
methodology which determines the Indirect
Expenditure Pool (column 6) and the Direct
Expenditure Base (column 7). Those figures are
used in the Fixed with Carry-Forward
calculation to determine the indirect rate to be
used in the subsequent 2-year period.
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17Where Can I Find a Copy of the Five Year DOE
Agreement?
- Once the Department of Education accepts the
methodology our state has proposed, OSPI receives
an agreement from DOE. This agreement is kept on
file with School Apportionment and Financial
Services (SAFS). We have recently posted the 5
year agreement, which ended August 31, 2006, to
www.k12.wa.us/safs/FinancialResources.asp. As
soon as DOE accepts our current proposal we will
post the new agreement to this website.
18Things To Consider For The Indirect Pool And Base
- Manual input item 3641 will still be used for
Public Relations costs. Districts will determine
what portion of the costs recorded in Program 97,
Activity 15, are for liaison with news media and
government relations officers, such as notices of
Federal concern, financial matters, school
calendar, newsletters, etc., and enter that
dollar amount in item 3641. If no entry is made
in this item number the total expenditures in
Program 97, Activity 15, will be included in the
direct base (denominator). - New in 06-07Pupil Management and Safety
expenditures in Program 97, Activity 25, will be
manually input in item 3691 for the Restricted
Indirect Rate, only if the district has done a
cost allocation plan. Guidance will be provided
at a later date, per DOE instructions. These
expenditures will continue to be included in the
Unrestricted Indirect Pool.
19Things To Consider For The Indirect Pool And Base
- New in 06-07Costs recorded in Program 97,
Activity 72,for districtwide Information Systems
expenditures will be entered in manual input item
3701. Exclude costs for student records such as
printing report cards or transcripts. If no entry
is made in this item number the total
expenditures in Program 97, Activity 72, will be
included in the direct base (denominator). - Motor Pool expenditures in Program 97, Activity
75, must only be for cars or vans used to
transport staff to conferences or meetings.
Expenditures associated with specific programs,
extracurricular, or ASB, should be directly
charged to those programs.
20Things To Consider For The Indirect Pool And Base
(cont.)
- Remember that Superintendent costs, and those
costs associated with the Superintendents
secretary, are not allowed in the restricted
indirect pool. The only exception is if the
Superintendent and/or the secretary are coded
100 to Activity 12 but have responsibilities in
the business office, human resources, print
center, information systems, motor pool, or
warehouse. The expenditures allocable to these
other activities are considered indirect and can
be entered in manual input item 3481. Remember
to exclude Capital Outlay (Object 9). - Check to make sure there arent any negative
dollars in the printing or motor pool activities.
This reduces the indirect rate. The example in
this presentation has a negative 48,753 in Motor
Pool, which reduced the indirect pool (not a good
thing!).
21Why Was Our Districts Rate Different on the FY
05-06 F-196?
- The rates calculated for some districts on the FY
03-04 F-196 (to be used in 05-06) were not
calculated correctly. In order for OSPI to be in
compliance, we were required to manually correct
the rates in our VAX system. This caused some
rates from the FY 03-04 database to be different
than they were on the actual 03-04 F-196.
Districts with an increase of greater than 1
were notified and allowed to change their rate in
the grant system if they chose to. Districts
whose rates decreased due to the recalculation
were allowed to use the higher rate in 05-06.
However, to ensure that future rates were
accurate, the VAX system was manually corrected
to reflect the lower rate. - This situation may also occur on the FY 06-07
F-196. The rates calculated on the 04-05 F-196
may not have been calculated correctly. - If your district noticed a different 03-04 rate
on the 05-06 F-196, or notice a different 04-05
rate on the 06-07 F-196, please contact me for
more information.
22Questions and Discussion
- Changes in guidance
- We are still working with DOE on the five year
plan for Washington State. The DOE
requirements may create some changes in the
F-196 calculation. - OSPI will provide more information on indirects
during the F-196 Annual Financial Statements
training. This will include any changes due to
DOE requirements. - Other Questions or Discussion?