Title: Facts about Grants Funding Pre
1Grants Management
Facts about Grants Funding Pre Post Award
Kathleen Shino Acting NIH SBIR/STTR
Coordinator Grants Management Officer,
NIDDK NIH SBIR/STTR Conference July 2005
2Overview
- Roles and Responsibilities
- Eligibility and Budgets
- Funding Considerations Pre-award
- Post Award
- Compliance
- NIH eRA Commons
3Grants Management Officer (GMO)
- Responsible for the business management of the
grant, including - Review
- Negotiation
- Award Administration
- Interpretation of policies and provisions
- GMO is the only person authorized to obligate
monies and permit changes to approved projects on
behalf of the NIH
4Program Official
-
- Advice and Guidance
- Whats Hot New initiatives
- Answer your scientific questions
- Review Issues Dos and Donts
- Discuss funding alternatives
5Grantee Institution
- The award is made to the institution, not an
individual - The Institution
- Is legally responsible for the proper conduct and
execution of the project - Provides fiscal management of the project
- Provides oversight on allocation decisions
- Ensures compliance with Federal laws and
regulations, and NIH policies and procedures
6Authorized Institute Official (IO)
- Designated representative of the grantee
organization in matters related to the award and
administration of NIH grants - In signing a grant application, this individual
certifies that the institution will - Comply with all applicable assurances and
certifications - Be held accountable for the funds awarded and for
the performance of the grant-supported project or
activities - Ensure that the organization complies with
applicable Federal laws and regulations
7Principal Investigator (PI)
- Responsible for the scientific and/or technical
aspects of the grant - Day-to-day management of the project
- Responsible for the scientific conduct of the
project and to provide the required progress
reports
8Eligibility SBIR/STTR
- See NIH Omnibus Solicitation
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/funding/sbir.htmsol
- First the definition 13 CFR 121.105
- a small business is a business entity organized
for profit, with a place of business located in
the United States, and which operates primarily
within the United States or which makes a
significant contribution to the U.S. economy
through payment of taxes or use of American
products, materials or labor. - has, including its affiliates, 500 or fewer
employees
9 Eligibility SBIR/STTR
- Second - Ownership - 13 CFR 121.702
- (1) A for-profit business concern, as defined in
Sec. 121.105, that is at least 51 owned and
controlled by one or more individuals who are
citizens of the United States, or permanent
resident aliens in the United States or, - (2) (SBIR only) A for-profit business concern,
as defined in Sec. 121.105, that is at least 51
owned and controlled by another for-profit
business concern, as defined in Sec. 121.105,
that is itself at least 51 owned and controlled
by individuals who are citizens of, or permanent
resident aliens in, the United States.
10Eligibility SBIR/STTR
- See NIH Omnibus Solicitation
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/funding/sbir.htmsol
- NIH Guide Announcement - http//grants.nih.gov/gra
nts/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-03-053.html - SBA highlighted the requirement that owners of
the SBIR participant be "individuals" who are
citizens of, or permanent resident aliens in, the
United States.
11 Verifying Eligibility
Business Structure Inc., Corp., LTD, JV, LLC,
SA, PLC Review the Commercialization Plan in
Phase II applications or company description for
affiliations. Biosketch information - Are there
any former or concurrent employment with larger
entities? (Email address?)
12 Verifying Eligibility
A listing of the majority or all shareholders,
including the venture capital investment
companies, The percentage of company stock each
investor or company holds, and Identify foreign
investors/shareholders
13 Verifying Eligibility
- The research space occupied by the grantee is
generally not shared with another organization
and is under the control of the grantee. - All research on the SBIR/STTR grant will be
performed in its entirety in the United States.
14- Application Considerations
15Cost Considerations
- Cost Principles and Organizations
- The Four Tests
16Reasonableness
- A cost may be considered reasonable if the nature
of the goods or services acquired or applied and
the associated dollar amount reflect the action
that a prudent person would have taken under the
circumstances prevailing at the time the decision
to incur the cost was made
17Reasonableness
- The cost principles address the following
considerations - Whether the cost is generally necessary to
operations or the grants performance - Whether the recipient complies with their own
established policies - Whether individuals expending Federal funds acted
with due prudence
18Allocability
- A cost is allocable to a specific grant,
function, department, etc., known as a cost
objective, if the goods or services involved are
chargeable or assignable to that cost objective
in accordance with the relative benefits received
or other equitable relationship
19Allocability
- A cost is allocable to a grant if
- The cost is incurred solely in order to advance
work under the grant - It benefits both the grant and other work of the
company (including other grant-supported
projects) - It is necessary to the overall operation of the
company and is deemed to be assignable, at least
in part, to the grant
20Allowability
- Applicable cost principles establish standards
- Applicability of a particular set of cost
principles depends on the type of organization
making the expenditure - In order to be allowable, costs must also conform
with NIH specific limitations and exclusions as
contained in the terms and conditions of the award
21Consistency
- Grantees must be consistent in assigning costs to
cost objectives - Although costs may be charged either as direct or
indirect, depending on their identifiable benefit
to a particular program, they must be treated
consistently for all work of the organization
under similar circumstances, regardless of the
source of funding
22Types of Costs
- Indirect Costs/Facilities and Administrative
(FA) Costs Not Easily Identified With A
Specific Project - Fringe Benefits, Overhead, GA
- Direct Costs Easily Identified With A Specific
Project - Direct Salaries Wages
- Materials Supplies
- Consultants Subcontracts
23Budget Format
- Submit PHS 398 form page 4 (detailed budget for
initial budget period) and form page 5 for entire
proposed period of support - STTR include research institution budget form
page
24Budget Preparation
- Consortia - third party
- The grantees signature on the application
certifies, as the direct and primary recipient of
grant funds, that it is aware of and is
accountable to NIH for the performance of the
project, the appropriate expenditure of grant
funds by all parties, and all other obligations
as specified in the NIH Grants Policy Statement.
25SBIR STTR Fee/Profit
- Fee must be requested in application
- May not exceed 7 of total costs for NIH grants
- Fee must be justified in the application
- Based on profit margin consistent with all
projects of similar scope, regardless of source
of funding.
26Negotiation Process
- Contact the Indirect Cost Branch Ruth Bishop
- When Notification Grant/Contract Is Going To Be
Awarded - How Via
- E-Mail rb17i_at_nih.gov
- Fax 301/402-7180
27Negotiation Process
- Indirect Cost Proposal Submitted
- Indirect Cost Branch Reviews Proposal
- Indirect Cost Branch Follows-up With Questions To
Company - Rates are Negotiated
- Typically By Telephone
- Rate Agreement Is Issued Or Rate Memo Is Sent To
Grant Specialist
28Pre-award Funding Considerations
29Just-in-Time (JIT)
- Information that is not submitted with the
application, but when the application has a
possibility of being funded based on the priority
score . This will be requested - Other support
- Institutional base salaries for non-modular
budgets - PI and institution documentation of eligibility
(see Verification Statement in NIH Solicitation) - Human subject assurance/IRB IACUC review dates
30Assurances/Certifications
- Human subjects (See OHRP on NIH.gov website)
- Vertebrate animals (See OLAW on NIH.gov website)
- Debarment and suspension
- Drug-free workplace
- Lobbying
- Research misconduct
- Financial conflict of interest
31Assurances/Certifications
- PHS metric program
- Smoke free workplace
- Government use of information under the privacy
act - Information available to the PI
- Information available to the general public
- Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
32Funding Decisions
- The paylist is determined by
- IRG recommendations (Peer Reviewers)
- Scientific merit (score)
- Council recommendations
- Program Official recommendations
- Scientific priorities
33Determining Award Levels
- Initial review group recommendations (summary
statement administrative notes) - Advisory Council actions
- Cost analysis (GMS review of application)
- Overlap
- Policy considerations (e.g., eligibility)
- Programmatic adjustments
34Budget Cost Elements Personnel
- Proposed hours for any employee should not exceed
direct work year (2,080 hours/ year) - Are proposed salaries supported by source
documents? (Employment Contract, agreement) - Is any part of the proposed labor also charged as
indirect? (PI/CEO/President) - Is the role of all staff (professional and
non-professional) concisely defined?
35Budget Cost Elements - Consultants
- Consultants must not be employees of the SBC
- Consultants should only be used when their
expertise is essential to the project - Documentation provided in the application should
include name of the consultant the nature of
the services rendered and their relevance to the
grant the period of service the basis for
calculating the amount requested
36Budget Cost Elements - Equipment
- Equipment may be classified as either project
specific or general purpose - Project specific equipment is defined as
equipment which directly facilitates the purpose
of and is an integral part of the activities of a
grant - General purpose equipment includes items such as
office equipment and furnishings. Typically,
these items are part of the FA costs
37Budget Cost Elements - Supplies
- Are supplies consistently treated as direct costs
on other projects, regardless of source of
funding? - Are the proposed supplies reasonable for the
scope of the work?
38Budget Cost Elements - Travel
- Costs incurred for project related travel
- Budget costs in accordance with the grantees
established travel cost reimbursement policy - For-profits--Government rates should be used as a
basis for charging travel costs to the grant
(www.policyworks.gov)
39Budget Cost Elements - Subcontracts
- Subcontract costs should be proposed in
accordance with their governing cost principles - OMB Circulars (A21, A122, A87, FAR)
- FA for subcontracts are proposed as direct costs
on the grantee budget
40- Award Actions
- Its free money, but its not easy
- --anonymous grantee
41Notice of Grant Award (NGA)
- A legally binding contract
- Official notice that an award has been made
- Includes
- Funding level
- Periods of support
- Terms and conditions (footnotes)
- NIH contact information
- Program Official for Scientific issues
- Grants Management Specialist for administrative
issues
42Standard Terms and Conditions
- Carry over
- The authority to expend funds from the previous
budget period - Streamlined Non-competing Award Process (SNAP)
(Phase II) - Eliminates need for annual submission of budget
with progress report and annual submission of
Financial Status Report (FSR)
43Other Terms and Conditions
- Restrictive terms - may specify required action
on the part of the grantee to remove restriction
(FA rate negotiation, human subjects) -
- Close-out reporting requirements
- Included in the Final year NGA
- Financial, invention and final progress report
44Expanded Authorities
- All NIH awards are under EA, which means
- 90 day pre-award cost authority at grantees own
risk - No-cost extension of project period for up to 12
months (notify GMS before project end date!)
45Post Award
46Prior NIH Approval Required
- Change of PI and other Key personnel
- Change of Grantee Organization
- Change of Scope
47Change in Scope
- Change in direction
- Change in type of training or
- Change other area that constitutes a significant
change from the aims, objectives, or purposes of
the originally approved project
48Actions Likely to be Considered a Change in Scope
- Change in the specific aims from those approved
in the competing application - Substitution of one animal model for another
- Any change from the approved use of animals or
human subjects - Shifting the research emphasis from one disease
area to another
49Change in Scope
- Transferring the performance of substantive
programmatic work to a third party through a
consortium agreement, by contract, or any other
means (not in original application) - Change in key personnel
- Significant rebudgeting (gt25 of total award)
50Changes - Prior Approval Required!
- Notify the NIH immediately if any of these apply
or will apply to your business - Successor-in-interest
- Name change
- Merger
-
51 Change Prior Approval Required!
- The following changes involving the PI or
other key personnel should also be promptly
reported - Withdrawal from the project entirely
- An absence of three months or more
- Reduced time devoted to the project by 25 or
more
52Submitting prior approval requests to NIH
- Requests for project changes that require Grants
Management Office approval must be submitted in
writing and signed by the PI and the Institution
Official (IO) - An e-mail request is acceptable
- initiated by the PI and sent through the IO
- to the agency GMO and Program Official
53No-cost Extensions
- Grantee may extend (without additional funds) the
final budget period of the project up to 12
months (one-time only). If registered in Commons
grantees can enter a first NCE through the
Commons (up to 90 days before the end date of the
award). - Notify NIH of extensions at least 10 days prior
to the project period end date - Explain the reason for the extension and the
length of the extension - No revised NGA for first on-time extension
54No-cost Extensions
- Requests submitted after the project period has
expired or extensions beyond the initial 12 month
extension requires NIH prior approval - 2nd NCE (or late) Request should include
- Length of the request
- An estimate of funds remaining
- A brief progress report and the goals to be
attained during the extended period - If the request was submitted late, state the
reason for the late request - If approved, a revised NGA will be issued
55Federal Cash Transaction Report (PSC 272)
- Grantees must report expenditures (Cash
Disbursements) quarterly using the PSC 272 to the
Division of Payment Management (DPM) - Reports are due within 45 days of 3/31, 6/30,
9/30 and 12/31 - Delays in submission of the quarterly reports
will result in the withholding of grant payments.
Please contact your DPM account representative
with any questions. - http//dpmlink.dpm.psc.gov/Contact.aspx
56Federal Cash Transaction Report (FCTR) form PSC
272
- Awarding agencies (GMS) use these quarterly
reports from PMS - To monitor patterns of cash expenditures,
including accelerated or delayed draw downs, and - To assess performance or to identify financial
management problems
57 Close-out and Compliance
58Close Out Requirements
- Due within 90 days of the end of the project
period to the awarding Institute - Final Progress Report (no form)
- Final Invention Statement - Form HHS 568
- Final Financial Status Report SF 269A or SF 269
- Refer to the terms and conditions on the final
Notice of Grant Award (Section IV)
59Compliance Basics
- Do the right thing
- Keep your policies current with Federal
requirements - Develop a continuing training program
- Perform risk assessments and implement
appropriate internal controls - COMMUNICATE!! COMMUNICATE!!
-
60Why is Compliance Important?
- It strengthens the relationship of trust that
exists between sponsor and recipient - It suggests a presence of the stewardship
necessary to properly safeguard the Federal
investment in biomedical research - Comments on Compliance Program Guidance for
Recipients of NIH Research Grants - Federal Guide Notice 9/23/03 http//a257.g.akamait
ech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gp
o.gov/2003/03-22626.htm
61Who is Accountable for Compliance?
- The Company is accountable for the finances and
the administration of the grant - The PI is accountable for the research
- The PI makes allocation decisions
- The Company exercises oversight on allocation
decisions
62Types of Issues
- Misuse of funds
- Unallowable costs
- Allocation of costs
- Accelerated expenditures
- Large unobligated balances
- Cost transfers
- Conflict of interest
63Common Contributors to Compliance Problems
- Inadequate resources
- Lack of understanding of roles and
responsibilities of institutional staff - Outdated or nonexistent policies and procedures
- Inadequate staff training and education
- Inadequate systems
- Perception that internal control systems are not
necessary
64 NIH Enforcement Actions
- Special terms and conditions of awards
- Loss of carryover authority
- Cost disallowances
- Suspension/termination of award
- Opportunity for improved grantee systems and
policies to assure compliance
65Financial Conflict of Interest
- Expectation Companies must establish written
policies and procedures to address financial
conflict of interest for their investigators.
These standards are designed to ensure that
investigators maintain research objectivity in
the design, conduct, analysis and reporting of
research funded under grants.
66Financial Conflict of Interest
- Identified a conflict of interest? You must
- Notify Chief GMO to assure that the conflicting
interest is being managed, reduced, or eliminated - Provide additional information, if requested
- FCOI must be addressed in consortium, consultant
and contractual agreements - See NIH Guide http//grants2.nih.gov/grants/guide
/notice-files/NOT-OD-OO-040.html
67Whats New in FY2006?
- Its electric! Research Administration
- New Electronic SF424 RR
- December 1, 2005 receipt date for SBIR/STTR
competing applications -
- Program Outcomes Data System (PODS)
Electronic final progress report
68NIH eRA Commons
- Open to All Institutions
- Authorized Organizational Official should
register the institution - Is your Institution already registered?
http//era.nih.gov/userreports/ipf_com_org_list.cf
m - To register
- Go to Commons home page click registration link
- Enter small amount of information
- Print out page and fax to NIH
- Approx 2-3 days to process registration
- Help desk can help with any problems
69Commons Functionality
- FSR submission
- IAR (internet assisted review)
- Demo facility any one can use!
- JIT submission (all data in single submission)
- Profiles (Institution and Professional Profiles)
- View status of application, priority score (PI
only), NGA and other grant related documents - See http//era.nih.gov/commons
- eRA help desk (866) 504-9552 (730-530 EST M-F)
70NIH Grants Information Sources
- Notice of Grant Award (read it!)
- Provides terms of award and agency contacts
- Frequently Asked Questions
- http//www.grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/giofaq.ht
m - Grants Information
- grantsinfo_at_nih.gov (contact email address)
- NIH Grants Policy Information
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/policy/policy.htm
71QUESTIONS??
- Want to Know More?
- Subscribe to the NIH Guide
- http//grants1.nih.gov/grants/guide/listserv.htm
- Thank You!
- Kathleen J. Shino, M.B.A.
- Acting NIH SBIR/STTR Program Coordinator
- Voice 301 435-2689 Fax 301 480-0146
- Email shinok_at_mail.nih.gov