Title: NCURA Region V
1NCURA Region V
- University Service Centers A Primer
2University Service Centers - Primer
- Overview
- Characteristics
- Information to determine
- Rate Development
- Rate Base
- Budget
- Tips from the Association of College University
Auditors - OIG Audits that Provide Guidance
3University Service Centers - Primer
- Within the campus, departments use a variety of
products or services to perform their activities.
- When these products or services are provided
within the university these units function as
non-profit businesses.
4What is a University Service Center?
- An operating unit within the University that
provides - --a service or group of services or
- --product or group of products
- --to users principally within the university
- --for a fee.
- A business operating within the University at
break-even.
5Can Everyone be a Service Centers?
- Need to determine if the operation is viable as a
service center under applicable - University criteria, (policies)
- OMB Circular A-21 and the
- Universitys Cost Disclosure Statement.
6Can Everyone Be a Service Center?
- Determine if the operation is viable as a service
center under applicable - University criteria (policies)
- OMB Circular A-21
- Universitys Cost Disclosure Statement
7Federal Guidance
- HHS Review Guide for Long Form University
Indirect Proposals - Audit Guide Adequacy and Compliance Audits of
Disclosure Statements Submitted by Educational
Institutions (HHS OIG) - Federal Audits of Recharge Centers (HHS OIG)
- A-133 Compliance Supplement (Part 3, Compliance
Requirements) April 1999 - Internal service, central service, pension, or
similar activities
8Summary of Key Compliance Issues
- Rates should recover no more than the cost of the
good or service. - Rates must break-even over time, not each year.
- Rates dont discriminate between users,
especially Feds - Surplus from recharge centers shouldnt be used
to fund unrelated activities - Must maintain published price list
- Rates may include depreciation expense only, not
the full cost of the equipment - Depreciation included in rates cant also be in
the FA rate - Service center subsidies should NOT be included
in the FA rate (i.e.. NOT as a Departmental
Administration cost)
9University Service Center
10Characteristics
- A measurable unit of output can be readily
determined. - Can you define what are you going to sell?
11Characteristics
- The amount of a product or service can be
measured easily and accurately. - Can you measure usage?
12Characteristics
- Individual accounts can be billed for products
or services based upon their actual usage - recommendation-monthly.
- Can you bill on a regular basis to recover costs?
13 Characteristics
- An operation may not function as a service
center if it cannot - --determine an actual usage in measurable units
of output - or
- --if monthly (periodic) billing cannot be made.
14Questions to Answer to Start the Process
- What are the products or service provided?
- Who will be the primary users?
- What portion of income will be from federal
sources? - Will equipment costing more than 5,000 be used
in the center? - How much in start up funding will be needed?
- Who will provide the funds?
15Developing the Rate
- Determine what you are going to sell.
16Define Good or Service to Sell
- Microscope Lab Use of Microscope
- Zebra Fish Facility Fish
- Super Computing Facility Excess CPU
- Technical Rate Rack Space 24 Hour Service
Connectivity Charge Technical Labor - Stores Facility Chemicals, Lab Supplies
Purchasing Services
17Example
- Federal training program provide lemonade daily
to participants and employees for June through
August. - 3 programs with 25 participants and 5 OU
employees each - Purchase Lemonade Machine
- Possible use of machine during remainder of year
18Example-Lemonade Stand
- What could we sell?
- Cups of Lemonade (to participants)
- Cups of Lemonade (to non-participants)
- Rental of Lemonade Machine (machine is available
nights and week-ends)
19Developing the Rate
- Determine who your customers will be.
20Evaluate Customer Base
- Internal
- University Sponsored Program Areas
- University Departments
- External
- Those who do not have a University account number
- Industry
- Students, faculty or staff acting in a personal
capacity - Estimate How Many Customers (Rate is a function
of the Operating Costs/Users (Use) of the
Service)
21Example
- Who are the potential customers for product and
services? - Will they be internal or external?
- Participants
- Employees
- Student Groups
22Customer Base
- Non-university users may be charged a higher user
rate than University users if they are purchasing
the service or product with non-federal funds.
23Developing the Rate
- Determine how the usage will be measured.
24Goal
- Use the measurement which allocates costs
equitably among all users - For example, a center that performs tests on
samples has two possible units of measure it
could charge per test, or per hour. If some tests
take twice as long as others, and labor is a
large portion of the cost of performing a test it
is not equitable to charge each user on a per
test basis. In such circumstances, the user rate
will be on a per hour basis.
25Examples of Measurable Units
- Page
- Test
- Slide
- Sequence
- Cup
- Labor hour
- Machine hour
- CPU Unit
- Per Rack Slot per Month
- Daily Rate
26Example Base to Use
Name Short Description Unit Base
Lemonade 8 oz cup
Lemonade Machine Use of machine to make lemonade
27Measurable Units for Lemonade Center
28Developing the Budget
29Developing the Budget
- All allowable costs of a center that will be used
in establishing user rates will be budgeted in
and expended through one operating account. - The budget will be determined using the standard
guidelines established by University policy and
procedures and the Cost Accounting Standard
guidelines.
30Developing the Budget
- Generally these costs include
- Salaries and Wages
- Fringe Benefits
- Supplies and Materials
- Subcontractors and Other Outside Services
- Repairs and Maintenance
- Carry-Forward Surpluses or Deficits
31Budget Components
32Salaries Wages
- Base salary and fringe benefits of employees
working in the center. - Anticipated raises for employees in the upcoming
year. - For open positions that will be filled in the
upcoming year, salaries and benefits can be
estimated by using an average salary for the
position.
33Salaries Wages
- If faculty salaries are to be included in user
rates they will be budgeted and paid from the
service center operating account.
34Example
- Lemonade will be provided to participants daily
June-August Machine will be rented during
remainder of year. Technician is needed to
maintain and clean machine all year.
NAME BASE SALARY (AT 100 FTE) BEN FTE ON CENTER TOTAL ON CTR (INC. BENEFITS)
Direct Salaries Â
Technician 10,000.00 33.0 50 6,650.00
Student - Sales 6,000.00 .09 25 1,635.00
Total Direct Salaries 16,000.00 Â Â 8,285.00
35Budget Components
36Supplies and Materials
- Supplies and materials costs necessary for the
operation of the service center. - Office supplies if consumed solely for the
operation of the center in deliverance of its
product or service. - All supplies and materials charged to the service
center need to be clearly identifiable and be
under the control of the centers staff.
37Example
SUPPLIES
Lemons (1 bag per day x 65 days _at_ 20/bag) 1,300.00
Sugar (1 bag per day x 65 days _at_ 3.50/bag) 227.50
Cups 5,850 needed (1 box of 1000 25.00) 150.00
 Â
TOTAL SUPPLIES 1,677.50
38Budget Components
39Other Expenses
- Actual expenses for items such as
- Travel
- Equipment service contracts
- Long distance telephone calls
40Example
SERVICES
Travel- training on machine 1,000.00
Machine upkeep 500.00
 -
SUBTOTAL SERVICES 1,500.00
41Budget Components
42Equipment
- Rates include the depreciation expense only, not
the full cost of the equipment. - GAAP requires that cost of the asset to be spread
over its useful life. - OMB A-21 mandates the calculation of depreciation
expenses for Federal costing purposes in a manner
consistent with that used for accounting for
depreciation on its financial statements.
43Example
Depreciation Schedule Â
Desc/Type of Equipment Depr End Date Acquisition Cost Useful Life years Depr in Rate
Lemonade Machine  2011 10,000 5 2,000
 Â
Totals  10,000  2,000
44Operating Principles
45Working Capital
- Funds that are accumulated in excess of actual
cost in order to fund future operating
expenditures. - A recharge center surplus fund should not exceed
60 days working capital.
46Acquiring Working Capital
- Service centers can acquire working capital by
using an existing surplus, adding approved
surcharges to external users, or transferring
funds from non-federal sources.
47Surpluses and Deficits
- The fund balance in the operating account less
working capital is used in determining the
surplus or deficit at year end. - Any surplus resulting from the prior year(s)
operations must be included in the centers
budget.
48Interest
- Interest earned on fund balances must be credited
to the appropriate center and used in the
determination of rates.
49Unallowable Costs
- Costs such as entertainment and bad debt expense.
50Rate Calculation
- Allocate Costs Identified Above to Individual
Services or Products (in Budget)
51Allocation of Salaries to Rates
RATE 1 RATE 2
NAME BEN FTE Ctr TOTAL INCL. BENEFITS Cups Machine Rental
Technician 33. 50 6,650.00 1,662.50 4,987.50
   FTE for each rate 25 75
2 students 9. 25 1,635.00 1,635.0 -
   FTE for each rate 100 0
52Example Supply Allocation
SUPPLIES 100 0
Lemons (1 bag per day x 65 days _at_ 20/bag) 1,300.00 Â 1,300.00 -
Sugar (1 bag per day x 65 days _at_ 3.50/bag) 227.50 Â 228.00 -
Cups 5,850 needed (1 box of 1000 25.00) 150.00 Â 150.00 -
SUBTOTAL SUPPLIES 1,677.50 Â 1,677.50 -
53Rate Calculation
- A service center may have different measurable
units for the different types and classes of
products it offers. - In our Lemonade example, we have a per cup for
lemonade and an hourly rate for rental of the
machine.
54Rate Calculation
- User rates consisting of flat fees that charge
per range of actual use such as light, moderate
or heavy use are not in compliance with CAS.
55Rate Calculation
- Annual Rate
- Annual Costs / Total Annual Usage
56Example Annual Cost
Rate 1 Rate 2
Direct Costs Cup of Lemonade Machine Rental
Direct Salaries Fringe Benefits 3,297.50 4,987.50
Travel Services 375.00 1,125.00
Supplies 1,677.50
Depreciation 500. 00 1,500.00
TOTAL DIRECT COSTS 5,850.00 7,612.50
57Example Annual Usage
Rate 1 Rate 2
Direct Costs Cup of Lemonade Machine Rental
Total Direct Cost 5,850.00 7,612.50
Estimated Usage 5,850 cups 266 days
Rate at Cost 1.00 per cup 28.62 per day
Market Rate 75.00 per hour
58Days Machine is Available for Rent
Available for rental 9 months, 75, of year (9/12) Available for rental 9 months, 75, of year (9/12)
Days Available
Days in Year 365
Days used in Summer 65
Days Machine is Idle (Vacation of Technician, Maintenance) 34
Days Machine is available for Rent 266
59Costing Considerations
- Costing Considerations for Internal External
Users What can I charge?
60Costing Considerations
- Section J47 of OMB Circular A-21 requires the
cost of each service be charged directly to users
based on actual use of the service and that rates
do not discriminate between federally and
non-federally supported activities, including
university internal activities.
61Costing Considerations
- The use of market prices to establish billing
rates for internal customers would not be
appropriate to the extent that market prices
include a profit. - It may be appropriate for external, non-federal,
users of the center.
62Costing Considerations
- Recharge centers may charge additional rate to
external users and the profit will be retained
by the center. - This additional income is not used in the carry
forward balances but will be recovered in a
separate account that can be used to replenish
equipment. - This amount must be reported to the controllers
office for possible tax purposes.
63Costing Considerations
- Multiple Services
- Recharge centers providing multiple services may
not subsidize the cost of certain services by
charging excessive rates for other services. - Consideration should be given to size, complexity
and equity in setting multiple rates for a
recharge center.
64Costing Considerations
- Developing an Hourly Rate
- When charging on an hourly basis, the total
maximum hours available for a full time employee
is 2080 per year. This would be the starting
point and adjusted downward for vacation, sick
leave, downtime, etc..
65Example
- Maximum hours available 2,080
- 40 hours/week x 52 weeks
- Less Holidays ( 80)
- Less Vacation Sick ( 264)
- Available Hours 1,736
- Less Non-productive hours(downtime for machine
setup, etc)( 0)As applicable to individual
centers. - Expected Usage 1,736 hours
66Reserve Account
- A reserve account is used to hold balances and
record transactions that dont directly affect
the rate charged to recharge center customers. - If recharge or cost centers want to include
equipment depreciation or an equipment use
allowance in the recharge rates, they should have
a reserve budget.
67Reserve Account
- Activities the Account is Used For
- Purchase of Equipment
- Recapture of Depreciation
- Additional charges for external customers
profit can be recorded in this account. - Not used in the calculation of surplus/deficit
at year end.
68Costing Considerations
- Recharge centers have the option of not including
all costs in the rates (should not be included in
account, should be paid from departmental
account).
69Costing Considerations
- Any partial subsidy of a center either included
as part of the budget or absorbed as a deficit at
the end of the year, needs to be identified as an
unallowable cost for FA rate calculation
purposes
70Costing Considerations
- In order to estimate usage, prior year(s) numbers
can be used as a starting point and adjusted for
anticipated changes. - Centers without sufficient usage history can use
available units as a starting point and adjust
for downtime and other intervening factors.
71Costing Considerations
- Recharge centers should use the same account for
all of their revenue and expenses to aid in
reconciliation and documentation.
72Depreciation
- Centers may not mark up billing rates to
accumulate a reserve for equipment replacement
and additions. - This is a violation of OMB A-21 which states,
charges for the use of specialized services
should be designed to recover not more than the
aggregate cost of the services.
73Depreciation
- Depreciation costs of recharge centers must not
be included in indirect cost pools.
74Other
- Program income and recharge center activity will
be recorded in separate accounts. - A recharge center may not have program income.
75Sales Tax UBIT
- Sales tax will be collected in certain
circumstances for some types of sales to external
users. - Unrelated Business Income Tax (UBIT) is a tax
that is charged on external sales that do not
meet certain prescribed exemptions.
76Space
- Space occupied by all service centers must be
identified and designated as such during the
annual space survey. - Space which is occupied by the center equipment
must be assigned as center space, rather than
department space.
77Operating Principles
78Billing and Receivables
- Recharge and cost centers should bill their users
in a timely manner (generally monthly) based on
actual usage. - Centers that have significant revenue are
recommended to bill more frequently. - The billing process may depend on whether the
customer is an internal user or an external user.
79Billing and Receivables
- Usage logs may be used to generate the billing
they should track - account numbers or customers charged,
- service performed or product sold
- rate charged
- This information is used to generate the billing
and can be used to make usage estimates for
future rate proposals.
80Association of College and University Auditors
- Over the years a pattern of audit findings at
Universities has emerged that highlights
potential accounting problems encountered by
Recharge Centers. - These problems pose the risk of financial loss to
the both individual Departments and their
Universities.
81Inadequate Rate Documentation
- Results from user rates being set arbitrarily
without regard to the actual costs of providing
the goods or services. - User rates must be supported by cost
calculations based on historical costs and
service levels. - An adjustment for known or anticipated changes in
service levels or services should be clearly
documented. - Estimated rates may only be used in the first
year of operation.
82Failing to Maintain Current Equipment
Depreciation Schedules
- Problems have also arisen when the University did
not ensure the items recovered in the user rate
are removed from the indirect cost pool used to
calculate the equipment use charge.
83Failing to Separately Identify Expenses Included
in the User rates from Departmental Expenses
- If you cant demonstrate that the cost was
incurred, you cant include it in the user rates.
- Additionally, if you include costs in the user
rates, you must be able to show they were paid by
the Recharge Center and not included in one of
the indirect cost pools or from other Federal
extramural funds.
84Failing to Document Clearly the Goods/Services
Provided
- User bills that dont carry sufficient detail to
identify the services provided are subject to
disallowance, - ----- it is important the customer
gets a detailed bill for services provided. - The type of bill would depend on the service.
Users must be provided with detailed bill in a
timely fashion.
85Failing to Identify the Users Source of Funds at
the Point of Purchase
- It is important from the standpoint of the
Federal auditors that a customer identify what
project(s) are to be charged at the time of
purchase.
86DOJ - University of Connecticut
- 2.5 Million Whistleblower False Claims
Investigation Settlement - Specialized Service Centers Overstated
anticipated expenses, overcharged the government
and billed for items not covered by the grants. - Billing Rates Failure to revise and
appropriately set its rate structure resulted in
submission of numerous false claims. - Newsday, January 9, 2006 ( Associated Press)
Hartford Current, January 10, 2006
87OIG Audit - University of Massachusetts Medical
School
- Recharge Laboratory Supply Center Charges
- OIG could not determine who requested the
recharge center services or laboratory supply
charges and whether these costs were allocable to
the NIH Grant. Records were not retained (Records
should be retained for 3 years after the dated of
the final financial status report). - 08/23/05
88OIG Audit 06/03- Northeastern University
- Animal care costs Animal care facility set up
as a recharge center, in proposal PI put direct
salary in budget for animal care technician
instead of rate. OIG determined that this made
it a direct cost and required time and effort
report.
89OIG Audit 11/05-University of Colorado
- A Review of Recharge Centers
- Rates based on actual cost of materials plus a
percentage markup, which was not based on cost. - University did not have written policies and
procedures for recharge centers - Surplus funds were transferred to other accounts
- Equipment costs were expended instead of
capitalized - Net interest earned on pooled investment balances
were not charged back to the fund or department
that earned the interest.
90OIG Audit 09/95- Washington University- St Louis
- Review of University Recharge Centers
- University did not develop billing rates based on
actual costs of providing services. - Surplus and deficit fund balances were not
properly accounted for. - Surpluses and deficits were included in the
calculation of the indirect cost rate, the
proposed rate may have been overstated and may
have resulted in duplicate recovery of costs.
(Surplus balances included in the indirect cost
pool understate the rate deficit balances
overstate the indirect cost rate.) - Comment on animal rates which are less than cost.
91OIG Audit 1995 - University of Utah
- A Review of Recharge Centers
- Billing rates not adjusted to eliminated
operating surpluses and deficits. - Recharge centers had not made cost studies to
ensure that billing rates approximated costs for
individual services. - Equipment costs from operating to reserve
accounts were not based on equipment depreciation
schedules maintained for the recharge center
operations.
92OIG Audit 1995- University of Iowa
- A Review of University Recharge Centers
- Some centers did not periodically adjust billing
rates to eliminate operational surpluses and
deficits - Some centers developed rates based on goals
conflicting with A-21 provisions - One center billed at rates which provided net
income of 20 to fulfill the annual dept service
requirement required by its bond covenants. - One center billed at rates to provide surplus
funds to purchase a new computer - Another center billed at rates below cost to
remain competitive in obtaining sponsored
agreements for the University. - One center offered some users rates below the
scheduled billing rates. - Some centers expensed equipment during the year
of purchase.
93OIG Audit 1994- Review of service centers at 12
Universities
- Summary Report of Audits of Recharge Centers at
12 Universities - Findings - billing rates were not adjusted for accumulated
surplus and deficit fund balances - included duplicate or unallowable costs in the
calculation of billing rates - included recharge costs in the calculation of
indirect cost rates - used funds of recharge center account for
unrelated purposes - billed some users at reduced rates.
94Questions
- Charlene Blevens, CPA, MBA, CRA, CFE
- University of Oklahoma
- 405-325-6992
- cblevens_at_ou.edu