99-12372. Revisions to the NASA FAR Supplement on Property Reporting Requirements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 94 (Monday, May 17, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 26721-26723]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-12372]
    
    
    
    [[Page 26721]]
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
    
    48 CFR Parts 1845 and 1852
    
    
    Revisions to the NASA FAR Supplement on Property Reporting 
    Requirements
    
    AGENCY: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This proposed rule would amend the NASA FAR Supplement (NFS) 
    to comply with OMB Bulletin 97-01 and make other changes to NASA 
    property reporting requirements. Specific changes include: raising the 
    reporting threshold for certain property categories from $5,000 to 
    $100,000; adding a requirement to include Federal Supply Classification 
    group codes for equipment, unit acquisition costs, and acquisition 
    dates on shipping documents; and adding a statement that contractors 
    are required to furnish, in addition to the information required by the 
    Form 1018, any information specified in supplemental instructions 
    issued by NASA for the current reporting period.
    
    DATES: Comments should be submitted on or before July 16, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested parties should submit written comments to James 
    H. Dolvin, NASA Headquarters, Office of Procurement, Contract 
    Management Division (Code HK), Washington, DC 20546. Comments may also 
    be submitted by e-mail to jdolvin1@mail.hq.nasa.gov.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James H. Dolvin, (202) 358-1279.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Federal Financial Accounting Standards Number 6, as implemented by 
    OMB Bulletin 97-01, provides for new financial accounting requirements 
    involving depreciation of Government property. New material is being 
    added to NFS Section 1845.7101, Instructions for preparing NASA Form 
    1018, to explain this change and to say that contractors will now be 
    required to submit supplemental information with the form, and that 
    this information may change from year to year, depending on OMB 
    requirements.
    
    Impact
    
        NASA certifies that this regulation will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small business entities 
    under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) Less than 
    three per cent of NASA contracts with small businesses have property 
    reporting requirements.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq., applies to 
    this proposed rule because it contains information collection 
    requirements. However, approval for the additional requirements has 
    already been obtained under OMB Control No. 2700-0017, approving an 
    increase in burden hours from 5,700 to 8,144.
    
    List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 1845 and 1852
    
        Government procurement.
    
    Tom Luedtke,
    Acting Associate Administrator for Procurement.
    
        Accordingly, 48 CFR Parts 1845 and 1852 are proposed to be amended 
    as follows:
        1. The authority citation for 48 CFR Parts 1845 and 1852 continues 
    to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 2473(c)(1).
    
    PART 1845--GOVERNMENT PROPERTY
    
        2. Subpart 1845.71 is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart 1845.71--Forms Preparation
    
    
    1845.7101  Instructions for preparing NASA Form 1018.
    
        NASA Form 1018 (see 1853.3) provides critical information for NASA 
    financial statements and property management. Accuracy and timeliness 
    of the report are very important. NASA must account for and report 
    assets in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3512 and 31 U.S.C. 3515, Federal 
    accounting standards, and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    instructions. Since contractors maintain NASA's official records for 
    its assets in their possession, NASA must obtain annual data from those 
    records to meet these requirements. Changes in Federal accounting 
    standards and OMB reporting requirements may occur from year to year, 
    requiring contractor submission of supplemental information with the NF 
    1018. Contractors shall retain documents which support the data 
    reported on NF 1018 in accordance with FAR subpart 4.7, Contractor 
    Records Retention. Classifications of property, related costs to be 
    reported, and other reporting requirements are discussed in this 
    subpart.
    
    
    1845.7101-1  Property Classification.
    
        (a) General. Contractors shall report costs in the classifications 
    on the NF 1018, as described in this section. For Land, Buildings, 
    Other Structures and Facilities, and Leasehold Improvements, 
    contractors shall report the amount for all items with a unit 
    acquisition cost of $100,000 or more and a useful life of 2 years or 
    more. For Plant Equipment, Special Tooling, Special Test Equipment and 
    Agency-Peculiar Property, contractors shall separately report--
        (1) The amount for all items with a unit acquisition cost of 
    $100,000 or more and a useful life of 2 years or more; and
        (2) All items under $100,000, regardless of useful life.
        (b) Materials. Contractors shall report the amount for all 
    Materials, regardless of unit acquisition cost.
        (c) Land. Includes costs of land and improvements to land.
        (d) Buildings. Includes costs of buildings, improvements to 
    buildings, and fixed equipment required for the operation of a building 
    which is permanently attached to and a part of the building and cannot 
    be removed without cutting into the walls, ceilings, or floors. 
    Examples of fixed equipment required for functioning of a building 
    include plumbing, heating and lighting equipment, elevators, central 
    air conditioning systems, and built-in safes and vaults.
        (e) Other structures and facilities. Includes costs of acquisitions 
    and improvements of structures and facilities other than buildings; for 
    example, airfield pavements, harbor and port facilities, power 
    production facilities and distribution systems, reclamation and 
    irrigation facilities, flood control and navigation aids, utility 
    systems (heating, sewage, water and electrical) when they serve several 
    buildings or structures, communication systems, traffic aids, roads and 
    bridges, railroads, monuments and memorials, and nonstructural 
    improvements such as sidewalks, parking areas, and fences.
        (f) Leasehold improvements. Includes NASA-funded costs of 
    improvements to leased buildings, structures, and facilities, as well 
    as easements and right-of-way, where NASA is the lessee or the cost is 
    charged to a NASA contract.
        (g) Equipment. Includes costs of commercially available personal 
    property capable of stand-alone use in manufacturing supplies, 
    performing services, or any general or administrative purpose (for 
    example, machine tools, furniture, vehicles, computers, and test 
    equipment, including their accessory or auxiliary items).
    
    [[Page 26722]]
    
        (h) Construction in Progress. Includes costs of work in process for 
    the construction of Buildings, Other Structures and Facilities, and 
    Leasehold Improvements to which NASA has title.
        (i) Special Tooling. Includes costs of equipment and manufacturing 
    aids (and their components and replacements) of such a specialized 
    nature that, without substantial modification or alteration, their use 
    is limited to development or production of particular supplies or 
    parts, or performance of particular services. Examples include jigs, 
    dies, fixtures, molds, patterns, taps and gauges.
        (j) Special Test Equipment. Includes costs of equipment used to 
    accomplish special purpose testing in performing a contract, and items 
    or assemblies of equipment.
        (k) Material. Includes costs of NASA-owned property held in 
    inventory that may become a part of an end item or be expended in 
    performing a contract. Examples include raw and processed material, 
    parts, assemblies, small tools and supplies. Material that is part of 
    work-in-process is not included.
        (l) Agency-Peculiar Property. Includes costs of completed items, 
    systems and subsystems, spare parts and components unique to NASA 
    aeronautical and space programs. Examples include research aircraft, 
    engines, satellites, instruments, rockets, prototypes and mock-ups. The 
    amount of property, title to which vests in the Government as a result 
    of progress payments to fixed price subcontractors, shall be included 
    to reflect the pro rata cost of undelivered agency-peculiar property.
        (m) Contract Work-in-Process. Includes costs of all work-in-
    process; excludes costs of completed items reported in other 
    categories.
    
    
    1845.7101-2  Transfers of property.
    
        A transfer is a change in accountability between and among prime 
    contracts, centers, and other Government agencies (e.g., between 
    contracts of the same center, contracts of different centers, a 
    contract of one center to that of another center, a center to a 
    contract of another center, and a contract to another Government agency 
    or its contract). To enable NASA to properly control and account for 
    transfers, they shall be adequately documented. Therefore, procurement, 
    property, and financial organizations at NASA centers must effect all 
    transfers of accountability, although physical shipment and receipt of 
    property may be made directly by contractors. The procedures described 
    in this section shall be followed to provide an administrative and 
    audit trail, even if property is physically shipped directly from one 
    contractor to another. Property shipped between September 1 and 
    September 30, inclusively, shall be reported by the shipping 
    contractor, regardless of the method of shipment, unless written 
    evidence of receipt at destination has been received. Repairables 
    provided under fixed price repair contracts that include the clause at 
    1852.245-72, Liability for Government Property Furnished for Repair or 
    Other Services, remain accountable to the cognizant center and are not 
    reportable on NF 1018; repairables provided under a cost-reimbursement 
    contract, however, are accountable to the contractor and reportable on 
    NF 1018. All materials provided to conduct repairs are reportable, 
    regardless of contract type.
        (a) Approval and notification. The contractor must obtain approval 
    of the contracting officer or designee for transfers of property before 
    shipment. Each shipping document must contain contract numbers, 
    shipping references, property classifications in which the items are 
    recorded (including Federal Supply Classification group (FSC) codes for 
    all types of equipment), unit acquisition costs, original acquisition 
    dates and any other appropriate identifying or descriptive data. Where 
    the DD 250, Material Inspection and Receiving Report, is used as the 
    shipping document, the FSC code will be part of the national stock 
    number (NSN) entered in Block 16 or, if the NSN is not provided, the 
    FSC alone shall be shown in Block 16. The original acquisition date 
    shall be shown in Block 23, by item. Other formats should be clearly 
    annotated with the required information. Unit acquisition costs shall 
    be obtained from records maintained pursuant to FAR part 45 and this 
    part 1845 or, for uncompleted items where property records have not yet 
    been established, from such other record systems as are appropriate 
    such as manufacturing or engineering records used for work control and 
    billing purposes. Shipping contractors shall furnish a copy of the 
    shipping document to the cognizant property administrator. Shipping and 
    receiving contractors shall promptly notify the financial management 
    office of the NASA center responsible for their respective contracts 
    when accountability for Government property is transferred to, or 
    received from, other contracts, contractors, NASA centers, or 
    Government agencies. Copies of shipping or receiving documents will 
    suffice as notification in most instances.
        (b) Reclassification. If property is transferred to another 
    contract or contractor, the receiving contractor shall record the 
    property in the same property classification and amount appearing on 
    the shipping document. For example, when a contractor receives an item 
    from another contractor that is identified on the shipping document as 
    equipment, but that the recipient intends to incorporate into special 
    test equipment, the recipient shall first record the item in the 
    equipment account and subsequently reclassify it as special test 
    equipment when incorporated into that item. Reclassification of 
    equipment, special tooling, special test equipment, or agency-peculiar 
    property requires prior approval of the contracting officer or a 
    designee.
        (c) Incomplete documentation. If contractors receive transfer 
    documents having insufficient detail to properly record the transfer 
    (e.g., omission of property classification, FSC, unit acquisition cost, 
    acquisition date, etc.) they shall request the omitted data directly 
    from the shipping contractor or through the property administrator as 
    provided in FAR 45.505-2.
    
    
    1845.7101-3  Unit acquisition cost.
    
        (a) The unit acquisition cost shall include all costs incurred to 
    bring the property to a form and location suitable for its intended 
    use. For example, the cost may include the following, as appropriate, 
    for the type of property:
        (1) Amounts paid to vendors or other contractors;
        (2) Transportation charges to the point of initial use;
        (3) Handling and storage charges;
        (4) Labor and other direct or indirect production costs (for assets 
    produced or constructed);
        (5) Engineering, architectural, and other outside services for 
    designs, plans, specifications, and surveys;
        (6) Acquisition and preparation costs of buildings and other 
    facilities;
        (7) An appropriate share of the cost of the equipment and 
    facilities used in construction work;
        (8) Fixed equipment and related installation costs required for 
    activities in a building or facility;
        (9) Direct costs of inspection, supervision, and administration of 
    construction contracts and construction work;
        (10) Legal and recording fees and damage claims;
        (11) Fair values of facilities and equipment donated to the 
    Government;
        (12) Material amounts of interest costs paid; and
        (13) Where appropriate, for Special Test Equipment, Special 
    Tooling, Agency-Peculiar and Contract Work-in-process, related fees, or 
    a prorata
    
    [[Page 26723]]
    
    portion of fees, paid by NASA to the contractor. Situations where 
    inclusion of fees in the acquisition cost would be appropriate are 
    those in which the contractor designs, develops, fabricates or 
    purchases property for NASA and part of the fees paid to the contractor 
    by NASA are related to that effort.
        (b) The use of weighted average methodologies is acceptable for 
    valuation of Material.
        (c) Contractors shall report unit acquisition costs using records 
    that are part of the prescribed property or financial control system as 
    provided in this section. Fabrication costs shall be based on approved 
    systems or procedures and include all direct and indirect costs of 
    fabrication.
        (d) The contractor shall redetermine unit acquisition costs of 
    items returned for modification or rehabilitation. If an item's 
    original acquisition cost is $100,000 or more, only modifications that 
    improve that item's capacity or extend its useful life two years or 
    more and that cost $100,000 or more shall be added to the original 
    acquisition cost reported on the NF 1018. The costs of any other 
    modifications will be considered to be expensed. If an item's original 
    unit acquisition cost is less than $100,000, but a single subsequent 
    modification costs $100,000 or more, that modification only will be 
    reported as an item $100,000 or more on subsequent NF 1018s. If an 
    item's acquisition cost is reduced by removal of components so that its 
    remaining acquisition cost is under $100,000, it shall be reported as 
    under $100,000.
        (e) The computation of work in process shall include costs of 
    associated systems, subsystems, and spare parts and components 
    furnished or acquired and charged to work in process pending 
    incorporation into a finished item. These types of items make up what 
    is sometimes called production inventory and include programmed extra 
    units to cover replacement during the fabrication process (production 
    spares). Also included are deliverable items on which the contractor or 
    a subcontractor has begun work, and materials issued from inventory.
    
    
    1845.7101-4  Types of deletions from contractor property records.
    
        Contractors shall report the types of deletions from the property 
    reportable under a given contract as described in this section.
        (a) Adjusted. Changes in the deletion amounts that result from 
    mathematical errors in the previous report.
        (b) Lost, Damaged or Destroyed. Deletion amounts that result from 
    relief from responsibility under FAR 45.503 granted during the 
    reporting period.
        (c) Transferred in Place. Deletion amounts that result from 
    transfer of property to a follow-on contract with the same contractor.
        (d) Transferred to Center Accountability. Deletion amounts that 
    result from transfer of accountability to the center responsible for 
    the contract, whether or not items are physically moved.
        (e) Transferred to Another NASA Center. Deletion amounts that 
    result from transfer of accountability to a center other than the one 
    responsible for the contract, whether or not items are physically 
    moved.
        (f) Transferred to Another Government Agency. Deletion amounts that 
    result from transfer of property for reutilization to another 
    Government agency, as a part of the plant clearance process.
        (g) Purchased at Cost/Returned for Credit. Deletion amounts that 
    result from contractor purchase or retention of contractor acquired 
    property as provided in FAR 45.605-1, or from contractor returns to 
    suppliers under FAR 45.605-2.
        (h) Disposal Through Plant Clearance Process. Deletions other than 
    transfers, within the Federal Government e.g., donations to eligible 
    recipients, sold at less than cost, or abandoned/directed destruction.
    
    
    1845.7101-5  Contractor's privileged financial and business 
    information.
    
        If a transfer of property between contractors involves disclosing 
    costs of a proprietary nature, the contractor shall furnish unit 
    acquisition costs only on copies of shipping documents sent to the 
    shipping and receiving NASA centers. Transfer of the property to the 
    receiving contractor shall be on a no-cost basis.
    
    PART 1852--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
    
        3. Section 1852.245-73 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    1852.245-73  Financial Reporting of NASA Property in the Custody of 
    Contractors.
    
        As prescribed in 1845.106-70(d), insert the following clause:
    
    Financial Reporting of NASA Property in the Custody of Contractors 
    (XXX)
    
        (a) The Contractor shall submit annually a NASA Form (NF) 1018, 
    NASA Property in the Custody of Contractors, in accordance with the 
    provisions of 1845.505-14, the instructions on the form, subpart 
    1845.71, and any supplemental instructions for the current reporting 
    period issued by NASA. Subcontractor use of NF 1018 is not required 
    by this clause; however, the contractor shall include data on 
    property in the possession of subcontractors in the annual NF 1018.
        (b) The contractor shall submit the original of the NF 1018 to 
    the Center Deputy Chief Financial Officer, Finance, and three copies 
    (through the Department of Defense (DOD) Property Administrator if 
    contract administration has been delegated to DOD) to the following 
    address: [Insert name and address of appropriate Center office .]
        (c) The annual reporting period shall be from October 1 of each 
    year through September 30 of the following year. The report shall be 
    submitted in time to be received by October 31. The information 
    contained in these reports is entered into the NASA accounting 
    system to reflect current asset values for agency financial 
    statement purposes. Therefore, it is essential that required reports 
    be received no later than October 31. The Contracting Officer may, 
    in the Government's interest, withhold payment until a reserve not 
    exceeding $25,000 or 5 percent of the amount of the contract, 
    whichever is less, has been set aside, if the Contractor fails to 
    submit annual NF 1018 reports when due. Such reserve shall be 
    withheld until the Contracting Officer has determined that the 
    required reports have been received by the Government. The 
    withholding of any amount or the subsequent payment thereof shall 
    not be construed as a waiver of any Government right.
        (d) A final report is required within 30 days after disposition 
    of all property subject to reporting when the contract performance 
    period is complete.
    
    (End of clause)
    
    [FR Doc. 99-12372 Filed 5-14-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7510-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/17/1999
Department:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
99-12372
Dates:
Comments should be submitted on or before July 16, 1999.
Pages:
26721-26723 (3 pages)
PDF File:
99-12372.pdf
CFR: (2)
48 CFR 1845
48 CFR 1852