[Federal Register Volume 59, Number 155 (Friday, August 12, 1994)]
[Unknown Section]
[Page 0]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 94-17962]
[[Page Unknown]]
[Federal Register: August 12, 1994]
_______________________________________________________________________
Part II
Corporation for National and Community Service
_______________________________________________________________________
45 CFR Parts 2541 and 2542
Corporation Grant and Cooperative Agreement Requirements; Final Rule
CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE
45 CFR Parts 2541 and 2542
Corporation Grant and Cooperative Agreement Requirements
AGENCY: Corporation for National and Community Service.
ACTION: Final Rule.
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SUMMARY: The Corporation for National and Community Service
(Corporation) is adopting in its final rules the following two Federal
agency common rules: Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and
Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments; and
Governmentwide Debarment and Suspension (Nonprocurement) and Drug-Free
Workplace (Grants). These regulations have been adopted by the
Corporation because they are applicable to State and Local Governments
that receive grants from the Corporation. In addition, all Corporation
grantees must comply with the Governmentwide Debarment and Suspension
and Drug-Free Workplace rules. By implementing these regulations, the
Corporation grantees will know some of the terms and conditions of
their respective grants.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This final rule is effective on August 12, 1994.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Terry Russell, General Counsel, (202)
606-4949, (Voice) (202) 606-5256, (TDD), between the hours of 9:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. For individuals with disabilities,
information will be made available in alternative formats, upon
request.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background Information
Part 2541 contains the Uniform Administrative Requirements for
Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments which
is a common rule developed by OMB and adopted by the Federal agencies
to ensure consistency and uniformity among Federal agencies in the
administration of grants and cooperative agreements to State, local,
and federally recognized Indian tribal governments. A full discussion
of the issues pertaining to this rule is contained in the preamble to
the final common rule that was adopted by 23 Federal agencies and
published in the Federal Register on March 11, 1988 (53 FR 8034).
Part 2542 contains the Governmentwide Debarment and Suspension
Requirements which were implemented pursuant to Executive Order 12549
to prevent waste, fraud and abuse in Federal nonprocurement
transactions. A discussion of the issues pertaining to this rule is
contained in the preamble of the final common rule that was adopted by
27 Federal agencies and published in the Federal Register on May 26,
1988 (53 FR 19161). Part 2542 also contains the Governmentwide Drug-
Free Workplace rules which were established to implement the Drug-Free
Workplace Act of 1988, 41 U.S.C. 701-722. The Drug Free Workplace Act
requires that all grantees receiving grants from any Federal agency
certify to that agency that they will maintain a drug-free workplace,
or in the case of a grantee who is an individual, certify to the agency
that his or her conduct of grant activity will be drug-free. A full
discussion of the issues pertaining to this rule is contained in the
preamble of the interim final rule that was adopted by 33 Federal
agencies and published in the Federal Register on May 25, 1990 (55 FR
21679).
The Corporation finds that publishing a notice of proposed
rulemaking on these matters would be unnecessary, and contrary to the
public interest, since the common rulemaking has been subjected to
extensive public scrutiny when OMB proposed and finalized the rules and
27 federal agencies issued these proposed rules for notice and
comments. Consequently, the Corporation for good cause pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b) has decided not to publish a proposed rulemaking on these
matters and has adopted and published these rules as a final rule. This
regulation is fully in effect. No further regulatory action by the
Corporation is essential to the legal effectiveness of the rule.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, it is hereby certified
that this final rule will not have a significant impact on small
business entities.
List of Subjects
45 CFR Part 2541
Accounting, Grant programs, Indians, Intergovernmental relations,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 2542
Administrative practice and procedure, Drug abuse, Grant programs,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Terry Russell,
General Counsel.
Accordingly, the Corporation amends title 45, chapter XXV of the
Code of Federal Regulations by adding parts 2541 and 2542 to read as
follows:
PART 2541--UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS FOR GRANTS AND
COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
Subpart A--General
Sec.
2541.10 Purpose and scope of this part.
2541.20 Scope of subpart.
2541.30 Definitions.
2541.40 Applicability.
2541.50 Effect on other issuances.
2541.60 Additions and exceptions.
Subpart B--Pre-Award Requirements
2541.100 Forms for applying for grants.
2541.110 State plans.
2541.120 Special grant or subgrant conditions for ``high-risk''
grantees.
Subpart C--Post Award Requirements
2541.200 Standards for financial management systems.
2541.210 Payment.
2541.220 Allowable costs.
2541.230 Period of availability of funds.
2541.240 Matching or cost sharing.
2541.250 Program income.
2541.260 Non-Federal audit.
Subpart D--Changes, Property and Subawards
2541.300 Changes.
2541.310 Real property.
2541.320 Equipment.
2541.330 Supplies.
2541.340 Copyrights.
2541.350 Subawards to debarred and suspended parties.
2541.360 Procurement.
2541.370 Subgrants.
Subpart E--Reports, Records, Retention and Enforcement
2541.400 Monitoring and reporting program performance.
2541.410 Financial reporting.
2541.420 Retention and access requirements for records.
2541.430 Enforcement.
2541.440 Termination for convenience.
Subpart F--After the Grant Requirements
2541.500 Closeout.
2541.510 Later disallowances and adjustments.
2541.520 Collection of amounts due.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 4950 et seq. and 12501 et seq.
Subpart A--General
Sec. 2541.10 Purpose and scope of this part.
This part establishes uniform administrative rules for Federal
grants and cooperative agreements and subawards to State, local and
Indian tribal governments.
Sec. 2541.20 Scope of subpart.
This subpart contains general rules pertaining to this part and
procedures for control of exceptions from this part.
Sec. 2541.30 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to terms used in this part and part
2542 of this chapter.
Accrued expenditures. The term accrued expenditures means the
charges incurred by the grantee during a given period requiring the
provision of funds for:
(1) Goods and other tangible property received;
(2) Services performed by employees, contractors, subgrantees,
subcontractors, and other payees; and
(3) Other amounts becoming owed under programs for which no current
services or performance is required, such as annuities, insurance
claims, and other benefit payments.
Accrued income. The term accrued income means the sum of:
(1) Earnings during a given period from services performed by the
grantee and goods and other tangible property delivered to purchasers;
and
(2) Amounts becoming owed to the grantee for which no current
services or performance is required by the grantee.
Acquisition cost. The term acquisition cost of an item of purchased
equipment means the net invoice unit price of the property including
the cost of modifications, attachments, accessories, or auxiliary
apparatus necessary to make the property usable for the purpose for
which it was acquired. Other charges such as the cost of installation,
transportation, taxes, duty or protective in-transit insurance, shall
be included or excluded from the unit acquisition cost in accordance
with the grantee's regular accounting practices.
Administrative requirements. The term administrative requirements
means those matters common to grants in general, such as financial
management, kinds and frequency of reports, and retention of records.
These are distinguished from ``programmatic'' requirements, which
concern matters that can be treated only on a program-by-program or
grant-by-grant basis, such as kinds of activities that can be supported
by grants under a particular program.
Awarding agency. The term awarding agency means:
(1) With respect to a grant, the Federal agency; and
(2) With respect to a subgrant, the party that awarded the
subgrant.
Cash contributions. The term cash contributions means the grantee's
cash outlay, including the outlay of money contributed to the grantee
or subgrantee by other public agencies and institutions, and private
organizations and individuals. When authorized by Federal legislation,
Federal funds received from other assistance agreements may be
considered as grantee or subgrantee cash contributions.
Contract. The term contract means (except as used in the
definitions for ``grant'' and ``subgrant'' in this section and except
where qualified by ``Federal'') a procurement contract under a grant or
subgrant, and means a procurement subcontract under a contract.
Cost sharing (or matching). The term cost sharing (or matching)
means the value of the third party in-kind contributions and the
portion of the costs of a federally assisted project or program not
borne by the Federal Government.
Cost-type contract. The term cost-type contract means a contract or
subcontract under a grant in which the contractor or subcontractor is
paid on the basis of the costs it incurs, with or without a fee.
Equipment. The term equipment means tangible, nonexpendable,
personal property having a useful life of more than one year and an
acquisition cost of $5,000 or more per unit. A grantee may use its own
definition of equipment provided that such definition would at least
include all equipment mentioned in this definition.
Expenditure report. The term expenditure report means:
(1) For nonconstruction grants, the SF-269 ``Financial Status
Report'' (or other equivalent report);
(2) for construction grants, the SF-271 ``Outlay Report and Request
for Reimbursement'' (or other equivalent report).
Federally recognized Indian tribal government. The term federally
recognized Indian tribal government means the governing body or a
governmental agency of any Indian tribe, band, nation, or other
organized group or community (including any Native village as defined
in section 3 of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, 85 Stat. 688)
certified by the Secretary of the Interior as eligible for the special
programs and services provided by him through the Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
Government. The term government means a State or local government
or a federally recognized Indian tribal government.
Grant. The term grant means an award of financial assistance,
including cooperative agreements, in the form of money, or property in
lieu of money, by the Federal Government to an eligible grantee. The
term does not include technical assistance which provides services
instead of money, or other assistance in the form of revenue sharing,
loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, or direct
appropriations. Also, the term does not include assistance, such as a
fellowship or other lump sum award, which the grantee is not required
to account for.
Grantee. The term grantee means the government to which a grant is
awarded and which is accountable for the use of the funds provided. The
grantee is the entire legal entity even if only a particular component
of the entity is designated in the grant award document.
Local government. The term local government means a county,
municipality, city, town, township, local public authority (including
any public and Indian housing agency under the United States Housing
Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1401 et seq.) school district, special district,
intrastate district, council of governments (whether or not
incorporated as a nonprofit corporation under state law), any other
regional or interstate government entity, or any agency or
instrumentality of a local government.
Obligations. The term obligations means the amounts of orders
placed, contracts and subgrants awarded, goods and services received,
and similar transactions during a given period that will require
payment by the grantee during the same or a future period.
OMB. The term OMB means the United States Office of Management and
Budget.
Outlays (expenditures). The term outlays (expenditures) means
charges made to the project or program. They may be reported on a cash
or accrual basis. For reports prepared on a cash basis, outlays are the
sum of actual cash disbursement for direct charges for goods and
services, the amount of indirect expense incurred, the value of in-kind
contributions applied, and the amount of cash advances and payments
made to contractors and subgrantees. For reports prepared on an accrued
expenditure basis, outlays are the sum of actual cash disbursements,
the amount of indirect expense incurred, the value of in-kind
contributions applied, and the new increase (or decrease) in the
amounts owed by the grantee for goods and other property received, for
services performed by employees, contractors, subgrantees,
subcontractors, and other payees, and other amounts becoming owed under
programs for which no current services or performance are required,
such as annuities, insurance claims, and other benefit payments.
Percentage of completion method. The term percentage of completion
method refers to a system under which payments are made for
construction work according to the percentage of completion of the
work, rather than to the grantee's cost incurred.
Prior approval. The term prior approval means documentation
evidencing consent prior to incurring specific cost.
Real property. The term real property means land, including land
improvements, structures and appurtenances thereto, excluding movable
machinery and equipment.
Share. The term share, when referring to the awarding agency's
portion of real property, equipment or supplies, means the same
percentage as the awarding agency's portion of the acquiring party's
total costs under the grant to which the acquisition costs under the
grant to which the acquisition cost of the property was charged. Only
costs are to be counted--not the value of third-party in-kind
contributions.
State. The term State means any of the several States of the United
States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any agency or
instrumentality of a State exclusive of local governments. The term
does not include any public and Indian housing agency under the United
States Housing Act of 1937.
Subgrant. The term subgrant means an award of financial assistance
in the form of money, or property in lieu of money, made under a grant
by a grantee to an eligible subgrantee. The term includes financial
assistance when provided by contractual legal agreement, but does not
include procurement purchases, nor does it include any form of
assistance which is excluded from the definition of ``grant'' in this
part.
Subgrantee. The term subgrantee means the government or other legal
entity to which a subgrant is awarded and which is accountable to the
grantee for the use of the funds provided.
Supplies. The term supplies means all tangible personal property
other than ``equipment'' as defined in this part.
Suspension. The term suspension means, depending on the context,
either--
(1) Temporary withdrawal of the authority to obligate grant funds
pending corrective action by the grantee or subgrantee or a decision to
terminate the grant; or
(2) An action taken by a suspending official in accordance with
agency regulations implementing E.O. 12549 (3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189)
to immediately exclude a person from participating in grant
transactions for a period, pending completion of an investigation and
such legal or debarment proceedings as may ensue.
Termination. The term termination means permanent withdrawal of the
authority to obligate previously-awarded grant funds before that
authority would otherwise expire. It also means the voluntary
relinquishment of that authority by the grantee or subgrantee.
Termination does not include--
(1) Withdrawal of funds awarded on the basis of the grantee's
underestimate of the unobligated balance in a prior period;
(2) Withdrawal of the unobligated balance as of the expiration of a
grant;
(3) Refusal to extend a grant or award additional funds, to make a
competing or noncompeting continuation, renewal, extension, or
supplemental award; or
(4) Voiding of a grant upon determination that the award was
obtained fraudulently, or was otherwise illegal or invalid from
inception.
Terms of a grant or subgrant mean all requirements of the grant or
subgrant, whether in statute, regulations, or the award document.
Third party in-kind contributions. The term third party in-kind
contributions means property or services which benefit a federally
assisted project or program and which are contributed by non-Federal
third parties without charge to the grantee, or a cost-type contractor
under the grant agreement.
Unliquidated obligations for reports prepared on a cash basis. The
term unliquidated obligations for reports prepared on a cash basis
means the amount of obligations incurred by the grantee that has not
been paid. For reports prepared on an accrued expenditure basis, they
represent the amount of obligations incurred by the grantee for which
an outlay has not been recorded.
Unobligated balance. The term unobligated balance means the portion
of the funds authorized by the Federal agency that has not been
obligated by the grantee and is determined by deducting the cumulative
obligations from the cumulative funds authorized.
Sec. 2541.40 Applicability.
(a) General. Subparts A through D of this part apply to all grants
and subgrants to governments, except where inconsistent with Federal
statutes or with regulations authorized in accordance with the
exception provision of Sec. 2541.60, or:
(1) Grants and subgrants to State and local institutions of higher
education or State and local hospitals.
(2) The block grants authorized by the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 97-35, 95 Stat. 357) (Community
Services; Preventive Health and Health Services; Alcohol, Drug Abuse,
and Mental Health Services; Maternal and Child Health Services; Social
Services; Low-Income Home Energy Assistance; States' Program of
Community Development Block Grants for Small Cities; and Elementary and
Secondary Education other than programs administered by the Secretary
of Education under title V, subtitle D, chapter 2, section 583--the
Secretary's discretionary grant program) and titles I-III of the Job
Training Partnership Act of 1982 (29 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) and under the
Public Health Services Act (42 U.S.C. 201 et seq.), Alcohol and Drug
Abuse Treatment and Rehabilitation Block Grant and part C of title V,
Mental Health Service for the Homeless Block Grant).
(3) Entitlement grants to carry out the following programs of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 301 et seq.):
(i) Aid to Needy Families with Dependent Children (title IV-A of
the Act, not including the Work Incentive Program (WIN) authorized by
section 402(a)19(G); HHS grants for WIN are subject to this part);
(ii) Child Support Enforcement and Establishment of Paternity
(title IV-D of the Act);
(iii) Foster Care and Adoption Assistance (title IV-E of the Act);
(iv) Aid to the Aged, Blind, and Disabled (titles I, X, XIV, and
XVI-AABD of the Act); and
(v) Medical Assistance (Medicaid) (title XIX of the Act) not
including the State Medicaid Fraud Control program authorized by
section 1903(a)(6)(B).
(4) Entitlement grants under the following programs of The National
School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. 1751 et seq.):
(i) School Lunch (section 4 of the Act);
(ii) Commodity Assistance (section 6 of the Act);
(iii) Special Meal Assistance (section 11 of the Act);
(iv) Summer Food Service for Children (section 13 of the Act); and
(v) Child Care Food Program (section 17 of the Act).
(5) Entitlement grants under the following programs of The Child
Nutrition Act of 1966:
(i) Special Milk (section 3 of the Act); and
(ii) School Breakfast (section 4 of the Act).
(6) Entitlement grants for State Administrative expenses under The
Food Stamp Act of 1977 (7 U.S.C. 2011 et seq.).
(7) A grant for an experimental, pilot, or demonstration project
that is also supported by a grant listed in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section.
(8) Grant funds awarded under subsection 412(e) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1522(e)) and subsection 501(a) of the
Refugee Education Assistance Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-422, 94 Stat.
1809), for cash assistance, medical assistance, and supplemental
security income benefits to refugees and entrants and the
administrative costs of providing the assistance and benefits.
(9) Grants to local education agencies under 20 U.S.C. 236 through
241-1(a), and 242 through 244 (portions of the Impact Aid program),
except for 20 U.S.C. 238(d)(2)(c) and 240(f) (Entitlement Increase for
Handicapped Children).
(10) Payments under the Veterans Administration's State Home Per
Diem Program (38 U.S.C. 641(a)).
(b) Entitlement programs. Entitlement programs enumerated in
Sec. 2541.40(a) (3) through (8) are subject to subpart E of this part.
Sec. 2541.50 Effect on other issuances.
All other grants administration provisions of codified program
regulations, program manuals, handbooks and other nonregulatory
materials which are inconsistent with this part are superseded, except
to the extent they are required by statute, or authorized in accordance
with the exception provision in Sec. 2541.60.
Sec. 2541.60 Additions and exceptions.
(a) For classes of grants and grantees subject to this part,
Federal agencies may not impose additional administrative requirements
except in codified regulations published in the Federal Register.
(b) Exceptions for classes of grants or grantees may be authorized
only by OMB.
(c) Exceptions on a case-by-case basis and for subgrantees may be
authorized by the affected Federal agencies.
Subpart B--Pre-Award Requirements
Sec. 2541.100 Forms for applying for grants.
(a) Scope. (1) This section prescribes forms and instructions to be
used by governmental organizations (except hospitals and institutions
of higher education operated by a government) in applying for grants.
This section is not applicable, however, to formula grant programs
which do not require applicants to apply for funds on a project basis.
(2) This section applies only to applications to Federal agencies
for grants, and is not required to be applied by grantees in dealing
with applicants for subgrants. However, grantees are encouraged to
avoid more detailed or burdensome application requirements for
subgrants.
(b) Authorized forms and instructions for governmental
organizations. (1) In applying for grants, applicants shall only use
standard application forms or those prescribed by the granting agency
with the approval of OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
(2) Applicants are not required to submit more than the original
and two copies of preapplications or applications.
(3) Applicants must follow all applicable instructions that bear
OMB clearance numbers. Federal agencies may specify and describe the
programs, functions, or activities that will be used to plan, budget,
and evaluate the work under a grant. Other supplementary instructions
may be issued only with the approval of OMB to the extent required
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980. For any standard form,
except the SF-424 facesheet, Federal agencies may shade out or instruct
the applicant to disregard any line item that is not needed.
(4) When a grantee applies for additional funding (such as a
continuation or supplemental award) or amends a previously submitted
application, only the affected pages need be submitted. Previously
submitted pages with information that is still current need not be
resubmitted.
Sec. 2541.110 State plans.
(a) Scope. The statutes for some programs require States to submit
plans before receiving grants. Under regulations implementing Executive
Order 12372 (3 CFR, 1982 Comp., p. 197), ``Intergovernmental Review of
Federal Programs,'' States are allowed to simplify, consolidate and
substitute plans. This section contains additional provisions for plans
that are subject to regulations implementing the Executive order.
(b) Requirements. A State need meet only Federal administrative or
programmatic requirements for a plan that are in statutes or codified
regulations.
(c) Assurances. In each plan the State will include an assurance
that the State shall comply with all applicable Federal statutes and
regulations in effect with respect to the periods for which it receives
grant funding. For this assurance and other assurances required in the
plan, the State may:
(1) Cite by number the statutory or regulatory provisions requiring
the assurances and affirm that it gives the assurances required by
those provisions;
(2) Repeat the assurance language in the statutes or regulations;
or
(3) Develop its own language to the extent permitted by law.
(d) Amendments. A State will amend a plan whenever necessary to
reflect: New or revised Federal statutes or regulations; or a material
change in any State law, organization, policy, or State agency
operation. The State will obtain approval for the amendment and its
effective date but need submit for approval only the amended portions
of the plan.
Sec. 2541.120 Special grant or subgrant conditions for ``high-risk''
grantees.
(a) A grantee or subgrantee may be considered ``high risk'' if an
awarding agency determines that a grantee or subgrantee:
(1) Has a history of unsatisfactory performance; or
(2) Is not financially stable; or
(3) Has a management system which does not meet the management
standards set forth in this part; or
(4) Has not conformed to terms and conditions of previous awards;
or
(5) Is otherwise not responsible; and if the awarding agency
determines that an award will be made, special conditions and/or
restrictions shall correspond to the high risk condition and shall be
included in the award.
(b) Special conditions or restrictions may include:
(1) Payment on a reimbursement basis;
(2) Withholding authority to proceed to the next phase until
receipt of evidence of acceptable performance within a given funding
period;
(3) Requiring additional, more detailed financial reports;
(4) Additional project monitoring;
(5) Requiring the grantee or subgrantee to obtain technical or
management assistance; or
(6) Establishing additional prior approvals.
(c) If an awarding agency decides to impose such conditions, the
awarding official will notify the grantee or subgrantee as early as
possible, in writing, of:
(1) The nature of the special conditions/restrictions;
(2) The reason(s) for imposing them;
(3) The corrective actions which must be taken before they will be
removed and the time allowed for completing the corrective actions; and
(4) The method of requesting reconsideration of the conditions/
restrictions imposed.
Subpart C--Post-Award Requirements
Sec. 2541.200 Standards for financial management systems.
(a) A State must expand and account for grant funds in accordance
with State laws and procedures for expending and accounting for its own
funds. Fiscal control and accounting procedures of the State, as well
as its subgrantees and cost-type contractors, must be sufficient to--
(1) Permit preparation of reports required by this part and the
statutes authorizing the grant; and
(2) Permit the tracing of funds to a level of expenditures adequate
to establish that such funds have not been used in violation of the
restrictions and prohibitions of applicable statutes.
(b) The financial management systems of other grantees and
subgrantees must meet the following standards:
(1) Financial reporting. Accurate, current, and complete disclosure
of the financial results of financially assisted activities must be
made in accordance with the financial reporting requirements of the
grant or subgrant.
(2) Accounting records. Grantees and subgrantees must maintain
records which adequately identify the source and application of funds
provided for financially-assisted activities. These records must
contain information pertaining to grant or subgrant awards and
authorizations, obligations, unobligated balances, assets, liabilities,
outlays or expenditures, and income.
(3) Internal control. Effective control and accountability must be
maintained for all grant and subgrant cash, real and personal property,
and other assets. Grantees and subgrantees must adequately safeguard
all such property and must assure that it is used solely for authorized
purposes.
(4) Budget control. Actual expenditures or outlays must be compared
with budgeted amounts for each grant or subgrant. Financial information
must be related to performance or productivity data, including the
development of unit cost information whenever appropriate or
specifically required in the grant or subgrant agreement. If unit cost
data are required, estimates based on available documentation will be
accepted whenever possible.
(5) Allowable cost. Applicable OMB cost principles, agency program
regulations, and the terms of grant and subgrant agreements will be
followed in determining the reasonableness, allowability, and
allocability of costs.
(6) Source documentation. Accounting records must be supported by
such source documentation as canceled checks, paid bills, payrolls,
time and attendance records, contract and subgrant award documents,
etc.
(7) Cash management. Procedures for minimizing the time elapsing
between the transfer of funds from the U.S. Treasury and disbursement
by grantees and subgrantees must be followed whenever advance payment
procedures are used. Grantees must establish reasonable procedures to
ensure the receipt of reports on subgrantees' cash balances and cash
disbursements in sufficient time to enable them to prepare complete and
accurate cash transactions reports to the awarding agency. When
advances are made by letter-of-credit or electronic transfer of funds
methods, the grantee must make drawdowns as close as possible to the
time of making disbursements. Grantees must monitor cash drawdowns by
their subgrantees to assure that they conform substantially to the same
standards of timing and amount as apply to advances to the grantees.
(c) An awarding agency may review the adequacy of the financial
management system of any applicant for financial assistance as part of
a preaward review or at any time subsequent to award.
Sec. 2541.210 Payment.
(a) Scope. This section prescribes the basic standard and the
methods under which a Federal agency will make payments to grantees,
and grantees will make payments to subgrantees and contractors.
(b) Basic standard. Methods and procedures for payment shall
minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds and
disbursement by the grantee or subgrantee, in accordance with Treasury
regulations at 31 CFR part 205.
(c) Advances. Grantees and subgrantees shall be paid in advance,
provided they maintain or demonstrate the willingness and ability to
maintain procedures to minimize the time elapsing between the transfer
of the funds and their disbursement by the grantee or subgrantee.
(d) Reimbursement. Reimbursement shall be the preferred method when
the requirements in paragraph (c) of this section are not met. Grantees
and subgrantees may also be paid by reimbursement for any construction
grant. Except as otherwise specified in regulation, Federal agencies
shall not use the percentage of completion method to pay construction
grants. The grantee or subgrantee may use that method to pay its
construction contractor, and if it does, the awarding agency's payments
to the grantee or subgrantee will be based on the grantee's or
subgrantee's actual rate of disbursement.
(e) Working capital advances. If a grantee cannot meet the criteria
for advance payments described in paragraph (c) of this section, and
the Federal agency has determined that reimbursement is not feasible
because the grantee lacks sufficient working capital, the awarding
agency may provide cash on a working capital advance basis. Under this
procedure the awarding agency shall advance cash to the grantee to
cover its estimated disbursement needs for an initial period generally
geared to the grantee's disbursing cycle. Thereafter, the awarding
agency shall reimburse the grantee for its actual cash disbursements.
The working capital advance method of payment shall not be used by
grantees or subgrantees if the reason for using such method is the
unwillingness or inability of the grantee to provide timely advances to
the subgrantee to meet the subgrantee's actual cash disbursements.
(f) Effect of program income, refunds, and audit recoveries on
payment. (1) Grantees and subgrantees shall disburse repayments to and
interest earned on a revolving fund before requesting additional cash
payments for the same activity.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (f)(1) of this section,
grantees and subgrantees shall disburse program income, rebates,
refunds, contract settlements, audit recoveries and interest earned on
such funds before requesting additional cash payments.
(g) Withholding payments. (1) Unless otherwise required by Federal
statute, awarding agencies shall not withhold payments for proper
charges incurred by grantees or subgrantees unless--
(i) The grantee or subgrantee has failed to comply with grant award
conditions; or
(ii) The grantee or subgrantee is indebted to the United States.
(2) Cash withheld for failure to comply with grant award condition,
but without suspension of the grant, shall be released to the grantee
upon subsequent compliance. When a grant is suspended, payment
adjustments will be made in accordance with Sec. 2541.410(c).
(3) A Federal agency shall not make payment to grantees for amounts
that are withheld by grantees or subgrantees from payment to
contractors to assure satisfactory completion of work. Payments shall
be made by the Federal agency when the grantees or subgrantees actually
disburse the withheld funds to the contractors or to escrow accounts
established to assure satisfactory completion of work.
(h) Cash depositories. (1) Consistent with the national goal of
expanding the opportunities for minority business enterprises, grantees
and subgrantees are encouraged to use minority banks (a bank which is
owned at least 50 percent by minority group members). A list of
minority owned banks can be obtained from the Minority Business
Development Agency, Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230.
(2) A grantee or subgrantee shall maintain a separate bank account
only when required by Federal-State agreement.
(i) Interest earned on advances. Except for interest earned on
advances of funds exempt under the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act
(31 U.S.C. 6501 et seq.) and the Indian Self-Determination Act (23
U.S.C. 450), grantees and subgrantees shall promptly, but at least
quarterly, remit interest earned on advances to the Federal agency. The
grantee or subgrantee may keep interest amounts up to $100 per year for
administrative expenses.
Sec. 2541.220 Allowable costs.
(a) Limitation on use of funds. Grant funds may be used only for--
(1) The allowable costs of the grantees, subgrantees and cost-type
contractors, including allowable costs in the form of payments to
fixed-price contractors; and
(2) Reasonable fees or profit to cost-type contractors but not any
fee or profit (or other increment above allowable costs) to the grantee
or subgrantee.
(b) Applicable cost principles. For each kind of organization,
there is a set of Federal principles for determining allowable costs.
Allowable costs will be determined in accordance with the cost
principles applicable to the organization incurring the costs. The
following chart lists the kinds of organizations and the applicable
cost principles:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the costs of a Use the principles in--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
State, local or Indian tribal OMB Circular A-87.
government
Private nonprofit organization OMB Circular A-122.
other than an (1) institution of
higher education, (2) hospital, or
(3) organization named in OMB
Circular A-122 as not subject to
that circular
Educational institutions OMB Circular A-21.
For-profit organization other than 48 CFR Part 31. Contract Cost
a hospital and an organization Principles and Procedures, or
named in OMB Circular A-122 as not uniform cost accounting standards
subject to that circular that comply with cost principles
acceptable to the Federal agency.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 2541.230 Period of availability of funds.
(a) General. Where a funding period is specified, a grantee may
charge to the award only costs resulting from obligations of the
funding period unless carryover of unobligated balances is permitted,
in which case the carryover balances may be charged for costs resulting
from obligations of the subsequent funding period.
(b) Liquidation of obligations. A grantee must liquidate all
obligations incurred under the award not later than 90 days after the
end of the funding period (or as specified in a program regulation) to
coincide with the submission of the annual Financial Status Report (SF-
269). The Federal agency may extend this deadline at the request of the
grantee.
Sec. 2541.240 Matching or cost sharing.
(a) Basic rule; costs and contributions acceptable. With the
qualifications and exceptions listed in paragraph (b) of this section,
a matching or cost sharing requirement may be satisfied by either or
both of the following:
(1) Allowable costs incurred by the grantee, subgrantee or a cost-
type contractor under the assistance agreement. This includes allowable
costs borne by non-Federal grants or by other cash donations from non-
Federal third parties.
(2) The value of third party in-kind contributions applicable to
the period to which the cost sharing or matching requirements applies.
(b) Qualifications and exceptions--(1) Costs borne by other Federal
grant agreements. Except as provided by Federal statute, a cost sharing
or matching requirement may not be met by costs borne by another
Federal grant. This prohibition does not apply to income earned by a
grantee or subgrantee from a contract awarded under another Federal
grant.
(2) General revenue sharing. For the purpose of this section,
general revenue sharing funds distributed under 31 U.S.C. 6702 are not
considered Federal grant funds.
(3) Cost or contributions counted towards other Federal costs-
sharing requirements. Neither costs nor the values of third party in-
kind contributions may count towards satisfying a cost sharing or
matching requirement of a grant agreement if they have been or will be
counted towards satisfying a cost sharing or matching requirement of
another Federal grant agreement, a Federal procurement contract, or any
other award of Federal funds.
(4) Costs financed by program income. Costs financed by program
income, as defined in Sec. 2541.250, shall not count towards satisfying
a cost sharing or matching requirement unless they are expressly
permitted in the terms of the assistance agreement. (This use of
general program income is described in Sec. 2541.250(g).)
(5) Services or property financed by income earned by contractors.
Contractors under a grant may earn income from the activities carried
out under the contract in addition to the amounts earned from the party
awarding the contract. No costs of services or property supported by
this income may count toward satisfying a cost sharing or matching
requirement unless other provisions of the grant agreement expressly
permit this kind of income to be used to meet the requirement.
(6) Records. Costs and third party in-kind contributions counting
towards satisfying a cost sharing or matching requirement must be
verifiable from the records of grantees and subgrantee or cost-type
contractors. These records must show how the value placed on third
party in-kind contributions was derived. To the extent feasible,
volunteer services will be supported by the same methods that the
organization uses to support the allocability of regular personnel
costs.
(7) Special standards for third party in-kind contributions. (i)
Third party in-kind contributions count towards satisfying a cost
sharing or matching requirement only where, if the party receiving the
contributions were to pay for them, the payments would be allowable
costs.
(ii) Some third party in-kind contributions are goods and services
that, if the grantee, subgrantee, or contractor receiving the
contribution had to pay for them, the payments would have been an
indirect costs. Costs sharing or matching credit for such contributions
shall be given only if the grantee, subgrantee, or contractor has
established, along with its regular indirect cost rate, a special rate
for allocating to individual projects or programs the value of the
contributions.
(iii) A third party in-kind contribution to a fixed-price contract
may count towards satisfying a cost sharing or matching requirement
only if it results in:
(A) An increase in the services or property provided under the
contract (without additional cost to the grantee or subgrantee); or
(B) A cost savings to the grantee or subgrantee.
(iv) The values placed on third party in-kind contributions for
cost sharing or matching purposes will conform to the rules in the
succeeding sections of this part. If a third party in-kind contribution
is a type not treated in those sections, the value placed upon it shall
be fair and reasonable.
(c) Valuation of donated services--(1) Volunteer services. Unpaid
services provided to a grantee or subgrantee by individuals will be
valued at rates consistent with those ordinarily paid for similar work
in the grantee's or subgrantee's organization. If the grantee or
subgrantee does not have employees performing similar work, the rates
will be consistent with those ordinarily paid by other employers for
similar work in the same labor market. In either case, a reasonable
amount for fringe benefits may be included in the valuation.
(2) Employees of other organizations. When an employer other than a
grantee, subgrantee, or cost-type contractor furnishes free of charge
the services of an employee in the employee's normal line of work, the
services will be valued at the employee's regular rate of pay exclusive
of the employee's fringe benefits and overhead costs. If the services
are in a different line of work, paragraph (c)(1) of this section
applies.
(d) Valuation of third party donated supplies and loaned equipment
or space. (1) If a third party donates supplies, the contribution will
be valued at the market value of the supplies at the time of donation.
(2) If a third party donates the use of equipment or space in a
building but retains title, the contribution will be valued at the fair
rental rate of the equipment or space.
(e) Valuation of third party donated equipment, buildings, and
land. If a third party donates equipment, buildings, or land, and title
passes to a grantee or subgrantee, the treatment of the donated
property will depend upon the purpose of the grant or subgrant, as
follows:
(1) Awards for capital expenditures. If the purpose of the grant or
subgrant is to assist the grantee or subgrantee in the acquisition of
property, the market value of that property at the time of donation may
be counted as cost sharing or matching.
(2) Other awards. If assisting in the acquisition of property is
not the purpose of the grant or subgrant, paragraphs (e)(2) (i) and
(ii) of this section apply:
(i) If approval is obtained from the awarding agency, the market
value at the time of donation of the donated equipment or buildings and
the fair rental rate of the donated land may be counted as cost sharing
or matching. In the case of a subgrant, the terms of the grant
agreement may require that the approval be obtained from the Federal
agency as well as the grantee. In all cases, the approval may be given
only if a purchase of the equipment or rental of the land would be
approved as an allowable direct cost. If any part of the donated
property was acquired with Federal funds, only the non-federal share of
the property may be counted as cost-sharing or matching.
(ii) If approval is not obtained under paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this
section, no amount may be counted for donated land, and only
depreciation or use allowances may be counted for donated equipment and
buildings. The depreciation or use allowances for this property are not
treated as third party in-kind contributions. Instead, they are treated
as costs incurred by the grantee or subgrantee. They are computed and
allocated (usually as indirect costs) in accordance with the cost
principles specified in Sec. 2541.220, in the same way as depreciation
or use allowances for purchased equipment and buildings. The amount of
depreciation or use allowances for donated equipment and buildings is
based on the property's market value at the time it was donated.
(f) Valuation of grantee or subgrantee donated real property for
construction/acquisition. If a grantee or subgrantee donates real
property for a construction or facilities acquisition project, the
current market value of that property may be counted as cost sharing or
matching. If any part of the donated property was acquired with Federal
funds, only the non-federal share of the property may be counted as
cost sharing or matching.
(g) Appraisal of real property. In some cases under paragraphs (d),
(e) and (f) of this section, it will be necessary to establish the
market value of land or a building or the fair rental rate of land or
of space in a building. In these cases, the Federal agency may require
the market value or fair rental value be set by an independent
appraiser, and that the value or rate be certified by the grantee. This
requirement will also be imposed by the grantee on subgrantees.
Sec. 2541.250 Program income.
(a) General. Grantees are encouraged to earn income to defray
program costs. Program income includes income from fees for services
performed, from the use or rental of real or personal property acquired
with grant funds, from the sale of commodities or items fabricated
under a grant agreement, and from payments of principal and interest on
loans made with grant funds. Except as otherwise provided in
regulations of the Federal agency, program income does not include
interest on grant funds, rebates, credits, discounts, refunds, etc. and
interest earned on any of them.
(b) Definition of program income. Program income means gross income
received by the grantee or subgrantee directly generated by a grant
supported activity, or earned only as a result of the grant agreement
during the grant period. ``During the grant period'' is the time
between the effective date of the award and the ending date of the
award reflected in the final financial report.
(c) Cost of generating program income. If authorized by Federal
regulations or the grant agreement, costs incident to the generation of
program income may be deducted from gross income to determine program
income.
(d) Governmental revenues. Taxes, special assessments, levies,
fines, and other such revenues raised by a grantee or subgrantee are
not program income unless the revenues are specifically identified in
the grant agreement or Federal agency regulations as program income.
(e) Royalties. Income from royalties and license fees for
copyrighted material, patents, and inventions developed by a grantee or
subgrantee is program income only if the revenues are specifically
identified in the grant agreement or Federal agency regulations as
program income. (See Sec. 2541.340)
(f) Property. Proceeds from the sale of real property or equipment
will be handled in accordance with the requirements of Secs. 2541.310
and 2541.320.
(g) Use of program income. Program income shall be deducted from
outlays which may be both Federal and non-Federal as described in
paragraphs (g)(1) and (2) of this section, unless the Federal agency
regulations or the grant agreement specify another alternative (or a
combination of the alternatives). In specifying alternatives, the
Federal agency may distinguish between income earned by the grantee and
income earned by subgrantees and between the sources, kinds, or amounts
of income. When Federal agencies authorize the alternatives in
paragraphs (g) (2) and (3) of this section, program income in excess of
any limits stipulated shall also be deducted from outlays.
(1) Deduction. Ordinarily program income shall be deducted from
total allowable costs to determine the net allowable costs. Program
income shall be used for current costs unless the Federal agency
authorizes otherwise. Program income which the grantee did not
anticipate at the time of the award shall be used to reduce the Federal
agency and grantee contributions rather than to increase the funds
committed to the project.
(2) Addition. When authorized, program income may be added to the
funds committed to the grant agreement by the Federal agency and the
grantee. The program income shall be used for the purposes and under
the conditions of the grant agreement.
(3) Cost sharing or matching. When authorized, program income may
be used to meet the cost sharing or matching requirement of the grant
agreement. The amount of the Federal grant award remains the same.
(h) Income after the award period. There are no Federal
requirements governing the disposition of program income earned after
the end of the award period (i.e., until the ending date of the final
financial report, see paragraph (a) of this section), unless the terms
of the agreement or the Federal agency regulations provide otherwise.
Sec. 2541.260 Non-Federal audit.
(a) Basic rule. Grantees and subgrantees are responsible for
obtaining audits in accordance with the Single Audit Act of 1984 (31
U.S.C.7501-7) and Federal agency implementing regulations. The audits
shall be made by an independent auditor in accordance with generally
accepted government auditing standards covering financial and
compliance audits.
(b) Subgrantees. State or local governments, as those terms are
defined for purposes of the Single Audit Act, that receive Federal
financial assistance and provide $25,000 or more of it in a fiscal year
to a subgrantee shall:
(1) Determine whether State or local subgrantees have met the audit
requirements of the Act and whether subgrantees covered by OMB Circular
A-110, ``Uniform Requirements for Grants and Other Agreements with
Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals and Other Nonprofit
Organizations'' have met the audit requirement. Commercial contractors
(private for profit and private and governmental organizations)
providing goods and services to State and local governments are not
required to have a single audit performed. State and local governments
should use their own procedures to ensure that the contractor has
complied with laws and regulations affecting the expenditure of Federal
funds;
(2) Determine whether the subgrantee spent Federal assistance funds
provided in accordance with applicable laws and regulations. This may
be accomplished by reviewing an audit of the subgrantee made in
accordance with the Act, Circular A-110, or through other means (e.g.,
program reviews) if the subgrantee has not had such an audit;
(3) Ensure that appropriate corrective action is taken within six
months after receipt of the audit report in instance of noncompliance
with Federal laws and regulations;
(4) Consider whether subgrantee audits necessitate adjustment of
the grantee's own records; and
(5) Require each subgrantee to permit independent auditors to have
access to the records and financial statements.
(c) Auditor selection. In arranging for audit services,
Sec. 2541.360 shall be followed.
Subpart D--Changes, Property and Subawards
Sec. 2541.300 Changes.
(a) General. Grantees and subgrantees are permitted to re budget
within the approved direct cost budget to meet unanticipated
requirements and may make limited program changes to the approved
project. However, unless waived by the awarding agency, certain types
of post-award changes in budgets and projects shall require the prior
written approval of the awarding agency.
(b) Relation to cost principles. The applicable cost principles
(see Sec. 2541.220) contain requirements for prior approval of certain
types of costs. Except where waived, those requirements apply to all
grants and subgrants even if paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section
do not.
(c) Budget changes.--(1) Nonconstruction projects. Except as stated
in other regulations or an award document, grantees or subgrantees
shall obtain the prior approval of the awarding agency whenever any of
the following changes is anticipated under a nonconstruction award:
(i) Any revision which would result in the need for additional
funding.
(ii) Unless waived by the awarding agency, cumulative transfers
among direct cost categories, or, if applicable, among separately
budgeted programs, projects, functions, or activities which exceed or
are expected to exceed ten percent of the current total approved
budget, whenever the awarding agency's share exceeds $100,000.
(iii) Transfer of funds allotted for training allowances (i.e.,
from direct payments to trainees to other expense categories).
(2) Construction projects. Grantees and subgrantees shall obtain
prior written approval for any budget revision which would result in
the need for additional funds.
(3) Combined construction and nonconstruction projects. When a
grant or subgrant provides funding for both construction and
nonconstruction activities, the grantee or subgrantee must obtain prior
written approval from the awarding agency before making any fund or
budget transfer from nonconstruction to construction or vice versa.
(d) Programmatic changes. Grantees or subgrantees must obtain the
prior approval of the awarding agency whenever any of the following
actions is anticipated:
(1) Any revision of the scope or objectives of the project
(regardless of whether there is an associated budget revision requiring
prior approval).
(2) Need to extend the period of availability of funds.
(3) Changes in key persons in cases where specified in an
application or a grant award. In research projects, a change in the
project director or principal investigator shall always require
approval unless waived by the awarding agency.
(4) Under nonconstruction projects, contracting out, subgranting
(if authorized by law) or otherwise obtaining the services of a third
party to perform activities which are central to the purposes of the
award. This approval requirement is in addition to the approval
requirements of Sec. 2541.360 but does not apply to the procurement of
equipment, supplies, and general support services.
(e) Additional prior approval requirements. The awarding agency may
not require prior approval for any budget revision which is not
described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(f) Requesting prior approval. (1) A request for prior approval of
any budget revision will be in the same budget formal the grantee used
in its application and shall be accompanied by a narrative
justification for the proposed revision.
(2) A request for a prior approval under the applicable Federal
cost principles (see Sec. 2541.220) may be made by letter.
(3) A request by a subgrantee for prior approval will be addressed
in writing to the grantee. The grantee will promptly review such
request and shall approve or disapprove the request in writing. A
grantee will not approve any budget or project revision which is
inconsistent with the purpose or terms and conditions of the Federal
grant to the grantee. If the revision, requested by the subgrantee
would result in a change to the grantee's approved project which
requires Federal prior approval, the grantee will obtain the Federal
agency's approval before approving the subgrantee's request.
Sec. 2541.310 Real property.
(a) Title. Subject to the obligations and conditions set forth in
this section, title to real property acquired under a grant or subgrant
will vest upon acquisition in the grantee or subgrantee respectively.
(b) Use. Except as otherwise provided by Federal statutes, real
property will be used for the originally authorized purposes as long as
needed for that purposes, and the grantee or subgrantee shall not
dispose of or encumber its title or other interests.
(c) Disposition. When real property is no longer needed for the
originally authorized purpose, the grantee or subgrantee will request
disposition instructions from the awarding agency. The instructions
will provide for one of the following alternatives:
(1) Retention of title. Retain title after compensating the
awarding agency. The amount paid to the awarding agency will be
computed by applying the awarding agency's percentage of participation
in the cost of the original purchase to the fair market value of the
property. However, in those situations where a grantee or subgrantee is
disposing of real property acquired with grant funds and acquiring
replacement real property under the same program, the net proceeds from
the disposition may be used as an offset to the cost of the replacement
property.
(2) Sale of property. Sell the property and compensate the awarding
agency. The amount due to the awarding agency will be calculated by
applying the awarding agency's percentage of participation in the cost
of the original purchase to the proceeds of the sale after deduction of
any actual and reasonable selling and fixing-up expenses. If the grant
is still active, the net proceeds from sale may be offset against the
original cost of the property. When a grantee or subgrantee is directed
to sell property, sales procedures shall be followed that provide for
competition to the extent practicable and result in the highest
possible return.
(3) Transfer of title. Transfer title to the awarding agency or to
a third-party designated/approved by the awarding agency. The grantee
or subgrantee shall be paid an amount calculated by applying the
grantee or subgrantee's percentage of participation in the purchase of
the real property to the current fair market value of the property.
Sec. 2541.320 Equipment.
(a) Title. Subject to the obligations and conditions set forth in
this section, title to equipment acquired under a grant or subgrant
will vest upon acquisition in the grantee or subgrantee respectively.
(b) States. A State will use, manage, and dispose of equipment
acquired under a grant by the State in accordance with State laws and
procedures. Other grantees and subgrantees will follow paragraphs (c)
through (e) of this section.
(c) Use. (1) Equipment shall be used by the grantee or subgrantee
in the program or project for which it was acquired as long as needed,
whether or not the project or program continues to be supported by
Federal funds. When no longer needed for the original program or
project, the equipment may be used in other activities currently or
previously supported by a Federal agency.
(2) The grantee or subgrantee shall also make equipment available
for use on other projects or programs currently or previously supported
by the Federal Government, providing such use will not interfere with
the work on the projects or program for which it was originally
acquired. First preference for other use shall be given to other
programs or projects supported by the awarding agency. User fees should
be considered if appropriate.
(3) Notwithstanding the encouragement in Sec. 2541.250(a) to earn
program income, the grantee or subgrantee must not use equipment
acquired with grant funds to provide services for a fee to compete
unfairly with private companies that provide equivalent services,
unless specifically permitted or contemplated by Federal statute.
(4) When acquiring replacement equipment, the grantee or subgrantee
may use the equipment to be replaced as a trade-in or sell the property
and use the proceeds to offset the cost of the replacement property,
subject to the approval of the awarding agency.
(d) Management requirements. Procedures for managing equipment
(including replacement equipment), whether acquired in whole or in part
with grant funds, until disposition takes place will, as a minimum,
meet the following requirements:
(1) Property records must be maintained that include a description
of the property, a serial number or other identification number, the
source of property, who holds title, the acquisition date, and cost of
the property, percentage of Federal participation in the cost of the
property, the location, use and condition of the property, and any
ultimate disposition data including the date of disposal and sale price
of the property.
(2) A physical inventory of the property must be taken and the
results reconciled with the property records at least once every two
years.
(3) A control system must be developed to ensure adequate
safeguards to prevent loss, damage, or theft of the property. Any loss,
damage, or theft shall be investigated.
(4) Adequate maintenance procedures must be developed to keep the
property in good condition.
(5) If the grantee or subgrantee is authorized or required to sell
the property, proper sales procedures must be established to ensure the
highest possible return.
(e) Disposition. When original or replacement equipment acquired
under a grant or subgrant is no longer needed for the original project
or program or for other activities currently or previously supported by
a Federal agency, disposition of the equipment will be made as follows:
(1) Items of equipment with a current per-unit fair market value of
less than $5,000 may be retained, sold or otherwise disposed of with no
further obligation to the awarding agency.
(2) Items of equipment with a current per unit fair market value in
excess of $5,000 may be retained or sold and the awarding agency shall
have a right to an amount calculated by multiplying the current market
value or proceeds from sale by the awarding agency's share of the
equipment.
(3) In cases where a grantee or subgrantee fails to take
appropriate disposition actions, the awarding agency may direct the
grantee or subgrantee to take excess and disposition actions.
(f) Federal equipment. In the event a grantee or subgrantee is
provided federally-owned equipment:
(1) Title will remain vested in the Federal Government.
(2) Grantees or subgrantees will manage the equipment in accordance
with Federal agency rules and procedures, and submit an annual
inventory listing.
(3) When the equipment is no longer needed, the grantee or
subgrantee will request disposition instructions from the Federal
agency.
(g) Right to transfer title. The Federal awarding agency may
reserve the right to transfer title to the Federal Government or a
third part named by the awarding agency when such a third party is
otherwise eligible under existing statutes. Such transfers shall be
subject to the following standards:
(1) The property shall be identified in the grant or otherwise made
known to the grantee in writing.
(2) The Federal awarding agency shall issue disposition instruction
within 120 calendar days after the end of the Federal support of the
project for which it was acquired. If the Federal awarding agency fails
to issue disposition instructions within the 120 calendar-day period
the grantee shall follow paragraph (e) of this section.
(3) When title to equipment is transferred, the grantee shall be
paid an amount calculated by applying the percentage of participation
in the purchase to the current fair market value of the property.
Sec. 2541.330 Supplies.
(a) Title. Title to supplies acquired under a grant or subgrant
will vest, upon acquisition, in the grantee or subgrantee respectively.
(b) Disposition. If there is a residual inventory of unused
supplies exceeding $5,000 in total aggregate fair market value upon
termination or completion of the award, and if the supplies are not
needed for any other federally sponsored programs or projects, the
grantee or subgrantee shall compensate the awarding agency for its
share.
Sec. 2541.340 Copyrights.
The Federal awarding agency reserves a royalty-free, non-exclusive,
and irrevocable license to reproduce, publish or otherwise use, and to
authorize others to use, for Federal Government purposes:
(a) The copyright in any work developed under a grant, subgrant, or
contract under a grant or subgrant; and
(b) Any rights of copyright to which a grantee, subgrantee or a
contractor purchases ownership with grant support.
Sec. 2541.350 Subawards to debarred and suspended parties.
Grantees and subgrantees must not make any award or permit any
award (subgrant or contract) at any tier to any party which is debarred
or suspended or is otherwise excluded from or ineligible for
participation in Federal assistance programs under Executive Order
12549, ``Debarment and Suspension.''
Sec. 2541.360 Procurement.
(a) States. When procuring property and services under a grant, a
State will follow the same policies and procedures it uses for
procurements from its non-Federal funds. The State will ensure that
every purchase order or other contract includes any clauses required by
Federal statutes and executive orders and their implementing
regulations. Other grantees and subgrantees will follow paragraphs (b)
through (i) of this section.
(b) Procurement standards. (1) Grantees and subgrantees will use
their own procurement procedures which reflect applicable State and
local laws and regulations, provided that the procurements conform to
applicable Federal law and the standards identified in this section.
(2) Grantees and subgrantees will maintain a contract
administration system which ensures that contractors perform in
accordance with the terms, conditions, and specifications of their
contracts or purchase orders.
(3) Grantees and subgrantees will maintain a written code of
standards of conduct governing the performance of their employees
engaged in the award and administration of contracts. No employee,
officer or agent of the grantee or subgrantee shall participate in
selection, or in the award or administration of a contract supported by
Federal funds if a conflict of interest, real or apparent, would be
involved. Such a conflict would arise when--
(i) The employee, officer or agent;
(ii) Any member of his immediate family;
(iii) His or her partner; or
(iv) An organization which employs, or is about to employ, any of
the above, has a financial or other interest in the firm selected for
award. The grantee's or subgrantee's officers, employees or agents will
neither solicit nor accept gratuities, favors or anything of monetary
value from contractors, potential contractors, or parties to
subagreements. Grantee and subgrantees may set minimum rules where the
financial interest is not substantial or the gift is an unsolicited
item of nominal intrinsic value. To the extent permitted by State or
local law or regulations, such standards or conduct will provide for
penalties, sanctions, or other disciplinary actions for violations of
such standards by the grantee's and subgrantee's officers, employees,
or agents, or by contractors or their agents. The awarding agency may
in regulation provide additional prohibitions relative to real,
apparent, or potential conflicts of interest.
(4) Grantee and subgrantee procedures will provide for a review of
proposed procurements to avoid purchase of unnecessary or duplicative
items. Consideration should be given to consolidating or breaking out
procurements to obtain a more economical purchase. Where appropriate,
an analysis will be made of lease versus purchase alternatives, and any
other appropriate analysis to determine the most economical approach.
(5) To foster greater economy and efficiency, grantees and
subgrantees are encouraged to enter into State and local
intergovernmental agreements for procurement or use of common goods and
services.
(6) Grantees and subgrantees are encouraged to use Federal excess
and surplus property in lieu of purchasing new equipment and property
whenever such use is feasible and reduces project costs.
(7) Grantees and subgrantees are encouraged to use value
engineering clauses in contracts for construction projects of
sufficient size to offer reasonable opportunities for cost reductions.
Value engineering is a systematic and creative analysis of each
contract item or task to ensure that its essential function is provided
at the overall lower cost.
(8) Grantees and subgrantees will make awards only to responsible
contractors possessing the ability to perform successfully under the
terms and conditions of a proposed procurement. Consideration will be
given to such matters as contractor integrity, compliance with public
policy, record of past performance, and financial and technical
resources.
(9) Grantees and subgrantees will maintain records sufficient to
detail the significant history of a procurement. These records will
include, but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale
for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor
selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.
(10) Grantees and subgrantees will use time and material type
contracts only--
(i) After a determination that no other contract is suitable; and
(ii) If the contract includes a ceiling price that the contractor
exceeds at its own risk.
(11) Grantees and subgrantees alone will be responsible, in
accordance with good administrative practice and sound business
judgment, for the settlement of all contractual and administrative
issues arising out of procurements. These issues include, but are not
limited to source evaluation, protests, disputes, and claims. These
standards do not relieve the grantee or subgrantee of any contractual
responsibilities under its contracts. Federal agencies will not
substitute their judgment for that of the grantee or subgrantee unless
the matter is primarily a Federal concern. Violations of law will be
referred to the local, State, or Federal authority having proper
jurisdiction.
(12) Grantees and subgrantees will have protest procedures to
handle and resolve disputes relating to their procurements and shall in
all instances disclose information regarding the protest to the
awarding agency. A protester must exhaust all administrative remedies
with the grantee and subgrantee before pursuing a protest with the
Federal agency. Reviews of protests by the Federal agency will be
limited to:
(i) Violations of Federal law or regulations and the standards of
this section (violations of State or local law will be under the
jurisdiction of State or local authorities); and
(ii) Violations of the grantee's or sub-grantee's protest
procedures for failure to review a complaint or protest. Protests
received by the Federal agency other than those specified in this
paragraph (b)(12)(ii) will be referred to the grantee or subgrantee.
(c) Competition. (1) All procurement transactions will be conducted
in a manner providing full and open competition consistent with the
standards of this section. Some of the situations considered to be
restrictive of competition include but are not limited to:
(i) Placing unreasonable requirements on firms in order for them to
qualify to do business;
(ii) Requiring unnecessary experience and excessive bonding;
(iii) Noncompetitive pricing practices between firms or between
affiliated companies;
(iv) Noncompetitive awards to consultants that are on retainer
contracts;
(v) Organizational conflicts of interest;
(vi) Specifying only a ``brand name'' product instead of allowing
``an equal'' product to be offered and describing the performance of
other relevant requirements of the procurement; and
(vii) Any arbitrary action in the procurement process.
(2) Grantees and subgrantees will conduct procurements in a manner
that prohibits the use of statutory or administratively imposed in-
State or local geographical preferences in the evaluation of bids or
proposals, except in those cases where applicable Federal statutes
expressly mandate or encourage geographic preference. Nothing in this
section preempts State licensing laws. When contracting for
architectural and engineering (A/E) services, geographic location may
be a selection criteria provided its application leaves an appropriate
number of qualified firms, given the nature and size of the project, to
compete for the contract.
(3) Grantees will have written selection procedures for procurement
transactions. These procedures will ensure that all solicitations:
(i) Incorporate a clear and accurate description of the technical
requirements for the material, product, or service to be procured. Such
description shall not, in competitive procurements, contain features
which unduly restrict competition. The description may include a
statement of the qualitative nature of the material, product or service
to be procured, and when necessary, shall set forth those minimum
essential characteristics and standards to which it must conform if it
is to satisfy its intended use. Detailed product specifications should
be avoided if at all possible. When it is impractical or uneconomical
to make a clear and accurate description of the technical requirements,
a ``brand name or equal'' description may be used as a means to define
the performance or other salient requirements of a procurement. The
specific features of the named brand which must be met by offerors
shall be clearly stated; and
(ii) Identify all requirements which the offerors must fulfill and
all other factors to be used in evaluating bids or proposals.
(4) Grantees and subgrantees will ensure that all prequalified
lists of persons, firms, or products which are used in acquiring goods
and services are current and include enough qualified sources to ensure
maximum open and free competition. Also, grantees and subgrantees will
not preclude potential bidders from qualifying during the solicitation
period.
(d) Methods of procurement to be followed--(1) Procurement by small
purchase procedures. Small purchase procedures are those relatively
simple and informal procurement methods for securing services,
supplies, or other property that do not cost more than $25,000 in the
aggregate. If small purchase procurements are used, price or rate
quotations will be obtained from an adequate number of qualified
sources.
(2) Procurement by sealed bids (formal advertising). Bids are
publicly solicited and a firm-fixed-price contract (lump sum or unit
price) is awarded to the responsible bidder whose bid, conforming with
all the material terms and conditions of the invitation for bids, is
the lowest in price. The sealed bid method is the preferred method for
procuring construction, if the conditions in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of
this section apply.
(i) In order for sealed bidding to be feasible, the following
conditions should be present:
(A) A complete, adequate, and realistic specification or purchase
description is available;
(B) Two or more responsible bidders are willing and able to compete
effectively for the business; and
(C) The procurement lends itself to a firm fixed price contract and
the selection of the successful bidder can be made principally on the
basis of price.
(ii) If sealed bids are used, the following requirements apply:
(A) The invitation for bids will be publicly advertised and bids
shall be solicited from an adequate number of known suppliers,
providing them sufficient time prior to the date set for opening the
bids;
(B) The invitation for bids, which will include any specifications
and pertinent attachments, shall define the items or services in order
for the bidder to properly respond;
(C) All bids will be publicly opened at the time and place
prescribed in the invitation for bids;
(D) A firm fixed-price contract award will be made in writing to
the lowest responsive and responsible bidder. Where specified in
bidding documents, factors such as discounts, transportation cost, and
life cycle costs shall be considered in determining which bid is
lowest. Payment discounts will only be used to determine the low bid
when prior experience indicates that such discounts are usually taken
advantage of; and
(E) Any or all bids may be rejected if there is a sound documented
reason.
(3) Procurement by competitive proposals. The technique of
competitive proposals is normally conducted with more than one source
submitting an offer, and either a fixed-price or cost-reimbursement
type contract is awarded. It is generally used when conditions are not
appropriate for the use of sealed bids. If this method is used, the
following requirements apply:
(i) Requests for proposals will be publicized and identify all
evaluation factors and their relative importance. Any response to
publicized requests for proposals shall be honored to the maximum
extent practical;
(ii) Proposals will be solicited from an adequate number of
qualified sources;
(iii) Grantees and subgrantees will have a method for conducting
technical evaluations of the proposals received and for selecting
awardees;
(iv) Awards will be made to the responsible firm whose proposal is
most advantageous to the program, with price and other factors
considered; and
(v) Grantees and subgrantees may use competitive proposal
procedures for qualifications-based procurement of architectural/
engineering (A/E) professional services whereby competitors'
qualifications are evaluated and the most qualified competitor is
selected, subject to negotiation of fair and reasonable compensation.
The method, where price is not used as a selection factor, can only be
used in procurement of A/E professional services. It cannot be used to
purchase other types of services though A/E firms are a potential
source to perform the proposed effort.
(4) Procurement by noncompetitive proposals. This procurement is
through solicitation of a proposal from only one source, or after
solicitation of a number of sources, competition is determined
inadequate.
(i) Procurement by noncompetitive proposals may be used only when
the award of a contract is infeasible under small purchase procedures,
sealed bids or competitive proposals and one of the following
circumstances applies:
(A) The item is available only from a single source;
(B) The public exigency or emergency for the requirement will not
permit a delay resulting from competitive solicitation;
(C) The awarding agency authorizes noncompetitive proposals; or
(D) After solicitation of a number of sources, competition is
determined inadequate.
(ii) Cost analysis, i.e., verifying the proposed cost data, the
projections of the data, and the evaluation of the specific elements of
costs and profit, is required.
(iii) Grantees and subgrantees may be required to submit the
proposed procurement to the awarding agency for pre-award review in
accordance with paragraph (g) of this section.
(e) Contracting with small and minority firms, women's business
enterprise and labor surplus area firms. (1) The grantee and subgrantee
will take all necessary affirmative steps to assure that minority
firms, women's business enterprises, and labor surplus area firms are
used when possible.
(2) Affirmative steps shall include:
(i) Placing qualified small and minority businesses and women's
business enterprises on solicitation lists;
(ii) Assuring that small and minority businesses, and women's
business enterprises are solicited whenever they are potential sources;
(iii) Dividing total requirements, when economically feasible, into
smaller tasks or quantities to permit maximum participation by small
and minority business, and women's business enterprises;
(iv) Establishing delivery schedules, where the requirement
permits, which encourage participation by small and minority business,
and women's business enterprises;
(v) Using the services and assistance of the Small Business
Administration, and the Minority Business Development Agency of the
Department of Commerce; and
(vi) Requiring the prime contractor, if subcontracts are to be let,
to take the affirmative steps listed in paragraphs (e)(2) (i) through
(v) of this section.
(f) Contract cost and price. (1) Grantees and subgrantees must
perform a cost or price analysis in connection with every procurement
action including contract modifications. The method and degree of
analysis is dependent on the facts surrounding the particular
procurement situation, but as a starting point, grantees must make
independent estimates before receiving bids or proposals. A cost
analysis must be performed when the offeror is required to submit the
elements of his estimated cost, e.g., under professional, consulting,
and architectural engineering services contracts. A cost analysis will
be necessary when adequate price competition is lacking, and for sole
source procurements, including contract modifications or change orders,
unless price reasonableness can be established on the basis of a
catalog or market price of a commercial product sold in substantial
quantities to the general public or based on prices set by law or
regulation. A price analysis will be used in all other instances to
determine the reasonableness of the proposed contract price.
(2) Grantees and subgrantees will negotiate profit as a separate
element of the price for each contract in which there is no price
competition and in all cases where cost analysis is performed. To
establish a fair and reasonable profit, consideration will be given to
the complexity of the work to be performed, the risk borne by the
contractor, the contractor's investment, the amount of subcontracting,
the quality of its record of past performance, and industry profit
rates in the surrounding geographical area for similar work.
(3) Costs or prices based on estimated costs for contracts under
grants will be allowable only to the extent that costs incurred or cost
estimates included in negotiated prices are consistent with Federal
cost principles (see Sec. 2541.220). Grantees may reference their own
cost principles that comply with the applicable Federal cost
principles.
(4) The cost plus a percentage of cost and percentage of
construction cost methods of contracting shall not be used.
(g) Awarding agency review. (1) Grantees and subgrantees must make
available, upon request of the awarding agency, technical
specifications on proposed procurements where the awarding agency
believes such review is needed to ensure that the item and/or service
specified is the one being proposed for purchase. This review generally
will take place prior to the time the specification is incorporated
into a solicitation document. However, if the grantee or subgrantee
desires to have the review accomplished after a solicitation has been
developed, the awarding agency may still review the specifications,
with such review usually limited to the technical aspects of the
proposed purchase.
(2) Grantees and subgrantees must on request make available for
awarding agency pre-award review procurement documents, such as
requests for proposals or invitations for bids, independent cost
estimates, etc., when--
(i) A grantee's or subgrantee's procurement procedures or operation
fails to comply with the procurement standards in this section; or
(ii) The procurement is expected to exceed $25,000 and is to be
awarded without competition or only one bid or offer is received in
response to a solicitation; or
(iii) The procurement, which is expected to exceed $25,000,
specifies a ``brand name'' product; or
(iv) The proposed award over $25,000 is to be awarded to other than
the apparent low bidder under a sealed bid procurement; or
(v) A proposed contract modification changes the scope of a
contract or increases the contract amount by more than $25,000.
(3) A grantee or subgrantee will be exempt from the pre-award
review in paragraph (g)(2) of this section if the awarding agency
determines that its procurement systems comply with the standards of
this section.
(i) A grantee or subgrantee may request that its procurement system
be reviewed by the awarding agency to determine whether its system
meets these standards in order for its system to be certified.
Generally, these reviews shall occur where there is a continuous high-
dollar funding, and third-party contracts are awarded on a regular
basis.
(ii) A grantee or subgrantee may self-certify its procurement
system. Such self-certification shall not limit the awarding agency's
right to survey the system. Under a self-certification procedure,
awarding agencies may wish to rely on written assurances from the
grantee or subgrantee that it is complying with these standards. A
grantee or subgrantee will cite specific procedures, regulations,
standards, etc., as being in compliance with these requirements and
have its system available for review.
(h) Bonding requirements. For construction or facility improvement
contracts or subcontracts exceeding $100,000, the awarding agency may
accept the bonding policy and requirements of the grantee or subgrantee
provided the awarding agency has made a determination that the awarding
agency's interest is adequately protected. If such a determination has
not been made, the minimum requirements shall be as follows:
(1) A bid guarantee from each bidder equivalent to five percent of
the bid price. The ``bid guarantee'' shall consist of a firm commitment
such as a bid bond, certified check, or other negotiable instrument
accompanying a bid as assurance that the bidder will, upon acceptance
of his bid, execute such contractual documents as may be required
within the time specified.
(2) A performance bond on the part of the contractor for 100
percent of the contract price. A ``performance bond'' is one executed
in connection with a contract to secure fulfillment of all the
contractor's obligations under such contract.
(3) A payment bond on the part of the contractor for 100 percent of
the contract price. A ``payment bond'' is one executed in connection
with a contract to assure payment as required by law of all persons
supplying labor and material in the execution of the work provided for
in the contract.
(i) Contract provisions. A grantee's and subgrantee's contracts
must contain provisions in this paragraph of this section. Federal
agencies are permitted to require changes, remedies, changed
conditions, access and records retention, suspension of work, and other
clauses approved by the Office of Procurement Policy.
(1) Administrative, contractual, or legal remedies in instances
where contractors violate or breach contract terms, and provide for
such sanctions and penalties as may be appropriate (contracts other
than small purchases).
(2) Termination for cause and for convenience by the grantee or
subgrantee including the manner by which it will be effected and the
basis for settlement (all contracts in excess of $10,000).
(3) Compliance with Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965 (3
CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 339) entitled ``Equal Employment
Opportunity,'' as amended by Executive Order 11375 of October 13, 1967
(3 CFR, 1966-1970 Comp., p. 684) and as supplemented in Department of
Labor regulations (41 CFR chapter 60) (all construction contracts
awarded in excess of $10,000 by grantees and their contractors or
subgrantees).
(4) Compliance with the Copeland ``Anti-Kickback'' Act (18 U.S.C.
874) as supplemented in Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 3)
(all contracts and subgrants for construction or repair).
(5) Compliance with the Davis-Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 276a to a-7) as
supplemented by Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5)
(construction contracts in excess of $2,000 awarded by grantees and
subgrantees when required by Federal grant program legislation).
(6) Compliance with sections 103 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours
and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-330) as supplemented by
Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5) (construction contracts
awarded by grantees and subgrantees in excess of $2,000, and in excess
of $2,500 for other contracts which involve the employment of mechanics
or laborers).
(7) Notice of awarding agency requirements and regulations
pertaining to reporting.
(8) Notice of awarding agency requirements and regulations
pertaining to patent rights with respect to any discovery or invention
which arises or is developed in the course of or under such contract.
(9) Awarding agency requirements and regulations pertaining to
copyrights and rights in data.
(10) Access by the grantee, the subgrantee, the Federal grantor
agency, the Comptroller General of the United States, or any of their
duly authorized representatives to any books, documents, papers, and
records of the contractor which are directly pertinent to that specific
contract for the purpose of making audit, examination, excerpts, and
transcriptions.
(11) Retention of all required records for three years after
grantees or subgrantees make final payments and all other pending
matters are closed.
(12) Compliance with all applicable standards, orders, or
requirements issued under section 306 of the Clear Air Act (42 U.S.C.
1857(h)), section 508 of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1368),
Executive Order 11738 (3 CFR, 1971-1975 Comp., p. 799), and
Environmental Protection Agency regulations (40 CFR part 15)
(contracts, subcontracts, and subgrants of amounts in excess of
$100,000).
(13) Mandatory standards and policies relating to energy efficiency
which are contained in the State energy conservation plan issued in
compliance with the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (42 U.S.C. 6201
et seq.).
Sec. 2541.370 Subgrants.
(a) States. States shall follow State law and procedures when
awarding and administering subgrants (whether on a cost reimbursement
or fixed amount basis) of financial assistance to local and Indian
tribal governments. States shall:
(1) Ensure that every subgrant includes any clauses required by
Federal statute and executive orders and their implementing
regulations;
(2) Ensure that subgrantees are aware of requirements imposed upon
them by Federal statute and regulation;
(3) Ensure that a provision for compliance with Sec. 2541.400 is
placed in every cost reimbursement subgrant; and
(4) Conform any advances of grant funds to subgrantees
substantially to the same standards of timing and amount that apply to
cash advances by Federal agencies.
(b) All other grantees. All other grantees shall follow the
provisions of this part which are applicable to awarding agencies when
awarding and administering subgrants (whether on a cost reimbursement
or fixed amount basis) of financial assistance to local and Indian
tribal governments. Grantees shall:
(1) Ensure that every subgrant includes a provision for compliance
with this part;
(2) Ensure that every subgrant includes any clauses required by
Federal statute and executive orders and their implementing
regulations; and
(3) Ensure that subgrantees are aware of requirements imposed upon
them by Federal statutes and regulations.
(c) Exceptions. By their own terms, certain provisions of this part
do not apply to the award and administration of subgrants:
(1) Sec. 2541.100;
(2) Sec. 2541.110;
(3) The letter-of-credit procedures specified in Treasury
Regulations at 31 CFR part 205, cited in Sec. 2541.210; and
(4) Sec. 2541.500.
Subpart E--Reports, Records, Retention and Enforcment
Sec. 2541.400 Monitoring and reporting program performance.
(a) Monitoring by grantees. Grantees are responsible for managing
the day-to-day operations of grant and subgrant supported activities.
Grantees must monitor grant and subgrant supported activities to assure
compliance with applicable Federal requirements and that performance
goals are being achieved. Grantee monitoring must cover each program,
function or activity.
(b) Nonconstruction performance reports. The Federal agency may, if
it decides that performance information available from subsequent
applications contains sufficient information to meet its programmatic
needs, require the grantee to submit a performance report only upon
expiration or termination of grant support. Unless waived by the
Federal agency this report will be due on the same date as the final
Financial Status Report.
(1) Grantees shall submit annual performance reports unless the
awarding agency requires quarterly or semi-annual reports. However,
performance reports will not be required more frequently than
quarterly. Annual reports shall be due 90 days after the grant year,
quarterly or semi-annual reports shall be due 30 days after the
reporting period. The final performance report will be due 90 days
after the expiration or termination of grant support. If a justified
request is submitted by a grantee, the Federal agency may extend the
due date for any performance report. Additionally, requirements for
unnecessary performance reports may be waived by the Federal agency.
(2) Performance reports will contain, for each grant, brief
information on the following:
(i) A comparison of actual accomplishments to the objectives
established for the period. Where the output of the project can be
quantified, a computation of the cost per unit of output may be
required if that information will be useful.
(ii) The reasons for slippage if established objectives were not
met.
(iii) Additional pertinent information including, when appropriate,
analysis and explanation of cost overruns or high unit costs.
(3) Grantees will not be required to submit more than the original
and two copies of performance reports.
(4) Grantees will adhere to the standards in this section in
prescribing performance reporting requirements for subgrantees.
(c) Construction performance reports. For the most part, on-site
technical inspections and certified percentage-of-completion data are
relied on heavily by Federal agencies to monitor progress under
construction grants and subgrants. The Federal agency will require
additional formal performance reports only when considered necessary,
and never more frequently than quarterly.
(d) Significant developments. Events may occur between the
scheduled performance reporting dates which have significant impact
upon the grant or subgrant supported activity. In such cases, the
grantee must inform the Federal agency as soon as the following types
of conditions become known:
(1) Problems, delays, or adverse conditions which will materially
impair the ability to meet the objective of the award. This disclosure
must include a statement of the action taken, or contemplated, and any
assistance needed to resolve the situation.
(2) Favorable developments which enable meeting time schedules and
objectives sooner or at less cost than anticipated or producing more
beneficial results than originally planned.
(e) Site visits. Federal agencies may make site visits as warranted
by program needs.
(f) Waivers, extensions. (1) Federal agencies may waive any
performance report required by this part if not needed.
(2) The grantee may waive any performance report from a subgrantee
when not needed. The grantee may extend the due date for any
performance report from a subgrantee if the grantee will still be able
to meet its performance reporting obligations to the Federal agency.
Sec. 2541.410 Financial reporting.
(a) General.--(1) Except as provided in paragraphs (a) (2) and (5)
of this section, grantees will use only the forms specified in
paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section, and such supplementary or
other forms as may from time to time be authorized by OMB, for:
(i) Submitting financial reports to Federal agencies; or
(ii) Requesting advances or reimbursements when letters of credit
are not used.
(2) Grantees need not apply the forms prescribed in this section in
dealing with their subgrantees. However, grantees shall not impose more
burdensome requirements on subgrantees.
(3) Grantees shall follow all applicable standard and supplemental
Federal agency instructions approved by OMB to the extent required
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 for use in connection with
forms specified in paragraphs (b) through (e) of this section. Federal
agencies may issue substantive supplementary instructions only with the
approval of OMB. Federal agencies may shade out or instruct the grantee
to disregard any line item that the Federal agency finds unnecessary
for its decision making purposes.
(4) Grantees will not be required to submit more than the original
and two copies of forms required under this part.
(5) Federal agencies may provide computer outputs to grantees to
expedite or contribute to the accuracy of reporting. Federal agencies
may accept the required information from grantees in machine usable
format or computer printouts instead of prescribed forms.
(6) Federal agencies may waive any report required by this section
if not needed.
(7) Federal agencies may extend the due date of any financial
report upon receiving a justified request from a grantee.
(b) Financial Status Report.--(1) Form. Grantees will use Standard
Form 269 or 269A, Financial Status Report, to report the status of
funds for all nonconstruction grants and for construction grants when
required in accordance with paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this section.
(2) Accounting basis. Each grantee will report program outlays and
program income on a cash or accrual basis as prescribed by the awarding
agency. If the Federal agency requires accrual information and the
grantee's accounting records are not normally kept on the accrual
basis, the grantee shall not be required to convert its accounting
system but shall develop such accrual information through an analysis
of the documentation on hand.
(3) Frequency. The Federal agency may prescribe the frequency of
the report for each project or program. However, the report will not be
required more frequently than quarterly. If the Federal agency does not
specify the frequency of the report, it will be submitted annually. A
final report will be required upon expiration or termination of grant
support.
(4) Due date. When reports are required on a quarterly or
semiannual basis, they will be due 30 days after the reporting period.
When required on an annual basis, they will be due 90 days after the
grant year. Final reports will be due 90 days after the expiration or
termination of grant support.
(c) Federal Cash Transactions Report.--(1) Form. (i) For grants
paid by letter or credit, Treasury check advances or electronic
transfer of funds, the grantee will submit the Standard Form 272,
Federal Cash Transactions Report, and when necessary, its continuation
sheet, Standard Form 272a, unless the terms of the award exempt the
grantee from this requirement.
(ii) These reports will be used by the Federal agency to monitor
cash advanced to grantees and to obtain disbursement or outlay
information for each grant from grantees. The format of the report may
be adapted as appropriate when reporting is to be accomplished with the
assistance of automatic data processing equipment provided that the
information to be submitted is not changed in substance.
(2) Forecasts of Federal cash requirements. Forecasts of Federal
cash requirements may be required in the ``Remarks'' section of the
report.
(3) Cash in hands of subgrantees. When considered necessary and
feasible by the Federal agency, grantees may be required to report the
amount of cash advances in excess of three days' needs in the hands of
their subgrantees or contractors and to provide short narrative
explanations of actions taken by the grantee to reduce the excess
balances.
(4) Frequency and due date. Grantees must submit the report no
later than 15 working days following the end of each quarter. However,
where an advance either by letter of credit or electronic transfer of
funds is authorized at an annualized rate of one million dollars or
more, the Federal agency may require the report to be submitted within
15 working days following the end of each month.
(d) Request for advance or reimbursement.--(1) Advance payments.
Requests for Treasury check advance payments will be submitted on
Standard Form 270, Request for Advance or Reimbursement. (This form
will not be used for drawdowns under a letter of credit, electronic
funds transfer or when Treasury check advance payments are made to the
grantee automatically on a predetermined basis.)
(2) Reimbursements. Requests for reimbursement under
nonconstruction grants will also be submitted on Standard Form 270.
(For reimbursement requests under construction grants, see paragraph
(e)(1) of this section.)
(3) The frequency for submitting payment requests is treated in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(e) Outlay report and request for reimbursement for construction
programs.--(1) Grants that support construction activities paid by
reimbursement method. (i) Requests for reimbursement under construction
grants will be submitted on Standard Form 271, Outlay Report and
Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs. Federal agencies
may, however, prescribe the Request for Advance or Reimbursement form,
specified in paragraph (d) of this section, instead of this form.
(ii) The frequency for submitting reimbursement requests is treated
in paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(2) Grants that support construction activities paid by letter of
credit, electronic funds transfer or Treasury check advance. (i) When a
construction grant is paid by letter of credit, electronic funds
transfer or Treasury check advances, the grantee will report its
outlays to the Federal agency using Standard Form 271, Outlay Report
and Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs. The Federal
agency will provide any necessary special instruction. However,
frequency and due date shall be governed by paragraphs (b) (3) and (4)
of this section.
(ii) When a construction grant is paid by Treasury check advances
based on periodic requests from the grantee, the advances will be
requested on the form specified in paragraph (d) of this section.
(iii) The Federal agency may substitute the Financial Status Report
specified in paragraph (b) of this section for the Outlay Report and
Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs.
(3) Accounting basis. The accounting basis for the Outlay Report
and Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs shall be
governed by paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
Sec. 2541.420 Retention and access requirements for records.
(a) Applicability. (1) This section applies to all financial and
programmatic records, supporting documents, statistical records, and
other records of grantees or subgrantees which are:
(i) Required to be maintained by the terms of this part, program
regulations or the grant agreement; or
(ii) Otherwise reasonably considered as pertinent to program
regulations or the grant agreement.
(2) This section does not apply to records maintained by
contractors or subcontractors. For a requirement to place a provision
concerning records in certain kinds of contracts, see
Sec. 2541.360(i)(10).
(b) Length of retention period. (1) Except as otherwise provided,
records must be retained for three years from the starting date
specified in paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) If any litigation, claim, negotiation, audit or other action
involving the records has been started before the expiration of the 3-
year period, the records must be retained until completion of the
action and resolution of all issues which arise from it, or until the
end of the regular 3-year period, whichever is later.
(3) To avoid duplicate recordkeeping, awarding agencies may make
special arrangements with grantees and subgrantees to retain any
records which are continuously needed for joint use. The awarding
agency will request transfer of records to its custody when it
determines that the records possess long-term retention value. When the
records are transferred to or maintained by the Federal agency, the 3-
year retention requirement is not applicable to the grantee or
subgrantee.
(c) Starting date of retention period.--(1) General. When grant
support is continued or renewed at annual or other intervals, the
retention period for the records of each funding period starts on the
day the grantee or subgrantee submits to the awarding agency its single
or last expenditure report for that period. However, if grant support
is continued or renewed quarterly, the retention period for each year's
records starts on the day the grantee submits its expenditure report
for the last quarter of the Federal fiscal year. In all other cases,
the retention period starts on the day the grantee submits its final
expenditure report. If an expenditure report has been waived, the
retention period starts on the day the report would have been due.
(2) Real property and equipment records. The retention period for
real property and equipment records starts from the date of the
disposition or replacement or transfer at the direction of the awarding
agency.
(3) Records for income transactions after grant or subgrant
support. In some cases grantees must report income after the period of
grant support. Where there is such a requirement, the retention period
for the records pertaining to the earning of the income starts from the
end of the grantee's fiscal year in which the income is earned.
(4) Indirect cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, etc. This
paragraph applies to the following types of documents, and their
supporting records: indirect cost rate computations or proposals, cost
allocation plans, and any similar accounting computations of the rate
at which a particular group of costs is chargeable (such as computer
usage charge back rates or composite fringe benefit rates).
(i) If submitted for negotiation. If the proposal, plan, or other
computation is required to be submitted to the Federal Government (or
to the grantee) to form the basis for negotiation of the rate, then the
3-year retention period for its supporting records starts from the date
of such submission.
(ii) If not submitted for negotiation. If the proposal, plan, or
other computation is not required to be submitted to the Federal
Government (or to the grantee) for negotiation purposes, then the 3-
year retention period for the proposal plan, or computation and its
supporting records starts from end of the fiscal year (or other
accounting period) covered by the proposal, plan, or other computation.
(d) Substitution of microfilm. Copies made by microfilming,
photocopying, or similar methods may be substituted for the original
records.
(e) Access to records.--(1) Records of grantees and subgrantees.
The awarding agency and the Comptroller General of the United States,
or any of their authorized representatives, shall have the right of
access to any pertinent books, documents, papers, or other records of
grantees and subgrantees which are pertinent to the grant, in order to
make audits, examinations, excerpts, and transcripts.
(2) Expiration of right of access. The rights of access in this
section must not be limited to the required retention period but shall
last as long as the records are retained.
(f) Restrictions on public access. The Federal Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) does not apply to records. Unless
required by Federal, State, or local law, grantees and subgrantees are
not required to permit public access to their records.
Sec. 2541.430 Enforcement.
(a) Remedies for noncompliance. If a grantee or subgrantee
materially fails to comply with any term of an award, whether stated in
a Federal statute or regulation, an assurance, in a State plan or
application, a notice of award, or elsewhere, the awarding agency may
take one or more of the following actions, as appropriate in the
circumstances:
(1) Temporarily withhold cash payments pending correction of the
deficiency by the grantee or subgrantee or more severe enforcement
action by the awarding agency;
(2) Disallow (that is, deny both use of funds and matching credit
for) all or part of the cost of the activity or action not in
compliance;
(3) Wholly or partly suspend or terminate the current award for the
grantee's or subgrantee's program;
(4) Withhold further awards for the program; or
(5) Take other remedies that may be legally available.
(b) Hearings, appeals. In taking an enforcement action, the
awarding agency will provide the grantee or subgrantee an opportunity
for such hearing, appeal, or other administrative proceeding to which
the grantee or subgrantee is entitled under any statute or regulation
applicable to the action involved.
(c) Effects of suspension and termination. Costs of grantee or
subgrantee resulting from obligations incurred by the grantee or
subgrantee during a suspension or after termination of an award are not
allowable unless the awarding agency expressly authorizes them in the
notice of suspension or termination or subsequently. Other grantee or
subgrantee costs during suspension or after termination which are
necessary and not reasonably avoidable are allowable if:
(1) The costs result from obligations which were properly incurred
by the grantee or subgrantee before the effective date of suspension or
termination, are not in anticipation of it, and, in the case of a
termination, are noncancellable; and
(2) The costs would be allowable if the award were not suspended or
expired normally at the end of the funding period in which the
termination takes effect.
(d) Relationship to debarment and suspension. The enforcement
remedies identified in this section, including suspension and
termination, do not preclude grantee or subgrantee from being subject
to ``Debarment and Suspension'' under E.O. 12549 (see Sec. 2541.350).
Sec. 2541.440 Termination for convenience.
Except as provided in Sec. 2541.430 awards may be terminated in
whole or in part only as follows:
(a) By the awarding agency with the consent of the grantee or
subgrantee in which case the two parties shall agree upon the
termination conditions, including the effective date and in the case of
partial termination, the portion to be terminated; or
(b) By the grantee or subgrantee upon written notification to the
awarding agency, setting forth the reasons for such termination, the
effective date, and in the case of partial termination, the portion to
be terminated. However, if, in the case of a partial termination, the
awarding agency determines that the remaining portion of the award will
not accomplish the purposes for which the award was made, the awarding
agency may terminate the award in its entirety under either
Sec. 2541.430 or paragraph (a) of this section.
Subpart F--After the Grant Requirement
Sec. 2541.500 Closeout.
(a) General. The Federal agency will close out the award when it
determines that all applicable administrative actions and all required
work of the grant has been completed.
(b) Reports. Within 90 days after the expiration or termination of
the grant, the grantee must submit all financial, performance, and
other reports required as a condition of the grant. Upon request by the
grantee, Federal agencies may extend this time frame. These may include
but are not limited to:
(1) Final performance or progress report;
(2) Financial Status Report (SF 269) or Outlay Report and Request
for Reimbursement for Construction Programs (SF-271) (as applicable);
(3) Final request for payment (SF-270) (if applicable);
(4) Invention disclosure (if applicable);
(5) Federally-owned property report. In accordance with
Sec. 2541.320(f), a grantee must submit an inventory of all federally
owned property (as distinct from property acquired with grant funds)
for which it is accountable and request disposition instructions from
the Federal agency of property no longer needed.
(c) Cost adjustment. The Federal agency will, within 90 days after
receipt of reports in paragraph (b) of this section, make upward or
downward adjustments to the allowable costs.
(d) Cash adjustments. (1) The Federal agency will make prompt
payment to the grantee for allowable reimbursable costs.
(2) The grantee must immediately refund to the Federal agency any
balance of unobligated (unencumbered) cash advanced that is not
authorized to be retained for use on other grants.
Sec. 2541.510 Later disallowances and adjustments.
The closeout of a grant does not affect:
(a) The Federal agency's right to disallow costs and recover funds
on the basis of a later audit or other review;
(b) The grantee's obligation to return any funds due as a result of
later refunds, corrections, or other transactions;
(c) Records retention as required in Sec. 2541.420;
(d) Property management requirements in Secs. 2541.3120 and
2541.320; and
(e) Audit requirements in Sec. 2541.410.
Sec. 2541.520 Collection of amounts due.
(a) Any funds paid to a grantee in excess of the amount to which
the grantee is finally determined to be entitled under the terms of the
award constitute a debt to the Federal Government. If not paid within a
reasonable period after demand, the Federal agency may reduce the debt
by:
(1) Making an administrative offset against other requests for
reimbursements;
(2) Withholding advance payments otherwise due to the grantee; or
(3) Other action permitted by law.
(b) Except where otherwise provided by statutes or regulations, the
Federal agency will charge interest on an overdue debt in accordance
with the Federal Claims Collection Standards (4 CFR Ch. II). The date
from which interest is computed is not extended by litigation or the
filing of any form of appeal.
PART 2542--GOVERNMENTWIDE DEBARMENT AND SUSPENSION (NONPROCUREMENT)
AND GOVERNMENTWIDE REQUIREMENTS FOR DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE (GRANTS)
Subpart A--General
Sec.
2542.10 Purpose.
2542.20 Definitions.
2542.30 Coverage.
2542.40 Policy.
Subpart B--Effect of Action
2542.100 Debarment or suspension.
2542.110 Ineligible persons.
2542.120 Voluntary exclusion.
2542.130 Exception provision.
2542.140 Continuation of covered transactions.
2542.150 Failure to adhere to restrictions.
Subpart C--Debarment
2542.200 General.
2542.210 Causes for debarment.
2542.220 Procedures.
2542.230 Investigation and referral.
2542.240 Notice of proposed debarment.
2542.250 Opportunity to contest proposed debarment.
2542.260 Debarring officials decision.
2542.270 Settlement and voluntary exclusion.
2542.280 Period of debarment.
2542.290 Scope of debarment.
Subpart D--Suspension
2542.300 General.
2542.310 Causes for suspension.
2542.320 Procedures.
2542.330 Notice of suspension.
2542.340 Opportuntiy to contest suspension.
2542.350 Suspending official's decision.
2542.360 Period of suspension.
2542.370 Scope of suspension.
Subpart E--Responsibilities of GSA, Agency and Participants
2542.400 GSA responsibilities.
2542.410 Corporation responsibilities.
2542.420 Participants' responsibilities.
Subpart F--Drug-Free Workplace Requirements (Grants)
2542.500 Purpose.
2542.510 Definitions.
2542.520 Coverage.
2542.530 Grounds for suspension of payments, suspension or
termination of grants, or suspension or debarment.
2542.540 Effect of violation.
2542.550 Exception provision.
2542.560 Certification requirements and procedures.
2542.570 Reporting of and employee sanctions for convictions of
criminal drug offenses.
Appendix A to Part 2542--Certification Regarding Debarment,
Suspension, and other Responsibility Matters--Primary Covered
Transactions
Appendix B to Part 2542--Certification Regarding Debarment,
Suspension, Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tiered
Covered Transactions
Appendix C to Part 2542--Certification Regarding Drug-Free Workplace
Requirements
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 4951 et seq., 5060 and 12644; E.O. 12549,
51 FR 6370, February 21, 1986 (3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189).
Cross Reference: See also Office of Management and Budget notice
published at 55 FR 21679, May 25, 1990, and the governmentwide
common rule published at 53 FR 19161, May 26, 1988.
Subpart A--General
Sec. 2542.10 Purpose.
(a) Executive Order 12549 (3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189) provides
that, to the extent permitted by law, Executive departments and
agencies shall participate in a governmentwide system for
nonprocurement debarment and suspension. A person who is debarred or
suspended shall be excluded from Federal financial and nonfinancial
assistance and benefits under Federal programs and activities.
Debarment or suspension of a participant in a program by one agency
shall have governmentwide effect.
(b) The regulations in this part implement section 3 of Executive
Order 12549 and the guidelines promulgated by the Office of Management
and Budget under section 6 of the Executive Order by:
(1) Prescribing the programs and activities that are covered by the
governmentwide system;
(2) Prescribing the governmentwide criteria and governmentwide
minimum due process procedures that each agency shall use;
(3) Providing for the listing of debarred and suspended
participants, participants declared ineligible (see definition of
``ineligible'' in Sec. 2542.20), and participants who have voluntarily
excluded themselves from participation in covered transactions;
(4) Setting forth the consequences of a debarment, suspension,
determination of ineligibility, or voluntary exclusion; and
(5) Offering such other guidance as necessary for the effective
implementation and administration of the governmentwide system.
(c) Although the regulations in this part cover the listing of
ineligible participants and the effect of such listing, they do not
prescribe policies and procedures governing declarations of
ineligibility.
Sec. 2542.20 Definitions.
Adequate evidence. The term adequate evidence means information
sufficient to support the reasonable belief that a particular act or
omission has occurred.
Affiliate. The term affiliate means persons are affiliates of each
other if, directly or indirectly, either one controls or has the power
to control the other, or, a third person controls or has the power to
control both. Indicia of control include, but are not limited to:
Interlocking management or ownership, identity of interests among
family members, shared facilities and equipment, common use of
employees, or a business entity organized following the suspension or
debarment of a person which has the same or similar management,
ownership, or principal employees as the suspended, debarred,
ineligible, or voluntarily excluded person.
Agency. The term agency means any executive department, military
department or defense agency or other agency of the executive branch,
excluding the independent regulatory agencies.
Civil judgment. The term civil judgment means the disposition of a
civil action by any court of competent jurisdiction, whether entered by
verdict, decision, settlement, stipulation, or otherwise creating a
civil liability for the wrongful acts complained of; or a final
determination of liability under the Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act
of 1988 (31 U.S.C. 3801-12).
Conviction. The term conviction means a judgment of conviction of a
criminal offense by any court of competent jurisdiction, whether
entered upon a verdict or a plea, including a plea of nolo contendere.
Debarment. The term debarment means an action taken by a debarring
official in accordance with these regulations to exclude a person from
participating in covered transactions. A person so excluded is
``debarred.''
Debarring official. The term debarring official means an official
authorized to impose debarment. The debarring official is either:
(1) The agency head; or
(2) An official designated by the agency head.
Indictment. Indictment for a criminal offense. An information or
other filing by competent authority charging a criminal offense shall
be given the same effect as an indictment.
Ineligible. The term ineligible means excluded from participation
in Federal nonprocurement programs pursuant to a determination of
ineligibility under statutory, executive order, or regulatory
authority, other than Executive Order 12549 and its agency implementing
regulations; for example, excluded pursuant to the Davis-Bacon Act and
its implementing regulations, the equal employment opportunity acts and
executive orders, or the environmental protection acts and executive
orders. A person is ineligible where the determination of ineligibility
affects such person's eligibility to participate in more than one
covered transaction.
Legal proceedings. The term legal proceedings means any criminal
proceeding or any civil judicial proceeding to which the Federal
Government or a State or local government or quasi-governmental
authority is a party. The term includes appeals from such proceedings.
Nonprocurement list. The term nonprocurement list means a portion
of the List of Parties Excluded from Federal Procurement or
Nonprocurement Programs compiled, maintained and distributed by the
General Services Administration (GSA) containing the names and other
information about persons who have been debarred, suspended, or
voluntarily excluded under Executive Order 12549 and this part, and
those who have been determined to be ineligible.
Notice. The term notice means a written communication served in
person or sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, or its
equivalent, to the last known address of a party, its identified
counsel, its agent for service of process, or any partner, officer,
director, owner, or joint venturer of the party. Notice, if
undeliverable, shall be considered to have been received by the
addressee five days after being properly sent to the last address known
by the agency.
Participant. The term participant means any person who submits a
proposal for, enters into, or reasonably may be expected to enter into
a covered transaction. This term also includes any person who acts on
behalf of or is authorized to commit a participant in a covered
transaction as an agent or representative of another participant.
Person. The term person means any individual, corporation,
partnership, association, unit of government or legal entity, however
organized, except: Foreign governments or foreign governmental
entities, public international organizations, foreign government owned
(in whole or in part) or controlled entities, and entities consisting
wholly or partially of foreign governments or foreign governmental
entities.
Preponderance of the evidence. The term preponderance of the
evidence means proof by information that, compared with that opposing
it, leads to the conclusion that the fact at issue is more probably
true than not.
Principal. The term principal means an officer, director, owner,
partner, key employee, or other person within a participant with
primary management or supervisory responsibilities; or a person who has
a critical influence on or substantive control over a covered
transaction, whether or not employed by the participant. Persons who
have a critical influence on or substantive control over a covered
transaction are principal investigators.
Proposal. The term proposal means a solicited or unsolicited bid,
application, request, invitation to consider or similar communication
by or on behalf of a person seeking to participate or to receive a
benefit, directly or indirectly, in or under a covered transaction.
Respondent. The term respondent means a person against whom a
debarment or suspension action has been initiated.
State. The term state means any of the States of the United States,
the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any agency of a State,
exclusive of institutions of higher education, hospitals, and units of
local government. A State instrumentality will be considered part of
the State government if it has a written determination from a State
government that such State considers that instrumentality to be an
agency of the State government.
Suspending official. The term suspending official means an official
authorized to impose suspension. The suspending official is either:
(1) The agency head; or
(2) An official designated by the agency head.
Suspension. The term suspension means an action taken by a
suspending official in accordance with these regulations that
immediately excludes a person from participating in covered
transactions for a temporary period, pending completion of an
investigation and such legal, debarment, or Program Fraud Civil
Remedies Act proceedings as may ensue. A person so excluded is
``suspended.''
Voluntary exclusion (or) voluntarily excluded. The term voluntary
exclusion (or) voluntarily excluded means a status of nonparticipation
or limited participation in covered transactions assumed by a person
pursuant to the terms of a settlement.
Sec. 2542.30 Coverage.
(a) The regulations in this part apply to all persons who have
participated, are currently participating or may reasonably be expected
to participate in transactions under Federal nonprocurement programs.
For purposes of the regulations in this part such transactions will be
referred to as ``covered transactions.''
(1) Covered transaction. For purposes of the regulations in this
part, a covered transaction is a primary covered transaction or a lower
tier covered transaction. Covered transactions at any tier need not
involve the transfer of Federal funds.
(i) Primary covered transaction. Except as noted in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, a primary covered transaction is any
nonprocurement transaction between an agency and a person, regardless
of type, including: Grants, cooperative agreements, scholarships,
fellowships, contracts of assistance, loans, loan guarantees,
subsidies, insurance, payments for specified use, donation agreements
and any other nonprocurement transactions between a Federal agency and
a person. Primary covered transactions also include those transactions
specially designated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development in such agency's regulations governing debarment and
suspension.
(ii) Lower tier covered transaction. A lower tier covered
transaction is:
(A) Any transaction between a participant and a person other than a
procurement contract for goods or services, regardless of type, under a
primary covered transaction.
(B) Any procurement contract for goods or services between a
participant and a person, regardless of type, expected to equal or
exceed the Federal procurement small purchase threshold fixed at 10
U.S.C. 2304(g) and 41 U.S.C. 253(g) (currently $25,000) under a primary
covered transaction.
(C) Any procurement contract for goods or services between a
participant and a person under a covered transaction, regardless of
amount, under which that person will have a critical influence on or
substantive control over that covered transaction. Such persons are:
(1) Principal investigators.
(2) Providers of federally-required audit services.
(3) Exceptions. The following transactions are not covered:
(i) Statutory entitlements or mandatory awards (but not subtier
awards thereunder which are not themselves mandatory), including
deposited funds insured by the Federal Government;
(ii) Direct awards to foreign governments or public international
organizations, or transactions with foreign governments or foreign
governmental entities, public international organizations, foreign
government owned (in whole or in part) or controlled entities, entities
consisting wholly or partially of foreign governments or foreign
governmental entities;
(iii) Benefits to an individual as a personal entitlement without
regard to the individual's present responsibility (but benefits
received in an individual's business capacity are not excepted);
(iv) Federal employment;
(v) Transactions pursuant to national or agency-recognized
emergencies or disasters;
(vi) Incidental benefits derived from ordinary governmental
operations; and
(vii) Other transactions where the application of these regulations
would be prohibited by law.
(b) Relationship to other sections. This section describes the
types of transactions to which a debarment or suspension under this
part will apply. Subpart B, ``Effect of Action,'' Sec. 2542.50,
``Debarment or suspension,'' sets forth the consequences of a debarment
or suspension. Those consequences would obtain only with respect to
participants and principals in the covered transactions and activities
described in Sec. 2542.30(a). Sections 2542.200 ``Scope of debarment,''
and 2542.280, ``Scope of suspension,'' govern the extent to which a
specific participant or organizational elements of a participant would
be automatically included within a debarment or suspension action, and
the conditions under which affiliates or persons associated with a
participant may also be brought within the scope of the action.
(c) Relationship to Federal procurement activities. Debarment and
suspension of Federal procurement contractors and subcontractors under
Federal procurement contracts are covered by the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR), 48 CFR part 9, subpart 9.4.
Sec. 2542.40 Policy.
(a) In order to protect the public interest, it is the policy of
the Federal Government to conduct business only with responsible
persons. Debarment and suspension are discretionary actions that, taken
in accordance with Executive Order 12549 and this part, are appropriate
means to implement this policy.
(b) Debarment and suspension are serious actions which shall be
used only in the public interest and for the Federal Government's
protection and not for purposes of punishment. Agencies may impose
debarment or suspension for the causes and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in this part.
(c) When more than one agency has an interest in the proposed
debarment or suspension of a person, consideration shall be given to
designating one agency as the lead agency for making the decision.
Agencies are encouraged to establish methods and procedures for
coordinating their debarment or suspension actions.
Subpart B--Effect of Action
Sec. 2542.100 Debarment or suspension.
(a) Primary covered transactions. Except to the extent prohibited
by law, persons who are debarred or suspended shall be excluded from
primary covered transactions as either participants or principals
throughout the executive branch of the Federal Government for the
period of their debarment or suspension. Accordingly, no agency shall
enter into primary covered transactions with such debarred or suspended
persons during such period, except as permitted pursuant to
Sec. 2542.130.
(b) Lower tier covered transactions. Except to the extent
prohibited by law, persons who have been debarred or suspended shall be
excluded from participating as either participants or principals in all
lower tier covered transactions (see Sec. 2542.30(a)(1)(ii)) for the
period of their debarment or suspension.
(c) Exceptions. Debarment or suspension does not affect a person's
eligibility for:
(1) Statutory entitlements or mandatory awards (but not subtier
awards thereunder which are not themselves mandatory), including
deposited funds insured by the Federal Government;
(2) Direct awards to foreign governments or public international
organizations, or transactions with foreign governments or foreign
governmental entities, public international organizations, foreign
government owned (in whole or in part) or controlled entities, and
entities consisting wholly or partially of foreign governments or
foreign governmental entities;
(3) Benefits to an individual as a personal entitlement without
regard to the individual's present responsibility (but benefits
received in an individual's business capacity are not excepted);
(4) Federal employment;
(5) Transactions pursuant to national or agency-recognized
emergencies or disasters;
(6) Incidental benefits derived from ordinary governmental
operations; and
(7) Other transactions where the application of this part would be
prohibited by law.
Sec. 2542.110 Ineligible persons.
Persons who are ineligible, as defined in Sec. 2542.20, are
excluded in accordance with the applicable statutory, executive order,
or regulatory authority.
Sec. 2542.120 Voluntary exclusion.
Persons who accept voluntary exclusions under Sec. 2542.270 are
excluded in accordance with the terms of their settlements. Corporation
shall, and participants may, contact the original action agency to
ascertain the extent of the exclusion.
Sec. 2542.130 Exception provision.
The Corporation may grant an exception permitting a debarred,
suspended, or voluntarily excluded person to participate in a
particular covered transaction upon a written determination by the
agency head or an authorized designee stating the reason(s) for
deviating from the Presidential policy established by Executive Order
12549 and Sec. 2542.100. However, in accordance with the President's
stated intention in the Executive Order, exceptions shall be granted
only infrequently. Exceptions shall be reported in accordance with
Sec. 2542.410(a).
Sec. 2542.140 Continuation of covered transactions.
(a) Notwithstanding the debarment, suspension, determination of
ineligibility, or voluntary exclusion of any person by an agency,
agencies and participants may continue covered transactions in
existence at the time the person was debarred, suspended, declared
ineligible, or voluntarily excluded. A decision as to the type of
termination action, if any, to be taken should be made only after
thorough review to ensure the propriety of the proposed action.
(b) Agencies and participants shall not renew or extend covered
transactions (other than no-cost time extensions) with any person who
is debarred, suspended, ineligible, or voluntarily excluded, except as
provided in Sec. 2542.130.
Sec. 2542.150 Failure to adhere to restrictions.
Except as permitted under Sec. 2542.130 or Sec. 2542.140, a
participant shall not knowingly do business under a covered transaction
with a person who is debarred or suspended, or with a person who is
ineligible for or voluntarily excluded from that covered transaction.
Violation of this restriction may result in disallowance of costs,
annulment or termination of award, issuance of a stop work order,
debarment or suspension, or other remedies, as appropriate. A
participant may rely upon the certification of a prospective
participant in a lower tier covered transaction that it and its
principals are not debarred, suspended, ineligible, or voluntarily
excluded from the covered transaction (see Appendix B of this part),
unless it knows that the certification is erroneous. An agency has the
burden of proof that such participant did knowingly do business with
such a person.
Subpart C--Debarment
Sec. 2542.200 General.
The debarring official may debar a person for any of the causes in
Sec. 2542.210, using procedures established in Secs. 2542.220 through
2542.260. The existence of a cause for debarment, however, does not
necessarily require that the person be debarred; the seriousness of the
person's acts or omissions and any mitigating factors shall be
considered in making any debarment decision.
Sec. 2542.210 Causes for debarment.
Debarment may be imposed in accordance with the provisions of
Secs. 2542.200 through 2542.260 for:
(a) Conviction of or civil judgment for:
(1) Commission of fraud or a criminal offense in connection with
obtaining, attempting to obtain, or performing a public or private
agreement or transaction;
(2) Violation of Federal or State antitrust statutes, including
those proscribing price fixing between competitors, allocation of
customers between competitors, and bid rigging;
(3) Commission of embezzlement, theft, forgery, bribery,
falsification or destruction of records, making false statements,
receiving stolen property, making false claims, or obstruction of
justice; or
(4) Commission of any other offense indicating a lack of business
integrity or business honesty that seriously and directly affects the
present responsibility of a person.
(b) Violation of the terms of a public agreement or transaction so
serious as to affect the integrity of an agency program, such as:
(1) A willful failure to perform in accordance with the terms of
one or more public agreements or transactions;
(2) A history of failure to perform or of unsatisfactory
performance of one or more public agreements or transactions; or
(3) A willful violation of a statutory or regulatory provision or
requirement applicable to a public agreement or transaction.
(c) Any of the following causes:
(1) A nonprocurement debarment by any Federal agency taken before
October 1, 1988, the effective date of the Governmentwide debarment and
suspension (nonprocurement) regulations, or a procurement debarment by
any Federal agency taken pursuant to 48 CFR part 9, subpart 9.4;
(2) Knowingly doing business with a debarred, suspended,
ineligible, or voluntarily excluded person, in connection with a
covered transaction, except as permitted in Sec. 2542.130 or
Sec. 2542.140;
(3) Failure to pay a single substantial debt, or a number of
outstanding debts (including disallowed costs and overpayments, but not
including sums owed the Federal Government under the Internal Revenue
Code) owed to any Federal agency or instrumentality, provided the debt
is uncontested by the debtor or, if contested, provided that the
debtor's legal and administrative remedies have been exhausted;
(4) Violation of a material provision of a voluntary exclusion
agreement entered into under Sec. 2542.270 or of any settlement of a
debarment or suspension action; or
(5) Violation of any requirement of subpart F of this part,
relating to providing a drug-free workplace, as set forth in
Sec. 2542.530 of this part.
(d) Any other cause of so serious or compelling a nature that it
affects the present responsibility of a person.
Sec. 2542.220 Procedures.
The Corporation shall process debarment actions as informally as
practicable, consistent with the principles of fundamental fairness,
using the procedures in Secs. 2542.230 through 2542.260.
Sec. 2542.230 Investigation and referral.
Information concerning the existence of a cause for debarment from
any source shall be promptly reported, investigated, and referred, when
appropriate, to the debarring official for consideration. After
consideration, the debarring official may issue a notice of proposed
debarment.
Sec. 2542.240 Notice of proposed debarment.
A debarment proceeding shall be initiated by notice to the
respondent advising:
(a) That debarment is being considered;
(b) Of the reasons for the proposed debarment in terms sufficient
to put the respondent on notice of the conduct or transaction(s) upon
which it is based;
(c) Of the cause(s) relied upon under Sec. 2452.210 for proposing
debarment;
(d) Of the provisions of Secs. 2542.230 through 2542.260, and any
other Corporation procedures, if applicable, governing debarment
decision making; and
(e) Of the potential effect of a debarment.
Sec. 2542.250 Opportunity to contest proposed debarment.
(a) Submission in opposition. Within 30 days after receipt of the
notice of proposed debarment, the respondent may submit, in person, in
writing, or through a representative, information and argument in
opposition to the proposed debarment.
(b) Additional proceedings as to disputed material facts. (1) In
actions not based upon a conviction or civil judgment, if the debarring
official finds that the respondent's submission in opposition raises a
genuine dispute over facts material to the proposed debarment,
respondent(s) shall be afforded an opportunity to appear with a
representative, submit documentary evidence, present witnesses, and
confront any witness the agency presents.
(2) A transcribed record of any additional proceedings shall be
made available at cost to the respondent, upon request, unless the
respondent and the agency, by mutual agreement, waive the requirement
for a transcript.
Sec. 2542.260 Debarring official's decision.
(a) No additional proceedings necessary. In actions based upon a
conviction or civil judgment, or in which there is no genuine dispute
over material facts, the debarring official shall make a decision on
the basis of all the information in the administrative record,
including any submission made by the respondent. The decision shall be
made within 45 days after receipt of any information and argument
submitted by the respondent, unless the debarring official extends this
period for good cause.
(b) Additional proceedings necessary. (1) In actions in which
additional proceedings are necessary to determine disputed material
facts, written findings of fact shall be prepared. The debarring
official shall base the decision on the facts as found, together with
any information and argument submitted by the respondent and any other
information in the administrative record.
(2) The debarring official may refer disputed material facts to
another official for findings of fact. The debarring official may
reject any such findings, in whole or in part, only after specifically
determining them to be arbitrary and capricious or clearly erroneous.
(3) The debarring official's decision shall be made after the
conclusion of the proceedings with respect to disputed facts.
(c) (1) Standard of proof. In any debarment action, the cause for
debarment must be established by a preponderance of the evidence. Where
the proposed debarment is based upon a conviction or civil judgment,
the standard shall be deemed to have been met.
(2) Burden of proof. The burden of proof is on the agency proposing
debarment.
(d) Notice of debarring official's decision. (1) If the debarring
official decides to impose debarment, the respondent shall be given
prompt notice:
(i) Referring to the notice of proposed debarment;
(ii) Specifying the reasons for debarment;
(iii) Stating the period of debarment, including effective dates;
and
(iv) Advising that the debarment is effective for covered
transactions throughout the executive branch of the Federal Government
unless an agency head or an authorized designee makes the determination
referred to in Sec. 2542.130.
(2) If the debarring official decides not to impose debarment, the
respondent shall be given prompt notice of that decision. A decision
not to impose debarment shall be without prejudice to a subsequent
imposition of debarment by any other agency.
Sec. 2542.270 Settlement and voluntary exclusion.
(a) When in the best interest of the Government, the Corporation
may, at any time, settle a debarment or suspension action.
(b) If a participant and the agency agree to a voluntary exclusion
of the participant, such voluntary exclusion shall be entered on the
Nonprocurement List (see subpart E of this part).
Sec. 2542.280 Period of debarment.
(a) Debarment shall be for a period commensurate with the
seriousness of the cause(s). If a suspension precedes a debarment, the
suspension period shall be considered in determining the debarment
period.
(1) Debarment for causes other than those related to a violation of
the requirements of subpart F of this part generally should not exceed
three years. Where circumstances warrant, a longer period of debarment
may be imposed.
(2) In the case of a debarment for a violation of the requirements
of subpart F of this part (see Sec. 2542.210(c)(5)), the period of
debarment shall not exceed five years.
(b) The debarring official may extend an existing debarment for an
additional period, if that official determines that an extension is
necessary to protect the public interest. However, a debarment may not
be extended solely on the basis of the facts and circumstances upon
which the initial debarment action was based. If debarment for an
additional period is determined to be necessary, the procedures of
Secs. 2542.230 through 2542.260 shall be followed to extend the
debarment.
(c) The respondent may request the debarring official to reverse
the debarment decision or to reduce the period or scope of debarment.
Such a request shall be in writing and supported by documentation. The
debarring official may grant such a request for reasons including, but
not limited to:
(1) Newly discovered material evidence;
(2) Reversal of the conviction or civil judgment upon which the
debarment was based;
(3) Bona fide change in ownership or management;
(4) Elimination of other causes for which the debarment was
imposed; or
(5) Other reasons the debarring official deems appropriate.
Sec. 2542.290 Scope of debarment.
(a) Scope in general. (1) Debarment of a person under this part
constitutes debarment of all its divisions and other organizational
elements from all covered transactions, unless the debarment decision
is limited by its terms to one or more specifically identified
individuals, divisions or other organizational elements or to specific
types of transactions.
(2) The debarment action may include any affiliate of the
participant that is specifically named and given notice of the proposed
debarment and an opportunity to respond (see Secs. 2542.230 through
2542.260).
(b) Imputing conduct. For purposes of determining the scope of
debarment, conduct may be imputed as follows:
(1) Conduct imputed to participant. The fraudulent, criminal or
other seriously improper conduct of any officer, director, shareholder,
partner, employee, or other individual associated with a participant
may be imputed to the participant when the conduct occurred in
connection with the individual's performance of duties for or on behalf
of the participant, or with the participant's knowledge, approval, or
acquiescence. The participant's acceptance of the benefits derived from
the conduct shall be evidence of such knowledge, approval, or
acquiescence.
(2) Conduct imputed to individuals associated with participant. The
fraudulent, criminal, or other seriously improper conduct of a
participant may be imputed to any officer, director, shareholder,
partner, employee, or other individual associated with the participant
who participated in, knew of, or had reason to know of the
participant's conduct.
(3) Conduct of one participant imputed to other participants in a
joint venture. The fraudulent, criminal, or other seriously improper
conduct of one participant in a joint venture, grant pursuant to a
joint application, or similar arrangement may be imputed to other
participants if the conduct occurred for or on behalf of the joint
venture, grant pursuant to a joint application, or similar arrangement
or with the knowledge, approval, or acquiescence of these participants.
Acceptance of the benefits derived from the conduct shall be evidence
of such knowledge, approval, or acquiescence.
Subpart D--Suspension
Sec. 2542.300 General.
(a) The suspending official may suspend a person for any of the
causes in Sec. 2542.310 using procedures established in Secs. 2542.320
through 2542.350.
(b) Suspension is a serious action to be imposed only when:
(1) There exists adequate evidence of one or more of the causes set
out in Sec. 2542.320; and
(2) Immediate action is necessary to protect the public interest.
(c) In assessing the adequacy of the evidence, the agency should
consider how much information is available, how credible it is given
the circumstances, whether or not important allegations are
corroborated, and what inferences can reasonably be drawn as a result.
This assessment should include an examination of basic documents such
as grants, cooperative agreements, loan authorizations, and contracts.
Sec. 2542.310 Causes for suspension.
(a) Suspension may be imposed in accordance with the provisions of
Secs. 2542.300 through 2542.350 upon adequate evidence:
(1) To suspect the commission of an offense listed in
Sec. 2542.300(a); or
(2) That a cause for debarment under Sec. 2542.300 may exist.
(b) Indictment shall constitute adequate evidence for purposes of
suspension actions.
Sec. 2542.320 Procedures.
(a) Investigation and referral. Information concerning the
existence of a cause for suspension from any source shall be promptly
reported, investigated, and referred, when appropriate, to the
suspending official for consideration. After consideration, the
suspending official may issue a notice of suspension.
(b) Decisionmaking process. The Corporation shall process
suspension actions as informally as practicable, consistent with
principles of fundamental fairness, using the procedures in
Secs. 2541.330 through 2542.350.
Sec. 2542.330 Notice of suspension.
When a respondent is suspended, notice shall immediately be given:
(a) That suspension has been imposed;
(b) That the suspension is based on an indictment, conviction, or
other adequate evidence that the respondent has committed
irregularities seriously reflecting on the propriety of further Federal
Government dealings with the respondent;
(c) Describing any such irregularities in terms sufficient to put
the respondent on notice without disclosing the Federal Government's
evidence;
(d) Of the cause(s) relied upon under Sec. 2542.310 for imposing
suspension;
(e) That the suspension is for a temporary period pending the
completion of an investigation or ensuing legal, debarment, or Program
Fraud Civil Remedies Act proceedings;
(f) Of the provisions of Secs. 2542.330 through 2542.350 and any
other Corporation procedures, if applicable, governing suspension
decisionmaking; and
(g) Of the effect of the suspension.
Sec. 2542.340 Opportunity to contest suspension.
(a) Submission in opposition. Within 30 days after receipt of the
notice of suspension, the respondent may submit, in person, in writing,
or through a representative, information and argument in opposition to
the suspension.
(b) Additional proceedings as to disputed material facts. (1) If
the suspending official finds that the respondent's submission in
opposition raises a genuine dispute over facts material to the
suspension, respondent(s) shall be afforded an opportunity to appear
with a representative, submit documentary evidence, present witnesses,
and confront any witness the agency presents, unless:
(i) The action is based on an indictment, conviction or civil
judgment; or
(ii) A determination is made, on the basis of Department of Justice
advice, that the substantial interests of the Federal Government in
pending or contemplated legal proceedings based on the same facts as
the suspension would be prejudiced.
(2) A transcribed record of any additional proceedings shall be
prepared and made available at cost to the respondent, upon request,
unless the respondent and the agency, by mutual agreement, waive the
requirement for a transcript.
Sec. 2542.350 Suspending official's decision.
The suspending official may modify or terminate the suspension (for
example, see Sec. 2542.280(c) for reasons for reducing the period or
scope of debatement or may leave it in force. However, a decision to
modify or terminate the suspension shall be without prejudice to the
subsequent imposition of suspension by any agency. The decision shall
be rendered in accordance with the following provisions.
(a) No additional proceedings necessary. In actions: Based on an
indictment, conviction, or civil judgment; in which there is no genuine
dispute over material facts; or in which additional proceedings to
determine disputed material facts have been denied on the basis of
Department of Justice advice, the suspending official shall make a
decision on the basis of all the information in the administrative
record, including any submission made by the respondent. The decision
shall be made within 45 days after receipt of any information and
argument submitted by the respondent, unless the suspending official
extends this period for good cause.
(b) Additional proceedings necessary. (1) In actions in which
additional proceedings are necessary to determine disputed material
facts, written findings of fact shall be prepared. The suspending
official shall base the decision on the facts as found, together with
any information and argument submitted by the respondent and any other
information in the administrative record.
(2) The suspending official may refer matters involving disputed
material facts to another official for findings of fact. The suspending
official may reject any such findings, in whole or in part, only after
specifically determining them to be arbitrary or capricious or clearly
erroneous.
(c) Notice of suspending official's decision. Prompt written notice
of the suspending official's decision shall be sent to the respondent.
Sec. 2542.360 Period of suspension.
(a) Suspension shall be for a temporary period pending the
completion of an investigation or ensuing legal, debarment, or Program
Fraud Civil Remedies Act proceedings, unless terminated sooner by the
suspending official or as provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) If legal or administrative proceedings are not initiated within
12 months after the date of the suspension notice, the suspension shall
be terminated unless an Assistant Attorney General or United States
Attorney requests its extension in writing, in which case it may be
extended for an additional six months. In no event may a suspension
extend beyond 18 months, unless such proceedings have been initiated
within that period.
(c) The suspending official shall notify the Department of Justice
of an impending termination of a suspension, at least 30 days before
the 12-month period expires, to give that Department an opportunity to
request an extension.
Sec. 2542.370 Scope of suspension.
The scope of a suspension is the same as the scope of a debarment
(see Sec. 2542.290) except that the procedures of Secs. 2542.320
through 2542.350 shall be used in imposing a suspension.
Subpart E--Responsibilities of GSA, Agency and Participants
Sec. 2542.400 GSA responsibilities.
(a) In accordance with the OMB guidelines, GSA shall compile,
maintain, and distribute a list of all persons who have been debarred,
suspended, or voluntarily excluded by agencies under Executive Order
12549 and this part, and those who have been determined to be
ineligible.
(b) At a minimum, this list shall indicate:
(1) The names and addresses of all debarred, suspended, ineligible,
and voluntarily excluded persons, in alphabetical order, with cross-
references when more than one name is involved in a single action;
(2) The type of action;
(3) The cause for the action;
(4) The scope of the action;
(5) Any termination date for each listing; and
(6) The agency and name and telephone number of the agency point of
contact for the action.
Sec. 2542.410 Corporation responsibilities.
(a) The agency shall provide GSA with current information
concerning debarments, suspension, determinations of ineligibility, and
voluntary exclusions it has taken. Until February 18, 1989, the agency
shall also provide GSA and OMB with information concerning all
transactions in which the Corporation has granted exceptions under
Sec. 2542.130 permitting participation by debarred, suspended, or
voluntarily excluded persons.
(b) Unless an alternative schedule is agreed to by GSA, the agency
shall advise GSA of the information set forth in Sec. 2542.400(b) and
of the exceptions granted under Sec. 2542.130 within five working days
after taking such actions.
(c) The agency shall direct inquiries concerning listed persons to
the agency that took the action.
(d) Agency officials shall check the Nonprocurement List before
entering covered transactions to determine whether a participant in a
primary transaction is debarred, suspended, ineligible, or voluntarily
excluded.
(e) Agency officials shall check the Nonprocurement List before
approving principals or lower tier participants where agency approval
of the principal or lower tier participant is required under the terms
of the transaction, to determine whether such principals or
participants are debarred, suspended, ineligible, or voluntarily
excluded.
Sec. 2542.420 Participants' responsibilities.
(a) Certification by participants in primary covered transactions.
Each participant shall submit the certification in Appendix A of this
part for it and its principals at the time the participant submits its
proposal in connection with a primary covered transaction, except that
States need only complete such certification as to their principals.
Participants may decide the method and frequency by which they
determine the eligibility of their principals. In addition, each
participant may, but is not required to, check the Nonprocurement List
for its principals. Adverse information on the certification will not
necessarily result in denial of participation. However, the
certification, and any additional information pertaining to the
certification submitted by the participant, shall be considered in the
administration of covered transactions.
(b) Certification by participants in lower tier covered
transactions. (1) Each participant shall require participants in lower
tier covered transactions to include the certification in Appendix B of
this part for it and its principals in any proposal submitted in
connection with such lower tier covered transactions.
(2) A participant may rely upon the certification of a prospective
participant in a lower tier covered transaction that it and its
principals are not debarred, suspended, ineligible, or voluntarily
excluded from the covered transaction by any Federal agency, unless it
knows that the certification is erroneous. Participants may decide the
method and frequency by which they determine the eligibility of their
principals. In addition, a participant may, but is not required to,
check the Nonprocurement List for its principals and for participants.
(c) Changed circumstances regarding certification. A participant
shall provide immediate written notice to Corporation if at any time
the participant learns that its certification was erroneous when
submitted or has become erroneous by reason of changed circumstances.
Participants in lower tier covered transactions shall provide the same
updated notice to the participant to which it submitted its proposals.
Subpart F--Drug-Free Workplace Requirements (Grants)
Sec. 2542.500 Purpose.
(a) The purpose of this subpart is to carry out the Drug-Free
Workplace Act of 1988 (41 U.S.C. 701 et seq.) by requiring that--
(1) A grantee, other than an individual, shall certify to the
agency that it will provide a drug-free workplace;
(2) A grantee who is an individual shall certify to the agency
that, as a condition of the grant, he or she will not engage in the
unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispensing, possession or use of a
controlled substance in conducting any activity with the grant.
(b) Requirements implementing the Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988
for contractors with the agency are found at 48 CFR part 9, subpart
9.4, part 23, subpart 23.5, and part 52, subpart 52.2.
Sec. 2542.510 Definitions.
(a) Except as amended in this section, the definitions of
Sec. 2542.20 apply to this subpart.
(b) For purposes of this subpart--
(1) Controlled substance. The term controlled substance means a
controlled substance in schedules I through V of the Controlled
Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 812), and as further defined by regulation at
21 CFR 1308.11 through 1308.15;
(2) Conviction. The term conviction means a finding of guilt
(including a plea of nolo contendere) or imposition of sentence, or
both, by any judicial body charged with the responsibility to determine
violations of the Federal or State criminal drug statutes;
(3) Criminal drug statute. The term criminal drug statute means a
Federal or non-Federal criminal statute involving the manufacture,
distribution, dispensing, use, or possession of any controlled
substance;
(4) Drug-free workplace. The term drug-free workplace means a site
for the performance of work done in connection with a specific grant at
which employees of the grantee are prohibited from engaging in the
unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispensing, possession, or use of a
controlled substance;
(5) Employee. (i) The term employee means the employee of a grantee
directly engaged in the performance of work under the grant, including:
(A) All direct charge employees;
(B) All indirect charge employees, unless their impact or
involvement is insignificant to the performance of the grant; and
(C) Temporary personnel and consultants who are directly engaged in
the performance of work under the grant and who are on the grantee's
payroll.
(ii) This definition does not include workers not on the payroll of
the grantee (e.g., volunteers, even if used to meet a matching
requirement; consultants or independent contractors not on the payroll;
or employees of subrecipients or subcontractors in covered workplaces);
(6) Federal agency (or agency). The term federal agency (or agency)
means any United States executive department, military department,
government corporation, government controlled corporation, any other
establishment in the executive branch (including the Executive Office
of the President), or any independent regulatory agency;
(7) Grant. The term grant means an award of financial assistance,
including a cooperative agreement, in the form of money, or property in
lieu of money, by a Federal agency directly to a grantee. The term
grant includes block grant and entitlement grant programs, whether or
not exempted from coverage under the grants management government-wide
common rule on uniform administrative requirements for grants and
cooperative agreements. The term does not include technical assistance
that provides services instead of money, or other assistance in the
form of loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, or
direct appropriations; or any veterans' benefits to individuals, i.e.,
any benefit to veterans, their families, or survivors by virtue of the
service of a veteran in the Armed Forces of the United States;
(8) Grantee. The term grantee means a person who applies for or
receives a grant directly from a Federal agency (except another Federal
agency);
(9) Individual. The term individual means a natural person;
(10) State. The term State means any of the States of the United
States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any agency of a State,
exclusive of institutions of higher education, hospitals, and units of
local government. A State instrumentality will be considered part of
the State government if it has a written determination from a State
government that such State considers the instrumentality to be an
agency of the State government.
Sec. 2542.520 Coverage.
(a) This subpart applies to any grantee of the agency.
(b) This subpart applies to any grant, except where application of
this subpart would be inconsistent with the international obligations
of the United States or the laws or regulations of a foreign
government. A determination of such inconsistency may be made only by
the agency head or his/her designee.
(c) The provisions of subparts A, B, C, D and E of this part apply
to matters covered by this subpart, except where specifically modified
by this subpart. In the event of any conflict between provisions of
this subpart and other provisions of this part, the provisions of this
subpart are deemed to control with respect to the implementation of
drug-free workplace requirements concerning grants.
Sec. 2542.530 Grounds for suspension of payments, suspension or
termination of grants, or suspension or debarment.
A grantee shall be deemed in violation of the requirements of this
subpart if the agency head or his or her official designee determines,
in writing, that--
(a) The grantee has made a false certification under Sec. 2542.560;
(b) With respect to a grantee other than an individual--
(1) The grantee has violated the certification by failing to carry
out the requirements of paragraphs (A) (a)-(g) and/or (B) of the
certification (Alternate I in Appendix C of this part); or
(2) Such a number of employees of the grantee have been convicted
of violations of criminal drug statutes for violations occurring in the
workplace as to indicate that the grantee has failed to make a good
faith effort to provide a drug-free workplace; or
(c) With respect to a grantee who is an individual--
(1) The grantee has violated the certification by failing to carry
out its requirements (Alternate II of Appendix C of this part); or
(2) The grantee is convicted of a criminal drug offense resulting
from a violation occurring during the conduct of any grant activity.
Sec. 2542.540 Effect of violation.
(a) In the event of a violation of this subpart as provided in
Sec. 2542.520, and in accordance with applicable law, the grantee shall
be subject to one or more of the following actions:
(1) Suspension of payments under the grant;
(2) Suspension or termination of the grant; and
(3) Suspension or debarment of the grantee under the provisions of
this part.
(b) Upon issuance of any final decision under this part requiring
debarment of a grantee, the debarred grantee shall be ineligible for
award of any grant from any Federal agency for a period specified in
the decision, not to exceed five years (see Sec. 2542.280(a)(2)).
Sec. 2542.550 Exception provision.
The agency head may waive with respect to a particular grant, in
writing, a suspension of payments under a grant, suspension or
termination of a grant, or suspension or debarment of a grantee if the
agency head determines that such a waiver would be in the public
interest. This exception authority cannot be delegated to any other
official.
Sec. 2542.560 Certification requirements and procedures.
(a) (1) As a prior condition of being awarded a grant, each grantee
shall make the appropriate certification to the Federal agency
providing the grant, as provided in Appendix C of this part.
(2) Grantees are not required to make a certification in order to
continue receiving funds under a grant awarded before March 18, 1989,
or under a no-cost time extension of such a grant. However, the grantee
shall make a one-time drug-free workplace certification for a non-
automatic continuation of such a grant made on or after March 18, 1989.
(b) Except as provided in this section, all grantees shall make the
required certification for each grant. For mandatory formula grants and
entitlements that have no application process, grantees shall submit a
one-time certification in order to continue receiving awards.
(c) A grantee that is a State may elect to make one certification
in each Federal fiscal year. States that previously submitted an annual
certification are not required to make a certification for Fiscal Year
1990 until June 30, 1990. Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this
section, this certification shall cover all grants to all State
agencies from any Federal agency. The State shall retain the original
of this statewide certification in its Governor's office and, prior to
grant award, shall ensure that a copy is submitted individually with
respect to each grant, unless the Federal agency has designated a
central location for submission.
(d) (1) The Governor of a State may exclude certain State agencies
from the statewide certification and authorize these agencies to submit
their own certifications to Federal agencies. The statewide
certification shall name any State agencies so excluded.
(2) A State agency to which the statewide certification does not
apply, or a State agency in a State that does not have a statewide
certification, may elect to make one certification in each Federal
fiscal year. State agencies that previously submitted a State agency
certification are not required to make a certification for Fiscal Year
1990 until June 30, 1990. The State agency shall retain the original of
this State agency-wide certification in its central office and, prior
to grant award, shall ensure that a copy is submitted individually with
respect to each grant, unless the Federal agency designates a central
location for submission.
(3) When the work of a grant is done by more than one State agency,
the certification of the State agency directly receiving the grant
shall be deemed to certify compliance for all workplaces, including
those located in other State agencies.
(e) (1) For a grant of less than 30 days performance duration,
grantees shall have this policy statement and program in place as soon
as possible, but in any case by a date prior to the date on which
performance is expected to be completed.
(2) For a grant of 30 days or more performance duration, grantees
shall have this policy statement and program in place within 30 days
after award.
(3) Where extraordinary circumstances warrant for a specific grant,
the grant officer may determine a different date on which the policy
statement and program shall be in place.
Sec. 2542.570 Reporting of and employee sanctions for convictions of
criminal drug offenses.
(a) When a grantee other than an individual is notified that an
employee has been convicted for a violation of a criminal drug statute
occurring in the workplace, it shall take the following actions:
(1) Within 10 calendar days of receiving notice of the conviction,
the grantee shall provide written notice, including the convicted
employee's position title, to every grant officer, or other designee on
whose grant activity the convicted employee was working, unless a
Federal agency has designated a central point for the receipt of such
notifications. Notification shall include the identification number(s)
for each of the Federal agency's affected grants.
(2) Within 30 calendar days of receiving notice of the conviction,
the grantee shall do the following with respect to the employee who was
convicted:
(i) Take appropriate personnel action against the employee, up to
and including termination, consistent with requirements of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended; or
(ii) Require the employee to participate satisfactorily in a drug
abuse assistance or rehabilitation program approved for such purposes
by a Federal, State, or local health law enforcement, or other
appropriate agency.
(b) A grantee who is an individual who is convicted for a violation
of a criminal drug statute occurring during the conduct of any grant
activity shall report the conviction, in writing, within 10 calendar
days, to his or her Federal agency grant officer, or other designee,
unless the Federal agency has designated a central point for the
receipt of such notices. Notification shall include the identification
number(s) for each of the Federal agency's affected grants.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number
0991-0002).
Appendix A To Part 2542--Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension,
And Other Responsibility Matters--Primarily Covered Transactions
Instructions for Certification
1. By signing and submitting this proposal, the prospective
primary participant is providing the certification set out below.
2. The inability of a person to provide the certification
required below will not necessarily result in denial of
participation in this covered transaction. The prospective
participant shall submit an explanation of why it cannot provide the
certification set out below. The certification or explanation will
be considered in connection with the department or agency's
determination whether to enter into this transaction. However,
failure of the prospective primary participant to furnish a
certification or an explanation shall disqualify such person from
participation in this transaction.
3. The certification in this clause is a material representation
of fact upon which reliance was placed when the department or agency
determined to enter into this transaction. If it is later determined
that the prospective primary participant knowingly rendered an
erroneous certification, in addition to other remedies available to
the Federal Government, the department or agency may terminate this
transaction for cause or default.
4. The prospective primary participant shall provide immediate
written notice to the department or agency to whom this proposal is
submitted if at any time the prospective primary participant learns
that its certification was erroneous when submitted or has become
erroneous by reason of changed circumstances.
5. The terms ``covered transaction,'' ``debarred,''
``suspended,'' ``ineligible,'' ``lower tier covered transaction,''
``participant,'' ``person,'' ``primary covered transaction,''
``principal,'' ``proposal,'' and ``voluntarily excluded,'' as used
in this clause, have the meanings set out in the Definitions and
Coverage sections of the rules implementing Executive Order 12549.
You may contact the department or agency to which this proposal is
being submitted for assistance in obtaining a copy of those
regulations.
6. The prospective primary participant agrees by submitting this
proposal that, should the proposed covered transaction be entered
into, it shall not knowingly enter into any lower tier covered
transaction with a person who is debarred, suspended, declared
ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from participation in this
covered transaction, unless authorized by the department or agency
entering into this transaction.
7. The prospective primary participant further agrees by
submitting this proposal that it will include the clause titled
``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and
Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Covered Transaction,'' provided by
the department or agency entering into this covered transaction,
without modification, in all lower tier covered transactions and in
all solicitations for lower tier covered transactions.
8. A participant in a covered transaction may rely upon a
certification of a prospective participant in a lower tier covered
transaction that it is not debarred, suspended, ineligible, or
voluntarily excluded from the covered transaction, unless it knows
that the certification is erroneous. A participant may decide the
method and frequency by which it determines the eligibility of its
principals. Each participant may, but is not required to, check the
Nonprocurement List.
9. Nothing contained in the foregoing shall be construed to
require establishment of a system of records in order to render in
good faith the certification required by this clause. The knowledge
and information of a participant is not required to exceed that
which is normally possessed by a prudent person in the ordinary
course of business dealings.
10. Except for transactions authorized under paragraph 6 of
these instructions, if a participant in a covered transaction
knowingly enters into a lower tier covered transaction with a person
who is suspended, debarred, ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from
participation in this transaction, in addition to other remedies
available to the Federal Government, the department or agency may
terminate this transaction for cause or default.
Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, and Other
Responsibility Matters--Primary Covered Transactions
(1) The prospective primary participant certifies to the best of
its knowledge and belief, that it and its principals:
(a) Are not presently debarred, suspended, proposed for
debarment, declared ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from covered
transactions by any Federal department or agency;
(b) Have not within a three-year period preceding this proposal
been convicted of or had a civil judgment rendered against them for
commission of fraud or a criminal offense in connection with
obtaining, attempting to obtain, or performing a public (Federal,
State or local) transaction or contract under a public transaction;
violation of Federal or State antitrust statutes or commission of
embezzlement, theft, forgery, bribery, falsification or destruction
of records, making false statements, or receiving stolen property;
(c) Are not presently indicted for or otherwise criminally or
civilly charged by a governmental entity (Federal, State or local)
with commission of any of the offenses enumerated in paragraph
(1)(b) of this certification; and
(d) Have not within a three-year period preceding this
application/proposal has one or more public transactions (Federal,
State or local) terminated for cause or default.
(2) Where the prospective primary participant is unable to
certify to any of the statements in this certification, such
prospective participant shall attach an explanation to this
proposal.
Appendix B To Part 2542--Certification, Regarding Debarment,
Suspension, Ineligibility, and Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Covered
Transactions
Instructions for Certification
1. By signing and submitting this proposal, the prospective
lower tier participant is providing the certification set out below.
2. The certification in this clause is a material representation
of fact upon which reliance was placed when this transaction was
entered into. If it is later determined that the prospective lower
tier participant knowingly rendered an erroneous certification, in
addition to other remedies available to the Federal Government, the
department or agency with which this transaction originated may
pursue available remedies, including suspension and/or debarment.
3. The prospective lower tier participant shall provide
immediate written notice to the person to which this proposal is
submitted if at any time the prospective lower tier participant
learns that its certification was erroneous when submitted or has
become erroneous by reason of changed circumstances.
4. The terms ``covered transaction,'' ``debarred,''
``suspended,'' ``ineligible,'' ``lower tier covered transaction,''
``participant,'' ``person,'' ``primary covered transaction,''
``principal,'' ``proposal,'' and ``voluntarily excluded,'' as used
in this clause, have the meanings set out in the Definitions and
Coverage sections of rules implementing Executive Order 12549. You
may contact the person to which this proposal is submitted for
assistance in obtaining a copy of those regulations.
5. The prospective lower tier participant agrees by submitting
this proposal that, should the proposed covered transaction be
entered into, it shall not knowingly enter into any lower tier
covered transaction with a person who is debarred, suspended,
declared ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from participation in
this covered transaction, unless authorized by the department or
agency with which this transaction originated.
6. The prospective lower tier participant further agrees by
submitting this proposal that it will include this clause titled
``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and
Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Covered Transaction,'' without
modification, in all lower tier covered transactions and in all
solicitations for lower tier covered transactions.
7. A participant in a covered transaction may rely upon a
certification of a prospective participant in a lower tier covered
transaction that it is not debarred, suspended, ineligible, or
voluntarily excluded from the covered transaction, unless it knows
that the certification is erroneous. A participant may decide the
method and frequency by which it determines the eligibility of its
principals. Each participant may, but is not required to, check the
Nonprocurement List.
8. Nothing contained in the foregoing shall be construed to
require establishment of a system of records in order to render in
good faith the certification required by this clause. The knowledge
and information of a participant is not required to exceed that
which is normally possessed by a prudent person in the ordinary
course of business dealings.
9. Except for transactions authorized under paragraph 5 of these
instructions, if a participant in a covered transaction knowingly
enters into a lower tier covered transaction with a person who is
suspended, debarred, ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from
participation in this transaction, in addition to other remedies
available to the Federal Government, the department of agency with
which this transaction originated may pursue available remedies,
including suspension and/or debarment.
Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and
Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Covered Transactions
(1) The prospective lower tier participant certifies, by
submission of this proposal, that neither it nor its principals is
presently debarred, suspended, proposed for debarment, declared
ineligible, or voluntarily excluded from participation in this
transaction by any Federal department or agency.
(2) Where the prospective lower tier participant is unable to
certify to any of the statements in this certification, such
prospective participant shall attach an explanation to this
proposal.
Appendix C to Part 2542--Certification Regarding Drug-Free Workplace
Requirements
Instructions for Certification
1. By signing and/or submitting this application or grant
agreement, the grantee is providing the certification set out below.
2. The certification set out below is a material representation
of fact upon which reliance is placed when the agency awards the
grant. If it is later determined that the grantee knowingly rendered
a false certification, or otherwise violates the requirements of the
Drug-Free Workplace Act, the agency, in addition to any other
remedies available to the Federal Government, may take action
authorized under the Drug-Free Workplace Act.
3. For grantees other than individuals, Alternate I applies.
4. For grantees who are individuals, Alternate II applies.
5. Workplaces under grants, for grantees other than individuals,
need not be identified on the certification. If known, they may be
identified in the grant application. If the grantee does not
identify the workplaces at the time of application, or upon award,
if there is no application, the grantee must keep the identity of
the workplace(s) on file in its office and make the information
available for Federal inspection. Failure to identify all known
workplaces constitutes a violation of the grantee's drug-free
workplace requirements.
6. Workplace identifications must include the actual address of
buildings (or parts of buildings) or other sites where work under
the grant takes place. Categorical descriptions may be used (e.g.,
all vehicles of a mass transit authority or State highway department
while in operation, State employees in each local unemployment
office, performers in concert halls or radio studios).
7. If the workplace identified to the agency changes during the
performance of the grant, the grantee shall inform the agency of the
change(s), if it previously identified the workplaces in question
(see paragraph five).
8. Definitions of terms in the Nonprocurement Suspension and
Debarment common rule and Drug-Free Workplace common rule apply to
this certification. Grantees' attention is called, in particular, to
the following definitions from these rules:
Controlled substance means a controlled substance in Schedules I
through V of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. Sec. 812) and
as further defined by regulation (21 CFR 1308.11 through 1308.15);
Conviction means a finding of guilt (including a plea of nolo
contendere) or imposition of sentence, or both, by any judicial body
charged with the responsibility to determine violations of the
Federal or State criminal drug statutes;
Criminal drug statute means a Federal or non-Federal criminal
statute involving the manufacture, distribution, dispensing, use, or
possession of any controlled substance;
Employee means the employee of a grantee directly engaged in the
performance of work under a grant, including: (i) All direct charge
employees; (ii) All indirect charge employees unless their impact or
involvement is insignificant to the performance of the grant; and,
(iii) Temporary personnel and consultants who are directly engaged
in the performance of work under the grant and who are on the
grantee's payroll. This definition does not include workers not on
the payroll of the grantee (e.g., volunteers, even if used to meet a
matching requirement; consultants or independent contractors not on
the grantee's payroll; or employees of sub recipients or
subcontractors in covered workplaces).
Certification Regarding Drug-Free Workplace Requirements
Alternate I. (Grantees Other Than Individuals)
A. The grantee certifies that it will or will continue to
provide a drug-free workplace by:
(a) Publishing a statement notifying employees that the unlawful
manufacture, distribution, dispensing, possession, or use of a
controlled substance is prohibited in the grantee's workplace and
specifying the actions that will be taken against employees for
violation of such prohibition;
(b) Establishing an ongoing drug-free awareness program to
inform employees about--
(1) The dangers of drug abuse in the workplace;
(2) The grantee's policy of maintaining a drug-free workplace;
(3) Any available drug counseling, rehabilitation, and employee
assistance programs; and
(4) The penalties that may be imposed upon employees for drug
abuse violations occurring in the workplace;
(c) Making it a requirement that each employee to be engaged in
the performance of the grant be given a copy of the statement
required by paragraph (a);
(d) Notifying the employee in the statement required by
paragraph (a) that, as a condition of employment under the grant,
the employee will--
(1) Abide by the terms of the statement; and
(2) Notify the employer in writing of his or her conviction for
a violation of a criminal drug statute occurring in the workplace no
later than five calendar days after such conviction;
(e) Notifying the agency in writing, within ten calendar days
after receiving notice under paragraph (d)(2) from an employee or
otherwise receiving actual notice of such conviction. Employers of
convicted employees must provide notice, including position title,
to every grant officer or other designee on whose grant activity the
convicted employee was working, unless the Federal agency has
designated a central point for the receipt of such notices. Notice
shall include the identification number(s) of each affected grant;
(f) Taking one of the following actions, within 30 calendar days
of receiving notice under paragraph (d)(2), with respect to any
employee who is so convicted--
(1) Taking appropriate personnel action against such an
employee, up to and including termination, consistent with the
requirements of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended; or
(2) Requiring such employee to participate satisfactorily in a
drug abuse assistance or rehabilitation program approved for such
purposes by a Federal, State, or local health, law enforcement, or
other appropriate agency;
(g) Making a good faith effort to continue to maintain a drug-
free workplace through implementation of paragraphs (a), (b), (c),
(d), (e) and (f).
B. The grantee may insert in the space provided below the
site(s) for the performance of work done in connection with the
specific grant: Place of Performance (Street address, city, county,
state, zip code)
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Check [ ] if there are workplaces on file that are not identified
here.
Alternate II. (Grantees Who Are Individuals)
(a) The grantee certifies that, as a condition of the grant, he
or she will not engage in the unlawful manufacture, distribution,
dispensing, possession, or use of a controlled substance in
conducting any activity with the grant;
(b) If convicted of a criminal drug offense resulting from a
violation occurring during the conduct of any grant activity, he or
she will report the conviction, in writing, within 10 calendar days
of the conviction, to every grant officer or other designee, unless
the Federal agency designates a central point for the receipt of
such notices. When notice is made to such a central point, it shall
include the identification number(s) of each affected grant.
[FR Doc. 94-17962 Filed 8-11-94; 8:45 am]
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