98-28230. Recipient Fund Balances  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 204 (Thursday, October 22, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 56591-56594]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-28230]
    
    
    
    [[Page 56591]]
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION
    
    45 CFR Part 1628
    
    
    Recipient Fund Balances
    
    AGENCY: Legal Services Corporation.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This proposed rule would revise the Corporation's rule on 
    recipient fund balances to provide the Corporation with more discretion 
    to determine whether to permit a recipient to maintain a fund balance 
    up to 25% of its LSC support for a particular reporting period. It also 
    adds additional requirements and limitations applicable to waiver 
    requests and the use of fund balances. Finally, the rule is 
    restructured for clarity and for consistency with other LSC 
    regulations.
    
    DATES: Comments should be received on or before December 21, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted to the Office of the General 
    Counsel, Legal Services Corporation, 750 First St. NE., 11th Floor, 
    Washington, DC 20002-4250.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Suzanne Glasow, Office of the General 
    Counsel, 202-336-8817.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Operations and Regulations Committee 
    (Committee) of the Legal Services Corporation's (LSC) Board of 
    Directors (Board) met on September 11, 1998, in Chicago, Illinois, to 
    consider proposed revisions to the Corporation's rule governing 
    recipient fund balances, 45 CFR Part 1628. The Committee adopted this 
    proposed rule for publication in the Federal Register for public 
    comment.
        There is no statutory provision that limits the amount of a fund 
    balance an LSC recipient may carry over from one year to another. In 
    1980, the General Accounting Office (GAO) released a report finding 
    that, because LSC grantees were not required to return funds not 
    expended by the end of the year, some grantees had relatively large 
    carryovers when compared to their total grants. The GAO report 
    recommended that the Corporation ``should closely monitor the 
    expenditure of funds by grantees to minimize year end fund carryovers 
    and adjust subsequent year funding of grantees with excess fund 
    balances.'' In response to the report, the Corporation took various 
    actions to regulate recipient fund balances that culminated in the 
    promulgation of the current rule. See LSC memoranda (December 18, 1980 
    & March 18, 1982), grant conditions, Instructions (Instruction 83-4, 48 
    FR 560), and 45 CFR Part 1628 (49 FR 21331, effective on June 20, 1984, 
    and corrected at 49 FR 23056, June 4, 1984).
        Generally, this proposed rule is intended to provide the 
    Corporation with more discretion to determine whether to permit a 
    recipient to maintain a fund balance up to 25% of its LSC support for a 
    particular reporting period and sets forth the requirements and 
    limitations applicable to waiver requests and the use of fund balances. 
    Finally, the rule is restructured for clarity and consistency with 
    other LSC regulations. A section-by-section analysis is provided below.
    
    Section 1628.1  Purpose
    
        This section is substantively revised. Provisions have been deleted 
    or moved to other parts of the rule because they do not constitute 
    statements of the purpose or function of the rule. The purpose of this 
    rule is to delineate the Corporation's policies and procedures 
    applicable to recipient fund balances. In addition, the rule's policies 
    and requirements are intended to ensure the timely expenditure of LSC 
    funds for the effective and economical provision of high quality legal 
    assistance to eligible clients.
    
    Section 1628.2  Definitions
    
        The proposed revisions to this section are intended to clarify or 
    update the meaning of the terms or to make them consistent with other 
    LSC regulations.
        The term LSC Support is revised to clarify that it means the sum of 
    the recipient's LSC carryover funds from the prior fiscal year, the 
    amount of the recipient's LSC grant for the year in question, and any 
    LSC derivative income earned by the recipient during the year in 
    question. The reference to derivative income is revised to be 
    consistent with the definition of the term in Part 1630.
        The proposed definition of fund balance amount is intended to 
    clarify that the term means the excess of LSC support over expenditures 
    as determined by the recipient's annual audit. Additional language in 
    the current definition is proposed to be deleted because it does not 
    constitute a statement of the meaning of the term.
        No revisions have been proposed for the definition of the term fund 
    balance percentage.
        The definition of recipient is proposed to be revised to reflect 
    current law which limits grants for financial assistance to those 
    authorized by Section 1006(a)(1)(A) of the LSC Act. The definition is 
    consistent with the definition of the term in many of the rules 
    promulgated by the Corporation since 1996.
    
    Section 1628.3  Policy
    
        This proposed section sets out the Corporation's policies governing 
    recipient fund balances. Several provisions in this section are found 
    in other sections of the current rule. They have been moved to this 
    section because they are statements of policy and are more 
    appropriately included here. In addition, procedural provisions in the 
    current rule have been removed from this section and transferred to the 
    section on procedures.
        Paragraph (a) states that recipients may automatically retain a 
    fund balance up to 10% of their LSC support. Paragraph (b) clarifies 
    that recipients may request a waiver from the Corporation to maintain a 
    fund balance up to 25% of their LSC support. Paragraph (c) states that 
    the Corporation has discretion to grant a waiver under paragraph (b) 
    and clarifies that the Corporation's decision to grant a waiver must be 
    based on the criteria found in Sec. 1628.4(e).
        Public comments, citing the practice of nonprofit corporations to 
    retain higher fund balances, urged raising the 10% and 25% caps or 
    eliminating the 25% cap altogther. The LSC Inspector General, on the 
    other hand, expressed concern that large fund balances create the risk 
    of fraud or defalcation of funds. Another comment cautioned that 
    appropriated funds should generally be expended within the 
    appropriation period for the badly needed provision of legal assistance 
    for eligible clients.
        The Committee decided it needs more information before deciding 
    this issue and seeks public comment on what the appropriate level of a 
    permissible fund balance should be and what constitutes the normal 
    operating practice of nonprofit and government entities with regard to 
    fund balances.
        Paragraph (d) requires that any fund balance in excess of what is 
    permitted by this rule must be returned to the Corporation. The 
    Corporation has discretion to determine, after consultation with the 
    recipient, whether the repayment of an excess fund balance should be 
    made in a lump sum or in pro rata deductions from the recipient's grant 
    checks for a specified number of months.
        Paragraph (e) clarifies that the recovery of an excess fund balance 
    does not constitute a termination pursuant to Part 1606.
        Paragraph (f) clarifies that funds from one-time or special purpose 
    grants may not be carried over as part of a recipient's fund balance. 
    Instead, any expended funds from such grants remaining after the 
    termination date of
    
    [[Page 56592]]
    
    the grant must be returned to the Corporation.
    
    Section 1628.4  Procedures
    
        This section sets out the procedures applicable to recipient fund 
    balances. It has been revised to provide the basis on which the 
    Corporation will exercise its discretion to grant a waiver of an excess 
    fund balance and sets forth requirements that are intended to ensure 
    careful oversight by the Corporation of a recipient's fund balance. All 
    procedural requirements in the current rule have been moved to this 
    section.
        Paragraph (a) sets out the obligation of a recipient whose fund 
    balance is in excess of the 10% ceiling to request a waiver from the 
    Corporation within 30 days of the issuance of the recipient's final 
    audit. The current rule requires that the statement be provided to the 
    Corporation within 120 days of the close of the recipient's fiscal 
    year. This is changed to link the deadline for the waiver request to 
    the audit submission date rather than the end of the recipient's fiscal 
    year. This will allow for periodic changes in the required submission 
    dates for audits without a need to revise this rule. This paragraph 
    also clarifies that, unless the recipient seeks and is granted a waiver 
    to maintain a fund balance over the 10%, the funds will be recovered by 
    the Corporation.
        Paragraph (b) clarifies that the Corporation will review 
    recipients' final audits, fund balance statements and any requests for 
    waivers and will provide written notice to any recipient whose fund 
    balance amount is due and payable to the Corporation. The written 
    notice will include the method of repayment of any funds to be 
    recovered.
        Paragraph (c) sets out the procedures for requesting a waiver of 
    the 10% ceiling. Generally, a recipient must specify its fund balance 
    amount, the reasons the fund balance has accrued, the recipient's plan 
    for the use or reserve of the fund balance within the current grant 
    year and the circumstances justifying the retention of the fund 
    balance.
        A new provision is proposed for this paragraph that would require a 
    recipient who seeks a waiver to retain a cash reserve to replace or 
    update the recipient's information technology systems pursuant to 
    paragraph (e)(4) of this section to submit a Technology Investment Plan 
    (TIP) that outlines how and when the funds would be used to improve the 
    recipient's Information Technology resources. See discussion of 
    paragraph (e)(4) below.
        Paragraph (d) prohibits a recipient from expending an excess fund 
    balance prior to receiving approval of its waiver request.
        Paragraph (e) sets out the standards governing the Corporation's 
    decision to grant a waiver. A proposed substantive revision to this 
    paragraph establishes a different standard for determining whether to 
    grant a recipient a waiver to retain a 25% fund balance. The new 
    standard is intended to provide the Corporation with more flexibility 
    and discretion to decide whether recipients may maintain a fund 
    balance. Experience has shown that ``extraordinary circumstances'' is 
    too high a standard. The underlying rationale for regulating fund 
    balances is to ensure that recipients provide effective and economical 
    legal assistance. While prohibiting recipients from carrying over too 
    large a fund balance promotes this purpose, regulated use of carryover 
    funds under certain circumstances also promotes the same purpose. Based 
    on changing needs and the Corporation's experience with fund balances 
    since 1984, this proposed paragraph is intended to reflect both 
    generally and specifically the circumstances under which the 
    Corporation may grant a fund balance waiver.
        The overriding standard to be considered by the Corporation is 
    whether the waiver would promote the statutory mandate that recipients 
    provide high quality legal services in an effective and economical 
    manner. In addition, the Corporation must consider 5 other factors. The 
    first factor is consideration of any emergencies or unusual or 
    unexpected occurrences or circumstances giving rise to the existence of 
    the excess fund balance. The reference to ``extraordinary 
    circumstances'' has been changed to ``circumstances'' to be consistent 
    with the rule's other changes to the standards proposed for determining 
    whether to grant a waiver. In addition, language providing examples of 
    extraordinary circumstances has been deleted.
        No revisions are proposed for factor two which requires 
    consideration of any special needs of clients.
        Factor three has been revised. The revision merges provisions in 
    the current rule which deal with compensated private bar programs. See 
    Sec. 1628.3(d) and Sec. 1628.4(d)(2). The current language is unclear 
    and somewhat inconsistent. It appears to require the Corporation to 
    grant a waiver for a cash reserve for compensated bar programs, while 
    at the same time, it gives discretion to grant the waiver because it is 
    granted only if there is a need for the cash reserve and after the 
    recipient makes a timely request. This proposed rule gives the 
    Corporation discretion to grant the waiver after consideration of 
    whether there is a need for the cash reserve.
        Factor four is new and would give the Corporation discretion to 
    grant a waiver so that a recipient could retain a cash reserve to 
    replace or update the recipient's information technology systems. To 
    carry out its statutory responsibility to encourage the most efficient 
    and productive delivery of legal services possible, the Corporation 
    encourages programs to invest in technology such as computers, 
    networking equipment and advanced telephone systems. Investments in 
    such technology can significantly increase the capability of programs 
    to serve their clients effectively and efficiently. Computer based 
    systems can help recipients manage legal work more efficiently. 
    Improved technology can increase the efficiency and effectiveness of 
    intake and pro se and community legal education efforts to make legal 
    services more accessible. Access to the Internet can increase the 
    quality of legal work by facilitating coordination among advocates and 
    increasing access to available legal information and other pertinent 
    databases.
        For programs to take advantage of such opportunities generally 
    requires significant purchases of hardware and software. The 
    Corporation believes that the best practice for management of 
    information technology is to replace computer and information 
    management technology on a regular, ongoing basis. Currently, however, 
    significant new technological capacities are developing at an extremely 
    rapid rate that suggest that radically transformative technology may 
    emerge periodically during the coming years. The unexpected development 
    and universal adoption of the world wide web as a principal instrument 
    of business and government is an example of such a development. Most 
    planners agree that for programs to keep up with these expanding 
    possibilities, they should be prepared to replace computer equipment 
    completely on a regular cycle, which may be as often as every three 
    years. There may be occasions, therefore, when normal incremental 
    upgrading of technological resources is not enough and a 
    disproportionately significant investment is required because of the 
    need to replace all the program's equipment and software.
        Programs that plan to purchase large amounts of computer equipment 
    are often faced with the barrier that they can only maintain a fund 
    balance of 10% or less and cannot create a property replacement 
    reserve, if the
    
    [[Page 56593]]
    
    resulting fund balance should exceed 10%. The Corporation proposes to 
    amend Part 1628 to allow it to waive the 10% ceiling so that, with 
    proper safeguards, recipients can maintain such a property reserve 
    fund. The Corporation believes that such a waiver for recipients to 
    update their equipment in an orderly and efficient manner will promote 
    more effective planning and will encourage more effective and efficient 
    delivery of services to clients.
        The final factor considered by the Corporation is the recipient's 
    financial managment record.
        Paragraph (e) is new and provides tighter controls on the use of 
    fund balances by recipients. It states that the Corporation's approval 
    must require the recipient to use the funds within a specified time 
    period and must use the funds for the purposes set out in the waiver 
    request as revised by the Corporation's approval.
        Paragraph (f) is a reporting requirement for any fund balance 
    retained by a recipient pursuant to a waiver.
    
    Section 1628.5 Fund Balance Deficits
    
        Only technical changes have been made to this section either to 
    update the information or to make it consistent with the rest of the 
    rule. Generally, this section regulates recipient deficits. Deficits 
    are discouraged and use of LSC funds to liquidate a deficit requires 
    prior Corporation approval. Any LSC funds used to liquidate a deficit 
    shall be identified as questioned costs unless prior approval for such 
    use has been provided by the Corporation.
    
    List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 1628
    
        Legal services, Fund balances.
        For reasons set out in the preamble, LSC proposes to revise 45 CFR 
    part 1628 to read as follows:
    
    PART 1628--RECIPIENT FUND BALANCES
    
    Sec.
    1628.1  Purpose.
    1628.2  Definitions.
    1628.3  Policy.
    1628.4  Procedures.
    
    
    Sec. 1628.5  Fund balance deficits.
    
        Authority: Secs. 42 USC 2996e(b)(1)(A), 2996f(a)(3).
    
    
    Sec. 1628.1  Purpose.
    
        The purpose of this part is to set out the Corporation's policies 
    and procedures applicable to recipient fund balances. The Corporation's 
    fund balance policies are intended to ensure the timely expenditure of 
    LSC funds for the effective and economical provision of high quality 
    legal assistance to eligible clients.
    
    
    
    
    Sec. 1628.2  Definitions.
    
        (a) ``LSC support'' means the sum of:
        (1) The carryover LSC fund balance from the prior fiscal year;
        (2) The amount of financial assistance awarded by the Corporation 
    to the recipient for the fiscal year in question; and
        (3) Any LSC derivative income, as defined in Sec. 1630.2(c), earned 
    by the recipient for the grant year in question.
        (b) The LSC ``fund balance amount'' is the excess of LSC support 
    over expenditures as determined by the recipient's annual audit.
        (c) The ``fund balance percentage'' shall be determined by 
    expressing the fund balance amount as a percentage of the recipient's 
    LSC support for the reporting period.
        (d) ``Recipient'' as used in this part, means any grantee or 
    contractor receiving financial assistance from the Corporation under 
    section 1006(a)(1)(A) of the LSC Act.
    
    
    Sec. 1628.3  Policy.
    
        (a) Recipients are permitted to retain from year-to-year fund 
    balances up to 10% of their LSC support.
        (b) Recipients may request a waiver to retain a fund balance up to 
    a maximum of 25% of their LSC support.
        (c) A waiver pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section may be 
    granted at the discretion of the Corporation pursuant to the criteria 
    set out in Sec. 1628.4(e).
        (d) Any fund balance amount in excess of 10% of LSC support shall 
    be repaid to the Corporation. If a waiver of the 10% ceiling is 
    granted, any fund balance amount in excess of the amount permitted to 
    be retained shall be repaid to the Corporation. Repayment shall be in a 
    lump sum or by pro rata deductions from the recipient's grant checks 
    for a specific number of months. The Corporation shall determine which 
    of the specified methods of repayment is reasonable and appropriate in 
    each case after consultation with the recipient.
        (e) A recovery from LSC support to recover an excess fund balance 
    pursuant to this part does not constitute a termination under 45 CFR 
    part 1606. See Sec. 1606.2(c)(2)(ii).
        (f) All one-time or special purpose grants awarded by the 
    Corporation shall have an effective date and a termination date. Such 
    grants are not subject to this part's fund balance policy. Revenue and 
    expenses relating to such grants must be reflected separately in the 
    audit report submitted to the Corporation. This may be done by 
    establishing a separate fund or by providing a separate supplemental 
    schedule of revenue and expenses related to such grants as a part of 
    the audit report. No funds provided under a one-time or special purpose 
    grant may be expended subsequent to the termination date of the grant 
    without the prior written approval of the Corporation. All unexpended 
    funds under such grants shall be returned to the Corporation.
    
    
    Sec. 1628.4  Procedures.
    
        (a) Any recipient whose audited fund balance exceeds the 10% 
    ceiling set forth in Sec. 1628.3 shall submit to the Corporation, 
    within 30 days of the issuance of the recipient's final audit, a 
    statement of the fund balance which occurred according to the required 
    annual audit. The funds will be recovered as set forth in 
    Sec. 1628.3(d) unless the recipient requests and is granted a waiver by 
    the Corporation.
        (b) After the Corporation's receipt and review of the recipient's 
    annual audit, the recipient's fund balance statement pursuant to 
    paragraph (a) of this section and any requests for a waiver, the 
    Corporation shall provide written notice to the recipient of any fund 
    balance amount due and payable to the Corporation as well as the method 
    for repayment 30 days prior to the effective date for repayment either 
    to occur or to commence in accordance with Sec. 1628.3(d).
        (c) The recipient may, within 30 days of the issuance of the 
    recipient's annual audit, request a waiver of the 10% ceiling. Such 
    request must specify:
        (1) The fund balance amount according to the recipient's annual 
    audit;
        (2) The reason such fund balance has been attained;
        (3) The recipient's plan for the disposition or reserve of such 
    fund balance amount within the current grant period. If a waiver is 
    requested under Sec. 1628.4(e)(4), for updating or replacing 
    information technology systems, a Technology Investment Plan that 
    outlines how and when the funds will be used to improve the recipient's 
    Information Technology resources should be provided with the waiver 
    request;
        (4) The amount of fund balance projected to be carried forward at 
    the close of the recipient's then current fiscal year; and
        (5) The circumstances justifying the retention of the fund balance.
        (d) Excess fund balance amounts shall not be expended by the 
    recipient prior to approval of the waiver request by the Corporation.
    
    [[Page 56594]]
    
        (e) The decision of the Corporation regarding the granting of a 
    waiver shall be guided by the statutory mandate requiring the recipient 
    to provide high quality legal services in an effective and economical 
    manner. In addition, the Corporation shall consider the following 
    factors.
        (1) Emergencies or unusual or unexpected occurrences, or 
    circumstances giving rise to the existence of a fund balance in excess 
    of 10%;
        (2) The special needs of clients;
        (3) The need for a recipient that operates a compensated private 
    bar program or component to retain a cash reserve up to 25% of the 
    amount of direct payment to attorneys indicated in the recipient's last 
    audit for direct payment to attorneys in the bar program;
        (4) The need for the recipient to retain a cash reserve to replace 
    or update the recipient's information technology systems; and
        (5) The recipient's financial management record.
        (f) The Corporation's written approval of a request for a waiver 
    shall require that the recipient use the funds it is permitted to 
    retain within the time period set out in the approval and for the 
    purposes set out in the waiver request, as revised by the Corporation's 
    approval.
        (g) Excess fund balance amounts approved by the Corporation for 
    expenditure by a recipient must be separately reported in the current 
    fiscal year audit. This may be done by establishing a separate fund or 
    by providing a separate supplemental schedule as part of the audit 
    report.
    
    
    Sec. 1628.5  Fund balance deficits.
    
        (a) Sound financial management practices such as those set out in 
    Chapter 3 of the Corporation's Accounting Guide for LSC Recipients 
    should preclude deficit spending. Use of current year LSC grant funds 
    to liquidate deficit balances in the LSC fund from a preceding period 
    requires the prior written approval of the Corporation.
        (b) The recipient may, within 30 days of the issuance of the 
    recipient's annual audit, apply to the Corporation for approval of the 
    costs associated with the liquidation of the deficit balances in the 
    LSC fund.
        (c) In the absence of approval by the Corporation, expenditures of 
    current year LSC grant funds to liquidate a deficit from a prior year 
    shall be identified as questioned costs.
        (d) The recipient's request must specify the same information 
    relative to the deficit LSC fund balance as that set forth in 
    Sec. 1628.4(c) (1) and (2). Additionally, the recipient must develop 
    and submit a plan approved by its governing body describing the 
    measures which will be implemented to prevent a recurrence of a deficit 
    balance in the LSC fund. The Corporation reserves the right to require 
    changes in the submitted plan.
        (e) The decision of the Corporation regarding acceptance of these 
    deficit-related costs shall be guided by the statutory mandate 
    requiring the recipient to provide high quality legal services 
    performed in an effective and economical manner. Special consideration 
    will be given for emergencies, unusual occurrences, or other 
    circumstances giving rise to this situation.
    
        Dated: October 16, 1998.
    Victor M. Fortuno,
    General Counsel.
    [FR Doc. 98-28230 Filed 10-21-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7050-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/22/1998
Department:
Legal Services Corporation
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
98-28230
Dates:
Comments should be received on or before December 21, 1998.
Pages:
56591-56594 (4 pages)
PDF File:
98-28230.pdf
CFR: (10)
45 CFR 1628.4(c)
45 CFR 1628.3(d)
45 CFR 1628.3(d)
45 CFR 1628.4
45 CFR 1628.5
More ...