96-20777. DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 166 (Monday, August 26, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 43867-43916]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-20777]
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 166, Monday, August 26, 1996 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 43867]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    32 CFR Parts 21, 22, 28, 32, 33, and 34
    
    RIN 0790-AG28
    
    
    DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, DoD.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Department of Defense is taking the next step toward 
    establishing the DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations. They are being 
    established to satisfy a need for uniform policies and procedures for 
    DoD Components' award and administration of grants and cooperative 
    agreements.
        The Department of Defense proposes to add four new parts and to 
    make minor amendments that update two of the four existing parts of the 
    DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations. The four proposed new parts: 
    address DoD Components' overall management of grant and agreement 
    functions; set forth DoD Components' and grants officers' 
    responsibilities related to the award and administration of grants and 
    agreements; implement administrative requirements in OMB Circular A-110 
    for grants and agreements awarded to institutions of higher education 
    and other nonprofit organizations; and establish administrative 
    requirements for awards to commercial organizations. The proposed minor 
    amendments to two existing parts: provide DoD-specific procedures 
    related to Governmentwide restrictions on lobbying; and update 
    administrative requirements for awards to State and local governments, 
    to conform with recent changes in statutes and statutory 
    implementation.
    
    DATES: Comments are due on or before October 25, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Forward comments to ODDR&E(R), ATTN: Mark Herbst, 3080 
    Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-3080.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Herbst, (703) 614-0205.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Steps Taken to Date To Establish the DoD Grant and Agreement 
    Regulations
    
        In 1992, the Department of Defense (DoD) took the first step toward 
    establishing the DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations. At that time (see 
    57 FR 6199, February 21, 1992), DoD redesignated into Subchapter B of 
    Chapter I of Title 32 of the Code of Federal Regulations three 
    Governmentwide rules: debarment, suspension, and drug-free workplace 
    requirements, now at 32 CFR Part 25; lobbying restrictions, now at 32 
    CFR Part 28; and administrative requirements for grants and cooperative 
    agreements to State and local governments, now at 32 CFR Part 33.
        The Department of Defense now takes the second step toward 
    establishing the regulations. In this second step, the Department 
    proposes to make minor amendments to update the existing parts 28 and 
    33 in Subchapter B of Chapter I, and to adopt the new parts 21, 22, 32, 
    and 34.
    
    Additional Information About Proposed Amendments to Parts 28 and 33
    
        The proposed amendments to part 28, ``New Restrictions on 
    Lobbying,'' would implement the DoD-specific statutory authority to 
    waive certain restrictions. The proposed amendments to part 33, 
    ``Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Cooperative 
    Agreements to State and Local Governments,'' are needed to implement 
    the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (42 U.S.C. 6962) and 
    statutory changes made by the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 
    1994.
    
    Additional Information About Proposed Parts 21 and 22
    
        Parts 21 and 22 primarily establish internal DoD policies and 
    procedures. Part 21 addresses DoD Components' overall management of 
    grant and cooperative agreement functions. Part 22 outlines grants 
    officers' and DoD Components' responsibilities related to the award and 
    administration of grants and cooperative agreements.
        In addition to establishing internal policies and procedures, the 
    proposed parts 21 and 22 implement several statutes that apply to DoD 
    grants and agreements, including: requirements in 31 U.S.C. 6101, et 
    seq., to report data on assistance awards and programs (implemented in 
    subpart C, part 21); provisions of 31 U.S.C. 6301, et seq., concerning 
    the appropriate use of grants and cooperative agreements (implemented 
    in subpart B, part 22); and statutes concerning the use of competitive 
    procedures, such as 10 U.S.C. 2374 (implemented in subpart C, part 22), 
    which was enacted by the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994.
        To reduce burdens on recipients, section 22.510 of the proposed 
    part 22 allows a streamlined certification method that reduces the 
    paperwork associated with obtaining required certifications. This is 
    consistent with the National Performance Review's recommendation that 
    the Government explore methods for eliminating needless paperwork by 
    simplifying the compliance certification process, a recommendation that 
    the Department of Defense heartily supports. The Department expects 
    that initiatives to increase the use of electronic commerce in agency 
    announcements of programs, recipients' submission of proposals, and 
    transmission of award documents, ultimately will enable even less 
    burdensome means for obtaining required certifications than the method 
    proposed in part 22.
        One section within subpart E of the proposed part 22 is reserved, 
    because DoD intends to redesignate an existing rule into that section 
    when part 22 is finalized. That rule, currently codified at 32 CFR Part 
    23, implements a law concerning military recruiters' access to 
    university campuses.
    
    Additional Information About Proposed Part 32
    
        The proposed part 32 specifies administrative requirements for 
    grants and cooperative agreements with universities and other non-
    profit organizations. It thereby implements the Governmentwide guidance 
    in the updated, OMB Circular A-110, ``Uniform Administrative 
    Requirements for Grants and Agreements With Institutions of Higher 
    Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations.''
        During the comment period on the proposed part 32, and until DoD 
    adopts a final version as its implementation of the November, 1993, 
    version of OMB Circular A-110 [58 FR 62992], DoD Components will 
    incorporate terms and conditions in grants and cooperative agreements 
    to universities and other nonprofit entities that provide for 
    recipients' administration of those awards in accordance with that 
    updated version of the Circular. Most DoD Components' awards already do 
    so, an interim practice that was authorized in February, 1994. By 
    standardizing this interim practice within the remaining DoD 
    Components, DoD will provide uniform requirements that parallel those 
    of other Federal agencies, thereby alleviating unnecessary burdens on 
    recipients. Award terms and conditions will provide for compliance with 
    part 32 when it is finalized, superseding the interim practice.
        The proposed part 32 adopts the language of the updated OMB 
    Circular, except for clarifying changes and a few changes to reduce 
    paperwork requirements and conform the rule to recent changes in 
    regulation and statute. None of the clarifying changes are intended to 
    deviate from the substance
    
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    in the Circular. The few other changes are as follows:
         In keeping with the spirit of the National Performance 
    Review and the Circular, the proposed section 32.44 would reduce 
    reporting and record keeping burdens on small entities. It provides 
    that recipients that receive less than $10 million annually in contract 
    and grant funding will not be required to have written procurement 
    procedures. With this change, the requirements of part 32 will be more 
    comparable to those applicable to contractors under the Federal 
    Acquisition Regulations.
         The proposed part 32 deletes provisions of the Circular 
    concerning the Cash Management Improvement Act (CMIA). The Circular 
    language was based on the Department of Treasury's original 
    implementation of CMIA, which applied the Act's provisions to some 
    state universities. Subsequent to OMB's issuance of the Circular, 
    however, the Department of Treasury amended its regulations 
    implementing CMIA, to exclude state universities from the coverage.
         The proposed part 32 updates references to the small 
    purchase threshold (previously $25,000) fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403(11), to 
    reflect the simplified acquisition threshold (currently $100,000) 
    established at 41 U.S.C. 403(11) by the Federal Acquisition 
    Streamlining Act of 1994.
         The proposed section 32.25 deletes Circular language that 
    authorizes a Federal agency to waive the requirement for recipients to 
    obtain the agency's approval before initiating a one-time, no-cost 
    extension of an award for a 12-month period. The language is deleted 
    because DoD incremental funding policies are to use a given fiscal 
    year's appropriations to support programmatic effort for specified 
    periods (e.g., research funds usually are for effort only through the 
    first three months of the next fiscal year). DoD Components therefore 
    must scrutinize requests for no-cost extensions, when those extensions 
    could lengthen by a year the period during which a given fiscal year's 
    appropriations would be used.
    
    Additional Information About Proposed Part 34
    
        The proposed part 34 specifies administrative requirements for 
    grants and for most cooperative agreements with commercial 
    organizations. Consistent with the updated OMB Circular A-110, which 
    states that ``Federal agencies may apply the provisions of this 
    Circular to commercial organizations . . . ,'' the proposed part 34 
    uses the Circular as its basis. It necessarily differs from Circular A-
    110 in areas (e.g., exempt property) where the Circular's provisions 
    are specifically written for educational and nonprofit organizations. 
    In some other areas, such as procurement standards, the proposed part 
    34 lessens requirements and reduces administrative burdens that 
    otherwise would be applied to commercial organizations.
    
    Remaining Step To Establish the DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations
    
        The final major step in establishing the DoD Grant and Agreement 
    Regulations will be to adopt one additional part on selected research 
    agreements with commercial organizations. That part, which currently is 
    being prepared, is intended to provide more flexible administrative 
    requirements than those in the proposed part 34. The greater 
    flexibility would be available for a certain class of research 
    agreements that is designed to help integrate the defense and non-
    defense portions of the U.S. technology and industrial bases.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        The proposed part 32 was determined to be a ``significant 
    regulatory action,'' as defined by Executive Order 12866, by the 
    Administrator of OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. 
    The Department of Defense believes that none of the proposed rules 
    will: (1) have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more 
    or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or 
    communities; (2) create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere 
    with an action taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially alter 
    the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan 
    programs or the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) 
    raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the 
    President's priorities, or the principles set forth in Executive Order 
    12866.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 [5 U.S.C. 605(b)]
    
        These regulatory actions will not have a significant adverse impact 
    on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3500 et seq.)
    
        These regulatory actions will not impose any new reporting or 
    recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act. Reporting 
    and recordkeeping requirements in the proposed parts 32 and 34 are 
    those promulgated by the updated OMB Circular A-110, which the Office 
    of Mangement and Budget proposed in August, 1992 [57 FR 39018], asking 
    for public comments, and finalized in November, 1993 [58 FR 62992].
    
    List of Subjects
    
    32 CFR Part 21
    
        Grant programs, Grants administration.
    
    32 CFR Part 22 -
    
        Accounting, Grant programs, Grants administration, 
    Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    32 CFR Part 28 -
    
        Grant programs, Loan programs, Lobbying, Penalties, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    32 CFR Part 32 -
    
        Accounting, Colleges and universities, Grant programs, Grants 
    administration, Hospitals, Nonprofit organizations, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    32 CFR Part 33 -
    
        Accounting, Grant programs, Grants administration, Indians, 
    Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    32 CFR Part 34 -
    
        Accounting, Business and industry, Grant programs, Grants 
    administration, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Accordingly, Title 32 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Chapter 
    I, Subchapter B, is proposed to be amended as follows.
        1. The heading of Subchapter B is proposed to be revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    SUBCHAPTER B--DoD GRANT AND AGREEMENT REGULATIONS
    
        2. Part 21 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
    
    PART 21--DoD GRANTS AND AGREEMENTS--GENERAL MATTERS
    
    Subpart A--Defense Grant and Agreement Regulatory System
    
    Sec.
    21.100  Scope.
    21.105  Authority, purpose, and issuance.
    21.110  Applicability and relationship to acquisition regulations.
    21.115  Compliance and implementation.
    21.120  Publication and maintenance.
    21.125  Deviations.
    21.130  Definitions.
    
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    Subpart B--Authorities and Responsibilities
    
    21.200  Purpose.
    21.205  DoD Components' authorities.
    21.210  Vesting and delegation of authority.
    21.215  Contracting activities.
    21.220  Grants officers.
    
    Subpart C--Grants Information
    
    21.300  Purpose.
    21.305  Defense Assistance Awards Data System.
    21.310  Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance.
    21.315  Uniform grants and agreements numbering system.
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
    Subpart A--Defense Grant and Agreement Regulatory System
    
    
    Sec. 21.100  Scope.
    
        The purposes of this part, which is one portion of the DoD Grant 
    and Agreement Regulations (DoDGARs), are to: -
        (a) Provide general information about the DoDGARs. -
        (b) Set forth general policies and procedures related to DoD 
    Components' overall management of functions related to grants and 
    cooperative agreements.
    
    
    Sec. 21.105  Authority, purpose, and issuance.
    
        (a) DoD Directive 3210.6 \1\ established the Defense Grant and 
    Agreement Regulatory System (DGARS). The directive authorized 
    publication of policies and procedures comprising the DGARS in the DoD 
    Grant and Agreement Regulations (DoDGARs), in DoD instructions, and in 
    other DoD publications, as appropriate. Thus, the DoDGARs are one 
    element of the DGARS.
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        \1\ Copies may be obtained, at cost, from the National Technical 
    Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. 
    Authorized users may also obtain copies from the Defense Technical 
    Information Center, 8725 John J. Kingman Rd., Suite 0944, Fort 
    Belvoir, VA 22060-6218.
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        (b) The purposes of the DoDGARs, in conjunction with other elements 
    of the DGARS, are to provide uniform policies and procedures for grants 
    and cooperative agreements awarded by DoD Components, in order to meet 
    DoD needs for:
        (1) Efficient program execution, effective program oversight, and 
    proper stewardship of Federal funds.
        (2) Compliance with relevant statutes; Executive orders; and 
    applicable guidance, such as Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    circulars.
        (3) Collection from DoD Components, retention, and dissemination of 
    management and fiscal data related to grants and agreements.
        (c) The Director of Defense Research and Engineering, or his or her 
    designee:
        (1) Develops and implements DGARS policies and procedures.
        (2) Issues and maintains the DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations 
    and other DoD publications that comprise the DGARS.
    
    
    Sec. 21.110  Applicability and relationship to acquisition regulations.
    
        (a) Applicability to grants and cooperative agreements. The DoD 
    Grant and Agreement Regulations (DoDGARs) apply to all DoD grants and 
    cooperative agreements.-
        (b) Applicability to other nonprocurement instruments. (1) In 
    accordance with DoD Directive 3210.6, the DoDGARs may include rules 
    that apply to other nonprocurement instruments, when specifically 
    required in order to implement a statute, Executive order, or 
    Governmentwide rule that applies to other nonprocurement instruments, 
    as well as to grants and cooperative agreements. For example, the rule 
    on nonprocurement debarment and suspension in 32 CFR part 25, subparts 
    A through E, applies to all nonprocurement transactions, including 
    grants, cooperative agreements, contracts of assistance, loans and loan 
    guarantees (see definition of ``primary covered transaction'' at 32 CFR 
    25.110(a)(1)(i)). -
        (2) The following is a list of DoDGARs rules that apply not only to 
    grants and cooperative agreements, but also to other types of 
    nonprocurement instruments: -
        (i) Requirements for reporting to the Defense Assistance Award Data 
    System, in subpart C of this part. -
        (ii) The rule on nonprocurement debarment and suspension in 32 CFR 
    part 25, subparts A through E. -
        (iii) Drug-free workplace requirements in 32 CFR part 25, subpart 
    F. -
        (iv) Restrictions on lobbying in 32 CFR part 28. -
        (v) Administrative requirements for grants, cooperative agreements, 
    and other financial assistance to: -
        (A) Universities and other nonprofit organizations, in 32 CFR part 
    32. -
        (B) State and local governments, in 32 CFR part 33. -
        (3) Grants officers should be aware that each rule that applies to 
    other types of nonprocurement instruments (i.e., other than grants and 
    cooperative agreements) states its applicability to such instruments. 
    However, grants officers must exercise caution when determining the 
    applicability of some Governmentwide rules that are included in the 
    DoDGARs, because a term may be defined differently in a Governmentwide 
    rule than it is defined elsewhere in the DoDGARs. For example, the 
    Governmentwide implementation of the Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 
    (32 CFR part 25, subpart F) states that it applies to grants, but 
    defines ``grants'' to include cooperative agreements and other forms of 
    financial assistance. -
        (c) Relationship to acquisition regulations. The Federal 
    Acquisition Regulation (FAR) (48 CFR parts 1-53), the Defense Federal 
    Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) (48 CFR parts 201-270), and 
    DoD Component supplements to the FAR and DFARS apply to DoD Components' 
    procurement contracts used to acquire goods and services for the direct 
    benefit or use of the Federal Government. Policies and procedures in 
    the FAR and DFARS do not apply to grants, cooperative agreements, or 
    other nonprocurement transactions unless the DoDGARs specify that they 
    apply.
    
    
    Sec. 21.115  Compliance and implementation. -
    
        The Head of each DoD Component that awards or administers grants 
    and cooperative agreements, or his or her designee: -
        (a) Is responsible for ensuring compliance with the DoDGARs within 
    that DoD Component. -
        (b) May authorize the issuance of regulations, procedures, or 
    instructions that are necessary to implement DGARS policies and 
    procedures within the DoD Component, or to supplement the DoDGARs to 
    satisfy needs that are specific to the DoD Component, as long as such 
    regulations, procedures, or instructions do not impose additional costs 
    or administrative burdens on recipients or potential recipients. Heads 
    of DoD Components or their designees shall establish policies and 
    procedures in areas where uniform policies and procedures throughout 
    the DoD Component are required, such as for: -
        (1) Requesting class deviations from the DoDGARs (see Sec. 21.125) 
    or exemptions from the provisions of 31 U.S.C. 6301 et seq., that 
    govern the appropriate use of contracts, grants, and cooperative 
    agreements (see 32 CFR 22.220). -
        (2) Designating one or more Grant Appeal Authorities to resolve 
    claims, disputes, and appeals (see 32 CFR 22.815). -
        (3) Reporting data on assistance awards and programs, as required 
    by 31 U.S.C. chapter 61 (see subpart C of this part). -
        (4) Prescribing requirements for use and disposition of real 
    property acquired under awards, if the DoD
    
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    Component makes any awards to institutions of higher education or to 
    other nonprofit organizations under which real property is acquired in 
    whole or in part with Federal funds (see 32 CFR 32.32).
    
    
    Sec. 21.120  Publication and maintenance. -
    
        (a) The DoDGARs are published as Chapter I, Subchapter B, Title 32 
    of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and in a separate loose-leaf 
    edition. The loose-leaf edition is divided into parts, subparts, and 
    sections, to parallel the CFR publication. Cross-references within the 
    DoDGARs are stated as CFR citations (e.g., a reference to section 
    21.115 in part 21 would be to 32 CFR 21.115). -
        (b) Updates to the DoDGARs are published in the Federal Register. 
    When finalized, updates also are published as Defense Grant and 
    Agreement Circulars, with revised pages for the separate, loose-leaf 
    edition. -
        (c) Revisions to the DoDGARs are recommended to the Director of 
    Defense Research and Engineering (DDR&E) by a standing working group. 
    The DDR&E, Director of Defense Procurement, and each Military 
    Department shall be represented on the working group. Other DoD 
    Components that use grants or cooperative agreements may also nominate 
    representatives. The working group meets when necessary.
    
    
    Sec. 21.125  Deviations.
    
        (a) The Head of the DoD Component or his or her designee may 
    authorize individual deviations from the DoDGARs, which are deviations 
    that affect only one grant or agreement, if such deviations are not 
    prohibited by statute, executive order or regulation.
        (b) Class deviations that affect more than one grant or agreement 
    must be approved in advance by the Director, Defense Research and 
    Engineering (DDR&E) or his or her designee. Note that OMB concurrence 
    also is required for deviations from two parts of the DoDGARs, 32 CFR 
    parts 32 and 33, in accordance with 32 CFR 32.4 and 33.6, respectively.
        (c) Copies of justifications and agency approvals for individual 
    deviations and written requests for class deviations shall be submitted 
    to:--Deputy Director, Defense Research and Engineering, ATTN: Research, 
    3080 Defense Pentagon, Washington D.C. 20301-3080.
        (d) Copies of requests and approvals for individual and class 
    deviations shall be maintained in award files.
    
    
    Sec. 21.130  Definitions.
    
        Acquisition. The acquiring (by purchase, lease, or barter) of 
    property or services for the direct benefit or use of the United States 
    Government (see more detailed definition at 48 CFR 2.101). In 
    accordance with 31 U.S.C. 6303, procurement contracts are the 
    appropriate legal instruments for acquiring such property or services.
        Assistance. The transfer of a thing of value to a recipient to 
    carry out a public purpose of support or stimulation authorized by a 
    law of the United States (see 31 U.S.C. 6101(3)). Grants and 
    cooperative agreements are examples of legal instruments used to 
    provide assistance.
        Contract. See the definition for procurement contract in this 
    section.
        Contracting activity. An activity to which the Head of a DoD 
    Component has delegated broad authority regarding acquisition 
    functions, pursuant to 48 CFR 1.601.
        Contracting officer. A person with the authority to enter into, 
    administer, and/or terminate contracts and make related determinations 
    and findings. A more detailed definition of the term appears at 48 CFR 
    2.101.
        Cooperative agreement. A legal instrument which, consistent with 31 
    U.S.C. 6305, is used to enter into the same kind of relationship as a 
    grant (see definition ``grant''), except that substantial involvement 
    is expected between the Department of Defense and the recipient when 
    carrying out the activity contemplated by the cooperative agreement. 
    The term does not include ``cooperative research and development 
    agreements'' as defined in 15 U.S.C. 3710a.
        Deviation. The issuance or use of a policy or procedure that is 
    inconsistent with the DoDGARs.
        DoD Components. The Office of the Secretary of Defense, the 
    Military Departments, the Defense Agencies, and DoD Field Activities.
        Grant. A legal instrument which, consistent with 31 U.S.C. 6304, is 
    used to enter into a relationship:
        (1) The principal purpose of which is to transfer a thing of value 
    to the recipient to carry out a public purpose of support or 
    stimulation authorized by a law of the United States, rather than to 
    acquire property or services for the Department of Defense's direct 
    benefit or use.
        (2) In which substantial involvement is not expected between the 
    Department of Defense and the recipient when carrying out the activity 
    contemplated by the grant.
        Grants officer. An official with the authority to enter into, 
    administer, and/or terminate grants or cooperative agreements.
        Nonprocurement instrument. A legal instrument other than a 
    procurement contract. Examples include instruments of financial 
    assistance, such as grants or cooperative agreements, and those of 
    technical assistance, which provide services in lieu of money.
        Procurement contract. A legal instrument which, consistent with 31 
    U.S.C. 6303, reflects a relationship between the Federal Government and 
    a State, a local government, or other person when the principal purpose 
    of the instrument is to acquire property or services for the direct 
    benefit or use of the Federal Government. See the more detailed 
    definition for contract at 48 CFR 2.101.
        Recipient. An organization or other entity receiving a grant or 
    cooperative agreement from a DoD Component.
    
    Subpart B--Authorities and Responsibilities
    
    
    Sec. 21.200  Purpose.
    
        This subpart describes the sources and flow of authority to use 
    grants and cooperative agreements, and assigns the broad 
    responsibilities associated with DoD Components' use of such 
    instruments.
    
    
    Sec. 21.205  DoD Components' authorities.
    
        (a) In accordance with 31 U.S.C. 6301 et seq., DoD Components shall 
    use grants and cooperative agreements as legal instruments reflecting 
    assistance relationships between the United States Government and 
    recipients.
        (b) Unlike the use of procurement contracts (for which Federal 
    agencies have inherent, Constitutional authority), use of grants or 
    cooperative agreements requires specific statutory authority. DoD 
    Components may award grants and cooperative agreements under a number 
    of statutory authorities that fall into three categories:
        (1) Authorities that statutes provide to the Secretary of Defense. 
    These authorities generally are delegated by the Secretary of Defense 
    to Heads of DoD Components, usually through DoD directives, 
    instructions, or policy memoranda that are not part of the Defense 
    Grant and Agreement Regulatory System. Examples of statutory 
    authorities in this category are:
        (i) Authority under 10 U.S.C. 2391 to make grants or conclude 
    cooperative agreements to assist State and local governments in 
    planning and carrying out community adjustments and economic 
    diversification required by changes in military installations or in DoD 
    contracts or spending that may have a direct and significant adverse
    
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    consequence on the affected community.
        (ii) Authority under 10 U.S.C. 2413 to enter into cooperative 
    agreements with entities that furnish procurement technical assistance 
    to businesses.
        (2) Authorities that statutes may provide directly to Heads of DoD 
    Components. For example, 10 U.S.C. 2358 authorizes the Secretaries of 
    the Military Departments, in addition to the Secretary of Defense, to 
    perform research and development projects through grants and 
    cooperative agreements. A Military Department's use of the authority of 
    10 U.S.C. 2358 therefore requires no delegation by the Secretary of 
    Defense.
        (3) Authorities that arise indirectly as the result of statute. For 
    example, authority to use a grant or cooperative agreement may result 
    from:
        (i) A federal statute authorizing a program that is consistent with 
    an assistance relationship (i.e., the support or stimulation of a 
    public purpose, rather than the acquisition of a good or service for 
    the direct benefit of the Department of Defense). In accordance with 31 
    U.S.C. chapter 63, such a program would appropriately be carried out 
    through the use of grants or cooperative agreements.
        (ii) Exemptions requested by the Department of Defense and granted 
    by the Office of Management and Budget under 31 U.S.C. 6307, as 
    described in 32 CFR 22.220.
    
    
    Sec. 21.210  Vesting and delegation of authority.
    
        (a) The authority and responsibility for awarding grants and 
    cooperative agreements is vested in the Head of each DoD Component that 
    has such authority.
        (b) The Head of each such DoD Component, or his or her designee, 
    may delegate to the heads of contracting activities (HCAs) within that 
    Component, authority to award grants or cooperative agreements, to 
    appoint grants officers (see Sec. 21.220(c)), and to broadly manage the 
    DoD Component's functions related to grants and agreements. An HCA is 
    the same official (or officials) designated as the head of the 
    contracting activity for procurement contracts, as defined at 48 CFR 
    2.101--the intent is that overall management responsibilities for a DoD 
    Component's functions related to nonprocurement instruments be assigned 
    only to officials that have similar responsibilities for procurement 
    contracts.
    
    
    Sec. 21.215  Contracting activities.
    
        When designated by the Head of the DoD Component or his or her 
    designee (see 32 CFR 22.210(b)), the HCA is responsible for the grants 
    and cooperative agreements made by or assigned to that activity. He or 
    she shall supervise and establish internal policies and procedures for 
    that activity's assistance awards.
    
    
    Sec. 21.220  Grants officers. -
    
        (a) Authority. Only grants officers are authorized to sign grants 
    or cooperative agreements, or to administer or terminate such legal 
    instruments on behalf of the Department of Defense. Grants officers may 
    bind the Government only to the extent of the authority delegated to 
    them. -
        (b) Responsibilities. Grants officers should be allowed wide 
    latitude to exercise judgment in performing their responsibilities. 
    Grants officers are responsible for ensuring that: --
        (1) Individual grants and cooperative agreements are used 
    effectively in the execution of DoD programs, and are awarded and 
    administered in accordance with applicable laws, Executive orders, 
    regulations, and DoD policies. --
        (2) Sufficient funds are available for obligation. --
        (3) Recipients of grants and cooperative agreements receive 
    impartial, fair, and equitable treatment. -
        (c) Selection, appointment and termination of appointment of grants 
    officers. Each DoD Component that awards grants or enters into 
    cooperative agreements shall have a formal process (see Sec. 21.210(b)) 
    to select and appoint grants officers and terminate their appointments. 
    DoD Components are not required to maintain a selection process for 
    grants officers separate from the selection process for contracting 
    officers, and written statements of appointment or termination for 
    grants officers may be integrated into the necessary documentation for 
    contracting officers, as appropriate. --
        (1) Selection. In selecting grants officers, appointing officials 
    shall consider the complexity and dollar value of the grants and 
    agreements to be assigned and judge whether candidates possess the 
    necessary experience, training, education, business acumen, judgment, 
    and knowledge of contracts and assistance instruments to function 
    effectively as grants officers. --
        (2) Appointment. Statements of appointment shall be in writing and 
    shall clearly state the limits of grants officers' authority, other 
    than limits contained in applicable laws or regulations. Information on 
    the limits of a grants officer's authority shall be readily available 
    to the public and agency personnel. --
        (3) Termination. Written statements of termination are required, 
    unless the written statement of appointment provides for automatic 
    termination. No termination shall be retroactive.
    
    Subpart C--Grants Information
    
    
    Sec. 21.300  Purpose. -
    
        This subpart prescribes policies and procedures for compiling and 
    reporting data related to grants, cooperative agreements, and other 
    nonprocurement instruments subject to information reporting 
    requirements of 31 U.S.C. chapter 61.
    
    
    Sec. 21.305  Defense Assistance Awards Data System. -
    
        (a) Purposes of the system. Data from the Defense Assistance Awards 
    Data System (DAADS) are used to provide: --
        (1) DoD inputs to meet statutory requirements for Federal 
    Governmentwide reporting of data related to obligations of funds by 
    grant, cooperative agreement, or other nonprocurement instrument. --
        (2) A basis for meeting Governmentwide requirements to report to 
    the Federal Assistance Awards Data System maintained by the Department 
    of Commerce and for preparing other recurring and special reports to 
    the President, the Congress, the General Accounting Office, and the 
    public. --
        (3) Information to support policy formulation and implementation 
    and to meet management oversight requirements related to the use of 
    grants, cooperative agreements, and other nonprocurement instruments. -
        (b) Responsibilities. (1) The Deputy Director, Defense Research and 
    Engineering (DDDR&E), or his or her designee, shall issue the manual 
    described in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section. --
        (2) The Director for Information Operations and Reports, Washington 
    Headquarters Services (DIOR, WHS) shall, consistent with guidance 
    issued by the DDDR&E:----
        (i) Process DAADS information on a quarterly basis and prepare 
    recurring and special reports using such information. ----
        (ii) Prepare, update, and disseminate ``Department of Defense 
    Assistance Awards Data System,'' an instruction manual for reporting 
    information to DAADS. The manual, which shall be issued by the office 
    of the DDR&E, shall specify procedures, formats, and editing processes 
    to be used by DoD Components, including magnetic tape layout and error 
    correction schedules. --
        (3) The following offices shall serve as central points for 
    collecting DAADS
    
    [[Page 43872]]
    
    information from contracting activities within the DoD Components: ----
        (i) For the Army: As directed by the U.S. Army Contracting Support 
    Agency. ----
        (ii) For the Navy: As directed by the Office of Naval Research. ---
    -
        (iii) For the Air Force: As directed by SAF/AQCP. ----
        (iv) For the Office of the Secretary of Defense, Defense Agencies, 
    and DoD Field Activities: Each Defense Agency shall identify a central 
    point for collecting and reporting DAADS information to the DIOR, WHS, 
    at the address given in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. DIOR, WHS 
    shall serve as the central point for offices and activities within the 
    Office of the Secretary of Defense and for DoD Field Activities. --
        (4) The office that serves, in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of 
    this section, as the central point for collecting DAADS information 
    from contracting activities within each DoD Component shall: ----
        (i) Establish internal procedures to ensure reporting by 
    contracting activities that use grants, cooperative agreements or other 
    nonprocurement instruments subject to 31 U.S.C. chapter 61. ----
        (ii Collect information required by DD Form 2566, ``DoD Assistance 
    Award Action Report,'' from those contracting activities, and report it 
    to DIOR, WHS, in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section. ----
        (iii) Submit to the DDDR&E, at the address given in Sec. 21.125(c), 
    any recommended changes to the DAADS or to the instruction manual 
    described in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section. -
        (c) Reporting procedures. The data required by the DD Form 2566 
    shall be: --
        (1) Collected for each individual grant, cooperative agreement, or 
    other nonprocurement action that is subject to 31 U.S.C. chapter 61 and 
    involves the obligation or deobligation of Federal funds. Each action 
    is reported as an obligation under a specific program listed in the 
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA, see Sec. 21.310). The 
    program to be shown is the one that provided the funds being obligated 
    (i.e., if a grants officer in one DoD Component obligates 
    appropriations of another DoD Component's program, the grants officer 
    would show the CFDA program of the second DoD Component on the DD Form 
    2566). --
        (2) Reported on a quarterly basis to DIOR, WHS by the offices that 
    are designated pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section. For the 
    first three quarters of the Federal fiscal year, the data are due by 
    close-of-business (COB) on the 15th day after the end of the quarter 
    (i.e., first-quarter data are due by COB on January 15th, second-
    quarter data by COB April 15th, and third-quarter data by COB July 
    15th). Fourth-quarter data are due by COB October 25th, the 25th day 
    after the end of the quarter. If any due date falls on a weekend or 
    holiday, the data are due on the next regular workday. The mailing 
    address for DIOR, WHS is 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, 
    Arlington, VA 22202-4302. --
        (3) Reported on a computer tape, floppy diskette or by other means 
    permitted by the instruction manual described in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) 
    of this section. The data shall be reported in the format specified in 
    the instruction manual. -
        (d) Report control symbol. DoD Components' reporting of DAADS data 
    is used by DoD to satisfy Governmentwide requirements to report to the 
    Federal Assistance Awards Data System, which is assigned Interagency 
    Report Control Number 0252-DOC-QU.
    
    
    Sec. 21.310  Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance.
    
        (a) Purpose and scope of the reporting requirement. (1) Under the 
    Federal Program Information Act (31 U.S.C. 6101 et seq.), as 
    implemented through OMB Circular A-89,\2\ the Department of Defense is 
    required to provide certain information about its domestic assistance 
    programs to OMB and the General Services Administration (GSA). GSA 
    makes this information available to the public by publishing it in the 
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) and maintaining the 
    Federal Assistance Programs Retrieval System, a computerized data base 
    of the information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ Contact the Office of Management and Budget, EOP 
    Publications, 725 17th St. N.W., New Executive Office Building, 
    Washington, D.C. 20503.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) The CFDA covers all domestic assistance programs and 
    activities, regardless of the number of awards made under the program, 
    the total dollar value of assistance provided, or the duration. In 
    addition to programs using grants and cooperative agreements, covered 
    programs include those providing assistance in other forms, such as 
    payments in lieu of taxes or indirect assistance resulting from Federal 
    operations.
        (b) Responsibilities. (1) Each DoD Component that provides domestic 
    financial assistance shall:
        (i) Report to the Director for Information Operations and Reports, 
    Washington Headquarters Services (DIOR, WHS) all new programs and 
    changes as they occur, or as DIOR, WHS requests annual updates to 
    existing CFDA information.
        (ii) Identify to the DIOR, WHS a point-of-contact who will be 
    responsible for reporting such program information and for responding 
    to inquiries related to it.
        (2) The DIOR, WHS shall act as the Department of Defense's single 
    office for collecting, compiling and reporting such program information 
    to OMB and GSA.
    
    
    Sec. 21.315  Uniform grants and agreements numbering system.
    
        DoD Components shall assign identifying numbers to all 
    nonprocurement instruments subject to this subpart, including grants 
    and cooperative agreements. The numbering system parallels the 
    procurement instrument identification (PII) numbering system specified 
    in 48 CFR 204.70 (in the ``Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation 
    Supplement''), as follows:
        (a) The first six alphanumeric characters of the assigned number 
    shall be identical to those specified by 48 CFR 204.7003(a)(1) to 
    identify the DoD Component and contracting activity.
        (b) The seventh and eighth positions shall be the last two digits 
    of the fiscal year in which the number is assigned to the grant, 
    cooperative agreement, or other nonprocurement instrument.
        (c) The 9th position shall be a number: ``1'' for grants; ``2'' for 
    cooperative agreements; and ``3'' for other nonprocurement instruments.
        (d) The 10th through 13th positions shall be the serial number of 
    the instrument. DoD Components and contracting activities need not 
    follow any specific pattern in assigning these numbers and may create 
    multiple series of letters and numbers to meet internal needs for 
    distinguishing between various sets of awards.
        3. Part 22 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
    
    PART 22--DoD GRANTS AND AGREEMENTS--AWARD AND ADMINISTRATION
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    22.100  Purpose, relation to other parts, and organization.
    22.105  Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Selecting the Appropriate Instrument
    
    22.200  Purpose.
    22.205  Distinguishing assistance from procurement.
    22.210  Authority for providing assistance.
    22.215  Distinguishing grants and cooperative agreements.
    22.220  Exemptions.
    
    Subpart C--Competition
    
    22.300  Purpose.
    22.305  General policy and requirement for competition.
    
    [[Page 43873]]
    
    22.310  Statutes concerning certain research, development, and 
    facilities construction grants.
    22.315  Merit-based, competitive procedures.
    22.320  Special competitions.
    Subpart D--Recipient Qualification Matters--General Policies and 
    Procedures
    22.400  Purpose.
    22.405  Policy.
    22.410  Grants officers' responsibilities.
    22.415  Standards.
    22.420  Pre-award procedures.
    
    Subpart E--National Policy Matters
    
    22.505  Purpose.
    22.510  Certifications, representations, and assurances.
    22.515  Provisions of annual appropriations acts.
    22.520  Military recruiting on campus. [Reserved]
    22.525  Paperwork Reduction Act.
    22.530  Metric system of measurement.
    
    Subpart F--Award
    
    22.600  Purpose.
    22.605  Grants officers' responsibilities.
    22.610  Award instruments.
    
    Subpart G--Field Administration
    
    22.700  Purpose.
    22.705  Policy.
    22.710  Assignment of grants administration offices.
    22.715  Grants administration office functions.
    
    Subpart H--Post-Award Administration
    
    22.800  Purpose and relation to other parts.
    22.805  Post-award requirements in other parts.
    22.810  Payments.
    22.815  Claims, disputes, and appeals.
    22.820  Debt collection.
    22.825  Closeout audits.
    
    Appendix A to Part 22--Suggested Proposal Provision for Required 
    Certifications
    
    Appendix B to Part 22--Suggested Award Provisions for National Policy 
    Requirements That Often Apply
    
    Appendix C to Part 22--Administrative Requirements and Issues To Be 
    Addressed in Award Terms and Conditions
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 22.100  Purpose, relation to other parts, and organization.
    
        (a) This part outlines grants officers' and DoD Components' 
    responsibilities related to the award and administration of grants and 
    cooperative agreements.
        (b) In doing so, it also supplements other parts of the DoD Grant 
    and Agreement Regulations (DoDGARs) that are either Governmentwide 
    rules or DoD implementation of Governmentwide guidance in Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) Circulars. Those other parts of the 
    DoDGARs, which are referenced as appropriate in this part, are:
        (1) Governmentwide rules on debarment, suspension and drug-free 
    workplace requirements, in 32 CFR part 25.
        (2) The Governmentwide rule on lobbying restrictions, in 32 CFR 
    part 28.
        (3) Administrative requirements for grants and agreements awarded 
    to specific types of recipients:
        (i) For State and local governmental organizations, in the 
    Governmentwide rule at 32 CFR part 33.
        (ii) For institutions of higher education and other nonprofit 
    organizations, at 32 CFR part 32.
        (iii) For commercial organizations, at 32 CFR part 34.
        (c)-The organization of this part parallels the award and 
    administration process, from pre-award through post-award matters. It 
    therefore is organized in the same manner as the parts of the DoDGARs 
    (32 CFR parts 32, 33, and 34) that prescribe administrative 
    requirements for specific types of recipients.
    
    
    Sec. 22.105  Definitions.
    
        Other than the terms defined in this section, terms used in this 
    part are defined in 32 CFR 21.130.
        Administrative offset. An action whereby money payable by the 
    United States Government to, or held by the Government for, a recipient 
    is withheld to satisfy a delinquent debt the recipient owes the 
    Government.
        Advanced research. Advanced technology development that creates new 
    technology or demonstrates the viability of applying existing 
    technology to new products and processes in a general way. Advanced 
    research is most closely analogous to precompetitive technology 
    development in the commercial sector (i.e., early phases of research 
    and development on which commercial competitors are willing to 
    collaborate, because the work is not so coupled to specific products 
    and processes that the results of the work must be proprietary). It 
    does not include development of military systems and hardware where 
    specific requirements have been defined. It is typically funded in 
    Budget Activity 3 (6.3, Advanced Development, which formerly was 
    category ``6.3A,'' Advanced Technology Development), within Research, 
    Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E).
        Applied research. Efforts that attempt to determine and exploit the 
    potential of scientific discoveries or improvements in technology such 
    as new materials, devices, methods and processes. It typically is 
    funded within Budget Activity 2 (6.2, Exploratory Development) within 
    Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E). Applied research 
    normally follows basic research but may not be fully distinguishable 
    from the related basic research. The term does not include efforts 
    whose principal aim is the design, development, or testing of specific 
    products, systems or processes to be considered for sale or 
    acquisition; these efforts are within the definition of 
    ``development.''
        Basic research. Efforts directed toward increasing knowledge and 
    understanding in science and engineering, rather than the practical 
    application of that knowledge and understanding. It typically is funded 
    within Budget Activity 1 (6.1, Basic Research) within Research, 
    Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E). For the purposes of this 
    part, basic research includes:
        (1) Research-related, science and engineering education, including 
    graduate fellowships and research traineeships.
        (2) Research instrumentation and other activities designed to 
    enhance the infrastructure for science and engineering research.
        Claim. A written demand or written assertion by one of the parties 
    to a grant or cooperative agreement seeking as a matter of right, the 
    payment of money in a sum certain, the adjustment or interpretation of 
    award terms, or other relief arising under or relating to a grant or 
    cooperative agreement. A routine request for payment that is not in 
    dispute when submitted is not a claim. The submission may be converted 
    to a claim by written notice to the grants officer if it is disputed 
    either as to liability or amount, or is not acted upon in a reasonable 
    time.
        Debt. Any amount of money or any property owed to a Federal Agency 
    by any person, organization, or entity except another United States 
    Federal agency. Debts include any amounts due from insured or 
    guaranteed loans, fees, leases, rents, royalties, services, sales of 
    real or personal property, or overpayments, penalties, damages, 
    interest, fines and forfeitures, and all other claims and similar 
    sources. Amounts due a nonappropriated fund instrumentality are not 
    debts owed the United States, for the purposes of this subchapter.
        Delinquent debt. A debt:
        (1) That the debtor fails to pay by the date specified in the 
    initial written notice from the agency owed the debt, normally within 
    30 days, unless the debtor makes satisfactory payment
    
    [[Page 43874]]
    
    arrangements with the agency by that date; and
        (2) With respect to which the debtor has elected not to exercise 
    any available appeals or has exhausted all agency appeal processes.
        Development. The systematic use of scientific and technical 
    knowledge in the design, development, testing, or evaluation of 
    potential new products, processes, or services to meet specific 
    performance requirements or objectives. It includes the functions of 
    design engineering, prototyping, and engineering testing.
        Electronic commerce. A wide range of functions related to grants 
    and cooperative agreements which are performed using data 
    communications techniques.
        Electronic data interchange. The exchange of standardized 
    information communicated electronically between business partners, 
    typically between computers. It is DoD policy that DoD Component EDI 
    applications conform to the American National Standards Institute 
    (ANSI), Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X-12 standard.\1\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Available from Accredited Standards Committee, X-12 
    Secretariat, Data Interchange Standards Association, 1800 Diagonal 
    Road, Suite 355, Alexandria, VA 22314-2852; Attention: Manager 
    Maintenance and Publications.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Electronic funds transfer. A system that provides the authority to 
    debit or credit accounts in financial institutions by electronic means 
    rather than source documents (e.g., paper checks). Processing typically 
    occurs through the Federal Reserve System and/or the Automated Clearing 
    House (ACH) computer network. It is DoD policy that DoD Component EFT 
    transmissions conform to the American National Standards Institute 
    (ANSI), Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X-12 standard.
        Historically Black colleges and universities. Institutions of 
    higher education determined by the Secretary of Education to meet the 
    requirements of 34 CFR 608.2. Each DoD Component's contracting 
    activities and grants officers may obtain a list of historically Black 
    colleges and universities from that DoD Component's Small and 
    Disadvantaged Business Utilization office.
        Institution of higher education. An educational institution that 
    meets the criteria in section 1201(a) of the Higher Education Act of 
    1965 (20 U.S.C. 1141(a)).
        Minority institutions. Institutions of higher education that meet 
    the criteria for minority institutions specified in 10 U.S.C. 2323. 
    Each DoD Component's contracting activities and grants officers may 
    obtain copies of a current list of institutions that qualify as 
    minority institutions under 10 U.S.C. 2323 from that DoD Component's 
    Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization office (the list of 
    minority institutions changes periodically, based on Department of 
    Education data on institutions' enrollments of minority students).
        Research. Basic, applied, and advanced research, as defined in this 
    section.
        Subaward. An award of financial assistance in the form of money, or 
    property in lieu of money, made under a DoD grant or cooperative 
    agreement by a recipient to an eligible subrecipient. The term includes 
    financial assistance for substantive program performance by the 
    subrecipient of a portion of the program for which the DoD grant or 
    cooperative agreement was made. It does not include the recipient's 
    procurement of goods and services needed to carry out the program.
    
    Subpart B--Selecting the Appropriate Instrument
    
    
    Sec. 22.200  Purpose.
    
        This subpart provides the bases for determining the appropriate 
    type of instrument in a given situation.
    
    
    Sec. 22.205  Distinguishing assistance from procurement.
    
        Before using a grant or cooperative agreement, the grants officer 
    shall make a positive judgment that an assistance instrument, rather 
    than a procurement contract, is the appropriate instrument, based on 
    the following:
        (a) Purpose. (1) The grants officer must judge that the principal 
    purpose of the activity to be carried out under the instrument is to 
    stimulate or support a public purpose (i.e., to provide assistance), 
    rather than acquisition (i.e., to acquire goods and services for the 
    direct benefit of the United States Government). If the principal 
    purpose is acquisition, then the grants officer shall judge that a 
    procurement contract is the appropriate instrument, in accordance with 
    31 U.S.C. chapter 63 (``Using Procurement Contracts and Grant and 
    Cooperative Agreements''). Assistance instruments shall not be used in 
    such situations, except:
        (i) When a statute specifically provides otherwise; or
        (ii) When an exemption is granted, in accordance with Sec. 22.220.
        (2) For research and development, the appropriate use of grants and 
    cooperative agreements therefore is almost exclusively limited to the 
    performance of selected basic, applied, and advanced research projects. 
    Development projects nearly always shall be performed by contract 
    because their principal purpose is the acquisition of specific 
    deliverable items (e.g., prototypes or other hardware) for the benefit 
    of the Department of Defense.
        (b) Fee or profit. Payment of fee or profit is consistent with an 
    activity whose principal purpose is the acquisition of goods and 
    services for the direct benefit or use of the United States Government, 
    rather than an activity whose principal purpose is assistance. 
    Therefore, the grants officer shall use a procurement contract, rather 
    than an assistance instrument, in all cases where:
        (1) Fee or profit is to be paid to the recipient of the instrument; 
    or
        (2) The instrument is to be used to carry out a program where fee 
    or profit is necessary to achieving program objectives.
    
    
    Sec. 22.210  Authority for providing assistance.
    
        (a) Before a grant or cooperative agreement may be used, the grants 
    officer must:
        (1) Identify the program statute, the statute that authorizes the 
    DoD Component to carry out the activity the principal purpose of which 
    is assistance (see 32 CFR 21.205(b)).
        (2) Review the program statute to determine if it contains 
    requirements that affect the:
        (i) Solicitation, selection, and award processes. For example, 
    program statutes may authorize assistance to be provided only to 
    certain types of recipients; may require that recipients meet certain 
    other criteria to be eligible to receive assistance; or require that a 
    specific process shall be used to review recipients' proposals.
        (ii) Terms and conditions of the award. For example, some program 
    statutes require a specific level of cost sharing or matching.
        (b) The grants officer shall ensure that the award of any grant or 
    cooperative agreement for a research project complies with the 
    requirements of 10 U.S.C. 2358, DoD's broad authority to carry out 
    research, even if the research project is authorized under a statutory 
    authority other than 10 U.S.C. 2358. This broadening of the 
    applicability of 10 U.S.C. 2358 to all research awards is a matter of 
    DoD policy. The requirements of 10 U.S.C. 2358 are that, in the opinion 
    of the Head of the DoD Component or his or her designee, the projects 
    must be:
        (1) Necessary to the responsibilities of the DoD Component.
    
    [[Page 43875]]
    
        (2) Related to weapons systems and other military needs or of 
    potential interest to the DoD Component.
    
    
    Sec. 22.215  Distinguishing grants and cooperative agreements.
    
        (a) Once a grants officer judges, in accordance with Secs. 22.205 
    and 22.210, that either a grant or cooperative agreement is the 
    appropriate instrument, the grants officer shall distinguish between 
    the two instruments as follows:
        (1) Grants shall be used when the grants officer judges that 
    substantial involvement is not expected between the Department of 
    Defense and the recipient when carrying out the activity contemplated 
    in the agreement.
        (2) Cooperative agreements shall be used when the grants officer 
    judges that substantial involvement is expected. Under no circumstances 
    are cooperative agreements to be used solely to obtain the stricter 
    controls typical of a contract. The grants officer should document the 
    nature of the substantial involvement that led to selection of a 
    cooperative agreement.
        (b) In judging whether substantial involvement is expected, grants 
    officers should recognize that ``substantial involvement'' is a 
    relative, rather than an absolute, concept, and that it is primarily 
    based on programmatic factors, rather than requirements for grant or 
    agreement award or administration. For example, substantial involvement 
    may include collaboration, participation, or intervention in the 
    program or activity to be performed under the award.
    
    
    Sec. 22.220  Exemptions.
    
        Under 31 U.S.C. 6307, the Director of the OMB is authorized to 
    exempt an agency transaction or program from the requirements of 31 
    U.S.C. chapter 63. Grants officers shall request such exemptions only 
    in exceptional circumstances. Each request shall specify for which 
    individual transaction or program the exemption is sought; the reasons 
    for requesting an exemption; the anticipated consequences if the 
    exemption is not granted; and the implications for other transactions 
    and programs if the exemption is granted. The procedures for requesting 
    exemptions shall be:
        (a) In cases where 31 U.S.C. chapter 63 would require use of a 
    contract and an exemption from that requirement is desired:
        (1) The grants officer shall submit a request for exemption, 
    through appropriate channels established by his or her DoD Component 
    (see 32 CFR 21.115(b)(1)), to the Director of Defense Procurement 
    (DDP).
        (2) The DDP, after coordination with the Director of Defense 
    Research and Engineering (DDR&E), shall transmit the request to OMB or 
    notify the DoD Component that the request has been disapproved.
        (b) In other cases, the DoD Component shall submit a request for 
    the exemption through appropriate channels to the DDR&E. The DDR&E 
    shall transmit the request to OMB or notify the DoD Component that the 
    request has been disapproved.
        (c) Where an exemption is granted, documentation of the approval 
    shall be maintained in the award file.
    
    Subpart C--Competition
    
    
    Sec. 22.300  Purpose.
    
        This subpart establishes DoD policy and implements statutes related 
    to the use of competitive procedures in the award of grants and 
    cooperative agreements.
    
    
    Sec. 22.305  General policy and requirement for competition.
    
        (a) It is DoD policy to maximize use of competition in the award of 
    grants and cooperative agreements. This also conforms with:
        (1) 31 U.S.C. 6301(3), which encourages the use of competition in 
    awarding all grants and cooperative agreements.
        (2) 10 U.S.C. 2374(a), which sets out Congressional policy that any 
    new grant for research, development, test, or evaluation be awarded 
    through merit-based selection procedures.
        (b) Grants officers shall use merit-based, competitive procedures 
    (as defined by Sec. 22.315) to award grants and cooperative agreements:
        (1) In every case where required by statute (e.g., 10 U.S.C. 2361, 
    as implemented in Sec. 22.310, for certain grants to institutions of 
    higher education).
        (2) To the maximum extent practicable in all cases where not 
    required by statute.
    
    
    Sec. 22.310  Statutes concerning certain research, development, and 
    facilities construction grants.
    
        (a) Definitions specific to this section. For the purposes of 
    implementing the requirements of 10 U.S.C. 2374 in this section, the 
    following terms are defined:
        (1) Follow-on grant. A grant that provides for continuation of 
    research and development performed by a recipient under a preceding 
    grant. Note that follow-on grants are distinct from incremental funding 
    actions during the period of execution of a multi-year award.
        (2) New grant. A grant that is not a follow-on grant.
        (b) Statutory requirement to use competitive procedures. (1) A 
    grants officer shall not award a grant by other than merit-based, 
    competitive procedures (as defined by Sec. 22.315) to an institution of 
    higher education for the performance of research and development or for 
    the construction of research or other facilities, unless:
        (i) In the case of a new grant for research and development, there 
    is a statute meeting the criteria in paragraph (c)(1) of this section;
        (ii) In the case of a follow-on grant for research and development, 
    or of a grant for the construction of research or other facilities, 
    there is a statute meeting the criteria in paragraph (c)(2) of this 
    section; and
        (iii) The Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a written notice 
    of intent to make the grant. The grant may not be awarded until 180 
    days have elapsed after the date on which Congress received the notice 
    of intent. Contracting activities must submit a draft notice of intent 
    with supporting documentation through channels to the Deputy Director, 
    Defense Research and Engineering.
        (2) Because subsequently enacted statutes may, by their terms, 
    impose different requirements than set out in paragraph (b)(1) of this 
    section, grants officers shall consult legal counsel on a case-by-case 
    basis, when grants for the performance of research and development or 
    for the construction of research or other facilities are to be awarded 
    to institutions of higher education by other than merit-based 
    competitive procedures.
        (c) Subsequent statutes. In accordance with 10 U.S.C. 2361 and 10 
    U.S.C. 2374, a provision of law may not be construed as requiring the 
    award of a grant through other than the merit-based, competitive 
    procedures described in Sec. 22.315, unless:
        (1) Institutions of higher education--new grants for research and 
    development. In the case of a new grant for research and development to 
    an institution of higher education, such provision of law specifically:
        (i) Identifies the particular institution of higher education 
    involved;
        (ii) States that such provision of law modifies or supersedes the 
    provisions of 10 U.S.C. 2361 (a requirement that applies only if the 
    statute authorizing or requiring award by other than competitive 
    procedures was enacted after September 30, 1989); and
    
    [[Page 43876]]
    
        (iii) States that the award to the institution of higher education 
    involved is required by such provision of law to be made in 
    contravention of the policy set forth in 10 U.S.C. 2374(a).
        (2) Institutions of higher education--follow-on grants for research 
    and development and grants for the construction of any research or 
    other facility. In the case of any such grant to an institution of 
    higher education, such provision of law specifically:
        (i) Identifies the particular institution of higher education 
    involved; and
        (ii) States that such provision of law modifies or supersedes the 
    provisions of 10 U.S.C. 2361 (a requirement that applies only if the 
    statute authorizing or requiring award by other than competitive 
    procedures was enacted after September 30, 1989).
        (3) Other entities--new grants for research and development--(i) 
    General. In the case of a new grant for research and development to an 
    entity other than an institution of higher education, such provision of 
    law specifically:
        (A) Identifies the particular entity involved;
        (B) States that the award to that entity is required by such 
    provision of law to be made in contravention of the policy set forth in 
    10 U.S.C. 2374(a).
        (ii) Exception. The requirement of paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this 
    section does not apply to any grant that calls upon the National 
    Academy of Sciences to:
        (A) Investigate, examine, or experiment upon any subject of science 
    or art of significance to the Department of Defense or any Military 
    Department; and
        (B) Report on such matters to the Congress or any agency of the 
    Federal Government.
    
    
    Sec. 22.315  Merit-based, competitive procedures.
    
        Competitive procedures are methods that encourage participation in 
    DoD programs by a broad base of the most highly qualified performers. 
    These procedures are characterized by competition among as many 
    eligible proposers as possible, with a published or widely disseminated 
    notice. Competitive procedures include, as a minimum:
        (a) Notice to prospective proposers. The notice may be a notice of 
    funding availability or Broad Agency Announcement published in the 
    Federal Register or Commerce Business Daily, respectively, or a notice 
    that is made available broadly by electronic means. Alternatively, it 
    may take the form of a specific notice that is distributed to eligible 
    proposers (a specific notice must be distributed to at least two 
    eligible proposers to be considered as part of a competitive 
    procedure). Notices must include, as a minimum, the following 
    information:
        (1) Programmatic area(s) of interest, in which proposals or 
    applications are sought.
        (2) Eligibility criteria for potential recipients (see subpart D of 
    this part).
        (3) Criteria that will be used to select the applications or 
    proposals that will be funded, and the method for conducting the 
    evaluation.
        (4) The type(s) of funding instruments (e.g., grants, cooperative 
    agreements, other assistance instruments, or procurement contracts) 
    that are anticipated to be awarded pursuant to the announcement.
        (5) Instructions for preparation and submission of a proposal or 
    application, including the time by which it must be submitted.
        (b) At least two eligible, prospective proposers.
        (c) Impartial review of the merits of applications or proposals 
    received in response to the notice, using the evaluation method and 
    selection criteria described in the notice. For research and 
    development awards, in order to be considered as part of a competitive 
    procedure, the two principal selection criteria, unless statute 
    provides otherwise, must be the:
        (1) Technical merits of the proposed research and development; and
        (2) Potential relationship of the proposed research and development 
    to Department of Defense missions.
    
    
    Sec. 22.320  Special competitions.
    
        (a) General. Some programs may be competed for programmatic or 
    policy reasons among specific classes of potential recipients. An 
    example would be a program to enhance U.S. capabilities for academic 
    research and research-coupled graduate education in defense-critical, 
    science and engineering disciplines, a program that would be competed 
    specifically among institutions of higher education. All such special 
    competitions shall be consistent with program representations in the 
    President's budget submission to Congress and with subsequent 
    Congressional authorizations and appropriations for the programs.
        (b) Historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) and other 
    minority institutions (MIs). Increasing the ability of HBCUs and MIs to 
    participate in federally funded, university programs is an objective of 
    Executive Order 12876 (3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p. 671) and 10 U.S.C. 2323. 
    Whenever practicable, grants officers shall reserve appropriate 
    programmatic areas for exclusive competition among HBCUs and MIs when 
    preparing Broad Agency Announcements or other announcements as notices 
    for programs in which grants or cooperative agreements are to be 
    awarded to institutions of higher education.
    
    Subpart D--Recipient Qualification Matters--General Policies and 
    Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 22.400  Purpose.
    
        The purpose of this subpart is to specify policies and procedures 
    for grants officers' determination of recipient qualifications prior to 
    award.
    
    
    Sec. 22.405  Policy.
    
        (a) General. Grants officers normally shall award grants or 
    cooperative agreements only to qualified recipients that meet the 
    standards in Sec. 22.415. This practice conforms with the 
    Governmentwide policy, stated at 32 CFR 25.115(a), to do business only 
    with responsible persons.
        (b) Exception. In exceptional circumstances, grants officers may 
    make awards to recipients that do not fully meet the standards in 
    Sec. 22.415 and include special award conditions that are appropriate 
    to the particular situation, in accordance with 32 CFR 32.14, 33.12, or 
    34.4.
    
    
    Sec. 22.410  Grants officers' responsibilities.
    
        The grants officer is responsible for determining a recipient's 
    qualification prior to award. The grants officer's signature on the 
    award document shall signify his or her determination that either:
        (a) The potential recipient meets the standards in Sec. 22.415 and 
    is qualified to receive the grant or cooperative agreement; or
        (b) An award is justified to a recipient that does not fully meet 
    the standards, pursuant to Sec. 22.405(b). In such cases, grants 
    officers shall document in the award file the rationale for making an 
    award to a recipient that does not fully meet the standards.
    
    
    Sec. 22.415  Standards.
    
        To be qualified, a potential recipient must:
        (a) Have the management capability and adequate financial and 
    technical resources, given those that would be made available through 
    the grant or cooperative agreement, to execute the program of 
    activities envisioned under the grant or cooperative agreement.
        (b) Have a satisfactory record of executing such programs or 
    activities.
        (c) Have a satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics.
    
    [[Page 43877]]
    
        (d) Be otherwise qualified and eligible to receive a grant or 
    cooperative agreement under applicable laws and regulations (see 
    Sec. 22.420(c)).
    
    
    Sec. 22.420  Pre-award procedures.
    
        (a) The appropriate method to be used and amount of effort to be 
    expended in deciding the qualification of a potential recipient will 
    vary. In deciding on the method and level of effort, the grants officer 
    should consider factors such as:
        (1) DoD's past experience with the recipient;
        (2) Whether the recipient has previously received cost-type 
    contracts, grants, or cooperative agreements from the Federal 
    Government; and
        (3) The amount of the prospective award and complexity of the 
    project to be carried out under the award.
        (b) There is no DoD-wide requirement to obtain a pre-award credit 
    report, audit, or any other specific piece of information. On a case-
    by-case basis, the grants officer will decide whether there is a need 
    to obtain any such information to assist in deciding whether the 
    recipient meets the standards in Sec. 22.415(a), (b), and (c).
        (1) Should the grants officer in a particular case decide that a 
    pre-award credit report, audit, or survey is needed, he or she should 
    consult first with the appropriate grants administration office 
    (identified in Sec. 22.710), and decide whether pre-existing surveys or 
    audits of the recipient, such as those of the recipient's internal 
    control systems under OMB Circular A-133 \2\ or A-128 \3\ will satisfy 
    the need (see Sec. 22.715(a)(1)).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ Contact the Office of Management and Budget, EOP 
    Publications, 725 17th St. N.W., New Executive Office Building, 
    Washington, D.C. 20503.
        \3\ See footnote 2 to paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) If, after consulting with the grants administration office, the 
    grants officer decides to obtain a credit report, audit, or other 
    information, and the report or other information discloses that a 
    potential recipient is delinquent on a debt to an agency of the United 
    States Government, then:
        (i) The grants officer shall take such information into account 
    when determining whether the potential recipient is qualified with 
    respect to the grant or cooperative agreement; and
        (ii) If the grants officer decides to make the award to the 
    recipient, unless there are compelling reasons to do otherwise, the 
    grants officer shall delay the award of the grant or cooperative 
    agreement until payment is made or satisfactory arrangements are made 
    to repay the debt.
        (c) In deciding whether a recipient is otherwise qualified and 
    eligible in accordance with the standard in Sec. 22.415(d), the grants 
    officer shall ensure that the potential recipient: --
        (1) Is not identified on the Governmentwide ``List of Parties 
    Excluded from Federal Procurement and Nonprocurement Programs'' as 
    being debarred, suspended, or otherwise ineligible to receive the 
    award. The grants officer shall check the list of such parties for: ---
    -
        (i) Potential recipients of prime awards, as described at 32 CFR 
    25.505(d); ----
        (ii) A recipient's principals (e.g., officers, directors, or other 
    key employees, as defined at 32 CFR 25.105); and ----
        (iii) Potential recipients of subawards, where DoD Component 
    approval of such principals or lower-tier recipients is required under 
    the terms of the award (see 32 CFR 25.505(e)). --
        (2) Has provided all certifications and assurances required by 
    Federal statute, Executive order, or codified regulation, unless they 
    are to be addressed in award terms and conditions at the time of award 
    (see Sec. 22.510). --
        (3) Meets any eligibility criteria that may be specified in the 
    statute authorizing the specific program under which the award is being 
    made (see Sec. 22.210(a)(2)). -
        (d) Grants officers shall obtain recipients' Taxpayer 
    Identification Numbers (these may be Social Security Numbers for 
    individuals and Employer Identification Numbers for businesses or non-
    profit entities) to facilitate later collection of delinquent debts, if 
    necessary.
    
    Subpart E--National Policy Matters
    
    
    Sec. 22.505  Purpose. -
    
        The purpose of this subpart is to supplement other regulations that 
    implement national policy requirements, to the extent that it is 
    necessary to provide additional guidance to DoD grants officers. The 
    other regulations that implement national policy requirements include: 
    -
        (a) The other parts of the DoDGARs (32 CFR parts 32, 33, and 34) 
    that implement the Governmentwide guidance in OMB Circulars A-102 \4\ 
    and A-110 \5\ on administrative requirements for grants and cooperative 
    agreements. Those parts address some national policy matters that 
    appear in the OMB Circulars.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \4\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 22.420(b)(1).
        \5\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 22.420(b)(1).-
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) DoD regulations other than the DoDGARs. -
        (c) Other Federal agencies' regulations.
    
    
    Sec. 22.510  Certifications, representations, and assurances. -
    
        (a) Certifications--(1) Policy. Certifications of compliance with 
    national policy requirements are to be obtained from recipients only 
    for those national policies where a statute, Executive order, or 
    codified regulation specifically states that a certification is 
    required. Other national policy requirements may be addressed by 
    obtaining representations or assurances (see paragraph (b) of this 
    section). Grants officers should utilize methods for obtaining 
    certifications, in accordance with Executive Order 12866 (3 CFR, 1993 
    Comp., p. 638), that minimize administration and paperwork.
        (2) Procedures. (i) When necessary, grants officers may obtain 
    individual, written certifications.
        (ii) Whenever possible, however, grants officers should identify 
    the certifications that are required for the particular type of 
    recipient and program, and consolidate them into a single certification 
    provision that cites them by reference.
        (A) Appendix A to this part lists the common certifications and 
    cites their applicability. Because some certifications (e.g., the 
    certification on lobbying in Appendix A to this part) are required by 
    law to be submitted at the time of proposal, rather than at the time of 
    award, Appendix A to this part includes suggested language for 
    incorporating common certifications by reference into a proposal.
        (B) If a grants officer elects to have proposers incorporate 
    certifications by reference into their proposals, the solicitation 
    either must include the full text of the certifications that proposers 
    are to provide by reference, or must inform the proposers where the 
    full text may be found (e.g., in documents or computer network sites 
    that are readily available to the public) and offer to provide it to 
    proposers upon request.
        (C) Grants officers may incorporate certifications by reference in 
    award documents when doing so is consistent with statute and codified 
    regulation. Note that a statute requires submission of the lobbying 
    certification in Appendix A to this part at the time of proposal. 
    Grants officers may incorporate the other certifications listed in 
    Appendix A to this part in award documents, notwithstanding the 
    regulatory requirement stated in 32 CFR 25.510(a) for obtaining 
    certifications regarding debarment and suspension at the time of 
    proposal submission. The provision that a grants officer would use to 
    incorporate certifications in award documents would be similar to the
    
    [[Page 43878]]
    
    suggested provision in Appendix A to this part, except that it would be 
    modified to state that the recipient is providing the required 
    certifications by signing the award document or by accepting funds 
    under the award.
        (b) Representations and assurances. Many national policies, either 
    in statute or in regulation, require recipients of grants and 
    cooperative agreements to make representations or provide assurances 
    (rather than certifications) that they are in compliance with the 
    policies. As discussed in Sec. 22.610(b), Appendix B to this part 
    suggests award terms and conditions that may be used to address several 
    of the more commonly applicable national policy requirements. These 
    terms and conditions may be used to obtain required assurances and 
    representations, if the grants officer wishes to do so at the time of 
    award, rather than through the use of the standard application form 
    (SF-424) or other means at the time of proposal.
    
    
    Sec. 22.515  Provisions of annual appropriations acts. -
    
        An annual appropriations act can include general provisions stating 
    national policy requirements that apply to the use of funds (e.g., 
    obligation through a grant or cooperative agreement) appropriated by 
    the act. Because these requirements are of limited duration (the period 
    during which a given year's appropriations are available for 
    obligation), and because they can vary from year to year and from one 
    agency's appropriations act to another agency's, the grants officer 
    must know the agency(ies) and fiscal year(s) of the appropriations 
    being obligated by a given grant or cooperative agreement, and may need 
    to consult legal counsel if he or she does not know the requirements 
    applicable to those appropriations.
    
    
    Sec. 22.520  Military recruiting on campus. [Reserved]
    
    
    Sec. 22.525  Paperwork Reduction Act. -
    
        Grants officers shall include appropriate award terms or 
    conditions, if a recipient's activities under an award will be subject 
    to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3500, et seq.):-
        (a) Generally, the Act only applies to Federal agencies--it 
    requires agencies to obtain clearance from the Office of Management and 
    Budget before collecting information using forms, schedules, 
    questionnaires, or other methods calling either for answers to: ---
        (1) Identical questions from ten or more persons other than 
    agencies, instrumentalities, or employees of the United States. ---
        (2) Questions from agencies, instrumentalities, or employees of the 
    United States which are to be used for statistical compilations of 
    general public interest. --
        (b) The Act applies to similar collections of information by 
    recipients of grants or cooperative agreements only when: ---
        (1) A recipient collects information at the specific request of the 
    awarding Federal agency; or ---
        (2) The terms and conditions of the award require specific approval 
    by the agency of the information collection or the collection 
    procedures.
    
    
    Sec. 22.530  Metric system of measurement. --
    
        (a) Statutory requirement. The Metric Conversion Act of 1975, as 
    amended by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (15 U.S.C. 
    205) and implemented by Executive Order 12770 (3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 
    343), states that: ---
        (1) The metric system is the preferred measurement system for U.S. 
    trade and commerce. ---
        (2) The metric system of measurement will be used, to the extent 
    economically feasible, in federal agencies' procurements, grants, and 
    other business-related activities. ---
        (3) Metric implementation shall not be required to the extent that 
    such use is likely to cause significant inefficiencies or loss of 
    markets to United States firms. --
        (b) Responsibilities. DoD Components shall ensure that the metric 
    system is used, to the maximum extent practicable, in measurement-
    sensitive activities supported by programs that use grants and 
    cooperative agreements, and in measurement-sensitive outputs of such 
    programs.
    
    Subpart F--Award
    
    
    Sec. 22.600  Purpose. --
    
        This subpart sets forth grants officers' responsibilities relating 
    to the award document and other actions at the time of award.
    
    
    Sec. 22.605  Grants officers' responsibilities. --
    
        At the time of award, the grants officer is responsible for 
    ensuring that: --
        (a) The award instrument contains the appropriate terms and 
    conditions, in accordance with Sec. 22.610. --
        (b) Information about the award is provided to the office 
    responsible for preparing reports for the Defense Assistance Award Data 
    System (DAADS), to ensure timely and accurate reporting of data 
    required by 31 U.S.C. 6101-6106 (see 32 CFR part 21, subpart C). --
        (c) In addition to the copy of the award document provided to the 
    recipient, a copy is forwarded to the office designated to administer 
    the grant or cooperative agreement, and another copy is forwarded to 
    the finance and accounting office designated to make the payments to 
    the recipient.
    
    
    Sec. 22.610  Award instruments. --
    
        (a) Each award document shall include terms and conditions that: --
    -
        (1) Address programmatic requirements (e.g., a statement of work or 
    other appropriate terms or conditions that describe the specific goals 
    and objectives of the project). The grants officer shall develop such 
    terms and conditions in coordination with program officials. ---
        (2) Provide for the recipient's compliance with: -----
        (i) Pertinent Federal statutes or Executive orders that apply 
    broadly to Federal or DoD assistance awards. -----
        (ii) Any program-specific requirements that are prescribed in the 
    program statute (see Sec. 22.210(a)(2)), or appropriation-specific 
    requirements that are stated in the pertinent Congressional 
    appropriations (see Sec. 22.515). -----
        (iii) Pertinent portions of the DoDGARs or other Federal 
    regulations, including those that implement the Federal statutes or 
    Executive orders described in paragraphs (a)(2) (i) and (ii) of this 
    section. ---
        (3) Specify the grants officer's instructions for post-award 
    administration, for any matter where the post-award administration 
    provisions in 32 CFR part 32, 33, or 34 give the grants officer options 
    for handling the matter. For example, under 32 CFR 32.24(b), the grants 
    officers must choose among possible methods for the recipient's 
    disposition of program income. It is essential that the grants officer 
    identify the option selected in each case, to provide clear 
    instructions to the recipient and the grants officer responsible for 
    post-award administration of the grant or cooperative agreement. --
        (b) To assist grants officers: ---
        (1) Appendix B to this part provides model clauses to implement 
    certain Federal statutes, Executive orders, and regulations (see 
    paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section) that frequently apply to DoD 
    grants and cooperative agreements. Grants officers may incorporate the 
    model clauses into award terms and conditions, as appropriate. It 
    should be noted that Appendix B to this part is an aid, and not an 
    exhaustive list of all requirements that apply in all cases.
    
    [[Page 43879]]
    
    Depending on the circumstances of a given award, other statutes, 
    Executive orders, or codified regulations also may apply (e.g., 
    Appendix B to this part does not list program-specific requirements 
    described in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section).
        (2) Appendix C to this part is a list of administrative 
    requirements that apply to awards to different types of recipients. It 
    also identifies post-award administration issues that the grants 
    officer must address in the award terms and conditions.
    
    Subpart G--Field Administration
    
    
    Sec. 22.700  Purpose. ---
    
        This subpart prescribes policies and procedures for administering 
    grants and cooperative agreements. It does so in conjunction with 32 
    CFR parts 32, 33, and 34, which prescribe administrative requirements 
    for particular types of recipients.
    
    
    Sec. 22.705  Policy. ---
    
        (a) DoD policy is to have each recipient deal with a single office, 
    to the maximum extent practicable, for post-award administration of its 
    grants and agreements. This reduces burdens on recipients that can 
    result when multiple DoD offices separately administer grants and 
    agreements they award to a given recipient. It also minimizes 
    unnecessary duplication of field administration services. ---
        (b) To further reduce burdens on recipients, the office responsible 
    for performing field administration services for grants and agreements 
    to a particular recipient shall be the same office that is assigned 
    responsibility for performing field administration services for 
    contracts awarded to that recipient. --
        (c) Contracting activities and grants officers therefore shall use 
    cross-servicing arrangements whenever practicable and, to the maximum 
    extent possible, delegate responsibility for post-award administration 
    to the cognizant grants administration offices identified in 
    Sec. 22.710.
    
    
    Sec. 22.710  Assignment of grants administration offices.
    
        In accordance with the policy stated in Sec. 22.705(b), the DoD 
    offices (referred to in this part as ``grants administration offices'') 
    that are assigned responsibility for performing field administration 
    services for grants and agreements are (see the ``DoD Directory of 
    Contract Administration Services Components,'' DLAH 4105.4,\6\ for 
    specific addresses of administration offices): -
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ Copies may be obtained from the Defense Logistics Agency, 
    Publications Distribution Division (DASC-WDM), 8725 John J. Kingman 
    Rd., Suite 0119, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6220.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (a) Regional offices of the Office of Naval Research, for grants 
    and agreements with: ----
        (1) Institutions of higher education and laboratories affiliated 
    with such institutions, to the extent that such organizations are 
    subject to the university cost principles in OMB Circular A-21.\7\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 22.420(b)(1).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) Nonprofit organizations that are subject to the cost principles 
    in OMB Circular A-122,\8\ if their principal business with the 
    Department of Defense is research and development.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 22.420(b)(1). -
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) Field offices of the Defense Contract Management Command, for 
    grants and agreements with all other entities, including: --
        (1) Commercial organizations. --
        (2) Nonprofit organizations identified in Attachment C of OMB 
    Circular A-122 that are subject to commercial cost principles in 48 CFR 
    part 31. --
        (3) Nonprofit organizations subject to the cost principles in OMB 
    Circular A-122, if their principal business with the Department of 
    Defense is other than research and development.
        (4) State and local governments.
    
    
    Sec. 22.715  Grants administration office functions.
    
        The primary responsibility of cognizant grants administration 
    offices shall be to advise and assist grants officers and recipients 
    prior to and after award, and to help ensure that recipients fulfill 
    all requirements in law, regulation, and award terms and conditions. 
    Specific functions include:
        (a) Conducting reviews and coordinating reviews, audits, and audit 
    requests. This includes:
        (1) Advising grants officers on the extent to which audits by 
    independent auditors (i.e., public accountants or Federal auditors) 
    have provided the information needed to carry out their 
    responsibilities. If a recipient has had an independent audit in 
    accordance with OMB Circular A-128 or OMB Circular A-133, and the audit 
    report disclosed no material weaknesses in the recipient's financial 
    management and other management and control systems, additional 
    preaward or closeout audits usually will not be needed (see 
    Secs. 22.420(b) and 22.825(b)).
        (2) Performing pre-award surveys, when requested by a grants 
    officer, after providing advice described in paragraph (a)(1) of this 
    section.
        (3) Reviewing recipients' systems and compliance with Federal 
    requirements, in coordination with any reviews and compliance audits 
    performed by independent auditors under OMB Circular A-128 or A-133. 
    This includes:
        (i) Reviewing recipients' financial management, property 
    management, and purchasing systems, to determine the adequacy of such 
    systems.
        (ii) Determining that recipients have drug-free workplace programs, 
    as required under 32 CFR part 25.
        (4) Notifying the Office of the Assistant Inspector General for 
    Audit Policy and Oversight (OAIG(APO)), 400 Army-Navy Drive, Arlington, 
    VA 22202, if either of the following is not available within a 
    reasonable period of time (e.g., six months) after the date on which a 
    recipient of DoD grants and agreements was to have submitted its audit 
    report under OMB Circular A-128 or A-133 to the OAIG(APO):
        (i) The recipient's audit report under OMB Circular A-128 or A-133.
        (ii) The OAIG(APO)'s desk review of the recipient's audit report, 
    or a letter stating that the OAIG(APO) has decided not to conduct a 
    desk review.
        (b) Performing property administration services for Government-
    owned property, and for any property acquired by a recipient, with 
    respect to which the recipient has further obligations to the 
    Government.
        (c) Ensuring timely submission of required reports.
        (d) Executing administrative closeout procedures.
        (e) Establishing recipients' indirect cost rates, where the 
    Department of Defense is the cognizant or oversight Federal agency with 
    the responsibility for doing so.
        (f) Performing other administration functions (e.g., receiving 
    recipients' payment requests and transmitting approved payment 
    authorizations to payment offices) as delegated by applicable cross-
    servicing agreements or letters of delegation.
    
    Subpart H--Post-Award Administration
    
    
    Sec. 22.800  Purpose and relation to other parts.
    
        This subpart sets forth grants officers' and DoD Components' 
    responsibilities for post-award administration, by providing DoD-
    specific requirements on payments; debt collection; claims, disputes 
    and appeals; and closeout audits.
    
    
    Sec. 22.805  Post-award requirements in other parts.
    
        Grants officers responsible for post-award administration of grants 
    and cooperative agreements shall administer such awards in accordance 
    with the
    
    [[Page 43880]]
    
    following parts of the DoDGARs, as supplemented by this subpart:
        (a) Awards to domestic recipients. Standard administrative 
    requirements for grants and cooperative agreements with domestic 
    recipients are specified in other parts of the DoDGARs, as follows:
        (1) For awards to domestic institutions of higher education and 
    other nonprofit organizations, requirements are specified in 32 CFR 
    part 32, which is the DoD implementation of OMB Circular A-110.
        (2) For awards to State and local governments, specifies 
    requirements are specified in 32 CFR part 33, which is the DoD 
    codification of the Governmentwide common rule to implement OMB 
    Circular A-102.
        (3) For awards to domestic commercial organizations, requirements 
    are specified in 32 CFR part 34, which is modeled on the requirements 
    in OMB Circular A-110.
        (b) Awards to foreign recipients. DoD Components shall use the 
    administrative requirements specified in paragraph (a) of this section, 
    to the maximum extent practicable, for grants and cooperative 
    agreements to foreign recipients.
    
    
    Sec. 22.810  Payments.
    
        (a) Purpose. This section prescribes policies and grants officers' 
    post-award responsibilities, with respect to payments to recipients of 
    grants and cooperative agreements.
        (b) Policy. It is Governmentwide policy to minimize the time 
    elapsing between any payment of funds to a recipient and the 
    recipient's disbursement of the funds for program purposes (see 32 CFR 
    32.22(a) and 33.21(b), and the implementation of the Cash Management 
    Improvement Act at 31 CFR part 205). Expanding on the Governmentwide 
    policy, DoD policy is to:
        (1) Use electronic commerce, to the maximum extent practicable, in 
    the payment process for grants and cooperative agreements, to improve 
    timeliness and accuracy of payments.
        (2) Make authorized payments expeditiously.
        (i) When grants or agreements provide for payments, either advances 
    or reimbursements, to be made in response to recipients' requests, 
    authorized payments shall be made as soon as possible after receipt of 
    the requests. Authorized payments normally shall not be made more than:
        (A) Seven days after receipt of recipients' requests, whenever 
    grants officers, payment offices, and recipients are able to use 
    electronic commerce (i.e., electronic data interchange (EDI) to request 
    and authorize payments and electronic funds transfer (EFT) to make 
    payments).
        (B) Thirty days after receipt of recipients' requests, when it is 
    not possible to use electronic commerce and offices must process paper 
    to receive recipients' requests, or to authorize and make payments 
    (note, however, that Governmentwide guidance implemented at 32 CFR 
    32.22(e)(1) makes payment within 30 days a firm requirement, not just 
    the norm, for payments to institutions of higher education and other 
    nonprofit organizations, when the reimbursement method of payment is 
    used). Payments shall be made as expeditiously as processing of paper 
    transactions allows--this policy is intended neither to delay payments 
    nor to make them as close as possible to the 30th day.
        (ii) When payments are authorized in advance, based on a 
    predetermined schedule, the payment office should make each payment 
    within 7 days of the date specified, if the schedule was provided to 
    the payment office at least 30 days in advance of the date of the 
    scheduled payment.
        (c) Post-award responsibilities. The administrative grants officer 
    designated to handle payments for a grant or cooperative agreement is 
    responsible for:
        (1) Maintaining a close working relationship with the personnel in 
    the finance and accounting office responsible for making the payments. 
    A good working relationship is necessary, to ensure timely and accurate 
    handling of financial transactions for grants and agreements. 
    Administrative grants officers should be generally familiar with 
    policies and procedures for disbursing officers that are contained in 
    Chapter 19 of Volume 10 of the DoD Financial Management Regulation (DoD 
    7000.14-R \9\).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \9\ Copies may be obtained, at cost, from the National Technical 
    Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. 
    Authorized users may also obtain copies from the Defense Technical 
    Information Center, 8725 John J. Kingman Rd., Suite 0944, Fort 
    Belvoir, VA 22060-6218.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) Handling recipients' requests for payments in accordance with 
    DoD implementation of Governmentwide guidance (see 32 CFR 32.22, 33.21, 
    or 34.12, as applicable).
        (3) Reviewing each payment request to ensure that:
        (i) The request complies with the award terms.
        (ii) Available funds are adequate to pay the request.
        (iii) The recipient will not have excess cash on hand, based on 
    expenditure patterns.
        (4) Forwarding authorizations to the designated payment office 
    expeditiously, so that payments may be made in accordance with the 
    timely payment goals in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. 
    Authorizations generally should be forwarded to the payment office at 
    least 3 working days before the end of the period specified in 
    paragraph (b)(2)(i) (A) or (B) of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 22.815  Claims, disputes, and appeals.
    
        (a) Award terms. Grants officers shall include in grants and 
    cooperative agreements a term or condition that incorporates the 
    procedures of this section for:
        (1) Processing recipient claims and disputes.
        (2) Deciding appeals of grants officers' decisions.
        (b) Submission of claims--(1) Recipient claims. Recipients shall 
    submit claims arising out of or relating to a grant or cooperative 
    agreement to the grants officer for decision. Claims shall be in 
    writing, shall specify the nature and basis for the relief requested, 
    and shall include all data that supports the claim.
        (2) DoD Component claims. Claims by a DoD Component shall be the 
    subject of a written decision by a grants officer.
        (c) Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)--(1) Policy. DoD policy is 
    to try to resolve all issues concerning grants and cooperative 
    agreements by mutual agreement at the grants officer's level. DoD 
    Components therefore are encouraged to use ADR procedures to the 
    maximum extent practicable. ADR procedures are any voluntary means 
    (e.g., mini-trials or mediation) used to resolve issues in controversy 
    without resorting to formal administrative appeals (see paragraph (e) 
    of this section) or to litigation.
        (2) Procedures. (i) The ADR procedures or techniques to be used may 
    either be agreed upon by the Government and the recipient in advance 
    (e.g., when agreeing on the terms and conditions of the grant or 
    cooperative agreement), or may be agreed upon at the time the parties 
    determine to use ADR procedures.
        (ii) If a grants officer and a recipient are not able to resolve an 
    issue through unassisted negotiations, the grants officer shall 
    encourage the recipient to enter into ADR procedures. ADR procedures 
    may be used prior to submission of a recipient's claim or at any time 
    prior to the Grant Appeal Authority's decision on a recipient's
    
    [[Page 43881]]
    
    appeal (see paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of this section).
        (d) Grants officer decisions. (1) Within 60 days of receipt of a 
    written claim, the grants officer shall either:
        (i) Prepare a written decision, which shall include the reasons for 
    the decision; shall identify all relevant data on which the decision is 
    based; shall identify the cognizant Grant Appeal Authority and give his 
    or her mailing address; and shall be included in the award file; or
        (ii) Notify the recipient of a specific date when he or she will 
    render a written decision, if more time is required to do so. The 
    notice shall inform the recipient of the reason for delaying the 
    decision (e.g., the complexity of the claim, a need for more time to 
    complete ADR procedures, or a need for the recipient to provide 
    additional information to support the claim).
        (2) The decision of the grants officer shall be final. If a 
    recipient decides to appeal a grants officer's decision, the grants 
    officer shall encourage the recipient to enter into ADR procedures, as 
    described in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (e) Formal administrative appeals--(1) Grant Appeal Authorities. 
    Each DoD Component that awards grants or cooperative agreements shall 
    establish one or more Grant Appeal Authorities to decide formal, 
    administrative appeals in accordance with paragraph (e)(3) of this 
    section. Each Grant Appeal Authority shall be either:
        (i) An individual at a grade level in the Senior Executive Service, 
    if civilian, or at the rank of Flag or General Officer, if military; or
        (ii) A board chaired by such an individual.
        (2) Right of appeal. A recipient has the right to appeal a grants 
    officer's decision to the Grant Appeal Authority (but note that ADR 
    procedures, as described in paragraph (c) of this section, are the 
    preferred means for resolving any appeal).
        (3) Appeal procedures--(i) Notice of appeal. A recipient may appeal 
    a decision of the grants officer within 90 days of receiving that 
    decision, by filing a written notice of appeal to the Grant Appeal 
    Authority and to the grants officer. If a recipient elects to use an 
    ADR procedure, the recipient is permitted an additional 60 days to file 
    the written notice of appeal to the Grant Appeal Authority and grants 
    officer.
        (ii) Appeal file. Within 30 days of receiving the notice of appeal, 
    the grants officer shall forward to the Grant Appeal Authority and the 
    recipient the appeal file, which shall include copies of all documents 
    relevant to the appeal. The recipient may supplement the file with 
    additional documents it deems relevant. Either the grants officer or 
    the recipient may supplement the file with a memorandum in support of 
    its position. The Grant Appeal Authority may request additional 
    information from either the grants officer or the recipient.
        (iii) Decision. The appeal shall be decided solely on the basis of 
    the written record, unless the Grant Appeal Authority decides to 
    conduct fact-finding procedures or an oral hearing on the appeal. Any 
    fact-finding or hearing shall be conducted using procedures that the 
    Grant Appeal Authority deems appropriate.
        (f) Representation. A recipient may be represented by counsel or 
    any other designated representative in any claim, appeal, or ADR 
    proceeding brought pursuant to this section, as long as the 
    representative is not otherwise prohibited by law or regulation from 
    appearing before the DoD Component concerned.
        (g) Non-exclusivity of remedies. Nothing in this section is 
    intended to limit a recipient's right to any remedy under the law.
    
    
    Sec. 22.820  Debt collection.
    
        (a) Purpose. This section prescribes procedures for establishing 
    debts owed by recipients of grants and cooperative agreements, and 
    transferring them to payment offices for collection.
        (b) Resolution of indebtedness. The grants officer shall attempt to 
    resolve by mutual agreement any claim of a recipient's indebtedness to 
    the United States arising out of a grant or cooperative agreement 
    (e.g., by a finding that a recipient was paid funds in excess of the 
    amount to which the recipient was entitled under the terms and 
    conditions of the award).
        (c) Grants officer's decision. In the absence of such mutual 
    agreement, any claim of a recipient's indebtedness shall be the subject 
    of a grants officer decision, in accordance with Sec. 22.815(b)(2). The 
    grants officer shall prepare and transmit to the recipient a written 
    notice that:
        (1) Describes the debt, including the amount, the name and address 
    of the official who determined the debt (e.g., the grants officer under 
    Sec. 22.815(d), and a copy of that determination.
        (2) Informs the recipient that:
        (i) Within 30 days of the grants officer's decision, the recipient 
    shall either pay the amount owed or inform the grants officer of the 
    recipient's intention to appeal the decision.
        (ii) If the recipient elects not to appeal, any amounts not paid 
    within 30 days of the grants officer's decision will be a delinquent 
    debt.
        (iii) If the recipient elects to appeal the grants officer's 
    decision the recipient has 90 days, or 150 days if ADR procedures are 
    used, after receipt of the grants officer's decision to file the 
    appeal, in accordance with Sec. 22.815(e)(3)(i).
        (iv) The debt will bear interest, and may include penalties and 
    other administrative costs. No interest will be charged if the 
    recipient pays the amount owed within 30 days of the grants officer's 
    decision. Interest will be charged for the entire period from the date 
    the decision was mailed, if the recipient pays the amount owed after 30 
    days.
        (d) Follow-up. Depending upon the response from the recipient, the 
    grants officer shall proceed as follows:
        (1) If the recipient pays the amount owed within 30 days to the 
    grants officer, the grants officer shall forward the payment to the 
    responsible payment office.
        (2) If within 30 days the recipient has neither paid the amount due 
    nor provided notice of intent to file an appeal of the grants officer's 
    decision, the grants officer shall send a demand letter to the 
    recipient, with a copy to the payment office that will be responsible 
    for collecting the delinquent debt. The payment office will be 
    responsible for any further debt collection activity, including 
    issuance of additional demand letters (see Chapter 19 of volume 10 of 
    the DoD Financial Management Regulation, DoD 7000.14-R. The grants 
    officer's demand letter shall:
        (i) Describe the debt, including the amount, the name and address 
    of the official that determined the debt (e.g., the grants officer 
    under Sec. 22.815(d)), and a copy of that determination.
        (ii) Notify the recipient that the debt is a delinquent debt that 
    bears interest from the date of the grants officer's decision, and that 
    penalties and other administrative costs may be assessed.
        (iii) Identify the payment office that is responsible for the 
    collection of the debt, and notify the recipient that it may submit a 
    proposal to that payment office to defer collection, if immediate 
    payment is not practicable.
        (3) If the recipient elects to appeal the grants officer's 
    decision, further action to collect the debt is deferred, pending the 
    outcome of the appeal. If the final result of the appeal is a 
    determination that the recipient owes a debt to the Federal Government, 
    the grants officer shall send a demand letter to the recipient and 
    transfer responsibility for further debt collection to a payment
    
    [[Page 43882]]
    
    office, as described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
        (e) Administrative offset. In carrying out the responsibility for 
    collecting delinquent debts, a disbursing officer may need to consult 
    grants officers, to determine whether administrative offset against 
    payments to a recipient owing a delinquent debt would interfere with 
    execution of projects being carried out under grants or cooperative 
    agreements. Disbursing officers may also ask grants officers whether it 
    is feasible to convert payment methods under grants or agreements from 
    advance payments to reimbursements, to facilitate use of administrative 
    offset. Grants officers therefore should be familiar with guidelines 
    for disbursing officers, in Chapter 19 of Volume 10 of the Financial 
    Management Regulation (DoD 7000.14-R), concerning withholding and 
    administrative offset to recover delinquent debts.
    
    
    Sec. 22.825  Closeout audits.
    
        (a) Purpose. This section establishes DoD policy for obtaining 
    audits at closeout of individual grants and cooperative agreements. It 
    thereby supplements the closeout procedures specified in:
        (1) 32 CFR 32.71 and 32.72, for awards to institutions of higher 
    education and other nonprofit organizations.
        (2) 32 CFR 33.50 and 33.51, for awards to State and local 
    governments.
        (3) 32 CFR 34.61 and 34.62, for awards to commercial entities.
        (b) Policy. Grants officers shall use their judgment on a case-by-
    case basis, in deciding whether to obtain an audit prior to closing out 
    a grant or cooperative agreement (i.e., there is no specific DoD 
    requirement to obtain an audit prior to doing so). Factors to be 
    considered include:
        (1) The amount of the award.
        (2) DoD's past experience with the recipient, including the 
    presence or lack of findings of material deficiencies in recent:
        (i) Audits of individual awards; or
        (ii) Systems-wide financial audits and audits of the compliance of 
    the recipient's systems with Federal requirements, under OMB Circular 
    A-128 or A-133, where those Circulars are applicable. (See 
    Sec. 22.715(a)(1)).
    
                    Appendix A to Part 22.--Suggested Proposal Provision for Required Certifications                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Used for                                               
    Suggested provision in proposal ---------------------------------------------------------                       
       (or, suitably modified, in                                               Specific       Source of requirement
                 award)                Type of award    Type of recipient      situation                            
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    By signing and submitting this                                                                                  
     proposal, the recipient is                                                                                     
     providing the:                                                                                                 
        (1) Certification at         Any                All but foreign    Any..............  Subparts A through E  
         Appendix A to 32 CFR Part    nonprocurement     governments,                          of 32 CFR 25, which  
         25 regarding debarment,      transaction [see   foreign                               implement E.O. 12549 
         suspension, and other        ``primary          governmental                          [3 CFR, 1986 Comp.,  
         responsibility matters.      covered            entities, and                         p. 189]; E.O. 12689  
                                      transaction,''     others excluded                       [3 CFR, 1989 Comp.,  
                                      defined at 32      from ``person,''                      p. 235]; and Sec.    
                                      CFR                as defined at 32                      2455 of Federal      
                                      25.110(a)(1)(i)].  CFR 25.105.                           Acquisition and      
                                                                                               Streamlining Act of  
                                                                                               1994 (Pub. L. 103-   
                                                                                               355).                
        (2) Certification at         Any financial      Any..............  Any, except where  Subpart F of 32 CFR   
         Appendix C to 32 CFR Part    assistance,                           inconsistent       25, which implements 
         25 regarding drug-free       including any                         with               sec. 5151-5160 of the
         workplace requirements.      grant or                              international      Drug-Free Workplace  
                                      cooperative                           obligations of     Act of 1988 (Pub. L. 
                                      agreement [see                        the U.S. or the    100-690, Title V,    
                                      ``grant,'' as                         laws or            Subtitle D; 41 U.S.C.
                                      broadly defined                       regulations of a   701, et seq.).       
                                      at 32 CFR                             foreign                                 
                                      25.605(b)(7)].                        government [see                         
                                                                            32 CFR                                  
                                                                            25.610(b)].                             
        (3) Certification at         Any financial      All but Indian     Any..............  32 CFR 28, which      
         Appendix A to 32 CFR Part    assistance [see    tribe or tribal                       implements 31 U.S.C. 
         28 regarding lobbying.       32 CFR 28.105(b)   organization                          1352.                
                                      and definitions    with respect to                                            
                                      of ``Federal       expenditures                                               
                                      grant,''           specifically                                               
                                      ``Federal          permitted by                                               
                                      cooperative        other Federal                                              
                                      agreement,'' and   law [see 32 CFR                                            
                                      ``Federal loan''   28.105(l)].                                                
                                      in 32 CFR 28.105                                                              
                                      (c), (d), and                                                                 
                                      (e)].                                                                         
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
          Appendix B to Part 22.--Suggested Award Provisions for National Policy Requirements That Often Apply      
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Used for                                               
                                    ---------------------------------------------------------   Some requirement(s) 
       Suggested award provision                                                Specific        the grants  officer 
                                       Type of award    Type of recipient      situation            should note     
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Nondiscrimination                                                                                        
                                                                                                                    
    By signing this agreement or                                                                                    
     accepting funds under this                                                                                     
     agreement, the recipient                                                                                       
     assures that it will comply                                                                                    
     with applicable provisions of                                                                                  
     the following national                                                                                         
     policies prohibiting                                                                                           
     discrimination:                                                                                                
    
    [[Page 43883]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        a. On the basis of race,     Grants,            Any..............  Any..............  32 CFR part 195.6     
         color, or national origin,   cooperative                                              requires grants      
         in Title VI of the Civil     agreements, and                                          officer to obtain    
         Rights Act of 1964 (42       other financial                                          recipient's assurance
         U.S.C. 2000d, et seq.), as   assistance                                               of compliance. It    
         implemented by DoD           included at 32                                           also requires        
         regulations at 32 CFR part   CFR 195.2(d).                                            recipient to flow    
         195.                                                                                  down requirements to 
                                                                                               subrecipients.       
        b. On the basis of race,     Grants,            Any..............  Awards under       Recipients must       
         color, religion, sex, or     cooperative                           which              include clause       
         national origin, in          agreements, and                       construction       prescribed by 41 CFR 
         Executive Order 11246 [3     other prime                           work is to be      60-1.4(b) in         
         CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p.     awards included                       done.              federally assisted   
         339], as implemented by      by ``Federally                                           construction awards  
         Department of Labor          assisted                                                 and subawards [41 CFR
         regulations at 41 CFR part   construction                                             60-1.4(d) allows     
         60.                          contract''                                               incorporation by     
                                      definition at 40                                         reference]. This     
                                      CFR 60-1.3.                                              requirement also is  
                                                                                               at 32 CFR 33.36(l)(3)
                                                                                               and at paragraphs 1. 
                                                                                               of Appendices A to 32
                                                                                               CFR part 32 and 32   
                                                                                               CFR part 34.         
        c. On the basis of sex or    Grants,            Educational        Any educational    ......................
         blindness, in Title IX of    cooperative        institution [for   program or                              
         the Education Amendments     agreements, and    sex                activity                                
         of 1972 (20 U.S.C. 1681,     other financial    discrimination,    receiving                               
         et seq.).                    assistance         excepts any        Federal                                 
                                      included at 16     institution        financial                               
                                      U.S.C. 1682.       controlled by      assistance.                             
                                                         religious                                                  
                                                         organization,                                              
                                                         when                                                       
                                                         inconsistent                                               
                                                         with the                                                   
                                                         organization's                                             
                                                         religious                                                  
                                                         tenets].                                                   
        d. On the basis of age, in   Grants,            Any..............  Any..............  45 CFR 90.4 requires  
         the Age Discrimination Act   cooperative                                              that recipient flow  
         of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6101,     agreements, and                                          down requirements to 
         et seq.), as implemented     other awards                                             subrecipients        
         by Department of Health      included in                                              [definition of       
         and Human Services           ``Federal                                                ``recipient'' at 45  
         regulations at 45 CFR part   financial                                                CFR 90.4 includes    
         90.                          assistance''                                             entities to which    
                                      definition at 45                                         assistance is        
                                      CFR 90.4.                                                extended indirectly, 
                                                                                               through another      
                                                                                               recipient].          
        e. On the basis of                                                                                          
         handicap, in:                                                                                              
            1. Section 504 of the    Grants,            Any..............  Any..............  32 CFR 56.9(b)        
             Rehabilitation Act of    cooperative                                              requires grants      
             1973 (29 U.S.C. 794),    agreements, and                                          officer to obtain    
             as implemented by        other awards                                             recipient's written  
             Department of Justice    included in                                              assurance of         
             regulations at 28 CFR    ``Federal                                                compliance and       
             part 41 and DoD          financial                                                specifies what the   
             regulations at 32 CFR    assistance''                                             assurance includes.  
             part 56.                 definition at 32                                         Note that            
                                      CFR 56.3(b).                                             requirements flow    
                                                                                               down to subawards    
                                                                                               [``recipient,''      
                                                                                               defined at 32 CFR    
                                                                                               56.3(g), includes    
                                                                                               entities receiving   
                                                                                               assistance indirectly
                                                                                               through other        
                                                                                               recipients].         
            2. The Architectural     Grant or loan....  Any..............  Construction or    ......................
             Barriers Act of 1968                                           alteration of                           
             (42 U.S.C. 4151, et                                            buildings or                            
             seq.).                                                         facilities which                        
                                                                            will require                            
                                                                            public                                  
                                                                            accessibility.                          
        Officials Not to Benefit                                                                                    
                                                                                                                    
    No member of or delegate to      Grants,            Any..............  Any.               ......................
     Congress, or resident            cooperative                                                                   
     commissioner, shall be           agreements, and                                                               
     admitted to any share or part    other                                                                         
     of this agreement, or to any     ``agreements''.                                                               
     benefit arising from it, in                                                                                    
     accordance with 41 U.S.C. 22.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                    
             Live Organisms                                                                                         
                                                                                                                    
    By signing this agreement or                                                                                    
     accepting funds under this                                                                                     
     agreement, the recipient                                                                                       
     assures that it will comply                                                                                    
     with applicable provisions of                                                                                  
     the following national                                                                                         
     policies concerning live                                                                                       
     organisms:                                                                                                     
    
    [[Page 43884]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        a. For human subjects, the   Any..............  Any..............  Research,          32 CFR 219.103        
         Common Federal Policy for                                          development,       requires each        
         the Protection of Human                                            test, or           recipient to have a  
         Subjects, codified by the                                          evaluation         Federally approved,  
         Department of Health and                                           involving live,    written assurance of 
         Human Services at 45 CFR                                           human subjects,    compliance [it may be
         part 46 and implemented by                                         with some          HHS-approved, on file
         the Department of Defense                                          exceptions [see    with HHS; DoD-       
         at 32 CFR part 219.                                                32 CFR part 219].  approved, on file    
                                                                                               with a DoD Component;
                                                                                               or may need to be    
                                                                                               obtained by the      
                                                                                               grants officer for   
                                                                                               the specific award]. 
        b. For animals:                                                                                             
            1. Rules concerning      Any..............  Any..............  Research,          Prior to making an    
             animal acquisition,                                            experimentation,   award under which    
             transport, care,                                               or testing         animal-based         
             handling, and use in:                                          involving the      research, testing, or
             (i) 9 CFR parts 1-4,                                           use of animals.    training is to be    
             Department of                                                                     performed, DoD       
             Agriculture                                                                       Directive 3216.1 \1\ 
             regulations that                                                                  requires             
             implement the                                                                     administrative review
             Laboratory Animal                                                                 of the proposal by a 
             Welfare Act of 1966 (7                                                            DoD veterinarian     
             U.S.C. 2131-2156); and                                                            trained or           
             (ii) the ``Guide for                                                              experienced in       
             the Care and Use of                                                               laboratory animal    
             Laboratory Animals,''                                                             science and medicine,
             National Institutes of                                                            as well as a review  
             Health Publication No.                                                            by the recipient's   
             86-23.                                                                            Institutional Animal 
                                                                                               Care and Use         
                                                                                               Committee.           
            2. Prohibitions on the   Any..............  Any..............  Use of DoD         ......................
             purchase or use of                                             appropriations                          
             dogs or cats for                                               for training on                         
             certain medical                                                treatment of                            
             training purposes, in                                          wounds.                                 
             Section 8019 (10                                                                                       
             U.S.C. 2241 note) of                                                                                   
             the Department of                                                                                      
             Defense Appropriations                                                                                 
             Act, 1991 (Pub. Law                                                                                    
             101-511).                                                                                              
            3. Regulations of the    Any..............  Any..............  Activities which   ......................
             Departments of the                                             may involve or                          
             Interior (50 CFR parts                                         impact wildlife                         
             10-24) and Commerce                                            and plants.                             
             (50 CFR parts 217-227)                                                                                 
             that implement                                                                                         
             statutes and                                                                                           
             conventions on the                                                                                     
             taking, possession,                                                                                    
             transport, sale,                                                                                       
             purchase, export, or                                                                                   
             import of wildlife and                                                                                 
             plants, including the:                                                                                 
             Endangered Species Act                                                                                 
             of 1973 (16 U.S.C.                                                                                     
             1531-1543); Marine                                                                                     
             Mammal Protection Act                                                                                  
             (16 U.S.C. 1361-1384);                                                                                 
             Lacey Act (18 U.S.C.                                                                                   
             42); and Convention on                                                                                 
             International Trade in                                                                                 
             Endangered Species of                                                                                  
             Wild Fauna and Flora.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                    
          Military Recruiters                                                                                       
                                                                                                                    
    [Grants Officers shall include   Grants and         Domestic           Any.               ......................
     the exact award provision        cooperative        institution of                                             
     specified at 32 CFR part 23.].   agreements.        higher education                                           
                                                         (see 32 CFR part                                           
                                                         23).                                                       
                                                                                                                    
    
    [[Page 43885]]
    
                                                                                                                    
            Cargo Preference                                                                                        
                                                                                                                    
    The recipient agrees that it     Grants,            Any..............  Any award where    46 CFR 381.7 requires 
     will comply with the Cargo       cooperative                           possibility        grants officers to   
     Preference Act of 1954 (46       agreements, and                       exists for ocean   include appropriate  
     U.S.C. 1241), as implemented     other awards                          transport of       clauses in award     
     by Department of                 included in 46                        items procured     documents. It also   
     Transportation regulations at    CFR 381.7.                            or obtained by     requires recipients  
     46 CFR 381.7, which require                                            or on behalf of    to include           
     that at least 50 percent of                                            the recipient,     appropriate clauses  
     equipment, materials or                                                or any of the      in contracts using   
     commodities procured or                                                recipient's        U.S. Government funds
     otherwise obtained with U.S.                                           contractors or     under agreements,    
     Government funds under this                                            subcontractors.    where ocean transport
     agreement, and which may be                                                               of procured goods is 
     transported by ocean vessel,                                                              possible [e.g., see  
     shall be transported on                                                                   clause at 46 CFR     
     privately owned U.S.-flag                                                                 381.7(b)].           
     commercial vessels, if                                                                                         
     available.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                    
        Preference for U.S.-Flag                                                                                    
                Carriers                                                                                            
                                                                                                                    
    Travel supported by U.S.         Any..............  Any..............  Any agreement      ......................
     Government funds under this                                            under which                             
     agreement shall use U.S.-flag                                          international                           
     air carriers (air carriers                                             air travel may                          
     holding certificates under 49                                          be supported by                         
     U.S.C. 41102) for                                                      U.S. Government                         
     international air                                                      funds.                                  
     transportation of people and                                                                                   
     property to the extent that                                                                                    
     such service is available, in                                                                                  
     accordance with the                                                                                            
     International Air                                                                                              
     Transportation Fair                                                                                            
     Competitive Practices Act of                                                                                   
     1974 (49 U.S.C. 40118) and the                                                                                 
     interpretative guidelines                                                                                      
     issued by the Comptroller                                                                                      
     General of the United States                                                                                   
     in the March 31, 1981,                                                                                         
     amendment to Comptroller                                                                                       
     General Decision B138942.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                    
      Relocation and Real Property                                                                                  
              Acquisition                                                                                           
                                                                                                                    
    The recipient assures that it    Grants,            ``State agency''   Any project that   42 U.S.C. 4630 and 49 
     will comply with 49 CFR part     cooperative        as defined in 49   may result in      CFR 24.4, as         
     24, which implements the         agreements, and    CFR part 24 to     real property      implemented by DoD at
     Uniform Relocation Assistance    other ``Federal    include persons    acquisition or     32 CFR part 259,     
     and Real Property Acquisition    financial          with authority     displacement       requires grants      
     Policies Act of 1970 (42         assistance''       to acquire         where State        officers to obtain   
     U.S.C. 4601, et seq.) and        [see 49 CFR        property by        agency hasn't      recipients' assurance
     provides for fair and            24.2(j)].          eminent domain     opted to certify   of compliance.       
     equitable treatment of persons                      under State law.   to Dept. of                             
     displaced by Federally                                                 Transportation                          
     assisted programs or persons                                           in lieu of                              
     whose property is acquired as                                          providing                               
     a result of such programs.                                             assurance.                              
                                                                                                                    
               Hatch Act                                                                                            
                                                                                                                    
    The recipient agrees to comply   Grants or loans..  State and local    All but employees  ......................
     with the Hatch Act (5 U.S.C.                        governments.       of educational                          
     1501-1508 and 7324-7328), as                                           or research                             
     implemented by the Office of                                           institutions                            
     Personnel Management at 5 CFR                                          supported by                            
     part 151, which limits                                                 State; political                        
     political activity of                                                  subdivision                             
     employees or officers of State                                         thereof; or                             
     or local governments whose                                             religious,                              
     employment is connected to an                                          philanthropic,                          
     activity financed in whole or                                          or cultural                             
     part with Federal funds.                                               organization.                           
                                                                                                                    
        Environmental Standards                                                                                     
                                                                                                                    
    By signing this agreement or                                                                                    
     accepting funds under this                                                                                     
     agreement, the recipient                                                                                       
     assures that it will:                                                                                          
    
    [[Page 43886]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        a. Comply with applicable    Grants,            Any..............  Any, for Clean     40 CFR 15.31 requires 
         provisions of the Clean      cooperative                           Air Act, Clean     the assurances in the
         Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401,     agreements, and                       Water Act, and     suggested award      
         et seq.) and Clean Water     other awards                          Executive Order    provision. It also   
         Act (33 U.S.C. 1251, et      included in                           11738.             requires that        
         seq.), as implemented by     definitions of                       40 CFR 15.5 makes   recipients flow down 
         Executive Order 11738 [3     ``grant'' and                         awards of less     requirements to      
         CFR, 1971-1975 Comp., p.     ``loan'' in 40                        than $100,000,     subawards (``grant'' 
         799] and Environmental       CFR part 15.                          and certain        as defined at 40 CFR 
         Protection Agency (EPA)                                            other awards,      15.4 includes        
         regulations at 40 CFR part                                         exempt from the    subagreements).      
         15. In accordance with the                                         EPA regulations.  Executive Order 11738 
         EPA regulations, the                                                                  establishes          
         recipient further agrees                                                              additional           
         that it will:                                                                         responsibilities for 
                                                                                               grants officers.     
            Not use any facility on                                                                                 
             the EPA's List of                                                                                      
             Violating Facilities                                                                                   
             in performing any                                                                                      
             award that is                                                                                          
             nonexempt under 40 CFR                                                                                 
             15.5, as long as the                                                                                   
             facility remains on                                                                                    
             the list                                                                                               
            Notify the awarding                                                                                     
             agency if it intends                                                                                   
             to use a facility in                                                                                   
             performing this award                                                                                  
             that is on the List of                                                                                 
             Violating Facilities                                                                                   
             or that the recipient                                                                                  
             knows has been                                                                                         
             recommended to be                                                                                      
             placed on the List of                                                                                  
             Violating Facilities                                                                                   
        b. Identify to the awarding                                                                                 
         agency any impact this                                                                                     
         award may have on:                                                                                         
            1. The quality of the    Any..............  Any..............  Any actions that   The Council on        
             human environment, and                                         may affect the     Environmental        
             provide help the                                               environment.       Quality's regulations
             agency may need to                                                                for implementing NEPA
             comply with the                                                                   are at 40 CFR parts  
             National Environmental                                                            1500-1508. Executive 
             Policy Act (NEPA, at                                                              Order 11514 [3 CFR,  
             42 U.S.C. 4321, et                                                                1966-1970 Comp., p.  
             seq.) and to prepare                                                              902], as amended by  
             Environmental Impact                                                              Executive Order      
             Statements or other                                                               11991, sets policies 
             required environmental                                                            and procedures for   
             documentation. The                                                                considering actions  
             recipient agrees, in                                                              in the U.S. Executive
             such cases, to take no                                                            Orders 11988 [3 CFR, 
             action that will have                                                             1977 Comp., p. 117]  
             an adverse                                                                        and 11990 [3 CFR,    
             environmental impact                                                              1977 Comp., p. 121]  
             (e.g., any physical                                                               specify additional   
             disturbance of a site                                                             considerations, when 
             such as breaking of                                                               actions involve      
             ground) until the                                                                 floodplains or       
             grants officer                                                                    wetlands,            
             provides written                                                                  respectively.        
             notification of                                                                                        
             compliance with the                                                                                    
             environmental impact                                                                                   
             analysis process.                                                                                      
            2. Flood-prone areas,    Grants,            Any..............  Awards involving   42 U.S.C. 4012a       
             and provide help the     cooperative                           construction,      prohibits awards for 
             agency may need to       agreements, and                       land acquisition   acquisition or       
             comply with the          other                                 or development,    construction in flood-
             National Flood           ``financial                           with some          prone areas (Federal 
             Insurance Act of 1968    assistance''                          exceptions [see    Emergency Management 
             and Flood Disaster       (see 42 U.S.C.                        42 U.S.C. 4001,    Agency publishes     
             Protection Act of 1973   4003).                                et seq.].          lists of such areas  
             (42 U.S.C. 4001, et                                                               in the Federal       
             seq.), which require                                                              Register), unless    
             flood insurance, when                                                             recipient has        
             available, for                                                                    required insurance.  
             Federally assisted                                                                If action is in a    
             construction or                                                                   floodplain, Executive
             acquisition in flood-                                                             Order 11988 [3 CFR,  
             prone areas.                                                                      1977 Comp., p. 117]  
                                                                                               specifies additional 
                                                                                               pre-award procedures 
                                                                                               for Federal agencies.
                                                                                               Recipients are to    
                                                                                               apply requirements to
                                                                                               subawards            
                                                                                               (``financial         
                                                                                               assistance,'' defined
                                                                                               at 42 U.S.C. 4003,   
                                                                                               includes indirect    
                                                                                               Federal assistance.  
    
    [[Page 43887]]
    
                                                                                                                    
            3. Coastal zones, and    Grants,            State and local    Awards that may    16 U.S.C. 1456(d)     
             provide help the         cooperative        governments,       affect the         prohibits approval of
             agency may need to       agreements, and    interstate and     coastal zone.      projects inconsistent
             comply with the          other ``Federal    other regional                        with a coastal       
             Coastal Zone             assistance''       agencies.                             State's approved     
             Management Act of 1972   [see 16 U.S.C.                                           management program   
             (16 U.S.C. 1451, et      1456(d)].                                                for the coastal zone.
             seq.), concerning                                                                                      
             protection of U.S.                                                                                     
             coastal resources.                                                                                     
            4. Coastal barriers,     Grants,            Any..............  Awards that may    16 U.S.C. 3504-3505   
             and provide help the     cooperative                           affect barriers    prohibit new awards  
             agency may need to       agreements, and                       along the          for actions within   
             comply with the          other                                 Atlantic and       Coastal Barrier      
             Coastal Barriers         ``financial                           Gulf coasts and    System, except for   
             Resource Act (16         assistance''                          Great Lakes'       certain purposes.    
             U.S.C. 3501, et seq.),   (see 16 U.S.C.                        shores.            Requirements flow to 
             concerning               3502).                                                   subawards (16 U.S.C. 
             preservation of                                                                   3502 includes        
             barrier resources.                                                                indirect assistance  
                                                                                               as ``financial       
                                                                                               assistance'').       
            5. Any existing or       Any..............  Any..............  Awards that may    ......................
             proposed component of                                          affect existing                         
             the National Wild and                                          or proposed                             
             Scenic Rivers system,                                          element of                              
             and provide help the                                           National Wild                           
             agency may need to                                             and Scenic                              
             comply with the Wild                                           Rivers system.                          
             and Scenic Rivers Act                                                                                  
             of 1968 (16 U.S.C.                                                                                     
             1271, et seq.).                                                                                        
            6. Underground sources   Any..............  Any..............  Construction in    42 U.S.C. 300h-3(e)   
             of drinking water in                                           any area with      precludes awards of  
             areas that have an                                             aquifer that the   Federal financial    
             aquifer that is the                                            EPA finds would    assistance for any   
             sole or principal                                              create public      project that the EPA 
             drinking water source,                                         health hazard,     administrator        
             and provide help the                                           if contaminated.   determines may       
             agency may need to                                                                contaminate a sole-  
             comply with the Safe                                                              source aquifer so as 
             Drinking Water Act (42                                                            to threaten public   
             U.S.C. 300h-3).                                                                   health.              
                                                                                                                    
     National Historic Preservation                                                                                 
                                                                                                                    
    The recipient agrees to          Any..............  Any..............  Any construction,  36 CFR part 800       
     identify to the awarding                                               acquisition,       requires grants      
     agency any property listed or                                          modernization,     officers to get      
     eligible for listing on the                                            or other           comments from the    
     National Register of Historic                                          activity that      Advisory Council on  
     Places that will be affected                                           may impact a       Historic Preservation
     by this award, and to provide                                          historic           before proceeding    
     any help the awarding agency                                           property.          with Federally       
     may need, with respect to this                                                            assisted projects    
     award, to comply with Section                                                             that may affect      
     106 of the National Historic                                                              properties listed on 
     Preservation Act of 1966 (16                                                              or eligible for      
     U.S.C. 470, et seq.), as                                                                  listing on the       
     implemented by the Advisory                                                               National Register of 
     Council on Historic                                                                       Historic Places.     
     Preservation regulations at 36                                                                                 
     CFR part 800 and Executive                                                                                     
     Order 11593 [3 CFR, 1971-1975                                                                                  
     Comp., p. 559].                                                                                                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Copies may be obtained, at cost, from the National Technical Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road,     
      Springfield, VA 22161. Authorized users may also obtain copies from the Defense Technical Information Center, 
      8725 John J. Kingman Rd., Suite 0944, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6218.                                            
    
    
    
                          Appendix C to Part 22.--Administrative Requirements and Issues To Be Addressed in Award Terms and Conditions                      
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Source of requirement for each type of recipient (where details may                                                
                                                                      be found)                                                                             
           Requirement, in brief        --------------------------------------------------------------------- Issues to be address in award terms/conditions
                                          University or other                                                                                               
                                               nonprofit         Governmental entity     Commercial entity                                                  
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Standards for Financial Management   32 CFR 32.21.........  32 CFR 33.20.........  32 CFR 34.11.........  For university, nonprofit, or commercial      
     Systems. Recipients' systems to                                                                           entity, specify if want:                     
     comply with.                                                                                              Bonding and insurance [32 CFR        
                                                                                                               32.21(c) or 32 CFR 34.11(b)].                
                                                                                                               Fidelity bond [32 CFR 32.21(d) or 32 
                                                                                                               CFR 34.11(c)].                               
    
    [[Page 43888]]
    
                                                                                                                                                            
    Payment. Recipients request          32 CFR 32.22.........  32 CFR 33.21, 33.41    32 CFR 34.12.........  Specify:                                      
     payments and handle advances and                            (d) and (e).                                  Payment method (e.g., advance,       
     interest in compliance with.                                                                              reimbursement, working capital advance).     
                                                                                                               Note: if predetermined payment schedule is   
                                                                                                               used, must specify means to ensure that      
                                                                                                               recipients don't develop large cash balances 
                                                                                                               well in advance of needs for such funds      
                                                                                                               (e.g., recipient submits SF-269 or SF-270    
                                                                                                               forms at regular intervals, for grants       
                                                                                                               officer to review recipients' cash on hand). 
                                                                                                               SF-270, SF-271, or other form to     
                                                                                                               request payment.                             
                                                                                                               Name/address of office to which      
                                                                                                               recipient sends payment requests and office  
                                                                                                               that will make payments.                     
                                                                                                               How frequently recipient may submit  
                                                                                                               payment requests.                            
    Allowable costs. Allowability of     32 CFR 32.37 and       32 CFR 33.22 and       32 CFR 34.17.........                                                
     costs to be in accordance with.      32.28.                 33.23.                                                                                     
    Fee/profit. None allowed...........  .....................  .....................  32 CFR 34.18.........                                                
    Cost share or match. If cost share   32 CFR 32.23.........  32 CFR 33.24.........  32 CFR 34.13.........  Specify if want to allow inclusion of certain 
     or match is required, allowability                                                                        types of items as cost share or allow them to
     and valuation are governed by.                                                                            be valued in certain ways [32 CFR 32.23 (b), 
                                                                                                               (c), and (g); 32 CFR 33.24 (b)(4), (b)(5),   
                                                                                                               and (e)(2); 32 CFR 34.13 (a)(7), (b)(1), and 
                                                                                                               (b)(4)(ii)].                                 
    Program income. Recipients account   32 CFR 32.24.........  32 CFR 33.25.........  32 CFR 34.14.........  Specify:                                      
     for program income in accordance                                                                          Method for disposition [32 CFR 32.24 
     with.                                                                                                     (b), (c), and (d); 32 CFR 33.25(g); 32 CFR   
                                                                                                               34.14 (d), (e), and (f)].                    
                                                                                                               If want recipient to have obligation 
                                                                                                               to Government for certain types of income or 
                                                                                                               for income earned after end of project period
                                                                                                               [32 CFR 32.24 (e) and (h), 32 CFR 33.25 (a), 
                                                                                                               (d), (e), and (h); 32 CFR 34.14(b)].         
                                                                                                               If want to allow recipient to deduct 
                                                                                                               costs of generating income [32 CFR 32.24(f); 
                                                                                                               32 CFR 33.25(c); 32 CFR 34.14(c)].           
    Revision of budget/program plans.    32 CFR 32.25.........  32 CFR 33.30.........  32 CFR 34.15.........  Specify:                                      
     Recipients request prior approval                                                                         If wish to waive some prior approvals
     for plan changes, in accordance                                                                           that are optional, but are in effect unless  
     with.                                                                                                     specifically waived [32 CFR 33.30 (b),       
                                                                                                               (c)(1), (d)(3); 32 CFR 34.15(c)(2)].         
                                                                                                               If wish to require some prior        
                                                                                                               approvals that are optional, but are only in 
                                                                                                               effect if specifically stated [32 CFR 32.25  
                                                                                                               (d), (e), (h); 32 CFR 34.15(c)(3)].          
    Audit. Recipients periodically to    32 CFR 32.26.........  32 CFR 33.26.........  32 CFR 34.16.........  Require all but commercial entities to submit 
     have independent, financial and                                                                           copy of OMB Circular A-133 or A-128 audit    
     compliance audit and report to                                                                            reports to IG, DoD. Require commercial       
     DoD, subject to provisions of.                                                                            entities to submit audit reports to whichever
                                                                                                               office(s) the DoD Component wishes audit     
                                                                                                               reports to be sent.                          
    Property. Recipients manage in       32 CFR 32.30 through   32 CFR 33.31 through   32 CFR 34.20 through   Specify if want:                              
     accordance with.                     32.37.                 33.34.                 34.25.                 To allow commercial entities to      
                                                                                                               acquire real property under awards [32 CFR   
                                                                                                               34.21(a)].                                   
                                                                                                               University or other nonprofit to have
                                                                                                               any further obligation to Government for     
                                                                                                               exempt property [32 CFR 32.33(b)].           
                                                                                                               To retain right to transfer title [32
                                                                                                               CFR 32.34(h); 32 CFR 33.32(g)].              
                                                                                                               To allow recipients to use equipment 
                                                                                                               for certain purposes [32 CFR 32.34 (d) and   
                                                                                                               (e); 32 CFR 33.32(c)(4); 32 CFR 34.21(d)].   
                                                                                                               To waive data rights [32 CFR         
                                                                                                               32.36(c); 32 CFR 34.24(b)(1)(ii)].           
                                                                                                               To require recipients to record liens
                                                                                                               [32 CFR 32.37].                              
                                                                                                              For research awards to certain recipients,    
                                                                                                               include patents clause required by 37 CFR 401
                                                                                                               [32 CFR 32.36(b); 32 CFR 34.24(a)].          
    Procurement. Recipients systems for  32 CFR 32.40 through   32 CFR 33.36.........  32 CFR 34.30 through   Specify if want to require recipient to make  
     acquiring goods and services under   32.49.                                        34.31.                 certain preaward documents available for DoD 
     awards are to comply with.                                                                                Component's review [32 CFR 32.44(e); 32 CFR  
                                                                                                               33.36(g); 32 CFR 34.31(b)].                  
    Subawards. Recipients flow down                                                                                                                         
     requirements to subawards in                                                                                                                           
     accordance with.                                                                                                                                       
    (2)32 CFR 32.5, 32 CFR 33.37, and                                                                                                                       
     32 CFR 34.1(b)(2)                                                                                                                                      
    
    [[Page 43889]]
    
                                                                                                                                                            
    Reports. Requirements are specified  32 CFR 32.51 and       32 CFR 33.40 and       32 CFR 34.41.........  Specify:                                      
     in.                                  32.52.                 33.41.                                        When recipients are to submit        
                                                                                                               periodic and final performance reports [32   
                                                                                                               CFR 32.51 (b) and (c); 32 CFR 33.40 (b), (c),
                                                                                                               and (f); 32 CFR 34.41].                      
                                                                                                               Frequency of financial status and    
                                                                                                               cash transactions reports [32 CFR 32.52      
                                                                                                               (a)(1)(iii) and (a)(2)(iv); 32 CFR 33.41     
                                                                                                               (b)(3) and (c); 32 CFR 34.41], or if wish to 
                                                                                                               exercise right to waive them under certain   
                                                                                                               conditions [32 CFR 32.52 (a)(1)(i) and       
                                                                                                               (a)(2)(v); 32 CFR 33.41(a)(6); 32 CFR 34.41].
                                                                                                               Whether want reports on cash or      
                                                                                                               accrual basis [32 CFR 32.52(a)(1)(ii); 32 CFR
                                                                                                               33.41(b)(2); 32 CFR 34.41].                  
    Records. Retention and access        32 CFR 32.53.........  32 CFR 33.42.........  32 CFR 34.42.........                                                
     requirements specified in.                                                                                                                             
    Termination and enforcement. Award   32 CFR 32.61 and       32 CFR 33.43 and       32 CFR 34.51 and                                                     
     is subject for.                      32.62.                 33.44.                 34.52.                                                              
    Disputes, claims, and appeals.                                                                                                                          
     Procedures are specified in.                                                                                                                           
    (2)32 CFR 22.815                                                                                                                                        
    After-the-award requirements.        32 CFR 32.71 through   32 CFR 33.50 through   32 CFR 34.61 through                                                 
     Closeout, subsequent adjustments,    32.73.                 33.52.                 34.63.                                                              
     continuing responsibilities, and                                                                                                                       
     collection of amounts due are                                                                                                                          
     subject to requirements in.                                                                                                                            
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    
    PART 28--[AMENDED]
    
        4. Part 28 is proposed to be amended as follows: -
        a. The authority citation for part 28 continues to read as follows:
    
         -Authority: Section 319, Public Law 102-121 (31 U.S.C. 1352); 5 
    U.S.C. section 301; 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
         -b. Section 28.500 is proposed to be revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 28.500  Secretary of Defense. -
    
        (a) Exemption authority. The Secretary of Defense may exempt, on a 
    case-by-case basis, a covered Federal action from the prohibition 
    whenever the Secretary determines, in writing, that such an exemption 
    is in the national interest. The Secretary shall transmit a copy of 
    each such written exemption to Congress immediately after making such a 
    determination. -
        (b) Policy. It is the policy of the Department of Defense that 
    exemptions under paragraph (a) of this section shall be requested only 
    rarely and in exceptional circumstances. -
        (c) Procedures. Each DoD Component that awards or administers 
    Federal grants, Federal cooperative agreements, or Federal loans 
    subject to this part shall establish procedures whereby: -
        (1) A grants officer wishing to request an exemption for a grant, 
    cooperative agreement, or loan shall transmit such request through 
    appropriate channels to: Director for Research, ODDR&E(R), 3080 Defense 
    Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20301-3080. -
        (2) Each such request shall explain why an exemption is in the 
    national interest, a justification that must be transmitted to Congress 
    for each exemption that is approved.
        5. Part 32 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
    
    PART 32--ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS FOR GRANTS AND AGREEMENTS WITH 
    INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION, HOSPITALS, AND OTHER NON-PROFIT 
    ORGANIZATIONS
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    32.1  Purpose.
    32.2  Definitions.
    32.3  Effect on other issuances.
    32.4  Deviations.
    32.5  Subawards.
    
    Subpart B--Pre-Award Requirements
    
    32.10  Purpose.
    32.11  Pre-award policies.
    32.12  Forms for applying for Federal assistance.
    32.13  Debarment and suspension.
    32.14  Special award conditions.
    32.15  Metric system of measurement.
    32.16  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
    32.17  Certifications and representations.
    
    Subpart C--Post-Award Requirements
    
    Financial and Program Management
    
    32.20  Purpose of financial and program management.
    32.21  Standards for financial management systems.
    32.22  Payment.
    32.23  Cost sharing or matching.
    32.24  Program income.
    32.25  Revision of budget and program plans.
    32.26  Non-Federal audits.
    32.27  Allowable costs.
    32.28  Period of availability of funds.
    
    Property Standards
    
    32.30  Purpose of property standards.
    32.31  Insurance coverage.
    32.32  Real property.
    32.33  Federally-owned and exempt property.
    32.34  Equipment.
    32.35  Supplies.
    32.36  Intangible property.
    32.37  Property trust relationship.
    
    Procurement Standards
    
    32.40  Purpose of procurement standards.
    32.41  Recipient responsibilities.
    32.42  Codes of conduct.
    32.43  Competition.
    32.44  Procurement procedures.
    32.45  Cost and price analysis.
    32.46  Procurement records.
    32.47  Contract administration.
    32.48  Contract provisions.
    32.49  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
    
    [[Page 43890]]
    
    Reports and Records
    
    32.50  Purpose of reports and records.
    32.51  Monitoring and reporting program performance.
    32.52  Financial reporting.
    32.53  Retention and access requirements for records.
    
    Termination and Enforcement
    
    32.60  Purpose of termination and enforcement.
    32.61  Termination.
    32.62  Enforcement.
    
    Subpart D--After-the-Award Requirements
    
    32.70  Purpose.
    32.71  Closeout procedures.
    32.72  Subsequent adjustments and continuing responsibilities.
    32.73  Collection of amounts due.
    
    Appendix A to Part 32--Contract Provisions
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 32.1  Purpose.
    
        (a) General. This part implements OMB Circular A-110 \1\ and 
    establishes uniform administrative requirements for grants, agreements, 
    and subawards awarded to institutions of higher education, hospitals, 
    and other non-governmental, non-profit organizations.
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        \1\ For copies of the Circular, contact the Office of Management 
    and Budget, EOP Publications, 725 17th St. N.W., New Executive 
    Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20503.
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        (b) Prime awards. DoD Components shall apply the provisions of this 
    part to grants and agreements with recipients that are institutions of 
    higher education, hospitals, and other non-profit organizations. DoD 
    Components shall not impose additional or inconsistent requirements, 
    except as provided in Secs. 32.4 and 32.14, or unless specifically 
    required by Federal statute or executive order.
        (c) Subawards. Any legal entity that receives a grant or agreement 
    from a DoD Component shall apply the provisions of this part to 
    subawards with institutions of higher education, hospitals, and other 
    non-profit organizations. Thus, a governmental or commercial 
    organization, whose prime award from a DoD Component is subject to 32 
    CFR part 33 or part 34, respectively, applies this part to subawards 
    with institutions of higher education, hospitals, or other non-profit 
    organizations. It should be noted that subawards are for the 
    performance of substantive work under grants and agreements, and are 
    distinct from contracts for procuring goods and services. It should be 
    further noted that non-profit organizations that implement Federal 
    programs for the States are also subject to State requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 32.2  Definitions.
    
        The following are definitions of terms used in this part. Grants 
    officers are cautioned that terms may be defined differently in this 
    part than they are in other parts of the DoD Grant and Agreement 
    Regulations, because this part implements OMB Circular A-110 and uses 
    definitions as stated in that Circular. In such cases, the definition 
    given in this section applies to the term as it is used in this part, 
    and the definition given in other parts applies to the term as it is 
    used in those parts. For example, ``recipient'' is defined in this 
    section to be specific types of organizations that are subject to this 
    part, but is defined at 32 CFR 21.130 to be any type of organization 
    that receives a grant or cooperative agreement (since that part applies 
    to awards to any type of organization).
        Accrued expenditures. The charges incurred by the recipient during 
    a given period requiring the provision of funds for:
        (1) Goods and other tangible property received;
        (2) Services performed by employees, contractors, subrecipients, 
    and other payees; and
        (3) Other amounts becoming owed under programs for which no current 
    services or performance is required.
        Accrued income. The sum of:
        (1) Earnings during a given period from:
        (i) Services performed by the recipient; and
        (ii) Goods and other tangible property delivered to purchasers.
        (2) Amounts becoming owed to the recipient for which no current 
    services or performance is required by the recipient.
        Acquisition cost of equipment. The net invoice price of the 
    equipment, 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 recipient's regular accounting 
    practices.
        Advance. A payment made by Treasury check or other appropriate 
    payment mechanism to a recipient upon its request either before outlays 
    are made by the recipient or through the use of predetermined payment 
    schedules.
        Award. Financial assistance that provides support or stimulation to 
    accomplish a public purpose. Awards include grants and other agreements 
    in the form of money or property in lieu of money, by the Federal 
    Government to an eligible recipient. The term does not include: 
    technical assistance, which provides services instead of money; other 
    assistance in the form of loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, 
    or insurance; direct payments of any kind to individuals; and, 
    contracts which are required to be entered into and administered under 
    procurement laws and regulations.
        Cash contributions. The recipient's cash outlay, including the 
    outlay of money contributed to the recipient by third parties.
        Closeout. The process by which the grants officer administering an 
    award made by a DoD Component determines that all applicable 
    administrative actions and all required work of the award have been 
    completed by the recipient and DoD Component.
        Contract. A procurement contract under an award or subaward, and a 
    procurement subcontract under a recipient's or subrecipient's contract.
        Cost sharing or matching. That portion of project or program costs 
    not borne by the Federal Government.
        Date of completion. The date on which all work under an award is 
    completed or the date on the award document, or any supplement or 
    amendment thereto, on which Federal sponsorship ends.
        Disallowed costs. Those charges to an award that the grants officer 
    administering an award made by a DoD Component determines to be 
    unallowable, in accordance with the applicable Federal cost principles 
    or other terms and conditions contained in the award.
        DoD Component. A Military Department, Defense Agency, DoD field 
    activity, or organization within the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
    that provides or administers an award to a recipient.
        Equipment. Tangible nonexpendable personal property including 
    exempt property charged directly to the award having a useful life of 
    more than one year and an acquisition cost of $5000 or more per unit. 
    However, consistent with recipient policy, lower limits may be 
    established.
        Excess property. Property under the control of any DoD Component 
    that, as determined by the head thereof, is no longer required for its 
    needs or the discharge of its responsibilities.
        Exempt property. Tangible personal property acquired in whole or in 
    part with Federal funds, where the DoD Component has statutory 
    authority to vest title in the recipient without further obligation to 
    the Federal Government. An example of exempt property
    
    [[Page 43891]]
    
    authority is contained in the Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement 
    Act (31 U.S.C. 6306), for property acquired under an award to conduct 
    basic or applied research by a non-profit institution of higher 
    education or non-profit organization whose principal purpose is 
    conducting scientific research.
        Federal funds authorized. The total amount of Federal funds 
    obligated by a DoD Component for use by the recipient. This amount may 
    include any authorized carryover of unobligated funds from prior 
    funding periods when permitted by agency regulations or agency 
    implementing instructions.
        Federal share (of real property, equipment, or supplies). That 
    percentage of the property's acquisition costs and any improvement 
    expenditures paid with Federal funds.
        Funding period. The period of time when Federal funding is 
    available for obligation by the recipient.
        Intangible property and debt instruments. Property that includes, 
    but is not limited to, trademarks, copyrights, patents and patent 
    applications and such property as loans, notes and other debt 
    instruments, lease agreements, stock and other instruments of property 
    ownership, whether considered tangible or intangible.
        Obligations. The amounts of orders placed, contracts and grants 
    awarded, services received and similar transactions during a given 
    period that require payment by the recipient during the same or a 
    future period.
        Outlays or expenditures. 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 cash disbursements for direct 
    charges for goods and services, the amount of indirect expense charged, 
    the value of third party in-kind contributions applied and the amount 
    of cash advances and payments made to subrecipients. For reports 
    prepared on an accrual basis, outlays are the sum of cash disbursements 
    for direct charges for goods and services, the amount of indirect 
    expense incurred, the value of in-kind contributions applied, and the 
    net increase (or decrease) in the amounts owed by the recipient for 
    goods and other property received, for services performed by employees, 
    contractors, subrecipients and other payees and other amounts becoming 
    owed under programs for which no current services or performance are 
    required.
        Personal property. Property of any kind except real property. It 
    may be tangible, having physical existence, or intangible, having no 
    physical existence, such as copyrights, patents, or securities.
        Prior approval. Written approval by an authorized official 
    evidencing prior consent.
        Program income. Gross income earned by the recipient that is 
    directly generated by a supported activity or earned as a result of the 
    award (see exclusions in Sec. 32.24(e) and (h)). Program income 
    includes, but is not limited to, income from fees for services 
    performed, the use or rental of real or personal property acquired 
    under federally-funded projects, the sale of commodities or items 
    fabricated under an award, license fees and royalties on patents and 
    copyrights, and interest on loans made with award funds. Interest 
    earned on advances of Federal funds is not program income. Except as 
    otherwise provided in program regulations or the terms and conditions 
    of the award, program income does not include the receipt of principal 
    on loans, rebates, credits, discounts, etc., or interest earned on any 
    of them.
        Project costs. All allowable costs, as set forth in the applicable 
    Federal cost principles, incurred by a recipient and the value of the 
    contributions made by third parties in accomplishing the objectives of 
    the award during the project period.
        Project period. The period established in the award document during 
    which Federal sponsorship begins and ends.
        Property. Real property and personal property (equipment, supplies, 
    intangible property and debt instruments), unless stated otherwise.
        Real property. Land, including land improvements, structures and 
    appurtenances thereto, but excluding movable machinery and equipment.
        Recipient. An organization receiving financial assistance directly 
    from DoD Components to carry out a project or program. The term 
    includes public and private institutions of higher education, public 
    and private hospitals, and other quasi-public and private non-profit 
    organizations such as, but not limited to, community action agencies, 
    research institutes, educational associations, and health centers. The 
    term also includes consortia comprised of any combination of 
    universities, other nonprofit organizations, governmental 
    organizations, commercial organizations, and other entities, to the 
    extent that the consortia are legally incorporated as nonprofit 
    organizations. The term does not include Government-owned contractor-
    operated facilities or research centers providing continued support for 
    mission-oriented, large-scale programs that are Government-owned or 
    controlled, or are designated as federally-funded research and 
    development centers.
        Research and development. All research activities, both basic and 
    applied, and all development activities that are supported at 
    universities, colleges, and other non-profit institutions. ``Research'' 
    is defined as a systematic study directed toward fuller scientific 
    knowledge or understanding of the subject studied. ``Development'' is 
    the systematic use of knowledge and understanding gained from research 
    directed toward the production of useful materials, devices, systems, 
    or methods, including design and development of prototypes and 
    processes. The term research also includes activities involving the 
    training of individuals in research techniques where such activities 
    utilize the same facilities as other research and development 
    activities and where such activities are not included in the 
    instruction function.
        Small award. A grant or agreement not exceeding the simplified 
    acquisition threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403(11) (currently $100,000).
        Subaward. An award of financial assistance in the form of money, or 
    property in lieu of money, made under an award by a recipient to an 
    eligible subrecipient or by a subrecipient to a lower tier 
    subrecipient. The term includes financial assistance when provided by 
    any legal agreement, even if the agreement is called a contract, but 
    does not include procurement of goods and services nor does it include 
    any form of assistance which is excluded from the definition of 
    ``award'' in this section.
        Subrecipient. The legal entity to which a subaward is made and 
    which is accountable to the recipient for the use of the funds 
    provided.
        Supplies. All personal property excluding equipment, intangible 
    property, and debt instruments as defined in this section, and 
    inventions of a contractor conceived or first actually reduced to 
    practice in the performance of work under a funding agreement 
    (``subject inventions''), as defined in 37 CFR part 401, ``Rights to 
    Inventions Made by Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms 
    Under Government Grants, Contracts, and Cooperative Agreements.''
        Suspension. An action by a DoD Component that temporarily withdraws 
    Federal sponsorship under an award, pending corrective action by the 
    recipient or pending a decision to terminate the award by the DoD 
    Component. Suspension of an award is a separate action from suspension 
    of a recipient under 32 CFR part 25.
    
    [[Page 43892]]
    
        Termination. The cancellation of an award, in whole or in part, at 
    any time prior to the date of completion.
        Third party in-kind contributions. The value of non-cash 
    contributions provided by non-Federal third parties. Third party in-
    kind contributions may be in the form of real property, equipment, 
    supplies, and the value of goods and services directly benefiting and 
    specifically identifiable to the project or program.
        Unliquidated obligations. The amount of obligations incurred by the 
    recipient:
        (1) That have not been paid, if financial reports are prepared on a 
    cash basis.
        (2) For which an outlay has not been recorded, if reports are 
    prepared on an accrued expenditure basis.
        Unobligated balance. The portion of the funds authorized by a DoD 
    Component that has not been obligated by the recipient and is 
    determined by deducting the cumulative obligations from the cumulative 
    funds authorized.
        Unrecovered indirect cost. The difference between the amount 
    awarded and the amount which could have been awarded under the 
    recipient's approved negotiated indirect cost rate.
        Working capital advance. A procedure where by funds are advanced to 
    the recipient to cover its estimated disbursement needs for a given 
    initial period.
    
    
    Sec. 32.3  Effect on other issuances.
    
        For awards subject to this part, all administrative requirements of 
    codified program regulations, program manuals, handbooks and other 
    nonregulatory materials which are inconsistent with the requirements of 
    this part shall be superseded, except to the extent they are required 
    by statute, or authorized in accordance with the deviations provision 
    in Sec. 32.4.
    
    
    Sec. 32.4  Deviations.
    
        (a) Individual deviations. Individual deviations affecting only one 
    award may be approved by DoD Components in accordance with procedures 
    stated in 32 CFR 21.125(a) and (c).
        (b) Small awards. DoD Components may apply less restrictive 
    requirements than the provisions of this part when awarding small 
    awards, except for those requirements which are statutory.
        (c) Other class deviations. For classes of awards other than small 
    awards, the Director of Defense Research and Engineering, or his or her 
    designee, with the concurrence of the Office of Management and Budget 
    (OMB), may grant exceptions from the requirements of this part when 
    exceptions are not prohibited by statute. DoD Components shall request 
    approval for such deviations in accordance with 32 CFR 21.125 (b) 
    and(c). However, in the interest of maximum uniformity, exceptions from 
    the requirements of this part shall be permitted only in unusual 
    circumstances.
    
    
    Sec. 32.5  Subawards.
    
        Unless sections of this part specifically exclude subrecipients 
    from coverage, the provisions of this part shall be applied to 
    subrecipients performing work under awards if such subrecipients are 
    institutions of higher education, hospitals or other non-profit 
    organizations. State and local government subrecipients are subject to 
    the provisions of 32 CFR part 33. Subrecipients that are commercial 
    organizations are subject to 32 CFR part 34.
    
    Subpart B--Pre-Award Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 32.10  Purpose.
    
        Sections 32.11 through 32.17 prescribe application forms and 
    instructions and other pre-award matters.
    
    
    Sec. 32.11  Pre-award policies.
    
        (a) Use of grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts. (1) OMB 
    Circular A-110 states that:
        (i) In each instance, the Federal awarding agency shall decide on 
    the appropriate award instrument (i.e., grant, cooperative agreement, 
    or contract).
        (ii) The Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act (31 U.S.C. 
    6301-6308) governs the use of grants, cooperative agreements, and 
    contracts. Under that Act:
        (A) A grant or cooperative agreement shall be used only when the 
    principal purpose of a transaction is to accomplish a public purpose of 
    support or stimulation authorized by Federal statute.
        (B) Contracts shall be used when the principal purpose is 
    acquisition of property or services for the direct benefit or use of 
    the Federal Government.
        (C) The statutory criterion for choosing between grants and 
    cooperative agreements is that for the latter, ``substantial 
    involvement is expected between the executive agency and the State, 
    local government, or other recipient when carrying out the activity 
    contemplated in the agreement.''
        (2) In selecting the appropriate award instruments, DoD Components' 
    grants officers shall comply with the DoD implementation of the Federal 
    Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act at 32 CFR 21.205(a) and 32 CFR part 
    22, subpart B.
        (b) Public notice and priority setting. As a matter of 
    Governmentwide policy, Federal awarding agencies shall notify the 
    public of intended funding priorities for programs that use 
    discretionary grants or agreements, unless funding priorities are 
    established by Federal statute. For DoD Components, compliance with 
    competition policies and statutory requirements implemented in 32 CFR 
    part 22, subpart C, shall constitute compliance with this 
    Governmentwide policy.
    
    
    Sec. 32.12  Forms for applying for Federal assistance.
    
        (a) DoD Components shall comply with the applicable report 
    clearance requirements of 5 CFR part 1320, ``Controlling Paperwork 
    Burdens on the Public,'' with regard to all forms used in place of or 
    as a supplement to the Standard Form 424\2\ (SF-424) series.
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        \2\ For copies of Standard Forms listed in this part, contact 
    regional grants administration offices of the Office of Naval 
    Research. Addresses for the offices are listed in the ``DoD 
    Directory of Contract Administration Services Components,'' DLAH 
    4105.4, which can be obtained from: Defense Logistics Agency, 
    Publications Distribution Division (DASC-WDM), 8725 John J. Kingman 
    Rd., Suite 0119, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6220.
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        (b) Applicants shall use the SF-424 series or those forms and 
    instructions prescribed by DoD Components.
        (c) For Federal programs covered by E.O. 12372 (3 CFR, 1982 Comp., 
    p. 197), ``Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs,'' the 
    applicant shall complete the appropriate sections of the SF-424 
    (Application for Federal Assistance) indicating whether the application 
    was subject to review by the State Single Point of Contact (SPOC). The 
    name and address of the SPOC for a particular State can be obtained 
    from the DoD Component or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. 
    The SPOC shall advise the applicant whether the program for which 
    application is made has been selected by that State for review.
        (d) DoD Components that do not use the SF-424 form should indicate 
    whether the application is subject to review by the State under E.O. 
    12372.
    
    
    Sec. 32.13  Debarment and suspension.
    
        DoD Components and recipients shall comply with the nonprocurement 
    debarment and suspension common rule at 32 CFR part 25. This common 
    rule restricts subawards and contracts with certain parties that are 
    debarred, suspended or otherwise excluded from or ineligible for 
    participation in Federal assistance programs or activities.
    
    [[Page 43893]]
    
    Sec. 32.14  Special award conditions.
    
        (a) DoD Components may impose additional requirements as needed, 
    over and above those provided in this part, if an applicant or 
    recipient:
        (1) Has a history of poor performance;
        (2) Is not financially stable;
        (3) Has a management system that does not meet the standards 
    prescribed in this part;
        (4) Has not conformed to the terms and conditions of a previous 
    award; or
        (5) Is not otherwise responsible.
        (b) Before imposing additional requirements, DoD Components shall 
    notify the applicant or recipient in writing as to:
        (1) The nature of the additional requirements;
        (2) The reason why the additional requirements are being imposed;
        (3) The nature of the corrective action needed;
        (4) The time allowed for completing the corrective actions; and
        (5) The method for requesting reconsideration of the additional 
    requirements imposed.
        (c) Any special conditions shall be promptly removed once the 
    conditions that prompted them have been corrected.
        (d) Grants officers:
        (1) Should coordinate the imposition and removal of special award 
    conditions with the cognizant grants administration office identified 
    in 32 CFR 22.710.
        (2) Shall include in the award file the written notification to the 
    recipient, described in paragraph (b) of this section, and the 
    documentation required by 32 CFR 22.410(b).
    
    
    Sec. 32.15  Metric system of measurement.
    
        The Metric Conversion Act, as amended by the Omnibus Trade and 
    Competitiveness Act (15 U.S.C. 205) declares that the metric system is 
    the preferred measurement system for U.S. trade and commerce, and for 
    Federal agencies' procurements, grants, and other business-related 
    activities. DoD grants officers shall comply with requirements 
    concerning the use of the metric system at 32 CFR 22.530.
    
    
    Sec. 32.16  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
    
        Recipients' procurements shall comply with applicable requirements 
    of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), as described at 
    Sec. 32.49.
    
    
    Sec. 32.17  Certifications and representations.
    
        (a) OMB Circular A-110 authorizes and encourages each Federal 
    agency, unless prohibited by statute or codified regulation, to allow 
    recipients to submit certifications and representations required by 
    statute, executive order, or regulation on an annual basis, if the 
    recipients have ongoing and continuing relationships with the agency.
        (b) DoD grants officers shall comply with the provisions concerning 
    certifications and representations at 32 CFR 22.510. Those provisions 
    ease burdens on recipients to the extent possible, given current 
    statutory impediments to obtaining all certifications on an annual 
    basis. The provisions thereby also comply with the intent of OMB 
    Circular A-110, to use less burdensome methods for obtaining 
    certifications and representations, as such methods become feasible.
    
    Subpart C--Post-Award Requirements
    
    Financial and Program Management
    
    
    Sec. 32.20  Purpose of financial and program management.
    
        Sections 32.21 through 32.28 prescribe standards for financial 
    management systems, methods for making payments and rules for: 
    satisfying cost sharing and matching requirements, accounting for 
    program income, budget revision approvals, making audits, determining 
    allowability of cost, and establishing fund availability.
    
    
    Sec. 32.21  Standards for financial management systems.
    
        (a) DoD Components shall require recipients to relate financial 
    data to performance data and develop unit cost information whenever 
    practical. For awards that support research, it should be noted that it 
    is generally not appropriate to develop unit cost information.
        (b) Recipients' financial management systems shall provide for the 
    following.
        (1) Accurate, current and complete disclosure of the financial 
    results of each federally-sponsored project or program in accordance 
    with the reporting requirements set forth in Sec. 32.52. If a DoD 
    Component requires reporting on an accrual basis from a recipient that 
    maintains its records on other than an accrual basis, the recipient 
    shall not be required to establish an accrual accounting system. These 
    recipients may develop such accrual data for its reports on the basis 
    of an analysis of the documentation on hand.
        (2) Records that identify adequately the source and application of 
    funds for federally-sponsored activities. These records shall contain 
    information pertaining to Federal awards, authorizations, obligations, 
    unobligated balances, assets, outlays, income and interest.
        (3) Effective control over and accountability for all funds, 
    property and other assets. Recipients shall adequately safeguard all 
    such assets and assure they are used solely for authorized purposes.
        (4) Comparison of outlays with budget amounts for each award. 
    Whenever appropriate, financial information should be related to 
    performance and unit cost data. As discussed in paragraph (a) of this 
    section, unit cost data is generally not appropriate for awards that 
    support research.
        (5) Written procedures to minimize the time elapsing between the 
    transfer of funds to the recipient from the U.S. Treasury and the 
    issuance or redemption of checks, warrants or payments by other means 
    for program purposes by the recipient.
        (6) Written procedures for determining the reasonableness, 
    allocability and allowability of costs in accordance with the 
    provisions of the applicable Federal cost principles (see Sec. 32.27) 
    and the terms and conditions of the award.
        (7) Accounting records including cost accounting records that are 
    supported by source documentation.
        (c) Where the Federal Government guarantees or insures the 
    repayment of money borrowed by the recipient, the DoD Component, at its 
    discretion, may require adequate bonding and insurance if the bonding 
    and insurance requirements of the recipient are not deemed adequate to 
    protect the interest of the Federal Government.
        (d) The DoD Component may require adequate fidelity bond coverage 
    where the recipient lacks sufficient coverage to protect the Federal 
    Government's interest.
        (e) Where bonds are required in the situations described above, the 
    bonds shall be obtained from companies holding certificates of 
    authority as acceptable sureties, as prescribed in 31 CFR part 223, 
    ``Surety Companies Doing Business with the United States.''
    
    
    Sec. 32.22  Payment.
    
        (a) Payment methods shall minimize the time elapsing between the 
    transfer of funds from the United States Treasury and the issuance or 
    redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means by the 
    recipients. Payment methods of State agencies or instrumentalities 
    shall be consistent with Treasury-State agreements under the Cash 
    Management Improvement Act (CMIA) (31 U.S.C. 3335 and 6503) or default 
    procedures in 31 CFR part 205.
        (b) Recipients are to be paid in advance, provided they maintain or
    
    [[Page 43894]]
    
    demonstrate the willingness to maintain:
        (1) Written procedures that minimize the time elapsing between the 
    transfer of funds and disbursement by the recipient; and
        (2) Financial management systems that meet the standards for fund 
    control and accountability as established in Sec. 32.21. Cash advances 
    to a recipient organization shall be limited to the minimum amounts 
    needed and be timed to be in accordance with the actual, immediate cash 
    requirements of the recipient organization in carrying out the purpose 
    of the approved program or project. The timing and amount of cash 
    advances shall be as close as is administratively feasible to the 
    actual disbursements by the recipient organization for direct program 
    or project costs and the proportionate share of any allowable indirect 
    costs.
        (c) Whenever possible, advances shall be consolidated to cover 
    anticipated cash needs for all awards made by the DoD Component to the 
    recipient.
        (1) Advance payment mechanisms include, but are not limited to, 
    Treasury check and electronic funds transfer.
        (2) Advance payment mechanisms are subject to 31 CFR part 205.
        (3) Recipients shall be authorized to submit requests for advances 
    and reimbursements at least monthly when electronic fund transfers are 
    not used.
        (d) Requests for Treasury check advance payment shall be submitted 
    on SF-270,\3\ ``Request for Advance or Reimbursement,'' or other forms 
    as may be authorized by OMB. This form is not to be used when Treasury 
    check advance payments are made to the recipient automatically through 
    the use of a predetermined payment schedule or if inconsistent with DoD 
    procedures for electronic funds transfer.
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        \3\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a).
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        (e) Reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in 
    paragraph (b) of this section cannot be met. DoD Components may also 
    use this method on any construction agreement, or if the major portion 
    of the construction project is accomplished through private market 
    financing or Federal loans, and the Federal assistance constitutes a 
    minor portion of the project.
        (1) When the reimbursement method is used, the responsible DoD 
    payment office shall make payment within 30 days after receipt of the 
    billing, unless the billing is improper (see also 32 CFR 22.810(b)(2)).
        (2) Recipients shall be authorized to submit requests for 
    reimbursement at least monthly when electronic funds transfers are not 
    used.
        (f) If a recipient cannot meet the criteria for advance payments 
    and the grants officer, in consultation with the program manager, has 
    determined that reimbursement is not feasible because the recipient 
    lacks sufficient working capital, the award may provide for cash on a 
    working capital advance basis. Under this procedure, the award shall 
    provide for advancing cash to the recipient to cover its estimated 
    disbursement needs for an initial period generally geared to the 
    awardee's disbursing cycle. Thereafter, the award shall provide for 
    reimbursing the recipient for its actual cash disbursements. The 
    working capital advance method of payment shall not be used for 
    recipients unwilling or unable to provide timely advances to their 
    subrecipient to meet the subrecipient's actual cash disbursements.
        (g) To the extent available, recipients shall disburse funds 
    available from repayments to and interest earned on a revolving fund, 
    program income, rebates, refunds, contract settlements, audit 
    recoveries and interest earned on such funds before requesting 
    additional cash payments.
        (h) Unless otherwise required by statute, grants officers shall not 
    withhold payments for proper charges made by recipients at any time 
    during the project period unless:
        (1) A recipient has failed to comply with the project objectives, 
    the terms and conditions of the award, or Federal reporting 
    requirements; or
        (2) The recipient or subrecipient is delinquent in a debt to the 
    United States (see definitions of ``debt'' and ``delinquent debt,'' at 
    32 CFR 22.105). Under such conditions, the grants officer may, upon 
    reasonable notice, inform the recipient that payments shall not be made 
    for obligations incurred after a specified date until the conditions 
    are corrected or the indebtedness to the Federal Government is 
    liquidated (also see 32 CFR 22.420(b)(2) and 22.820).
        (i) Standards governing the use of banks and other institutions as 
    depositories of funds advanced under awards are as follows:
        (1) Except for situations described in paragraph (i)(2) of this 
    section, DoD Components shall not require separate depository accounts 
    for funds provided to a recipient or establish any eligibility 
    requirements for depositories for funds provided to a recipient. 
    However, recipients must be able to account for the receipt, obligation 
    and expenditure of funds.
        (2) Advances of Federal funds shall be deposited and maintained in 
    insured accounts whenever possible.
        (j) Consistent with the national goal of expanding the 
    opportunities for women-owned and minority-owned business enterprises, 
    recipients shall be encouraged to use women-owned and minority-owned 
    banks (a bank which is owned at least 50 percent by women or minority 
    group members).
        (k) Recipients shall maintain advances of Federal funds in interest 
    bearing accounts, unless:
        (1) The recipient receives less than $120,000 in Federal awards per 
    year;
        (2) The best reasonably available interest bearing account would 
    not be expected to earn interest in excess of $250 per year on Federal 
    cash balances; or
        (3) The depository would require an average or minimum balance so 
    high that it would not be feasible within the expected Federal and non-
    Federal cash resources.
        (l) Interest earned on Federal advances deposited in interest 
    bearing accounts shall be remitted annually to Department of Health and 
    Human Services, Payment Management System, P.O. Box 6021, Rockville, MD 
    20852. In keeping with Electronic Funds Transfer rules (31 CFR part 
    206), interest should be remitted to the HHS Payment Management System 
    through an electronic medium such as the FEDWIR Deposit System. 
    Recipients that do not have this capability should use a check. 
    Interest amounts up to $250 per year may be retained by the recipient 
    for administrative expense.
        (m) Except as noted elsewhere in this part, only the following 
    forms shall be authorized for the recipients in requesting advances and 
    reimbursements. DoD Components shall not require more than an original 
    and two copies of these forms.
        (1) SF-270, Request for Advance or Reimbursement. Each DoD 
    Component shall adopt the SF-270 as a standard form for all 
    nonconstruction programs when electronic funds transfer or 
    predetermined advance methods are not used. DoD Components, however, 
    have the option of using this form for construction programs in lieu of 
    the SF-271,\4\ ``Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for 
    Construction Programs.''
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        \4\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) SF-271, Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for 
    Construction Programs. Each DoD Component shall adopt the SF-271 as the 
    standard form to be used for requesting reimbursement for
    
    [[Page 43895]]
    
    construction programs. However, a DoD Component may substitute the SF-
    270 when the DoD Component determines that it provides adequate 
    information to meet Federal needs.
    
    
    Sec. 32.23  Cost sharing or matching.
    
        (a) All contributions, including cash and third party in-kind, 
    shall be accepted as part of the recipient's cost sharing or matching 
    when such contributions meet all of the following criteria:
        (1) Are verifiable from the recipient's records.
        (2) Are not included as contributions for any other federally-
    assisted project or program.
        (3) Are necessary and reasonable for proper and efficient 
    accomplishment of project or program objectives.
        (4) Are allowable under the applicable cost principles.
        (5) Are not paid by the Federal Government under another award, 
    except where authorized by Federal statute to be used for cost sharing 
    or matching.
        (6) Are provided for in the approved budget when required by the 
    DoD Component.
        (7) Conform to other provisions of this part, as applicable.
        (b) Unrecovered indirect costs (see definition in Sec. 32.2) may be 
    included as part of cost sharing or matching only with the prior 
    approval of the grants officer.
        (c) Values for recipient contributions of services and property 
    shall be established in accordance with the applicable cost principles. 
    If a DoD Component authorizes recipients to donate buildings or land 
    for construction/facilities acquisition projects or long-term use, the 
    value of the donated property for cost sharing or matching shall be the 
    lesser of:
        (1) The certified value of the remaining life of the property 
    recorded in the recipient's accounting records at the time of donation; 
    or
        (2) The current fair market value. However, when there is 
    sufficient justification, the DoD Component may approve the use of the 
    current fair market value of the donated property, even if it exceeds 
    the certified value at the time of donation to the project.
        (d) Volunteer services furnished by professional and technical 
    personnel, consultants, and other skilled and unskilled labor may be 
    counted as cost sharing or matching if the service is an integral and 
    necessary part of an approved project or program. Rates for volunteer 
    services shall be consistent with those paid for similar work in the 
    recipient's organization. In those instances in which the required 
    skills are not found in the recipient organization, rates shall be 
    consistent with those paid for similar work in the labor market in 
    which the recipient competes for the kind of services involved. In 
    either case, paid fringe benefits that are reasonable, allowable, and 
    allocable may be included in the valuation.
        (e) When an employer other than the recipient furnishes the 
    services of an employee, these services shall be valued at the 
    employee's regular rate of pay (plus an amount of fringe benefits that 
    are reasonable, allowable, and allocable, but exclusive of overhead 
    costs), provided these services are in the same skill for which the 
    employee is normally paid.
        (f) Donated supplies may include such items as office supplies, 
    laboratory supplies or workshop and classroom supplies. Value assessed 
    to donated supplies included in the cost sharing or matching share 
    shall be reasonable and shall not exceed the fair market value of the 
    property at the time of the donation.
        (g) The method used for determining cost sharing or matching for 
    donated equipment, buildings and land for which title passes to the 
    recipient may differ according to the purpose of the award, if the 
    purpose of the award is to:
        (1) Assist the recipient in the acquisition of equipment, buildings 
    or land, the total value of the donated property may be claimed as cost 
    sharing or matching; or
        (2) Support activities that require the use of equipment, buildings 
    or land, normally only depreciation or use charges for equipment and 
    buildings may be made. However, the full value of equipment or other 
    capital assets and fair rental charges for land may be allowed, 
    provided that the DoD Component has approved the charges.
        (h) The value of donated property shall be determined in accordance 
    with the usual accounting policies of the recipient, with the following 
    qualifications.
        (1) The value of donated land and buildings shall not exceed its 
    fair market value at the time of donation to the recipient as 
    established by an independent appraiser (e.g., certified real property 
    appraiser or General Services Administration representative) and 
    certified by a responsible official of the recipient.
        (2) The value of donated equipment shall not exceed the fair market 
    value of equipment of the same age and condition at the time of 
    donation.
        (3) The value of donated space shall not exceed the fair rental 
    value of comparable space as established by an independent appraisal of 
    comparable space and facilities in a privately-owned building in the 
    same locality.
        (4) The value of loaned equipment shall not exceed its fair rental 
    value.
        (i) The following requirements pertain to the recipient's 
    supporting records for in-kind contributions from third parties:
        (1) Volunteer services shall be documented and, to the extent 
    feasible, supported by the same methods used by the recipient for its 
    own employees.
        (2) The basis for determining the valuation for personal service 
    and property shall be documented.
    
    
    Sec. 32.24  Program income.
    
        (a) DoD Components shall apply the standards set forth in this 
    section in requiring recipient organizations to account for program 
    income related to projects financed in whole or in part with Federal 
    funds.
        (b) Except as provided in paragraph (h) of this section, program 
    income earned during the project period shall be retained by the 
    recipient and, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the 
    award, shall be used in one or more of the following ways:
        (1) Added to funds committed to the project by the DoD Component 
    and recipient and used to further eligible project or program 
    objectives.
        (2) Used to finance the non-Federal share of the project or 
    program.
        (3) Deducted from the total project or program allowable cost in 
    determining the net allowable costs on which the Federal share of costs 
    is based.
        (c) When a program regulation or award authorizes the disposition 
    of program income as described in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this 
    section, program income in excess of any limits stipulated shall be 
    used in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
        (d) In the event that program regulations or the terms and 
    conditions of the award do not specify how program income is to be 
    used, paragraph (b)(3) of this section shall apply automatically to all 
    projects or programs except research. For awards that support research, 
    paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall apply automatically unless the 
    terms and conditions specify another alternative or the recipient is 
    subject to special award conditions, as indicated in Sec. 32.14.
        (e) Unless program regulations or the terms and conditions of the 
    award provide otherwise, recipients shall have no obligation to the 
    Federal Government regarding program income earned after the end of the 
    project period.
        (f) If authorized by program regulations or the terms and 
    conditions
    
    [[Page 43896]]
    
    of the award, costs incident to the generation of program income may be 
    deducted from gross income to determine program income, provided these 
    costs have not been charged to the award.
        (g) Proceeds from the sale of property shall be handled in 
    accordance with the requirements of the Property Standards (see 
    Secs. 32.30 through 32.37).
        (h) Unless program regulations or the terms and condition of the 
    award provide otherwise, recipients shall have no obligation to the 
    Federal Government with respect to program income earned from license 
    fees and royalties for copyrighted material, patents, patent 
    applications, trademarks, and inventions produced under an award. Note 
    that the Patent and Trademark Amendments (35 U.S.C. chapter 18) apply 
    to inventions made under an experimental, developmental, or research 
    award.
    
    
    Sec. 32.25  Revision of budget and program plans.
    
        (a) The budget plan is the financial expression of the project or 
    program as approved during the award process. It may include either the 
    sum of the Federal and non-Federal shares, or only the Federal share, 
    depending upon DoD Component requirements. It shall be related to 
    performance for program evaluation purposes whenever appropriate.
        (b) Recipients are required to report deviations from budget and 
    program plans, and request prior approvals for budget and program plan 
    revisions, in accordance with this section.
        (c) For nonconstruction awards, recipients shall request prior 
    approvals from the cognizant grants officer for one or more of the 
    following program or budget related reasons.
        (1) Change in the scope or the objective of the project or program 
    (even if there is no associated budget revision requiring prior written 
    approval).
        (2) Change in a key person specified in the application or award 
    document.
        (3) The absence for more than three months, or a 25 percent 
    reduction in time devoted to the project, by the approved project 
    director or principal investigator.
        (4) The need for additional Federal funding.
        (5) The inclusion, unless waived by the DoD Component, of costs 
    that require prior approval in accordance with OMB Circular A-21,\5\ 
    ``Cost Principles for Institutions of Higher Education,'' OMB Circular 
    A-122,\6\ ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations,'' or Appendix 
    E to 45 CFR part 74, ``Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to 
    Research and Development under Grants and Contracts with Hospitals,'' 
    or 48 CFR part 31, ``Contract Cost Principles and Procedures,'' as 
    applicable. However, it should be noted that many of the prior 
    approvals in these cost principles are appropriately waived only after 
    consultation with the cognizant federal agency responsible for 
    negotiating the recipient's indirect costs.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \5\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
        \6\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (6) The transfer of funds allotted for training allowances (direct 
    payment to trainees) to other categories of expense.
        (7) Unless described in the application and funded in the approved 
    awards, the subaward, transfer or contracting out of any work under an 
    award. This provision does not apply to the purchase of supplies, 
    material, equipment or general support services.
        (d) (1) Except for requirements listed in paragraphs (c)(1) and 
    (c)(4) of this section, OMB Circular A-110 authorizes DoD Components, 
    at their option, to waive cost-related and administrative prior written 
    approvals required by this part and OMB Circulars A-21 and A-122 (but 
    see cautionary note at end of paragraph (c)(5) of this section).
        (2) The two prior approvals listed in paragraphs (d)(2) (i) and 
    (ii) of this section are automatically waived unless the award document 
    states otherwise. DoD Components should not override this automatic 
    waiver and require the prior approvals, especially for research awards, 
    unless there are compelling reasons for doing so in a given 
    circumstance. Absent an override in the award terms and conditions, 
    recipients need not obtain prior approvals before:
        (i) Incurring pre-award costs 90 calendar days prior to award 
    (incurring pre-award costs more than 90 calendar days prior to award 
    would still require the prior approval of the DoD Component). All pre-
    award costs are incurred at the recipient's risk (i.e., the DoD 
    Component is under no obligation to reimburse such costs if for any 
    reason the recipient does not receive an award or if the award is less 
    than anticipated and inadequate to cover such costs).
        (ii) Carrying forward unobligated balances to subsequent funding 
    periods.
        (e) The DoD Component may, at its option, restrict the transfer of 
    funds among direct cost categories, functions and activities for awards 
    in which the Federal share of the project exceeds $100,000 and the 
    cumulative amount of such transfers exceeds or is expected to exceed 10 
    percent of the total budget as last approved by the DoD Component. No 
    DoD Component shall permit a transfer that would cause any Federal 
    appropriation or part thereof to be used for purposes other than those 
    consistent with the original intent of the appropriation.
        (f) For construction awards, recipients shall request prior written 
    approval promptly from grants officers for budget revisions whenever:
        (1) The revision results from changes in the scope or the objective 
    of the project or program;
        (2) The need arises for additional Federal funds to complete the 
    project; or
        (3) A revision is desired which involves specific costs for which 
    prior written approval requirements may be imposed consistent with 
    applicable OMB cost principles listed in Sec. 32.27.
        (g) When a DoD Component makes an award that provides support for 
    both construction and nonconstruction work, the DoD Component may 
    require the recipient to request prior approval from the grants officer 
    before making any fund or budget transfers between the two types of 
    work supported.
        (h) No other prior approval requirements for specific items may be 
    imposed unless a deviation has been approved, in accordance with the 
    deviation procedures in Sec. 32.4(c).
        (i) For both construction and nonconstruction awards, DoD 
    Components shall require recipients to notify the grants officer in 
    writing promptly whenever the amount of Federal authorized funds is 
    expected to exceed the needs of the recipient for the project period by 
    more than $5000 or five percent of the Federal award, whichever is 
    greater. This notification shall not be required if an application for 
    additional funding is submitted for a continuation award.
        (j) When requesting approval for budget revisions, recipients shall 
    use the budget forms that were used in the application unless the 
    grants officer indicates a letter of request suffices.
        (k) Within 30 calendar days from the date of receipt of the request 
    for budget revisions, the grants officer shall review the request and 
    notify the recipient whether the budget revisions have been approved. 
    If the revision is still under consideration at the end of 30 calendar 
    days, the grants officer shall inform the recipient in writing of the 
    date when the recipient may expect the decision.
    
    
    Sec. 32.26  Non-Federal audits.
    
        (a) Recipients and subrecipients that are institutions of higher 
    education or other non-profit organizations shall be subject to the 
    audit requirements contained in OMB Circular A-133,\7\
    
    [[Page 43897]]
    
    ``Audits of Institutions of Higher Education and Other Non-Profit 
    Institutions.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) State and local governments that are subrecipients shall be 
    subject to the audit requirements contained in the Single Audit Act (31 
    U.S.C. 7501-7) and regulations at 32 CFR part 266 implementing OMB 
    Circular A-128,\8\ ``Audits of State and Local Governments.''-
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (c) Hospitals that are subrecipients and are not covered by the 
    audit provisions of OMB Circular A-133 shall be subject to the audit 
    requirements specified in award terms and conditions.
        (d) Commercial organizations that are subrecipients shall be 
    subject to the audit requirements specified in 32 CFR 34.16.
    
    
    Sec. 32.27  Allowable costs.
    
        (a) General. For each kind of recipient or subrecipient of a cost-
    type assistance award, or each contractor receiving a. cost-type 
    contract under an assistance award, there is a set of Federal 
    principles for determining allowable costs. Allowability of costs shall 
    be determined in accordance with the cost principles applicable to the 
    entity incurring the costs.
        (b) Governmental organizations. Allowability of costs incurred by 
    State, local or federally-recognized Indian tribal governments that may 
    be subrecipients or contractors under awards subject to this part is 
    determined in accordance with the provisions of OMB Circular A-87,\9\ 
    ``Cost Principles for State and Local Governments.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \9\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (c) Non-profit organizations. The allowability of costs incurred by 
    non-profit organizations that may be recipients or subrecipients of 
    awards subject to this part, or contractors under such awards, is 
    determined in accordance with the provisions of OMB Circular A-122, 
    ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations.''
        (d) Higher educational institutions. The allowability of costs 
    incurred by institutions of higher education that may be recipients, 
    subrecipients, or contractors is determined in accordance with the 
    provisions of OMB Circular A-21, ``Cost Principles for Educational 
    Institutions.''
        (e) Hospitals. The allowability of costs incurred by hospitals that 
    are recipients, subrecipients, or contractors is determined in 
    accordance with the provisions of Appendix E to 45 CFR part 74, 
    ``Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and 
    Development Under Grants and Contracts with Hospitals.''
        (f) Commercial organizations. The allowability of costs incurred by 
    subrecipients or contractors that are either commercial organizations 
    or non-profit organizations listed in Attachment C to Circular A-122 is 
    determined in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Acquisition 
    Regulation (FAR) at 48 CFR part 31.
    
    
    Sec. 32.28  Period of availability of funds.
    
        Where a funding period is specified, a recipient may charge to the 
    award only allowable costs resulting from obligations incurred during 
    the funding period and any pre-award costs (see Sec. 32.25(d)(2)(i)) 
    authorized by the DoD Component.
    
    Property Standards
    
    
    Sec. 32.30  Purpose of property standards.
    
        Sections 32.31 through 32.37 set forth uniform standards governing 
    management and disposition of property furnished by the Federal 
    Government and property whose cost was charged to a project supported 
    by a Federal award. DoD Components shall require recipients to observe 
    these standards under awards and shall not impose additional 
    requirements, unless specifically required by Federal statute. The 
    recipient may use its own property management standards and procedures 
    provided it observes the provisions of Secs. 32.31 through 32.37.
    
    
    Sec. 32.31  Insurance coverage.
    
        Recipients shall, at a minimum, provide the equivalent insurance 
    coverage for real property and equipment acquired with Federal funds as 
    provided to property owned by the recipient. Federally-owned property 
    need not be insured unless required by the terms and conditions of the 
    award.
    
    
    Sec. 32.32  Real property.
    
        Each DoD Component that makes awards under which real property is 
    acquired in whole or in part with Federal funds shall prescribe 
    requirements for recipients concerning the use and disposition of such 
    property. Unless otherwise provided by statute, such requirements, at a 
    minimum, shall contain the following:
        (a) Title to real property shall vest in the recipient subject to 
    the condition that the recipient shall use the real property for the 
    authorized purpose of the project as long as it is needed and shall not 
    encumber the property without approval of the DoD Component.
        (b) The recipient shall obtain written approval by the grants 
    officer for the use of real property in other federally sponsored 
    projects when the recipient determines that the property is no longer 
    needed for the purpose of the original project. Use in other projects 
    shall be limited to those under federally sponsored projects (i.e., 
    awards) or programs that have purposes consistent with those authorized 
    for support by the DoD Component.
        (c) When the real property is no longer needed as provided in 
    paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the recipient shall request 
    disposition instructions from the DoD Component or its successor 
    Federal agency. The responsible Federal agency shall observe one or 
    more of the following disposition instructions:
        (1) The recipient may be permitted to retain title without further 
    obligation to the Federal Government after it compensates the Federal 
    Government for that percentage of the current fair market value of the 
    property attributable to the Federal participation in the project.
        (2) The recipient may be directed to sell the property under 
    guidelines provided by the DoD Component and pay the Federal Government 
    for that percentage of the current fair market value of the property 
    attributable to the Federal participation in the project (after 
    deducting actual and reasonable selling and fix-up expenses, if any, 
    from the sales proceeds). When the recipient is authorized or required 
    to sell the property, proper sales procedures shall be established that 
    provide for competition to the extent practicable and result in the 
    highest possible return.
        (3) The recipient may be directed to transfer title to the property 
    to the Federal Government or to an eligible third party provided that, 
    in such cases, the recipient shall be entitled to compensation for its 
    attributable percentage of the current fair market value of the 
    property.
    
    
    Sec. 32.33  Federally-owned and exempt property.
    
        (a) Federally-owned property. (1) Title to federally-owned property 
    remains vested in the Federal Government. Recipients shall submit 
    annually an inventory listing of federally-owned property in their 
    custody to the DoD Component that made the award. Upon completion of 
    the award or when the property is no longer needed, the recipient shall 
    report the property to the DoD Component for further Federal agency 
    utilization.
        (2) If the DoD Component that made the award has no further need 
    for the property, it shall be declared excess and either:
    
    [[Page 43898]]
    
        (i) Reported to the General Services Administration, in accordance 
    with the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (40 
    U.S.C. 483(b)(2)), as implemented by General Services Administration 
    regulations at 41 CFR 101-47.202; or
        (ii) Disposed of by alternative methods pursuant to other specific 
    statutory authority (e.g., DoD Components are authorized by the Federal 
    Technology Transfer Act (15 U.S.C. 3710(i)), to donate research 
    equipment to educational and non-profit organizations for the conduct 
    of technical and scientific education and research activities. 
    Donations under this Act shall be in accordance with the DoD 
    implementation of E.O. 12821 (3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p. 323), ``Improving 
    Mathematics and Science Education in Support of the National Education 
    Goals''. Appropriate instructions shall be issued to the recipient by 
    the DoD Component.
        (b) Exempt property. (1) When statutory authority exists, a DoD 
    Component may vest title to property acquired with Federal funds in the 
    recipient without further obligation to the Federal Government and 
    under conditions the DoD Component considers appropriate. For example, 
    under 31 U.S.C. 6306, DoD Components may so vest title to tangible 
    personal property under a grant or cooperative agreement for basic or 
    applied research in a nonprofit institution of higher education or a 
    nonprofit organization whose primary purpose is conducting scientific 
    research. Such property is ``exempt property.''
        (2) As a matter of policy, DoD Components shall make maximum use of 
    the authority of 31 U.S.C. 6306 to vest title to exempt property in 
    institutions of higher education, without further obligation to the 
    Government, to enhance the university infrastructure for future 
    performance of defense research and related science and engineering 
    education.
        (3) DoD Components may establish conditions, in regulation or in 
    award terms and conditions, for vesting title to exempt property. 
    Should a DoD Component not establish conditions, title to exempt 
    property upon acquisition shall vest in the recipient without further 
    obligation to the Federal Government.
    
    
    Sec. 32.34  Equipment.
    
        (a) Title to equipment acquired by a recipient with Federal funds 
    shall vest in the recipient, subject to conditions of this section.
        (b) The recipient shall not use equipment acquired with Federal 
    funds to provide services to non-Federal outside organizations for a 
    fee that is less than private companies charge for equivalent services, 
    unless specifically authorized by Federal statute, for as long as the 
    Federal Government retains an interest in the equipment.
        (c) The recipient shall use the equipment in the project or program 
    for which it was acquired as long as needed, whether or not the project 
    or program continues to be supported by Federal funds and shall not 
    encumber the property without approval of the DoD Component that made 
    the award. When no longer needed for the original project or program, 
    the recipient shall use the equipment in connection with its other 
    federally-sponsored activities, in the following order of priority:
        (1) First, activities sponsored by the DoD Component that funded 
    the original project.
        (2) Second, activities sponsored by other DoD Components.
        (3) Then, activities sponsored by other Federal agencies.
        (d) During the time that equipment is used on the project or 
    program for which it was acquired, the recipient shall make it 
    available for use on other projects or programs if such other use will 
    not interfere with the work on the project or program for which the 
    equipment was originally acquired. First preference for such other use 
    shall be given to other projects or programs sponsored by the DoD 
    Component that financed the equipment; second preference shall be given 
    to projects or programs sponsored by other DoD Components; and third 
    preference shall be given to projects or programs sponsored by other 
    Federal agencies. If the property is owned by the Federal Government, 
    use on other activities not sponsored by the Federal Government shall 
    be permissible if authorized by the DoD Component that financed the 
    property. User charges shall be treated as program income.
        (e) When acquiring replacement equipment, the recipient may use the 
    equipment to be replaced as trade-in or sell the equipment and use the 
    proceeds to offset the costs of the replacement equipment subject to 
    the approval of the DoD Component that financed the equipment.
        (f) The recipient's property management standards for equipment 
    acquired with Federal funds and federally-owned property shall include 
    all of the following:
        (1) Records for equipment and federally-owned property shall be 
    maintained accurately and shall include the following information:
        (i) A description of the equipment or federally-owned property.
        (ii) Manufacturer's serial number, model number, Federal stock 
    number, national stock number, or other identification number.
        (iii) Source of the equipment or federally-owned property, 
    including the award number.
        (iv) Whether title vests in the recipient or the Federal 
    Government.
        (v) Acquisition date (or date received, if the property was 
    furnished by the Federal Government) and cost.
        (vi) Information from which one can calculate the percentage of 
    Federal participation in the cost of the equipment (not applicable to 
    property furnished by the Federal Government).
        (vii) Location and condition of the equipment or federally-owned 
    property and the date the information was reported.
        (viii) Unit acquisition cost.
        (ix) Ultimate disposition data, including date of disposal and 
    sales price or the method used to determine current fair market value 
    where a recipient compensates the DoD Component that made the award for 
    its share.
        (2) Property owned by the Federal Government shall be identified to 
    indicate Federal ownership.
        (3) A physical inventory of equipment and federally-owned property 
    shall be taken and the results reconciled with the equipment records at 
    least once every two years. Any differences between quantities 
    determined by the physical inspection and those shown in the accounting 
    records shall be investigated to determine the causes of the 
    difference. The recipient shall, in connection with the inventory, 
    verify the existence, current utilization, and continued need for the 
    equipment or federally-owned property.
        (4) A control system shall be in effect to insure adequate 
    safeguards to prevent loss, damage, or theft of the equipment or 
    federally-owned property. Any loss, damage, or theft of equipment or 
    federally-owned property shall be investigated and fully documented; if 
    the property was owned by the Federal Government, the recipient shall 
    promptly notify the DoD Component.
        (5) Adequate maintenance procedures shall be implemented to keep 
    the equipment or federally-owned property in good condition.
        (6) Where the recipient is authorized or required to sell the 
    equipment, proper sales procedures shall be established which provide 
    for competition to the extent practicable and result in the highest 
    possible return.
    
    [[Page 43899]]
    
        (g) When the recipient no longer needs the equipment, the equipment 
    may be used for other activities in accordance with the following 
    standards.
        (1) For equipment with a current per unit fair market value of 
    $5,000 or more, the recipient may retain the equipment for other uses 
    provided that compensation is made to the DoD Component that originally 
    made the award or its successor. The amount of compensation shall be 
    computed by applying the percentage of Federal participation in the 
    cost of the original project or program to the current fair market 
    value of the equipment.
        (2) If the recipient has no need for the equipment, the recipient 
    shall request disposition instructions from the DoD Component. The DoD 
    Component shall issue instructions to the recipient no later than 120 
    calendar days after the recipient's request and the following 
    procedures shall govern:
        (i) The grants officer, in consultation with the program manager, 
    shall judge whether the age and nature of the equipment warrant a 
    screening procedure to determine whether the equipment is useful to a 
    DoD Component or other Federal agency. If a screening procedure is 
    warranted:
        (A) The DoD Component shall determine whether the equipment can be 
    used to meet DoD requirements.
        (B) If no DoD requirement exists, the availability of the equipment 
    shall be reported to the General Services Administration by the DoD 
    Component to determine whether a requirement for the equipment exists 
    in other Federal agencies.
        (ii) If so instructed or if disposition instructions are not issued 
    within 120 calendar days after the recipient's request, the recipient 
    shall sell the equipment and reimburse the DoD Component that made the 
    award an amount computed by applying to the sales proceeds the 
    percentage of Federal participation in the cost of the original project 
    or program. However, the recipient shall be permitted to deduct and 
    retain from the Federal share $500 or ten percent of the proceeds, 
    whichever is less, for the recipient's selling and handling expenses.
        (iii) If the recipient is instructed to ship the equipment 
    elsewhere, the recipient shall be reimbursed by the Federal Government 
    by an amount which is computed by applying the percentage of the 
    recipient's participation in the cost of the original project or 
    program to the current fair market value of the equipment, plus any 
    reasonable shipping or interim storage costs incurred.
        (iv) If the recipient is instructed to otherwise dispose of the 
    equipment, the recipient shall be reimbursed by the DoD Component that 
    made the award for such costs incurred in its disposition.
        (h) The DoD Component may reserve the right to transfer the title 
    to the Federal Government or to a third party named by the Federal 
    Government when such third party is otherwise eligible under existing 
    statutes. Such transfer shall be subject to the following standards.
        (1) The equipment shall be appropriately identified in the award or 
    otherwise made known to the recipient in writing. For exempt property, 
    in accordance with Sec. 32.33(b)(3), note that this identification must 
    occur by the time of award, or title to the property vests in the 
    recipient without further obligation to the Government.
        (2) The DoD Component shall issue disposition instructions within 
    120 calendar days after receipt of a final inventory. The final 
    inventory shall list all equipment acquired with award funds and 
    federally-owned property. If the DoD Component fails to issue 
    disposition instructions for equipment within the 120 calendar day 
    period, the recipient shall apply the standards of paragraph (g)(1) of 
    this section.
        (3) When the DoD Component exercises its right to take title, the 
    equipment shall be subject to the provisions for federally-owned 
    property.
    
    
    Sec. 32.35   Supplies.
    
        (a) Title to supplies shall vest in the recipient upon acquisition. 
    If there is a residual inventory of unused supplies exceeding $5,000 in 
    total aggregate value upon termination or completion of the project or 
    program and the supplies are not needed for any other federally-
    sponsored project or program, the recipient shall retain the supplies 
    for use on non-Federal sponsored activities or sell them, but shall, in 
    either case, compensate the Federal Government for its share. The 
    amount of compensation shall be computed in the same manner as for 
    equipment.
        (b) The recipient shall not use supplies acquired with Federal 
    funds to provide services to non-Federal outside organizations for a 
    fee that is less than private companies charge for equivalent services, 
    unless specifically authorized by Federal statute as long as the 
    Federal Government retains an interest in the supplies.
    
    
    Sec. 32.36   Intangible property.
    
        (a) The recipient may copyright any work that is subject to 
    copyright and was developed, or for which ownership was purchased, 
    under an award. DoD Components reserve a royalty-free, nonexclusive and 
    irrevocable right to reproduce, publish, or otherwise use the work for 
    Federal purposes, and to authorize others to do so.
        (b) Recipients are subject to applicable regulations governing 
    patents and inventions, including Governmentwide regulations issued by 
    the Department of Commerce at 37 CFR part 401, ``Rights to Inventions 
    Made by Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under 
    Government Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements.''
        (c) Unless waived by the DoD Component making the award, the 
    Federal Government has the right to:
        (1) Obtain, reproduce, publish or otherwise use the data first 
    produced under an award.
        (2) Authorize others to receive, reproduce, publish, or otherwise 
    use such data for Federal purposes.
        (d) Title to intangible property and debt instruments acquired 
    under an award or subaward (rather than developed or produced under the 
    award or subaward) vests upon acquisition in the recipient. The 
    recipient shall use that property for the originally-authorized 
    purpose, and the recipient shall not encumber the property without 
    approval of the DoD Component that made the award. When no longer 
    needed for the originally authorized purpose, disposition of the 
    intangible property shall occur in accordance with the provisions of 
    Sec. 32.34(g).
    
    
    Sec. 32.37   Property trust relationship.
    
        Real property, equipment, intangible property and debt instruments 
    that are acquired or improved with Federal funds shall be held in trust 
    by the recipient as trustee for the beneficiaries of the project or 
    program under which the property was acquired or improved. DoD 
    Components may require recipients to record liens or other appropriate 
    notices of record to indicate that personal or real property has been 
    acquired or improved with Federal funds and that use and disposition 
    conditions apply to the property.
    
    Procurement Standards
    
    
    Sec. 32.40   Purpose of procurement standards.
    
        Sections 32.41 through 32.48 set forth standards for use by 
    recipients in establishing procedures for the procurement of supplies 
    and other expendable property, equipment, real property and other 
    services with Federal funds. These standards are furnished to ensure 
    that such materials and services are obtained in an effective manner 
    and
    
    [[Page 43900]]
    
    in compliance with the provisions of applicable Federal statutes and 
    executive orders.
    
    
    Sec. 32.41   Recipient responsibilities.
    
        The standards contained in this section do not relieve the 
    recipient of the contractual responsibilities arising under its 
    contract(s). The recipient is the responsible authority, without 
    recourse to the DoD Component that made the award, regarding the 
    settlement and satisfaction of all contractual and administrative 
    issues arising out of procurements entered into in support of an award 
    or other agreement. This includes disputes, claims, protests of award, 
    source evaluation or other matters of a contractual nature. Matters 
    concerning violation of statute are to be referred to such Federal, 
    State or local authority as may have proper jurisdiction.
    
    
    Sec. 32.42   Codes of conduct.
    
        The recipient shall maintain written standards of conduct governing 
    the performance of its employees engaged in the award and 
    administration of contracts. No employee, officer, or agent shall 
    participate in the selection, award, or administration of a contract 
    supported by Federal funds if a real or apparent conflict of interest 
    would be involved. Such a conflict would arise when the employee, 
    officer, or agent, any member of his or her immediate family, his or 
    her partner, or an organization which employs or is about to employ any 
    of the parties indicated herein, has a financial or other interest in 
    the firm selected for an award. The officers, employees, and agents of 
    the recipient shall neither solicit nor accept gratuities, favors, or 
    anything of monetary value from contractors, or parties to 
    subagreements. However, recipients may set standards for situations in 
    which the financial interest is not substantial or the gift is an 
    unsolicited item of nominal value. The standards of conduct shall 
    provide for disciplinary actions to be applied for violations of such 
    standards by officers, employees, or agents of the recipient.
    
    
    Sec. 32.43   Competition.
    
        All procurement transactions shall be conducted in a manner to 
    provide, to the maximum extent practical, open and free competition. 
    The recipient shall be alert to organizational conflicts of interest as 
    well as noncompetitive practices among contractors that may restrict or 
    eliminate competition or otherwise restrain trade. In order to ensure 
    objective contractor performance and eliminate unfair competitive 
    advantage, contractors that develop or draft specifications, 
    requirements, statements of work, invitations for bids and/or requests 
    for proposals shall be excluded from competing for such procurements. 
    Awards shall be made to the bidder or offeror whose bid or offer is 
    responsive to the solicitation and is most advantageous to the 
    recipient, price, quality and other factors considered. Solicitations 
    shall clearly set forth all requirements that the bidder or offeror 
    shall fulfill in order for the bid or offer to be evaluated by the 
    recipient. Any and all bids or offers may be rejected when it is in the 
    recipient's interest to do so.
    
    
    Sec. 32.44   Procurement procedures.
    
        (a) To comply with this part, which is DoD's implementation of OMB 
    Circular A-110, all recipients that received at least $10 million in 
    Federal funding in the previous fiscal year (through contracts and 
    subcontracts, as well as assistance awards and subawards) shall have 
    written procurement procedures. Note, however, that a recipient that 
    received awards from other Federal agencies, in addition to awards from 
    DoD Components, must also comply with the other agencies' 
    implementation of OMB Circular A-110 (which may require written 
    procurement procedures, even if the recipient received less than $10 
    million in Federal funding). All recipients, whether or not their 
    procurement procedures must be maintained in writing, shall have 
    procedures that provide, at a minimum, that:
        (1) Recipients avoid purchasing unnecessary items;
        (2) Where appropriate, an analysis is made of lease and purchase 
    alternatives to determine which would be the most economical and 
    practical procurement; and
        (3) Solicitations for goods and services provide for all of the 
    following:
        (i) A clear and accurate description of the technical requirements 
    for the material, product or service to be procured. In competitive 
    procurements, such a description shall not contain features which 
    unduly restrict competition.
        (ii) Requirements which the bidder/offeror must fulfill and all 
    other factors to be used in evaluating bids or proposals.
        (iii) A description, whenever practicable, of technical 
    requirements in terms of functions to be performed or performance 
    required, including the range of acceptable characteristics or minimum 
    acceptable standards.
        (iv) The specific features of ``brand name or equal'' descriptions 
    that bidders are required to meet when such items are included in the 
    solicitation.
        (v) The acceptance, to the extent practicable and economically 
    feasible, of products and services dimensioned in the metric system of 
    measurement.
        (vi) Preference, to the extent practicable and economically 
    feasible, for products and services that conserve natural resources and 
    protect the environment and are energy efficient.
        (b) Positive efforts shall be made by recipients to utilize small 
    businesses, minority-owned firms, and women's business enterprises, 
    whenever possible. Recipients of Federal awards shall take all of the 
    following steps to further this goal:
        (1) Ensure that small businesses, minority-owned firms, and women's 
    business enterprises are used to the fullest extent practicable.
        (2) Make information on forthcoming opportunities available and 
    arrange time frames for purchases and contracts to encourage and 
    facilitate participation by small businesses, minority-owned firms, and 
    women's business enterprises.
        (3) Consider in the contract process whether firms competing for 
    larger contracts intend to subcontract with small businesses, minority-
    owned firms, and women's business enterprises.
        (4) Encourage contracting with consortiums of small businesses, 
    minority-owned firms and women's business enterprises when a contract 
    is too large for one of these firms to handle individually.
        (5) Use the services and assistance, as appropriate, of such 
    organizations as the Small Business Administration and the Department 
    of Commerce's Minority Business Development Agency in the solicitation 
    and utilization of small businesses, minority-owned firms and women's 
    business enterprises.
        (c) The type of procuring instruments used (e.g., fixed price 
    contracts, cost reimbursable contracts, purchase orders, and incentive 
    contracts) shall be determined by the recipient but shall be 
    appropriate for the particular procurement and for promoting the best 
    interest of the program or project involved. The ``cost-plus-a-
    percentage-of-cost'' or ``percentage of construction cost'' methods of 
    contracting shall not be used.
        (d) Contracts shall be made only with responsible contractors who 
    possess the potential ability to perform successfully under the terms 
    and conditions of the proposed procurement. Consideration shall be 
    given to such matters as contractor integrity, record of past 
    performance, financial and technical resources or accessibility to 
    other necessary resources. In certain
    
    [[Page 43901]]
    
    circumstances, contracts with certain parties are restricted by the DoD 
    implementation, in 32 CFR part 25, of E.O.s 12549 (3 CFR, 1986 Comp., 
    p. 189) and 12689 (3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 235), ``Debarment and 
    Suspension.''
        (e) Recipients shall, on request, make available for the DoD 
    Component's pre-award review, procurement documents such as request for 
    proposals or invitations for bids, independent cost estimates, etc., 
    when any of the following conditions apply:
        (1) A recipient's procurement procedures or operation fails to 
    comply with the procurement standards in this part.
        (2) The procurement is expected to exceed the simplified 
    acquisition threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403 (11) (currently $100,000) 
    and is to be awarded without competition or only one bid or offer is 
    received in response to a solicitation.
        (3) The procurement, which is expected to exceed the simplified 
    acquisition threshold, specifies a ``brand name'' product.
        (4) The proposed award over the simplified acquisition threshold is 
    to be awarded to other than the apparent low bidder under a sealed bid 
    procurement.
        (5) A proposed contract modification changes the scope of a 
    contract or increases the contract amount by more than the amount of 
    the simplified acquisition threshold.
    
    
    Sec. 32.45  Cost and price analysis.
    
        Some form of cost or price analysis shall be made and documented in 
    the procurement files in connection with every procurement action. 
    Price analysis may be accomplished in various ways, including the 
    comparison of price quotations submitted, market prices and similar 
    indicia, together with discounts. Cost analysis is the review and 
    evaluation of each element of cost to determine reasonableness, 
    allocability and allowability.
    
    
    Sec. 32.46  Procurement records.
    
        Procurement records and files for purchases in excess of the 
    simplified acquisition threshold shall include the following at a 
    minimum:
        (a) Basis for contractor selection;
        (b) Justification for lack of competition when competitive bids or 
    offers are not obtained; and
        (c) Basis for award cost or price.
    
    
    Sec. 32.47  Contract administration.
    
        A system for contract administration shall be maintained to ensure 
    contractor conformance with the terms, conditions and specifications of 
    the contract and to ensure adequate and timely follow up of all 
    purchases. Recipients shall evaluate contractor performance and 
    document, as appropriate, whether contractors have met the terms, 
    conditions and specifications of the contract.
    
    
    Sec. 32.48  Contract provisions.
    
        The recipient shall include, in addition to provisions to define a 
    sound and complete agreement, the following provisions in all 
    contracts. The following provisions shall also be applied to 
    subcontracts:
        (a) Contracts in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold 
    shall contain contractual provisions or conditions that allow for 
    administrative, contractual, or legal remedies in instances in which a 
    contractor violates or breaches the contract terms, and provide for 
    such remedial actions as may be appropriate.
        (b) All contracts in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold 
    shall contain suitable provisions for termination by the recipient, 
    including the manner by which termination shall be effected and the 
    basis for settlement. In addition, such contracts shall describe 
    conditions under which the contract may be terminated for default as 
    well as conditions where the contract may be terminated because of 
    circumstances beyond the control of the contractor.
        (c) Except as otherwise required by statute, an award that requires 
    the contracting (or subcontracting) for construction or facility 
    improvements shall provide for the recipient to follow its own 
    requirements relating to bid guarantees, performance bonds, and payment 
    bonds unless the construction contract or subcontract exceeds $100,000. 
    For those contracts or subcontracts exceeding $100,000, the DoD 
    Component may accept the bonding policy and requirements of the 
    recipient, provided the grants officer has made a determination that 
    the Federal Government'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 shall, 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 statute of all persons 
    supplying labor and material in the execution of the work provided for 
    in the contract.
        (4) Where bonds are required in the situations described in 
    Secs. 32.40 through 32.49, the bonds shall be obtained from companies 
    holding certificates of authority as acceptable sureties pursuant to 31 
    CFR part 223, ``Surety Companies Doing Business with the United 
    States.''
        (d) All negotiated contracts (except those for less than the 
    simplified acquisition threshold) awarded by recipients shall include a 
    provision to the effect that the recipient, the Department of Defense, 
    the Comptroller General of the United States, or any of their duly 
    authorized representatives, shall have access to any books, documents, 
    papers and records of the contractor which are directly pertinent to a 
    specific program for the purpose of making audits, examinations, 
    excerpts and transcriptions.
        (e) All contracts, including those for amounts less than the 
    simplified acquisition threshold, by recipients and their contractors 
    shall contain the procurement provisions of Appendix A to this part, as 
    applicable.
    
    
    Sec. 32.49  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. -
    
        Under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) (section 
    6002, Public Law 94-580, 42 U.S.C. 6962), any State agency or agency of 
    a political subdivision of a State which is using appropriated Federal 
    funds must comply with section 6002. Section 6002 requires that 
    preference be given in procurement programs to the purchase of specific 
    products containing recycled materials identified in guidelines 
    developed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) (40 CFR parts 
    247-254). Accordingly, State and local institutions of higher 
    education, hospitals, and non-profit organizations that receive direct 
    Federal awards or other Federal funds shall give preference in their 
    procurement programs funded with Federal funds to the purchase of 
    recycled products pursuant to the EPA guidelines.
    
    Reports and Records
    
    
    Sec. 32.50  Purpose of reports and records. -
    
        Sections 32.51 through 32.53 set forth the procedures for 
    monitoring and reporting on the recipient's financial
    
    [[Page 43902]]
    
    and program performance and the necessary standard reporting forms. 
    They also set forth record retention requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 32.51  Monitoring and reporting program performance. -
    
        (a) Recipients are responsible for managing and monitoring each 
    project, program, subaward, function or activity supported by the 
    award. Recipients shall monitor subawards to ensure subrecipients have 
    met the audit requirements as delineated in Sec. 32.26. -
        (b) The award terms and conditions shall prescribe the frequency 
    with which the performance reports shall be submitted. Except as 
    provided in paragraph (f) of this section, performance reports shall 
    not be required more frequently than quarterly or less frequently than 
    annually. Annual reports shall be due 90 calendar days after the award 
    year; quarterly or semi-annual reports shall be due 30 days after the 
    reporting period. DoD Components may require annual reports before the 
    anniversary dates of multiple year awards in lieu of these 
    requirements. The final performance reports are due 90 calendar days 
    after the expiration or termination of the award. -
        (c) If inappropriate, a final technical or performance report shall 
    not be required after completion of the project. -
        (d) When required, performance reports shall generally contain, for 
    each award, brief information on each of the following: --
        (1) A comparison of actual accomplishments with the goals and 
    objectives established for the period, the findings of the 
    investigator, or both. Whenever appropriate and the output of programs 
    or projects can be readily quantified, such quantitative data should be 
    related to cost data for computation of unit costs. However, unit costs 
    are generally inappropriate for research (see Secs. 32.21 (a) and 
    (b)(4)). --
        (2) Reasons why established goals were not met, if appropriate. --
        (3) Other pertinent information including, when appropriate, 
    analysis and explanation of cost overruns or high unit costs. -
        (e) Recipients shall not be required to submit more than the 
    original and two copies of performance reports. -
        (f) Recipients shall immediately notify the grants officer of 
    developments that have a significant impact on the award-supported 
    activities. Also, notification shall be given in the case of problems, 
    delays, or adverse conditions which materially impair the ability to 
    meet the objectives of the award. This notification shall include a 
    statement of the action taken or contemplated, and any assistance 
    needed to resolve the situation. -
        (g)- DoD Components' representatives may make site visits, as 
    needed. -
        (h)- DoD Components shall comply with applicable clearance 
    requirements of 5 CFR part 1320 when requesting performance data from 
    recipients.
    
    
    Sec. 32.52  Financial reporting. -
    
        (a) The following forms or such other forms as may be approved by 
    OMB are authorized for obtaining financial information from recipients:
        (1) SF-269 \10\ or SF-269A,\11\ Financial Status Report. (i) DoD 
    Components shall require recipients to use the SF-269 or SF-269A to 
    report the status of funds for all nonconstruction projects or 
    programs. A DoD Component may, however, have the option of not 
    requiring the SF-269 or SF-269A when the SF-270, Request for Advance or 
    Reimbursement, or SF-272,\12\ Report of Federal Cash Transactions, is 
    determined to provide adequate information to meet agency needs, except 
    that a final SF-269 or SF-269A shall be required at the completion of 
    the project when the SF-270 is used only for advances.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \10\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a).
        \11\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a).
        \12\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a). ----
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (ii) The DoD Component shall prescribe whether the report shall be 
    on a cash or accrual basis. If the award requires accrual information 
    and the recipient's accounting records are not normally kept on the 
    accrual basis, the recipient shall not be required to convert its 
    accounting system, but shall develop such accrual information through 
    best estimates based on an analysis of the documentation on hand. ----
        (iii) The DoD Component shall determine the frequency of the 
    Financial Status Report for each project or program, considering the 
    size and complexity of the particular project or program. However, the 
    report shall not be required more frequently than quarterly or less 
    frequently than annually. A final report shall be required at the 
    completion of the agreement. ----
        (iv) The DoD Component shall require recipients to submit the SF-
    269 or SF-269A (an original and no more than two copies) no later than 
    30 days after the end of each specified reporting period for quarterly 
    and semi-annual reports, and 90 calendar days for annual and final 
    reports. Extensions of reporting due dates may be approved by the 
    grants officer upon request of the recipient. --
        (2) SF-272, Report of Federal Cash Transactions. (i) When funds are 
    advanced to recipients the DoD Component shall require each recipient 
    to submit the SF-272 and, when necessary, its continuation sheet, SF-
    272a.\13\ The grants officer shall use this report to monitor cash 
    advanced to recipients and to obtain disbursement information for each 
    agreement with the recipients. ----
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \13\ See footnote 2 to Sec. 32.12(a). -
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (ii) DoD Components may require forecasts of Federal cash 
    requirements in the ``Remarks'' section of the report. ----
        (iii) When practical and deemed necessary, DoD Components may 
    require recipients to report in the ``Remarks'' section the amount of 
    cash advances received in excess of three days. Recipients shall 
    provide short narrative explanations of actions taken to reduce the 
    excess balances.
        (iv) Recipients shall be required to submit not more than the 
    original and two copies of the SF-272 15 calendar days following the 
    end of each quarter. DoD Components may require a monthly report from 
    those recipients receiving advances totaling $1 million or more per 
    year. -
        (v) DoD Components may waive the requirement for submission of the 
    SF-272 for any one of the following reasons:
        (A) When monthly advances do not exceed $25,000 per recipient, 
    provided that such advances are monitored through other forms contained 
    in this section;
        (B) If, in the grants officer's opinion, the recipient's accounting 
    controls are adequate to minimize excessive Federal advances; or
        (C) When electronic payment mechanisms or SF-270 forms provide 
    adequate data.
        (b) When the DoD Component needs additional information or more 
    frequent reports, the following shall be observed:
        (1) When additional information is needed to comply with 
    legislative requirements, grants officers shall issue instructions to 
    require recipients to submit such information under the ``Remarks'' 
    section of the reports.
        (2) When a grants officer, after consultation with the Federal 
    agency assigned cognizance for a recipient's audit and audit 
    resolution, determines that the recipient's accounting system does not 
    meet the standards in Sec. 32.21, additional pertinent information to 
    further monitor awards may be obtained upon written notice to the 
    recipient until such time as the system is brought up to standard. The 
    grants officer, in obtaining this information, shall comply with 
    applicable report clearance requirements of 5 CFR part 1320.
    
    [[Page 43903]]
    
        (3) Grants officers are encouraged to shade out any line item on 
    any report if not necessary.
        (4) DoD Components are encouraged to accept the identical 
    information from the recipients in machine readable format or computer 
    printouts or electronic outputs in lieu of prescribed formats.
        (5) DoD Components may provide computer or electronic outputs to 
    recipients when it expedites or contributes to the accuracy of 
    reporting.
    
    
    Sec. 32.53  Retention and access requirements for records. -
    
        (a) This section sets forth requirements for record retention and 
    access to records for awards to recipients. DoD Components shall not 
    impose any other record retention or access requirements upon 
    recipients. -
        (b) Financial records, supporting documents, statistical records, 
    and all other records pertinent to an award shall be retained for a 
    period of three years from the date of submission of the final 
    expenditure report. The only exceptions are the following:
        (1) If any litigation, claim, or audit is started before the 
    expiration of the 3-year period, the records shall be retained until 
    all litigation, claims or audit findings involving the records have 
    been resolved and final action taken.
        (2) Records for real property and equipment acquired with Federal 
    funds shall be retained for 3 years after final disposition.
        (3) When records are transferred to or maintained by the DoD 
    Component that made the award, the 3-year retention requirement is not 
    applicable to the recipient.
        (4) Indirect cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, and 
    related records, for which retention requirements are specified in 
    paragraph (g) of this section.
        (c) Copies of original records may be substituted for the original 
    records if authorized by the grants officer.
        (d) The grants officer shall request that recipients transfer 
    certain records to DoD Component custody when he or she determines that 
    the records possess long term retention value. However, in order to 
    avoid duplicate recordkeeping, a grants officer may make arrangements 
    for recipients to retain any records that are continuously needed for 
    joint use.
        (e) DoD Components, the Inspector General, Comptroller General of 
    the United States, or any of their duly authorized representatives, 
    have the right of timely and unrestricted access to any books, 
    documents, papers, or other records of recipients that are pertinent to 
    the awards, in order to make audits, examinations, excerpts, 
    transcripts and copies of such documents. This right also includes 
    timely and reasonable access to a recipient's personnel for the purpose 
    of interview and discussion related to such documents. The rights of 
    access in this paragraph are not limited to the required retention 
    period, but shall last as long as records are retained.
        (f) Unless required by statute, no DoD Component shall place 
    restrictions on recipients that limit public access to the records of 
    recipients that are pertinent to an award, except when the DoD 
    Component can demonstrate that such records shall be kept confidential 
    and would have been exempted from disclosure pursuant to the Freedom of 
    Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) if the records had belonged to the DoD 
    Component making the award.
        (g) Indirect cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, etc. 
    Paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of this section apply 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 chargeback rates or 
    composite fringe benefit rates).
        (1) If submitted for negotiation. If the recipient submits an 
    indirect-cost proposal, plan, or other computation to the Federal 
    agency responsible for negotiating the recipient's indirect cost rate, 
    as the basis for negotiation of the rate, or the subrecipient submits 
    such a proposal, plan, or computation to the recipient, then the 3-year 
    retention period for its supporting records starts on the date of such 
    submission.
        (2) If not submitted for negotiation. If the recipient is not 
    required to submit to the cognizant Federal agency or the subrecipient 
    is not required to submit to the recipient the proposal, plan, or other 
    computation for negotiation purposes, then the 3-year retention period 
    for the proposal, plan, or other computation and its supporting records 
    starts at the end of the fiscal year (or other accounting period) 
    covered by the proposal, plan, or other computation.
    
    Termination and Enforcement
    
    
    Sec. 32.60  Purpose of termination and enforcement.
    
        Sections 32.61 and 32.62 set forth uniform suspension, termination 
    and enforcement procedures.
    
    
    Sec. 32.61  Termination.
    
        (a) Awards may be terminated in whole or in part only as follows:
        (1) By the grants officer, if a recipient materially fails to 
    comply with the terms and conditions of an award;
        (2) By the grants officer with the consent of the recipient, 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
        (3) By the recipient upon sending to the grants officer written 
    notification setting forth the reasons for such termination, the 
    effective date, and, in the case of partial termination, the portion to 
    be terminated. The recipient must provide such notice at least 30 days 
    prior to the effective date of the termination. However, if the grants 
    officer determines in the case of partial termination that the reduced 
    or modified portion of the award will not accomplish the purposes for 
    which the award was made, he or she may terminate the award in its 
    entirety.
        (b) If costs are allowed under an award, the responsibilities of 
    the recipient referred to in Sec. 32.71, including those for property 
    management as applicable, shall be considered in the termination of the 
    award, and provision shall be made for continuing responsibilities of 
    the recipient after termination, as appropriate.
    
    
    Sec. 32.62  Enforcement.
    
        (a) Remedies for noncompliance. If a recipient materially fails to 
    comply with the terms and conditions of an award, whether stated in a 
    Federal statute, regulation, assurance, application, or notice of 
    award, the grants officer may, in addition to imposing any of the 
    special conditions outlined in Sec. 32.14, 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 recipient or more severe enforcement action by the 
    grants officer and DoD Component.
        (2) Disallow (that is, deny both use of funds and any applicable 
    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.
        (4) Withhold further awards for the project or program.
        (5) Take other remedies that may be legally available.
        (b) Hearings and appeals. In taking an enforcement action, the DoD 
    Component shall provide the recipient an opportunity for hearing, 
    appeal, or other administrative proceeding to which the recipient is 
    entitled under
    
    [[Page 43904]]
    
    any statute or regulation applicable to the action involved (see 32 CFR 
    22.815).
        (c) Effects of suspension and termination. Costs of a recipient 
    resulting from obligations incurred by the recipient during a 
    suspension or after termination of an award are not allowable unless 
    the grants officer expressly authorizes them in the notice of 
    suspension or termination or subsequently. Other recipient costs during 
    suspension or after termination which are necessary and not reasonably 
    avoidable are allowable if the costs:
        (1) Result from obligations which were properly incurred by the 
    recipient 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) 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 a recipient from being subject to 
    debarment and suspension under 32 CFR part 25.
    
    Subpart D--After-the-Award Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 32.70  Purpose.
    
        Sections 32.71 through 32.73 contain closeout procedures and other 
    procedures for subsequent disallowances and adjustments.
    
    
    Sec. 32.71  Closeout procedures.
    
        (a) Recipients shall submit, within 90 calendar days after the date 
    of completion of the award, all financial, performance, and other 
    reports required by the terms and conditions of the award. The grants 
    officer may approve extensions when requested by the recipient.
        (b) Unless the grants officer authorizes an extension, a recipient 
    shall liquidate all obligations incurred under the award not later than 
    90 calendar days after the funding period or the date of completion as 
    specified in the terms and conditions of the award or in agency 
    implementing instructions.
        (c) The responsible grants officer and payment office shall 
    expedite completion of steps needed to close out awards and make 
    prompt, final payments to a recipient for allowable reimbursable costs 
    under the award being closed out.
        (d) The recipient shall promptly refund any balances of unobligated 
    cash that the DoD Component has advanced or paid and that is not 
    authorized to be retained by the recipient for use in other projects. 
    OMB Circular A-129 \14\ governs unreturned amounts that become 
    delinquent debts (see 32 CFR 22.820).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \14\ See footnote 1 to Sec. 32.1(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (e) When authorized by the terms and conditions of the award, the 
    grants officer shall make a settlement for any upward or downward 
    adjustments to the Federal share of costs after closeout reports are 
    received.
        (f) The recipient shall account for any real and personal property 
    acquired with Federal funds or received from the Federal Government in 
    accordance with Secs. 32.31 through 32.37.
        (g) In the event a final audit has not been performed prior to the 
    closeout of an award, the DoD Component shall retain the right to 
    recover an appropriate amount after fully considering the 
    recommendations on disallowed costs resulting from the final audit.
    
    
    Sec. 32.72  Subsequent adjustments and continuing responsibilities.
    
        (a) The closeout of an award does not affect any of the following:
        (1) The right of the Department of Defense to disallow costs and 
    recover funds on the basis of a later audit or other review.
        (2) The obligation of the recipient to return any funds due as a 
    result of later refunds, corrections, or other transactions.
        (3) Audit requirements in Sec. 32.26.
        (4) Property management requirements in Secs. 32.31 through 32.37.
        (5) Records retention as required in Sec. 32.53.
        (b) After closeout of an award, a relationship created under an 
    award may be modified or ended in whole or in part with the consent of 
    the grants officer and the recipient, provided the responsibilities of 
    the recipient referred to in Sec. 32.73(a), including those for 
    property management as applicable, are considered and provisions made 
    for continuing responsibilities of the recipient, as appropriate.
    
    
    Sec. 32.73  Collection of amounts due.
    
        (a) Any funds paid to a recipient in excess of the amount to which 
    the recipient is finally determined to be entitled under the terms and 
    conditions of the award constitute a debt to the Federal Government.
        (b) OMB Circular A-110 informs each Federal agency that:
        (1) If a debt is not paid within a reasonable period after the 
    demand for payment, the Federal agency may reduce the debt by:
        (i) Making administrative offset against other requests for 
    reimbursement.
        (ii) Withholding advance payments otherwise due to the recipient.
        (iii) Taking other action permitted by statute.
        (2) Except as otherwise provided by law, the Federal awarding 
    agency shall charge interest on an overdue debt in accordance with 4 
    CFR Chapter II, ``Federal Claims Collection Standards.''
        (c) DoD grants officers shall follow the procedures in 32 CFR 
    22.820 for issuing demands for payment and transferring debts to DoD 
    payment offices for collection.
    
    Appendix A to Part 32--Contract Provisions
    
        All contracts awarded by a recipient, including those for 
    amounts less than the simplified acquisition threshold, shall 
    contain the following provisions as applicable:
        1. Equal Employment Opportunity--All contracts shall contain a 
    provision requiring compliance with E.O. 11246 (3 CFR, 1964-1965 
    Comp., p. 339), ``Equal Employment Opportunity,'' as amended by E.O. 
    11375 (3 CFR, 1966-1970 Comp., p. 684), ``Amending Executive Order 
    11246 Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity,'' and as 
    supplemented by regulations at 41 CFR chapter 60, ``Office of 
    Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Equal Employment Opportunity, 
    Department of Labor.''
        2. Copeland ``Anti-Kickback'' Act (18 U.S.C. 874 and 40 U.S.C. 
    276c)--All contracts and subawards in excess of $2000 for 
    construction or repair awarded by recipients and subrecipients shall 
    include a provision for compliance with the Copeland ``Anti-
    Kickback'' Act (18 U.S.C. 874), as supplemented by Department of 
    Labor regulations (29 CFR part 3, ``Contractors and Subcontractors 
    on Public Building or Public Work Financed in Whole or in Part by 
    Loans or Grants from the United States''). The Act provides that 
    each contractor or subrecipient shall be prohibited from inducing, 
    by any means, any person employed in the construction, completion, 
    or repair of public work, to give up any part of the compensation to 
    which he is otherwise entitled. The recipient shall report all 
    suspected or reported violations to the responsible DoD Component.
        3. Davis-Bacon Act, as amended (40 U.S.C. 276a to a-7)--This Act 
    applies to procurements under awards only when the Federal program 
    legislation specifically makes it apply (i.e., Davis-Bacon does not 
    by itself apply to procurements under awards). In cases where 
    another statute does make the Davis-Bacon Act apply, all 
    construction contracts awarded by the recipients and subrecipients 
    of more than $2,000 shall include a provision for compliance with 
    the Davis-Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 276a to a-7) and as supplemented by 
    Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5, ``Labor Standards 
    Provisions Applicable to Contracts Governing Federally Financed and 
    Assisted
    
    [[Page 43905]]
    
    Construction''). Under this Act, contractors shall be required to 
    pay wages to laborers and mechanics at a rate not less than the 
    minimum wages specified in a wage determination made by the 
    Secretary of Labor. In addition, contractors shall be required to 
    pay wages not less than once a week. The recipient shall place a 
    copy of the current prevailing wage determination issued by the 
    Department of Labor in each solicitation and the award of a contract 
    shall be conditioned upon the acceptance of the wage determination. 
    The recipient shall report all suspected or reported violations to 
    the Federal awarding agency.
        4. Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-
    333)--Where applicable, all contracts awarded by recipients in 
    excess of $100,000 for construction or other purposes that involve 
    the employment of mechanics or laborers shall include a provision 
    for compliance with Sections 102 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours 
    and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-333), as supplemented by 
    Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5). Under Section 102 
    of the Act, each contractor shall be required to compute the wages 
    of every mechanic and laborer on the basis of a standard work week 
    of 40 hours. Work in excess of the standard work week is permissible 
    provided that the worker is compensated at a rate of not less than 
    1\1/2\ times the basic rate of pay for all hours worked in excess of 
    40 hours in the work week. Section 107 of the Act is applicable to 
    construction work and provides that no laborer or mechanic shall be 
    required to work in surroundings or under working conditions which 
    are unsanitary, hazardous or dangerous. These requirements do not 
    apply to the purchases of supplies or materials or articles 
    ordinarily available on the open market, or contracts for 
    transportation or transmission of intelligence.
        5. Rights to Inventions Made Under a Contract or Agreement--
    Contracts or agreements for the performance of experimental, 
    developmental, or research work shall provide for the rights of the 
    Federal Government and the recipient in any resulting invention in 
    accordance with 37 CFR part 401, ``Rights to Inventions Made by 
    Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under Government 
    Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements.''
        6. Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water 
    Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended--
    Contracts and subawards of amounts in excess of $100,000 shall 
    contain a provision that requires the recipient to agree to comply 
    with all applicable standards, orders or regulations issued pursuant 
    to the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water 
    Pollution Control Act as amended (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.). 
    Violations shall be reported to the responsible DoD Component and 
    the Regional Office of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
        7. Byrd Anti-Lobbying Amendment (31 U.S.C. 1352)--Contractors 
    who apply or bid for an award of $100,000 or more shall file the 
    required certification. Each tier certifies to the tier above that 
    it will not and has not used Federal appropriated funds to pay any 
    person or organization for influencing or attempting to influence an 
    officer or employee of any agency, a member of Congress, officer or 
    employee of Congress, or an employee of a member of Congress in 
    connection with obtaining any Federal contract, grant or any other 
    award covered by 31 U.S.C. 1352. Each tier shall also disclose any 
    lobbying with non-Federal funds that takes place in connection with 
    obtaining any Federal award. Such disclosures are forwarded from 
    tier to tier up to the recipient.
        8. Debarment and Suspension (E.O.s 12549 and 12689)--Contract 
    awards that exceed the simplified acquisition threshold and certain 
    other contract awards shall not be made to parties listed on the 
    General Services Administration's Lists of Parties Excluded from 
    Federal Procurement and Nonprocurement Programs in accordance with 
    E.O.s 12549 (3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189) and 12689 (3 CFR, 1989 
    Comp., p. 235), ``Debarment and Suspension.'' This list contains the 
    names of parties debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded by 
    agencies, and contractors declared ineligible under statutory or 
    regulatory authority other than E.O. 12549. Contractors with awards 
    that exceed the simplified acquisition threshold shall provide the 
    required certification regarding its exclusion status and that of 
    its principals.
    
    PART 33--[AMENDED]
    
        6. Part 33 is proposed to be amended as follows:
        a. The authority citation for part 33 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
        b. Section 33.36 is proposed to be amended by revising paragraph 
    (i)(6) and by adding paragraph (j) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 33.36  Procurement.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) * * *
        (6) Compliance with sections 103 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours 
    and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-330, as amended), as 
    supplemented by Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR Part 5). 
    (Contracts awarded by grantees and subgrantees in excess of $100,000 
    for construction or other purposes that involve the employment of 
    mechanics or laborers).
    * * * * *
        (j) Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Any State agency 
    or agency of a political subdivision of a State must comply with RCRA 
    (Public Law 94-580), with respect to its procurements using 
    appropriated Federal funds. Section 6002 of RCRA (42 U.S.C. 6962) 
    requires that entities qualifying as ``procuring agencies'' give 
    preference in procurement programs to the purchase of specific products 
    containing recycled materials identified in guidelines (40 CFR parts 
    247-254) developed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
        7. Part 34 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
    
    PART 34--ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS FOR GRANTS AND AGREEMENTS WITH 
    COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    34.1  Purpose.
    34.2  Definitions.
    34.3  Deviations.
    34.4  Special award conditions.
    
    Subpart B--Post-Award Requirements
    
    Financial and Program Management
    
    34.10  Purpose of financial and program management.
    34.11  Standards for financial management systems.
    34.12  Payment.
    34.13  Cost sharing or matching.
    34.14  Program income.
    34.15  Revision of budget and program plans.
    34.16  Audits.
    34.17  Allowable costs.
    34.18  Fee and profit.
    
    Property Standards
    
    34.20  Purpose of property standards.
    34.21  Real property and equipment.
    34.22  Federally owned property.
    34.23  Property management system.
    34.24  Supplies.
    34.25  Intellectual property developed or produced under awards.
    
    Procurement Standards
    
    34.30  Purpose of procurement standards.
    34.31  Requirements.
    
    Reports and Records
    
    34.40  Purpose of reports and records.
    34.41  Monitoring and reporting program and financial performance.
    34.42  Retention and access requirements for records.
    
    Termination and Enforcement
    
    34.50  Purpose of termination and enforcement.
    34.51  Termination.
    34.52  Enforcement.
    34.53  Disputes and appeals.
    
    Subpart C--After-the-Award Requirements
    
    34.60  Purpose.
    34.61  Closeout procedures.
    34.62  Subsequent adjustments and continuing responsibilities.
    34.63  Collection of amounts due.
    
    Appendix A to Part 34--Contract Provisions
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 10 U.S.C. 113.
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 34.1  Purpose.
    
        (a) This part prescribes administrative requirements for grants and 
    cooperative
    
    [[Page 43906]]
    
    agreements to commercial organizations. -
        (b) Applicability to prime awards and subawards is as follows:
        (1) Prime awards. DoD Components shall apply the provisions of this 
    part to awards to commercial organizations. DoD Components shall not 
    impose requirements that are in addition to, or inconsistent with, the 
    requirements provided in this part, except:
        (i) In accordance with the deviation procedures or special award 
    conditions in Sec. 34.3 or Sec. 34.4, respectively; or
        (ii) As required by Federal statute, Executive order, or Federal 
    regulation implementing a statute or Executive order.
        (2) Subawards. (i) Any legal entity (including any State, local 
    government, university or other nonprofit organization, as well as any 
    commercial entity) that receives an award from a DoD Component shall 
    apply the provisions of this part to subawards with commercial 
    organizations. It should be noted that subawards (see definition in 
    Sec. 34.2) are financial assistance for substantive programmatic 
    performance and do not include recipients' procurement of goods and 
    services.
        (ii) Commercial organizations that receive prime awards covered by 
    this part shall apply to each subaward the administrative requirements 
    that are applicable to the particular type of subrecipient (e.g., 32 
    CFR part 33 specifies requirements for subrecipients that are States or 
    local governments, and 32 CFR part 32 contains requirements for 
    universities or other nonprofit organizations).
    
    
    Sec. 34.2  Definitions.
    
        The following are definitions of terms as used in this part. Grants 
    officers are cautioned that terms may be defined differently in this 
    part than they are in other parts of the DoD Grant and Agreement 
    Regulations (DoD GARS).
        Advance. A payment made by Treasury check or other appropriate 
    payment mechanism to a recipient upon its request either before outlays 
    are made by the recipient or through the use of predetermined payment 
    schedules.
        Award. A grant or cooperative agreement.
        Cash contributions. The recipient's cash outlay, including the 
    outlay of money contributed to the recipient by third parties.
        Closeout. The process by which the grants officer administering an 
    award made by a DoD Component determines that all applicable 
    administrative actions and all required work of the award have been 
    completed by the recipient and DoD Component.
        Contract. A procurement contract under an award or subaward, and a 
    procurement subcontract under a recipient's or subrecipient's contract.
        Cost sharing or matching. That portion of project or program costs 
    not borne by the Federal Government.
        Disallowed costs. Those charges to an award that the grants officer 
    administering an award made by a DoD Component determines to be 
    unallowable, in accordance with the applicable Federal cost principles 
    or other terms and conditions contained in the award.
        DoD Component. A Military Department, Defense Agency, DoD Field 
    Activity, or organization within the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
    that provides or administers an award to a recipient.
        Equipment. Tangible nonexpendable personal property charged 
    directly to the award having a useful life of more than one year and an 
    acquisition cost of $5,000 or more per unit. That definition applies 
    for the purposes of the Federal administrative requirements in this 
    part. However, the recipient's policy may be to use a lower dollar 
    value for defining ``equipment,'' and nothing in this part should be 
    construed as requiring the recipient to establish a higher limit for 
    purposes other than the administrative requirements in this part.
        Excess property. Property under the control of any DoD Component 
    that, as determined by the head thereof, is no longer required for its 
    needs or the discharge of its responsibilities.
        Expenditures. See the definition for outlays in this section.
        Federally owned property. Property in the possession of, or 
    directly acquired by, the Government and subsequently made available to 
    the recipient.
        Funding period. The period of time when Federal funding is 
    available for obligation by the recipient.
        Intellectual property. Intangible personal property such as patents 
    and patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, technical data, and 
    software rights.
        Obligations. The amounts of orders placed, contracts and grants 
    awarded, services received and similar transactions during a given 
    period that require payment by the recipient during the same or a 
    future period.
        Outlays or expenditures. 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 cash disbursements for direct 
    charges for goods and services, the amount of indirect expense charged, 
    the value of third party in-kind contributions applied and the amount 
    of cash advances and payments made to subrecipients. For reports 
    prepared on an accrual basis, outlays are the sum of cash disbursements 
    for direct charges for goods and services, the amount of indirect 
    expense incurred, the value of in-kind contributions applied, and the 
    net increase (or decrease) in the amounts owed by the recipient for 
    goods and other property received, for services performed by employees, 
    contractors, subrecipients and other payees and other amounts becoming 
    owed under programs for which no current services or performance are 
    required.
        Personal property. Property of any kind except real property. It 
    may be:
        (1) Tangible, having physical existence (i.e., equipment and 
    supplies); or
        (2) Intangible, having no physical existence, such as patents, 
    copyrights, data and software.
        Prior approval. Written or electronic approval by an authorized 
    official evidencing prior consent.
        Program income. Gross income earned by the recipient that is 
    directly generated by a supported activity or earned as a result of the 
    award. Program income includes, but is not limited to, income from fees 
    for services performed, the use or rental of real or personal property 
    acquired under federally-funded projects, the sale of commodities or 
    items fabricated under an award, license fees and royalties on patents 
    and copyrights, and interest on loans made with award funds. Interest 
    earned on advances of Federal funds is not program income. Except as 
    otherwise provided in program regulations or the terms and conditions 
    of the award, program income does not include the receipt of principal 
    on loans, rebates, credits, discounts, etc., or interest earned on any 
    of them.
        Project costs. All allowable costs, as set forth in the applicable 
    Federal cost principles, incurred by a recipient and the value of the 
    contributions made by third parties in accomplishing the objectives of 
    the award during the project period.
        Project period. The period established in the award document during 
    which Federal sponsorship begins and ends.
        Property. Real property and personal property (equipment, supplies, 
    and intellectual property), unless stated otherwise.
        Real property. Land, including land improvements, structures and 
    appurtenances thereto, but excludes movable machinery and equipment.
    
    [[Page 43907]]
    
        Recipient. A commercial organization receiving an award directly 
    from a DoD Component to carry out a project or program.
        Research. Basic, applied, and advanced research activities. ``Basic 
    research'' is defined as efforts directed toward increasing knowledge 
    or understanding in science and engineering. ``Applied research'' is 
    defined as efforts that attempt to determine and exploit the potential 
    of scientific discoveries or improvements in technology, such as new 
    materials, devices, methods, and processes. ``Advanced research,'' 
    advanced technology development that creates new technology or 
    demonstrates the viability of applying existing technology to new 
    products and processes in a general way, is most closely analogous to 
    precommercialization or precompetitive technology development in the 
    commercial sector (it does not include development of military systems 
    and hardware where specific requirements have been defined).
        Small award. An award not exceeding the simplified acquisition 
    threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403(11) (currently $100,000).
        Small business concern. A concern, including its affiliates, that 
    is independently owned and operated, not dominant in the field of 
    operation in which it has applied for an award, and qualified as a 
    small business under the criteria and size standards in 13 CFR part 
    121. For more details, grants officers should see 48 CFR part 19 in the 
    ``Federal Acquisition Regulation.''
        Subaward. Financial assistance in the form of money, or property in 
    lieu of money, provided under an award by a recipient to an eligible 
    subrecipient or by a subrecipient to a lower tier subrecipient. The 
    term includes financial assistance when provided by any legal 
    agreement, even if the agreement is called a contract, but the term 
    includes neither procurement of goods and services nor any form of 
    assistance which is excluded from the definition of ``award'' in this 
    section.
        Subrecipient. The legal entity to which a subaward is made and 
    which is accountable to the recipient for the use of the funds 
    provided.
        Supplies. Tangible expendable personal property that is charged 
    directly to the award and that has a useful life of less than one year 
    or an acquisition cost of less than $5000 per unit.
        Suspension. An action by a DoD Component that temporarily withdraws 
    Federal sponsorship under an award, pending corrective action by the 
    recipient or pending a decision to terminate the award by the DoD 
    Component. Suspension of an award is a separate action from suspension 
    of a recipient under 32 CFR part 25.
        Termination. The cancellation of an award, in whole or in part, 
    under an agreement at any time prior to either:
        (1) The date on which all work under an award is completed; or
        (2) The date on which Federal sponsorship ends, as given on the 
    award document or any supplement or amendment thereto.
        Third party in-kind contributions. The value of non-cash 
    contributions provided by non-Federal third parties. Third party in-
    kind contributions may be in the form of real property, equipment, 
    supplies and other expendable property, and the value of goods and 
    services directly benefiting and specifically identifiable to the 
    project or program.
        Unobligated balance. The portion of the funds authorized by a DoD 
    Component that has not been obligated by the recipient and is 
    determined by deducting the cumulative obligations from the cumulative 
    funds authorized.
    
    
    Sec. 34.3  Deviations.
    
        (a) Individual deviations. Individual deviations affecting only one 
    award may be approved by DoD Components in accordance with procedures 
    stated in 32 CFR 21.125(a).
        (b) Small awards. DoD Components may apply less restrictive 
    requirements than the provisions of this part when awarding small 
    awards, except for those requirements which are statutory.
        (c) Other class deviations. For classes of awards other than small 
    awards, the Director, Defense Research and Engineering, or his or her 
    designee, may grant exceptions from the requirements of this part when 
    exceptions are not prohibited by statute. DoD Components shall request 
    approval for such deviations in accordance with 32 CFR 21.125 (b) and 
    (c).
    
    
    Sec. 34.4  Special award conditions.
    
        (a) Grants officers may impose additional requirements as needed, 
    over and above those provided in this part, if an applicant or 
    recipient:
        (1) Has a history of poor performance;
        (2) Is not financially stable;
        (3) Has a management system that does not meet the standards 
    prescribed in this part;
        (4) Has not conformed to the terms and conditions of a previous 
    award; or--
        (5) Is not otherwise responsible. -
        (b) Before imposing additional requirements, DoD Components shall 
    notify the applicant or recipient in writing as to: --
        (1) The nature of the additional requirements; --
        (2) The reason why the additional requirements are being imposed; -
    -
        (3) The nature of the corrective action needed; --
        (4) The time allowed for completing the corrective actions; and --
        (5) The method for requesting reconsideration of the additional 
    requirements imposed. -
        (c) Any special conditions shall be promptly removed once the 
    conditions that prompted them have been corrected. -
        (d) Grants officers: --
        (1) Should coordinate the imposition and removal of special award 
    conditions with the cognizant grants administration office identified 
    in 32 CFR 22.710. --
        (2) Shall include in the award file the written notification to the 
    recipient, described in paragraph (b) of this section, and the 
    documentation required by 32 CFR 22.410(b).
    
    Subpart B--Post-award Requirements
    
    Financial and Program Management
    
    
    Sec. 34.10  Purpose of financial and program management. -
    
        Sections 34.11 through 34.17 prescribe standards for financial 
    management systems; methods for making payments; and rules for cost 
    sharing and matching, program income, revisions to budgets and program 
    plans, audits, allowable costs, and fee and profit.
    
    
    Sec. 34.11  Standards for financial management systems. -
    
        (a) Recipients shall be allowed and encouraged to use existing 
    financial management systems established for doing business in the 
    commercial marketplace, to the extent that the systems comply with 
    Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and the minimum 
    standards in this section. As a minimum, a recipient's financial 
    management system shall provide: --
        (1) Effective control of all funds. Control systems must be 
    adequate to ensure that costs charged to Federal funds and those 
    counted as the recipient's cost share or match are consistent with 
    requirements for cost reasonableness, allowability, and allocability in 
    the applicable cost principles (see Sec. 34.17) and in the terms and 
    conditions of the award. --
        (2) Accurate, current and complete records that document for each 
    project funded wholly or in part with Federal funds the source and 
    application of the Federal funds and the recipient's
    
    [[Page 43908]]
    
    required cost share or match. These records shall: ----
        (i) Contain information about receipts, authorizations, assets, 
    expenditures, program income, and interest. ----
        (ii) Be adequate to make comparisons of outlays with budgeted 
    amounts for each award (as required for programmatic and financial 
    reporting under Sec. 34.41. Where appropriate, financial information 
    should be related to performance and unit cost data. Note that unit 
    cost data are generally not appropriate for awards that support 
    research. --
        (3) To the extent that advance payments are authorized under 
    Sec. 34.12, procedures that minimize the time elapsing between the 
    transfer of funds to the recipient from the Government and the 
    recipient's disbursement of the funds for program purposes. --
        (4) The recipient shall have a system to support charges to Federal 
    awards for salaries and wages, whether treated as direct or indirect 
    costs. Where employees work on multiple activities or cost objectives, 
    a distribution of their salaries and wages will be supported by 
    personnel activity reports which must: ----
        (i) Reflect an after the fact distribution of the actual activity 
    of each employee. ----
        (ii) Account for the total activity for which each employee is 
    compensated. ----
        (iii) Be prepared at least monthly, and coincide with one or more 
    pay periods. -
        (b) Where the Federal Government guarantees or insures the 
    repayment of money borrowed by the recipient, the DoD Component, at its 
    discretion, may require adequate bonding and insurance if the bonding 
    and insurance requirements of the recipient are not deemed adequate to 
    protect the interest of the Federal Government. -
        (c) The DoD Component may require adequate fidelity bond coverage 
    where the recipient lacks sufficient coverage to protect the Federal 
    Government's interest. -
        (d) Where bonds are required in the situations described above, the 
    bonds shall be obtained from companies holding certificates of 
    authority as acceptable sureties, as prescribed in 31 CFR part 223, 
    ``Surety Companies Doing Business with the United States.''
    
    
    Sec. 34.12  Payment. -
    
        (a) Methods available. Payment methods for agreements with 
    commercial organizations are: --
        (1) Reimbursement. Under this method, the recipient requests 
    reimbursement for costs incurred during a time period. After approval 
    of the request by the grants officer designated to do so, the DoD 
    payment office reimburses the recipient by electronic funds transfer or 
    check. --
        (2) Advance payments. Under this method, a DoD Component makes a 
    payment to a recipient before the recipient disburses cash. The payment 
    generally is made upon the recipient's request, although predetermined 
    payment schedules may be used when the timing of the recipient's needs 
    to disburse funds can be predicted in advance with sufficient accuracy 
    to ensure compliance with paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section.-
        (b) Selecting a method. (1) The preferred payment method is the 
    reimbursement method, as described in paragraph (a)(1) of this 
    section.--
        (2) Advance payments, as described in paragraph (a)(2) of this 
    section, may be used in exceptional circumstances, subject to the 
    following conditions: ----
        (i) The grants officer, in consultation with the program official, 
    must judge that advance payments are necessary or will materially 
    contribute to the probability of success of the project contemplated 
    under the agreement (e.g., as startup funds for a project performed by 
    a newly formed company). The rationale for the judgment shall be 
    documented in the award file. ----
        (ii) Cash advances shall be limited to the minimum amounts needed 
    to carry out the program. ---
        (iii) Recipients and the DoD Component shall maintain procedures to 
    ensure that the timing of cash advances is as close as is 
    administratively feasible to the recipients' disbursements of the funds 
    for program purposes, including direct program or project costs and the 
    proportionate share of any allowable indirect costs. ----
        (iv) Recipients shall maintain advance payments of Federal funds in 
    interest-bearing accounts, and remit annually the interest earned to 
    the DoD Component (for return to the Department of Treasury's 
    miscellaneous receipts account), unless one of the following applies: -
    ----
        (A) The recipient receives less than $120,000 in Federal awards per 
    year. -----
        (B) The best reasonably available interest bearing account would 
    not be expected to earn interest in excess of $250 per year on Federal 
    cash balances. -----
        (C) The depository would require an average or minimum balance so 
    high that it would not be feasible within the expected Federal and non-
    Federal cash resources. -
        (c) Frequency of payments. For either reimbursements or advance 
    payments, recipients shall be authorized to submit requests for payment 
    at least monthly.
        (d) Forms for requesting payment. DoD Components may authorize 
    recipients to use the SF-270,\1\ ``Request for Advance or 
    Reimbursement;'' the SF-271,\2\ ``Outlay Report and Request for 
    Reimbursement for Construction Programs;'' or prescribe other forms or 
    formats as necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ For copies of Standard Forms listed in this part, contact 
    regional grants administration offices of the Office of Naval 
    Research. Addresses for the offices are listed in the ``DoD 
    Directory of Contract Administration Services Components,'' DLAH 
    4105.4, which can be obtained from: Defense Logistics Agency, 
    Publications Distribution Division (DASC-WDM), 8725 John J. Kingman 
    Rd., Suite 0119, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6220.
        \2\ See footnote 1 to this paragraph (d).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (e) Timeliness of payments. Payments normally will be made within 
    30 days of a recipient's request for reimbursement or advance, in 
    accordance with 32 CFR 22.810. -
        (f) Precedence of other available funds. Recipients shall disburse 
    funds available from program income, rebates, refunds, contract 
    settlements, audit recoveries, and interest earned on such funds before 
    requesting additional cash payments. -
        (g) Withholding of payments. Unless otherwise required by statute, 
    grants officers shall not withhold payments for proper charges made by 
    recipients during the project period for reasons other than the 
    following: --
        (1) A recipient has failed to comply with project objectives, the 
    terms and conditions of the award, or Federal reporting requirements, 
    in which case the grants officer may suspend payments in accordance 
    with Sec. 34.52. --
        (2) The recipient is delinquent on a debt to the United States (see 
    definitions of ``debt'' and ``delinquent debt'' in 32 CFR 22.105). In 
    that case, the grants officer may, upon reasonable notice, withhold 
    payments for obligations incurred after a specified date, until the 
    debt is resolved.
    
    
    Sec. 34.13  Cost sharing or matching. -
    
        (a) Acceptable contributions. All contributions, including cash 
    contributions and third party in-kind contributions, shall be accepted 
    as part of the recipient's cost sharing or matching when such 
    contributions meet all of the following criteria: --
        (1) They are verifiable from the recipient's records. --
        (2) They are not included as contributions for any other federally-
    assisted project or program. --
        (3) They are necessary and reasonable for proper and efficient 
    accomplishment of project or program objectives. --
        (4) They are allowable under Sec. 34.17. --
        (5) They are not paid by the Federal Government under another 
    award, except where authorized by Federal
    
    [[Page 43909]]
    
    statute to be used for cost sharing or matching. --
        (6) They are provided for in the approved budget, when approval of 
    the budget is required by the DoD Component. --
        (7) If they are real property or equipment, whether purchased with 
    recipient's funds or donated by third parties, they must have the 
    grants officer's prior approval if the contributions' value is to 
    exceed depreciation or use charges during the project period 
    (paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(4)(ii) of this section discuss the limited 
    circumstances under which a grants officer may approve higher values). 
    If a DoD Component requires approval of a recipient's budget (see 
    paragraph (a)(6) of this section), the grants officer's approval of the 
    budget satisfies this prior approval requirement, for real property or 
    equipment items listed in the budget. --
        (8) They conform to other provisions of this part, as applicable. -
        (b) Valuing and documenting contributions--(1) Valuing recipient's 
    property or services of recipient's employees. Values shall be 
    established in accordance with the applicable cost principles in 
    Sec. 34.17, which means that amounts chargeable to the project are 
    determined on the basis of costs incurred. For real property or 
    equipment used on the project, the cost principles authorize 
    depreciation or use charges. The full value of the item may be applied 
    when the item will be consumed in the performance of the agreement or 
    fully depreciated by the end of the agreement. In cases where the full 
    value of a donated capital asset is to be applied as cost sharing or 
    matching, that full value shall be the lesser of the following: ----
        (i) The certified value of the remaining life of the property 
    recorded in the recipient's accounting records at the time of donation; 
    or ----
        (ii) The current fair market value. However, when there is 
    sufficient justification, the grants officer may approve the use of the 
    current fair market value of the donated property, even if it exceeds 
    the certified value at the time of donation to the project.
        (2) Valuing services of others' employees. When an employer other 
    than the recipient furnishes the services of an employee, those 
    services shall be valued at the employee's regular rate of pay plus an 
    amount of fringe benefits and overhead (at an overhead rate appropriate 
    for the location where the services are performed) provided these 
    services are in the same skill for which the employee is normally paid.
        (3) Valuing volunteer services. Volunteer services furnished by 
    professional and technical personnel, consultants, and other skilled 
    and unskilled labor may be counted as cost sharing or matching if the 
    service is an integral and necessary part of an approved project or 
    program. Rates for volunteer services shall be consistent with those 
    paid for similar work in the recipient's organization. In those 
    instances in which the required skills are not found in the recipient 
    organization, rates shall be consistent with those paid for similar 
    work in the labor market in which the recipient competes for the kind 
    of services involved. In either case, paid fringe benefits that are 
    reasonable, allowable, and allocable may be included in the valuation.
        (4) Valuing property donated by third parties. (i) Donated supplies 
    may include such items as office supplies or laboratory supplies. Value 
    assessed to donated supplies included in the cost sharing or matching 
    share shall be reasonable and shall not exceed the fair market value of 
    the property at the time of the donation.
        (ii) Normally only depreciation or use charges for equipment and 
    buildings may be applied. However, the fair rental charges for land and 
    the full value of equipment or other capital assets may be allowed, 
    when they will be consumed in the performance of the agreement or fully 
    depreciated by the end of the agreement, provided that the grants 
    officer has approved the charges. When use charges are applied, values 
    shall be determined in accordance with the usual accounting policies of 
    the recipient, with the following qualifications:
        (A) The value of donated space shall not exceed the fair rental 
    value of comparable space as established by an independent appraisal of 
    comparable space and facilities in a privately-owned building in the 
    same locality.
        (B) The value of loaned equipment shall not exceed its fair rental 
    value.
        (5) Documentation. The following requirements pertain to the 
    recipient's supporting records for in-kind contributions from third 
    parties:
        (i) Volunteer services shall be documented and, to the extent 
    feasible, supported by the same methods used by the recipient for its 
    own employees.
        (ii) The basis for determining the valuation for personal services 
    and property shall be documented.
    
    
    Sec. 34.14  Program income.
    
        (a) DoD Components shall apply the standards in this section to the 
    disposition of program income from projects financed in whole or in 
    part with Federal funds.
        (b) Recipients shall have no obligation to the Government, unless 
    the terms and conditions of the award provide otherwise, for program 
    income earned:
        (1) From license fees and royalties for copyrighted material, 
    patents, patent applications, trademarks, and inventions produced under 
    an award. Note, however, that the Patent and Trademark Amendments (35 
    U.S.C. Chapter 18), as implemented in Sec. 34.24, apply to inventions 
    made under a research award.
        (2) After the end of the project period. If a grants officer 
    anticipates that an award is likely to generate program income after 
    the end of the project period, the grants officer should indicate in 
    the award document whether the recipient will have any obligation to 
    the Federal Government with respect to such income.
        (c) If authorized by the terms and conditions of the award, costs 
    incident to the generation of program income may be deducted from gross 
    income to determine program income, provided these costs have not been 
    charged to the award.
        (d) Other than any program income excluded pursuant to paragraphs 
    (b) and (c) of this section, program income earned during the project 
    period shall be retained by the recipient and used in one or more of 
    the following ways, as specified in program regulations or the terms 
    and conditions of the award:
        (1) Added to funds committed to the project by the DoD Component 
    and recipient and used to further eligible project or program 
    objectives.
        (2) Used to finance the non-Federal share of the project or 
    program.
        (3) Deducted from the total project or program allowable cost in 
    determining the net allowable costs on which the Federal share of costs 
    is based.
        (e) If the terms and conditions of an award authorize the 
    disposition of program income as described in paragraph (d)(1) or 
    (d)(2) of this section, and stipulate a limit on the amounts that may 
    be used in those ways, program income in excess of the stipulated 
    limits shall be used in accordance with paragraph (d)(3) of this 
    section.
        (f) In the event that the terms and conditions of the award do not 
    specify how program income is to be used, paragraph (d)(3) of this 
    section shall apply automatically to all projects or programs except 
    research. For awards that support research, paragraph (d)(1) of this 
    section shall apply automatically unless the terms and conditions 
    specify another alternative or the recipient is
    
    [[Page 43910]]
    
    subject to special award conditions, as indicated in Sec. 34.4.
        (g) Proceeds from the sale of property that is acquired, rather 
    than fabricated, under an award are not program income and shall be 
    handled in accordance with the requirements of the Property Standards 
    (see Secs. 34.20 through 34.25).
    
    
    Sec. 34.15  Revision of budget and program plans.
    
        (a) The budget plan is the financial expression of the project or 
    program as approved during the award process. It may include either the 
    sum of the Federal and non-Federal shares, or only the Federal share, 
    depending upon DoD Component requirements. It shall be related to 
    performance for program evaluation purposes whenever appropriate.
        (b) Recipients are required to report deviations from budget and 
    program plans, and request prior approvals for budget and program plan 
    revisions, in accordance with this section.
        (c) Recipients shall immediately request, in writing, prior 
    approval from the cognizant grants officer when there is reason to 
    believe that within the next seven days a programmatic or budgetary 
    revision will be necessary for certain reasons, as follows:
        (1) The recipient always must obtain the grants officer's prior 
    approval when a revision is necessary for either of the following two 
    reasons (i.e., these two requirements for prior approval may never be 
    waived):
        (i) A change in the scope or the objective of the project or 
    program (even if there is no associated budget revision requiring prior 
    written approval).
        (ii) A need for additional Federal funding.
        (2) The recipient must obtain the grants officer's prior approval 
    when a revision is necessary for any of the following six reasons, 
    unless the requirement for prior approval is waived in the terms and 
    conditions of the award (i.e., if the award document is silent, these 
    prior approvals are required):
        (i) A change in a key person specified in the application or award 
    document.
        (ii) The absence for more than three months, or a 25 percent 
    reduction in time devoted to the project, by the approved project 
    director or principal investigator.
        (iii) The inclusion of any additional costs that require prior 
    approval in accordance with applicable cost principles for Federal 
    funds and recipients' cost share or match, in Sec. 34.17 and 
    Sec. 34.13, respectively.
        (iv) The inclusion of pre-award costs. All such costs are incurred 
    at the recipient's risk (i.e., the DoD Component is under no obligation 
    to reimburse such costs if for any reason the recipient does not 
    receive an award, or if the award is less than anticipated and 
    inadequate to cover such costs).
        (v) A ``no-cost'' extension of the project period that does not 
    require additional Federal funds and does not change the approved 
    objectives or scope of the project.
        (vi) Any subaward, transfer or contracting out of substantive 
    program performance under an award, unless described in the application 
    and funded in the approved awards. This provision does not apply to the 
    purchase of supplies, material, or general support services, except 
    that procurement of equipment or other capital items of property always 
    is subject to the grants officer's prior approval under Sec. 34.21(a), 
    if it is to be purchased with Federal funds, or Sec. 34.13(a)(7), if it 
    is to be used as cost sharing or matching.
        (3) The recipient also must obtain the grants officer's prior 
    approval when a revision is necessary for either of the following 
    reasons, if specifically required in the terms and conditions of the 
    award document (i.e., if the award document is silent, these prior 
    approvals are not required):
        (i) The transfer of funds among direct cost categories, functions 
    and activities for awards in which the Federal share of the project 
    exceeds $100,000 and the cumulative amount of such transfers exceeds or 
    is expected to exceed 10 percent of the total budget as last approved 
    by the DoD Component. No DoD Component shall permit a transfer that 
    would cause any Federal appropriation or part thereof to be used for 
    purposes other than those consistent with the original intent of the 
    appropriation.
        (ii) For awards that provide support for both construction and 
    nonconstruction work, any fund or budget transfers between the two 
    types of work supported.
        (d) Within 30 calendar days from the date of receipt of the 
    recipient's request for budget revisions, the grants officer shall 
    review the request and notify the recipient whether the budget 
    revisions have been approved. If the revision is still under 
    consideration at the end of 30 calendar days, the grants officer shall 
    inform the recipient in writing of the date when the recipient may 
    expect the decision.
    
    
    Sec. 34.16  Audits.
    
        (a) Any recipient that expends $300,000 or more in a year under 
    Federal awards shall have an audit made for that year by an independent 
    auditor, in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. The audit 
    generally should be made a part of the regularly scheduled, annual 
    audit of the recipient's financial statements. However, it may be more 
    economical in some cases to have the Federal awards separately audited, 
    and a recipient may elect to do so, unless that option is precluded by 
    award terms and conditions, or by Federal laws or regulations 
    applicable to the program(s) under which the awards were made.
        (b) The auditor shall determine and report on whether:
        (1) The recipient has an internal control structure that provides 
    reasonable assurance that it is managing Federal awards in compliance 
    with Federal laws and regulations, and with the terms and conditions of 
    the awards.
        (2) Based on a sampling of Federal award expenditures, the 
    recipient has complied with laws, regulations, and award terms that may 
    have a direct and material effect on Federal awards.
        (c) The recipient shall make the auditor's report available to DoD 
    Components whose awards are affected.
        (d) The requirement for an annual independent audit is intended to 
    ascertain the adequacy of the recipient's internal financial management 
    systems and to curtail the unnecessary duplication and overlap that 
    usually results when Federal agencies request audits of individual 
    awards on a routine basis. Therefore, a grants officer:
        (1) Shall consider whether the independent audit satisfies his or 
    her requirements, before requesting any additional audits; and
        (2) When requesting an additional audit, shall:
        (i) Limit the scope of such additional audit to areas not 
    adequately addressed by the independent audit.
        (ii) Coordinate the audit request with the Federal agency with the 
    predominant fiscal interest in the recipient, as the agency responsible 
    for the scheduling and distribution of audits. If DoD has the 
    predominant fiscal interest in the recipient, the Defense Contract 
    Management Command (DCMC) is responsible for monitoring audits, 
    ensuring resolution of audit findings, and distributing audit reports. 
    When an additional audit is requested and DoD has the predominant 
    fiscal interest in the recipient, DCMC shall, to the extent 
    practicable, ensure that the additional audit builds upon the 
    independent audit or other audits performed in accordance with this 
    section.
        (e) There may be instances in which Federal auditors have recently 
    performed audits, are performing audits,
    
    [[Page 43911]]
    
    or are planning to perform audits, of a recipient. In these cases, the 
    recipient and its Federal cognizant agency should seek to have the non-
    Federal, independent auditors work with the Federal auditors to develop 
    a coordinated audit approach, to minimize duplication of audit work.
    
    
    Sec. 34.17  Allowable costs.
    
        Allowability of costs shall be determined in accordance with the 
    cost principles applicable to the type of entity incurring the costs, 
    as follows:
        (a) Commercial organizations. Allowability of costs incurred by 
    commercial organizations that are recipients of prime awards from DoD 
    Components, and those that are subrecipients under prime awards to 
    other organizations, is to be determined in accordance with 48 CFR 
    parts 31 and 231 (in the Federal Acquisition Regulation, or FAR, and 
    the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement, or DFARS, 
    respectively).
        (b) Other types of organizations. Allowability of costs incurred by 
    other types of organizations that may be subrecipients under a prime 
    award to a commercial organization is determined as follows:
        (1) Institutions of higher education. Allowability is determined in 
    accordance with OMB Circular A-21,\3\ ``Cost Principles for Educational 
    Institutions.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \3\ For copies of the Circular, contact the Office of Management 
    and Budget, EOP Publications, 725 17th St. N.W., New Executive 
    Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20503.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) Other nonprofit organizations. Allowability is determined in 
    accordance with OMB Circular A-122,\4\ ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit 
    Organizations.'' Note that Attachment C of the Circular identifies 
    selected nonprofit organizations for whom cost allowability is 
    determined in accordance with the FAR cost principles for commercial 
    organizations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \4\ See footnote 3 to paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (3) Hospitals. Allowability is determined in accordance with the 
    provisions of 45 CFR part 74, Appendix E, ``Principles for Determining 
    Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts 
    with Hospitals.''
        (4) Governmental organizations. Allowability for State, local, or 
    federally recognized Indian tribal governments is determined in 
    accordance with OMB Circular A-87,\5\ ``Cost Principles for State and 
    Local Governments.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \5\ See footnote 3 to paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    Sec. 34.18  Fee and profit.
    
        In accordance with 32 CFR 22.205(b), grants and cooperative 
    agreements shall not:
        (a) Provide for the payment of fee or profit to the recipient.
        (b) Be used to carry out programs where fee or profit is necessary 
    to achieving program objectives.
    
    Property Standards
    
    
    Sec. 34.20  Purpose of property standards.
    
        Sections 34.21 through 34.25 set forth uniform standards for 
    management, use, and disposition of property. DoD Components shall 
    encourage recipients to use existing property-management systems, to 
    the extent that the systems meet these minimum requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 34.21  Real property and equipment.
    
        (a) Prior approval for acquisition with Federal funds. Recipients 
    may purchase real property or equipment in whole or in part with 
    Federal funds under a grant or cooperative agreement only with the 
    prior approval of the grants officer.
        (b) Title. Title to such real property or equipment shall vest in 
    the recipient upon acquisition. Unless a statute specifically 
    authorizes a DoD Component to vest title in the recipient without 
    further obligation to the Government, and the DoD Component elects to 
    do so, the title shall be a conditional title. Title shall vest in the 
    recipient subject to the conditions that the recipient:
        (1) Use the real property or equipment for the authorized purposes 
    of the project until funding for the project ceases, or until the 
    property is no longer needed for the purposes of the project.
        (2) Not encumber the property without approval of the grants 
    officer.
        (3) Use and dispose of the property in accordance with paragraphs 
    (d) and (e) of this section.
        (c) Federal interest in real property or equipment offered as cost-
    share. A recipient may offer real property or equipment that is 
    purchased with recipient's funds or that is donated by a third party to 
    meet a portion of any required cost sharing or matching, subject to the 
    prior approval requirement in Sec. 34.13(a)(7). If a recipient does so, 
    the Government has a financial interest in the property, a share of the 
    property value attributable to the Federal participation in the 
    project. The property therefore shall be considered as if it had been 
    acquired in part with Federal funds, and shall be subject to the 
    provisions of paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2) and (b)(3) of this section, and 
    to the provisions of Sec. 34.23.
        (d) Use. If real property or equipment is acquired in whole or in 
    part with Federal funds under an award, and the award provides that 
    title vests conditionally in the recipient, the real property or 
    equipment is subject to the following:
        (1) During the time that the real property or equipment is used on 
    the project or program for which it was acquired, the recipient shall 
    make it available for use on other projects or programs, if such other 
    use will not interfere with the work on the project or program for 
    which the real property or equipment was originally acquired. Use of 
    the real property or equipment on other projects will be in the 
    following order of priority:
        (i) Activities sponsored by DoD Components' grants, cooperative 
    agreements, or other assistance awards;
        (ii) Activities sponsored by other Federal agencies' grants, 
    cooperative agreements, or other assistance awards;
        (iii) Activities under Federal procurement contracts, or activities 
    not sponsored by any Federal agency. If so used, use charges shall be 
    assessed to those activities. For real property or equipment, the use 
    charges shall be at rates equivalent to those for which comparable real 
    property or equipment may be leased. The use charges shall be treated 
    as program income.
        (2) After Federal funding for the project ceases, or when the real 
    property or equipment is no longer needed for the purposes of the 
    project, the recipient may use the real property or equipment for other 
    projects, insofar as:
        (i) There are Federally sponsored projects for which the real 
    property or equipment may be used. If the only use for the real 
    property or equipment is for projects that have no Federal sponsorship, 
    the recipient shall proceed with disposition of the real property or 
    equipment, in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section.
        (ii) The recipient obtains written approval from the grants officer 
    to do so. The grants officer shall ensure that there is a formal change 
    of accountability for the real property or equipment to a currently 
    funded, Federal award.
        (iii) The recipient's use of the real property or equipment for 
    other projects is in the same order of priority as described in 
    paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
        (e) Disposition. (1) When an item of real property or equipment is 
    no longer needed for Federally sponsored projects, the recipient shall 
    proceed as follows:
        (i) If the property that is no longer needed is equipment (rather 
    than real property), the recipient may wish to replace it with an item 
    that is needed currently for the project. In that case, the recipient 
    may use the original
    
    [[Page 43912]]
    
    equipment as trade-in or sell it and use the proceeds to offset the 
    costs of the replacement equipment, subject to the approval of the 
    responsible agency (i.e., the DoD Component or the Federal agency to 
    which the DoD Component delegated responsibility for administering the 
    equipment).
        (ii) The recipient may elect to retain title, without further 
    obligation to the Federal Government, by compensating the Federal 
    Government for that percentage of the current fair market value of the 
    real property or equipment that is attributable to the Federal 
    participation in the project.
        (iii) If the recipient does not elect to retain title to real 
    property or equipment (see paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section), or 
    request approval to use equipment as trade-in or offset for replacement 
    equipment (see paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section), the recipient 
    shall request disposition instructions from the responsible agency.
        (2) If a recipient requests disposition instructions, in accordance 
    with paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of this section, the responsible grants 
    officer shall:
        (i) For equipment (but not real property), consult with the Federal 
    program manager and judge whether the age and nature of the equipment 
    warrant a screening procedure, to determine whether the equipment is 
    useful to a DoD Component or other Federal agency. If a screening 
    procedure is warranted, the responsible agency shall determine whether 
    the equipment can be used to meet a DoD Component's requirement. If no 
    DoD requirement is found, the responsible agency shall report the 
    availability of the equipment to the General Services Administration, 
    to determine whether a requirement for the equipment exists in other 
    Federal agencies.
        (ii) For either real property or equipment, issue instructions to 
    the recipient for disposition of the property no later than 120 
    calendar days after the recipient's request. The grants officer's 
    options for disposition are to direct the recipient to:
        (A) Transfer title to the real property or equipment to the Federal 
    Government or to an eligible third party provided that, in such cases, 
    the recipient shall be entitled to compensation for its attributable 
    percentage of the current fair market value of the real property or 
    equipment, plus any reasonable shipping or interim storage costs 
    incurred. If title is transferred to the Federal Government, it shall 
    be subject thereafter to provisions for Federally owned property in 
    Sec. 34.22.
        (B) Sell the real property or equipment and pay the Federal 
    Government for that percentage of the current fair market value of the 
    property that is attributable to the Federal participation in the 
    project (after deducting actual and reasonable selling and fix-up 
    expenses, if any, from the sale proceeds). When the recipient is 
    authorized or required to sell the real property or equipment, proper 
    sales procedures shall be established that provide for competition to 
    the extent practicable and result in the highest possible return.
        (3) If the responsible agency fails to issue disposition 
    instructions within 120 days of the recipient's request, as described 
    in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of this section, the recipient shall dispose of 
    the real property or equipment through the option described in 
    paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 34.22  Federally owned property.
    
        (a) Annual inventory. Recipients shall submit annually an inventory 
    listing of all Federally owned property in their custody (property 
    furnished by the Federal Government, rather than acquired by the 
    recipient with Federal funds under the award), to the DoD Component or 
    other Federal agency responsible for administering the property under 
    the award.
        (b) Use on other activities. (1) Use of federally owned property on 
    other activities is permissible, if authorized by the DoD Component 
    responsible for administering the award to which the property currently 
    is charged.
        (2) Use on other activities will be in the following order of 
    priority:
        (i) Activities sponsored by DoD Components' grants, cooperative 
    agreements, or other assistance awards;
        (ii) Activities sponsored by other Federal agencies' grants, 
    cooperative agreements, or other assistance awards;
        (iii) Activities under Federal procurement contracts, or activities 
    not sponsored by any Federal agency. If so used, use charges shall be 
    assessed to those activities. For real property or equipment, the use 
    charges shall be at rates equivalent to those for which comparable real 
    property or equipment may be leased. The use charges shall be treated 
    as program income.
        (c) Disposition of property. Upon completion of the award, the 
    recipient shall report the property to the responsible agency. The 
    agency may:
        (1) Use the property to meet another Federal Government need (e.g, 
    by transferring accountability for the property to another Federal 
    award to the same recipient, or by directing the recipient to transfer 
    the property to a Federal agency that needs the property, or to another 
    recipient with a currently funded award).
        (2) Declare the property to be excess property and either:
        (i) Report the property to the General Services Administration, in 
    accordance with the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 
    1949 (40 U.S.C. 483(b)(2)), as implemented by General Services 
    Administration regulations at 41 CFR 101-47.202; or
        (ii) Dispose of the property by alternative methods, if there is 
    statutory authority to do so (e.g., DoD Components are authorized by 15 
    U.S.C. 3710(i), the Federal Technology Transfer Act, to donate research 
    equipment to educational and nonprofit organizations for the conduct of 
    technical and scientific education and research activities. Such 
    donations shall be in accordance with the DoD implementation of 
    Executive Order 12821 (3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p. 323), ``Improving 
    Mathematics and Science Education in Support of the National Education 
    Goals.'') Appropriate instructions shall be issued to the recipient by 
    the responsible agency.
    
    
    Sec. 34.23  Property management system.
    
        The recipient's property management system shall include the 
    following, for property that is Federally owned, and for equipment that 
    is acquired in whole or in part with Federal funds, or that is used as 
    matching share:
        (a) Property records shall be maintained, to include the following 
    information:
        (1) A description of the property.
        (2) Manufacturer's serial number, model number, Federal stock 
    number, national stock number, or any other identification number.
        (3) Source of the property, including the award number.
        (4) Whether title vests in the recipient or the Federal Government.
        (5) Acquisition date (or date received, if the property was 
    furnished by the Federal Government) and cost.
        (6) Information from which one can calculate the percentage of 
    Federal participation in the cost of the property (not applicable to 
    property furnished by the Federal Government).
        (7) The location and condition of the property and the date the 
    information was reported.
        (8) Ultimate disposition data, including date of disposal and sales 
    price or the method used to determine current fair market value where a 
    recipient compensates the Federal Government for its share.
        (b) Federally owned equipment shall be marked, to indicate Federal 
    ownership.
    
    [[Page 43913]]
    
        (c) A physical inventory shall be taken and the results reconciled 
    with the property records at least once every two years. Any 
    differences between quantities determined by the physical inspection 
    and those shown in the accounting records shall be investigated to 
    determine the causes of the difference. The recipient shall, in 
    connection with the inventory, verify the existence, current 
    utilization, and continued need for the property.
        (d) A control system shall be in effect to insure adequate 
    safeguards to prevent loss, damage, or theft of the property. Any loss, 
    damage, or theft of property shall be investigated and fully 
    documented; if the property was owned by the Federal Government, the 
    recipient shall promptly notify the Federal agency responsible for 
    administering the property.
        (e) Adequate maintenance procedures shall be implemented to keep 
    the property in good condition.
    
    
    Sec. 34.24  Supplies.
    
        (a) Title shall vest in the recipient upon acquisition for supplies 
    acquired with Federal funds under an award.
        (b) Upon termination or completion of the project or program, the 
    recipient shall retain any unused supplies. If the inventory of unused 
    supplies exceeds $5,000 in total aggregate value and the items are not 
    needed for any other Federally sponsored project or program, the 
    recipient shall retain the items for use on non-Federal sponsored 
    activities or sell them, but shall, in either case, compensate the 
    Federal Government for its share.
    
    
    Sec. 34.25  Intellectual property developed or produced under awards.
    
        (a) Patents. Grants and cooperative agreements with:
        (1) Small business concerns shall comply with 35 U.S.C. Chapter 18, 
    as implemented by 37 CFR part 401, which applies to inventions made 
    under grants and cooperative agreements with small business concerns 
    for research and development. 37 CFR 401.14 provides a standard clause 
    that is required in such cooperative agreements in most cases, 37 CFR 
    401.3 specifies when the clause shall be included, and 37 CFR 401.5 
    specifies how the clause may be modified and tailored.
        (2) Commercial organizations other than small business concerns 
    shall comply with 35 U.S.C. 210(c) and Executive Order 12591 (3 CFR, 
    1987 Comp., p. 220) (which codifies a Presidential Memorandum on 
    Government Patent Policy, dated February 18, 1983).
        (i) The Executive order states that, as a matter of policy, grants 
    and cooperative agreements should grant to all commercial 
    organizations, regardless of size, title to patents made in whole or in 
    part with Federal funds, in exchange for royalty-free use by or on 
    behalf of the Government (i.e., it extends the applicability of 35 
    U.S.C. Chapter 18, to the extent permitted by law, to commercial 
    organizations other than small business concerns).
        (ii) 35 U.S.C. 210(c) states that 35 U.S.C. Chapter 18 is not 
    intended to limit agencies' authority to agree to the disposition of 
    rights in inventions in accordance with the Presidential memorandum 
    codified by the Executive order. It also states that such grants and 
    agreements shall provide for Government license rights required by 35 
    U.S.C. 202(c)(4) and march-in rights required by 35 U.S.C. 203.
        (b) Copyright, data and software rights. Requirements concerning 
    data and software rights are as follows:
        (1) The recipient may copyright any work that is subject to 
    copyright and was developed under an award. DoD Components reserve a 
    royalty-free, nonexclusive and irrevocable right to reproduce, publish, 
    or otherwise use the work for Federal purposes, and to authorize others 
    to do so.
        (2) Unless waived by the DoD Component making the award, the 
    Federal Government has the right to:
        (i) Obtain, reproduce, publish or otherwise use the data first 
    produced under an award.
        (ii) Authorize others to receive, reproduce, publish, or otherwise 
    use such data for Federal purposes.
    
    Procurement Standards
    
    
    Sec. 34.30  Purpose of procurement standards.
    
        Section 34.31 sets forth requirements necessary to ensure:
        (a) Compliance of recipients' procurements that use Federal funds 
    with applicable Federal statutes and executive orders.
        (b) Proper stewardship of Federal funds used in recipients' 
    procurements.
    
    
    Sec. 34.31  Requirements.
    
        The following requirements pertain to recipients' procurements 
    funded in whole or in part with Federal funds or with recipients' cost-
    share or match:
        (a) Reasonable cost. Recipients procurement procedures shall make 
    maximum practicable use of competition, or shall use other means that 
    ensure reasonable cost for procured goods and services.
        (b) Pre-award review of certain procurements. Prior to awarding a 
    procurement contract under a grant or cooperative agreement, a 
    recipient may be required to provide the grants officer administering 
    the grant or cooperative agreement with pre-award documents (e.g., 
    requests for proposals, invitations for bids, or independent cost 
    estimates) related to the procurement. Recipients will only be required 
    to provide such documents for the grants officer's pre-award review in 
    cases where the grants officer judges that there is a compelling need 
    to do so. In such cases, the grants officer must include a provision in 
    the grant or cooperative agreement that states the requirement.
        (c) Contract provisions. (1) Contracts in excess of the simplified 
    acquisition threshold shall contain contractual provisions or 
    conditions that allow for administrative, contractual, or legal 
    remedies in instances in which a contractor violates or breaches the 
    contract terms, and provide for such remedial actions as may be 
    appropriate.
        (2) All contracts in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold 
    shall contain suitable provisions for termination for default by the 
    recipient or for termination due to circumstances beyond the control of 
    the contractor.
        (3) All negotiated contracts in excess of the simplified 
    acquisition threshold shall include a provision permitting access of 
    the Department of Defense, the Comptroller General of the United 
    States, or any of their duly authorized representatives, to any books, 
    documents, papers, and records of the contractor that are directly 
    pertinent to a specific program, for the purpose of making audits, 
    examinations, excerpts, and transcriptions.
        (4) All contracts, including those for amounts less than the 
    simplified acquisition threshold, awarded by recipients and their 
    contractors shall contain the procurement provisions of Appendix A to 
    this part, as applicable.
    
    Reports and Records
    
    
    Sec. 34.40  Purpose of reports and records.
    
        Sections 34.41 and 34.42 prescribe requirements for monitoring and 
    reporting financial and program performance and for records retention.
    
    
    Sec. 34.41  Monitoring and reporting program and financial performance.
    
        Grants officers may use the provisions of 32 CFR 32.51 and 32.52 
    for awards to commercial organizations, or may include equivalent 
    technical and financial reporting requirements that ensure reasonable 
    oversight of the expenditure of appropriated funds. As a minimum, 
    equivalent requirements must include:
    
    [[Page 43914]]
    
        (a) Periodic reports (at least annually, and no more frequently 
    than quarterly) addressing both program status and business status, as 
    follows:
        (1) The program portions of the reports must address progress 
    toward achieving program performance goals, including current issues, 
    problems, or developments.
        (2) The business portions of the reports shall provide summarized 
    details on the status of resources (federal funds and non-federal cost 
    sharing or matching), including an accounting of expenditures for the 
    period covered by the report. The report should compare the resource 
    status with any payment and expenditure schedules or plans provided in 
    the original grant or agreement; explain any major deviations from 
    those schedules; and discuss actions that will be taken to address the 
    deviations.
        (3) When grants officers previously authorized advance payments, 
    pursuant to Sec. 34.12(a)(2), they should consult with the program 
    official and consider whether program progress reported in the periodic 
    report, in relation to reported expenditures, is sufficient to justify 
    continued authorization of advance payments.
        (b) Unless inappropriate, a final performance report that addresses 
    all major accomplishments under the agreement.
    
    
    Sec. 34.42  Retention and access requirements for records.
    
        (a) This section sets forth requirements for records retention and 
    access to records for awards to recipients.
        (b) Financial records, supporting documents, statistical records, 
    and all other records pertinent to an award shall be retained for a 
    period of three years from the date of submission of the final 
    expenditure report. The only exceptions are the following:
        (1) If any litigation, claim, or audit is started before the 
    expiration of the 3-year period, the records shall be retained until 
    all litigation, claims or audit findings involving the records have 
    been resolved and final action taken.
        (2) Records for real property and equipment acquired with Federal 
    funds shall be retained for 3 years after final disposition.
        (3) When records are transferred to or maintained by the DoD 
    Component that made the award, the 3-year retention requirement is not 
    applicable to the recipient.
        (4) Indirect cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, and 
    related records, for which retention requirements are specified in 
    Sec. 34.42(g).
        (c) Copies of original records may be substituted for the original 
    records if authorized by the grants officer.
        (d) The grants officer shall request that recipients transfer 
    certain records to DoD Component custody when he or she determines that 
    the records possess long term retention value. However, in order to 
    avoid duplicate recordkeeping, a grants officer may make arrangements 
    for recipients to retain any records that are continuously needed for 
    joint use.
        (e) DoD Components, the Inspector General, Comptroller General of 
    the United States, or any of their duly authorized representatives, 
    have the right of timely and unrestricted access to any books, 
    documents, papers, or other records of recipients that are pertinent to 
    the awards, in order to make audits, examinations, excerpts, 
    transcripts and copies of such documents. This right also includes 
    timely and reasonable access to a recipient's personnel for the purpose 
    of interview and discussion related to such documents. The rights of 
    access in this paragraph are not limited to the required retention 
    period, but shall last as long as records are retained.
        (f) Unless required by statute, no DoD Component shall place 
    restrictions on recipients that limit public access to the records of 
    recipients that are pertinent to an award, except when the DoD 
    Component can demonstrate that such records shall be kept confidential 
    and would have been exempted from disclosure pursuant to the Freedom of 
    Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) if the records had belonged to the DoD 
    Component making the award.
        (g) Indirect cost proposals, cost allocation plans, and other cost 
    accounting documents (such as documents related to computer usage 
    chargeback rates), along with their supporting records, shall be 
    retained for a 3-year period, as follows:
        (1) If a recipient is required to submit an indirect-cost proposal, 
    cost allocation plan, or other computation to the cognizant Federal 
    agency, for purposes of negotiating an indirect cost rate or other 
    rates, the 3-year retention period starts on the date of the 
    submission. This retention requirement also applies to subrecipients 
    submitting similar documents for negotiation to the recipient.
        (2) If the recipient or the subrecipient is not required to submit 
    the documents or supporting records for negotiating an indirect cost 
    rate or other rates, the 3-year retention period for the documents and 
    records starts at the end of the fiscal year (or other accounting 
    period) covered by the proposal, plan, or other computation.
    
    Termination and Enforcement
    
    
    Sec. 34.50  Purpose of termination and enforcement.
    
        Sections 34.51 through 34.53 set forth uniform procedures for 
    suspension, termination, enforcement, and disputes.
    
    
    Sec. 34.51  Termination.
    
        (a) Awards may be terminated in whole or in part only in accordance 
    with one of the following:
        (1) By the grants officer, if a recipient materially fails to 
    comply with the terms and conditions of an award.
        (2) By the grants officer with the consent of the recipient, 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.
        (3) By the recipient upon sending to the grants officer written 
    notification setting forth the reasons for such termination, the 
    effective date, and, in the case of partial termination, the portion to 
    be terminated. The recipient must provide such notice at least 30 days 
    prior to the effective date of the termination. However, if the grants 
    officer determines in the case of partial termination that the reduced 
    or modified portion of the award will not accomplish the purposes for 
    which the award was made, he or she may terminate the award in its 
    entirety.
        (b) If costs are allowed under an award, the responsibilities of 
    the recipient referred to in Sec. 34.61(b), including those for 
    property management as applicable, shall be considered in the 
    termination of the award, and provision shall be made for continuing 
    responsibilities of the recipient after termination, as appropriate.
    
    
    Sec. 34.52  Enforcement.
    
        (a) Remedies for noncompliance. If a recipient materially fails to 
    comply with the terms and conditions of an award, whether stated in a 
    Federal statute, regulation, assurance, application, or notice of 
    award, the grants officer may, in addition to imposing any of the 
    special conditions outlined in Sec. 34.4, 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 recipient or more severe enforcement action by the 
    grants officer and DoD Component.
        (2) Disallow (that is, deny both use of funds and any applicable 
    matching
    
    [[Page 43915]]
    
    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.
        (4) Withhold further awards for the project or program.
        (5) Take other remedies that may be legally available.
        (b) Hearings and appeals. In taking an enforcement action, the 
    grants officer and DoD Component shall provide the recipient an 
    opportunity for hearing, appeal, or other administrative proceeding to 
    which the recipient is entitled under any statute or regulation 
    applicable to the action involved (see Sec. 34.53 and 32 CFR 22.815).
        (c) Effects of suspension and termination. Costs of a recipient 
    resulting from obligations incurred by the recipient during a 
    suspension or after termination of an award are not allowable unless 
    the grants officer expressly authorizes them in the notice of 
    suspension or termination or subsequently. Other recipient costs during 
    suspension or after termination which are necessary and not reasonably 
    avoidable are allowable if the costs:
        (1) Result from obligations which were properly incurred by the 
    recipient 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) 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 a recipient from being subject to 
    debarment and suspension under 32 CFR part 25.
    
    
    Sec. 34.53  Disputes and appeals.
    
        Recipients have the right to appeal certain decisions by grants 
    officers. In resolving such issues, DoD policy is to use Alternative 
    Dispute Resolution (ADR) techniques, to the maximum practicable extent. 
    See 32 CFR 22.815 for standards for DoD Components' dispute resolution 
    and formal, administrative appeal procedures.
    
    Subpart C--After-the-Award Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 34.60  Purpose.
    
        Sections 34.61 through 34.63 contain procedures for closeout and 
    for subsequent disallowances and adjustments.
    
    
    Sec. 34.61  Closeout procedures.
    
        (a) The cognizant grants officer shall, at least six months prior 
    to the expiration date of the award, contact the recipient to 
    establish:
        (1) All steps needed to close out the award, including submission 
    of financial and performance reports, liquidation of obligations, and 
    decisions on property disposition.
        (2) A schedule for completing those steps.
        (b) The following provisions shall apply to the closeout:
        (1) The responsible grants officer and payment office shall 
    expedite completion of steps needed to close out awards and make 
    prompt, final payments to a recipient for allowable reimbursable costs 
    under the award being closed out.
        (2) The recipient shall promptly refund any unobligated balances of 
    cash that the DoD Component has advanced or paid and that is not 
    authorized to be retained by the recipient for use in other projects. 
    For unreturned amounts that become delinquent debts, see 32 CFR 22.820.
        (3) When authorized by the terms and conditions of the award, the 
    grants officer shall make a settlement for any upward or downward 
    adjustments to the Federal share of costs after closeout reports are 
    received.
        (4) The recipient shall account for any real property and personal 
    property acquired with Federal funds or received from the Federal 
    Government in accordance with Secs. 34.21 through 34.25.
        (5) In the event a final audit has not been performed prior to the 
    closeout of an award, the DoD Component shall retain the right to 
    recover an appropriate amount after fully considering the 
    recommendations on disallowed costs resulting from the final audit.
    
    
    Sec. 34.62  Subsequent adjustments and continuing responsibilities.
    
        (a) The closeout of an award does not affect any of the following:
        (1) The right of the Department of Defense to disallow costs and 
    recover funds on the basis of a later audit or other review.
        (2) The obligation of the recipient to return any funds due as a 
    result of later refunds, corrections, or other transactions.
        (3) Audit requirements in Sec. 34.16.
        (4) Property management requirements in Secs. 34.21 through 34.25.
        (5) Records retention as required in Sec. 34.42.
        (b) After closeout of an award, a relationship created under an 
    award may be modified or ended in whole or in part with the consent of 
    the grants officer and the recipient, provided the responsibilities of 
    the recipient referred to in Sec. 34.61(a), including those for 
    property management as applicable, are considered and provisions made 
    for continuing responsibilities of the recipient, as appropriate.
    
    
    Sec. 34.63  Collection of amounts due. -
    
        Any funds paid to a recipient in excess of the amount to which the 
    recipient is finally determined to be entitled under the terms and 
    conditions of the award constitute a debt to the Federal Government. 
    Procedures for issuing the demand for payment and pursuing 
    administrative offset and other remedies are described in 32 CFR 
    22.820.
    
    Appendix A to Part 34--Contract Provisions -
    
        All contracts awarded by a recipient, including those for 
    amounts less than the simplified acquisition threshold, shall 
    contain the following provisions as applicable:
        1. Equal Employment Opportunity--All contracts shall contain a 
    provision requiring compliance with E.O. 11246 (3 CFR, 1964-1965 
    Comp., p. 339), ``Equal Employment Opportunity,'' as amended by E.O. 
    11375 (3 CFR, 1966-1970 Comp., p. 684), ``Amending Executive Order 
    11246 Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity,'' and as 
    supplemented by regulations at 41 CFR chapter 60, ``Office of 
    Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Equal Employment Opportunity, 
    Department of Labor.''
        2. Copeland ``Anti-Kickback'' Act (18 U.S.C. 874 and 40 U.S.C. 
    276c)--All contracts and subawards in excess of $2000 for 
    construction or repair awarded by recipients and subrecipients shall 
    include a provision for compliance with the Copeland ``Anti-
    Kickback'' Act (18 U.S.C. 874), as supplemented by Department of 
    Labor regulations (29 CFR part 3, ``Contractors and Subcontractors 
    on Public Building or Public Work Financed in Whole or in Part by 
    Loans or Grants from the United States''). The Act provides that 
    each contractor or subrecipient shall be prohibited from inducing, 
    by any means, any person employed in the construction, completion, 
    or repair of public work, to give up any part of the compensation to 
    which he is otherwise entitled. The recipient shall report all 
    suspected or reported violations to the responsible DoD Component.
        3. Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-
    333)--Where applicable, all contracts awarded by recipients in 
    excess of $100,000 for construction and other purposes that involve 
    the employment of mechanics or laborers shall include a provision 
    for compliance with Sections 102 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours 
    and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-333), as supplemented by 
    Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5). Under Section 102 
    of the Act, each contractor shall be required to compute the wages 
    of every mechanic and laborer on the basis of a standard work week 
    of 40 hours. Work in excess of the standard work week is permissible 
    provided that the worker is
    
    [[Page 43916]]
    
    compensated at a rate of not less than 1\1/2\ times the basic rate 
    of pay for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours in the work week. 
    Section 107 of the Act is applicable to construction work and 
    provides that no laborer or mechanic shall be required to work in 
    surroundings or under working conditions which are unsanitary, 
    hazardous or dangerous. These requirements do not apply to the 
    purchases of supplies or materials or articles ordinarily available 
    on the open market, or contracts for transportation or transmission 
    of intelligence.
        4. Rights to Inventions Made Under a Contract or Agreement--
    Contracts or agreements for the performance of experimental, 
    developmental, or research work shall provide for the rights of the 
    Federal Government and the recipient in any resulting invention in 
    accordance with 37 CFR part 401, ``Rights to Inventions Made by 
    Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under Government 
    Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements.''
        5. Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water 
    Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended--
    Contracts and subawards of amounts in excess of $100,000 shall 
    contain a provision that requires the recipient to agree to comply 
    with all applicable standards, orders or regulations issued pursuant 
    to the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water 
    Pollution Control Act as amended (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.). 
    Violations shall be reported to the responsible DoD Component and 
    the Regional Office of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
        6. Byrd Anti-Lobbying Amendment (31 U.S.C. 1352)--Contractors 
    who apply or bid for an award of $100,000 or more shall file the 
    required certification. Each tier certifies to the tier above that 
    it will not and has not used Federal appropriated funds to pay any 
    person or organization for influencing or attempting to influence an 
    officer or employee of any agency, a member of Congress, officer or 
    employee of Congress, or an employee of a member of Congress in 
    connection with obtaining any Federal contract, grant or any other 
    award covered by 31 U.S.C. 1352. Each tier shall also disclose any 
    lobbying with non-Federal funds that takes place in connection with 
    obtaining any Federal award. Such disclosures are forwarded from 
    tier to tier up to the recipient.
        7. Debarment and Suspension (E.O.s 12549 and 12689)--Contract 
    awards that exceed the simplified acquisition threshold and certain 
    other contract awards shall not be made to parties listed on 
    nonprocurement portion of the General Services Administration's 
    Lists of Parties Excluded from Federal Procurement and 
    Nonprocurement Programs in accordance with E.O.s 12549 (3 CFR, 1986 
    Comp., p. 189) and 12689 (3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 235), ``Debarment 
    and Suspension.'' This list contains the names of parties debarred, 
    suspended, or otherwise excluded by agencies, and contractors 
    declared ineligible under statutory or regulatory authority other 
    than E.O. 12549. Contractors with awards that exceed the small 
    purchase threshold shall provide the required certification 
    regarding its exclusion status and that of its principals.
    
        Dated: August 9, 1996.
    Linda M. Bynum,
    Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer Department of Defense.
    [FR Doc. 96-20777 Filed 8-23-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 5000-04-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/26/1996
Department:
Defense Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
96-20777
Dates:
Comments are due on or before October 25, 1996.
Pages:
43867-43916 (50 pages)
RINs:
0790-AG28: DoD Grant and Agreement Regulations (DoD 3210.6-R)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0790-AG28/dod-grant-and-agreement-regulations-dod-3210-6-r-
PDF File:
96-20777.pdf
CFR: (204)
32 CFR 34.2)
32 CFR 22.715(a)(1))
32 CFR 25.110(a)(1)(i))
32 CFR 22.420(c))
32 CFR 22.815(d)
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