Property and Equipment Disposition Larry Jenkins, BTOP Grants Officer Marianne Eggers, NOAA Grants Management Specialist.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
VCOM Conflict of Interest Policy Overview of Financial Conflict of Interest Related to Research December 4, 2013.
Advertisements

Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011.
Introduction to Uniform Guidance Presented to Engineering Research Network – Nov 19, 2014 by Sponsored Programs Accounting.
Federal Acquisition Service U.S. General Services Administration Doug Janka Area Property Officer Chicago Office, Southeast Sunbelt Region July 21, 2009.
Research Administration for Scientists Tim Quigg, Associate Chair and Lecturer Computer Science Department, UNC-Chapel Hill OMB Circular A-110: Administrative.
Real Property Disposition Dudley Whyte and Tiffany Gallegos Region IV and Region VIII May 19-21, 2014.
Notice of Award Property Management. Definitions Equipment VS Supplies Equipment - Tangible nonexpendable personal property having a useful life of more.
Guidance Overview for Disposition of Real Property Acquired with FTA Financial Assistance May 20, 2014 Valencia McFerrin Director, Office of Grants Management.
Corporations: Organization, Stock Transactions & Dividends
Operational Assets - Intangibles Chapter 12 Kieso, Weygandt, Warfield.
Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer Ron Huss, Ph.D., Associate Vice President of Research and Technology Transfer Michael Brignati, Ph.D., J.D.,
Grants Management Close Out Requirements School Improvement Grant 2014 Office of General Counsel and the Office of School Transformation 1.
Reporting and Interpreting Property, Plant and Equipment; Natural Resources; and Intangibles Chapter 8 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Circular A-110 Everything You Didn’t Want to Know.
Chapter 12: Intangible Assets
Tiffany R. Winters, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC Fall Forum 2014 Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC Micro Purchases, Sole Sourcing and Property.
Monitoring & Enforcement By Alan Conway & Debbie Chen.
Andrew Nobleman & Halima Turner  Reporting Frequency: The Grants Officer, after coordination with the DOC operating unit, shall prescribe the frequency.
Copyright 2003 Prentice Hall Publishing1 Chapter 5 Acquisitions: Purchase and Use of Business Assets.
Introductory to the “Basics” of Contract Types and Their Impact in the Management of Government Property Presented by: Fay K. Schulte, CPPM.
Chapter 3 Property Dispositions Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
©2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Advanced Accounting 8/e, Beams/Anthony/Clement/Lowensohn Accounting for State and Local Governmental Units.
EQUIPMENT TRACKING AND FABRICATION NCURA Region III 2008 Spring Meeting May 13, 2008 May 13, 2008.
Closeouts and Equipment Disposition Marianne Eggers, NOAA GMD.
Financial and Managerial Accounting John J. Wild Third Edition John J. Wild Third Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
COPYRIGHT © 2008 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
PROGRAM INCOME / IN-KIND ASSISTANCE / IN-KIND CONTRIBUTION
Equipment Management – The Basics
Monitor and Closeout Awards Lamar Revis NMFS Team Leader Paulette S. Moss OAR, NWS, NESDIS Team Leader.
FISCAL PRINCIPLES - PROPERTY ADMINSTRATION. ACQUISITION OF GOODS AND SERVICES OBTAINED THROUGH THE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT WILL BE IN ACCORDANCE WITH STATE.
Cohort 8 Grant Closeout Procedures HEIDI SCHULTZ DEBRA APPLETON.
Capital & Operating Leases ODJFS Office of Fiscal & Monitoring Services Bureau of County Finance & Technical Assistance OJFSDA Conference, June 2009.
Spiceland | Thomas | Herrmann Financial Accounting Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without.
Equipment, Facilities, Capital Improvements & Other Property.
Investment In business, the purchase by a producer of a physical good, such as durable equipment or inventory, in the hope of improving future business.
Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Plant and Intangible Assets Chapter 9.
Presented to: By: Date: Federal Aviation Administration Airports Division Eastern Region Grant Closeout Guidance 33 rd Annual Airports Conference Patricia.
10 CODE OF FEDERAL REGISTRATIONS 600 MAJOR SUBPARTS t Subpart A - General t Subpart B - Grants to Other Than State and Local Governments t Subpart C -
Equipment, Facilities, Capital Improvements & Other Property.
CAPITAL ASSETS Unit 9. Capital assets are long-lived assets that are used in the operations of a business and are not intended for sale to customers.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. © 2005 Chapter 10 Plant Assets, Natural Resources, and Intangible Assets Prepared by Naomi Karolinski Monroe Community College.
Plant Assets -Long-lived assets acquired for use in business operations. Major Categories of Plant Assets – Tangible Plant Assets – Intangible Assets –
SBIR Budgeting Leanne Robey Chief, Special Reviews Branch, NIH.
Close-Outs Presented by Stacy Tedder NOAA Grants Management Division January 31,
Moveable Equipment Inventory Brown Bag February 11, 2009 Bob Marchitto Manager, Moveable Equipment Inventory ,
KEY ACCOUNTING CONCEPTS ACTG 6920 Session 2 Professor Kile.
Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
EQUIPMENT 1.At the UW, items with a purchase value of $2,000 or more (including tax and other ancillary charges) are defined as Equipment (not Supplies).
Presented by: Francine Fast Horse Supply Management Officer.
1 2 CFR Part 200: – Property Standards Jason Guilbeault, Senior Consultant.
OMB Circular A-122 and the Federal Cost Principles Copyright © Texas Education Agency
Copyright © Texas Education Agency Accounting for Grant Funds, including Documentation for Expenditures.
Copyright © Texas Education Agency Matching and Cost-Share Requirements Allowable Items and Accounting for Cost Share.
1 On-Line Financial Management Workshops Leveraged Resources, Match & Intellectual Property June 2009.
1 On-Line Financial Management Workshops Equipment, Facilities, Capital Improvements & SWA Real Property June 2009.
Title I, Part A Allowability of Costs Association of Compensatory Educators of Texas (ACET) Conference-Austin, Texas April 7, 2015 Anita Villarreal, State.
THE BIGGEST WINNER Uniform Guidance. Test Your Knowledge UG Basics Equipment & Facilities Shared Costs Items of Cost Bits & Pieces
The Basics of Intellectual Property Reporting
Office of Monitoring & Internal Controls
Fundamentals of Intermediate Accounting Weygandt, Kieso and Warfield
Equipment Management Chris Crutcher | Branch Director, Internal Operations | September 19, 2017.
Guidelines for Use of Government Owned Equipment
Managing Property What Principal Investigators and Business Officers need to know Business Services - Rates and Review Team Established February 25, 2015.
Intermediate Accounting, 10th Edition Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield
Managing Property What Principal Investigators and Business Officers need to know Business Services - Rates and Review Team Established February 25, 2015.
Guidelines for Use of Government Owned Equipment
Equipment and Furniture Capitalized vs. Non-Capitalized
Investments: Property, Plant, and Equipment and Intangible Assets
Property Management: Supplies, Equipment, and Intangible Property
Presentation transcript:

Property and Equipment Disposition Larry Jenkins, BTOP Grants Officer Marianne Eggers, NOAA Grants Management Specialist

Definitions:  Equipment: tangible personal property (including information technology systems) having a useful life of more than one year and a per-unit acquisition cost which equals or exceeds the lesser of the capitalization level established by the non-Federal entity for financial statement purposes, or $5,000.  Exempt Property: federally-owned property that has been vested in a Recipient without obligation to the Federal Government.  Intangible Property: property having no physical existence, such as trademarks, copyrights, patents and patent applications and property, such as loans, notes and other debt instruments, lease agreements, stock and other instruments of property ownership (whether the property is tangible or intangible).

Definitions: (Continued)  Personal Property: property other than real property. It may be tangible, having physical existence, or intangible.  Real Property: land, including land improvements, structures and appurtenances thereto, but excludes moveable machinery and equipment.  Supplies: all tangible personal property other than those described as Equipment. A computing device is a supply if the acquisition cost is less than the lesser of the capitalization level established by the non-Federal entity for financial statement purposes or $5,000, regardless of the length of its useful life.

Current Regulations  Real Property:  Title vests in the Recipient  Must be used for its original intended purpose as long as needed by Recipient  When no longer needed on the original project, disposition instructions must be requested from the Awarding Agency The grantee shall retain title after compensating the Awarding Agency (Awarding Agency % times the current market value of the property) Grantee may be directed to sell the property and pay the Awarding Agency (Awarding Agency % times the proceeds of the sale, less reasonable selling expenses) Transfer title to the Awarding Agency or third party (Grantee receives Grantee % times the current market value of the property)

Current Regulations (Continued)  Equipment:  Title vests in the Recipient  Equipment may not be used to provide services for a fee that is less than what private companies charge for equivalent services  When equipment is no longer needed It the Recipient is a state, it will use, manage, and dispose of equipment in accordance with state laws and procedures If the current per-unit fair market value < $5,000, the equipment may be kept, sold or disposed of with no further obligation to the Awarding Agency If the current per-unit fair market value is $5,000 or more, the Recipient may keep or sell the equipment. In such cases, they must compensate the Awarding Agency (Awarding Agency % times the current market value of the equipment) If the current per-unit fair market value is $5,000 or more, and the recipient doesn’t want the equipment

Current Regulations: Equipment (Continued) The Grants Officer will either have the equipment used on another agency project or report the equipment to the General Services Administration If so instructed or if disposition instructions aren’t issued within 120 calendar days, the Recipient shall sell the equipment and reimburse the DoC (Awarding Agency % times the current market value of the equipment, less $500 or 10% of the proceeds) The recipient may be instructed to ship the equipment elsewhere. In this case, the recipient shall be reimbursed by the DoC (Recipient % times the current market value of the equipment, plus $500 or 10% of the proceeds, for shipping and storage costs) The recipient may be instructed to dispose of the equipment. The cost of the disposal shall be charged to the grant or paid to the Recipient by the DoC The DoC reserves the right to transfer the title to the Federal Government or a third party

Current Regulations  Supplies and other expendable property:  Title shall vest in the Recipient  Upon completion of the project, if the residual inventory of unused supplies exceeds $5,000 in total aggregate (current fair market value), and if the supplies are not needed for another federally sponsored project, the Recipient shall compensate the Awarding Agency (Awarding Agency % times the current market value of the supplies)  The Recipient shall not use supplies to provide services to non-federal organizations for a fee that is less than private companies charge for equivalent services

Current Regulations  Federally-owned and exempt property:  Title remains vested in the Federal Government  If the DoC on longer needs the property, after completion of the project, it shall be declared excess and reported to the General Services Administration  The DoC has the option to vest title in the Recipient when considered appropriate by the DoC (exempt property)

Current Regulations  Intangible property:  The recipient may copyright any work that is subject to copyright and was developed, or for which ownership was purchased, under an award  The DoC reserves 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  The Recipient shall not use supplies to provide services to non-federal organizations for a fee that is less than private companies charge for equivalent services

Project Closeout Once work on a grant has been completed, the Recipient has up to 90 days to submit all final reports to the DoC These reports include, but are not limited to: Final performance or progress report Financial Status Report (SF-269/SF-425) or Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs (SF-271) (as applicable) Final request for payment (SF-270) (if applicable) Invention disclosure (if applicable) Federally-owned property report Tangible Property Report (SF-428-B) and/or Real Property Status Report SF-429

Forms SF-428 and SF-428-A

Forms (Continued) SF-428-B and SF-428-C

Forms (Continued) SF-428-S and SF-429

Real Life Situations:  A Recipient has a piece of equipment they purchased from an award that has been closed for three years. The Recipient would like to trade in the piece of equipment to buy a newer model. Can they make a trade in? If so, what do they need to do?

Answer to Real Life Situation #1  When acquiring replacement equipment, the recipient or subrecipient may use the equipment to be replaced as a trade- in or sell the property and use the proceeds to offset the cost of the replacement property, subject to the approval of the Federal awarding agency.

Real Life Situations:  A Recipient, with a warehouse full of equipment, is terminated for cause. If the Awarding Agency instructs the Recipient to hold an auction to sell that equipment, what happens to the proceeds?

Answer to Real Life Situation #2 The proceeds, less auction expenses, will be used to off-set the federal portion of the grant expenses.