Proposal Budgeting for Administrators NURAP at Noon-Chicago January 12, 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Presentation Author, 2006 GRANTS BATO Facts and Snacks December 16, 2010.
Advertisements

Cost share Lucien Finley, Office of Sponsored Projects Lesley Stephenson, Office of Post Award Management February 7, 2013.
Effort Training Part III Cost-Sharing, Salary Caps & Other Concerns Office of Sponsored Programs July, 2011.
Cost Sharing Date Presenter Name Presenter Phone Number Presenter .
Effort Certification Date Presenter. 2 New fiscal policy coming soon Existing fiscal policy FI0205 –About 2 paragraphs about effort just isn’t enough.
Angela Shotts The Office for Sponsored Programs (OSP)
Jamie Young, Associate Director, Chicago Office for Sponsored Research, Northwestern University.
How to Create a Proposal Budget/ Fiscal Rules for Administrators.
Just-in-Time JIT features and UMass approaches. JIT purpose In an effort to focus the NIH review on the science and to save the applicant time and effort,
Budget 101 Overview of a typical grant budget Erin Scott, CRA.
Guidelines for Preparing an NIH Budget
Prepared by the Office of Grants and Contracts1 COST SHARING.
Proposal Budgeting for Administrators NURAP at Noon-Evanston January 10, 2010.
Best Practices Proposal Preparation University Research Center Administrators Ellen Feldman June, 2010.
Grants and Contracts Changes, Changes, and more Changes... What would this University be without Changes? Heather L. Paulsen.
Grant Financial Management Post Award Sponsored Projects Training Program1.
National Institutes of Health Modular Grants Proposal Preparation and Award Administration Presented by UCLA’s Office of Sponsored Research Linda White,
The University of Texas at Arlington Office of Research and Office of Accounting and Business Services Brown Bag Training Session Three: The 1,2,3’s of.
1 New York University School of Medicine Time and Effort Certification Training 2007.
Grants Landscape III: Grant Budget Development Office of Sponsored Programs Raubinger Hall, Room 107 William Paterson University November.
1 COST SHARING CReATE ver. 04/13 © 2013 Florida State University. All rights reserved Objective: To understand the requirements related to cost sharing.
NANCY ABBOTT CANR GRANTS DEVELOPMENT OFFICER [GDO] CANR Sponsored Project Proposal Process.
by Nancy Abbott CANR Grants Development Office [GDO]
HOW TO WRITE A BUDGET…. The Importance of Your Budget Preparation of the budget is an important part of the proposal preparation process. Pre-Award and.
Contracts & Grants Functionality Paul Sandoval, University of Arizona Jim Becker, Indiana University.
Streamlining the Grant Submission Process Jennifer Barrett Department of Medicine Sponsored Program Services Medical Center North D-3100
VA MOU’s The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Chris G. Green, CPA Director, Sponsored Programs.
Indiana University East March 10, 2009 Teresa Miller, Manager Office of Research Administration – Grant Services.
“Grants Boot Camp” Workshop Series January 9, 2014 Creighton University Sponsored Programs Administration 2500 California Plaza, Omaha, NE  Phone:
Introduction to Pre-award Research Administration Karen Hawkinson, Frances Spalding and Roger Wareham
Washington University Washington University School of Medicine Research Administrators Forum May 2002.
Science & Engineering  New Faculty Orientation Research at Rice Nancy Nisbett, Director Office of Sponsored Research.
1. Proposal deadline 2. Timeline  A grant opportunity announcement will include a sponsor deadline for receipt of the proposal.  The instructions will.
FEBRUARY 26, 2013 PRE-AWARD MATTERS THAT AFFECT POST-AWARD COMPLIANCE MODULE SESSION 2 OF SERIES III AAPLS (APPLICANTS & ADMINISTRATORS PREAWARD LUNCHEON.
Time with Office of Sponsored Programs April 4, 2011 Topic: Cost Share.
Sponsored Programs Services (SPS) PROPOSALS. What is the PI’s role in the proposal?  Contact the central pre-award center,
SBIR Budgeting Leanne Robey Chief, Special Reviews Branch, NIH.
Cost Sharing for Sponsored Programs College of Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources March 19, 2010.
Kansas State University – Sponsored Programs Accounting Last updated March 2015.
Policies and Procedures for Summer Supplements on Federal Awards April
ABC’s of Proposal Processing NCURA Regional VI/VII Conference April 30, 2008.
Cost Sharing James Trotter Quality Standards Manager Sponsored Projects Administration.
Salary Cost Sharing for Departmental Administrators Presentation Chris G. Green, CPA Director, Sponsored Programs.
“Surviving an Audit” Al Willie, Office of Internal Audit
MAY 1, 2012 GRAFTON CAMPUS APPLICANTS & ADMINISTRATORS PREAWARD LUNCHEON SERIES Hands On Budget Workshop.
NSF Early Career Award Submission Preparation March 21, 2014 Prepared by: Shelly Baczkowski
JANUARY 21, 2014 SERIES 4, SESSION 1 OF AAPLS MECHANISMS OF COLLABORATION: PROPOSALS THAT INCLUDE MORE THAN ONE TUFTS DEPARTMENT OR SCHOOL, OR A COLLABORATION.
Carilion Clinic, Office of Sponsored Projects Frequently Asked Questions Pre-Award Procedures For Principal Investigators.
1 WUSM RA Forum September 2007 Grants & Contracts.
GCO INFORMATION SESSION: YOU ASK, WE ANSWER NIH R01 A PPLICATION B ASICS P RESENTED BY : M ICHELLE H UMPHREYS G RANTS A NALYST II G RANTS AND C ONTRACTS.
Seminar Series Charge the Stuff that’s Easy to Defend Tim Reuter, Director Post Award Office of Sponsored Research December 5, 2013 Nuts & Bolts of Research.
Cost Sharing. Objectives Review roles and responsibilities Facilitate pro-active, continuous monitoring of cost share commitments Review Cost Share Summary.
MAY 10, 2011 SESSION 6 OF AAPLS – BUDGET PREPARATION & IMPLICATIONS OF COST SHARE APPLICANTS & ADMINISTRATORS PREAWARD LUNCHEON SERIES Module C: Budget.
Basic Grant Writing John Hulvey Director – Sponsored Programs Office of Sponsored Programs Administration and Accounting.
Prepared by the Office of Grants and Contracts1 INDIRECTS vs. REDIRECTS.
Sheraton University Inn December 15, Faculty Member – Principal Investigator (PI) has a research question they want to explore Group of researchers.
Office of Academic Grants and Sponsored Research Phone: Fax:
SUBMITTING PROPOSALS AFTER LEGAL CLOSE If you plan to collaborate with VUMC investigators, you will need to include a VUMC proposal for an outgoing billing.
Effort 101. Effort Theory Review –Why Certify Effort –Audits –Select Definitions –Effort Management –Effort Certification –Risks of Non-Compliance.
PROPOSAL REVIEW AND SUBMISSION FYAP May 5, 2016 Julie Wammack Sponsored Research Administration.
Back to the Basics Preparing an NIH Budget
Sponsored Programs (SP)
Sponsored Programs at Penn
Sponsored Programs at Penn
EFFORT REPORTING TRAINING
Overview of a typical grant budget
Overview of a typical grant budget
Russell Center Small Research Grants Program
Effort Reporting on your effort report
Budgets and Budget Justifications: NIH and Beyond
Presentation transcript:

Proposal Budgeting for Administrators NURAP at Noon-Chicago January 12, 2010

Proposal Budgeting for Administrators The Set-Up – The PI PerspectiveEllen Feldman The Forest and the Trees – The Departmental PerspectiveMichelle Grana

NIH, AHRQ, and NIOSH to Eliminate Error Correction Window for Due Dates on or after January 25, 2011 It has been NIH’s ultimate goal to define “on-time” submission as having an error-free application (i.e., passes Grants.gov and NIH Commons system- enforced business rules without errors) with a Grants.gov timestamp on/before 5:00 p.m. local time of the applicant organization on the receipt date. Currently, NIH allows a 2-day window to correct validation errors as long as the original submission was received on time. Going forward, NIH has announced that the 2-day error correction window for proposal submissions will be eliminated Jan. 25, 2011: An error-free submission must be date-stamped in Grants.gov by 5:00 This means that proposals to NIH can no longer be changed or corrected due to grants.gov or agency validation errors, or PI errors/omissions, after the 5:00 Grants.gov deadline.

Proposal Budgeting for Administrators The Set-Up The PI Perspective

The Set-Up 1.Set up meeting between yourself & PI – Critical to smooth process for submission – Schedule 3-4 weeks before due date – Use Checklist to guide the discussion 2.Notify your GO of pending submission – Your GO is your BFF

Checklist-What Do You Need to Know? Key Non-budgetary items: – Title (get spelling correct!) – Sponsor and Funding Opportunity – Project Team – Human/Animals Involved – Subcontractors, consultants

Checklist- What do you Need to Know Budgetary Items – Dates: Start, end, # years – Target Costs: Direct and total by year – Personnel: Key and Non-Key (with effort) – Travel – Supplies – Equipment – Subcontracts

Suggested Checklist

Proposal Budgeting for Administrators The Forest and the Trees: The Departmental Perspective

The Forest and the Trees The Trees: Creating a grant budget Budget calculation Budget narrative (justification) Determining reasonable effort The Forest: Fiscal considerations Can it be done? Fiscal health of the department Utilization of dept resources F&A recovery; F&A sharing Cost sharing Effort commitment/restrictions

The Trees: Creating a grant budget Choosing a template  Federal  SF 424 Regular  SF 424 Modular  see OSR modular budget tabulator:  PHS 398  Non-Federal Completing the budget Writing the budget narrative Determining reasonable effort

The Trees: Choosing a budget template No need to recreate the wheel! Departmental Resources OSR Colleagues (NURAP!) Schools Web

The Trees: Completing the budget template Regular updates to any template RFA requirements (such as requirements/ restrictions on max no. years of support, direct costs, salary cap, effort requirements, etc.) NIH salary cap Fringe benefits Other considerations (common mistakes) Subcontracts Items excluded from F&A calculation Math check (always!)

The Trees: SF424 Regular Budget Template SEE HANDOUT: SF424 REGULAR NIH BUDGET

The Trees: Writing the Budget Narrative (Regular NIH Budget) Key Requirements Follow general guidelines (SF424) and RFA instructions precisely List each line item separately in the order it appears on the budget For personnel costs, list name, role, % effort and/or person months (calendar, academic, summer). Is effort reasonable? – See NIH percent effort/person months conversion chart at OSR website: For consultants, list name, organizational affiliation, rate and role. Provide letter of collaboration from each consultant. Itemize general non-salary costs (materials and supplies, etc.)

The Trees: SF424 Modular Budget Template SEE HANDOUT: SF424 MODULAR NIH BUDGET

The Trees: Writing the Budget Narrative: (Modular NIH Budget) Key Requirements Follow general guidelines (SF424) and RFA instructions precisely Personnel – List names, academic, calendar, and/or summer months and roles on the project. Is effort reasonable? For consultants, list name, organizational affiliation, role and time commitment. Provide letter(s) of collaboration from each consultant. Consortium/Contractual - Provide an estimate of total costs (direct plus F&A) for each year, rounded to the nearest $1,000. List the consortium organization along with all personnel. Provide letter(s) of intent to establish a consortium for each proposed consortium. Additional justification – provide as needed for unusual items and/or variations in the number of modules requested.

The Forest: Can it be done?

Can the work that is promised in the application be accomplished within the proposed budget? Does budget match research plan? Is the budget reasonable and fully justified? Are other resources not included in budget being committed? Do you have approvals, letters of commitment, etc. Upon award, has the budget been reduced? Will award reduction require reduced scope of work? Work with OSR and sponsor to determine/negotiate appropriate actions.

The Forest: Fiscal considerations Utilization of dept resources F&A recovery; F&A sharing Cost sharing Effort commitments/restrictions

The Forest: Utilization of departmental resources Personnel Does the application propose use of current staff? Are they available? What are the implications for their current work?Does the application propose use of current staff? Are they available? What are the implications for their current work? If TBN positions are included, is recruitment possible? If there are obstacles, how will you address?If TBN positions are included, is recruitment possible? If there are obstacles, how will you address? Other resources Are other departmental resources promised in the application? If so, are these resources available? Do you have necessary approvals from dept chair?Are other departmental resources promised in the application? If so, are these resources available? Do you have necessary approvals from dept chair?

The Forest: F&A recovery F&A cost recovery on sponsored projects represents a vital part of the University's operating budget NU does not generate a surplus from its research activities. F&A costs are recovered at a rate and an amount lower than the University’s actual incurred cost of doing research. Research infrastructure and administrative personnel are subsidized by the University due to the lack of full recovery from sponsors. F&A Waiver requests require a letter to the Dean of Research (Dr. Rex Chisolm) with a copy to Bruce Elliott (for FSM proposals) in advance of proposal submission to the sponsor.

The Forest: F&A recovery Within FSM, the dean’s office receives 40% of F&A recovery to cover a portion of operating expenses; 60% of the F&A recovery is assigned directly to departments. Dept F&A recovery supports administrative salaries and infrastructure costs for the unit May support faculty start-up costs, faculty and research staff salaries not covered by grants, clinical, and teaching time

The Forest: F&A sharing New F&A sharing policies/procedures require confirmation of F&A sharing at proposal stage (OSR-1) and allow for automated assignment of F&A to multiple units (NU Financials/InfoEd) See ution_guidelines.html

The Forest: Cost sharing Types of cost sharing Mandatory Cost Sharing/MatchingMandatory Cost Sharing/Matching Voluntary Committed Cost SharingVoluntary Committed Cost Sharing Voluntary Uncommitted Cost SharingVoluntary Uncommitted Cost Sharing Salary Cap Cost SharingSalary Cap Cost Sharing

The Forest: Cost sharing Salary Cap Cost Sharing NIH does not require cost sharingNIH does not require cost sharing Most common type of cost sharing on the Chicago campus is the NIH statutory cap and the salary limitation on NIH career (K) awardsMost common type of cost sharing on the Chicago campus is the NIH statutory cap and the salary limitation on NIH career (K) awards This can have a huge impact for clinical units where salaries are in hundreds of thousandsThis can have a huge impact for clinical units where salaries are in hundreds of thousands – DoM requires divisional approvals for proposals that involve salary cap/salary limitation cost sharing

The Forest: Cost sharing NIH statutory cap - the NIH salary cap is a statutory limitation imposed by Congress on any individual’s rate of pay directly chargeable to NIH awards. – Limits the rate of pay chargeable to NIH awards to maximum that is tied to Executive Level I of the Federal Executive Pay scale. K-award salary cap - varies by institute, but typically limited to only $75K allowable salary recovery (for min. 75% effort) and typically provides only ~$20K for research support.

The Forest: Cost Sharing Impact of cost sharing Financial Impact Redirection of resourcesRedirection of resources Forfeit not only the direct cost, but also the associated F&A costForfeit not only the direct cost, but also the associated F&A cost F&A Calculation Impact The University's total Cost Sharing is included in the F&A rate calculation. This serves to decrease the University's overall F&A rate.The University's total Cost Sharing is included in the F&A rate calculation. This serves to decrease the University's overall F&A rate. Administrative/Compliance Impact Cost Sharing commitments must be met and tracked for sponsor verification in the University's records.Cost Sharing commitments must be met and tracked for sponsor verification in the University's records.

The Forest: Effort Commitments & Restrictions on NIH Mentored Career Development (K) awards Almost all K’s require a full-time appointment at the applicant organization and minimum 75% effort commitment to the goals of the career award. Because salary recovery is limited to $75K, may need to cost shareBecause salary recovery is limited to $75K, may need to cost share The effort commitment on a K-award may not be reduced by any amount without sponsor approvalThe effort commitment on a K-award may not be reduced by any amount without sponsor approval Approval may be sought for reduction up to 25% in last 2 years only if PI on competing independent research project grant and/or sub- project director role on multi-component program project/center grant.Approval may be sought for reduction up to 25% in last 2 years only if PI on competing independent research project grant and/or sub- project director role on multi-component program project/center grant.

The Forest: Effort Commitments & Restrictions on NIH Mentored Career Development (K) awards A career award recipient meets the required commitment of total professional effort as long as: 1) the applicant has a full-time appointment with the applicant organization; and 2) the minimum percentage of the candidate's commitment required for the proposed career award is covered by that appointment.

The Forest: Effort Commitments & Restrictions What does this mean for NU faculty with NMFF appointments? The basis for sponsored project effort commitment is NU and, if applicable, NMFF effort: NU+NMFF = 100% effort The effort an investigator may commit to sponsored research is typically exclusively from the NU side. NU effort may include research, teaching and administrative activities. An investigator with two days/week clinic (40% NMFF) can not commit 75% effort to a K award. Thus, s/he will need to reduce their NMFF appointment. This has significant fiscal implications for the clinical unit, since this may either reduce the clinical income for a unit and/or these clinical sessions may need to be covered by another physician.

The Forest: Effort Commitments & Restrictions What about VA (or other) external appointments? If the individual also has a VA appointment, the associated commitment is not included in the full-time NU appointment and may not be used to meet any minimum effort requirement. –HOWEVER, the number of eighths of the VA appointment does impact the NIH view of whether an investigator may be considered to have a full-time NU appointment. –For example, an investigator has a full time appointment at a university and a half time appointment with another organization (4/8 VA appt or other half-time independent clinical practice plan). Under this new policy, the investigator can be supported because the university and candidate can commit at least 75% of the full time appointment to the award. –Any investigator with 5/8 VA appointment or greater, should contact OSR in advance of K award submission (and possibly in advance of other research support applications if significant effort is committed).

General Advice Alert PI’s to elimination of error correction window Work closely with PI and OSR on proposal preparation (start early, submit early!) Ask relevant questions for budgeting and larger fiscal considerations (F&A, cost sharing, effort commitments) –Utilize available resources (OSR) for budget process Work with OSR to resolve questions/ address concerns

Questions?