Southern Regional Education Board, DAB No. 455 (1983) GAB Decision 455 July 29, 1983 Southern Regional Education Board; Docket No. 83-41 Settle, Norval; Teitz, Alexander Ford, Cecilia The Southern Regional Education Board (SREB) appealed a decision by the Regional Director, Region IV, sustaining a determination by the Region IV Division of Cost Allocation (DCA, Agency) which unilaterally set an indirect cost rate effective date. /1/ The Board held a conference call as provided for in 45 CFR 16.12, so that each party could comment on the other's submission. We retained the tape of that conference call for the record. As explained below, we determine that DCA incorrectly applied the requirements for the submission of indirect cost rate proposals and the negotiation of rates. Accordingly, the Board sustains the appeal. Background The record shows that it was SREB's practice to submit an indirect cost rate proposal each year, within six months of the close of its fiscal year. (Appellant's Letter, April 13, 1983) /2/ Based on the proposal submitted on December 10, 1981, DCA and SREB entered into a Negotiation Agreement dated February 3, 1982 which set a final indirect cost rate for FY 81 (July 1, 1980 -- June 30, 1981) but set no provisional rate for FY 82. Rather, the agreement stated: (2) Effective July 1, 1981, this institution does not have active grants or contracts with the Federal Government which need a negotiated indirect cost rate. However, if a grant or contract which requires a rate is awarded . . . a new rate will be established at that time. In fact, however, a grant awarded effective September 1, 1981 by the United States Department of Education did provide for payment of actual indirect costs. The parties both recognize that had this grant been taken into account, a provisional rate would have been set for FY 82 in the Negotiation Agreement. Although DCA stressed that it was not its responsibility to determine whether or not a rate is necessary for a paticular time, SREB's accountant stated that the DCA negotiator had informed him, during their discussions leading to the February 3, 1982 agreement, that DCA's own information showed that, as of July 1, 1981, SREB had no grants or contracts requiring a provisional rate for FY 82. According to SREB's accountant, the DCA negotiator suggested that a provisional rate for FY 82 was not necessary; the DCA negotiator apparently stated that only final rates were being given, when possible, due to the phase-out of his office. SREB's accountant also stated that he had recognized that they had no grants or contracts requiring a rate as of July 1, 1981, but that he had mentioned the Education grant to the DCA negotiator and indicated that, although this grant carried a rate in excess of 90%, he was unsure whether the rate was predetermined or was to be adjusted to reflect actual costs. According to SREB's accountant, SREB received no guidelines concerning payment of indirect costs under the Education grant and actually learned some time in March of 1982 that this grant did provide for payment of actual indirect costs. (Conference Call Tape) SREB's accountant stated that SREB signed the February 1982 Negotiation Agreement based on (1) its reading of the OASC-5 as requiring submission of its proposal within six months of the close of FY 82 in order to obtain a rate for FY 82, (2) the last paragraph in the DCA letter accompanying the Negotiation Agreement which stated that a proposal was required to be submitted for each fiscal year for which indirect costs would be claimed, and (3) the DCA negotiator's knowledge that the Education grant might require a rate. (Conference Call Tape) On November 18, 1982, SREB submitted an indirect cost rate proposal for FY 82 (July 1, 1981 -- June 30, 1982). The letter forwarding this proposal noted that SREB had received a new grant effective September 1, 1981. DCA then prepared a Negotiation (3) Agreement setting a provisional rate effective November 1, 1982 and setting no final rate for FY 82; SREB disagreed with the terms of the agreement and appealed the unilateral determination setting the effective date for a provisional rate on November 1, 1982 and setting no final rate for FY 82. SREB asserted that a final rate should have been established for FY 82, effective July 1, 1981, and stated that the absence of a final rate precluded SREB from recovering $4,887.42 in indirect costs under the Education grant it received during FY 82. /3/ Requirements and Policies for Establishing Indirect Cost Rates For non-profit institutions, such as SREB, the requirements and policies concerning the submission of indirect cost rate proposals and the negotiation of rates are stated in the cost principles in OMB Circular A-122, the OASC-5 ("A Guide for Non-Profit Institutions"), and the Grants Administration Manual. A provisional rate is a temporary billing rate used as a basis for estimating and funding indirect costs. Adjustments are made to reflect the final rate which is established based on an institution's actual costs for the accounting period involved. Institutions routinely requiring the establishment of rates submit proposals yearly, within six months of the close of their fiscal year. Institutions without previously established rates submit their proposals within three months of the award of a grant or contract requiring a rate. The OASC-5 states: Requirement for Submission of Indirect Cost Proposals Each institution claiming reimbursement for indirect costs must submit an indirect cost rate proposal to document how it derived the (rates) it used to compute its claim. The failure of an institution to submit timely proposals may result in the disallowance of costs previously awarded. Further, awards made during a period for which an institution does not have a current indirect cost rate will not (4) include an amount for indirect costs. If a rate is subsequently established, based on the late submission of an indirect cost proposal, indirect costs on DHEW awards will be provided only for the period beginning with the first day of the month in which the proposal is submitted. * * * An institution that has not previously established an indirect cost rate with the Department must submit its initial proposal . . . immediately after being notified that an award providing reimbursement for indirect costs will be made. Where possible, this proposal should be submitted prior to the date of the award, and, in no event, later than three months after such date. If initial proposals are submitted within the three month period, indirect costs will be reimbursed for the full award year. If initial proposals are not submitted within the three month period, indirect costs will be irrevocably lost for all months prior to the month that the indirect cost proposal is submitted. . . . An institution that has previously established an indirect cost (rates) with the Department must submit a new proposal . . . within six months after the close of each fiscal year in which a grant or contract is performed. . . . (Pages 3-5) OMB Circular A-122 provides for the negotiation of indirect cost and other rates by one designated agency but the use of such rates by other agencies as well. The Circular also contains the three and six month deadlines for proposal submission. (Attachment A, E.2.a., b., and c.) The OASC-5 further provides for extensions of time for the submission of proposals under extenuating circumstances. Review of the requirements and policies in general reveals an orderly but flexible process for the negotiation and establishment of necessary rates. Analysis DCA concluded that by signing the February 3, 1982 Negotiation Agreement SREB had agreed to the termination of its indirect cost rate effective July 1, 1981. Accordingly, reasoned DCA, based on the OMB Circular and OASC-5, a new rate was required to be established based on the proposal submitted during November 1982. DCA stated: (5) . . . Since you failed to submit your proposal within three months after September 1, 1981, we must comply with . . . OASC-5 which provides that indirect costs will be provided only for the period beginning with the first day of the month in which the proposal was submitted. Since your proposal was submitted on November 18, the effective date of your indirect cost rate must be November 1, 1982. (January 12, 1983 letter from DCA to SREB, Attachment D to Appellant's Letter) At the time the Education grant was awarded, SREB was an institution which had "previously established an indirect cost (rates)", so that its proposal for FY 81 was due by December 31, 1981. The Agency admitted that the proposal submitted December 10, 1981 for FY 81 was timely. (Respondent's Letter, April 21, 1983) Yet, DCA, using hindsight, applied a three month deadline ending December 1, 1981, concluded it must disregard the December 1981 proposal because it resulted in a Negotiation Agreement which did not set a provisional rate, and concluded that the proposal it should relate to the Education grant was the one submitted in November 1982 which, the Regional Director's final decision stated, was almost fifteen months late. /4/ We conclude that in establishing an indirect cost rate based on the proposal submitted in November 1982, DCA cannot reasonably disregard the timely submission of the prior year's proposal and decline to set a final rate for FY 82, effective July 1, 1981. DCA must recognize that had the parties considered the Education grant, a provisional rate would have been set for FY 82 so that a final rate would have been routinely set based on the November 1982 proposal. In concluding that it was necessary to establish a "new" rate which could not be effective prior (6) to November 1, 1982, DCA mechanically applied time limits to preclude the establishment of a final rate for FY 82 where the limits did not clearly govern. The Agency relied on Franklin C. Fetter Family Health Center, Decision No. 99, May 19, 1980. There the grantee claimed indirect costs for a time it had no rate but could have established one; that grantee argued that it was a hardship to absorb the costs, and, in any event, its claim was at a rate much lower than its provisional rate established for several years later. The Board concluded that equitable arguments were not a basis for the Board to disregard a legal requirement that indirect costs be claimed based on a properly established rate. The Agency argued that "(while) it is unfortunate that the SREB failed to seek an FY 1982 provisional rate because of misinterpretation of grant terms", the legal requirement here is that indirect costs not be allowed prior to November 1, 1982. /5/ (Respondent's Letter, April 21, 1983) We disagree; the issue here does not concern whether indirect costs were claimed based on a properly established rate, but rather concerns whether the Agency must in fact agree to establish a rate. Here provisional and final rates were routinely set for SREB each fiscal year based on the yearly indirect cost rate proposal. The circumstances of the parties' negotiations and SREB's decision to sign the February 3, 1982 agreement lead us to conclude that the agreement does not, in fact, manifest SREB's intention to terminate its indirect cost rate as of July 1, 1981. The Agency has pointed to nothing in the OASC-5 or elsewhere that requires us to conclude that merely because the parties failed to set a provisional rate, for which they both bear some responsibility, a final rate may not be set despite SREB's pattern of yearly submitting proposals and negotiating rates. In addition, the language in the February 1982 agreement concerning establishing a new rate upon the award of a grant or contract requiring one does not require us to conclude that the Agency need not set a final rate for FY 82. This provision was premised on an incorrect understanding of the actual facts since the contingency it provided for, i.e., the award of a grant requiring a rate, had already occurred. Furthermore, the (7) Agency cannot claim that it is surprised or disadvantaged here since, having set a final rate for FY 81, it knew what the provisional FY 82 rate would have been. In concluding that a final rate should be set for FY 82, we do not set any general precedents concerning retroactive indirect cost rates or indirect cost claims for time periods where no rates were established. We simply conclude that, in the facts of this case, the Agency incorrectly applied the requirements for the submission of proposals and negotiation of rates. Accordingly, this appeal is sustained. /6/ /1/ Under the informal grant appeals procedures in Subpart A of 45 CFR Part 75, the Regional Director issued this final decision as a reconsideration of the determination by the Division of Cost Allocation. /2/ Appellant discusses the "customary pattern of events" concerning the submission of proposals and the negotiation of provisional and final rates in its April 13, 1983 letter to the Board. Appellant also submitted its indirect cost rate proposals for FYs 80, 81, and 82 and the negotiated agreements prepared by DCA for FYs 79, 80, 81, and 82. (Attachments F -- R to Appellant's Letter) During the conference call the parties referred to appellant's 10-year long "unbroken string" of proposals and rates. /3/ SREB also argued in the alternative that the effective date should be set on September 1, 1981, the effective date of the Education grant, or December 1, 1981, the first day of the month the FY 81 proposal was submitted. Since we are sustaining the appeal, we do not discuss these alternate dates. /4/ During the conference call SREB's accountant stated that SREB was not notified about award of the Education grant until on or after September 10, 1981. Accordingly, we conclude that the December 10, 1981 proposal was made within three months from the time SREB received notice of the award of the grant. This is of interest but not directly pertinent to our analysis since, as stated above, the FY 81 proposal was, in fact, timely. In any event, the parties would not have known during the fall of 1981 to apply the three month deadline because SREB's status as an institution previously having a rate made its submission due within six months of the close of the fiscal year, by December 31, 1981. /5/ Appellant did not agree that it "failed to seek" a provisional rate, explaining that provisional rates, at the level of the prior year's final rate, had always been set in the past without an explicit request and that here the DCA negotiator had "suggested" that SREB did not need a provisional rate. /6/ The Board's regulations at 45 CFR 16.12(d) provide special expedited procedures for appeals of $25,000 or less where the Board reviews a decision by "a board or other relatively independent reviewing authority" which conducts a "formal preliminary review process which results in a written decision based on a record . . . after reasonable notice. . . ." Section 16.12(d) provides, inter alia, that unless the Board makes certain determinations it will limit its review to whether the decision reviewed is clearly erroneous. The Presiding Board Member mistakenly informed the parties during the conference call that the special expedited procedures should apply to this appeal. In fact, final decisions resulting from the review process in 45 CFR Part 75 have not generally involved a particular amount in dispute and the Board has not considered its section 16.12(d) procedures to apply to these disputes. The parties here had a full opportunity to present their arguments and we do not believe that the erroneous citation to section 16.12(d) had any effect on the handling of this case. NOVEMBER 14, 1984