University of North Dakota, DAB No. 808 (1986)

DEPARTMENTAL GRANT APPEALS BOARD

Department of Health and Human Services

SUBJECT: University of North Dakota

Docket No. 86-116
Decision No. 808

DATE: November 17, 1986

DECISION

The University of North Dakota (grantee or appellant) appealed the
decision of the Public Health Service (PHS or respondent) to disallow
$38,118 in salary and associated fringe benefit costs charged to a PHS
grant during the period March 1980 to June 1982. PHS based its decision
on grounds that the salary arrangement between the grantee and a
National Health Service Corps doctor violated a PHS Grants Policy
Statement provision specifying conditions under which salary payments by
a grantee to a federal employee are allowable.

We uphold the disallowance because PHS reasonably concluded that the
salary arrangement was unacceptable since the duties covered by the
grant payments were also within the scope of the doctor's federal
employment in the National Health Service Corps. As discussed below,
however, we do not here completely adopt other aspects of the PHS
position in this case. In particular, we think that PHS incorrectly
implied that the grantee and doctor knowingly engaged in improper
conduct.

This decision is based in the written record, including documents filed
in an earlier case (Docket No. 84-208), which the Board remanded to PHS.
It is the PHS decision on that remand that is at issue here.

Background

The costs in question here were charged to a Health Careers Opportunity
Program (HCOP) grant awarded to the grantee for its Indians Into
Medicine (INMED) Program. The purpose of the INMED Program, as the name
implies, was to develop Indian health professionals to provide health
services to the Indian people.

The facts are complicated because more than one subagency of PHS
provided support to the INMED Program. The essentials are: (1) two
subagencies of PHS provided grant funds to the program and one also
provided a National Health Service Corps (Corps) physician; (2) the
physician was not a Corps officer at the time the grantee requested
approval of her employment as project director under the HCOP grant; and
(3) the grantee did not subsequently inform HCOP officials that the
physician had become a Corps doctor or inform Corps officials that the
physician would be receiving a salary under the HCOP grant in addition
to her Corps salary. When - 2 -

HCOP officials learned of this in 1982, PHS sent a team to investigate
the matter. This team found that, while the doctor should have obtained
prior approval for the arrangement, there was no fraud involved and no
improper dual compensation. Nonetheless, HCOP grant officials later
determined to disallow all salary and fringe benefits paid over and
above what the doctor was receiving under her Corps assignment. This
determination was later upheld by a PHS review committee and appealed to
this Board.

Although PHS first focused on statutory and regulatory provisions on
dual compensation and conflict of interest, PHS later asked the Board to
rule on a single question which PHS contended was dispositive of the
case: whether the undisputed fact that grantee did not obtain approval
from PHS prior to making the salary payments from grant funds
established that grantee had failed to comply with a provision in the
PHS Grants Policy Statement. That provision reads as follows:

Federal (U.S. Government) employees. -- The following rules
apply to payments made from a grant to Federal employees: * *
* 3. Salaries and travel:
Allowable when the employee is:

a. Working under a grant to a Federal institution.

b. During nonduty hours, in leave-without-pay status, or
on detail to a State or local government, provided (1)
reimbursement is in accordance with terms mutually
acceptable to the grantee institution and PHS, and (2) all
parties concerned are assured that there is no possibility
of dual compensation or a resulting conflict of interest.
(1976) 1/

In University of North Dakota, Decision No. 707, November 22, 1985, the
Board decided the issue posed by PHS. The Board rejected the grantee's
argument that PHS had previously approved the salary arrangement. While
noting that the bureaucratic structure within PHS was confusing, the
Board found that neither subagency had full knowledge of the situation.
The Board further ruled, however, that the provision did not, as PHS had
alleged, preclude PHS from granting approval retroactively. On remand,
PHS considered the matter and issued a second decision. That decision
again disallowed the salary payment. (See Respondent's May 30, 1986
decision)

1/ The grantee did not dispute the applicability of this provision.
Moreover, as discussed at page 2 of the Board's decision remanding the
initial PHS disallowance, the provision was a term of the grant. (See
University of North Dakota, Decision No. 707, November 22, 1986)

- 3 -

PHS determined that item 3b of the applicable Grants Policy Statement
provision contains three separate conditions, all of which must be met
for the salary payment to be allowable:

1. The employee must be performing the work during nonduty
hours, or on leave-without-pay status, or be on detail to a
state or local government; and

2. Reimbursement must be in accordance with terms mutually
acceptable to the grantee institution and PHS; and

3. All parties concerned must be assured that there is no
possibility of dual compensation or a resulting conflict of
interest. 2/

PHS concluded that it could not now approve the salary payment because
the payment did not meet any of these conditions. PHS noted that
failure to meet any one of the conditions was a sufficient basis for the
disallowance.

The grantee appealed this determination to the Board, but failed to
submit its brief in a timely manner. PHS moved to dismiss the appeal.
The Board denied this motion. Since grantee had not shown good cause
for its delay, however, the Board determined to proceed to decision
based on the record previously made in this case, including the
grantee's submissions in the earlier proceedings. (See Board's Ruling
dated October 16, 1986)

There, the grantee presented a number of arguments relevant here about
why salary payments should be allowed. Basically, the grantee argued
that the Corps doctor performed numerous duties that justified the
salary payment, that the salary arrangement did not constitute dual
compensation under applicable law, that the PHS investigative report
found no knowing improper conduct, and that the doctor's services
promoted the goals of the INMED Program, as shown by the success of the
program and awards given to the Corps doctor for her outstanding
service.

Discussion

While we do not here adopt PHS' rationale completely, we are constrained
ultimately by the terms of the PHS Grants Policy Statement provision,
which applies here and which conditions allowability of PHS grant
payments to a federal employee on the


2/ PHS specifically noted that item 3a did not apply because grantee was
not a federal institution (but rather a state agency). (See
Respondent's May 30, 1986 decision, p. 3) Grantee did not dispute this
or allege that the payment was allowable under the terms of 3a.

- 4 -

reimbursement being acceptable to PHS and on PHS being assured that
there is no dual compensation or conflict of interest. This affords PHS
with discretion to apply its programmatic expertise, and we will not
substitute our judgment for that of PHS so long as the PHS decision is
reasonable.

Based on our review of the record, we have determined that the
conclusion by PHS not to approve the arrangement has a basis sufficient
to support PHS' judgment as a reasonable one. One of the key premises
of the grantee's arguments concerning the reasonableness of paying the
doctor from grant funds is the allegation that she was performing duties
in addition to those she was required to perform under her Corps
assignment. PHS found that these "additional duties" were within the
scope of the assignment. This finding is sufficiently supported by the
record.

The grantee stated that the doctor's Corps assignment was to be project
director for the INMED Program and to provide medical services to
patients at various underserved reservations in North Dakota and to
INMED students. The grantee further stated that the doctor was assigned
by the University to be Instructor of Family Medicine and INMED
Director. (Appellant's brief dated April 30, 1985, p. 1) In support of
its argument that the doctor performed duties separate and distinct from
her Corps assignment, the grantee listed the following as duties that
the doctor performed in addition to her Corps assignment: lecturing at
University classes, liaison on topics concerning Indian health,
University tribal activities, curriculum development for the University
to further the goals of Indian students, representation of the
University at various meetings, dealing with minority issues and Indian
health issues, and services as Minority Student Affairs Officer for the
American Association of Medical Colleges. (Id., p. 5) PHS concluded
that all of these duties were within the scope of her Corps assignment
based on various descriptions of the duties under her assignment.
(Respondent's May 30, 1986 decision, pp. 3-4) While PHS provided no
analysis in support of this conclusion, we agree with PHS that most of
the so-called "additional duties" could fit within her assignment. For
example, the objectives of the assignment as stated in the agreement
between the doctor, the grantee, and the Corps were described as
follows:

The major objective is the management of the overall operation,
administration, and program development of the INMED Program,
including recruitment and working with staff and students.
Secondary objectives are to communicate at the National, regional
and local levels on Indian health-related activities. The
development of a quality clinical educational program at the
undergraduate and graduate levels, with additional attention
focused on the service aspects of the program. (Respondent's May
30, 1986 decision, Att.3, p. 1)

- 5 -

This is extremely broad and appears to encompass the duties described by
the grantee, such as lecturing in University classes, attending
meetings, and developing curriculum. 3/ Other descriptions of the Corps
assignment are similarly broad. (See Respondent's May 30, 1986
decision, pp. 3-4)

Moreover, the flaw in grantee's argument is that, to the extent the
duties may have fit more with her role as an instructor with the
University, rather than with her role as project director of INMED, they
are not the duties for which she received compensation under the HCOP
grant. The grantee's own reports indicate that the payment of grant
funds was for 50% (and later 30%) of her salary as project director.
(See Respondent's Brief, August 9, 1985, Att.lO; see also Appellant's
Brief dated April 30, 1985, AFll, p. 2) Her Corps assignment also was to
serve as project director, and there is no indication in any of the
documents related to the assignment that she was expected to work only
as a half-time project director rather than a full-time project
director.

Thus, we think that PHS reasonably determined that it would not approve
the salary arrangement where grant funds would be used to reimburse the
doctor for activities covered by her Corps assignment.

In reaching our conclusion here, we have considered grantee's argument
(which PHS failed to address) that the PHS investigative report found no
dual compensation. That report did state that the investigators did not
feel that the doctor's activities "constituted improper dual
compensation." (Appellant's Brief dated April 30, 1985, AFll, p. 4
(emphasis added)) In context, however, we read this finding as
indicating no more than the investigators' belief that no fraudulent
intent was involved, a finding with which we concur. The investigators
expressly viewed their role as determining whether there was any
evidence of "impropriety, fraud, [or] any attempt to hide the
information that [the doctor] was receiving additional compensation to
her salary." (Id.)

We also note that the grantee argued that the salary arrangement did not
fall within the meaning of "dual compensation" in the statutory
provision originally cited by PHS as a basis for the disallowance, 5
U.S.C. 5534. The grantee's arguments on this point were premised on its
view that the compensation was for duties separate and distinct from her
Corps assignment. As discussed above, the record does not support this
view. Moreover, both the grantee and the PHS investigative team viewed
the "dual compensation" issue as involving the question of whether the
doctor received payments directly from more than one federal source.

3/ Although the assignment agreement was not signed until a year after
her assignment began, there is no allegation or evidence that the
agreement did not reflect the duties and objectives from the beginning
of the assignment. - 6 -

Even if the payment from the grant funds does not fall within this
technical definition of "dual compensation," however, PHS could
reasonably determine that the terms of reimbursement were not acceptable
to it.

While the grantee argued that extra pay was reasonable, considering the
low level of pay the doctor received under her Corps commission, the
amount her predecessor had received as project director, and the amount
of time that she devoted to her duties, PHS reasonably was concerned
that the extra pay was simply not a necessary grant cost if she could
have been required to perform the duties under her Corps assignment.
Moreover, while the Corps salary does seem low for the duties performed,
the purpose of the Corps assignment was in part so that the doctor
could, in effect, pay back PHS for scholarship support she had received.
Thus, it is to be expected that a Corps salary would be lower than a
civilian salary.

The record does support the grantee's position that the doctor performed
her services well and that neither the grantee nor the doctor
intentionally engaged in improper conduct. Moreover, there is no
evidence that there was in fact any conflict of interest in the
situation, and it appears that all of the doctor's activities were
consistent with the project goals. We are concerned that the PHS
decision on remand did not fully consider the grantee's arguments or the
findings of the PHS investigative team regarding these points. In light
of the clearly applicable PHS Grants Policy Statement provision,
however, the grantee simply could not rely on the extra salary payments
being considered allowable charges to grant funds without PHS approval
of the arrangement. Since PHS reasonably denied that approval, the
grantee is not entitled to the funds and must return them.

Conclusion

For the reasons stated above, we uphold the PHS decision to disallow
$38,118 as a charge to HCOP grant funds.


________________________________ Donald F. Garrett

________________________________ Alexander G. Teitz

________________________________ Judith A. Ballard Presiding
Board