Sumter County Opportunity, Inc., DAB No. 1200 (1990)

Department of Health and Human Services

DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD

Appellate Division

SUBJECT: Sumter County Opportunity, Inc.
Docket No. 90-96
Audit Control No. A-04-89-06959
Decision No. 1200

DATE: October 15, 1990

DECISION

Sumter County Opportunity, Inc. (Grantee) appealed a decision by the
Office of Human Development Services (OHDS, Agency) to disallow costs
totaling $58,834 claimed under a Head Start grant for the program year
ended April 30, 1989. Pursuant to an independent audit of the Grantee's
Head Start program, the Agency disallowed $2,525 identified as penalty
and interest charges incurred by the Grantee as a result of the
Grantee's lateness both in paying unemployment compensation taxes and in
filing an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 5500. Further, the Agency
disallowed $56,309 for the Grantee's failure to meet its 12 percent
non-federal share matching requirement.

By notice of appeal dated April 30, 1990, and received by the Board on
May 10, 1990, the Grantee appealed the disallowance and stated the
reasons why it believed the disallowance to be wrong. By acknowledgment
dated May 15, 1990, the Board acknowledged the Grantee's appeal and
explained that the Grantee had 30 days from receipt of the
acknowledgment to submit its brief and appeal file. Board
acknowledgment, p. 1. By a telephone conversation on June 28, 1990, and
confirmed by the Board on July 5, 1990, the Grantee notified the Board
and the Agency that it had nothing further to add to its April 30, 1990
notice of appeal. Additionally, the Grantee declined to respond to the
Agency's response brief and appeal file.

For the reasons discussed below, we uphold the disallowance in full.

Analysis

Late penalties are unallowable because they are interest charges and
are unreasonable costs.

The Agency, in its disallowance letter, notified the Grantee that the
above-noted audit report had revealed unallowable penalty costs.
Specifically, OHDS, at page 1, stated:

Unemployment compensation tax payments were not made on a timely
basis resulting in penalty and interest payments of $200. Failure
to file IRS Form 5500 for the [Grantee's] flexible benefit plan
resulted in a penalty assessment of $2,325. These penalties and
interest totaling $2,525 are unallowable costs in accordance with
OMB Circular A-122.

In its notice of appeal, the Grantee stated its position on why the
Board should not uphold this part of the disallowance. In regard to the
late payment of the unemployment compensation tax, the Grantee
maintained that it did not have a "Fiscal Officer/Administrative
Assistant," whose responsibility it would have been to handle the
payment, and that it had difficulty in finding a qualified person to
fill the position. Further, the Grantee asserted that it was not aware,
until the deadline had passed, that an IRS Form 5500 should have been
filed for its Flexible Benefit Plan. The Grantee explained that it used
another organization to file the forms required for its plan, and that
the organization chosen did not file the form in a timely manner. The
Grantee stated that it had changed to another organization and has
discontinued the flexible benefit plan.

The Grantee is a nonprofit organization and, pursuant to 45 C.F.R.
74.174(a) (1987), is subject to the cost principles of Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-122, applicable to grants to
nonprofit organizations. OMB Circular A-122, Attachment B, Section
19a., provides that: "Costs incurred for interest . . . are
unallowable."

The Board, in prior decisions, has found that late payment charges
constitute unallowable interest charges. Specifically, in Marshalls
Community Action Agency, DAB No. 328 (1982), we held that the Agency's
argument that the payment of a late charge "constituted a constructive
borrowing" was a "reasonable construction of the term 'interest on
borrowed capital . . . however represented'". (p. 3) Then we concluded
"that the late payment charge . . . was interest on borrowed capital, an
unallowable cost." Id; see also Economic Opportunity Council of
Suffolk, Inc., DAB No. 714 (1985). 1/

We find no reason to treat the late payment penalties in this appeal
differently. The Grantee's explanations do not change the nature of
these charges. A long-standing Board principle is that a grantee has an
obligation to document the allowability of its costs. Neighborhood
Services Dept., DAB No. 110 (1980); New York State Dept. of Social
Services, DAB No. 204 (1981). In this instance, the Grantee did not
document that these costs are allowable.

Moreover, the Grantee's late payment charges are unreasonable. OMB
Circular A-122, Attachment A, Paragraph A.2.a. provides that, for a cost
to be allowable, it must be reasonable for the performance of the grant.
Reasonable costs are defined in Paragraph A.3 which provides:

Reasonable costs. A cost is reasonable if, in its nature or amount,
it does not exceed that which would be incurred by a prudent person
under the circumstances prevailing at the time the decision was made
to incur the cost.

Paragraph A.3.a. provides that in determining the reasonableness of a
given cost, consideration shall be given to:

Whether the cost is a type generally recognized as ordinary and
necessary for the operation of the organization or the performance
of the award.

In prior decisions, the Board has upheld the Agency's determination that
any late payment charge arising from the failure to pay a bill on time
was not a cost that would be incurred by a prudent person or be
considered to be "ordinary and necessary" for the performance of a
grant. See Economic Opportunity Council of Suffolk, Inc., supra, at p.
7; Marshalls Community Action Agency, supra, at p. 4.

Based on the above, we find that the Agency correctly disallowed the
costs.

The Grantee's request to reduce its non-federal share matching
requirement is beyond the Board's jurisdiction.

In regard to the Grantee's non-federal share matching requirement, the
disallowance letter, in relevant part, stated:

Federal financial assistance granted under the Head Start Act cannot
exceed the Federal matching requirement specified in the grant . . .
. Your agency is hereby required to make up this shortage in
Program Year 24 (PYE 4/30/91).

Section 1301.20 of 45 C.F.R. (1987) provides, in part:

(a) Federal financial assistance granted under the act for a Head
Start program shall not exceed 80 percent of the total costs of the
program unless: (1) An amount in excess of that percentage is
approved under section 1301.21 . . . .

Section 1301.21 provides, in relevant part:

The responsible HHS official, on the basis of a written application
and any supporting evidence he or she may require, will approve
financial assistance in excess of 80 percent if he or she concludes
that the Head Start agency has made a reasonable effort to meet its
required non-Federal share but is unable to do so . . .

It is undisputed that the Grantee's federal financial assistance is 88
percent. Agency's appeal file, ex. B. Therefore, the Grantee's federal
assistance is currently above the amount normally allowed for such
grants. Moreover, the Regional Administrator, in the disallowance
letter, provided the Grantee with the opportunity to make up the
shortage in the program year ending April 30, 1991. The Grantee
apparently believes, however, that, due to the unavailability of
sufficient contributors of in-kind volunteer services, it will be unable
to meet its 12 percent non-federal share matching requirement. Thus,
while the Grantee did not contest the amount of this part of the
disallowance in its notice of appeal, the Grantee requested that the
Board reduce its non-federal share matching requirement so as to
eliminate the disallowance amount. 2/

The Board, in its acknowledgment, advised both parties that it was not
clear whether the Board had jurisdiction to grant this request, and
asked that the Agency comment on this issue.

Pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 1301.20 and 1301.21, the Agency maintained that
the Board does not have the authority to grant the requested relief. In
addition, the Agency stated that the responsible HHS official to whom
written application must be made, for a reduction of the non- federal
share matching requirement, is the OHDS Regional Administrator for
Region IV. We agree. The Board is bound by all applicable laws and
regulations, which include the requirements of 45 C.F.R. 1301.21. 45
C.F.R. 16.14. See also Inter-Tribal Council of California, Inc., DAB
No. 265 (1982). Finally, we note that while the Grantee's request is
beyond the Board's jurisdiction, the Grantee may still make such a
request to the OHDS Regional Administrator. Thus, since the Grantee
does not contest this part of the disallowance, we therefore uphold it.

Conclusion

Based on the foregoing, we uphold the disallowance in full.


_________________________________ Judith A. Ballard


_________________________________ Cecilia Sparks Ford


_________________________________ Norval D. (John)
Settle

1. We note, in addition, that OMB Circular A-122, Attachment B,
Section 14, specifically provides that penalties, such as the ones at
issue here, are unallowable costs.

2. Specifically, the Grantee stated that "it has been difficult to
secure sufficient volunteer hours . . . . We need our volunteer
requirement to be at a lower rate." While the Grantee stated the
non-federal share matching requirement as a "volunteer requirement," we
note that the Grantee's 12 percent non-federal share may be derived from
non-federal sources other than "volunteer hours," such as private