The provisions 
              of the sections of this Circular shall be applied by Federal agencies 
              to recipients. Recipients shall apply the provisions of this Circular 
              to subrecipients performing substantive work under grants and agreements 
              that are passed through or awarded by the primary recipient, if 
              such subrecipients are organizations described in paragraph 1.
            This Circular 
              does not apply to grants, contracts, or other agreements between 
              the Federal Government and units of State or local governments covered 
              by OMB Circular A-102, "Grants and Cooperative Agreements with State 
              and Local Governments," and the Federal agencies' grants management 
              common rule which standardized and codified the administrative requirements 
              Federal agencies impose on State and local grantees. In addition, 
              subawards and contracts to State or local governments are not covered 
              by this Circular. However, this Circular applies to subawards made 
              by State and local governments to organizations covered by this 
              Circular. Federal agencies may apply the provisions of this Circular 
              to commercial organizations, foreign governments, organizations 
              under the jurisdiction of foreign governments, and international 
              organizations.
             
              (a) Accrued 
                expenditures means the charges incurred by the recipient 
                during a given period requiring the provision of funds for: (1) 
                goods and other tangible property received; (2) services performed 
                by employees, contractors, subrecipients, and other payees; and, 
                (3) other amounts becoming owed under programs for which no current 
                services or performance is required.  
               
                 
              (b) Accrued 
                income means the sum of: (1) earnings during a given 
                period from (i) services performed by the recipient, and (ii) 
                goods and other tangible property delivered to purchasers, and 
                (2) amounts becoming owed to the recipient for which no current 
                services or performance is required by the recipient.  
                
                 
              (c) Acquisition 
                cost of equipment means the net invoice price of the 
                equipment, including the cost of modifications, attachments, accessories, 
                or auxiliary apparatus necessary to make the property usable for 
                the purpose for which it was acquired. Other charges, such as 
                the cost of installation, transportation, taxes, duty or protective 
                in-transit insurance, shall be included or excluded from the unit 
                acquisition cost in accordance with the recipient's regular accounting 
                practices.  
               
                 
              (d) Advance 
                means a payment made by Treasury check or other appropriate payment 
                mechanism to a recipient upon its request either before outlays 
                are made by the recipient or through the use of predetermined 
                payment schedules.  
                
                 
              (e) Award 
                means financial assistance that provides support or stimulation 
                to accomplish a public purpose. Awards include grants and other 
                agreements in the form of money or property in lieu of money, 
                by the Federal Government to an eligible recipient. The term does 
                not include: technical assistance, which provides services instead 
                of money; other assistance in the form of loans, loan guarantees, 
                interest subsidies, or insurance; direct payments of any kind 
                to individuals; and, contracts which are required to be entered 
                into and administered under procurement laws and regulations. 
            
                 
              (f) Cash 
                contributions means the recipient's cash outlay, including 
                the outlay of money contributed to the recipient by third parties. 
                
                 
              (g) Closeout 
                means the process by which a Federal awarding agency determines 
                that all applicable administrative actions and all required work 
                of the award have been completed by the recipient and Federal 
                awarding agency.  
                
                 
              (h) Contract 
                means a procurement contract under an award or subaward, and a 
                procurement subcontract under a recipient's or subrecipient's 
                contract.  
                
                 
              (i) Cost 
                sharing or matching means that portion of project or 
                program costs not borne by the Federal Government.  
                
                 
              (j) Date 
                of completion means the date on which all work under 
                an award is completed or the date on the award document, or any 
                supplement or amendment thereto, on which Federal sponsorship 
                ends.  
                
                 
              (k) Disallowed 
                costs means those charges to an award that the Federal 
                awarding agency determines to be unallowable, in accordance with 
                the applicable Federal cost principles or other terms and conditions 
                contained in the award.  
                
                 
              (l) Equipment 
                means tangible nonexpendable personal property including exempt 
                property charged directly to the award having a useful life of 
                more than one year and an acquisition cost of $5000 or more per 
                unit. However, consistent with recipient policy, lower limits 
                may be established.  
                
                 
              (m) Excess 
                property means property under the control of any Federal 
                awarding agency that, as determined by the head thereof, is no 
                longer required for its needs or the discharge of its responsibilities. 
                
                 
              (n) Exempt 
                property means tangible personal property acquired in 
                whole or in part with Federal funds, where the Federal awarding 
                agency has statutory authority to vest title in the recipient 
                without further obligation to the Federal Government. An example 
                of exempt property authority is contained in the Federal Grant 
                and Cooperative Agreement Act (31 U.S.C. 6306), for property acquired 
                under an award to conduct basic or applied research by a non-profit 
                institution of higher education or non-profit organization whose 
                principal purpose is conducting scientific research.  
                
                 
              (o) Federal 
                awarding agency means the Federal agency that provides 
                an award to the recipient.  
                
                 
              (p) Federal 
                funds authorized means the total amount of Federal funds 
                obligated by the Federal Government for use by the recipient. 
                This amount may include any authorized carryover of unobligated 
                funds from prior funding periods when permitted by agency regulations 
                or agency implementing instructions.  
                
                 
              (q) Federal 
                share of real property, equipment, or supplies means 
                that percentage of the property's acquisition costs and any improvement 
                expenditures paid with Federal funds.  
                
                 
              (r) Funding 
                period means the period of time when Federal funding 
                is available for obligation by the recipient.  
                
                 
              (s) Intangible 
                property and debt instruments means, but is not limited 
                to, trademarks, copyrights, patents and patent applications and 
                such property as loans, notes and other debt instruments, lease 
                agreements, stock and other instruments of property ownership, 
                whether considered tangible or intangible.  
                
   
              (t) Obligations 
                means the amounts of orders placed, contracts and grants awarded, 
                services received and similar transactions during a given period 
                that require payment by the recipient during the same or a future 
                period.  
            
                 
              (u) Outlays 
                or expenditures means charges made to the project or 
                program. They may be reported on a cash or accrual basis. For 
                reports prepared on a cash basis, outlays are the sum of cash 
                disbursements for direct charges for goods and services, the amount 
                of indirect expense charged, the value of third party in-kind 
                contributions applied and the amount of cash advances and payments 
                made to subrecipients. For reports prepared on an accrual basis, 
                outlays are the sum of cash disbursements for direct charges for 
                goods and services, the amount of indirect expense incurred, the 
                value of in-kind contributions applied, and the net increase (or 
                decrease) in the amounts owed by the recipient for goods and other 
                property received, for services performed by employees, contractors, 
                subrecipients and other payees and other amounts becoming owed 
                under programs for which no current services or performance are 
                required.  
                
                 
              (v) Personal 
                property means property of any kind except real property. 
                It may be tangible, having physical existence, or intangible, 
                having no physical existence, such as copyrights, patents, or 
                securities.  
                
   
              (w) Prior 
                approval means written approval by an authorized official 
                evidencing prior consent.  
            
                 
              (x) Program 
                income means gross income earned by the recipient that 
                is directly generated by a supported activity or earned as a result 
                of the award (see exclusions in paragraphs ___.24 (e) and (h)). 
                Program income includes, but is not limited to, income from fees 
                for services performed, the use or rental of real or personal 
                property acquired under federally-funded projects, the sale of 
                commodities or items fabricated under an award, license fees and 
                royalties on patents and copyrights, and interest on loans made 
                with award funds. Interest earned on advances of Federal funds 
                is not program income. Except as otherwise provided in Federal 
                awarding agency regulations or the terms and conditions of the 
                award, program income does not include the receipt of principal 
                on loans, rebates, credits, discounts, etc., or interest earned 
                on any of them.  
                
                 
              (y) Project 
                costs means all allowable costs, as set forth in the 
                applicable Federal cost principles, incurred by a recipient and 
                the value of the contributions made by third parties in accomplishing 
                the objectives of the award during the project period.  
                
                 
              (z) Project 
                period means the period established in the award document 
                during which Federal sponsorship begins and ends.  
                
                 
              (aa) Property 
                means, unless otherwise stated, real property, equipment, intangible 
                property and debt instruments.  
               
                 
              (bb) Real 
                property means land, including land improvements, structures 
                and appurtenances thereto, but excludes movable machinery and 
                equipment.  
                
                 
              (cc) Recipient 
                means an organization receiving financial assistance directly 
                from Federal awarding agencies to carry out a project or program. 
                The term includes public and private institutions of higher education, 
                public and private hospitals, and other quasi-public and private 
                non-profit organizations such as, but not limited to, community 
                action agencies, research institutes, educational associations, 
                and health centers. The term may include commercial organizations, 
                foreign or international organizations (such as agencies of the 
                United Nations) which are recipients, subrecipients, or contractors 
                or subcontractors of recipients or subrecipients at the discretion 
                of the Federal awarding agency. The term does not include government-owned 
                contractor-operated facilities or research centers providing continued 
                support for mission-oriented, large-scale programs that are government-owned 
                or controlled, or are designated as federally-funded research 
                and development centers.  
                
                 
              (dd) Research 
                and development means all research activities, both basic 
                and applied, and all development activities that are supported 
                at universities, colleges, and other non-profit institutions. 
                "Research" is defined as a systematic study directed toward fuller 
                scientific knowledge or understanding of the subject studied. 
                "Development" is the systematic use of knowledge and understanding 
                gained from research directed toward the production of useful 
                materials, devices, systems, or methods, including design and 
                development of prototypes and processes. The term research also 
                includes activities involving the training of individuals in research 
                techniques where such activities utilize the same facilities as 
                other research and development activities and where such activities 
                are not included in the instruction function.  
               
                 
              (ee) Small 
                awards means a grant or cooperative agreement not exceeding 
                the small purchase threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403(11) (currently 
                $25,000).  
               
                 
              (ff) Subaward 
                means an award of financial assistance in the form of money, or 
                property in lieu of money, made under an award by a recipient 
                to an eligible subrecipient or by a subrecipient to a lower tier 
                subrecipient. The term includes financial assistance when provided 
                by any legal agreement, even if the agreement is called a contract, 
                but does not include procurement of goods and services nor does 
                it include any form of assistance which is excluded from the definition 
                of "award" in paragraph (e).  
               
                 
              (gg) Subrecipient 
                means the legal entity to which a subaward is made and which is 
                accountable to the recipient for the use of the funds provided. 
                The term may include foreign or international organizations (such 
                as agencies of the United Nations) at the discretion of the Federal 
                awarding agency.  
                
                 
              (hh) Supplies 
                means all personal property excluding equipment, intangible property, 
                and debt instruments as defined in this section, and inventions 
                of a contractor conceived or first actually reduced to practice 
                in the performance of work under a funding agreement ("subject 
                inventions"), as defined in 37 CFR part 401, "Rights to Inventions 
                Made by Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under 
                Government Grants, Contracts, and Cooperative Agreements."  
                
                 
              (ii) Suspension 
                means an action by a Federal awarding agency that temporarily 
                withdraws Federal sponsorship under an award, pending corrective 
                action by the recipient or pending a decision to terminate the 
                award by the Federal awarding agency. Suspension of an award is 
                a separate action from suspension under Federal agency regulations 
                implementing E.O.s 12549 and 12689, "Debarment and Suspension." 
            
                 
              (jj) Termination 
                means the cancellation of Federal sponsorship, in whole or in 
                part, under an agreement at any time prior to the date of completion. 
            
                 
              (kk) Third 
                party in-kind contributions means the value of non-cash 
                contributions provided by non-Federal third parties. Third party 
                in-kind contributions may be in the form of real property, equipment, 
                supplies and other expendable property, and the value of goods 
                and services directly benefiting and specifically identifiable 
                to the project or program.  
                
                 
              (ll) Unliquidated 
                obligations, for financial reports prepared on a cash 
                basis, means the amount of obligations incurred by the recipient 
                that have not been paid. For reports prepared on an accrued expenditure 
                basis, they represent the amount of obligations incurred by the 
                recipient for which an outlay has not been recorded.  
                
                 
              (mm) Unobligated 
                balance means the portion of the funds authorized by 
                the Federal awarding agency that has not been obligated by the 
                recipient and is determined by deducting the cumulative obligations 
                from the cumulative funds authorized.  
                
                 
              (nn) Unrecovered 
                indirect cost means the difference between the amount 
                awarded and the amount which could have been awarded under the 
                recipient's approved negotiated indirect cost rate.  
                
                 
              (oo) Working 
                capital advance means a procedure where by funds are 
                advanced to the recipient to cover its estimated disbursement 
                needs for a given initial period.  
               
                ___.3 Effect 
                  on other issuances. For awards subject to this Circular, 
                  all administrative requirements of codified program regulations, 
                  program manuals, handbooks and other nonregulatory materials 
                  which are inconsistent with the requirements of this Circular 
                  shall be superseded, except to the extent they are required 
                  by statute, or authorized in accordance with the deviations 
                  provision in Section ___.4.
                ___.4 Deviations. 
                  The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) may grant exceptions 
                  for classes of grants or recipients subject to the requirements 
                  of this Circular when exceptions are not prohibited by statute. 
                  However, in the interest of maximum uniformity, exceptions from 
                  the requirements of this Circular shall be permitted only in 
                  unusual circumstances. Federal awarding agencies may apply more 
                  restrictive requirements to a class of recipients when approved 
                  by OMB. Federal awarding agencies may apply less restrictive 
                  requirements when awarding small awards, except for those requirements 
                  which are statutory. Exceptions on a case-by-case basis may 
                  also be made by Federal awarding agencies.
                ___.5 Subawards. 
                  Unless sections of this Circular specifically exclude subrecipients 
                  from coverage, the provisions of this Circular shall be applied 
                  to subrecipients performing work under awards if such subrecipients 
                  are institutions of higher education, hospitals or other non-profit 
                  organizations. State and local government subrecipients are 
                  subject to the provisions of regulations implementing the grants 
                  management common rule,"Uniform Administrative Requirements 
                  for Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments," 
                  published at 53 FR 8034 (3/11/88).
                SUBPART 
                  B - Pre-Award Requirements 
                ___.10 
                  Purpose. Sections ___.11 
                  through ___.17 prescribes forms and instructions and other pre-award 
                  matters to be used in applying for Federal awards.
                ___.11 
                  Pre-award policies.
                 
              (a) Use 
                of Grants and Cooperative Agreements, and Contracts. In each instance, 
                the Federal awarding agency shall decide on the appropriate award 
                instrument (i.e., grant, cooperative agreement, or contract). 
                The Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act (31 U.S.C. 6301-08) 
                governs the use of grants, cooperative agreements and contracts. 
                A grant or cooperative agreement shall be used only when the principal 
                purpose of a transaction is to accomplish a public purpose of 
                support or stimulation authorized by Federal statute. The statutory 
                criterion for choosing between grants and cooperative agreements 
                is that for the latter, "substantial involvement is expected between 
                the executive agency and the State, local government, or other 
                recipient when carrying out the activity contemplated in the agreement." 
                Contracts shall be used when the principal purpose is acquisition 
                of property or services for the direct benefit or use of the Federal 
                Government.  
                
                 
              (b) Public 
                Notice and Priority Setting. Federal awarding agencies shall notify 
                the public of its intended funding priorities for discretionary 
                grant programs, unless funding priorities are established by Federal 
                statute.  
                
                ___.12 
                  Forms for applying for Federal 
                  assistance.
                 
              (a) Federal 
                awarding agencies shall comply with the applicable report clearance 
                requirements of 5 CFR part 1320, "Controlling Paperwork Burdens 
                on the Public," with regard to all forms used by the Federal awarding 
                agency in place of or as a supplement to the Standard Form 424 
                (SF-424) series.  
                
                 
              (b) Applicants 
                shall use the SF-424 series or those forms and instructions prescribed 
                by the Federal awarding agency.  
               
                 
              (c) For 
                Federal programs covered by E.O. 12372, "Intergovernmental Review 
                of Federal Programs," the applicant shall complete the appropriate 
                sections of the SF-424 (Application for Federal Assistance) indicating 
                whether the application was subject to review by the State Single 
                Point of Contact (SPOC). The name and address of the SPOC for 
                a particular State can be obtained from the Federal awarding agency 
                or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. 
                The SPOC shall advise the applicant whether the program for which 
                application is made has been selected by that State for review. 
                
                 
              (d) Federal 
                awarding agencies that do not use the SF-424 form should indicate 
                whether the application is subject to review by the State under 
                E.O. 12372.  
                
                ___.13 
                  Debarment and suspension. 
                  Federal awarding agencies and recipients shall comply with the 
                  nonprocurement debarment and suspension common rule implementing 
                  E.O.s 12549 and 12689, "Debarment and Suspension." This common 
                  rule restricts subawards and contracts with certain parties 
                  that are debarred, suspended or otherwise excluded from or ineligible 
                  for participation in Federal assistance programs or activities.
                ___.14 
                  Special award conditions. 
                  If an applicant or recipient: (a) has a history of poor performance, 
                  (b) is not financially stable, (c) has a management system that 
                  does not meet the standards prescribed in this Circular, (d) 
                  has not conformed to the terms and conditions of a previous 
                  award, or (e) is not otherwise responsible, Federal awarding 
                  agencies may impose additional requirements as needed, provided 
                  that such applicant or recipient is notified in writing as to: 
                  the nature of the additional requirements, the reason why the 
                  additional requirements are being imposed, the nature of the 
                  corrective action needed, the time allowed for completing the 
                  corrective actions, and the method for requesting reconsideration 
                  of the additional requirements imposed. Any special conditions 
                  shall be promptly removed once the conditions that prompted 
                  them have been corrected.
                ___.15 
                  Metric system of measurement. 
                  The Metric Conversion Act, as amended by the Omnibus Trade and 
                  Competitiveness Act (15 U.S.C. 205) declares that the metric 
                  system is the preferred measurement system for U.S. trade and 
                  commerce. The Act requires each Federal agency to establish 
                  a date or dates in consultation with the Secretary of Commerce, 
                  when the metric system of measurement will be used in the agency's 
                  procurements, grants, and other business-related activities. 
                  Metric implementation may take longer where the use of the system 
                  is initially impractical or likely to cause significant inefficiencies 
                  in the accomplishment of federally-funded activities. Federal 
                  awarding agencies shall follow the provisions of E.O. 12770, 
                  "Metric Usage in Federal Government Programs."
                ___.16 
                  Resource Conservation and Recovery 
                  Act (RCRA) (Pub. L. 94-580 codified at 42 U.S.C. 6962). 
                  Under the Act, any State agency or agency of a political subdivision 
                  of a State which is using appropriated Federal funds must comply 
                  with Section 6002. Section 6002 requires that preference be 
                  given in procurement programs to the purchase of specific products 
                  containing recycled materials identified in guidelines developed 
                  by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) (40 CFR parts 247-254). 
                  Accordingly, State and local institutions of higher education, 
                  hospitals, and non-profit organizations that receive direct 
                  Federal awards or other Federal funds shall give preference 
                  in their procurement programs funded with Federal funds to the 
                  purchase of recycled products pursuant to the EPA guidelines.
                ___.17 
                  Certifications and representations. 
                  Unless prohibited by statute or codified regulation, each Federal 
                  awarding agency is authorized and encouraged to allow recipients 
                  to submit certifications and representations required by statute, 
                  executive order, or regulation on an annual basis, if the recipients 
                  have ongoing and continuing relationships with the agency. Annual 
                  certifications and representations shall be signed by responsible 
                  officials with the authority to ensure recipients' compliance 
                  with the pertinent requirements.
                SUBPART 
                  C - Post-Award Requirements 
                Financial 
                  and Program Management 
                ___.20 
                  Purpose of financial and program 
                  management. Sections ___.21 through ___.28 prescribe standards 
                  for financial management systems, methods for making payments 
                  and rules for: satisfying cost sharing and matching requirements, 
                  accounting for program income, budget revision approvals, making 
                  audits, determining allowability of cost, and establishing fund 
                  availability.
                ___.21 
                  Standards for financial management 
                  systems.
                 
              (a) Federal 
                awarding agencies shall require recipients to relate financial 
                data to performance data and develop unit cost information whenever 
                practical.  
                
                 
              (b) Recipients' 
                financial management systems shall provide for the following. 
            
                 
              (1) Accurate, 
                current and complete disclosure of the financial results of each 
                federally-sponsored project or program in accordance with the 
                reporting requirements set forth in Section ___.52. If a Federal 
                awarding agency requires reporting on an accrual basis from a 
                recipient that maintains its records on other than an accrual 
                basis, the recipient shall not be required to establish an accrual 
                accounting system. These recipients may develop such accrual data 
                for its reports on the basis of an analysis of the documentation 
                on hand.  
                
                 
              (2) Records 
                that identify adequately the source and application of funds for 
                federally-sponsored activities. These records shall contain information 
                pertaining to Federal awards, authorizations, obligations, unobligated 
                balances, assets, outlays, income and interest.  
                
                 
              (3) Effective 
                control over and accountability for all funds, property and other 
                assets. Recipients shall adequately safeguard all such assets 
                and assure they are used solely for authorized purposes.  
               
                 
              (4) Comparison 
                of outlays with budget amounts for each award. Whenever appropriate, 
                financial information should be related to performance and unit 
                cost data.  
                
                 
              (5) Written 
                procedures to minimize the time elapsing between the transfer 
                of funds to the recipient from the U.S. Treasury and the issuance 
                or redemption of checks, warrants or payments by other means for 
                program purposes by the recipient. To the extent that the provisions 
                of the Cash Management Improvement Act (CMIA) (Pub. L. 101-453) 
                govern, payment methods of State agencies, instrumentalities, 
                and fiscal agents shall be consistent with CMIA Treasury-State 
                Agreements or the CMIA default procedures codified at 31 CFR part 
                205, "Withdrawal of Cash from the Treasury for Advances under 
                Federal Grant and Other Programs."  
                
                 
              (6) Written 
                procedures for determining the reasonableness, allocability and 
                allowability of costs in accordance with the provisions of the 
                applicable Federal cost principles and the terms and conditions 
                of the award.  
                
                 
              (7) Accounting 
                records including cost accounting records that are supported by 
                source documentation.  
               
    
                 
              (c) Where 
                the Federal Government guarantees or insures the repayment of 
                money borrowed by the recipient, the Federal awarding agency, 
                at its discretion, may require adequate bonding and insurance 
                if the bonding and insurance requirements of the recipient are 
                not deemed adequate to protect the interest of the Federal Government. 
            
                 
              (d) The 
                Federal awarding agency may require adequate fidelity bond coverage 
                where the recipient lacks sufficient coverage to protect the Federal 
                Government's interest.  
                
                 
              (e) Where 
                bonds are required in the situations described above, the bonds 
                shall be obtained from companies holding certificates of authority 
                as acceptable sureties, as prescribed in 31 CFR part 223, "Surety 
                Companies Doing Business with the United States."  
                
                ___.22 
                  Payment.
                 
              (a) Payment 
                methods shall minimize the time elapsing between the transfer 
                of funds from the United States Treasury and the issuance or redemption 
                of checks, warrants, or payment by other means by the recipients. 
                Payment methods of State agencies or instrumentalities shall be 
                consistent with Treasury-State CMIA agreements or default procedures 
                codified at 31 CFR part 205.  
                
                 
              (b) Recipients 
                are to be paid in advance, provided they maintain or demonstrate 
                the willingness to maintain: (1) written procedures that minimize 
                the time elapsing between the transfer of funds and disbursement 
                by the recipient, and (2) financial management systems that meet 
                the standards for fund control and accountability as established 
                in Section ___.21. Cash advances to a recipient organization shall 
                be limited to the minimum amounts needed and be timed to be in 
                accordance with the actual, immediate cash requirements of the 
                recipient organization in carrying out the purpose of the approved 
                program or project. The timing and amount of cash advances shall 
                be as close as is administratively feasible to the actual disbursements 
                by the recipient organization for direct program or project costs 
                and the proportionate share of any allowable indirect costs.  
               
                 
              (c) Whenever 
                possible, advances shall be consolidated to cover anticipated 
                cash needs for all awards made by the Federal awarding agency 
                to the recipient.  
                
                 
              (1) Advance 
                payment mechanisms include, but are not limited to, Treasury check 
                and electronic funds transfer.  
                
                 
              (2) Advance 
                payment mechanisms are subject to 31 CFR part 205.  
               
                 
              (3) Recipients 
                shall be authorized to submit requests for advances and reimbursements 
                at least monthly when electronic fund transfers are not used.
				 
                 
                 
              (d) Requests 
                for Treasury check advance payment shall be submitted on SF-270, 
                "Request for Advance or Reimbursement," or other forms as may 
                be authorized by OMB. This form is not to be used when Treasury 
                check advance payments are made to the recipient automatically 
                through the use of a predetermined payment schedule or if precluded 
                by special Federal awarding agency instructions for electronic 
                funds transfer.  
                
                 
              (e) Reimbursement 
                is the preferred method when the requirements in paragraph (b) 
                cannot be met. Federal awarding agencies may also use this method 
                on any construction agreement, or if the major portion of the 
                construction project is accomplished through private market financing 
                or Federal loans, and the Federal assistance constitutes a minor 
                portion of the project.  
              
                 
              (1) When 
                the reimbursement method is used, the Federal awarding agency 
                shall make payment within 30 days after receipt of the billing, 
                unless the billing is improper.  
                
                 
              (2) Recipients 
                shall be authorized to submit request for reimbursement at least 
                monthly when electronic funds transfers are not used.
				  
                 
              (f) If a 
                recipient cannot meet the criteria for advance payments and the 
                Federal awarding agency has determined that reimbursement is not 
                feasible because the recipient lacks sufficient working capital, 
                the Federal awarding agency may provide cash on a working capital 
                advance basis. Under this procedure, the Federal awarding agency 
                shall advance cash to the recipient to cover its estimated disbursement 
                needs for an initial period generally geared to the awardee's 
                disbursing cycle. Thereafter, the Federal awarding agency shall 
                reimburse the recipient for its actual cash disbursements. The 
                working capital advance method of payment shall not be used for 
                recipients unwilling or unable to provide timely advances to their 
                subrecipient to meet the subrecipient's actual cash disbursements. 
            
                 
              (g) To the 
                extent available, recipients shall disburse funds available from 
                repayments to and interest earned on a revolving fund, program 
                income, rebates, refunds, contract settlements, audit recoveries 
                and interest earned on such funds before requesting additional 
                cash payments.  
                
                 
              (h) Unless 
                otherwise required by statute, Federal awarding agencies shall 
                not withhold payments for proper charges made by recipients at 
                any time during the project period unless (1) or (2) apply.  
               
                 
              (1) A recipient 
                has failed to comply with the project objectives, the terms and 
                conditions of the award, or Federal reporting requirements.  
                
                 
              (2) The 
                recipient or subrecipient is delinquent in a debt to the United 
                States as defined in OMB Circular A-129, "Managing Federal Credit 
                Programs." Under such conditions, the Federal awarding agency 
                may, upon reasonable notice, inform the recipient that payments 
                shall not be made for obligations incurred after a specified date 
                until the conditions are corrected or the indebtedness to the 
                Federal Government is liquidated.
				  
                 
              (i) Standards 
                governing the use of banks and other institutions as depositories 
                of funds advanced under awards are as follows.  
                
                 
              (1) Except 
                for situations described in paragraph (i)(2), Federal awarding 
                agencies shall not require separate depository accounts for funds 
                provided to a recipient or establish any eligibility requirements 
                for depositories for funds provided to a recipient. However, recipients 
                must be able to account for the receipt, obligation and expenditure 
                of funds.  
              
                 
              (2) Advances 
                of Federal funds shall be deposited and maintained in insured 
                accounts whenever possible.
				  
                 
              (j) Consistent 
                with the national goal of expanding the opportunities for women-owned 
                and minority-owned business enterprises, recipients shall be encouraged 
                to use women- owned and minority-owned banks (a bank which is 
                owned at least 50 percent by women or minority group members). 
            
                 
              (k) Recipients 
                shall maintain advances of Federal funds in interest bearing accounts, 
                unless (1), (2) or (3) apply.  
                
                 
              (1) The 
                recipient receives less than $120,000 in Federal awards per year. 
                
                 
              (2) The 
                best reasonably available interest bearing account would not be 
                expected to earn interest in excess of $250 per year on Federal 
                cash balances.  
                
                 
              (3) The 
                depository would require an average or minimum balance so high 
                that it would not be feasible within the expected Federal and 
                non-Federal cash resources.
				  
                 
              (l) For 
                those entities where CMIA and its implementing regulations do 
                not apply, interest earned on Federal advances deposited in interest 
                bearing accounts shall be remitted annually to Department of Health 
                and Human Services, Payment Management System, Rockville, MD 20852. 
                Interest amounts up to $250 per year may be retained by the recipient 
                for administrative expense. State universities and hospitals shall 
                comply with CMIA, as it pertains to interest. If an entity subject 
                to CMIA uses its own funds to pay pre-award costs for discretionary 
                awards without prior written approval from the Federal awarding 
                agency, it waives its right to recover the interest under CMIA. 
            
                 
              (m) Except 
                as noted elsewhere in this Circular, only the following forms 
                shall be authorized for the recipients in requesting advances 
                and reimbursements. Federal agencies shall not require more than 
                an original and two copies of these forms.  
                
                 
              (1) SF-270, 
                Request for Advance or Reimbursement. Each Federal awarding agency 
                shall adopt the SF-270 as a standard form for all nonconstruction 
                programs when electronic funds transfer or predetermined advance 
                methods are not used. Federal awarding agencies, however, have 
                the option of using this form for construction programs in lieu 
                of the SF-271, "Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for 
                Construction Programs."  
                
                 
              (2) SF-271, 
                Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for Construction Programs. 
                Each Federal awarding agency shall adopt the SF-271 as the standard 
                form to be used for requesting reimbursement for construction 
                programs. However, a Federal awarding agency may substitute the 
                SF-270 when the Federal awarding agency determines that it provides 
                adequate information to meet Federal needs.
				  
                ___.23 
                  Cost sharing or matching.
                 
              (a) All 
                contributions, including cash and third party in-kind, shall be 
                accepted as part of the recipient's cost sharing or matching when 
                such contributions meet all of the following criteria.  
                
                 
              (1) Are 
                verifiable from the recipient's records.  
                 
                 
              (2) Are 
                not included as contributions for any other federally-assisted 
                project or program.  
                
 
                 
              (3) Are 
                necessary and reasonable for proper and efficient accomplishment 
                of project or program objectives.  
                
 
                 
              (4) Are 
                allowable under the applicable cost principles.  
                
 
                 
              (5) Are 
                not paid by the Federal Government under another award, except 
                where authorized by Federal statute to be used for cost sharing 
                or matching.  
                
 
                 
              (6) Are 
                provided for in the approved budget when required by the Federal 
                awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (7) Conform 
                to other provisions of this Circular, as applicable.
  
                 
              (b) Unrecovered 
                indirect costs may be included as part of cost sharing or matching 
                only with the prior approval of the Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (c) Values 
                for recipient contributions of services and property shall be 
                established in accordance with the applicable cost principles. 
                If a Federal awarding agency authorizes recipients to donate buildings 
                or land for construction/facilities acquisition projects or long-term 
                use, the value of the donated property for cost sharing or matching 
                shall be the lesser of (1) or (2).  
                
 
                 
              (1) The 
                certified value of the remaining life of the property recorded 
                in the recipient's accounting records at the time of donation. 
                 
                 
                 
              (2) The 
                current fair market value. However, when there is sufficient justification, 
                the Federal awarding agency may approve the use of the current 
                fair market value of the donated property, even if it exceeds 
                the certified value at the time of donation to the project.
 
                 
                 
              (d) Volunteer 
                services furnished by professional and technical personnel, consultants, 
                and other skilled and unskilled labor may be counted as cost sharing 
                or matching if the service is an integral and necessary part of 
                an approved project or program. Rates for volunteer services shall 
                be consistent with those paid for similar work in the recipient's 
                organization. In those instances in which the required skills 
                are not found in the recipient organization, rates shall be consistent 
                with those paid for similar work in the labor market in which 
                the recipient competes for the kind of services involved. In either 
                case, paid fringe benefits that are reasonable, allowable, and 
                allocable may be included in the valuation.  
                
 
                 
              (e) When 
                an employer other than the recipient furnishes the services of 
                an employee, these services shall be valued at the employee's 
                regular rate of pay (plus an amount of fringe benefits that are 
                reasonable, allowable, and allocable, but exclusive of overhead 
                costs), provided these services are in the same skill for which 
                the employee is normally paid.  
                
 
                 
              (f) Donated 
                supplies may include such items as expendable equipment, office 
                supplies, laboratory supplies or workshop and classroom supplies. 
                Value assessed to donated supplies included in the cost sharing 
                or matching share shall be reasonable and shall not exceed the 
                fair market value of the property at the time of the donation. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (g) The 
                method used for determining cost sharing or matching for donated 
                equipment, buildings and land for which title passes to the recipient 
                may differ according to the purpose of the award, if (1) or (2) 
                apply.  
                
 
                 
              (1) If the 
                purpose of the award is to assist the recipient in the acquisition 
                of equipment, buildings or land, the total value of the donated 
                property may be claimed as cost sharing or matching.  
                 
                 
              (2) If the 
                purpose of the award is to support activities that require the 
                use of equipment, buildings or land, normally only depreciation 
                or use charges for equipment and buildings may be made. However, 
                the full value of equipment or other capital assets and fair rental 
                charges for land may be allowed, provided that the Federal awarding 
                agency has approved the charges.
  
                 
              (h) The 
                value of donated property shall be determined in accordance with 
                the usual accounting policies of the recipient, with the following 
                qualifications.  
                
 
                 
              (1) The 
                value of donated land and buildings shall not exceed its fair 
                market value at the time of donation to the recipient as established 
                by an independent appraiser (e.g., certified real property appraiser 
                or General Services Administration representative) and certified 
                by a responsible official of the recipient.  
                 
                 
              (2) The 
                value of donated equipment shall not exceed the fair market value 
                of equipment of the same age and condition at the time of donation. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (3) The 
                value of donated space shall not exceed the fair rental value 
                of comparable space as established by an independent appraisal 
                of comparable space and facilities in a privately-owned building 
                in the same locality.  
                
 
                 
              (4) The 
                value of loaned equipment shall not exceed its fair rental value. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (5) The 
                following requirements pertain to the recipient's supporting records 
                for in-kind contributions from third parties.  
                
 
                 
              (i) Volunteer 
                services shall be documented and, to the extent feasible, supported 
                by the same methods used by the recipient for its own employees. 
                 
                 
                 
              (ii) The 
                basis for determining the valuation for personal service, material, 
                equipment, buildings and land shall be documented.
 
                 
                ___.24 
                  Program income.
                 
              (a) Federal 
                awarding agencies shall apply the standards set forth in this 
                section in requiring recipient organizations to account for program 
                income related to projects financed in whole or in part with Federal 
                funds.  
                
 
                 
              (b) Except 
                as provided in paragraph (h) below, program income earned during 
                the project period shall be retained by the recipient and, in 
                accordance with Federal awarding agency regulations or the terms 
                and conditions of the award, shall be used in one or more of the 
                ways listed in the following.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Added 
                to funds committed to the project by the Federal awarding agency 
                and recipient and used to further eligible project or program 
                objectives.  
                 
                 
              (2) Used 
                to finance the non-Federal share of the project or program.  
                
 
                 
              (3) Deducted 
                from the total project or program allowable cost in determining 
                the net allowable costs on which the Federal share of costs is 
                based.
  
                 
              (c) When 
                an agency authorizes the disposition of program income as described 
                in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2), program income in excess of any 
                limits stipulated shall be used in accordance with paragraph (b)(3). 
                 
                
 
                 
              (d) In the 
                event that the Federal awarding agency does not specify in its 
                regulations or the terms and conditions of the award how program 
                income is to be used, paragraph (b)(3) shall apply automatically 
                to all projects or programs except research. For awards that support 
                research, paragraph (b)(1) shall apply automatically unless the 
                awarding agency indicates in the terms and conditions another 
                alternative on the award or the recipient is subject to special 
                award conditions, as indicated in Section ___.14.  
                
 
                 
              (e) Unless 
                Federal awarding agency regulations or the terms and conditions 
                of the award provide otherwise, recipients shall have no obligation 
                to the Federal Government regarding program income earned after 
                the end of the project period.  
                
 
                 
              (f) If authorized 
                by Federal awarding agency regulations or the terms and conditions 
                of the award, costs incident to the generation of program income 
                may be deducted from gross income to determine program income, 
                provided these costs have not been charged to the award.  
                
 
                 
              (g) Proceeds 
                from the sale of property shall be handled in accordance with 
                the requirements of the Property Standards (See Sections ___.30 
                through ___.37).  
                
 
                 
              (h) Unless 
                Federal awarding agency regulations or the terms and condition 
                of the award provide otherwise, recipients shall have no obligation 
                to the Federal Government with respect to program income earned 
                from license fees and royalties for copyrighted material, patents, 
                patent applications, trademarks, and inventions produced under 
                an award. However, Patent and Trademark Amendments (35 U.S.C. 
                18) apply to inventions made under an experimental, developmental, 
                or research award.  
                
 
                ___.25 
                  Revision of budget and program 
                  plans.
                 
              (a) The 
                budget plan is the financial expression of the project or program 
                as approved during the award process. It may include either the 
                Federal and non-Federal share, or only the Federal share, depending 
                upon Federal awarding agency requirements. It shall be related 
                to performance for program evaluation purposes whenever appropriate. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (b) Recipients 
                are required to report deviations from budget and program plans, 
                and request prior approvals for budget and program plan revisions, 
                in accordance with this section.  
                
 
                 
              (c) For 
                nonconstruction awards, recipients shall request prior approvals 
                from Federal awarding agencies for one or more of the following 
                program or budget related reasons.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Change 
                in the scope or the objective of the project or program (even 
                if there is no associated budget revision requiring prior written 
                approval).  
                 
                 
              (2) Change 
                in a key person specified in the application or award document. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (3) The 
                absence for more than three months, or a 25 percent reduction 
                in time devoted to the project, by the approved project director 
                or principal investigator.  
                
 
                 
              (4) The 
                need for additional Federal funding.  
                
 
                 
              (5) The 
                transfer of amounts budgeted for indirect costs to absorb increases 
                in direct costs, or vice versa, if approval is required by the 
                Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (6) The 
                inclusion, unless waived by the Federal awarding agency, of costs 
                that require prior approval in accordance with OMB Circular A-21, 
                "Cost Principles for Educational Institutions," OMB Circular A-122, 
                "Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations," or 45 CFR part 
                74 Appendix E, "Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to 
                Research and Development under Grants and Contracts with Hospitals," 
                or 48 CFR part 31, "Contract Cost Principles and Procedures," 
                as applicable.  
                
 
                 
              (7) The 
                transfer of funds allotted for training allowances (direct payment 
                to trainees) to other categories of expense.  
                
 
                 
              (8) Unless 
                described in the application and funded in the approved awards, 
                the subaward, transfer or contracting out of any work under an 
                award. This provision does not apply to the purchase of supplies, 
                material, equipment or general support services.
  
                 
              (d) No other 
                prior approval requirements for specific items may be imposed 
                unless a deviation has been approved by OMB.  
                
 
                 
              (e) Except 
                for requirements listed in paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(4) of this 
                section, Federal awarding agencies are authorized, at their option, 
                to waive cost-related and administrative prior written approvals 
                required by this Circular and OMB Circulars A-21 and A-122. Such 
                waivers may include authorizing recipients to do any one or more 
                of the following.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Incur 
                pre-award costs 90 calendar days prior to award or more than 90 
                calendar days with the prior approval of the Federal awarding 
                agency. All pre-award costs are incurred at the recipient's risk 
                (i.e., the Federal awarding agency is under no obligation to reimburse 
                such costs if for any reason the recipient does not receive an 
                award or if the award is less than anticipated and inadequate 
                to cover such costs).  
                 
                 
              (2) Initiate 
                a one-time extension of the expiration date of the award of up 
                to 12 months unless one or more of the following conditions apply. 
                For one-time extensions, the recipient must notify the Federal 
                awarding agency in writing with the supporting reasons and revised 
                expiration date at least 10 days before the expiration date specified 
                in the award. This one-time extension may not be exercised merely 
                for the purpose of using unobligated balances.  
                
 
                 
              (i) The 
                terms and conditions of award prohibit the extension.  
                 
                 
              (ii) The 
                extension requires additional Federal funds.  
                
 
                 
              (iii) The 
                extension involves any change in the approved objectives or scope 
                of the project.
  
                 
              (3) Carry 
                forward unobligated balances to subsequent funding periods.  
                
 
                 
              (4) For 
                awards that support research, unless the Federal awarding agency 
                provides otherwise in the award or in the agency's regulations, 
                the prior approval requirements described in paragraph (e) are 
                automatically waived (i.e., recipients need not obtain such prior 
                approvals) unless one of the conditions included in paragraph 
                (e)(2) applies.
  
                 
              (f) The 
                Federal awarding agency may, at its option, restrict the transfer 
                of funds among direct cost categories or programs, functions and 
                activities for awards in which the Federal share of the project 
                exceeds $100,000 and the cumulative amount of such transfers exceeds 
                or is expected to exceed 10 percent of the total budget as last 
                approved by the Federal awarding agency. No Federal awarding agency 
                shall permit a transfer that would cause any Federal appropriation 
                or part thereof to be used for purposes other than those consistent 
                with the original intent of the appropriation.  
                
 
                 
              (g) All 
                other changes to nonconstruction budgets, except for the changes 
                described in paragraph (j), do not require prior approval.  
                
 
                 
              (h) For 
                construction awards, recipients shall request prior written approval 
                promptly from Federal awarding agencies for budget revisions whenever 
                (1), (2) or (3) apply.  
                
 
                 
              (1) The 
                revision results from changes in the scope or the objective of 
                the project or program.  
                 
                 
              (2) The 
                need arises for additional Federal funds to complete the project. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (3) A revision 
                is desired which involves specific costs for which prior written 
                approval requirements may be imposed consistent with applicable 
                OMB cost principles listed in Section ___.27.  
                
 
                  
                 
              (i) No other 
                prior approval requirements for specific items may be imposed 
                unless a deviation has been approved by OMB.  
                
 
              (j) When 
                a Federal awarding agency makes an award that provides support 
                for both construction and nonconstruction work, the Federal awarding 
                agency may require the recipient to request prior approval from 
                the Federal awarding agency before making any fund or budget transfers 
                between the two types of work supported.  
                
 
                 
              (k) For 
                both construction and nonconstruction awards, Federal awarding 
                agencies shall require recipients to notify the Federal awarding 
                agency in writing promptly whenever the amount of Federal authorized 
                funds is expected to exceed the needs of the recipient for the 
                project period by more than $5000 or five percent of the Federal 
                award, whichever is greater. This notification shall not be required 
                if an application for additional funding is submitted for a continuation 
                award.  
                
 
                 
              (l) When 
                requesting approval for budget revisions, recipients shall use 
                the budget forms that were used in the application unless the 
                Federal awarding agency indicates a letter of request suffices. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (m) Within 
                30 calendar days from the date of receipt of the request for budget 
                revisions, Federal awarding agencies shall review the request 
                and notify the recipient whether the budget revisions have been 
                approved. If the revision is still under consideration at the 
                end of 30 calendar days, the Federal awarding agency shall inform 
                the recipient in writing of the date when the recipient may expect 
                the decision.  
                
 
                ___.26 
                  Non-Federal audits.
                 
              (a) Recipients 
                and subrecipients that are institutions of higher education or 
                other non-profit organizations (including hospitals) shall be 
                subject to the audit requirements contained in the Single Audit 
                Act Amendments of 1996 (31 USC 7501-7507) and revised OMB Circular 
                A-133, "Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations." 
                 
                
 
                 
              (b) State 
                and local governments shall be subject to the audit requirements 
                contained in the Single Audit Act Amendments of 1996 (31 USC 7501-7507) 
                and revised OMB Circular A-133, "Audits of States, Local Governments, 
                and Non-Profit Organizations."  
                
 
                 
              (c) For-profit 
                hospitals not covered by the audit provisions of revised OMB Circular 
                A-133 shall be subject to the audit requirements of the Federal 
                awarding agencies.  
                
 
                 
              (d) Commercial 
                organizations shall be subject to the audit requirements of the 
                Federal awarding agency or the prime recipient as incorporated 
                into the award document.  
                
 
                ___.27 
                  Allowable costs. For each 
                  kind of recipient, there is a set of Federal principles for 
                  determining allowable costs. Allowability of costs shall be 
                  determined in accordance with the cost principles applicable 
                  to the entity incurring the costs. Thus, allowability of costs 
                  incurred by State, local or federally-recognized Indian tribal 
                  governments is determined in accordance with the provisions 
                  of OMB Circular A-87, "Cost Principles for State, Local, and 
                  Indian Tribal Governments." The allowability of costs incurred 
                  by non-profit organizations is determined in accordance with 
                  the provisions of OMB Circular A-122, "Cost Principles for Non-Profit 
                  Organizations." The allowability of costs incurred by institutions 
                  of higher education is determined in accordance with the provisions 
                  of OMB Circular A-21, "Cost Principles for Educational Institutions." 
                  The allowability of costs incurred by hospitals is determined 
                  in accordance with the provisions of Appendix E of 45 CFR part 
                  74, "Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research 
                  and Development Under Grants and Contracts with Hospitals." 
                  The allowability of costs incurred by commercial organizations 
                  and those non-profit organizations listed in Attachment C to 
                  Circular A-122 is determined in accordance with the provisions 
                  of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) at 48 CFR part 31.
                ___.28 
                  Period of availability of funds. 
                  Where a funding period is specified, a recipient may charge 
                  to the grant only allowable costs resulting from obligations 
                  incurred during the funding period and any pre-award costs authorized 
                  by the Federal awarding agency.
                ___.29 
                  Conditional exemptions.
                 
              (a) OMB 
                authorizes conditional exemption from OMB administrative requirements 
                and cost principles circulars for certain Federal programs with 
                statutorily-authorized consolidated planning and consolidated 
                administrative funding, that are identified by a Federal agency 
                and approved by the head of the Executive department or establishment. 
                A Federal agency shall consult with OMB during its consideration 
                of whether to grant such an exemption.  
                
 
                 
              (b) To promote 
                efficiency in State and local program administration, when Federal 
                non-entitlement programs with common purposes have specific statutorily-authorized 
                consolidated planning and consolidated administrative funding 
                and where most of the State agency's resources come from non-Federal 
                sources, Federal agencies may exempt these covered State-administered, 
                non-entitlement grant programs from certain OMB grants management 
                requirements. The exemptions would be from all but the allocability 
                of costs provisions of OMB Circulars A-87 (Attachment A, subsection 
                C.3), "Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments," 
                A-21 (Section C, subpart 4), "Cost Principles for Educational 
                Institutions," and A-122 (Attachment A, subsection A.4), "Cost 
                Principles for Non-Profit Organizations," and from all of the 
                administrative requirements provisions of OMB Circular A-110, 
                "Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements 
                with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit 
                Organizations," and the agencies' grants management common rule. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (c) When 
                a Federal agency provides this flexibility, as a prerequisite 
                to a State's exercising this option, a State must adopt its own 
                written fiscal and administrative requirements for expending and 
                accounting for all funds, which are consistent with the provisions 
                of OMB Circular A-87, and extend such policies to all subrecipients. 
                These fiscal and administrative requirements must be sufficiently 
                specific to ensure that: funds are used in compliance with all 
                applicable Federal statutory and regulatory provisions, costs 
                are reasonable and necessary for operating these programs, and 
                funds are not be used for general expenses required to carry out 
                other responsibilities of a State or its subrecipients.  
                
 
                Property 
                  Standards 
                ___.30 
                  Purpose of property standards. 
                  Sections ___.31 through ___.37 set forth uniform standards governing 
                  management and disposition of property furnished by the Federal 
                  Government whose cost was charged to a project supported by 
                  a Federal award. Federal awarding agencies shall require recipients 
                  to observe these standards under awards and shall not impose 
                  additional requirements, unless specifically required by Federal 
                  statute. The recipient may use its own property management standards 
                  and procedures provided it observes the provisions of Sections 
                  ___.31 through ___.37.
                ___.31 
                  Insurance coverage. 
                  Recipients shall, at a minimum, provide the equivalent insurance 
                  coverage for real property and equipment acquired with Federal 
                  funds as provided to property owned by the recipient. Federally-owned 
                  property need not be insured unless required by the terms and 
                  conditions of the award.
                ___.32 
                  Real property. Each 
                  Federal awarding agency shall prescribe requirements for recipients 
                  concerning the use and disposition of real property acquired 
                  in whole or in part under awards. Unless otherwise provided 
                  by statute, such requirements, at a minimum, shall contain the 
                  following.
                 
              (a) Title 
                to real property shall vest in the recipient subject to the condition 
                that the recipient shall use the real property for the authorized 
                purpose of the project as long as it is needed and shall not encumber 
                the property without approval of the Federal awarding agency. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (b) The 
                recipient shall obtain written approval by the Federal awarding 
                agency for the use of real property in other federally-sponsored 
                projects when the recipient determines that the property is no 
                longer needed for the purpose of the original project. Use in 
                other projects shall be limited to those under federally-sponsored 
                projects (i.e., awards) or programs that have purposes consistent 
                with those authorized for support by the Federal awarding agency. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (c) When 
                the real property is no longer needed as provided in paragraphs 
                (a) and (b), the recipient shall request disposition instructions 
                from the Federal awarding agency or its successor Federal awarding 
                agency. The Federal awarding agency shall observe one or more 
                of the following disposition instructions.  
                
 
                 
              (1) The 
                recipient may be permitted to retain title without further obligation 
                to the Federal Government after it compensates the Federal Government 
                for that percentage of the current fair market value of the property 
                attributable to the Federal participation in the project.  
                 
                 
              (2) The 
                recipient may be directed to sell the property under guidelines 
                provided by the Federal awarding agency and pay the Federal Government 
                for that percentage of the current fair market value of the property 
                attributable to the Federal participation in the project (after 
                deducting actual and reasonable selling and fix-up expenses, if 
                any, from the sales proceeds). When the recipient is authorized 
                or required to sell the property, proper sales procedures shall 
                be established that provide for competition to the extent practicable 
                and result in the highest possible return.  
                
 
                 
              (3) The 
                recipient may be directed to transfer title to the property to 
                the Federal Government or to an eligible third party provided 
                that, in such cases, the recipient shall be entitled to compensation 
                for its attributable percentage of the current fair market value 
                of the property.
  
                ___.33 
                  Federally-owned and exempt 
                  property.
                 
              (a) Federally-owned 
                property.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Title 
                to federally-owned property remains vested in the Federal Government. 
                Recipients shall submit annually an inventory listing of federally-owned 
                property in their custody to the Federal awarding agency. Upon 
                completion of the award or when the property is no longer needed, 
                the recipient shall report the property to the Federal awarding 
                agency for further Federal agency utilization.  
                 
                 
              (2) If the 
                Federal awarding agency has no further need for the property, 
                it shall be declared excess and reported to the General Services 
                Administration, unless the Federal awarding agency has statutory 
                authority to dispose of the property by alternative methods (e.g., 
                the authority provided by the Federal Technology Transfer Act 
                (15 U.S.C. 3710 (I)) to donate research equipment to educational 
                and non-profit organizations in accordance with E.O. 12821, "Improving 
                Mathematics and Science Education in Support of the National Education 
                Goals.") Appropriate instructions shall be issued to the recipient 
                by the Federal awarding agency.
  
                 
              (b) Exempt 
                property. When statutory authority exists, the Federal awarding 
                agency has the option to vest title to property acquired with 
                Federal funds in the recipient without further obligation to the 
                Federal Government and under conditions the Federal awarding agency 
                considers appropriate. Such property is "exempt property." Should 
                a Federal awarding agency not establish conditions, title to exempt 
                property upon acquisition shall vest in the recipient without 
                further obligation to the Federal Government.  
                
 
                ___.34 
                  Equipment.
                 
              (a) Title 
                to equipment acquired by a recipient with Federal funds shall 
                vest in the recipient, subject to conditions of this section. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (b) The 
                recipient shall not use equipment acquired with Federal funds 
                to provide services to non-Federal outside organizations for a 
                fee that is less than private companies charge for equivalent 
                services, unless specifically authorized by Federal statute, for 
                as long as the Federal Government retains an interest in the equipment. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (c) The 
                recipient shall use the equipment in the project or program for 
                which it was acquired as long as needed, whether or not the project 
                or program continues to be supported by Federal funds and shall 
                not encumber the property without approval of the Federal awarding 
                agency. When no longer needed for the original project or program, 
                the recipient shall use the equipment in connection with its other 
                federally-sponsored activities, in the following order of priority: 
                (i) Activities sponsored by the Federal awarding agency which 
                funded the original project, then (ii) activities sponsored by 
                other Federal awarding agencies.  
                
 
                 
              (d) During 
                the time that equipment is used on the project or program for 
                which it was acquired, the recipient shall make it available for 
                use on other projects or programs if such other use will not interfere 
                with the work on the project or program for which the equipment 
                was originally acquired. First preference for such other use shall 
                be given to other projects or programs sponsored by the Federal 
                awarding agency that financed the equipment; second preference 
                shall be given to projects or programs sponsored by other Federal 
                awarding agencies. If the equipment is owned by the Federal Government, 
                use on other activities not sponsored by the Federal Government 
                shall be permissible if authorized by the Federal awarding agency. 
                User charges shall be treated as program income.  
                
 
                 
              (e) When 
                acquiring replacement equipment, the recipient may use the equipment 
                to be replaced as trade-in or sell the equipment and use the proceeds 
                to offset the costs of the replacement equipment subject to the 
                approval of the Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (f) The 
                recipient's property management standards for equipment acquired 
                with Federal funds and federally-owned equipment shall include 
                all of the following.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Equipment 
                records shall be maintained accurately and shall include the following 
                information.  
                 
                 
              (i) A description 
                of the equipment.  
                 
                 
              (ii) Manufacturer's 
                serial number, model number, Federal stock number, national stock 
                number, or other identification number.  
                
 
                 
              (iii) Source 
                of the equipment, including the award number.  
                
 
                 
              (iv) Whether 
                title vests in the recipient or the Federal Government.  
                
 
                 
              (v) Acquisition 
                date (or date received, if the equipment was furnished by the 
                Federal Government) and cost.  
                
 
                 
              (vi) Information 
                from which one can calculate the percentage of Federal participation 
                in the cost of the equipment (not applicable to equipment furnished 
                by the Federal Government).  
                
 
                 
              (vii) Location 
                and condition of the equipment and the date the information was 
                reported.  
                
 
                 
              (viii) Unit 
                acquisition cost.  
                
 
                 
              (ix) Ultimate 
                disposition data, including date of disposal and sales price or 
                the method used to determine current fair market value where a 
                recipient compensates the Federal awarding agency for its share.
 
                 
                 
              (2) Equipment 
                owned by the Federal Government shall be identified to indicate 
                Federal ownership.  
                
 
                 
              (3) A physical 
                inventory of equipment shall be taken and the results reconciled 
                with the equipment records at least once every two years. Any 
                differences between quantities determined by the physical inspection 
                and those shown in the accounting records shall be investigated 
                to determine the causes of the difference. The recipient shall, 
                in connection with the inventory, verify the existence, current 
                utilization, and continued need for the equipment.  
                
 
                 
              (4) A control 
                system shall be in effect to insure adequate safeguards to prevent 
                loss, damage, or theft of the equipment. Any loss, damage, or 
                theft of equipment shall be investigated and fully documented; 
                if the equipment was owned by the Federal Government, the recipient 
                shall promptly notify the Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (5) Adequate 
                maintenance procedures shall be implemented to keep the equipment 
                in good condition.  
                
 
                 
              (6) Where 
                the recipient is authorized or required to sell the equipment, 
                proper sales procedures shall be established which provide for 
                competition to the extent practicable and result in the highest 
                possible return.
  
                 
              (g) When 
                the recipient no longer needs the equipment, the equipment may 
                be used for other activities in accordance with the following 
                standards. For equipment with a current per unit fair market value 
                of $5000 or more, the recipient may retain the equipment for other 
                uses provided that compensation is made to the original Federal 
                awarding agency or its successor. The amount of compensation shall 
                be computed by applying the percentage of Federal participation 
                in the cost of the original project or program to the current 
                fair market value of the equipment. If the recipient has no need 
                for the equipment, the recipient shall request disposition instructions 
                from the Federal awarding agency. The Federal awarding agency 
                shall determine whether the equipment can be used to meet the 
                agency's requirements. If no requirement exists within that agency, 
                the availability of the equipment shall be reported to the General 
                Services Administration by the Federal awarding agency to determine 
                whether a requirement for the equipment exists in other Federal 
                agencies. The Federal awarding agency shall issue instructions 
                to the recipient no later than 120 calendar days after the recipient's 
                request and the following procedures shall govern.  
                
 
                 
              (1) If so 
                instructed or if disposition instructions are not issued within 
                120 calendar days after the recipient's request, the recipient 
                shall sell the equipment and reimburse the Federal awarding agency 
                an amount computed by applying to the sales proceeds the percentage 
                of Federal participation in the cost of the original project or 
                program. However, the recipient shall be permitted to deduct and 
                retain from the Federal share $500 or ten percent of the proceeds, 
                whichever is less, for the recipient's selling and handling expenses. 
                 
                 
                 
              (2) If the 
                recipient is instructed to ship the equipment elsewhere, the recipient 
                shall be reimbursed by the Federal Government by an amount which 
                is computed by applying the percentage of the recipient's participation 
                in the cost of the original project or program to the current 
                fair market value of the equipment, plus any reasonable shipping 
                or interim storage costs incurred.  
                
 
                 
              (3) If the 
                recipient is instructed to otherwise dispose of the equipment, 
                the recipient shall be reimbursed by the Federal awarding agency 
                for such costs incurred in its disposition.  
                
 
                 
              (4) The 
                Federal awarding agency may reserve the right to transfer the 
                title to the Federal Government or to a third party named by the 
                Federal Government when such third party is otherwise eligible 
                under existing statutes. Such transfer shall be subject to the 
                following standards.  
                
 
                 
              (i) The 
                equipment shall be appropriately identified in the award or otherwise 
                made known to the recipient in writing.  
                 
                 
              (ii) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall issue disposition instructions within 
                120 calendar days after receipt of a final inventory. The final 
                inventory shall list all equipment acquired with grant funds and 
                federally-owned equipment. If the Federal awarding agency fails 
                to issue disposition instructions within the 120 calendar day 
                period, the recipient shall apply the standards of this section, 
                as appropriate.  
                
 
                 
              (iii) When 
                the Federal awarding agency exercises its right to take title, 
                the equipment shall be subject to the provisions for federally-owned 
                equipment.
  
                ___.35 
                  Supplies and other expendable 
                  property.
                 
              (a) Title 
                to supplies and other expendable property shall vest in the recipient 
                upon acquisition. If there is a residual inventory of unused supplies 
                exceeding $5000 in total aggregate value upon termination or completion 
                of the project or program and the supplies are not needed for 
                any other federally-sponsored project or program, the recipient 
                shall retain the supplies for use on non-Federal sponsored activities 
                or sell them, but shall, in either case, compensate the Federal 
                Government for its share. The amount of compensation shall be 
                computed in the same manner as for equipment.  
                
 
                 
              (b) The 
                recipient shall not use supplies acquired with Federal funds to 
                provide services to non-Federal outside organizations for a fee 
                that is less than private companies charge for equivalent services, 
                unless specifically authorized by Federal statute as long as the 
                Federal Government retains an interest in the supplies.  
                
 
                ___.36 
                  Intangible property.
                 
              (a) The 
                recipient may copyright any work that is subject to copyright 
                and was developed, or for which ownership was purchased, under 
                an award. The Federal awarding agency(ies) reserve 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.  
                
 
                 
              (b) Recipients 
                are subject to applicable regulations governing patents and inventions, 
                including government-wide regulations issued by the Department 
                of Commerce at 37 CFR part 401, "Rights to Inventions Made by 
                Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under Government 
                Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements."  
                
 
                 
              (c) The 
                Federal Government has the right to:  
                
 
                 
              (1) obtain, 
                reproduce, publish or otherwise use the data first produced under 
                an award; and  
                 
                 
              (2) authorize 
                others to receive, reproduce, publish, or otherwise use such data 
                for Federal purposes.  
                
 
                  
                 
              (d) (1) 
                In addition, in response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 
                request for research data relating to published research findings 
                produced under an award that were used by the Federal Government 
                in developing an agency action that has the force and effect of 
                law, the Federal awarding agency shall request, and the recipient 
                shall provide, within a reasonable time, the research data so 
                that they can be made available to the public through the procedures 
                established under the FOIA. If the Federal awarding agency obtains 
                the research data solely in response to a FOIA request, the agency 
                may charge the requester a reasonable fee equaling the full incremental 
                cost of obtaining the research data. This fee should reflect costs 
                incurred by the agency, the recipient, and applicable subrecipients. 
                This fee is in addition to any fees the agency may assess under 
                the FOIA (5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)).  
                
 
                 
              (2) The 
                following definitions apply for purposes of paragraph (d) of this 
                section:  
                 
                 
              (i) Research 
                data is defined as the recorded factual material commonly 
                accepted in the scientific community as necessary to validate 
                research findings, but not any of the following: preliminary analyses, 
                drafts of scientific papers, plans for future research, peer reviews, 
                or communications with colleagues. This "recorded" material excludes 
                physical objects (e.g., laboratory samples). Research data also 
                do not include:  
                 
                 
              (A) Trade 
                secrets, commercial information, materials necessary to be held 
                confidential by a researcher until they are published, or similar 
                information which is protected under law; and  
                 
                 
              (B) Personnel 
                and medical information and similar information the disclosure 
                of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal 
                privacy, such as information that could be used to identify a 
                particular person in a research study.
  
                 
              (ii) Published 
                is defined as either when:  
                
 
                 
              (A) Research 
                findings are published in a peer-reviewed scientific or technical 
                journal; or  
                 
                 
              (B) A Federal 
                agency publicly and officially cites the research findings in 
                support of an agency action that has the force and effect of law.
 
                 
                 
              (iii) Used 
                by the Federal Government in developing an agency action that 
                has the force and effect of law is defined as when an agency 
                publicly and officially cites the research findings in support 
                of an agency action that has the force and effect of law.
 
                 
                 
              (e) Title 
                to intangible property and debt instruments acquired under an 
                award or subaward vests upon acquisition in the recipient. The 
                recipient shall use that property for the originally-authorized 
                purpose, and the recipient shall not encumber the property without 
                approval of the Federal awarding agency. When no longer needed 
                for the originally authorized purpose, disposition of the intangible 
                property shall occur in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 
                ___.34(g).  
                
 
                ___.37 
                  Property trust relationship. 
                  Real property, equipment, intangible property and debt instruments 
                  that are acquired or improved with Federal funds shall be held 
                  in trust by the recipient as trustee for the beneficiaries of 
                  the project or program under which the property was acquired 
                  or improved. Agencies may require recipients to record liens 
                  or other appropriate notices of record to indicate that personal 
                  or real property has been acquired or improved with Federal 
                  funds and that use and disposition conditions apply to the property.
                Procurement 
                  Standards 
                ___.40 
                  Purpose of procurement 
                  standards. Sections ___.41 through ___.48 set forth standards 
                  for use by recipients in establishing procedures for the procurement 
                  of supplies and other expendable property, equipment, real property 
                  and other services with Federal funds. These standards are furnished 
                  to ensure that such materials and services are obtained in an 
                  effective manner and in compliance with the provisions of applicable 
                  Federal statutes and executive orders. No additional procurement 
                  standards or requirements shall be imposed by the Federal awarding 
                  agencies upon recipients, unless specifically required by Federal 
                  statute or executive order or approved by OMB.
                ___.41 
                  Recipient responsibilities. 
                  The standards contained in this section do not relieve the recipient 
                  of the contractual responsibilities arising under its contract(s). 
                  The recipient is the responsible authority, without recourse 
                  to the Federal awarding agency, regarding the settlement and 
                  satisfaction of all contractual and administrative issues arising 
                  out of procurements entered into in support of an award or other 
                  agreement. This includes disputes, claims, protests of award, 
                  source evaluation or other matters of a contractual nature. 
                  Matters concerning violation of statute are to be referred to 
                  such Federal, State or local authority as may have proper jurisdiction.
                ___.42 
                  Codes of conduct. 
                  The recipient shall maintain written standards of conduct governing 
                  the performance of its employees engaged in the award and administration 
                  of contracts. No employee, officer, or agent shall participate 
                  in the selection, award, or administration of a contract supported 
                  by Federal funds if a real or apparent conflict of interest 
                  would be involved. Such a conflict would arise when the employee, 
                  officer, or agent, any member of his or her immediate family, 
                  his or her partner, or an organization which employs or is about 
                  to employ any of the parties indicated herein, has a financial 
                  or other interest in the firm selected for an award. The officers, 
                  employees, and agents of the recipient shall neither solicit 
                  nor accept gratuities, favors, or anything of monetary value 
                  from contractors, or parties to subagreements. However, recipients 
                  may set standards for situations in which the financial interest 
                  is not substantial or the gift is an unsolicited item of nominal 
                  value. The standards of conduct shall provide for disciplinary 
                  actions to be applied for violations of such standards by officers, 
                  employees, or agents of the recipient.
                ___.43 
                  Competition. All 
                  procurement transactions shall be conducted in a manner to provide, 
                  to the maximum extent practical, open and free competition. 
                  The recipient shall be alert to organizational conflicts of 
                  interest as well as noncompetitive practices among contractors 
                  that may restrict or eliminate competition or otherwise restrain 
                  trade. In order to ensure objective contractor performance and 
                  eliminate unfair competitive advantage, contractors that develop 
                  or draft specifications, requirements, statements of work, invitations 
                  for bids and/or requests for proposals shall be excluded from 
                  competing for such procurements. Awards shall be made to the 
                  bidder or offeror whose bid or offer is responsive to the solicitation 
                  and is most advantageous to the recipient, price, quality and 
                  other factors considered. Solicitations shall clearly set forth 
                  all requirements that the bidder or offeror shall fulfill in 
                  order for the bid or offer to be evaluated by the recipient. 
                  Any and all bids or offers may be rejected when it is in the 
                  recipient's interest to do so.
                ___.44 
                  Procurement procedures.
                 
              (a) All 
                recipients shall establish written procurement procedures. These 
                procedures shall provide for, at a minimum, that (1), (2) and 
                (3) apply.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Recipients 
                avoid purchasing unnecessary items.  
                 
                 
              (2) Where 
                appropriate, an analysis is made of lease and purchase alternatives 
                to determine which would be the most economical and practical 
                procurement for the Federal Government.  
                
 
                 
              (3) Solicitations 
                for goods and services provide for all of the following.  
                
 
                 
              (i) A clear 
                and accurate description of the technical requirements for the 
                material, product or service to be procured. In competitive procurements, 
                such a description shall not contain features which unduly restrict 
                competition.  
                 
                 
              (ii) Requirements 
                which the bidder/offeror must fulfill and all other factors to 
                be used in evaluating bids or proposals.  
                
 
                 
              (iii) A 
                description, whenever practicable, of technical requirements in 
                terms of functions to be performed or performance required, including 
                the range of acceptable characteristics or minimum acceptable 
                standards.  
                
 
                 
              (iv) The 
                specific features of "brand name or equal" descriptions that bidders 
                are required to meet when such items are included in the solicitation. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (v) The 
                acceptance, to the extent practicable and economically feasible, 
                of products and services dimensioned in the metric system of measurement. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (vi) Preference, 
                to the extent practicable and economically feasible, for products 
                and services that conserve natural resources and protect the environment 
                and are energy efficient.
  
                 
              (b) Positive 
                efforts shall be made by recipients to utilize small businesses, 
                minority-owned firms, and women's business enterprises, whenever 
                possible. Recipients of Federal awards shall take all of the following 
                steps to further this goal.  
                
 
                 
              (1) Ensure 
                that small businesses, minority-owned firms, and women's business 
                enterprises are used to the fullest extent practicable.  
                 
                 
              (2) Make 
                information on forthcoming opportunities available and arrange 
                time frames for purchases and contracts to encourage and facilitate 
                participation by small businesses, minority-owned firms, and women's 
                business enterprises.  
                
 
                 
              (3) Consider 
                in the contract process whether firms competing for larger contracts 
                intend to subcontract with small businesses, minority-owned firms, 
                and women's business enterprises.  
                
 
                 
              (4) Encourage 
                contracting with consortiums of small businesses, minority-owned 
                firms and women's business enterprises when a contract is too 
                large for one of these firms to handle individually.  
                
 
                 
              (5) Use 
                the services and assistance, as appropriate, of such organizations 
                as the Small Business Administration and the Department of Commerce's 
                Minority Business Development Agency in the solicitation and utilization 
                of small businesses, minority- owned firms and women's business 
                enterprises.
  
                 
              (c) The 
                type of procuring instruments used (e.g., fixed price contracts, 
                cost reimbursable contracts, purchase orders, and incentive contracts) 
                shall be determined by the recipient but shall be appropriate 
                for the particular procurement and for promoting the best interest 
                of the program or project involved. The "cost-plus-a-percentage-of-cost" 
                or "percentage of construction cost" methods of contracting shall 
                not be used.  
                
 
                 
              (d) Contracts 
                shall be made only with responsible contractors who possess the 
                potential ability to perform successfully under the terms and 
                conditions of the proposed procurement. Consideration shall be 
                given to such matters as contractor integrity, record of past 
                performance, financial and technical resources or accessibility 
                to other necessary resources. In certain circumstances, contracts 
                with certain parties are restricted by agencies' implementation 
                of E.O.s 12549 and 12689, "Debarment and Suspension."  
                
 
                 
              (e) Recipients 
                shall, on request, make available for the Federal awarding agency, 
                pre-award review and procurement documents, such as request for 
                proposals or invitations for bids, independent cost estimates, 
                etc., when any of the following conditions apply.  
                
 
                 
              (1) A recipient's 
                procurement procedures or operation fails to comply with the procurement 
                standards in the Federal awarding agency's implementation of this 
                Circular.  
                 
                 
              (2) The 
                procurement is expected to exceed the small purchase threshold 
                fixed at 41 U.S.C. 403 (11) (currently $25,000) and is to be awarded 
                without competition or only one bid or offer is received in response 
                to a solicitation.  
                
 
                 
              (3) The 
                procurement, which is expected to exceed the small purchase threshold, 
                specifies a "brand name" product.  
                
 
                 
              (4) The 
                proposed award over the small purchase threshold is to be awarded 
                to other than the apparent low bidder under a sealed bid procurement. 
                 
                
 
                 
              (5) A proposed 
                contract modification changes the scope of a contract or increases 
                the contract amount by more than the amount of the small purchase 
                threshold.  
                
 
                  
                ___.45 
                  Cost and price analysis. 
                  Some form of cost or price analysis shall be made and documented 
                  in the procurement files in connection with every procurement 
                  action. Price analysis may be accomplished in various ways, 
                  including the comparison of price quotations submitted, market 
                  prices and similar indicia, together with discounts. Cost analysis 
                  is the review and evaluation of each element of cost to determine 
                  reasonableness, allocability and allowability.
                ___.46 
                  Procurement records. 
                  Procurement records and files for purchases in excess of the 
                  small purchase threshold shall include the following at a minimum: 
                  (a) basis for contractor selection, (b) justification for lack 
                  of competition when competitive bids or offers are not obtained, 
                  and (c) basis for award cost or price.
                ___.47 
                  Contract administration. 
                  A system for contract administration shall be maintained to 
                  ensure contractor conformance with the terms, conditions and 
                  specifications of the contract and to ensure adequate and timely 
                  follow up of all purchases. Recipients shall evaluate contractor 
                  performance and document, as appropriate, whether contractors 
                  have met the terms, conditions and specifications of the contract.
                ___.48 
                  Contract provisions. 
                  The recipient shall include, in addition to provisions to define 
                  a sound and complete agreement, the following provisions in 
                  all contracts. The following provisions shall also be applied 
                  to subcontracts.
                 
              (a) Contracts 
                in excess of the small purchase threshold shall contain contractual 
                provisions or conditions that allow for administrative, contractual, 
                or legal remedies in instances in which a contractor violates 
                or breaches the contract terms, and provide for such remedial 
                actions as may be appropriate.  
                
                 
              (b) All 
                contracts in excess of the small purchase threshold shall contain 
                suitable provisions for termination by the recipient, including 
                the manner by which termination shall be effected and the basis 
                for settlement. In addition, such contracts shall describe conditions 
                under which the contract may be terminated for default as well 
                as conditions where the contract may be terminated because of 
                circumstances beyond the control of the contractor.  
               
                 
              (c) Except 
                as otherwise required by statute, an award that requires the contracting 
                (or subcontracting) for construction or facility improvements 
                shall provide for the recipient to follow its own requirements 
                relating to bid guarantees, performance bonds, and payment bonds 
                unless the construction contract or subcontract exceeds $100,000. 
                For those contracts or subcontracts exceeding $100,000, the Federal 
                awarding agency may accept the bonding policy and requirements 
                of the recipient, provided the Federal awarding agency has made 
                a determination that the Federal Government's interest is adequately 
                protected. If such a determination has not been made, the minimum 
                requirements shall be as follows.  
                
                 
              (1) A bid 
                guarantee from each bidder equivalent to five percent of the bid 
                price. The "bid guarantee" shall consist of a firm commitment 
                such as a bid bond, certified check, or other negotiable instrument 
                accompanying a bid as assurance that the bidder shall, upon acceptance 
                of his bid, execute such contractual documents as may be required 
                within the time specified.  
                
                 
              (2) A performance 
                bond on the part of the contractor for 100 percent of the contract 
                price. A "performance bond" is one executed in connection with 
                a contract to secure fulfillment of all the contractor's obligations 
                under such contract.  
                
                 
              (3) A payment 
                bond on the part of the contractor for 100 percent of the contract 
                price. A "payment bond" is one executed in connection with a contract 
                to assure payment as required by statute of all persons supplying 
                labor and material in the execution of the work provided for in 
                the contract.  
                
                 
              (4) Where 
                bonds are required in the situations described herein, the bonds 
                shall be obtained from companies holding certificates of authority 
                as acceptable sureties pursuant to 31 CFR part 223, "Surety Companies 
                Doing Business with the United States."
  
                 
              (d) All 
                negotiated contracts (except those for less than the small purchase 
                threshold) awarded by recipients shall include a provision to 
                the effect that the recipient, the Federal awarding agency, the 
                Comptroller General of the United States, or any of their duly 
                authorized representatives, shall have access to any books, documents, 
                papers and records of the contractor which are directly pertinent 
                to a specific program for the purpose of making audits, examinations, 
                excerpts and transcriptions.  
                
                 
              (e) All 
                contracts, including small purchases, awarded by recipients and 
                their contractors shall contain the procurement provisions of 
                Appendix A to this Circular, as applicable.  
                
 
                Reports 
                  and Records 
                ___.50 
                  Purpose of reports and records. 
                  Sections ___.51 through ___.53 set forth the procedures for 
                  monitoring and reporting on the recipient's financial and program 
                  performance and the necessary standard reporting forms. They 
                  also set forth record retention requirements.
                ___.51 
                  Monitoring and reporting 
                  program performance.
                 
              (a) Recipients 
                are responsible for managing and monitoring each project, program, 
                subaward, function or activity supported by the award. Recipients 
                shall monitor subawards to ensure subrecipients have met the audit 
                requirements as delineated in Section ___.26.  
                
                 
              (b) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall prescribe the frequency with which 
                the performance reports shall be submitted. Except as provided 
                in paragraph ___.51(f), performance reports shall not be required 
                more frequently than quarterly or, less frequently than annually. 
                Annual reports shall be due 90 calendar days after the grant year; 
                quarterly or semi-annual reports shall be due 30 days after the 
                reporting period. The Federal awarding agency may require annual 
                reports before the anniversary dates of multiple year awards in 
                lieu of these requirements. The final performance reports are 
                due 90 calendar days after the expiration or termination of the 
                award.  
                
 
                 
              (c) If inappropriate, 
                a final technical or performance report shall not be required 
                after completion of the project.  
                
                 
              (d) When 
                required, performance reports shall generally contain, for each 
                award, brief information on each of the following.  
                
 
                 
              (1) A comparison 
                of actual accomplishments with the goals and objectives established 
                for the period, the findings of the investigator, or both. Whenever 
                appropriate and the output of programs or projects can be readily 
                quantified, such quantitative data should be related to cost data 
                for computation of unit costs.  
               
                 
              (2) Reasons 
                why established goals were not met, if appropriate.  
                
                 
              (3) Other 
                pertinent information including, when appropriate, analysis and 
                explanation of cost overruns or high unit costs.
  
                 
              (e) Recipients 
                shall not be required to submit more than the original and two 
                copies of performance reports.  
                
                 
              (f) Recipients 
                shall immediately notify the Federal awarding agency of developments 
                that have a significant impact on the award-supported activities. 
                Also, notification shall be given in the case of problems, delays, 
                or adverse conditions which materially impair the ability to meet 
                the objectives of the award. This notification shall include a 
                statement of the action taken or contemplated, and any assistance 
                needed to resolve the situation.  
                
                 
              (g) Federal 
                awarding agencies may make site visits, as needed.  
                
 
                 
              (h) Federal 
                awarding agencies shall comply with clearance requirements of 
                5 CFR part 1320 when requesting performance data from recipients. 
               
                ___.52 
                  Financial reporting.
                 
              (a) The 
                following forms or such other forms as may be approved by OMB 
                are authorized for obtaining financial information from recipients. 
                 
                
                 
              (1) SF-269 
                or SF-269A, Financial Status Report.  
                
                
                
                 
              (i) Each 
                Federal awarding agency shall require recipients to use the SF-269 
                or SF-269A to report the status of funds for all nonconstruction 
                projects or programs. A Federal awarding agency may, however, 
                have the option of not requiring the SF-269 or SF-269A when the 
                SF-270, Request for Advance or Reimbursement, or SF-272, Report 
                of Federal Cash Transactions, is determined to provide adequate 
                information to meet its needs, except that a final SF-269 or SF-269A 
                shall be required at the completion of the project when the SF-270 
                is used only for advances.  
                
                 
              (ii) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall prescribe whether the report shall 
                be on a cash or accrual basis. If the Federal awarding agency 
                requires accrual information and the recipient's accounting records 
                are not normally kept on the accrual basis, the recipient shall 
                not be required to convert its accounting system, but shall develop 
                such accrual information through best estimates based on an analysis 
                of the documentation on hand.  
                
                 
              (iii) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall determine the frequency of the Financial 
                Status Report for each project or program, considering the size 
                and complexity of the particular project or program. However, 
                the report shall not be required more frequently than quarterly 
                or less frequently than annually. A final report shall be required 
                at the completion of the agreement.  
                
                 
              (iv) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall require recipients to submit the 
                SF-269 or SF-269A (an original and no more than two copies) no 
                later than 30 days after the end of each specified reporting period 
                for quarterly and semi-annual reports, and 90 calendar days for 
                annual and final reports. Extensions of reporting due dates may 
                be approved by the Federal awarding agency upon request of the 
                recipient.
  
                 
              (2) SF-272, 
                Report of Federal Cash Transactions.  
                
                 
              (i) When 
                funds are advanced to recipients the Federal awarding agency shall 
                require each recipient to submit the SF-272 and, when necessary, 
                its continuation sheet, SF-272a. The Federal awarding agency shall 
                use this report to monitor cash advanced to recipients and to 
                obtain disbursement information for each agreement with the recipients. 
                 
                
                 
              (ii) Federal 
                awarding agencies may require forecasts of Federal cash requirements 
                in the "Remarks" section of the report.  
               
                 
              (iii) When 
                practical and deemed necessary, Federal awarding agencies may 
                require recipients to report in the "Remarks" section the amount 
                of cash advances received in excess of three days. Recipients 
                shall provide short narrative explanations of actions taken to 
                reduce the excess balances.  
                
 
                 
              (iv) Recipients 
                shall be required to submit not more than the original and two 
                copies of the SF-272 15 calendar days following the end of each 
                quarter. The Federal awarding agencies may require a monthly report 
                from those recipients receiving advances totaling $1 million or 
                more per year.  
                
                 
              (v) Federal 
                awarding agencies may waive the requirement for submission of 
                the SF-272 for any one of the following reasons: (1) When monthly 
                advances do not exceed $25,000 per recipient, provided that such 
                advances are monitored through other forms contained in this section; 
                (2) If, in the Federal awarding agency's opinion, the recipient's 
                accounting controls are adequate to minimize excessive Federal 
                advances; or, (3) When the electronic payment mechanisms provide 
            adequate data.
  
                 
              (b) When 
                the Federal awarding agency needs additional information or more 
                frequent reports, the following shall be observed.  
                
 
                 
              (1) When 
                additional information is needed to comply with legislative requirements, 
                Federal awarding agencies shall issue instructions to require 
                recipients to submit such information under the "Remarks" section 
                of the reports.  
                 
                 
              (2) When 
                a Federal awarding agency determines that a recipient's accounting 
                system does not meet the standards in Section ___.21, additional 
                pertinent information to further monitor awards may be obtained 
                upon written notice to the recipient until such time as the system 
                is brought up to standard. The Federal awarding agency, in obtaining 
                this information, shall comply with report clearance requirements 
                of 5 CFR part 1320.  
                
                 
              (3) Federal 
                awarding agencies are encouraged to shade out any line item on 
                any report if not necessary.  
               
                 
              (4) Federal 
                awarding agencies may accept the identical information from the 
                recipients in machine readable format or computer printouts or 
                electronic outputs in lieu of prescribed formats.  
                
 
                 
              (5) Federal 
                awarding agencies may provide computer or electronic outputs to 
                recipients when such expedites or contributes to the accuracy 
                of reporting.
  
                ___.53 
                  Retention and access requirements 
                  for records.
                 
              (a) This 
                section sets forth requirements for record retention and access 
                to records for awards to recipients. Federal awarding agencies 
                shall not impose any other record retention or access requirements 
                upon recipients.  
                
                 
              (b) Financial 
                records, supporting documents, statistical records, and all other 
                records pertinent to an award shall be retained for a period of 
                three years from the date of submission of the final expenditure 
                report or, for awards that are renewed quarterly or annually, 
                from the date of the submission of the quarterly or annual financial 
                report, as authorized by the Federal awarding agency. The only 
                exceptions are the following.  
                
 
                 
              (1) If any 
                litigation, claim, or audit is started before the expiration of 
                the 3-year period, the records shall be retained until all litigation, 
                claims or audit findings involving the records have been resolved 
                and final action taken.  
                
                 
              (2) Records 
                for real property and equipment acquired with Federal funds shall 
                be retained for 3 years after final disposition.  
               
                 
              (3) When 
                records are transferred to or maintained by the Federal awarding 
                agency, the 3-year retention requirement is not applicable to 
                the recipient.  
               
                 
              (4) Indirect 
                cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, etc. as specified 
                in paragraph ___.53(g).
  
                 
              (c) Copies 
                of original records may be substituted for the original records 
                if authorized by the Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (d) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall request transfer of certain records 
                to its custody from recipients when it determines that the records 
                possess long term retention value. However, in order to avoid 
                duplicate recordkeeping, a Federal awarding agency may make arrangements 
                for recipients to retain any records that are continuously needed 
                for joint use.  
                
                 
              (e) The 
                Federal awarding agency, the Inspector General, Comptroller General 
                of the United States, or any of their duly authorized representatives, 
                have the right of timely and unrestricted access to any books, 
                documents, papers, or other records of recipients that are pertinent 
                to the awards, in order to make audits, examinations, excerpts, 
                transcripts and copies of such documents. This right also includes 
                timely and reasonable access to a recipient's personnel for the 
                purpose of interview and discussion related to such documents. 
                The rights of access in this paragraph are not limited to the 
                required retention period, but shall last as long as records are 
                retained.  
               
                 
              (f) Unless 
                required by statute, no Federal awarding agency shall place restrictions 
                on recipients that limit public access to the records of recipients 
                that are pertinent to an award, except when the Federal awarding 
                agency can demonstrate that such records shall be kept confidential 
                and would have been exempted from disclosure pursuant to the Freedom 
                of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) if the records had belonged 
                to the Federal awarding agency.  
                
 
                 
              (g) Indirect 
                cost rate proposals, cost allocations plans, etc. Paragraphs (g)(1) 
                and (g)(2) apply to the following types of documents, and their 
                supporting records: indirect cost rate computations or proposals, 
                cost allocation plans, and any similar accounting computations 
                of the rate at which a particular group of costs is chargeable 
                (such as computer usage chargeback rates or composite fringe benefit 
                rates).  
               
                 
              (1) If submitted 
                for negotiation. If the recipient submits to the Federal awarding 
                agency or the subrecipient submits to the recipient the proposal, 
                plan, or other computation to form the basis for negotiation of 
                the rate, then the 3-year retention period for its supporting 
                records starts on the date of such submission.  
                 
                 
              (2) If not 
                submitted for negotiation. If the recipient is not required to 
                submit to the Federal awarding agency or the subrecipient is not 
                required to submit to the recipient the proposal, plan, or other 
                computation for negotiation purposes, then the 3-year retention 
                period for the proposal, plan, or other computation and its supporting 
                records starts at the end of the fiscal year (or other accounting 
                period) covered by the proposal, plan, or other computation.
 
                 
                Termination 
                  and Enforcement 
                ___.60 
                  Purpose of termination 
                  and enforcement. Sections ___.61 and ___.62 set forth uniform 
                  suspension, termination and enforcement procedures.
                ___.61 
                  Termination.
                 
              (a) Awards 
                may be terminated in whole or in part only if (1), (2) or (3) 
                apply.  
                
                 
              (1) By the 
                Federal awarding agency, if a recipient materially fails to comply 
                with the terms and conditions of an award.  
                
                 
              (2) By the 
                Federal awarding agency with the consent of the recipient, in 
                which case the two parties shall agree upon the termination conditions, 
                including the effective date and, in the case of partial termination, 
                the portion to be terminated.  
                
 
                 
              (3) By the 
                recipient upon sending to the Federal awarding agency written 
                notification setting forth the reasons for such termination, the 
                effective date, and, in the case of partial termination, the portion 
                to be terminated. However, if the Federal awarding agency determines 
                in the case of partial termination that the reduced or modified 
                portion of the grant will not accomplish the purposes for which 
                the grant was made, it may terminate the grant in its entirety 
                under either paragraphs (a)(1) or (2).
  
                 
              (b) If costs 
                are allowed under an award, the responsibilities of the recipient 
                referred to in paragraph ___.71(a), including those for property 
                management as applicable, shall be considered in the termination 
                of the award, and provision shall be made for continuing responsibilities 
                of the recipient after termination, as appropriate.  
              
                ___.62 
                  Enforcement.  
                
 
              (a) Remedies 
                for noncompliance. If a recipient materially fails to comply with 
                the terms and conditions of an award, whether stated in a Federal 
                statute, regulation, assurance, application, or notice of award, 
                the Federal awarding agency may, in addition to imposing any of 
                the special conditions outlined in Section ___.14, take one or 
                more of the following actions, as appropriate in the circumstances. 
                 
                
                 
              (1) Temporarily 
                withhold cash payments pending correction of the deficiency by 
                the recipient or more severe enforcement action by the Federal 
                awarding agency.  
                
                 
              (2) Disallow 
                (that is, deny both use of funds and any applicable matching credit 
                for) all or part of the cost of the activity or action not in 
                compliance.  
                
                 
              (3) Wholly 
                or partly suspend or terminate the current award.  
                
                 
              (4) Withhold 
                further awards for the project or program.  
                
                 
              (5) Take 
                other remedies that may be legally available.
  
                 
              (b) Hearings 
                and appeals. In taking an enforcement action, the awarding agency 
                shall provide the recipient an opportunity for hearing, appeal, 
                or other administrative proceeding to which the recipient is entitled 
                under any statute or regulation applicable to the action involved. 
                 
                
                 
              (c) Effects 
                of suspension and termination. Costs of a recipient resulting 
                from obligations incurred by the recipient during a suspension 
                or after termination of an award are not allowable unless the 
                awarding agency expressly authorizes them in the notice of suspension 
                or termination or subsequently. Other recipient costs during suspension 
                or after termination which are necessary and not reasonably avoidable 
                are allowable if (1) and (2) apply.  
                
                 
              (1) The 
                costs result from obligations which were properly incurred by 
                the recipient before the effective date of suspension or termination, 
                are not in anticipation of it, and in the case of a termination, 
                are noncancellable.  
                <
                 
              (2) The 
                costs would be allowable if the award were not suspended or expired 
                normally at the end of the funding period in which the termination 
                takes effect.
  
                 
              (d) Relationship 
                to debarment and suspension. The enforcement remedies identified 
                in this section, including suspension and termination, do not 
                preclude a recipient from being subject to debarment and suspension 
                under E.O.s 12549 and 12689 and the Federal awarding agency implementing 
                regulations (see Section ___.13).  
                
                SUBPART 
                  D - After-the-Award Requirements 
                ___.70 
                  Purpose. Sections ___.71 
                  through ___.73 contain closeout procedures and other procedures 
                  for subsequent disallowances and adjustments.
                ___.71 
                  Closeout procedures.
                 
              (a) Recipients 
                shall submit, within 90 calendar days after the date of completion 
                of the award, all financial, performance, and other reports as 
                required by the terms and conditions of the award. The Federal 
                awarding agency may approve extensions when requested by the recipient. 
                
                 
              (b) Unless 
                the Federal awarding agency authorizes an extension, a recipient 
                shall liquidate all obligations incurred under the award not later 
                than 90 calendar days after the funding period or the date of 
                completion as specified in the terms and conditions of the award 
                or in agency implementing instructions.  
                
                 
              (c) The 
                Federal awarding agency shall make prompt payments to a recipient 
                for allowable reimbursable costs under the award being closed 
                out.  
                
                 
              (d) The 
                recipient shall promptly refund any balances of unobligated cash 
                that the Federal awarding agency has advanced or paid and that 
                is not authorized to be retained by the recipient for use in other 
                projects. OMB Circular A-129 governs unreturned amounts that become 
                delinquent debts.  
               
                 
              (e) When 
                authorized by the terms and conditions of the award, the Federal 
                awarding agency shall make a settlement for any upward or downward 
                adjustments to the Federal share of costs after closeout reports 
                are received.  
                
                 
              (f) The 
                recipient shall account for any real and personal property acquired 
                with Federal funds or received from the Federal Government in 
                accordance with Sections ___.31 through ___.37.  
               
                 
              (g) In the 
                event a final audit has not been performed prior to the closeout 
                of an award, the Federal awarding agency shall retain the right 
                to recover an appropriate amount after fully considering the recommendations 
                on disallowed costs resulting from the final audit.  
                
                ___.72 
                  Subsequent adjustments and 
                  continuing responsibilities.
                 
              (a) The 
                closeout of an award does not affect any of the following.  
                
                 
              (1) The 
                right of the Federal awarding agency to disallow costs and recover 
                funds on the basis of a later audit or other review.  
               
                 
              (2) The 
                obligation of the recipient to return any funds due as a result 
                of later refunds, corrections, or other transactions.  
               
                 
              (3) Audit 
                requirements in Section ___.26.  
                
                 
              (4) Property 
                management requirements in Sections ___.31 through ___.37.  
                
                 
              (5) Records 
                retention as required in Section ___.53.
  
                 
              (b) After 
                closeout of an award, a relationship created under an award may 
                be modified or ended in whole or in part with the consent of the 
                Federal awarding agency and the recipient, provided the responsibilities 
                of the recipient referred to in paragraph ___.73(a), including 
                those for property management as applicable, are considered and 
                provisions made for continuing responsibilities of the recipient, 
                as appropriate.  
                
				
                
___.73 
                  Collection of amounts due.
                 
              (a) Any 
                funds paid to a recipient in excess of the amount to which the 
                recipient is finally determined to be entitled under the terms 
                and conditions of the award constitute a debt to the Federal Government. 
                If not paid within a reasonable period after the demand for payment, 
                the Federal awarding agency may reduce the debt by (1), (2) or 
                (3).  
                
 
                 
              (1) Making 
                an administrative offset against other requests for reimbursements. 
                 
                 
                 
              (2) Withholding 
                advance payments otherwise due to the recipient.  
                
 
                 
              (3) Taking 
                other action permitted by statute.
  
               
			     
              (b) Except 
                as otherwise provided by law, the Federal awarding agency shall 
                charge interest on an overdue debt in accordance with 4 CFR Chapter 
                II, "Federal Claims Collection Standards." 
             
                
               
                Appendix A
				
                Contract Provisions
                
All contracts, 
                  awarded by a recipient including small purchases, shall contain 
                  the following provisions as applicable:
                1. 
                  Equal Employment Opportunity - All contracts shall 
                  contain a provision requiring compliance with E.O. 11246, "Equal 
                  Employment Opportunity," as amended by E.O. 11375, "Amending 
                  Executive Order 11246 Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity," 
                  and as supplemented by regulations at 41 CFR part 60, "Office 
                  of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Equal Employment Opportunity, 
                  Department of Labor."
                2. 
                  Copeland "Anti-Kickback" Act (18 U.S.C. 874 and 40 U.S.C. 276c) 
                  - All contracts and subgrants in excess of $2000 for construction 
                  or repair awarded by recipients and subrecipients shall include 
                  a provision for compliance with the Copeland "Anti-Kickback" 
                  Act (18 U.S.C. 874), as supplemented by Department of Labor 
                  regulations (29 CFR part 3, "Contractors and Subcontractors 
                  on Public Building or Public Work Financed in Whole or in Part 
                  by Loans or Grants from the United States"). The Act provides 
                  that each contractor or subrecipient shall be prohibited from 
                  inducing, by any means, any person employed in the construction, 
                  completion, or repair of public work, to give up any part of 
                  the compensation to which he is otherwise entitled. The recipient 
                  shall report all suspected or reported violations to the Federal 
                  awarding agency.
                3. 
                  Davis-Bacon Act, as amended (40 U.S.C. 276a to a-7) 
                  - When required by Federal program legislation, all construction 
                  contracts awarded by the recipients and subrecipients of more 
                  than $2000 shall include a provision for compliance with the 
                  Davis-Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 276a to a-7) and as supplemented 
                  by Department of Labor regulations (29 CFR part 5, "Labor Standards 
                  Provisions Applicable to Contracts Governing Federally Financed 
                  and Assisted Construction"). Under this Act, contractors shall 
                  be required to pay wages to laborers and mechanics at a rate 
                  not less than the minimum wages specified in a wage determination 
                  made by the Secretary of Labor. In addition, contractors shall 
                  be required to pay wages not less than once a week. The recipient 
                  shall place a copy of the current prevailing wage determination 
                  issued by the Department of Labor in each solicitation and the 
                  award of a contract shall be conditioned upon the acceptance 
                  of the wage determination. The recipient shall report all suspected 
                  or reported violations to the Federal awarding agency.
                4. 
                  Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. 327-333) 
                  - Where applicable, all contracts awarded by recipients in excess 
                  of $2000 for construction contracts and in excess of $2500 for 
                  other contracts that involve the employment of mechanics or 
                  laborers shall include a provision for compliance with Sections 
                  102 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards 
                  Act (40 U.S.C. 327-333), as supplemented by Department of Labor 
                  regulations (29 CFR part 5). Under Section 102 of the Act, each 
                  contractor shall be required to compute the wages of every mechanic 
                  and laborer on the basis of a standard work week of 40 hours. 
                  Work in excess of the standard work week is permissible provided 
                  that the worker is compensated at a rate of not less than 1 
                  ½ times the basic rate of pay for all hours worked in excess 
                  of 40 hours in the work week. Section 107 of the Act is applicable 
                  to construction work and provides that no laborer or mechanic 
                  shall be required to work in surroundings or under working conditions 
                  which are unsanitary, hazardous or dangerous. These requirements 
                  do not apply to the purchases of supplies or materials or articles 
                  ordinarily available on the open market, or contracts for transportation 
                  or transmission of intelligence.
                5. 
                  Rights to Inventions Made Under a Contract or Agreement 
                  - Contracts or agreements for the performance of experimental, 
                  developmental, or research work shall provide for the rights 
                  of the Federal Government and the recipient in any resulting 
                  invention in accordance with 37 CFR part 401, "Rights to Inventions 
                  Made by Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business Firms Under 
                  Government Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements," and 
                  any implementing regulations issued by the awarding agency.
                6. 
                  Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water 
                  Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended  
                  - Contracts and subgrants of amounts in excess of $100,000 shall 
                  contain a provision that requires the recipient to agree to 
                  comply with all applicable standards, orders or regulations 
                  issued pursuant to the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.) 
                  and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act as amended (33 U.S.C. 
                  1251 et seq.). Violations shall be reported to the Federal awarding 
                  agency and the Regional Office of the Environmental Protection 
                  Agency (EPA).
                7. 
                  Byrd Anti-Lobbying Amendment (31 U.S.C. 1352) - Contractors 
                  who apply or bid for an award of $100,000 or more shall file 
                  the required certification. Each tier certifies to the tier 
                  above that it will not and has not used Federal appropriated 
                  funds to pay any person or organization for influencing or attempting 
                  to influence an officer or employee of any agency, a member 
                  of Congress, officer or employee of Congress, or an employee 
                  of a member of Congress in connection with obtaining any Federal 
                  contract, grant or any other award covered by 31 U.S.C. 1352. 
                  Each tier shall also disclose any lobbying with non-Federal 
                  funds that takes place in connection with obtaining any Federal 
                  award. Such disclosures are forwarded from tier to tier up to 
                  the recipient.
                8. 
                  Debarment and Suspension (E.O.s 12549 and 12689) - 
                  No contract shall be made to parties listed on the General Services 
                  Administration's List of Parties Excluded from Federal Procurement 
                  or Nonprocurement Programs in accordance with E.O.s 12549 and 
                  12689, "Debarment and Suspension." This list contains the names 
                  of parties debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded by agencies, 
                  and contractors declared ineligible under statutory or regulatory 
                  authority other than E.O. 12549. Contractors with awards that 
                  exceed the small purchase threshold shall provide the required 
                  certification regarding its exclusion status and that of its 
                  principal employees.
               
			  
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