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PTFP Close-Out
and Federal Interest Period Requirements for Construction Grants (September 2001) |
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The information presented here is meant to assist you in closing out your Public Telecommunications Facilities Program (PTFP) construction or planning grant. We urge you to read it carefully and to refer to the appropriate sections again as you prepare each item for your close-out. We encourage you to call your Program Officer at (202) 482-5802 if you have any questions. The documents you need to submit in order to close out your grant are described in the sections that follow. Also included is a checklist on which you can record relevant information about your close-out. All of the items on the checklist are important to the close-out process. We suggest you print out one for your grant as soon as possible and refer to it as you prepare your close-out. Please remember that all close-out documentation -
Failure to provide the required information on time and in full not only creates unnecessary problems for you and needless work for the PTFP staff, but also puts your project out of compliance with the terms and conditions of your grant award. Being out of compliance can result in -
PLEASE NOTE CAREFULLY:
Closing Out Construction Grants
Your PTFP Program Officer should be the initial contact for all programmatic aspects of closing out your grant award. The reports and other documents you submit to NTIA/PTFP at close-out are:
[Program Officer's Name] NTIA/PTFP Room 4812 U.S. Department of Commerce 1401 Constitution Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20230The name of your organization's PTFP Program Officer is listed in the Special Award Conditions of your grant award document. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Grants & Agreements Management Division (GAMD), is the Commerce Department's Federal Grants Office and is responsible for all administrative and financial aspects of closing out your grant award. The reports you submit to GAMD at close-out are:
They should be addressed to: [Grant Specialist's Name] National Institute of Standards and Technology Office of the Chief Financial Officer Grants & Agreements Management Division 100 Bureau Drive, Mail Stop 3580 Gaithersburg, MD 20899-3580 The name of your organization's GAMD Grants Specialist is listed in the Special Award Conditions of your grant award document.
As noted above, all construction grant close-outs include at least three separate documents a certification of completion and insurance coverage, a final inventory, and a priority lien. Here we discuss each of the three documents in turn.
The First item that must be included in your close-out documentation is certification that the project has been completed and that all of the terms and conditions of the award have been complied with. The certification should be in the form of a letter addressed to William Cooperman, Director, Public Broadcasting Division, and must refer to your full grant number (e.g., 99-01-99999). The letter should be signed by the same person who signed the Financial Assistance Award (Form CD-450) to accept the grant or by that person's successor or superior. The letter should certify specifically that your organization has:
You must supply two copies of a final inventory of all equipment (whether bought or donated) acquired as part of your PTFP-funded grant project. The inventory you submit will be compared with the equipment list approved as part of the Grant Award, along with any amendments approved in writing by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Grants & Agreements Management Division (GAMD) during the project period. The inventory must include the following information for each item of equipment (an example of the format to use appears below):
Taxes, Shipping, Installation, and Other Project Costs Sales taxes and reasonable shipping charges may be claimed for equipment approved for a PTFP project. (Some states may waive sales taxes if the item is paid for with Federal funds.) Labor costs for project equipment installation can be claimed only when authorization was included in the award document or in an amendment approved in writing by GAMD. Sales Tax
Preparing the Final Inventory Please provide a heading that includes the name of your organization and the complete NTIA/PTFP grant number (e.g., 99-01-99999). Please repeat the heading on each page of the inventory and number the pages. The Final Inventory list itself should be divided in half vertically, as shown in the example below. The left hand side should reproduce the equipment list from the award document; the right-hand side should show what was actually acquired. Each major item of equipment should be listed separately. In deciding what to include as major inventory line items, you should strike a balance between encompassing too much in a single entry (e.g., "six microwave hops...$360,000") and breaking entries down into unmanageable detail (e.g., "twelve wing nuts...$1.19). Minor equipment items, however, may be included in the cost of the major item to which they relate. You should note what sub-items are included in the total item cost. Any item that requires its own inventory number should be listed separately on the Final Inventory. You should include brief explanations of any aspect of the Final Inventory that is unusual and might, therefore, be questioned. The total amount of the Final Inventory (including sales taxes, shipping, installation charges, and any other approved project costs) should equal the total reported on the final financial report (SF-269) submitted to the National Institute of Standard and Technology, Grants & Agreements Management Division.
You must mark permanently all equipment included in the project to ensure accurate identification and accurate reference to inventory records. Even if your organization does not normally assign inventory numbers to items costing under a specific dollar amount, you must still assign inventory numbers to all equipment items for NTIA's purposes. A non-removable label (or other means of identification) should be attached to the equipment where it can be seen easily. The label should contain your organization's inventory number plus the NTIA/PTFP grant award number. Transmission antennas should be assigned an inventory number. The number should be posted in the transmitter shelter with an appropriate identification.
The requirement to submit a certificate from your insurance carrier or your risk manager has been dropped from the close-out requirements. This does not mean that you no longer have to insure equipment acquired as part of a PTFP grant. You still must have insurance so that, in the event of loss, you will be able to continue the project by replacing equipment promptly. The insurance must protect the equipment from common hazards (fire, theft, etc.). Flood insurance should be carried in a community where such insurance is available when the grant equipment is to be located in an area that has been identified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services as having special flood hazards. Although you no longer have to provide a certificate from your insurance company or risk manager, you must certify that your organization has - and will maintain - the required coverage. This certification is part of the letter of certification.
If your organization expends more than $300,000 in Federal funds - from all Federal sources, not just PTFP - in a one-year period, you must have an audit performed in accordance with Federal guidelines as stated in OMB Circular A-133, dated June 30, 1997 (copies were included in the grant award package). These audits are performed in one of two ways. An NTIA/PTFP-specific audit may be performed if your organization receives Federal funds only from NTIA. If your organization receives funds from more than one Federal source during the year for which the audit is conducted, an organization-wide audit must be performed. (Note that CPB funding is not considered a Federal source.) If an allowance for audit costs was included in your Grant Award, the audit report must be submitted prior to the deadline for submitting the close-out documentation in order for the cost to be charged to the grant. Questions about audits should be addressed to your Grants Specialist in the Grants & Agreements Management Division.
The Federal government retains a priority reversionary interest in all equipment you acquire as part of the project. The Federal interest extends from the initial receipt of the equipment through a ten-year period after the project is completed. This interest is secured through a lien document. You may have been required to file an initial lien at the start of your Grant Award Period. This lien may have been revised to reflect amendments to your approved equipment list during the Grant Award Period. Regardless of the number of lien documents you may have filed during the Grant Award Period, you are required to submit a completed lien form as part of the close-out documentation.
It would be premature for you to submit a fully-recorded final lien with the close-out documents, because PTFP has to approve the final inventory attached to the lien and GAMD must sign the form before it is recorded. Even if the lien form in your state does not require a signature by the secured party, you must submit the form with the attached inventory for PTFP and Grants Office approval before you file it. Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Forms Most grantees use UCC (Uniform Commercial Code) forms for the final lien. In some states a chattel mortgage is used. UCC forms differ slightly from state to state. They are usually available from an attorney, from a bank's loan department, or from an office supply store. If required, an initial lien is usually submitted on a UCC-1 form. Subsequent lien forms that revise the equipment list are usually done as an amendment to the original lien and are prepared on whatever form is required in your state. Whether the lien submitted with the close-out is your first or not, follow the guidelines below for completing the form.
After review by NTIA/PTFP, the Grants & Agreements Management Division (GAMD) will sign the lien document for the "Secured Party" and return it to you. You must then file it at recorder(s) office(s) in the jurisdiction(s) where the project equipment will be located and where your headquarters are located, if different. This may require the preparation of more than one lien document. Once filed, the secured party's copy of the lien, with the recording office stamp clearly visible, must be returned promptly to: [Grants Specialist's Name] National Institute of Standards and Technology Office of the Chief Financial Officer Grants & Agreements Management Division 100 Bureau Drive, Mail Stop 3580 Gaithersburg, MD 20899-3580
When Federal Communications Commission (FCC) authorization is required for a grant project, the authorization is usually the subject of a Special Award Condition placed in the Grant Award document and worded along the following lines:
If you have already supplied FCC authorizations to NTIA/PTFP to fulfill a Special Award Condition, you need not resubmit the documents as part of the Close-Out. Your Program Officer will let you know if additional FCC documents are required.
As indicated in the section on liens, the Federal government has an interest in PTFP-funded equipment for ten years after the completion of a project. To ensure that inadequate site rights will not hinder your ability to provide long-term public telecommunications services, you may be required by NTIA/PTFP to provide evidence of leases or ownership of sites on which major fixed pieces of equipment are located. When site rights certification is required, it is usually requested in a Special Award Condition placed in the award document and stated in language similar to the following:
If you have already supplied the necessary opinion letter to NTIA/PTFP to fulfill a Special Award Condition for site rights, you need not re-submit it as part of the Close-Out. Your Program Officer will contact you if additional material is required.
Supply an original and one copy of all documents except the lien form, with the full grant number (e.g., 99-01-99999) and original signatures where required on both copies. Attach a copy of the inventory to each lien document, and please include a photocopy of each lien document.
PTFP Program Officer: _________________________________ GAMD Grants Specialist: _________________________________
NTIA/PTFP reviews all close-out documents to be sure that the project was completed in accordance of the terms and conditions of the award. The program may request clarification or revision of material submitted in your package of close-out documents. Your prompt response will assist in the timely completion of the close-out process. All grant recipients should be aware that failure to provide additional requested close-out information in a timely manner can result in
Items included on the final inventory and not approved for purchase in the Financial Assistance Award document or in a subsequent amendment will be removed from the final approved inventory. This may result in a requirement to refund Federal funds already paid to your organization. It is worth repeating something said earlier: inventories will not be amended retroactively as part of closing out a grant in order to cover items purchased without prior written authorization from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Grants & Agreements Management Division.
Your responsibility to the Federal government through the Department of Commerce does not end when the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Grants & Agreements Management Division informs you that your close-out has been completed. This section summarizes some of the requirements imposed on grantees in the years after a grant is closed out.
Federal regulations require that your organization keep financial records, supporting documents, statistical records, and all other records pertaining to the grant project for three (3) years after your final financial status report has been accepted. If any litigation, claim, or audit is started before the expiration of the three-year period, all records must be kept until all litigation, claims, or audit findings involving the records have been resolved. Grant recipients must keep the following records intact and accessible for inspection at any time:
Project equipment must be marked in a permanent manner to assure easy and accurate identification and reference to inventory records. The marking includes the PTFP grant number and a unique inventory number assigned by the grantee.
Grantees must permit inspections at any time during normal business hours by NTIA and the Comptroller General of the United States, or their authorized representatives, of the public telecommunications facilities acquired with Federal financial assistance and of any books, documents, papers, and records relating to those facilities.
Organizations that have received construction grants from NTIA/PTFP are required to submit an Annual Status Report for every grant project that is in the Federal interest period. By statute, this is the 10-year period during which the Federal government retains a reversionary interest in all equipment purchased under the project. The Federal interest period begins with the project completion date, as established by NTIA/PTFP during the close-out procedure. Annual Status Reports are due on or before April 1 in each of the ten years of a grant's Federal interest period. If you have more than one grant to report on, you may submit a single report as long as it shows clearly the full grant number of each award you have in the 10-year Federal interest period. In a conspicuous space at the beginning, the report should be identified as an Annual Status Report, with the full, nine-digit PTFP grant number (e.g., 99-01-99999). In the Annual Status Report, the grant recipient must certify:
The Annual Status Report should be signed by an official of the recipient organization who is legally authorized to make such certifications for it. In a college or university, this is often the president or the head of the grants and contracts office. A nonprofit institution will often have its president sign. Annual Status Reports should be sent to the following address:William Cooperman, Director Public Broadcasting Division National Telecommunications and Information Administration U.S. Department of Commerce 1401 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Room H-4812 Washington, D.C. 20230
A SAMPLE ANNUAL
STATUS REPORT APPEARS BELOW TO ASSIST YOU IN
PREPARING YOUR REPORTS
Sample
Annual Status Report Letter
William Cooperman
Dear PTFP Director: With respect to the above-referenced grant, we hereby certify the following:
Sincerely, Thomas A. AnyonePresident
PTFP construction grant recipients
are required to take steps to ensure that the Federal government's position
as primary secured creditor is fully protected for the entire 10-year
period of Federal interest. This protection is secured by a lien document,
generally a UCC-1 financing statement, the final version of which is recorded
during the grant close-out procedure. Many states, however, do not extend such protection through the Federal interest period under a single lien document. In those states, continued protection is secured by recording a continuation statement. Recognizing the need for and recording of continuation statements is your responsibility. If you are located in any state except those listed below, you must continue to protect the Federal interest by filing a continuation of the final lien at the appropriate interval(s). All states require renewal of the lien after five years, with the following exceptions:
Recognizing the need for, preparing, and recording continuation documents is your responsibility. To help you with this, we suggest that you enter the date the lien was recorded ("stamped") on the checklist that follows.
Revised 28 September 2004
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