| Improved
NIH guide for grants and contracts listings now available
Issued by
National Institutes
of Health (NIH)
This is to
announce that previous static listings for browsing published
NIH Guide announcements have been replaced with real-time database
query listings that retrieve only active Requests for Applications
(RFAs) and Program Announcements (PAs), based on the expiration
dates stated in those announcements. The new listing for NIH Guide
Notices displays Notices published over the last two years, by
default, since expiration dates are not currently assigned to
these announcements. Links to these new resources are available
from the main NIH
Guide Funding Opportunities and Notices page.
All announcements
(active plus inactive) in each category may also be viewed by
using selections in the drop-down box at the top of each listing
page. Clicking on header links allows re-sorting of lists. In
addition, a new Ad Hoc NIH Guide Database Search page is available,
which allows for individualized queries with various selection
criteria.
Since NIH
Guide listings now use expiration dates as a key item, the following
information is provided, relating to expiration dates in each
of the announcement categories:
RFAs
— The expiration date for RFAs is generally set to one day
after the last receipt date for the RFA. Once an RFA expiration
date is reached, applications relating to the RFA will no longer
be accepted by the NIH.
PAs
— In general, PAs are active for up to three years (nine
submission cycles) beyond the initial Release Date. Most PAs issued
in 2001 or later will have a specific Expiration Date listed near
the top of the document. Those that do not have a date specified
in the announcement have been set to expire three years after
the Release Date, unless an alternate date has been provided by
the issuing organization. Once the expiration date is reached,
applications should no longer be submitted for the PA. If an application
is submitted that cites an expired PA, it may be delayed in the
review process or returned without review.
Important:
Note that a PA Expiration Date may not coincide exactly with the
actual final receipt date for the PA. Applicants should refer
to the Receipt
Dates/Deadlines page for the final receipt date that precedes
the stated expiration date, based on the Mechanism(s) of Support
shown in the PA. Also, note that PARs will sometimes have a single
receipt date. In those cases, the expiration date will be the
day after the receipt date.
Notices
— All Notices are considered active because they do not
have specific expiration dates. This field is currently populated
with "n/a" for all Notices. In the future, NIH hopes
to add expiration dates for Notices to allow for "active"
listings to be generated.
The new NIH
Guide Search Help Page contains above information, as well as
other information regarding new NIH Guide listings.
Inquiries
about these new resources or about the NIH Guide in general, may
be directed to the OER Webmaster at OERWebmaster03@od.nih.gov.
Upcoming
internal funding deadlines from the MU vice provost for research
Note: Some
of the application processes have changed; updated guidelines
can be accessed via our
web page .
•Research
board
Deadline: Monday, February 14, 2005
Purpose: To enhance the long-term quality and
quantity of scholarship throughout all of the University of Missouri
campuses by supporting research and creative activity of regular
faculty.
Eligibility: Primary applicants must be regular
(tenured or tenure-track) faculty. Non-regular faculty may serve
as co-applicants. Non-regular faculty may apply as primary applicants
only with prior approval from the Research Board.
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NIH
updates salary limitation on grants, cooperative agreements and
contracts
Issued by
National Institutes
of Health (NIH)
This notice
provides updated information regarding the salary limitation for
NIH grant and cooperative agreement awards and extramural research
and development contract awards. On February 13, 2004, the Fiscal
Year (FY) 2004 information on the salary limitation was published
in the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts.
For sixteen
consecutive years, Congress has legislatively mandated a provision
for the limitation of salary. For FY 2005, the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, Public Law 108-447, which includes appropriations for the
Department of Health and Human Services, restricts the amount
of direct salary of an individual under an NIH grant or cooperative
agreement (referred to here as a grant) or applicable contract
to Executive Level I of the Federal Executive Pay scale. The Executive
Level I annual salary rate was $175,700 for the period January
1 through December 31, 2004 (see NOT-OD-04-034, March 11, 2004).
Effective January 1, 2005, the Executive Level I salary level
increased to $180,100.
For the purposes
of the salary limitation, the terms "direct salary,"
"salary," and "institutional base salary"
have the same meaning and are exclusive of fringe benefits and
facilities and administrative (F&A) expenses, also referred
to as indirect costs. An individual's institutional base salary
is the annual compensation that the applicant organization pays
for an individual's appointment, whether that individual's time
is spent on research, teaching, patient care, or other activities.
Base salary excludes any income that an individual may be permitted
to earn outside of the duties to the applicant organization.
NIH grant/contract
awards for applications/proposals that request direct salaries
of individuals in excess of the applicable RATE per year will
be adjusted in accordance with the legislative salary limitation
and will include a notification such as the following:
According
to the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2005, "None of the
funds appropriated in this Act for the National Institutes of
Health, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration shall
be used to pay the salary of an individual, through a grant or
other extramural mechanism, at a rate in excess of Executive Level
I“ of the Federal Executive Pay Scale. This is the fifth
year that the limitation has been linked to Executive Level I
of the Federal Pay Scale.
Please see
the salary cap summary and the time frames associated with existing
salary caps at the Office
of Extramural Resarch Web site.
Implementation
of new salary limitation:
- No adjustments
will be made to modular grant applications/awards or to previously
established commitment levels for non-competing grant awards
issued with FY 2005 funds.
- NIH competing
grant awards with categorical budgets reflecting salary levels
at or above the new cap(s) issued in FY 2005 will reflect adjustments
to the current and all future years so that no funds are awarded
or committed for salaries over the limitation.
- For awards
issued in those years restricted to Executive Level I (see Salary
Cap Summary, [FY 1990 – FY 2005]), if adequate funds are
available in active awards, and if the salary cap increase is
consistent with the institutional base salary, grantees may
rebudget to accommodate the current Executive Level I salary
level and contractors may charge at the higher level. However,
no additional funds will be provided to the prior year grant
awards and the total estimated cost of the contract will not
be modified.
- An individual's
base salary, per se, is not constrained by the legislative provision
for a limitation of salary. The rate limitation simply limits
the amount that may be awarded and charged to NIH grants and
contracts. An institution may pay an individual's salary amount
in excess of the salary cap with non-federal funds.
- The salary
limitation does not apply to payments made to consultants under
an NIH grant or contract although, as with all costs, those
payments must meet the test of reasonableness and be consistent
with institutional policy.
- The salary
limitation provision does apply to subawards/subcontracts for
substantive work under an NIH grant or contract. Competing grant
applications and contract proposals that include a categorical
breakdown in the budget figures/business proposal should continue
to reflect the actual institutional base salary of all individuals
for whom reimbursement is requested. In lieu of actual base
salary, however, applicants/offerors may elect to provide an
explanation indicating that actual institutional base salary
exceeds the current salary limitation. When this information
is provided, NIH staff will make necessary adjustments to requested
salaries prior to award.
Questions
and Answers
1. If a grant
award (competing or non-competing) has already been issued in
FY 2005, will an adjustment be made? No adjustments will be
made. However, rebudgeting is allowable.
2. Can I
rebudget grant funds or charge contracts issued in those years
restricted to Executive Level l (see Salary Cap Summary (FY 1990
– FY 2005) funds to allow for the 2005 salary cap increase?
Yes, provided funds are available and the increase is warranted.
Prorated figures should be used for the applicable months, i.e.,
the $180,100 level is effective beginning January 1, 2005.
3. If an
application/proposal fails to provide needed salary information,
will an adjustment be made based on the new rates? No adjustment
will be made if an application fails to provide adequate information
regarding the individual's actual salary level.
4. Does the
NIH appropriation language link the salary cap to a Federal Executive
Level or to a dollar level? The link is to the Federal Executive
Level pay scale (i.e., Executive Level III for FY 1999 and Executive
Level II for FY 2000 and Executive Level I for FYs 2001, 2002,
2003, 2004 and 2005).
5. As the
cap is linked to Federal Executive Levels, can grantees/contractors
with ongoing awards rebudget/charge up to the various salary caps,
based on the fiscal year of the award and the time of the salary
expense is incurred? Yes, salary may be charged in accordance
with the FY cap(s), as long as the levels are consistent with
the individual's institutional base pay. Please refer to the salary
cap summary with times frames for existing salary caps.
6. Will grantees
be permitted to submit revised categorical budgets reflecting
higher base salaries? Not as a general rule. NIH policy for
categorical budgets states that grantees should always reflect
actual base salaries in the requested budgets or provide an explanation
indicating that actual institutional base salary exceeds the current
salary limitation. As a general rule, NIH will use the information
available in the existing application and make adjustments for
the salary cap based on information available at the time of award.
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