A sponsored research project may include three types of contractors: a consultant, a Sub-Recipient, and a regular vendor contractor. Under the OMB Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards, the term “vendor” was replaced with “contractor.” For consistency purposes, when the University of Houston provides funds from a federal award to a non-federal entity, the non-federal entity receiving these funds is classified as a subrecipient or a contractor based on the nature of the agreement and the criteria in 2 CFR §200.330.
The Sponsored Project Contractual Agreement should be used when the contractor is a consultant or when the contractor is not a sub-recipient. Normally, such contractors are specifically identified upfront in the proposal budget under the “contractor” category and explained in the budget justification.
The Uniform Guidance identifies specific standards in addition to the University’s requirements, which include:
In addition to the Uniform Guidance, the University of Houston MAPP 04.00.00 - Code of Conduct- Procurement Responsibilities should be adhered to for the procurement of a contractor on a grant. This policy defines the standards of conduct that must be met by all university employees engaged in any activity related to purchasing or contracting for goods or services for the university regardless of the funding source.
Use the Sponsored Project Contractual Agreement when paying contractors budgeted on a sponsored project award. Contractors budgeted on awards are normally consultants or contractors providing very specific services to the award. A contractor may be an individual or an entity.
The following documents must accompany the contract and must be completed, signed, and approved before services commence.
Effective 06/01/2020, sponsored research consultant and service agreements using fund 5 (except for fund 5999) must be routed on RC730 requisition. Refer to the table for routing instructions. Contracts over $50,000.00 are routed to the Provost Office for Approval. An Authorization and Information Summary Sheet for Purchase Requisitions Exceeding $100,000 must be completed for purchases greater than $100,000.
Below are the steps to submit consulting and service agreements:
Late submission of a contractual agreement must be accompanied by a late justification form signed by the PI and the DBA. Note that the agreement is late if the effective date or start date is before the date on which all parties signed the agreement, and the work by the contractor begun.
Honoraria are unallowable on federal research grants when the primary intent is to confer distinction on or to symbolize respect, esteem, or admiration for, the recipient of the honorarium. The NIH grants policy specifically prohibits this cost.
Speaker Fees are an allowable payment for services rendered, such as a speaker’s fee under a conference grant, the presentation of research results, the reading of papers, or the participation in workshops and seminars when the cost is budgeted on the award or prior approval is received from the sponsor. When the Speaker Agreement is used, a requisition routed via OCG on the RC730 business unit and use of the account codes referenced above (52108 or 53857).