Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1)
Reasonable Costs. A cost shall be deemed to be a reasonable expenditure for a
DUI program if it does not exceed that which would be incurred by a prudent
person under the circumstances prevailing at the time the decision was made to
incur the cost. In determining the reasonableness of a given cost,
consideration shall be given to:
(a) Whether
the cost is of a type generally recognized as ordinary and necessary for the
operation of an organization in the public sector which performs similar
functions or which is staffed with similarly classified personnel.
(b) The restraints or requirements imposed by
such factors as generally accepted sound business practices, arms length
bargaining, and federal and state laws and regulations.
(c) Whether the individuals concerned acted
with prudence in the circumstances, considering their responsibilities to the
organization, its employees, its clients, and the public at
large.
(2) Personnel
Salaries and Benefits.
(a) The Board of
Directors or advisory committee shall not receive direct compensation for their
services on the board or as an employee or consultant for the
corporation.
(b) Management - The
total compensation of the executive director, president, or other senior
managers which is charged to the DUI program shall be based on the number of
clients served, staffing, size of budget relative to other organizations
offering similar services, and other relevant factors. In addition, such
factors as tenure with the organization may be considered.
(c) The total compensation of each employee
which is charged to the DUI program, other than those identified in paragraph
(2)(b) above, shall approximate that paid by other employers in the same
general geographic area to positions requiring similar skills and
experience.
(d) Contributions to
retirement cannot exceed the percentage of gross compensation contributed by
the employer of members of the Regular Class of the Florida Retirement System
pursuant to Section 121.071, F.S.
(e) Benefits such as club dues, tuition plans
for employees' children, and automobiles primarily for personal use are not
allowable costs.
(3)
Expenses.
(a) Contributions and donations to
others are not allowable costs.
(b)
Accelerated depreciation is not allowable.
(c) The costs of an individual's dues,
memberships, and subscriptions are not allowable unless the organization does
not permit corporate memberships. Individual membership for the purpose of
professional liability coverage is allowable.
(d) Expenditures for entertainment are not
allowable.
(e) Discretionary
bonuses shall not be paid from or charged to the DUI program either as direct
or indirect costs. Discretionary or extraordinary bonuses are sums paid to
employees in recognition of services performed during a given period when the
payment is not made pursuant to any prior written agreement causing the
employees to expect such payments regularly, or as part of amounts budgeted by
the program for such purposes.
(f)
Usage and occupancy fees charged to the DUI program by an affiliated
organization or other program within the same organization are limited to the
DUI programs share of the total operating cost plus
depreciation.
(4) Cost
Allocation.
The identification of direct and indirect costs and the
allocation of indirect costs is required for multi-function organizations.
Single function organizations will not be required to provide this degree of
cost accounting.
(a) Direct costs are
those costs which can be reasonably identified as benefiting a particular
program, function, or cost center.
1. All
costs should be charged directly to a program or function unless identified as
an indirect cost as defined below.
2. Joint costs are costs incurred by the
organization which benefits two or more programs or functions, and which can be
readily allocated to the DUI program receiving such benefits, using an
appropriate base. This would include such items as depreciation, rental costs,
operation and maintenance of facilities, telephone expenses, and employees
salaries. A step-down allocation methodology is preferred and any other method
must be justified as being more equitable.
(b) Indirect costs are those that have been
incurred for common or joint objectives and cannot be readily identified with a
particular final cost objective.
1. Direct
costs of minor amounts may be treated as indirect costs where it is not
economically feasible to identify and allocate them as direct costs.
2. Indirect costs are those costs remaining
after all direct costs have been determined and assigned directly to programs,
functions, or cost centers, as appropriate.
3. Indirect costs shall be assigned to one or
more indirect costs pools and allocated to programs or functions using a
logical, supportable, and equitable distribution base. Different distribution
bases may be used for different indirect cost
pools.
(5) Cost
Limitations. The amount of any cost charged to a DUI program, subject to the
maximum cost limitations imposed by these rules, shall be limited to the
proportion of benefit received by the program.
Rulemaking Authority 322.02, 322.292, 322.293 FS. Law
Implemented 322.292, 322.293 FS.
New 1-4-95, Amended
3-4-97.