§___.210 Subrecipient and vendor determinations.
(a) General. An auditee may be a recipient,
a subrecipient, and a vendor. Federal awards expended as a recipient or
a subrecipient would be subject to audit under this part. The payments
received for goods or services provided as a vendor would not be considered
Federal awards. The guidance in paragraphs (b) and (c) of
this section should be considered in determining whether payments constitute
a Federal award or a payment for goods and services.
(b) Federal award. Characteristics
indicative of a Federal award received by a subrecipient are when the organization:
(1) Determines who is eligible to receive
what Federal financial assistance;
(2) Has its performance measured against whether
the objectives of the Federal program are met;
(3) Has responsibility for programmatic decision
making;
(4) Has responsibility for adherence to applicable
Federal program compliance requirements; and
(5) Uses the Federal funds to carry out a
program of the organization as compared to providing goods or services
for a program of the pass-through entity.
(c) Payment for goods and services.
Characteristics indicative of a payment for goods and services received
by a vendor are when the organization (1) Provides the goods and services
within normal business operations;
(2) Provides similar goods or services to
many different purchasers;
(3) Operates in a competitive environment;
(4) Provides goods or services that are ancillary
to the operation of the Federal program; and
(5) Is not subject to compliance requirements
of the Federal program.
(d) Use of judgment in making determination.
There may be unusual circumstances or exceptions to the listed characteristics.
In making the determination of whether a subrecipient or vendor relationship
exists, the substance of the relationship is more important than the form
of the agreement. It is not expected that all of the characteristics will
be present and judgment should be used in determining whether an entity
is a subrecipient or vendor.
(e) For-profit subrecipient. Since
this part does not apply to for-profit subrecipients, the pass-through
entity is responsible for establishing requirements, as necessary, to ensure
compliance by for-profit subrecipients. The contract with the for-profit
subrecipient should describe applicable compliance requirements and the
for-profit subrecipient's compliance responsibility. Methods to ensure
compliance for Federal awards made to for-profit subrecipients may include
pre-award audits, monitoring during the contract, and post-award audits.
(f) Compliance responsibility for vendors.
In most cases, the auditee's compliance responsibility for vendors is only
to ensure that the procurement, receipt, and payment for goods and services
comply with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant
agreements. Program compliance requirements normally do not pass through
to vendors. However, the auditee is responsible for ensuring compliance
for vendor transactions which are structured such that the vendor is responsible
for program compliance or the vendor's records must be reviewed to determine
program compliance. Also, when these vendor transactions relate to a major
program, the scope of the audit shall include determining whether these
transactions are in compliance with laws, regulations, and the provisions
of contracts or grant agreements. |