[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 34, Volume 3]

[Revised as of July 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 34CFR682.418]



[Page 764-766]

 

                           TITLE 34--EDUCATION

 

 CHAPTER VI--OFFICE OF POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

 

PART 682_FEDERAL FAMILY EDUCATION LOAN (FFEL) PROGRAM--Table of Contents

 

 Subpart D_Administration of the Federal Family Education Loan Programs 

                          by a Guaranty Agency

 

Sec. 682.418  Prohibited uses of the assets of the Operating Fund during 



periods in which the Operating Fund contains transferred funds owed to 

the Federal 

          Fund.



    (a) General. (1) During periods in which the Operating Fund contains 

transferred funds owed to the Federal Fund, a guaranty agency may not 

use the assets of the Operating Fund to pay costs prohibited under 

paragraph (b) of this section and may not use the assets of the 

Operating Fund to pay for goods, property, or services provided by an 

affiliated organization unless the agency applies and demonstrates to 

the Secretary, and receives the Secretary's approval, that the payment 

would be in the Federal fiscal interest and would not exceed the 

affiliated organization's actual and reasonable cost of providing those 

goods, property, or services.

    (2) All guaranty agency contracts with respect to its Operating Fund 

or assets must include a provision stating that the contract is 

terminable by the Secretary upon 30 days notice to the contracting 

parties if the Secretary determines that the contract includes an 

impermissible transfer of the Operating Fund or assets or is otherwise 

inconsistent with the terms and purposes of section 422 of the HEA.

    (b) Prohibited uses of Operating Fund assets. A guaranty agency may 

use the assets of the Operating Fund established under Sec. 

682.410(a)(1) only as prescribed in Sec. 682.410(a)(2). Uses of the 

Operating Fund that are not allowable under Sec. 682.410(a)(2) include, 

but are not limited to--

    (1) Compensation for personnel services, including wages, salaries, 

pension plan costs, post-retirement health benefits, employee life 

insurance, unemployment benefit plans, severance pay, costs of leave, 

and other benefits, to the extent that total compensation to an 

employee, officer, director, trustee, or agent of the guaranty agency is 

not reasonable for the services rendered. Compensation is considered 

reasonable to the extent that it is comparable to that paid in the labor 

market in which the guaranty agency competes for the kind of employees 

involved. Costs that are otherwise unallowable may not be considered 

allowable solely on the basis that they constitute personnel 

compensation. In no case may the Operating Fund be used to pay any 

compensation, whether calculated on an hourly basis or otherwise, that 

would be proportionately greater than 118.05 percent of the total salary 

paid (as calculated on an hourly basis) under section 5312 of title 5, 

United States Code (relating to Level I of the Executive Schedule).

    (2) Contributions and donations, including cash, property, and 

services, by the guaranty agency to others, regardless of the recipient 

or purpose, unless pursuant to written authorization from the Secretary;

    (3) Entertainment, including amusement, diversion, hospitality 

suites, and social activities, and any costs associated with those 

activities, such as tickets to shows or sports events, meals, alcoholic 

beverages, lodging, rentals, transportation, and gratuities;

    (4) Fines, penalties, damages, and other settlements resulting from 

violations or alleged violations of the guaranty agency's failure to 

comply with Federal, State, or local laws and regulations that are 

unrelated to the FFEL Program, unless specifically approved by the 

Secretary. This prohibition does not apply if a non-criminal violation 

or alleged violation has been assessed against the guaranty agency, the 

payment does not reimburse an agency employee, and the payment does not 

exceed $1,000, or if it occurred as a result of compliance with specific 

requirements of the FFEL Program or in



[[Page 765]]



accordance with written instructions from the Secretary. The use of the 

Operating Fund in any other case must be requested by the agency and 

specifically approved in advance by the Secretary;

    (5) Legal expenses for prosecution of claims against the Federal 

Government, unless the guaranty agency substantially prevails on those 

claims. In that event, the Secretary approves the reimbursement of 

reasonable legal expenses incurred by the guaranty agency;

    (6) Lobbying activities, as defined in section 501(h) of the 

Internal Revenue Code, including dues to membership organizations to the 

extent that those dues are used for lobbying;

    (7) Major expenditures, including those for land, buildings, 

equipment, or information systems, whether singly or as a related group 

of expenditures, that exceed 5 percent of the guaranty agency's 

Operating Fund balance at the time the expenditures are made, unless the 

agency has provided written notice of the intended expenditure to the 

Secretary 30 days before the agency makes or commits itself to the 

expenditure. For those expenditures involving the purchase of an asset, 

the term ``major expenditure'' applies to costs such as the cost of 

purchasing the asset and making improvements to it, the cost to put it 

in place, the net invoice price of the asset, ancillary charges, such as 

taxes, duty, protective in-transit insurance, freight, and installation 

costs, and the costs of any modifications, attachments, accessories, or 

auxiliary apparatus necessary to make the asset usable for the purpose 

for which it was acquired, whether the expenditures are classified as 

capital or operating expenses;

    (8) Public relations, and all associated costs, paid directly or 

through a third party, to the extent that those costs are used to 

promote or maintain a favorable image of the guaranty agency. The term 

``public relations'' does not include any activity that is ordinary and 

necessary for the fulfillment of the agency's FFEL guaranty 

responsibilities under the HEA, including appropriate and reasonable 

advertising designed specifically to communicate with the public and 

program participants for the purpose of facilitating the agency's 

ability to fulfill its FFEL guaranty responsibilities under the HEA. 

Ordinary and necessary public relations activities include training of 

program participants and secondary school personnel and customer service 

functions that disseminate FFEL-related information and materials to 

schools, loan holders, prospective loan applicants, and their parents. 

In providing that training at workshops, conferences, or other ordinary 

and necessary forums customarily used by the agency to fulfill its 

responsibilities under the HEA, the agency may provide light meals and 

refreshments of a reasonable nature and amount to the participants;

    (9) Relocation of employees in excess of an employee's actual or 

reasonably estimated expenses or for purposes that do not benefit the 

administration of the guaranty agency's FFEL program. Except as approved 

by the Secretary, reimbursement must be in accordance with an 

established written policy; and

    (10) Travel expenses that are not in accordance with a written 

policy approved by the Secretary or a State policy. If the guaranty 

agency does not have such a policy, it may not use the assets of the 

Operating Fund to pay for travel expenses that exceed those allowed for 

lodging and subsistence under subchapter I of Chapter 57 of title 5, 

United States Code, or in excess of commercial airfare costs for 

standard coach airfare, unless those accommodations would require 

circuitous routing, travel during unreasonable hours, excessively 

prolonged travel, would result in increased cost that would offset 

transportation savings, or would offer accommodations not reasonably 

adequate for the medical needs of the traveler.

    (c) Cost allocation. Each guaranty agency that shares costs with any 

other program, agency, or organization shall develop a cost allocation 

plan consistent with the requirements described in OMB Circular A-87 and 

maintain the plan and related supporting documentation for audit. A 

guaranty agency is required to submit



[[Page 766]]



its cost allocation plans for the Secretary's approval if it is 

specifically requested to do so by the Secretary.



(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 

1840-0726)



(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1078)



[61 FR 60437, Nov. 27, 1996, as amended at 62 FR 13539, Mar. 21, 1997; 

64 FR 58634, Oct. 29, 1999]