Recovery of Interest on Advance Payments to State Grantees and Subgrantees ( 1982 )


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  •                    Recovery of Interest on Advance Payments
    to State Grantees and Subgrantees
    Section 203 of the Intergovernm ental Cooperation Act exem pts both the states and their subgrantees
    from accountability for interest earned on federal grant funds pending their disbursem ent, and
    such interest may thus not be recovered by the federal governm ent.
    February 5, 1982
    M EM ORANDUM OPINION FOR THE COUNSEL TO THE DIRECTOR,
    OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
    This memorandum responds to your request that this Office advise you
    whether the federal government may recover interest actually accrued by state
    grantees and subgrantees on advance payments of grant funds. Section 203 o f the
    Intergovernmental Cooperation Act of 1968,42 U .S.C . § 4213 (1976), provides
    that “ [s]tates shall not be held accountable for interest earned on grant-in-aid
    funds, pending their disbursement for program purposes.” On the basis of this
    provision, prior opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel, and three recent
    decisions of the Com ptroller General interpreting that provision, we conclude
    that the federal government may not recover interest earned by state grantees and
    subgrantees on advances of federal grant-in-aid funds.
    I.
    Section 203 of the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act of 1968, 42 U .S .C .
    § 4213, which directs the scheduling of transfers of federal grant-in-aid funds to
    states, provides that transfers of grant funds be made as near as possible to the
    time of disbursem ent by the states, and exempts states1 from accountability for
    interest earned on these funds pending their disbursement. Section 203 provides:
    Scheduling of Federal transfers to the States
    Heads of Federal departments and agencies responsible for ad­
    ministering grant-in-aid programs shall schedule the transfer of
    grant-in-aid funds consistent with program purposes and applica-
    1 D ecisions of the C om ptroller G eneral have in the past required recipients o f federal g rants to return to the
    Treasury any interest earned on such grants prior to their use, unless C ongress has specifically precluded su ch a
    requirem ent. See 42 Com p. G en 289 (1962) and cases cited therein.
    127
    ble Treasury regulations, so as to m inim ize the time elapsing
    between the transfer of such funds from the United States Treas­
    ury and the disbursement thereof by a State, whether such dis­
    bursem ent occurs prior to or subsequent to such transfer of funds.
    . . . States shall not be held accountable for interest earned on
    g ra n t-in -a id funds, p en din g their disbursem ent fo r program
    purposes.
    42 U .S .C . § 4213 (emphasis added).
    You have questioned the applicability of the exemption contained in § 203 to
    interest actually earned by state grantees in view of the A ct’s mandate that federal
    grant-in-aid funds not be transferred from the Treasury until such funds are ready
    for use by the state grantees, the effect of which would minimize the amount of
    interest accrued by the states. In addition, it is your position that even if § 203
    does provide an exemption for interest earned by state grantees, the exemption
    does not extend to local governmental units which are secondary recipients of
    federal grant funds funnelled through the states.
    N otw ithstanding the Act’s purpose to discourage the transfer of federal grant
    funds to states in advance of the grantees’ program needs, we cannot ignore the
    clear language o f the A ct which exempts states from accountability for interest in
    the event that interest is earned prior to states’ disbursement of funds. Dec.
    Comp. G en. B - l 96794 (Feb. 2 4 ,1 9 8 1 ); 5 9 Comp. Gen. 218 (1980); Dec. Comp.
    Gen. B -171019 (Oct. 16, 1973); Rehnquist, Office of Legal Counsel, “ Recov­
    ery o f Interest on Excessive C ash Balances of LEAA Funds Held by States and
    Cities” (Nov. 15, 1971 ).2 Moreover, while the question can be raised whether
    2 In his 1971 o p in io n , then Assistant A ttorney G eneral R ehnquist gave a clear and concise account o f the
    exem ption provision co n tain ed in § 203 o f th e Act:
    O u r reading o f the legislative h isto ry concerning § 203 and the bro ad er objectives o f the
    Intergovernm ental Cooperation Act o f 1968 as w ell, leads us to [conclude] that Congress exem pted
    th e States from the burden o f accounting for interest on g rant funds to facilitate the new authorities for
    co m m ingling F ederal funds in the g en e ra l accounts of th e States and the new Treasury techniques
    such as the letter o f cred it and sight d ra ft procedures w h ich im plem ented the A ct. We do not read
    these, however, as support for the view that Congress intended to impose penalties on those States
    which accum ulated interest on deposited or invested funds and to require a forfeiture o f that interest
    O n the contrary, the [S enate and H ouse] reports em phasize the expectation that very little interest
    accum ulation is expected. It is clear to u s that this is because an im portant objective o f the legislation
    is to require the Federal G overnm ent to im pose such oversight controls as w ill result in a scheduling
    o f funds to the S tates and so prevent a n y long periods o f d isu se of funds w ith resulting buildups and
    accum ulation o f w indfalls.
    An overall legislative objective is clearly assistance to the States from the Federal Government. In
    its very title the A ct is described as a m easure to “ achieve the fullest cooperation * * * to im prove the
    adm inistration o f grants-in-aid to the States ” For these purposes, am ong others, the States were
    relieved o f a n u m b e r o f the duties w hich theretofore had b u rden ed the adm inistration o f the grant-in-
    aid pro g ram s, such as the requirem ents for m aintaining funds in separate banks and the requirem ent
    o f accounting for any interest earned o n deposits or investm ents
    We w ould agree . . . that Congress never intended to p erm it a State “ to abuse agency and Treasury
    regulations by draw ing excessive am o u n ts o f cash for investm ent p ending disbursem ent and still be
    relieved o f having to account for th e interest earned on th e in v estm en t.'’ T he legislative history
    indicates that C ongress d id not intend that to happen because the Federal G overnm ent was expected
    to prevent it from happening by sp acin g the disbursem ent funds on the basis o f need.
    Perhaps the most persuasive argument against a plan to hold a State accountable fo r interest
    earned is the categorical provision in § 203 stating “States shall not be held accountable fo r interest
    earned on grant-in-aid funds, pending their disbursement fo r program purposes .” We do not fin d a
    C ontinued
    128
    this exemption applies to local governmental units which are subgrantees of the
    states, both this Office and the Com ptroller General have examined this issue,
    and neither has read § 203 to permit the federal government to recover interest
    earned by local governmental units receiving federal funds as subgrants from the
    states. See Dec. Comp. G en. B-196794 (Feb. 24, 1981); 59 Comp. Gen. 218
    (1980); Dec. Comp. Gen. B—171019 (Oct. 16, 1973); Ulman, Office of Legal
    Counsel, “ Issue Raised by Conflicting Opinions Concerning Interest Earned on
    Grant Funds by Local Governments” (Mar. 12, 1974); Office of Legal Counsel,
    Internal Action M emorandum (Feb. 19, 1974). But see Rehnquist, Office of
    Legal Counsel (Nov. 15, 
    1971), supra
    .
    II.
    This Office first considered the applicability of the § 203 exemption to
    subgrantees of states receiving federal grant-in-aid funds in a 1971 opinion
    issued by Assistant Attorney General Rehnquist to the Administrator of the Law
    Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA). See Rehnquist, Office of Legal
    Counsel (Nov. 15, 
    1971), supra
    . In that opinion Assistant Attorney General
    Rehnquist noted that § 203 of the Act speaks only of relief to “ States,” a term
    which is defined in Section 102 of the Act as
    any of the several States of the United States, the District of
    Colum bia, Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the United
    States, or any agency or instrumentality of a State, but does not
    include the governments of the political subdivisions c f the State.
    42 U .S.C . § 4201(2) (emphasis added). Because local governmental units are
    not encom passed by this definition, he concluded that local governmental units
    receiving federal funds as subgrantees of the states were not exempt from the
    general requirement that interest earned on federal funds be returned to the
    United States Treasury:
    [D]espite the Congressional intention to discontinue “ future ap­
    plication” of the interest accountability “ principle” (H. Rept.
    No. 1845, 90th C ong., Aug. 2, 1968) the specific mention of the
    States in § 203 without any express legislative relief to the cities
    and other local units leaves unchanged the general rule calling for
    continued accountability by the latter, whether funds are received
    directly or by subgrant from a State. Although we are not aware of
    any reason for the distinction in § 203 between “ States” and
    “ political subdivisions,” it nevertheless exists, and accordingly
    contradiction to that clear statement in the Act nor in its legislative history
    R ehnquist opinion at 5 - 6 (em phasis added) Because this Office has continued to m aintain the view s expressed in
    A ssistant A ttorney G eneral R ehnquist's 1971 opin io n , w hich are also consistent w ith subsequent decisions b y the
    C o m p troller G eneral, we do not find it necessary to re-analyze in this opinion the applicability o f § 203 to state
    grantees
    129
    we thin k that as a m atter of law the distinction must be
    m aintained.
    Rehnquist opinion at 7.
    In strictly construing the term “ State” in the Act without reference to the A ct’s
    legislative history, the Rehnquist opinion failed to distinguish local governmental
    units which receive grant-in-aid funds directly from the federal government from
    those which are secondary recipients of federal grant funds, receiving federal
    funds as subgrantees of the states. In view o f the A ct’s purpose to assist the states
    by facilitating the transfers o f federal grant funds, as well as by relieving the
    states of various administrative and accounting duties, we believe that this
    distinction is critical to the A ct’s implementation. As subsequent decisions of this
    Office3 and the Comptroller G eneral have m ade clear, a requirement that local
    governm ental units receiving federal grant funds as subgrantees of the states be
    held accountable for interest earned on these funds would necessarily require
    state grantees, in contravention of § 203, to be responsible for ascertaining and
    securing the interest earned by their local subgrantees. In the case of direct
    federal grants to local governmental units, however, state grant administrative
    m achinery is in no way implicated— in these cases, o f course, local grantees are
    directly accountable to the federal government for interest earned on federal
    grant funds prior to their use. S ee Dec. Comp. Gen. B-196794 (Feb. 24, 1981);
    59 Comp. G en. 218 (Jan. 17, 1980); U lm an, Office of Legal Counsel, “ Issue
    R aised by Conflicting Opinions Concerning Interest Earned on Grant Funds by
    Local G overnm ents” (Mar. 12, 1974); Dec. Comp. Gen. B -171019 (Oct. 16,
    1973).
    In 1973, the Com ptroller G eneral considered the issue of interest accountabil­
    ity by subgrantees o f the states and concluded that “ political subdivisions
    receiving Federal grants-in-aid through State governments are entitled to retain
    moneys received as interest earned on such Federal funds.” Dec. Comp. Gen.
    B -1 7 1 0 1 9 at 1 (O ct. 16, 1973). In reaching this conclusion, the Comptroller
    G eneral noted that neither the language nor the legislative history of § 203 of the
    Intergovernm ental Cooperation A ct differentiates between grants which the
    states will disburse themselves and grants involving funds which the states will
    subgrant to local governm ents.4 The Com ptroller General stated:
    1    See U lm a n , O ffice of Legal Counsel, “ Is su e Raised by C onflicting O p inions C oncerning Interest E arned on
    G ran t R inds by L ocal G o v ern m en ts’' (Mar 12, 1974) O n Mar. 12, 1974, A cting A ssistant A ttorney G eneral U lm an
    responded to a request by LEA A to resolve th e differences betw een the 1971 R ehnquist opinion an d a 1973 decision
    by th e C o m p tro lle r G eneral w hich concluded that local governm ental u nits receiving federal grant funds as
    sub g ran ts from th e states w ere perm itted to re ta in the interest ea rn e d on those funds. In his letter, U lman deferred to
    the ju d g m e n t o f th e C o m p tro lle r G eneral reg ard in g the proper interpretation o f § 203, noting that " th e m atter .
    involve[d] th e disp o sitio n o f funds in the settlem ent o f a public accoun t, a m atter w ithin [the C o m ptroller G en eral’s]
    official ju risd ic tio n .      ” U lm a n , Office of L e g al C ounsel, supra at 3 See also Office o f Legal C o unsel. Internal
    A ction M em o ra n d u m (F eb 19. 1974) (discussing issues to be addressed in the Mar. 12, 1974, letter to LE A A )
    4 T h e C o m p tro lle r G eneral referred to a F eb . 19, 1969, m em orandum from the A ssistant G eneral C ounsel for
    E d ucation, D ep artm en t o f H ealth , Education a n d W elfare (H E W ) to the A ssistant C om m issioner for A dm inistra­
    tio n . H EW , w hich also co n c lu d ed that the interpretation of § 203 that is m ost co n sisten t w ith the Intergovernm ental
    C o o p era tio n A c t’s p urposes and legislative h isto ry requires that all federal g rant funds transferred to states be
    ex em p t from in terest accountability, without reg ard to w hether the funds are further subgranted by the states:
    (T he la nguage o f § 203] quite literally instructs us not to hold a S tate agency accountable for
    interest earn ed on g ran t funds pending their disbursement. T h ere is n o exception to this instruction
    C ontinued
    130
    Thus, it seems clear to us that States are not to be held accountable
    for interest earned on any grant-in-aid funds pending their dis­
    bursem ent, whether or not the States intend, or are required by the
    terms of the grant, to subgrant these funds. To hold otherwise
    would, of course, require the States to assume the burden of
    accounting for the presumably relatively small amounts of inter­
    est which would be earned on these funds in contravention of the
    legislative intent behind the last sentence in section 203.
    
    Id. at 8.
       This analysis of § 203 was reaffirmed by the Comptroller General in 1980,
    with respect to /ton-governmental subgrantees of state recipients of federal
    grants. See 59 Comp. Gen. 218 (Jan. 17, 1980). The Com ptroller General
    concluded that “ the same rationale that justifies exempting governmental sub­
    grantees from rem itting to the Federal grantor agency interest earned on Federal
    grant funds received from the States, applies equally to non-governmental sub­
    grantees.” 
    Id. Again in
    1981, the Comptroller General reiterated his interpretation of § 203
    as permitting subgrantees of federal grants to retain the interest earned on funds
    received by them through the states. See Dec. Comp. Gen. B -196794 (Feb. 24,
    1981). The Com ptroller G eneral’s 1981 decision was prompted by a request from
    the Office of M anagement and Budget (OMB) to reconsider the current reading
    of § 203 in light of the difficulties that it poses for sound cash management by the
    various federal grantor agencies. OMB was, and continues to be, concerned that
    § 203 provides an incentive to states and their subgrantees to draw on their grant
    funds prematurely to accrue “ free” interest, and thereby frustrate the mandate of
    Treasury C ircular 10755 against excessive cash withdrawals. While the Com p­
    for funds that ea rn interest pending their disbursem ent by a local educational agency, o r any o ther
    agency
    To depart from this plain reading o f § 203 w ould require som e clear indication o f a d ifferent
    legislative intent in its enactm ent. N o such indication is apparent. O n the contrary, as th e floor
    m anager o f the H ouse bill, M r R euss, pointed out—
    T he first substantive title— title II— calls for im proved adm inistration o f grants-in-aid to
    the States * * * In addition it w ould relieve the States from u nnecessary and outm oded
    accounting procedures now in effect and the m aintenance o f separate bank accounts w hile
    protecting the n g h t of the executive branch and the C om ptroller G eneral to audit those
    accounts
    R elief from “ unnecessary * * * accounting procedures” is consistent w ith suspension o f the rule
    requiring the S tates to account for interest earned on grant funds, regardless o f w hat agency o f the
    State may be in possession of those funds at the tim e that such interest accrues. The effect c f excluding
    political subdivisions from the term 'State' must be understood merely to withhold interest fo r -
    giveness in programs in which a local educational agency is directly accountable to the Federal
    Government.
    D ec C om p G en B -1 7 1 0 1 9 (O ct. 16, 1973) (em phasis added)
    5 Treasury C ircular 1075 requires th a t1
    Cash advances to a recipient organization shall be lim ited to the m inim um am ounts needed and shall
    be tim ed to be in accord only w ith the actual, im m ediate cash requirem ents o f the recipient
    organization in carry in g out the purpose of the approved program or project T h e tim ing an d am ount
    o f cash advances shall be as close as is adm inistratively feasible to the actual disbursem ents by the
    recipient organization for direct program costs and the proportionate share o f any allow able indirect
    costs
    3 1 C .F R § 205 4 ( 1 9 7 8 ) See also S. R ep N o 29, 96th C ong , 2d S ess (1980) o n the S upplem ental A p p ro p n a-
    C o n n n u ed
    131
    troller G eneral was sympathetic to the concerns expressed by OMB and indicated
    that § 203 is being reassessed in light of administrative changes that have taken
    place since the legislation was passed in 1968, he nevertheless concluded that
    [a]s long as section 203 rem ains in e f f e c t. . . we see no basis for
    changing our ruling even if this is an obstacle to better cash
    m anagem ent. However, we should point out that our decision
    does not preclude agencies from com plying with the three steps
    m entioned by the Senate Com m ittee on Appropriations, includ­
    ing “ [in itiatin g immediate recovery action whenever recipients
    are found to have drawn excess cash, in violation of Treasury
    C ircular 1075.” S. Rep. No. 9 6 -8 2 9 , 96th C ong., 2d Sess. 14
    (1980). T hus, the agencies should monitor their grantees draw of
    cash and recover any excess.
    
    Id. at 2.
       O ur own reading of § 203 of the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act o f 1968,
    in light o f its legislative history, supports the foregoing analyses of the Comp­
    troller G eneral. W hile we are m indful of the position taken by this Office in the
    1971 Rehnquist opinion, we believe that the A ct’s legislative history, and the
    accom panying statem ents of the A ct’s purposes, cannot support the narrow
    interpretation of “ State” accorded § 203 by that opinion. To exempt state
    grantees from the interest accountability requirement while requiring that they
    m onitor and collect interest accrued by their .jwbgrantees would reimpose the
    very adm inistrative and accounting burdens of which the Act was intended to
    relieve the states.6 Although the Rehnquist opinion did not appear to contemplate
    such a result, it nevertheless seem ed com pelled by its narrow reading of “ States”
    to distinguish federal grant funds which are disbursed by the states for state
    program m ing needs from those funds which are disbursed by the states to their
    political subdivisions for local program m ing needs. In view of the A ct’s overall
    legislative objective of assisting the states by improving the administration of
    grants-in-aid— including the facilitation of grant fund transfers, and relieving
    states o f the burdens of maintaining grant funds in separate bank accounts and
    accounting for interest earned o n deposits or investments— it would make little
    sense to im pose upon states th e far m ore difficult task of accounting for the
    tions and R escission B ill, 1980, directing all federal agencies to “ take im m ediate steps to assure com pliance w ith
    Treasury C ircu lar 1075“ b y
    (1) Review ing th e p erio d ic reports filed by recipients to ascertain w hether they are draw ing and
    holding cash in ex cess o f their cu rren t needs,
    (2) A uditing a sufficient number of recip ien t accounts to determ ine w h eth er they are filing accurate
    reports on cash m han d ; and
    (3) Initiating immediate recovery action whenever recipients arefo u n d to have drawn excess cash, in
    violation o f Treasury Circular 1075.
    S. R ep N o. 829 at 14 (em phasis added).
    6 O f co u rse, th is burden w ould not be im p o se d on the states in cases w h ere federal grant funds are transferred
    directly from the federal g ran to r agencies to lo c al governm ental units, w ith o u t being funnelled through the states.
    A ll prior o p inions of th e C o m p tro lle r G eneral an d the Office of Legal C o u n sel, including the R ehnquist op in io n , are
    in agreem ent that in such ca ses, the local g ra n t recipients are responsible d irectly to the federal grantor agency, and
    are not ex em p t from in terest accountability b y operation o f § 203.
    132
    interest earnings of their subgrantees when the states themselves are exempt from
    accountability for their own earnings. Thus, we believe that, consistent with the
    purposes of the Act, § 203 is properly interpreted to exempt interest accountabil­
    ity on all federal grant-in-aid funds that are transferred to the states, regardless of
    whether such funds are disbursed by the states for their own programming needs
    or subgranted to local governmental units.
    While we are sympathetic to the cash management concerns expressed by
    OMB, we believe that the Act clearly places the responsibility for implementing
    sound fiscal policies with respect to federal grant funds with the federal grantor
    agencies. Section 203 requires the heads of federal departments and agencies
    who are responsible for administering grant-in-aid funds to schedule the fund
    transfers in a m anner that is “ consistent with program purposes and applicable
    Treasury regulations, so as to minimize the tim e elapsing between the transfer of
    such funds from the United States Treasury and the disbursement thereof by a
    State. . . .” 42 U .S .C . § 4213.
    T h e o d o r e B. O l s o n
    Assistant Attorney General
    Office of Legal Counsel
    133
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 2/5/1982

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017