Maintained for Historical Purposes

This resource is being maintained for historical purposes only and is not currently applicable.

Institutional Eligibility and Administrative Requirements - Cash Management

AwardYear: 1996-1997
EnterChapterNo: 3
EnterChapterTitle: Institutional Eligibility and Administrative Requirements
SectionNumber: 3
SectionTitle: Cash Management
PageNumbers: 53-64


On December 1, 1994, the Department published regulations that
govern a school's management of most SFA funds. These
regulations are known as the "cash management" regulations. These
regulations establish rules and procedures that a school must follow
in requesting, maintaining, disbursing and otherwise managing funds
under the Pell Grant, FSEOG, Perkins Loan, FWS, Direct Loan, and
FFEL programs. For purposes of this discussion SFA FUNDS refers
only to these SFA Programs.

Previously, most cash management requirements were found in the
individual SFA Program regulations or various Department
publications. The December 1, 1994 regulations consolidated many
of these requirements and added new requirements for proper
handling of SFA funds. This section will highlight the provisions of
these new regulations. However, a school is still responsible for
following other cash management rules and procedures specific to an
SFA Program.

[[Third-party servicers]]
These rules and procedures also apply to a third-party servicer. For
more information about third-party servicers, see the discussion on
page 3-46.

As in the past, the SFA funds received by a school are intended
solely for the use of student beneficiaries, except for funds received
as an administrative cost allowance, which are intended as a
payment to the school. (See the Administrative Cost Allowance
discussion on page 3-64.) All other funds are held in trust by the
school for students and for the Department. SFA funds cannot be
used as collateral or for any other purpose.

REQUESTING FUNDS

The December 1, 1994 regulations include provisions for requesting
SFA funds from the Department that are based on longstanding
Department policy.

The Department provides SFA funds to a school either by the
"advance payment method" or the "reimbursement payment
method."

[[Advance payment method]]
Under the advance payment method, the Department accepts a
school's request for funds and transfers the amount requested to a
bank account designated by the school. The school should not
request more cash than is needed to make disbursements to students
within THREE BUSINESS DAYS. Therefore, a school should make
the disbursements as soon as administratively feasible, but no later
than three business days following the date the school received those
funds.

[[Reimbursement payment method]]
Under the reimbursement method, a school must disburse funds to
eligible students before requesting funds from the Department. The
school cannot request more cash than the amount that it actually
disbursed to those eligible students. Before approving a school's
request for funds, the Department determines that the school has

- identified the students for whom it is seeking reimbursement,

- documented properly the SFA eligibility of each student,

- calculate correctly the SFA payment to each student included in
its request,

- credited appropriately each student's account, and

- submitted the documentation required by the Department to
support each of those conditions.

[[FFEL/Direct Loan EFT]]
In certifying a loan application for a borrower who is not subject to
delayed disbursement provisions, a school may not request that a
lender provide by electronic fund transfer (EFT) or master check the
loan proceeds for that borrower earlier than 13 days before the first
day of a student's enrollment period. While the regulations speak to
the first day of the enrollment period, for subsequent disbursements
of Direct Loan or FFEL program loans, it is expected that schools
will not request that a lender provide the loan proceeds earlier than
13 days before the first day of a semester, term, or other period of
enrollment for which the disbursement is intended.

MAINTAINING FUNDS

[[Account for federal funds]]
All schools must maintain a bank account into which the Department
transfers, or the school deposits, campus-based, Direct Loan, and
Pell Grant funds.*1* A school is not required to maintain a separate
account for SFA funds unless the Department specifies otherwise.

[[NEW]]
[[Changes to UCC-1 statement requirement]]
Previously, the regulations required all schools to file a UCC-1
statement. Beginning with the 1996-97 award year, the December 1,
1995 regulations (with corrections published February 1, 1996)
require schools other than public schools to EITHER

- ensure that the name of the account includes the phrase "federal
Funds" to clearly identify that SFA funds are maintained in the
account, or

- notify the bank of the accounts that contain federal funds and keep
a copy of this notice in its records AND file a UCC-1 statement
with the appropriate state or municipal government entity that
discloses that an account contains federal funds.

The school must keep a copy of this statement in its records.

[[Public schools exempt from UCC-1 requirement]]
Because the regulations no longer require PUBLIC institutions to file
a UCC-1 statement, a public institution must EITHER

- ensure that the name of the account includes the phrase "federal
Funds" to clearly identify that SFA funds are maintained in the
account, or

- notify the bank of the accounts that contain federal funds and keep
a copy of this notice in its records.

The requirement that a school file a UCC-1 statement was
established to reduce the possibility that a school could misrepresent
federal funds as its own funds to obtain a loan or secure credit.
Because public institutions generally do not seek to obtain credit in
the same manner as private institutions, they have been exempted
from the requirement.

[[Interest bearing or investment account]]
Except in the instances discussed below, the account that SFA funds
are deposited in must be an interest-bearing account or an investment
account. An INTEREST-BEARING ACCOUNT must be federally
insured or secured by collateral of value reasonably equivalent to the
amount of SFA funds in the account. An INVESTMENT
ACCOUNT must consist predominately of low-risk income-
producing securities. If a school chooses to maintain federal funds in
an investment account, the school must maintain sufficient liquidity
in that account to make required disbursements to students.

[[Interest must be remitted to the Department]]
Any interest earned on SFA funds maintained in an interest-bearing
account or an investment account (other than Perkins Loan funds)
that exceeds $250 per year, must be remitted to the Department at
least once a year. A school may keep up to $250 per year of the
interest or investment revenue earned (other than that earned on
Perkins Loan funds) to pay for the administrative expense of
maintaining an interest-bearing account. A school must keep any
interest earned on Perkins Loan funds for transfer to the Perkins
Loan Fund.

[[Exceptions to interest-bearing account or investment account]]
A school is not required to maintain funds in a interest-bearing
account or an investment account if

- The school drew down less than $3 million from the SFA
Programs in the prior award year,

- The school earned less than $250 in interest on the total amount of
SFA funds drawn down in the prior award year, or

- The school can demonstrate that it would not earn over $250 in
interest on the total amount of SFA funds it will draw down.

A non-interest-bearing account must be federally insured, or secured
by collateral of value reasonably equivalent to the amount of SFA
funds in the account.

[[Federal Perkins Loan Program participants]]
A school that participates in the Perkins Loan Program must
ALWAYS maintain an interest-bearing account or an investment
account for Perkins Loan funds. If a school is also required to
maintain an interest-bearing account or investment account for other
federal funds, the school may use one account for Perkins Loan
funds and all other federal funds. If the school chooses to maintain
one account, it must determine the exact amount of any interest
earned on the Perkins Loan funds for transfer to the Perkins Loan
Fund.

DISBURSING FUNDS

The December 1, 1994 regulations consolidated and added to
existing requirements for disbursing SFA funds. These requirements
apply to all the SFA Programs specified at the beginning of this
section, except for the FWS program. A school must continue to
follow all applicable FWS disbursement procedures.

[[Definition of "disbursed"]]
SFA funds are DISBURSED when a school makes a payment of
SFA funds, or delivers proceeds of an SFA loan to or on behalf of a
student, either directly or by crediting a student's account with the
funds (posting payment of funds).

[[Knowing when an SFA disbursement occurs]]
It is important for a school to understand when the crediting of
federal student aid to a student's account will result in an SFA
disbursement. Knowing this will allow a school to determine when it
must comply with regulatory requirements related to disbursements
and other cash management issues.

- Except for Direct Loan program funds, the Department considers
a disbursement of SFA funds to have taken place by crediting a
student's account once the school has both credited the student's
account AND drawn down federal funds. The crediting of a
student's account must be backed up with federal funds before it is
considered an SFA disbursement. That is, the school must either
draw down federal funds or use federal funds it had in an account
at the school such as funds from the school's Perkins Revolving
Account or carryover funds from an earlier drawdown.

- In the case of Direct Loan program funds, a disbursement of SFA
funds takes place by crediting a student's account when the school
actually credits the student's account (if the school uses student
accounts), whether the initial funds used to credit the account are
federal funds or the school's own funds that it is designating as
Direct Loan funds.*2*

[[Early payments]]
The earliest a school may disburse SFA funds (credit a student's
account or pay the student directly) is 10 days before the first day of
the payment period or period of enrollment for which the
disbursement is intended. (Note that a school may not make a
disbursement to a student for a payment period or period of
enrollment until the student is enrolled in classes for that period.)
For subsequent disbursements of Direct Loan or FFEL Program
loans, the earliest a school may disburse SFA funds is 10 days before
the first day of a semester, term, or other period of enrollment for
which disbursement is intended.

Remember, with the exception of Direct Loan program funds noted
above, any crediting to a student's account which occurs without
federal funds being used IS NOT A FEDERAL DISBURSEMENT.
Therefore, a school may credit a student's account with award
amounts from SFA Programs earlier than 10 days prior to the
beginning of the payment or enrollment period as long as federal
funds are not used. A federal disbursement will have occurred on the
day that federal funds are taken to support the credit or on the date
that the school credits the student's account for Direct Loan
purposes.

[[Delayed disbursement of loan funds]]
Note that if a student is in the first year of an undergraduate program
and is a first-time borrower under the FFEL or Direct Loan program,
a school may not disburse or deliver the first installment of his or her
loan until 30 days after the student's first day of classes.

When a school disburses SFA funds to a student by CREDITING A
STUDENT'S ACCOUNT, it may only do so for ALLOWABLE
CHARGES. Funds in excess of the allowable charges must be paid
directly to the student, unless otherwise authorized by the student.
(An exception for the payment of prior year charges is discussed
below.)

[[Allowable charges]]
ALLOWABLE CHARGES are

- tuition and fees (as defined in section 472 of the Higher Education
Act of 1965, as amended [HEA]), room and board (if the student
contracts with the school), and

- other cost-of-attendance charges and other school charges that a
student incurs at his or her discretion, if the school obtains the
student's or parent's authorization to have such charges credited
with SFA funds.

If a charge does not meet the definition of tuition and fees in section
472 of the HEA (with the exception of contracted room and board
charges), the school must obtain the student's permission (or
parent's, if applicable) to credit the student's account with SFA
funds for these charges.

[[Required notifications]]
[[NEW]]
A school must notify a student (or parent borrower) of the amount of
SFA funds the student can expect to receive, and how and when
those funds will be paid. The school must also notify a student (or
parent borrower) in writing or electronically whenever the school
credits the student's account with Direct Loan, FFEL, and (beginning
with the 1996-97 award year) Perkins Loan program funds.
Regulations published on December 1, 1995 applied this requirement
to Perkins Loan Program funds because the regulations eliminated
the requirement that a Perkins Loan recipient sign for each loan
advance (see Chapter 6).

[[Electronic notification]]
[[NEW]]
Note that, beginning with the 1996-97 award year, the December 1,
1995 regulations permit a school to notify a student or parent
borrower electronically (as opposed to in writing) that his or her
account has been credited with SFA loan funds. If a school notifies a
borrower electronically, it must request that the borrower confirm the
receipt of the notice and maintain a record of that confirmation. For
example, if a school notifies a borrower through electronic mail, the
school must request a "return receipt" message and keep a copy of
the receipt on file.

A school MAY NOT use an in-person or telephonic conversation as
the sole means of notification. This notification is required to remind
students of their loan obligation and to give students the opportunity
to replace credited loan proceeds with other funds; in-person and
telephonic conversations are not adequate and verifiable methods of
providing notice. Notification to borrowers in-person and by
telephone may be done in addition to providing written or electronic
notice.

[[SFA credit balance]]
Beginning with the 1996-97 award year, the December 1, 1994
regulations require that, whenever a school credits SFA funds to a
student's account, and those funds exceed the student's allowable
charges, a school must pay the excess SFA funds (the CREDIT
BALANCE) directly to the student within 14 days*3* of the later of

- the date the balance occurs on the student's account,

- the first day of classes of the payment period or period of
enrollment, or

- the date the student rescinds his or her authorization for the school
to retain funds in excess of the amount needed to cover allowable
charges.

Note that the law requires that any excess PLUS loan funds be
returned to the PARENT. Therefore, if a school determines that
PLUS loan funds created a credit balance, the credit balance would
have to be given to the parent. At this time, the Department does not
specify how a school must determine which SFA funds create a
credit balance. For information on the treatment of a credit balance
when a student withdraws, see Section 5.

[[Payment of prior year charges]]
[[NEW]]
In general, SFA funds are allowed to be used to pay only for
educational expenses a student incurs in the period for which those
funds are provided. Previously, schools were not allowed to apply
SFA funds to charges assessed the student in a prior award year or
period of enrollment. Regulations published December 1, 1995
permit a school to use a student's SFA funds to pay minor prior-year
institutional charges if the student has or will have an SFA credit
balance, and the school obtains the student's authorization to pay the
prior-year charges. Although the regulations were not effective until
July 1, 1996, schools were permitted to implement this provision
upon publication of the final regulations (December 1, 1995).

A school may obtain authorization from a student in advance to use
SFA funds to cover prior-year charges that do not exceed $100. To
pay prior-year charges for amounts over $100, in addition to
obtaining authorization from a student, a school must determine if
that payment would prevent the student from paying for his or her
current educational expenses.

[[Disbursing SFA funds directly]]
In addition to crediting a student's account, SFA funds may be
disbursed directly to a student. Funds are disbursed "directly" by one
of three methods:

- A school may make a payment by check (or other means of
payment) that is payable to and requires the endorsement of the
student (or parent borrower for PLUS loan funds),

- A school may initiate an electronic funds transfer (EFT) to a bank
account designated by the student (or parent borrower for PLUS
loan funds), and

- A school may pay the student in cash, provided that the school
obtains a signed receipt from the student (or parent borrower*4*).

Note that a parent borrower of PLUS loan funds may authorize the
school to transfer PLUS loan funds to a bank account in the student's
name.

[[EFT]]
Beginning with the 1995-96 award year, a school has been allowed
to make an EFT payment to a student. A school must obtain
voluntary authorization from the student (or parent borrower) to
disburse by the EFT method into a bank account designated by the
student or parent.

[[Holding student funds]]
A school is permitted to hold excess funds if it obtains a voluntary
authorization from the student (or parent borrower). If a school
receives authorization to hold excess funds, the school must identify
the student and the amount of funds the school holds for the student
in a subsidiary ledger account designated for that purpose. The
school must maintain, at all times, cash in its bank account at least
equal to the amount the school holds for students. The school is
permitted to retain any interest earned on the student's funds. A
school may not hold excess funds for any student if the Department
determines that the school has failed to meet the financial
responsibility standards under 34 CFR 668.15 of the Student
Assistance General Provisions regulations.

An authorization permitting a school to use excess SFA funds must
provide detail that is sufficient to give the student (or parent
borrower) a general idea of what the excess funds would be used to
pay. A blanket statement that excess funds would cover ANY charges
is not acceptable.

[[Required authorizations]]
A school must obtain authorization from a student (or parent
borrower) before

- disbursing SFA funds by EFT

- using SFA funds to pay for allowable charges other than tuition,
fees and room and board (if the student contracts with the school)

- holding excess SFA funds

- applying SFA funds to prior year charges.

In obtaining authorization from a student (or parent borrower) for
these purposes, a school MAY NOT REQUIRE THE
AUTHORIZATION, and must allow the student or parent to rescind
the authorization at any time. Once a student or parent rescinds his or
her authorization, the school may not perform the function from that
date forward.

A school may include two or more of the items that require
authorization on one statement. However, a student (or parent
borrower) must be informed that he or she may refuse to authorize
any individual item on the statement.

Any authorization must contain an explanation of the provisions
regarding the activities that an institution seeks to perform on behalf
of a student. It does not need to detail every aspect pertaining to the
activity; however, a blanket authorization which only identifies the
activities to be performed is not acceptable.

An authorization is valid for the award year or period of enrollment
in which the authorization is obtained or until the student or parent
revokes the authorization. This authorization continues to be valid in
subsequent award years if the school notifies the student or parent
prior to performing a function that requires continued authorization
in the subsequent award year. The notification must clearly explain
those functions for which continued authorization is necessary
(including what will happen to any interest that the school earns on
the student's funds) and provide the student or parent with an
opportunity to cancel or modify the provisions of the authorization.

EXCESS CASH

"Excess cash" is any amount of SFA funds (other than FFEL or
Perkins funds) that a school does not disburse to students by the end
of the third business day following the school's receipt of those
funds. Excess cash must be returned to the Department immediately.
However, under certain circumstances, a school may maintain an
excess cash balance for up to seven additional days.

[[Allowable excess cash tolerances]]
For a period of peak enrollment (see below) at the school during
which a drawdown of excess cash occurs, the school can maintain
the excess cash balance in its federal account if the excess cash
balance is less than 3% of the school's total prior-year drawdowns.
The school is required to eliminate the excess cash balance within the
next seven days by disbursing SFA funds to students for at least the
amount of that excess cash balance.

A period of peak enrollment at a school occurs when at least 25% of
the school's students start classes during a given 30-day period. A
school determines this percentage for an award year with the
following fraction:

Number of students who started classes in the
comparable 30 day period in the prior award year
---------------------------------------------
Total number of students who started classes
during the entire prior award year

For any period other than a period of peak enrollment, the school can
maintain the excess cash balance if the excess cash balance is less
than 1% of the school's prior-year drawdowns. In this case also, the
school is required to eliminate the excess cash balance within the
next seven days by disbursing SFA funds to students for at least the
amount of that balance.

If a school that is participating in the Direct Loan program does not
have prior-year drawdown data for the Direct Loan program because
it did not participate in the Direct Loan program for that prior award
year, the school may include the total amount of loans guaranteed
under the FFEL program for students attending the school during
that year in determining total prior-year drawdowns.

The Department reviews schools to determine where excess cash
balances have been improperly maintained and to seek recovery from
those schools of the resulting losses to the government.

[[Consequences for improperly maintaining excess cash balances]]
Upon a finding that a school has maintained an excess cash balance
in excess of allowable tolerances, a school is required to reimburse
the Department for the costs that the government incurred in making
those excess funds available to the school. In addition, where excess
cash balances are disproportionately large to the size of the school or
represent a continuing problem with the school's responsibility to
administer efficiently the SFA Programs, the Department may
initiate a proceeding to fine, limit, suspend, or terminate the school's
participation in one or more of the SFA Programs. (For more on
fines and other actions against schools, see Section 10.)

Generally, a check is "issued" when the school releases, distributes,
or makes available the check by mailing the check to the student or
parent (if applicable), or by notifying the student or parent
expeditiously that the check is available for immediate pickup.
However, upon a finding that a school has maintained excess cash
balances, the Department considers the school to have issued a check
on the date that check cleared the school's bank account, unless the
school demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Department that it
issued the check to the student shortly after the school wrote that
check.

Finally, the Department will assess a school that maintains excess
cash balances a liability that is equal to the difference between the
earnings those cash balances would have yielded under a Treasury-
derived rate and the actual interest earned on those cash balances.

ADMINISTRATIVE COST ALLOWANCE

[[Pell Grant allowance]]
The Department pays an administrative cost allowance (ACA) to
schools to offset some of the administrative costs related to the Pell
Grant, campus-based, and Direct Loan programs. As defined in the
regulations, the Pell Grant program ACA is $5.00 for each Pell Grant
recipient at the school (calculated by the Department, based on the
number of Pell Grant recipients reported by the school). Schools are
notified of their Pell Grant ACA by mail three times during the
processing year. The Pell Grant allowance is paid directly to the
school by the U.S. Treasury. (For more information, see Chapter 4.)

[[Campus-based allowance]]
A school calculates its own campus-based program ACA in its
annual Fiscal Operations Report and Application to Participate
(FISAP), based on a percentage of its campus-based expenditures in
the previous award year (see Chapter 5). Unlike the Pell Grant ACA
procedures, the school must draw down the campus-based ACA from
its program allocation using the ED Payment System. (A school may
use up to 10% of the FWS-based ACA for expenses incurred for its
community service program.)

[[Direct Loan allowance]]
For schools that originate loans under the Direct Loan program, the
ACA is $10.00 for each Direct Loan borrower for schools that print
the promissory notes, and $7.00 for each Direct Loan borrower for
schools that do not print the promissory notes.


*1* FFEL Program funds that a school received through EFT or by
master check must be maintained in accordance with 34 CFR
682.207(b).

*2* Clarification provided in the June 30, 1995 technical corrections
final regulations.

*3* For the 1995-96 award year, this period of time was 21 days.

*4* Clarification provided in the June 30, 1995 technical corrections final regulations.