Common use of Reconciliation Process Clause in Contracts

Reconciliation Process. State and Federal agencies agree to consolidate billing and minimum balances. All Kansas costs of fires occurring in and out of Kansas, regardless of jurisdictional boundary, will be compiled based on each agencies’ costs. A reconciliation balance sheet will be developed and billed as one consolidated amount. This cost tracking method will reduce actual payments and ensure that a fair division of suppression costs can be made between the federal agencies and the state in a timely fashion. Agency and cooperator costs are identified by fire number and code and tracked on an annual balance sheet. Federal balance sheets (and State balance sheets depending on funding laws) must align with a single fiscal year. A final division of cost responsibilities based on jurisdiction, minimum thresholds and cost share agreements will be negotiated by end of each year the incident occurred. Minimum Billing Threshold (NOT APPLICABLE) is [$XX – insert agreed upon amount] and applies to all fires included in this process. It does not apply to out-of- state responses. The minimum threshold does not apply to costs for cooperating fire departments under a separate agreement with the state when working outside their jurisdictional boundary or requested by a resource order for extended attack. The [agency] will be responsible for managing the balance sheet which includes all agencies’ costs and cost share information. Actual costs are tracked by each agency for each incident. Agency actual costs are subject to audit procedures identified in item #, Audit Procedures. The balance sheet is verified but may be disputed based on the cost share allocation, severability of costs and actual costs submitted for each fire. The balance sheet will result in a final settlement between all parties and one transfer of funds is required to reconcile the fire season, unless a request is submitted to complete reconciliation prior to the end of fire season, at which point a settlement will be done for expenses to the requested date. within 180 days of final reconciliation. Requests for extensions beyond 180 days for invoice submittal must be presented in writing to the reimbursing agency. Operating plans will include contact information for written requests for extensions.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement

Reconciliation Process. State state and Federal federal agencies agree to consolidate billing and minimum balances. N/A – This process is not used within the state of Nevada. All Kansas [state] costs of fires occurring in and out of Kansas[state], regardless of jurisdictional boundary, will be compiled based on each agencies’ costs. A reconciliation balance sheet will be developed and billed as one consolidated amount. This cost tracking method will reduce actual payments and ensure that a fair division of suppression costs can be made between the federal agencies Federal Agencies and the state State in a timely fashion. Agency and cooperator Cooperator costs are identified by fire number and code and tracked on an annual balance sheet. Federal balance sheets (and State balance sheets depending on funding laws) must align with a single fiscal year. A final division of cost responsibilities based on jurisdiction, minimum thresholds and cost share agreements will be negotiated by end [mmdd] of each year the incident occurredyear. Minimum Billing Threshold (NOT APPLICABLE) is [$XX – insert agreed upon amount] and applies to all fires included in this process. It does not apply to out-of- of-state responses. The minimum threshold does not apply to costs for cooperating fire departments under a separate agreement with the state when working outside their jurisdictional boundary or requested by a resource order for extended attack. The [agency] will be responsible for managing the balance sheet which includes all agencies’ costs and cost share information. Actual costs are tracked by each agency for each incident. Agency actual costs are subject to audit procedures identified in item #, Audit Procedures. The balance sheet is verified but may be disputed based on the cost share allocation, severability of costs and actual costs submitted for each fire. The balance sheet will result in a final settlement between all parties Parties and one transfer of funds is required to reconcile the fire season, unless a request is submitted to complete reconciliation prior to the end of fire season, at which point a settlement will be done for expenses to the requested date. Billing Time Frames for Reconciliation Process: Agencies will submit invoices within 180 30 days of final reconciliation. Requests for extensions beyond 180 30 days for invoice submittal must be presented in writing to the reimbursing agency. Operating plans will include contact information for written requests for extensions.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement

Reconciliation Process. State and Federal agencies agree to consolidate billing and minimum balances. All Kansas [state] costs of fires occurring in and out of Kansas[state], regardless of jurisdictional boundary, will be compiled based on each agencies’ costs. A reconciliation balance sheet will be developed and billed as one consolidated amount. This cost tracking method will reduce actual payments and ensure that a fair division of suppression costs can be made between the federal agencies and the state in a timely fashion. Agency and cooperator costs are identified by fire number and code and tracked on an annual balance sheet. Federal balance sheets (and State balance sheets depending on funding laws) must align with a single fiscal year. A final division of cost responsibilities based on jurisdiction, minimum thresholds and cost share agreements will be negotiated by end [mmdd] of each year the incident occurredyear. Minimum Billing Threshold (NOT APPLICABLE) is [$XX – insert agreed upon amount] and applies to all fires included in this process. It does not apply to out-of- of-state responses. The minimum threshold does not apply to costs for cooperating fire departments under a separate agreement with the state when working outside their jurisdictional boundary or requested by a resource order for extended attack. The [agency] will be responsible for managing the balance sheet which includes all agencies’ costs and cost share information. Actual costs are tracked by each agency for each incident. Agency actual costs are subject to audit procedures identified in item #, Audit Procedures. The balance sheet is verified but may be disputed based on the cost share allocation, severability of costs and actual costs submitted for each fire. The balance sheet will result in a final settlement between all parties and one transfer of funds is required to reconcile the fire season, unless a request is submitted to complete reconciliation prior to the end of fire season, at which point a settlement will be done for expenses to the requested date. Billing Time Frames for reconciliation process: Agencies will submit invoices within 180 30 days of final reconciliation. Requests for extensions beyond 180 30 days for invoice submittal must be presented in writing to the reimbursing agency. Operating plans will include contact information for written requests for extensions. Federal ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ by Incident: There are not ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ between the Federal wildland fire agencies, pursuant to the Master Interagency Agreement for Wildland Fire Management. Federal Agencies will submit bills for their reimbursable costs to the States whenever (insert state(s)), state agencies are the protecting Agency and a billing is appropriate. State ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ by Incident: When one of the States is the supporting Agency and the fire is within the State of (insert state(s)), the State will ▇▇▇▇ the protecting Agency for reimbursable costs when a billing is appropriate. Anytime the States respond to a Federal Agency fire outside of (insert states), the State will ▇▇▇▇ all applicable costs to the jurisdictional federal agency or agencies. Operating plans will include billing location information. Should a State intend to utilize the assistance of the FS to facilitate the payment and reimbursement of a State to State response, identify any administrative fees that are agreed upon. Billing Time Frames: Agencies will submit invoices within 180 days of the demobilization of the incident. Extensions beyond 180 days for invoice submittal must be presented in writing to the reimbursing agency. It should be noted that some categories of expenses may often require subsequent ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ outside of the 180 day period, such as: Outstanding Cost Shares, Claims, Aircraft expenses, and Fire cache costs. Operating plans will include contact information for written requests for extensions. Absent a written extension of time granted by the reimbursing agency, the final itemized ▇▇▇▇ should be submitted to the reimbursing agency within 180 days of the demobilization of the incident. After a final billing has been sent, and if additional costs are identified, a supplemental billing may be issued if agreeable to applicable parties. Each Party to this agreement will strive to provide appropriate parties of an estimate of the amount of reimbursable bills they expect to submit within 90 calendar days in each reimbursable action. Severity: Costs incurred on severity assignments within the state of [state] will be billed individually to the Jurisdictional Agency. Severity assignments are reimbursable under the Reciprocal Fire Protection Act. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, effective January 2, 1999, US Treasury Regulation, Money and Finance at 31 CFR 208.3 requires that federal payments are to be made by EFT unless waived in accordance with specific circumstances set forth in 31 CFR 208.4 In order to receive EFT payments, the payment recipient shall register in System for Award Management (▇▇▇) and are required to validate their information in ▇▇▇ once per year. The payment recipient is also required to have a Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number. The DUNS number is assigned by Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (D&B) to identify unique business entities. For more information, refer to ▇▇▇.▇▇▇.gov. Each party to this agreement shall provide the following information in the operating plan. Agency name and billing address Financial Contact (name, phone, email) Agency DUNS Billing Content: The following items will be included as a minimum for each ▇▇▇▇, noting that a resource order is not always required or available in order for a ▇▇▇▇ to be valid. Provide as a minimum on each invoice/▇▇▇▇: Agency name, address, phone number, and agency financial contact, Invoice or ▇▇▇▇ number Agreement number Incident name and number Dates of the incident covered by the billing, Location and jurisdictional unit Appropriate Firecode or charge code. Summary cost data for the amount being billed. Summary data may include but is not limited to, a list of personnel, travel, and equipment expenses; and a listing by vendor name and amount spent for supplies and services procured. Generally, cost source documents will not be required unless summary cost data is disputed, there is a Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG), or unless specific agency regulations require cost source documents. At times, supplemental information, summary data or additional billing documentation may be requested and provided if agreed upon by the Parties. The process for handling such requests should be documented in the Operating Plan.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Master Cooperative Wildland Fire Management and Stafford Act Response Agreement

Reconciliation Process. State and Federal agencies agree to consolidate billing and minimum balances. All Kansas [state] costs of fires occurring in and out of Kansas[state], regardless of jurisdictional boundary, will be compiled based on each agencies’ costs. A reconciliation balance sheet will be developed and billed as one consolidated amount. This cost tracking method will reduce actual payments and ensure that a fair division of suppression costs can be made between the federal agencies and the state in a timely fashion. Agency and cooperator costs are identified by fire number and code and tracked on an annual balance sheet. Federal balance sheets (and State balance sheets depending on funding laws) must align with a single fiscal year. A final division of cost responsibilities based on jurisdiction, minimum thresholds and cost share agreements will be negotiated by end [mmdd] of each year the incident occurredyear. Minimum Billing Threshold (NOT APPLICABLE) is [$XX – insert agreed upon amount] and applies to all fires included in this process. It does not apply to out-of- of-state responses. The minimum threshold does not apply to costs for cooperating fire departments under a separate agreement with the state when working outside their jurisdictional boundary or requested by a resource order for extended attack. The [agency] will be responsible for managing the balance sheet which includes all agencies’ costs and cost share information. Actual costs are tracked by each agency for each incident. Agency actual costs are subject to audit procedures identified in item #, Audit Procedures. The balance sheet is verified but may be disputed based on the cost share allocation, severability of costs and actual costs submitted for each fire. The balance sheet will result in a final settlement between all parties and one transfer of funds is required to reconcile the fire season, unless a request is submitted to complete reconciliation prior to the end of fire season, at which point a settlement will be done for expenses to the requested date. within 180 days of final reconciliation. Requests for extensions beyond 180 days for invoice submittal must be presented in writing to the reimbursing agency. Operating plans will include contact information for written requests for extensions.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Cooperative Wildland Fire Management Agreement