Number: 
03-100-011
Type: 
Other
Policy Steward: 
Fiscal Policy Officer
Format Updated: 
DONE
University Policy & Standards Converted: 
DONE
Status: 
Current
Revision Date: 
Tuesday, March 14, 2023

 * This information replaces FIS 002 Definitions

 

  • Y
  • Z

Terms used in the Fiscal Policy Manual or general accounting practices are defined as follows:

A

 

ACADEMIC SUPPORT

Expenses incurred for administrative and support services such as in the Deans' offices, academic departments and divisions, educational media services and centers/departmental administrative offices that benefit common or joint departmental activities.

 

ACCOUNT CODE

The third element of a FOAPAL accounting string used to identify specific financial transactions.  Account codes define the type of activity taking place, such as revenues, expenses and transfers in the Operating Ledger, and assets, liabilities and fund balances in the General Ledger.

 

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE

An expense that has been incurred but a check has not been issued.

 

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE

The amount of money owed to the university or a department for goods or services that have been delivered or provided to outside parties . The amount should be recorded as an asset and the associated revenue recognized in the proper fiscal year. Any person, organization or agency that incurs charges, fines or penalties at Oregon State University establishes an accounts receivable at OSU.  An account becomes past due when not paid by the due date as stated in each bill or as listed in the Schedule of Classes.

 

ACH

Automated Clearing House (ACH) is a method of electronically moving funds from bank to bank, similar to a wire transfer.  It is a mechanism used for domestic transactions, as opposed to international transactions which are Electronic Fund Transfers (EFT).

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Acknowledgements are sometimes issued by vendors to confirm their receipt of an order.  Acknowledgements, as well as, packing slips, work orders and quote sheets may show unit prices but are never used as invoices.

 

ACTIVITY CODE

The fifth element of a FOAPAL accounting string.  These codes are available to the department to facilitate more detailed reporting and tracking.

 

ACTUAL COST (in lieu of per diem)

Actual lodging cost supported by a valid, itemized receipt.

 

ADDRESS CHANGES

Forward all notifications of vendor remittance or vendor address changes via a Vendor Maintenance Form to Business Affairs.  Employees and students should go to the web On-line Services to make any changes to their address.

 

ADVERTISING

There are two kinds of advertising, Classified and Display.  Complete information should be on file to verify the ad contents and date of publication.  A tear sheet (printed copy of the advertisement) should be kept in departmental files.

 

AGENCY

An external entity that utilizes the university’s accounting system while in the pursuit of its own mission and purpose.  Monies placed in agency funds are not the property of OSU.  However, OSU acts as the custodian of the funds.  Examples include officially sanctioned student groups, employee deductions payable to another entity and the OSU Alumni Association.

 

ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL ACCOUNTS

An estimate of the accounts receivable that will not be collected.

 

APPROPRIATION

Specified line items in the legislatively adopted budget that have distinct purposes, expenditure limits and restrictions.  Appropriations must be budgeted and accounted for separately in order to ensure compliance with legislative intent.

 

APPROVAL PROCESS

All BANNER invoices require approval before routing to the Business Center or Business Affairs for final processing.  The BANNER invoice label/stamp must be completed and attached to all documents.

 

APPROVAL QUEUE

FIS documents route to approvers for review.  The FOAPAL elements and/or dollar amounts determine which queues are required.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-150-112 Approvals.

 

ASSETS

The financial value of property or economic benefits owned by the university.  Typical assets and their account codes include:  Cash (A0xxx-A1xxx), Accounts Receivable (A3xxx), Inventories (A4xxx), Prepaid Expense (A5xxx) and Capitalized Assets (A8XXX).

 

AUDIT

The examination of documents, records, reports, internal control systems, as well as, accounting and financial procedures.   Audits may also include the examination of other evidence for the following purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles of institutions:

  • To evaluate whether the statements prepared from the accounts present fairly the financial position of the institution
  • To evaluate whether the results of institutional financial operations of the constituent funds and balanced groups are consistent with the previous year’s financial activities
  • To determine the propriety, legality and mathematical accuracy of an institution’s financial transactions
  • To ascertain whether all financial transactions have been properly recorded
  • To evaluate stewardship of public funds

 

AUTHORITY LEVEL

Delegated authority to initiate any individual transaction may be limited to a specified dollar threshold.  The transaction must not be split in order to avoid a particular process or required approval, and approval should be obtained at the higher authority level if there is a chance that the transaction may exceed the threshold.

 

AUTO-PAY (CENTRALIZED PROCESSING)

Selected vendors have been contracted by OSU to submit their billings centrally to Business Affairs for processing.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-140-205 Auto Pay and Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-140-206 Procurement Cards.

 

AUXILIARY ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS

A non-academic, institutional support or service activity, specifically established to furnish goods or services to students, faculty or staff primarily for personal use, rather than to units/departments of the institution.  Examples include dormitories, residence halls, dining halls, student health services and intercollegiate athletics.

 

ASSIGNMENT NOTICES

A notice which authorizes OSU to transfer a financial obligation. These should be sent to Business Affairs.

 

B

 

BAD DEBT ALLOWANCE

A bad debt expense is assessed to all departments submitting charges to be billed through accounts receivable.  The individual funds record the applicable SIS accounts receivable, as well as, an allowance for bad debt.  The allowance is based on the balance of the accounts receivable on June 30.  The calculation is adjusted annually by the Office of Business Affairs.

 

BANKRUPTCY NOTICES

Forward all vendor bankruptcy notices to Business Affairs.  Bankruptcies usually involve issuance of the check to a financial intermediary rather than the vendor providing the goods and/or services.

 

BASE RENT

The portion of a periodic lease payment that is specifically for the right to use the asset being leased.

 

BID

A competitive offer to to purchase advertised Surplus Property at a price specified by the bidder.

 

BUDGET AUTHORITY

Department head or equivalent or delegated person responsible for the university account and whose signature will be required on all documents authorizing expenditure of funds from the university account.

 

BUILDING USE CREDITS

Building Use Credits are funds that are set aside from Facilities and Administrative (F&A)/Indirect Cost recoveries on sponsored grants and contracts.  For more information, see Building Use Credits in Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-160-600 Constructions and Plant Funds.

 

BUSINESS CENTER

Business Centers are seven units regionally located on the Corvallis campus to provide transactional administrative support to all campus departments.  These seven units provide support to their stakeholders through a customer-service-driven model that continues to seek to increase efficiencies and effectiveness in the university’s administrative support processes.  Key areas of support include accounts payable, travel, financial accounting, grant support, human resources and payroll.

 

BUSINESS PURPOSE

A statement that adequately describes the expense as a necessary, reasonable and appropriate business expense for the university; and confirms that a particular good, service or activity supports or advances the goals, objectives and mission of the university.

 

C

 

CANCELLED (CASHED) CHECK COPIES

To obtain a copy of vendor checks that have been cashed, complete a Vendor Inquiry Form and  submit to Business Affairs.  A final or cleared check is shown as “F” by the check number in FOIDOCH.

For questions on student checks, see Student Finance Office.

 

CAPITAL OUTLAY

Purchases of equipment, buildings, major remodeling or improvements other than buildings (such as art work, outside lighting systems, sidewalks, etc.) that meet the dollar threshold and other criteria for capitalization.  These purchases result in the acquisition of or addition to fixed assets and are accounted for under the 4xxxx series.

FAQ: Are major re-model projects capitalized and depreciated?

 

CAPITALIZED EQUIPMENT

Capitalized, non-expendable assets.  Tangible, personal property that is loaned, leased, controlled or possessed by an institution and that meets the following criteria:

  • Are not consumed in the normal course of business
  • Have a value of $5,000 or more
  • Have a useful life that exceeds one year

There is one exception to the threshold of $5,000 – vehicles licensed for road use are capitalized regardless of the value.

 

CASH

Includes U.S. currency, cashier's checks, certified checks, traveler's checks, money orders made payable to the Oregon State University, or approved credit cards.

 

CASH EQUIVALENT

Short-term highly liquid investments that are easily convertible into a known amount of cash and close enough to maturity that market value is not sensitive to interest rate changes.  This could include securities, stocks and bonds.

 

CDW

Collision Damage Waiver

 

CENTRALIZED PROCESSING

See definition for AUTO PAY.

 

CHART of ACCOUNTS

Oregon State University’s chart code is “C”.

 

CITY-PAIR AIRFARES

City pairs are contracted, discounted, unrestricted, one-way fares that require no advance reservation.  There are no cancellation or transfer penalties.

 

CLAIMANT

The individual requesting reimbursement of university business-related expenses.

 

CLOSING OF THE BOOKS

A process completed at fiscal year-end to close all revenue and expense accounts.  An additional fiscal period (accrual period 14) is opened in July for any adjustments needed after period 12 is closed.  No changes can be made to the financial records in FIS for the fiscal year after closing.

 

COLLECTIONS

When a student leaves OSU owing money, his/her receivable account balance is placed in collection status.  A collection fee is assessed and collection procedures are initiated.  Collection procedures are also performed for non-student receivables.

 

COMMERCIAL CARRIER

A person or company that transports goods or people for any person or company.

 

COMMON CARRIER

Private-sector supplier of air, rail or bus transportation.

 

COMMUTE

Travel between the employee's official residence and their tax home.

 

COMPENSATED TRAVELER

A person conducting official business on behalf of the university for actual wages.

 

COMPENSATION

Any form of payment (cash or non-cash) to Academic Faculty, Professional Faculty, Classified Staff and Student Employees in exchange for the work they do for Oregon State University.  As defined by the IRS, compensation also includes any payment for services rendered, such as honorariums.

 

COMPLIANCE

To ensure expenditures are conducted in accordance with all applicable laws, regulations, policies, procedures and sound business practices.

 

CONCUR

The university's travel management system.

 

CONFERENCE

An event externally sponsored by an organization other than OSU and at location beyond the control of OSU.

 

CONTRACT

A written agreement between OSU and a contractor which describes the work to be done and the obligations of the parties.  OSU may use "contract" as meaning a purchase order, price agreement or other contract document.  Only university approved contract officials can sign on behalf of the university.

 

CONTRACT AUTHORITY

The legal power to sign contracts on behalf of the university.

 

CONTRACTED TRAVEL AGENCY

Travel agency under contract with the university to provide travel related services.

 

CONTRIBUTIONS

See definition for GIFTS.

 

CREDIT

Offering customers the option of paying for products and services at a later date instead of upfront, within express guidelines.

 

CREDIT MEMO

A document issued by a vendor to adjust a previous invoice, to refund an overpayment or to adjust for returned merchandise.

 

D

 

DAS

Department of Administrative Services (State of Oregon).

 

DEBT SERVICE

All payments in connection with funds borrowed by an institution: principal payments, interest charges, trustee’s service charges, legal expenses and other items related to indebtedness.

 

DEPARTMENTAL RESEARCH

Research, development and scholarly activities that are not sponsored research.  That is, they are not separately budgeted and accounted for.  See the OSU Research website for information on sponsored research.

FAQ: What's the difference between organized research and departmental research?

 

DEPOSIT

Money posted to a fund under GL account code B4xxx that is held as security or collateral for delivery of goods or services. Examples include deposits for Horse Center space rental and Agricultural Experiment Station (AES) housing rentals. When it is time to refund the deposit, charge the same fund and account code where the original deposit posted. If the complete amount is not refunded, create a transaction to move the unreturned amount into revenue (i.e. 06993 Deposits or 06994 Forfeited Deposits).

 

DEPRECIATION

Depreciation expense for capital assets is an allocation of the net cost of the depreciable asset over its useful life using the straight-line method.  The depreciation process is run monthly.

 

DESIGNATED OPERATIONS

The 05xxxx series of funds used to account for self-sustaining activities related to instruction, testing and public service.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-150-204 Designated Operations.

 

DETAIL CODES

Detail codes are used by the Banner accounting system to process accounts receivable charges and credits; including but not limited to course fees.  All charges to accounts require the use of a detail code, and they must be established before charges can be processed.  Departments seeking to put charges on a student A/R account should request a detail code by submitting the index, account number, billing description and the intended use of the detail code to Business Affairs for their review and setup.  Detail Code Request Forms may be obtained online.

 

DIRECT COSTS

Those expenses which can be charged directly as part of the cost of a service department or operating unit, as distinguished from overhead and other indirect costs which must be prorated among several services, departments or operating units.

.

 

DIRECT LABOR

All work required for preparation, production, processing and packing, but does not include supervision, administration, inspection or shipping.

 

DISAPPROVAL

A completed FIS transaction is subject to an approval process. A document may be disapproved if it contains errors or fails to meet all applicable requirements.  Disapproved documents are coded as incomplete and the originator of the document will receive a BANNER disapproval message.  The originator may then make the corrections and re-complete the document or delete it.

 

DISCOUNTS – VENDOR INVOICES

Vendors may give a cost discount for prompt payment.  Check each invoice for discount terms and take the maximum discount offered.  Take the discount only on the value of the items purchased, not on handling and transportation charges.

 

DOMESTIC TRAVEL

Travel within the 48 contiguous states, the District of Columbia, Alaska and Hawaii.

 

DONATIONS

Oregon State University has no authority or obligation to make disbursements for voluntary contributions, donations or funds solicited for various causes.

 

DUAL CUSTODY

Requirement that at least 2 individuals should be involved in processing certain accounting functions, such as counting and storing cash or cash equivalent items.

 

E

 

EDUCATION AND GENERAL FUNDS (E & G Funds)

Those funds received by the university directly from the legislature and from student tuition.  The funds are subject to expenditure limitations, and are allocated to colleges and departments through the budget process.

 

EFT

Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) is a method of electronically moving funds from bank to bank used with international transactions.  Domestic transfers are handled through the Automated Clearing House (ACH).

 

EMERGENCY LOANS

Short term loans to be paid back by the end of the term.  Students must be admitted to the university, enrolled at least half time, and be in good financial standing to be eligible.  Students may appeal a denial of an emergency loan with Business Affairs.

 

EMPLOYEE

Individual on the payroll of Oregon State University (e.g. faculty, staff, Graduate Assistants).

 

EMPLOYEE HOUSEHOLD

All persons residing with employee.

 

EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION AWARDS

An award given by departments to honor employees for outstanding achievements, length of service or retirement.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-140-507 Employee Recognition.

 

EMPLOYEE TRAVEL

Travel of OSU employees on official university business.

 

ENCUMBRANCE

A dollar amount reserved for some future budgetary expense.  The HRIS Payroll system, FIS On-line Purchase Orders and Accounting Encumbrance Journal Vouchers create encumbrances.

 

ENDOWMENTS

Endowments are donations from a donor where the donor specifies that the principal (or corpus) cannot be expended.

 

EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT RESERVES

Funds created for the purpose of setting aside money to be used for the purchase of replacement equipment.  Only Auxiliary Enterprises and Service Centers are authorized to have these funds.  For more information, see fiscal policies related to Reserve Funds.

 

EVIDENCE OF TRAVEL STATUS

Evidence of travel status is normally in the form of lodging receipts.  However, vehicle rental, local transportation, meal receipts or other receipts showing the travel location may be used.

 

EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS

An exchange transaction is one in which each party receives and sacrifices something of approximate equal value.

 

F

 

FACULTY DESIGNATED FUNDS

Unit funds that are budgetarily allocated to an index in which an individual faculty member has managerial authority for discretionary use in supporting university activities related to teaching, research, outreach or professional development.  Like all other university funds, these funds cannot be used for personal benefit.  These funds revert to other uses within the unit when the faculty leaves OSU and can be reallocated for other purposes at any time as determined most appropriate to support the unit’s mission.

 

FEDERAL PERKINS STUDENT LOAN

A federally funded loan co-administered between the Office of Business Affairs Student Finance and the Office of Financial Aid and Scholarships (OFAS).  OFAS administers the application process and recipient selection.  The Office of Business Affairs maintains the promissory notes and processes the repayment schedules.

 

FEE REMISSIONS

The payment of full or partial tuition by the university on behalf of the student.  The amount of the financial award is determined by the specific tuition remission program within the Tuition Remission Policy.

The tuition charged to the student is recorded as university income, and remissions are posted as a reduction of income (account code 019xx).  The Fee Remission is recorded as a credit on the student’s account. Graduate Assistantship appointments are recorded as part of the employment compensation.  These GRA/GTA fee remissions are recorded as an expense to the university (account code 1095x) and credited to the student’s account.

 

FELLOWSHIPS

Financial assistance awarded  to students or post-doctoral faculty engaged in a training program or research project.  For more information, see the Graduate School website for Graduate School institutional allowance policy and Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-140-508 Fellowships, Scholarships and Student Payments.

 

FIELD TRIP

Required study trips outside the regular classroom or laboratory.  Trips must be necessary for field instruction, observation of contemporary practices and other areas that are not readily available for classroom or laboratory presentation, but are considered by the instructor to be subject matter essential to the course.

 

FINANCIAL AID

Financial Aid includes awards of aid and actual disbursement to students.  It includes PELL grants, Supplemental Education Opportunity Grants (SEOG), Oregon Opportunity Grants, Federal Perkins loans, Federal Direct loans, institutional loans, university and non-university scholarships, fellowships, special awards and tuition remission waivers.  All student payments, including cash awards, are processed through The Office of Financial Aid & Scholarships.

 

FIS

The university’s Financial Information System (FIS) is a comprehensive software package for entering, adjusting and retrieving financial data.  FIS Banner is a complete financial system with modules devoted to accounting, purchasing, accounts payable, fixed assets, grants/contracts and budget development.

 

FISCAL ACTIVITIES

All activities provided under the purview of the Controller’s Office (Business Affairs; Financial Accounting & Analysis; Procurement, Contracting & Materials Management-PCMM; Business Centers; and Treasury), including but not limited to the following:

  • Revenue & receivables
  • Payroll
  • Procurement & contracting
  • Vendor & employee payments (including reimbursements & travel)
  • Financial accounting
  • Asset accounting
  • Investment accounting
  • University Fee Book (excluding tuition & mandatory fee policy reserved for the Board)

 

FISCAL AUTHORITY

The Oregon State University (university) Board of Trustees (Board) delegates to the President of the university or his/her designee the authority to undertake all lawful activities to further the operation of the university, with the exception of the activities reserved to the Board as specified in the Board's resolution delegating authority to the university.  The President delegates general supervision of fiscal and administrative activities, including authority over fiscal policy and any associated rules, to the Vice President for Finance and Administration (VPFA).  The VPFA further delegates to the Controller’s Office authority over the university’s Fiscal Policy Program, which includes development, maintenance and execution of policy and rules in all areas of fiscal activity applicable to the university as a whole.  For more information, see University Policy #03-100 Fiscal Policy Program Authority.

 

FISCAL POLICY COMMITTEE

Provides guidance and makes recommendations to the Vice President for Finance and Administration (VPFA) to ensure fiscal policy is consistent with university policies and standards, as well as the strategic plan of the Division of Finance and Administration, utilizing an effective and efficient process that incorporates campus feedback and solicits buy-in.  The committee will also guide the creation and improvement of those rules within the purview of the VPFA.

The committee will be comprised of representatives from Financial Accounting & Analysis, Business Centers and other personnel as appropriate who will evaluate requests for new or revised fiscal policies or rules as prepared by the Policy Officer.  The committee will verify that all appropriate stakeholders have been identified and that their feedback has been received before making an approval or denial recommendation and submitting it to the Vice President for Finance and Administration (or designee) for a final decision.  This group will meet on a monthly basis to process requests and make administrative decisions on standard development processes, procedures, tools and protocols associated with the fiscal policy program.

 

FISCAL POLICY COORDINATOR

The delegated liaison within each Business Center or other unit who serves as a primary point of contact for any issues or inquires related to fiscal activities.  Each designee is knowledgeable of and experienced with administering and enforcing fiscal policy.  These individuals receive requests for new or revised fiscal policies or rules from unit constituents (Fiscal Policy Requestors), complete the fiscal policy request forms and submit them to the Policy Officer for processing.

 

FISCAL POLICY MANUAL

The official university reference for all fiscal rules as they apply to the complexity of financial transactions conducted by university operating units.

 

FISCAL POLICY OFFICER

The coordinator of all administrative actions of the fiscal policy program.  This person is responsible for receiving all requests from Policy Coordinators, managing the review and approval process in coordination with the Policy Committee, drafting changes, making edits and seeing each request through to its ultimate disposition.  This position is also responsible for developing and implementing an institution-wide compliance and training program, maintaining related website content, serving as the resource for the university community on fiscal policy and associated rules, communicating any decisions regarding policy or rule development to the pertinent audience, and initiating annual reviews and updates of current policy and associated rules.

 

FISCAL POLICY PROGRAM

A comprehensive program designed to effectively manage all aspects of fiscal policy in a professional, efficient and cost effective manner, enhancing operational efficiencies, best practices, effective decision-making and compliance with laws and rules associated with fiscal operations.  Supports the development and maintenance of Oregon State University’s fiscal policy and associated rules, guided by the core values of accessibility, clarity, customer service, internal control and stewardship of resources, as well as the Division of Finance and Administration’s mission of providing “leadership, innovative services, creative solutions and integrated systems… through collaborative stewardship of human and financial resources within an environment of transparency and exemplary service”.

 

FISCAL POLICY REQUESTOR

The person who initiates the request to either modify a current fiscal policy or rule or to create a new fiscal policy or rule based upon an identified need.  This person would submit the request to their respective Policy Coordinator.  (Could be the same person as the Policy Steward)

 

FISCAL POLICY STEWARD

The content expert, responsible for a particular set of fiscal rules.  Each designee is knowledgeable of and experienced with administering and enforcing fiscal policy and may also serve as Coordinators.  These individuals will review any such new or revised fiscal policy or rule, providing feedback to the Policy Officer and Policy Committee regarding the efficacy and viability of proposed policy or rule changes.  They will also contribute to the identification of policy stakeholders, participate in post-implementation training, monitor related policy and associated rules and make recommendations to update or retire such policies and rules as needed.

 

FISCAL YEAR

A twelve month period in which the annual budget applies.  At the end of the fiscal year (FY) an institution determines its financial position and the results of its operations.  Oregon State University's fiscal year extends from July 1st to June 30th of the following year.  The fiscal year for the federal government runs from October 1st to September 30th of the following year.

 

FIXED ASSET

See definition for CAPITALIZED EQUIPMENT.

 

FLY AMERICA ACT

49 U.S.C. 40118, commonly referred to as the "Fly America Act", requires the use of a U.S. flag air carrier service for all air travel funded by the U.S. Federal Government.

 

FOAPAL

Acronym for the six chart of accounts elements used to process financial data.  FIS term standing for fundorganizationaccountprogramactivity and location codes.

 

FOREIGN TRAVEL

Travel within another country or in a US Territory or Possession such as Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa or the Virgin Islands.

 

FREQUENT FLYER MILES

Credits acquired when making qualified purchases.

 

FTE (FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT POSITIONS)

Position FTE is a four-digit decimal fraction representing the proportion of full-time for which an individual is employed in the position indicated in their position number.  Position FTE indicates one of two things:

  • The percentage of full-time monthly pay a classified employee will receive for the current mont
  • The percentage of full-time annual salary an unclassified employee is to be paid

 

FUND ACCOUNTING

A method of recording financial information that groups resources into funds based on their source and any limitations on use.

 

FUND BALANCE

Fund balances are the excess of the assets of a fund over its liabilities.  The term net equity is often used to mean fund balance.

 

FUND CODE

The first element in FOAPAL representing the source of revenue/budget.  Examples: general funds, grant funds, gift funds, agency funds, service department funds, designated operations funds, inventions/royalties funds, auxiliary funds, student loan funds, endowment funds, plant funds.

 

FUND TYPES

A method to separate funds by a two digit type code.

 

FUPLOAD

An electronic transfer of data from independent cost accounting systems (Printing and Mailing, Facilities Services, Transportation Services, Chemistry Stores) to transfer data into Banner/FIS.  An interface process is completed from the source location to FIS, and the documents post to the identified indexes.

 

G

 

GARNISHMENTS

Employee garnishment requests are time sensitive and should be sent to Payroll immediately.

 

GASB QUALIFYING LEASE

A lease whose contract/agreement provisions satisfy GASB 87 criteria and must be reported and disclosed in accordance with the standard.

 

GENERAL LEDGER

A balance sheet made up of Asset, Liability, Fund Balance and Control Accounts.

 

GIFTS

The receipt of cash or other resources from a donor with no expectation of anything in return.  A gift may be unrestricted or restricted as to use.

 

GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANTS

Research assistants provide duties related to the research function of the university.  GRAs on .49 FTE appointments are expected to perform 255 hours of duties during the 13-week term (at least .20 FTE is required to be on this appointment).  GRAs at other FTE levels are expected to provide proportional levels of service and are required to enroll for 12 hours of course work.  Students meeting the requirements do not pay the instruction fee portion of tuition, but do pay the mandatory enrollment fees.

 

GRADUATE TEACHING ASSISTANTS (GTA)

Graduate teaching assistants are expected to provide duties related to the university's instructional program (e.g., teaching laboratories or discussion sections, grading papers, advising).  Graduate Teaching Assistants are required to enroll for 12 hours of course work, and work at least .20 FTE, but no more than .49 FTE.  Students meeting the requirements do not pay the instruction fee portion of tuition.  GTAs do pay the mandatory enrollment fees.  Fee remissions are assessed at resident rates and are charged to the index that pays the GTA stipend.

 

GRANT

An instrument of commitment from an outside source for a project.  Resources provided by a unilateral agreement signed by the grantor and issued to a grant recipient or grantee.  Expenditures are governed by general rules covering all agreements issued by the grantor.  The agreement also includes the grantee’s obligation to use the resources for the purposes stated in the grant and subject to the conditions of the grant.

 

GRATUITY

An additional payment for a service provided that is optional and within an individual's discretion.

 

GROUP TRAVEL

University business-related Athletic team or student group travel in which a minimum of one OSU employee is in attendance who is responsible for the care, custody or control of the students.

 

GURFEED

See definition for FUPLOAD.

 

H

 

H-1B VISA

The H-1B VISA is a temporary work permit for professional positions that allows foreign nationals to live and work in the U.S.

 

HIGH COST LOCALITY

A locality determined by the IRS as being one that requires a higher per diem rate for meals, lodging and incidental expenses.

 

HONORARIUMS

A payment or something of economic value given to an individual in exchange for services (such as speaking at an event).

 

HRIS

Human Resources Information System within Banner that handles transactions from Human Resources and Payroll.

 

I

 

IMPROVEMENTS OTHER THAN BUILDINGS (IOTB)

Permanent (non-moveable) improvements other than buildings that have a useful life of more than one year (e.g. fences, retaining walls, parking lots, most landscaping, fountains, bleachers, dugouts, goal posts, scoreboards and artwork attached to a footer or pedestal). [account code 404xx]

 

INCIDENTAL EXPENSES

Minor expenses incurred while traveling that include, but not limited to, fees and gratuities for services, such as waiters and baggage handlers.  Incidental Expenses are combined with meals into a single per diem rate.  The term does not include miscellaneous expenses such as taxi cab fares, airport shuttle bus fares, telephone calls, facsimiles and lodging taxes.

 

INCOMPLETE DOCUMENT

A document is incomplete when it needs to be corrected or deleted according to guidance within the FIS Manual. 

 

INDEX

Combines the appropriate Fund, ORG and Program codes.  Indexes are used when processing invoices and journal vouchers in the Operating Ledger.   Indexes are not used on General Ledger entries because there is no ORG or Program codes in the GL.

 

INDIRECT COSTS

Amounts charged on transactions to cover overhead costs, such as administrative support or utilities, that are not specifically charged to any fund.  Also known as facilities and administrative costs.

 

INFRASTRUCTURE

Long-lived capital assets that normally are stationary in nature, broadly serve campus grounds/facilities rather than a specific building and normally can be preserved for a significantly greater number of years than most capital assets (e.g. roads, bridges, tunnels, drainage systems, water and sewer systems, dams and lighting systems. [account code 407xx]

 

IN-STATE TRAVEL

University business related travel between two points in Oregon, or university business related travel that originates in another state or country in which the destination is within the State of Oregon boundaries.

 

INSTITUTIONAL LOANS

The OSU Financial Aid Office awards OSU Institutional Loans to qualified students.  The OSU Student Loan Office in Business Affairs is responsible for the disbursement of the funds that have been awarded.  See the Financial Aid & Scholarship website for information on Financial Aid.

 

INSTITUTION FUNDS

See definition for UNIVERSITY FUNDS.

 

INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT

Expenses associated with units that provide support to the entire University.  This includes the President’s office, Provost, Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, Vice President for Research, Business Affairs, General Counsel, Office of Budget and Fiscal Planning, Institutional Research, Human Resources and Information Services.

 

INSTRUCTION

The teaching and training activities of the university, whether it is for credit towards a degree or on a non-credit basis.

 

INTEREST PAID ON OVERDUE ACCOUNTS

Interest is paid on A/P vendor invoices when the vendor presents a bill for the late payment charge.  Interest may begin to accrue on the 46th day from the date of initial invoice receipt.  Late payment charges are limited to 2/3 of 1% per month or 8% per year and cannot exceed the vendor’s usual charge.  Late payment charges are recorded with account code 28911 (Late Charge – Vendor Payments).

 

INTERNAL LEASE

A lease agreement between departments or entities of the university, including the main university, OSU-Cascades and the statewide public services.

 

INTERNAL MANAGEMENT DIRECTIVE (IMD)

Oregon State Board of Higher Education Internal Management Directives (IMDs) identified the policies established by the Board and those delegated as responsible for implementation of the policies.

 

INTERNAL SALES REIMBURSEMENTS

Either 09xxx account codes or 79xxx account codes are used to record reimbursement for sales and services to other entities within the institution depending upon what entity/fund is providing the service.  09xxx account codes are used as the credit (revenue) for all Designated Operations (05xxxx funds), Service Centers (09xxxx funds) and Auxiliaries (1xxxxx funds).  A fee must first be established in the internal fee book which lists the fees charged within the institution.

 

INTER-DEPARTMENTAL

Referring to transactions between different departments/units.

 

INTRA-DEPARTMENTAL

Referring to something that is internal within a single department/unit.

 

INVITATION TO BID

A competitive Offer to bid on Surplus Property available for public sale and is also known as an on-line sale listing.

 

INVOICE

An accounting document or bill to elicit payment from a customer and to record the transaction. It provides details of the transaction, the total cost due to the University and specifies when payment is due.

 

IPEDS

Integrated Post Secondary Education Data System survey. Conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics; US Dept of Commerce Bureau of the Census.

 

ITINERARY – AIRFARE

Information provided by the airline or internet website showing the traveler's name, date(s) of travel, class of travel and route traveled.

 

ITINERARY – OSU TRAVEL REIMBURSEMENT REQUEST FORM

A daily showing of a traveler's exact whereabouts for a specific trip.  Details such as the date and time of departure/return, the traveler's destination/lodging location and any days of personal leave utilized are specified.

 

J

 

JOURNAL VOUCHER (JV)

A document used to record debit(s) and credit(s) to be posted to the Operating and/or General Ledgersreflecting a transaction or adjustment made between or within departments at OSU.

 

L

 

LAND IMPROVEMENTS

Specific site improvements to prepare the land for its intended use (e.g. fill, grading and utility installation; removal, relocation or reconstruction of property of others such as railroads and telephone and power lines, etc.). These improvements are inexhaustible capital assets whose economic benefit or service potential is used up so slowly that its estimated useful life is extraordinarily long and are non-depreciable. [account code 403xxx]

 

LDW

Liability Damage Waiver

 

LEASE

A contract that conveys control of the right to use another entity’s nonfinancial asset as specified in the contract for a period of time in an exchange or exchange-like transaction as defined by GASB 87.

 

LEASE DISCOUNT RATE

The discount rate is the explicit interest rate stated in the lease agreement that is used to calculate the lease’s net present value. When an explicit interest rate is not stipulated in the lease agreement, the discount rate is based on OSU’s cost of capital as determined by the OSU Controller’s Unit Treasury Office.

 

LEASE OPERATING EXPENSES

The portion of a periodic or one-time lease payment that is charged by the lessor to reimburse them for costs such as insurance, repairs and maintenance, landscaping, property taxes, utilities, etc.

 

LESSEE

The party to a lease agreement that makes payments to another entity, i.e., a lessor, in exchange for the right to use a tangible nonfinancial asset as defined by GASB 87.

 

LESSOR

The party to a lease agreement that owns or subleases a tangible nonfinancial asset, as defined by GASB 87, and agrees to let another entity use that asset for a defined period of time in exchange for compensation.

 

LEG of TRIP

A stage of a journey or course, especially the part of an air route or a flight pattern that is between two successive stops, positions or changes in direction.

 

LIABILITIES

The financial value of obligations owed.

 

LOCATION CODE

The fourth element of FOAPAL identifies the assignment of building location for fixed assets.

 

LOST BOOKS

An individual responsible for a book’s safekeeping is charged for its loss.  Charges cannot be made to university funds for lost books.

 

LOW COST LOCALITY

A locality as determined by the IRS where the normal per diem rate is the standard amount for all cities in the continental United States.

 

M

 

MATERIALITY THRESHOLD

The value at which a transaction is considered to be significant to the financial records.

 

MEAL and INCIDENTAL EXPENSES (M&IE)

The per diem rate for meals & incidental expenses (M&IE) includes all meals, room service, fees and tips for persons who provide services (such as food servers and luggage handlers).

 

MILEAGE LOG

Document of accumulated private vehicle miles used in performance of official duties.

 

MINOR EQUIPMENT

Equipment that is valued at less than $5,000, will not be consumed in the course of business and lasts a year or more.  Exceptions include books, periodicals and reference materials that are part of The Valley Library holdings or Potts Guin Library holdings and inventory for resale.

 

MONTH-TO-MONTH LEASE

Any “lease” agreement than can be cancelled by either party with 30 days or less notice.

 

N

 

NET INVESTMENT IN PLANT FUND

Fund used to account for the acquisition value of the university's capital assets; including land, buildings, equipment, improvements other than buildings, libraries and museums.  This fund excludes assets of auxiliaries and service centers which are in their own operating fund.

 

NO-COST OR NOMINAL DOLLAR LEASE

Leases with payments that are de minimis (e.g., $1 to lease land for 50 years.

 

NON-COMMERCIAL LODGING

Alternate lodging (e.g. travel trailer, motor home, staying with family or friends) provided while on official travel.

 

NON-EMPLOYEE

Individuals not on OSU's payroll (e.g. students, employees from other state agencies, official volunteers, OSU appointments without pay, etc.).

 

NON-EXCHANGE LEASE

A lease where the lessee and the lessor are not exchanging equal value.

 

NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION

Organized and operated as described under section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code.

 

NON-REFUNDABLE COURSE FEE

A designation that may be applied to a course fee when the university would not be able to recover the cost of the fee should the student drop the course before or after the terms begins.  Examples are materials that cannot be reused or reissued to another student or a field trip discount that has been arranged dependent on the number of participants.

 

NON-SUFFICIENT FUNDS (NSF)

A check returned from the bank because of irregularities or non-sufficient funds.  A fine will be assessed for all NSF checks.

 

NONCANCELABLE PERIOD

The period of time in the lease agreement when only one or neither party has the right to cancel the lease.

 

NONRESIDENT ALIENS

Any international person who has not been physically present in the USA for the amount of time required to warrant treatment as a Resident Alien for Tax Purposes.

 

O

 

OFFICIAL GUEST

An individual deemed by an authorized university employee for a specific purpose that benefits OSU’s mission.  Official guests can include, but are not limited to, visiting speakers, visiting faculty, diplomatic or dignitary guests, public figures, candidates and their accompanying family members and performing artists.

 

OFFICIAL WORKSTATION

The city, town or other location to which an employee is assigned. The official workstation may be specifically defined by the state executive department in certain circumstances.

 

OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BUSINESS

Business that directly provides a benefit to the university's educational, research and public service objectives.

 

OFFICIAL VOLUNTEER

A non-OSU employee whose volunteer status is documented and on file with OSU.  Such individuals are authorized to travel on behalf of OSU when travel is an assigned duty and indicated as such on their Condition of Volunteer Service Form.  Additional information can be found on the OSU Insurance and Risk Management Services website.

 

ONE DAY TRIP

Travel not involving an overnight stay by the employee.

Unlink

 

OPE

Other payroll expenses (fringe benefits).  These include retirement, Medicare, FICA and benefit contributions.

 

OPERATING LEDGER

The financial record of the day-to-day business (revenue, expenditures and transfers) of the university over a given time period, by fiscal year.

 

OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF PHYSICAL PLANT

Expenses, which have been incurred for the administration, supervision, operation, maintenance, preservation and protection of the university’s physical plant (buildings, grounds and equipment).

 

OREGON ADMINISTRATIVE RULES (OAR)

Agency rules adopted under the Oregon Administrative Procedures Act.

 

OREGON REVISED STATUTES (ORS)

Statutes of the State of Oregon.

 

ORGANIZATION CODE (ORG)

The second element of FOAPAL identifies the budgetary unit within the university responsible for the budget, such as a department.

 

OSU SPONSORED/BRANDED CARDS

A co-branded card  is a credit card or gift card that a retailer issues in partnership with Oregon State University, using university branding and logos.

OUT-OF-STATE TRAVEL

Travel from a point in Oregon to a destination in another state, or travel between two states outside of Oregon including Alaska and Hawaii.

 

OVERDRAFTS

A deficit fund balance as determined after considering recorded receivables and outstanding payables.  Any deficit as of June 30th must be eliminated by transferring funds from other Current General Funds.  See Year End Closing instructions for correct account codes to use to eliminate overdrafts.

 

P

 

PAI

Personal Accident Insurance.

 

PARTICIPANT SUPPORT

Payments made to (or on behalf of) individuals who are not OSU employees, engaged in research and/or training in a specific field or program.

 

PASSPORT EXPENSE

Passport and VISA expenses are reimbursable, if the travel is required for doing university business. Use account code 24560 VISA/Passport Processing Fees.

 

PAST DUE BALANCE

Oregon State University may impose finance charges on Accounts Receivable.  Student accounts that are past due are referred to as in-house collection accounts and managed by Student Debt Management.  The total of past due amounts, including fees, charges, prior interest and finance charges, less payments and credits received to date.  The past due balance does not include any new charges added to an account since the last billing or to charges assigned future due dates.

See definition for COLLECTIONS.

 

PAYMENT AUTHORITY

Authority to process payments from a university account, certifying that appropriate funds are available and that goods or services have been received.

 

PAYMENT CARD INDUSTRY (PCI) COMPLIANCE

Compliance mandated by credit card companies to help ensure the security of credit card transactions in the payments industry. Payment card industry compliance refers to the technical and operational standards that businesses follow to secure and protect credit card data provided by cardholders and transmitted through card processing transactions. PCI standards for compliance are developed and managed by the PCI Security Standards Council.

 

PER DIEM

Federal allowances for daily expenses for lodging, meal and incidental expenses involving an overnight stay.

 

PLANT CONSTRUCTION OR IMPROVEMENTS

This category includes acquisition, construction or renovation of university land or buildings which are capitalized.  The value of the asset is increased.

 

POLICY

Guiding principles (rules) of the organization.

 

POSTING

The official recording of a transaction or a document on a general or operating ledger through a periodic "posting process".

 

PREPAY

Some vendors require advance payment before providing goods or services.  All prepayments require documentation for audit purposes and clear communication to the vendor of the nature of the order.  Documentation may be provided by one or more of the following items:

  • Vendor invoice specifying required prepayment
  • Purchase order
  • Registration form
  • Vendor quote
  • Customer order form/work order/job order
  • Contract
  • Detailed memorandum

Deposits that are partial payments for a larger order or contract require a purchase order to avoid fragmenting the order.  The purchase order also provides an encumbrance and liquidation history on partial payments.  Use account code 40199 for partial payments of capitalized equipment (more than $5,000).

 

PROCEDURE

Procedures are descriptions of the tasks required to support and carry out university policies, university standards or rules.  Procedures articulate the process for accomplishing tasks or controls and are intended to ensure activities are accomplished completely and consistently.  Procedures have a narrower focus than university policies or rules.  They are often changed to improve the processes and are typically more detailed than university policies, university standards or rules.  Procedures often state who will accomplish a task, how it is performed and when it must be done.

 

PROCESS

Series of related tasks to ensure compliance with policy.

 

PROGRAM CODE

The fourth element of FOAPAL, program codes identify the type of activities for which dollars are spent, such as Instruction, Administration, Research and Public Service.

 

PROGRAM TRAVEL

Travel for field research, presenting papers and meeting with people from other agencies.

 

PROGRESS PAYMENTS

Contractor requests for progress payments.  Accompanying architect or engineer certificates must be checked for proper signature prior to approval.  In accordance with ORS 279.354, the Contractor and every subcontractor shall submit written certified statements (Wage Certifications) with the Owner’s Authorized Representative, on the form prescribed by the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor and Industries.  See Procurement and Contract Services.

 

PROOF OF PAYMENT

A cancelled check, copy of a credit card billing statement or other receipt showing the person’s name.  If using a credit card statement or cancelled check, blacken out the card or checking account number.

 

PUBLIC AGENCY

Divisions or units of Oregon local government having separate autonomy such as Oregon counties, cities, municipalities or other public corporate entities having local governing authority.

 

Q

 

QUALIFIED LODGING LIST

A list of Oregon lodging establishments provided by the Oregon State Department of Administrative Services whose rates are within the per diem rates.

 

QUASI-ENDOWMENT

Principal can be spent with approval, as well as, interest with approval.  Any individual donation or gift that equals or exceeds $100,000 in total market value, regardless of the type of gift or the accounting periods in which it is received, shall be designated a quasi-endowment.  The principal (corpus) can be moved to a gift fund for expenditure.

 

R

 

RATE CODES (Tuition & Fees)

Rate codes are assigned to every student upon admission to the University and may vary from term to term.  They are an important element in determining the correct tuition and fee assessment.  Initial assignment of the rate code generally reflects the residency and educational level of the student.  Rate codes can be later assigned by Business Affairs to effect special billing provisions, such as teaching assistants, study abroad and national student exchanges.

 

REASONABLE

A cost may be considered reasonable if the nature of goods and services reflects prudent action.  Generally, charges for goods or services that foster or support the on-going missions of the university are considered reasonable as long as they comply with the regulations by which the university is governed.

 

REDUCTION OF EXPENSE

Deposits made as a reduction of expense are very limited.  It is used for the return of goods and services, a discount or rebate given from the vendor after the bill has been paid.  The deposit is credited to the fund and account code to which the purchase was charged.  The original “I”doc must be referenced on the cashier deposit slip.

Outside entities may reimburse the campus, pay a service provider directly, or reimburse an employee for travel expenses related to OSU business.  If the reimbursement is made to the campus, it should be accounted for as a reduction of expense.

 

REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT

See Deposit.

 

REFUNDS

A repayment of expenditures that were overpaid or where the university is otherwise entitled to receive money back from the vendor.  Examples include:

  • A conference registration payment where the conference is later cancelled
  • Return of a defective item that is not replaced

The amount refunded should be deposited (credited) against the original expenditure account code.  These are instances where no value (goods or services) were received, therefore, no expenditure should be recorded.

 

REGISTRATION HOLDS

To be eligible to register for a future term, the student’s receivable balance must be below a predetermined amount that is published in the Schedule of Classes.  That amount is determined by the Vice President of Finance and Administration in conjunction with the Registrar.  A registration hold is placed on the student’s account when the balance exceeds the maximum limit.  If the student is not currently enrolled, his/her account must be paid in full in order to register.

 

REIMBURSEMENTS

These are reimbursements to OSU that can occur as a result of a staff member officially representing the university in the course of their job.  It could also occur whenever an outside entity reimburses OSU for expenditures OSU has incurred.  Examples include:

  • If OSU receives funds because an employee has been a conference speaker, it should be accounted for as a reduction of expense.
  • If an employee is hired as a conference speaker, he/she is acting as a consultant and the money is his/hers.  OSU doesn’t become involved.  (The staff member would get a 1099 form from the hiring entity for tax purposes.)  See Consulting, Overload and Outside Employment Compensation.
  • An outside source pays OSU or an OSU employee for travel expenses previously paid to a university index by an OSU contracted travel agency.  The check should be made payable to OSU and placed against the index/account code as a reduction of expense.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-140-407 Travel-Reimbursements.

 

RELOCATION

New employees may be reimbursed for specific, pre-approved moving expenses when reimbursement is necessary to employ qualified personnel.  Any agreement must be reflected in the employee’s Letter of Offer.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-120-404 Relocation Allowance.

 

RENEWAL AND REPLACEMENT FUNDS

Used by service departments and auxiliary enterprises, these funds reflect resources set aside in accordance with OSU policy on a systematic basis to fund future equipment purchases and building repairs.  Housing, Memorial Union, Printing and Mailing and Student Health Service are examples of organizations that maintain such funds.

 

RESERVES

An account which records a portion of the fund balance which is “saved” for some future use and which is, therefore, not available for further appropriation of expenditures.  Budgeted Reserves are monies set aside for contingencies and are not yet allocated for expenditure.  Reserves differ from renewal and replacement funds in that reserves are general fund monies and are for any contingency rather than to fund future equipment purchases and building repairs.

 

RESTRICTED FUNDS

Used to identify resources that may be used only for a specific purpose as directed by the donor or the granting or contracting agency.  Sponsored research, gifts for construction of a facility or student aid are examples.

 

RETIREMENT OF DEBT FUNDS

Used to account for funds set aside and disbursed to retire debts incurred to finance the acquisition, construction or renewal of capital assets.

 

REVENUE

Proceeds from any activity sponsored by OSU, evidenced in part by the use of OSU letterhead, using state resources such as employee time and effort, OSU facilities, OSU vehicles, etc.  These activities are deemed to be OSU revenue and must be deposited into an OSU fund.  Examples are proceeds from short course workshops or seminars.

 

ROLL-UP

The ability in FIS to summarize data at various hierarchical levels, which allows you to query financial reports not only at the data-entry level, but also at higher levels that will combine the data as needed.

 

S

 

SABBATICAL LEAVE

Sabbatical leave is granted to tenured faculty of academic rank for purposes of research, writing, advanced study, travel undertaken for observation and study of conditions affecting the applicant's field or related scholarly or professional activities.

 

SABBATICAL LEAVE, SUPPLEMENT

Staff members may supplement their sabbatical salaries to a reasonable degree, provided that such supplementation strictly conforms to the stated and approved purposes of the sabbatical leave.  Supplementation of sabbatical leave paid from grants and contracts must be set up as a secondary job and approved by the sponsoring agency.  Route the Job Form through the Office of Sponsored Research and Award Administration (OSRAA) for approval.

 

SAFEKEEPING AND SUNDRY SCHOLARSHIPS

Safekeeping is a custodial fund that receives funds and disburses funds to student accounts based on authorizations received from parents, grandparents, trusts and sundry scholarships.  When a student receives funding from an organization, the organization sends the university an authorization specifying the cost they will pay on behalf of the student and for the period of time.  Foreign students generally receive support from embassies, ROTC students receive support from the branch of service that the student has committed time with, while private support includes any corporation or state agency paying for employee training.

 

SAFETY DEVICES

When a department head considers a safety device a necessity, and the employee cannot work without it, the expense must be paid from university funds.  Such devices include safety shoes and safety glasses.  If the device is not required as a condition of employment, the employee bears its cost.  Safety devices and other equipment purchased by OSU remain as OSU property whether used by one or several employees.  It is recommended that the departments confer with Environmental Health and Safety to determine the benefits of the device, and the Office of Human Resources to determine if there are conflicts with the collective bargaining agreement and/or other university policies.  See the Safety Manual for additional information on this subject.

 

SCHOLARSHIP

Financial assistance awarded to students based on academic merit or financial need.  Disbursements are posted on the student’s university account and intended to defray educational cost.  Recipients are not required to render service to or repay the institution as a consideration for their awards, but are generally required to maintain minimum enrollment levels.

 

SELP LOANS

Small Energy Loan Program loans that are sponsored by the Oregon Department of Energy.  The loans are for the purposes of providing partial funding for energy conservation or energy efficient projects.  The loan must be repaid by Facilities from the energy savings.

 

SERVICE CENTERS

The primary function of a service center is to provide financially self-sustaining services to other departments of the institution.  The service might be purchased from commercial sources, but, for reasons of convenience and/or cost control, is more effectively provided through a unit of the institution.

 

SERVICE CHARGE

An additional payment for a service provided that is not optional and labeled as such by the vendor.

 

SERVICE CREDITS

See definition for INTERNAL SALES REIMBURSEMENTS.

 

SHORT-TERM LEASE

A lease that at the commencement of the lease term, has a maximum possible term under the lease contract of 12 months or less, including any options to extend, regardless of their probability of being exercised.

 

SIS

The university’s Student Information System within Banner that supports all of the major administrative functions of the university related to students (ie Admissions, Registrars, Financial Aid and Student Accounts).

 

SPONSORED INSTRUCTION AND TRAINING

Specific instructional or training activity established by a grant, contract or cooperative agreement.

 

SPONSORED RESEARCH

All basic or applied research that is separately budgeted and accounted for.  This may also be called organized research.

 

STAFF TUITION RATES

A reduced instruction fee is charged to OSU staff members taking courses at any State of Oregon public institution.

OSU employees eligible for staff fee benefits may transfer such privilege to family members or domestic partners.  See OSU Office of Human Resources Benefits for details of this benefit.

 

STAFF TUITION TAXABLE BENEFITS

Staff taking graduate credits using the staff fee privilege are taxed on the difference between the tuition instruction rate for graduate students and the staff rate.  This amount is reported to the IRS on form W-2.  The IRS code excludes undergraduate courses from this taxable compensation.

 

STALE CHECKS

A check that has not been cashed that is more than six months old.  The bank the check was issued on may pay it, but is under no obligation to do so.  OSU stale checks are turned over to the State Land Board at the end of Statute of Limitations – 2 years.

 

STATEMENT

A documented presentation of the total amount owed by the customer at a given point in time. It is a snapshot of all invoices due by a specific customer as of the statement date – 2 years.

 

STIPEND

A pre-determined subsistence allowance for students, post doctoral faculty and other non-employee participants engaged in training or research programs.  Stipends are commonly paid for fellowships, participant support and for services in support of academic or administrative programs.

 

STUDENT AWARDS

Payments (scholarships, fellowships or awards) to enrolled students.  For more information, see Scholarships or Fellowships to Students in Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-150-301 OSU Foundation.

 

STUDENT LOANS

Loans disbursed to students from Federal Direct Loan program, Federal Perkins Loan program and University Loan program.  The Federal Direct Loans are totally funded by the federal government, Federal Perkins Loans by repayments from former students and University Loans by repayments from students and contributions.

 

SUB-LEDGER

An accounts receivable subsidiary ledger (sub-ledger) is an accounting record (or system that meets a specialized need of a department) that shows the transaction and payment history of individual customers that are extended credit on account. The sub-ledger provides more detail than the general ledger, and the two must be reconciled periodically to ensure accuracy of the financial statements.

 

SUBSIDIZED TRAVEL

Travel in which OSU will receive compensation from an outside entity.

 

SURPLUS PROPERTY

All excess items and materials other than items that would be typically disposed of in a wastebasket, such as scrap paper, consumed pencils and pens, etc.

 

T

 

TAXES

State of Oregon agencies are exempt from paying federal taxes on purchases of gasoline, oil, etc.  If an employee paid for a product and is seeking reimbursement, or if the product was purchased and possession taken in another state, taxes may be paid.  Agencies are exempt from paying State, city or county taxes in some instances.

OSU is subject to real and personal property taxes on property owned but not used for institutional purposes, such as miscellaneous rentals.  State-owned property that is located within an irrigation district is subject to taxation by the district.

 

TAX EXEMPT STATUS OF OSU

Occasionally a request is received for an IRS tax exemption status letter.  The inquiry is usually in conjunction with a request from a donor.  It is not possible to furnish such a letter, since it does not exist.  OSU as an agency of the State of Oregon is exempt from tax under IRS Code 115.  The federal government does not issue tax exemption status letters for organizations exempt under this section of the code.

 

TAX HOME

The city or general vicinity where an individual's primary place of business or employment is located.

 

1098 T STATEMENTS

This is a Tuition Payment Statement that is provided to students to assist in computing the Hope and Lifetime Learning credit on form 8863 to be filed with their Federal tax return.  Business Affairs Student Finance prepares these statements.

 

1099 MISCELLANEOUS STATEMENTS

Reports of taxable income paid to individuals and companies by Oregon State University.  They are produced every January for the prior tax year.  Per IRS regulations, these statements must be mailed on or before January 31 or a penalty is assessed.  The Business Affairs Financial Accounting and Analysis office is responsible for producing the statements.

 

TIP

See definition for GRATUITY.

 

TRAINING TRAVEL

Travel related to employee training, including any conference, workshop, seminar or formal program of learning that contributes directly to the professional competence of the individual.

 

TRANSACTION

The action of conduction business.

 

TRANSACTION AUTHORITY

Authority to acquire goods or services from an external party, or to initiate transactions within the institution.  An individual with this authority assumes responsibility for the administration of such transaction(s) made on behalf of Oregon State University.

 

TRANSCRIPT HOLDS

Requests for official transcripts are held for any receivable balance owing prior to the current term.  Balances owing for prior terms must be paid in full before transcripts will be released.  Exceptions to this policy may be made for employment or certification purposes.

 

TRAVEL STATUS

An employee or official guest is in travel status when they are traveling for university business and required to be away from the general area of their tax home for a period substantially longer than an ordinary day's work and require rest to meet the demands of their work while away.

 

TRIPLINK

A program that merges outside bookings into the Concur travel management system.

 

TUITION WAIVER

When a student is put on a Graduate Assistantship appointment resident tuition is assessed and the additional amount for non-resident fees is waived.

 

U

 

UBIT (UNRELATED BUSINESS INCOME TAX)

A tax imposed on a nonprofit exempt organization on income derived from an activity of a trade or business, regularly carried on, that is not substantially related to the organization's tax exempt purpose.  For more information, see Fiscal Policy-Rule #03-150-101 Unrelated Business Income.

 

UNIT

Division, college, department, program, etc. operating within Oregon State University.

 

UNIT-LEVEL RULES

Unit rules address needs at the unit level or control issues that affect a subset of the university.  Colleges, departments and other units of the university may develop specific implementation mechanisms for operations, administration or programs within that particular unit.  Unit rules are developed and approved by the unit and describe a unit’s approach to implementing relevant university policies or university standards.  Unit rules are applicable only to their home units, or to functions over which that unit has authority, but may involve the implementation of processes that effect the entire university and university community.  Unit rules may be more restrictive than university policies and standards, but must remain consistent with them and with relevant statutes and regulations.

 

UNIVERSITY FUNDS

All funds available to the institution received from internal and external sources, including reimbursements from an affiliated university foundation for costs paid through the university.  The only exclusion are agency funds.  There may be specific agreement restrictions on grant, contract or other sponsored project funds.  University funds do not include funds held at an affiliated foundation when payment requests are submitted directly to and paid by that foundation.

 

UNIVERSITY POLICY

A university policy is a statement that applies broadly across the university, governing the OSU community of students, faculty, staff, volunteers, licensees and contractors.  University policies are intended to be concise and understandable, contain a minimum amount of detail, and generally, do not require frequent change.  A university policy accomplishes one or more of the following:

  • Promotes the university’s mission, values and relationships with key stakeholders;
  • Contains governing principles or rules that create administrative structures, describe desired outcomes, delegate authority, assign responsibility, mandate or constrain action and provide minimal procedures for implementation;
  • Promotes compliance with laws, regulations or other externally imposed requirements;
  • Mitigates institutional risk or promotes operational efficiency.

 

UNIVERSITY STANDARDS

University standards are similar to policies, but also govern individuals outside the university community and are enforceable through the judicial system.  All individuals or entities entering university real property, using university resources or participating in university programs are subject to university standards.  All university standards must include an appeals process.  Units of the university are not permitted to develop university standards outside the process overseen by the Executive Policy and Standards Committee.

 

UNRESTRICTED FUNDS

Used to identify resources with no specific limitations imposed by donors or external agencies.

 

US TERRITORIES AND POSSESSIONS

Includes Puerto Rico, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, Papua New Guinea, Wake Island, Midway Islands, US Virgin Islands (St. Croix, St. John and St. Thomas) and other outlying islands.

 

V

 

VALID RECEIPT

A valid receipt provides the following information:

  1. name and address of the business
  2. date of the purchase
  3. itemized description of the goods or service purchased
  4. amount of the purchase

 

VALID RECEIPT FOR LODGING

An original receipt completed by the establishment that includes:

  1. Name and Address of lodging establishment
  2. Date(s) occupied
  3. Name of guest
  4. Number of persons occupying the room
  5. Room rate (if more than one occupant single room rate is needed)
  6. Lodging tax
  7. Room number
  8. Actual amount paid

 

VARIABLE LEASE EXPENSE

Variable payments OSU pays to a lessor that are based on future performance of the university, or on measurable utilization of the underlying asset. (If a lease has graduated payments that are specifically defined in the contract, these are not considered variable as the amount is fixed per the contract).

 

VARIABLE LEASE REVENUE

The portion of a lease payment received by OSU that is calculated based on the lessee’s financial performance or utilization of the underlying asset. (If a lease has graduated payments that are specifically defined in the contract, these are not considered variable as the amount is fixed per the contract).

 

VENDOR

A company or person from which goods and/or services are purchased.

 

VICINITY MILES

Miles incurred on official university business when travel is within the vicinity of official headquarters or within the city limits of the city traveled to.

 

VISA PETITION FEE

The fee for visa petition to classify a non-immigrant as a temporary worker or trainee.  The Visa fee is an allowable expenditure.  Any additional expenses associated with procuring the Visa are unallowable for reimbursement.

 

VOLUNTEER

See definition for OFFICIAL VOLUNTEER.

 

W

 

WESTERN INTERSTATE COMMISSION FOR HIGHER EDUCATION (WICHE)

An agreement established in 1953 allows students from several western states to pursue certain professional courses of study in member states and pay resident tuition rates.  Member states include Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.  Reference:  ORS 351.770 through 351-840; OAR 580-010-0085.

 

WESTERN REGIONAL GRADUATE PROGRAM

The Western Regional Graduate Program is a program of the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE).  WRGP status permits graduate students from eligible WICHE states to enroll in selected graduate programs and be assessed tuition at the resident graduate rate.  See OSU Graduate School home page for complete details.

 

WIRE TRANSFER (INCOMING AND OUTGOING)

Electronic transfer of funds from a private bank account to the Oregon State University state treasury account, or from OSU to a private bank account.  Wired funds can be used for either a departmental payment or a student account payment and are often used for international payments.

 

WRITE-OFFS

AWhen accounts receivable amounts are deemed uncollectible after all collection efforts have been exhausted, the receivable is removed from the balance sheet with an offsetting entry to expense what has become bad debt.