ncaidoclogs.jpg (4136 bytes)

NATIONAL CONGRESS OF AMERICAN INDIANS

NATIONAL POLICY WORK GROUP ON

CONTRACT SUPPORT COSTS

FINAL REPORT

July 1999

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Executive Summary

A. Purpose and Background of the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs

B. Organization of the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs

C. Findings

D. Guiding Principles

E. Recommendations

 

Chapter I - Overview and History

A. The Indian Self-Determination Act

B. Contract support costs under the ISDA

C. BIA and IHS approaches to contract support costs

D. Recent judicial and administrative decisions concerning contract support costs

E. Congressional actions in 1998 (FY 1999) relating to contract support costs

F. Funding contract support cost needs:

Past, Present and Future

 

Chapter 2 - Understanding Contract Support Costs: Myths & Realities

 

Chapter 3 - Conclusion

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

A. Purpose and Background of the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs.

In 1970 President Nixon formally launched the Nation into the Era of Tribal Self-Determination. Five years later that policy was embraced by Congress through enactment of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act. Under that Act, federal agencies within the Department of the Interior and the Department of Health and Human Services were required and directed to turn over the complete administration of their federal Indian programs to the Indian tribes themselves, upon receipt of a formal tribal request.

The result of that enactment has been the transfer of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal Indian programs from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service to tribal operation, leading to enormous improvements both in the empowerment of tribal governments and in the delivery and quality of local health and social welfare programs serving Native American people. This massive transfer of federal authorities to local tribal governments has emerged as an outstanding example of the success that comes from the devolution of federal governmental prerogatives to local governmental institutions.

From the earliest implementation of the 1975 Act it was clear that the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service were unable (and in some instances unprepared) to transfer to tribes the full resources of the federal government available to the agencies to carry out their federal Indian programs. In addition to the direct program funding, the Act authorized Acontract support costs" (typically associated with personnel administration, financial management, procurement activities and the like) to be provided to tribes over and above the program resources. It was recognized that if these additional contract support cost funds were not provided, tribes would actually be penalized in exercising their self-determination rights, by being compelled to reduce program operations to cover these unavoidable costs.

Despite this early recognition, since the inception of the Indian Self-Determination Act of 1975, each and every Administration has failed to meet its legal obligation to fully fund tribal contract support cost needs associated with tribally-operated Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian Health Service programs. The result, as frequently documented, has been to penalize tribes by forcing reductions in direct program operations, in order to support the administrative overhead associated with those programs. In essence, contracting tribes (and, more recently, self-governance tribes) have been punished for exercising their Self-Determination rights, by being compelled to reduce essential governmental programs.

The crisis in the Nation's Tribal Self-Determination Policy created by the consistent failure to fully fund contract support costs has been the subject of considerable Congressional attention. In comprehensively revamping the Indian Self-Determination Act in 1988 -- primarily to remedy this problem -- Congress observed that the failure to fully fund contract support costs constituted the single greatest impediment to the success of the Tribal Self-Determination Policy. It also reaffirmed that self-determination constitutes an enforceable system of important contractual obligations, and is not simply another program administered by federal agencies. But despite the 1988 reforms, and a second round of comprehensive congressional reforms in 1994, the Administration and the Congress continued to force upon tribes the burden of either reducing direct program services or diverting scarce tribal resources to cover the federal government's failure to fully fund contract support.

By 1998, it was estimated that the combined BIA and IHS contract support shortfall resulting from this failure exceeded $200 million. At the same time, courts and administrative law judges began to award tribes substantial damages against the agencies. As differences deepened between the authorizing and appropriations committees, as well as between the committees and the Administration, tribes were increasingly caught in the middle.

B. Organization of the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs.

It is in this environment that in April 1998, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) took the initiative to form the National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs. The goals of the Work Group were to explore the evolution of the contract support cost system within the Department of the Interior and the Department of Health and Human Services, to identify the problems that had developed in the system since the enactment of the Indian Self-Determination Act, to review recent judicial and administrative developments pertaining to contract support costs, and to explore possible changes and reforms in the funding and administration of contract support costs.

In April 1998 the NCAI hosted an open forum in Las Vegas for tribal leaders from throughout the United States and officials of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI), and of the Indian Health Service (IHS), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The attendees at the meeting included Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs Kevin Gover, Deputy Director of the Indian Health Service Luana Reyes and NCAI President W. Ron Allen.

The purpose of this open forum was two-fold: first, to explore changes and reforms in the contract support cost system in light of recent developments in the federal courts and in the Interior Board of Contract Appeals (including such cases as Shoshone-Bannock Tribes v. Shalala, Ramah Navajo School Board v. Babbitt, Ramah Navajo Chapter v. Babbitt, and Micosukee, et al. v. Bureau of Indian Affairs); second, to explore more broadly the evolution of the contract support cost system within each Department over the past twenty years, and to explore possible reforms and other measures that could help close the funding shortfall presently experienced by all tribes involved in contracting or compacting under the Indian Self-Determination Act.

The Las Vegas open forum led to the formal establishment of the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs. In organizing the Work Group, the Las Vegas participants determined to seek the participation not only of tribal governments, the BIA and IHS, but also representation from the DHHS Office of the Secretary and the DHHS Division of Cost Allocation (DCA), the DOI Assistant Secretary for Policy Management and Budget, the DOI Office of Inspector General (OIG), and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

In June 1998 a small tribal working group developed a first set of research requests for IHS, DHHS-DCA, BIA and DOI-OIG. The data and research requests were then confirmed in letters from NCAI President W. Ron Allen. On July 24, 1998, the full Work Group convened in Washington, D.C.

The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs has now convened 11 national meetings and several additional smaller committee meetings, including a special technical work group created to explore alternatives in the determination of tribal contract support cost needs.

The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs has devoted one year to the study of contract support cost issues. It has taken into consideration all of the prior governmental and nongovernmental studies of the issue, the various approaches taken by the agencies over the years, and the various approaches explored by the authorizing and appropriations committees. The Work Group has also drawn upon the expertise of tribal leaders, tribal administrators and financial consultants, accountants and tribal attorneys with specialized expertise in matters pertaining to contract support costs.

Throughout its deliberations the Work Group has worked closely with representatives of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Indian Health Service and the Office of Inspector General. In some instances, the Work Group has also been joined by representatives from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the General Accounting Office and various congressional offices. Finally, the Work Group has explored at length the difficulties faced by tribal providers of federal ISDA programs as they struggle to deal with contract support shortfalls caused both by the consistent failure of the BIA and IHS to pay the full amounts required by law, and by the persistent failure of other federal agencies to pay the full amounts required by the government-wide indirect rate established by each tribe's cognizant federal agency.

C. Findings.

The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs believes that much needed reform can be brought to the contract support cost system to alleviate the problems faced by tribal communities as they struggle to administer federal programs with insufficient administrative support. Those reforms have been developed in light of several key findings from the past year's work, including the following:

1. The payment of full contract support costs is essential to the success of the Self-Determination Policy, empowerment of Tribal governments and to avoid a contracting penalty associated with the transfer of federal programs to tribal operation;

2. The policy of paying contract support costs began with the BIA's and IHS's recognition that such costs were necessary to preserve the resources of the programs being transferred to tribal administrative operations. Without full funding of contract support costs, program resources will necessarily be diverted to sustain necessary administrative functions;

3. The determination of contract support costs has historically occurred in arms-length government-to-government transactions, primarily with the United States represented by the Department of the Interior's Office of the Inspector General in the context of indirect cost rate negotiations. These negotiations have been free of collusion, undue influence, or conflicts of interest;

4. To date the indirect cost system has proven to be the most flexible system available for fairly determining each tribe's prudent requirements for contract support costs;

5. Past efforts to replace the indirect cost system have failed because they have not taken into account programmatic differences, large and small tribe factors, geographical locations and a number of other distinguishing elements that vary from tribe to tribe, and from contract to contract;

6. No study of contract support issues has ever developed a more reliable system for better determining a tribe's necessary and reasonable requirements for prudent management of a contract than the IDC rate system;

7. The BIA and IHS agencies have consistently failed to meet their responsibilities to timely report to Congress on the full nature of contract support costs and contract support cost shortfalls, denying Congress vitally needed information in the budget and appropriations process;

8. Going back as far as the 1970s, the agencies have consistently failed to meet their obligations to fully fund contract support costs. In most years, this failure can be attributed to the refusal by the Administration to request sufficient funds as part of the budget and appropriations process, while in other cases, Congress has simply ignored requests for substantial contract support increases;

9. Agencies continue to withhold programs and resources at the area and central office levels, leaving tribes with fewer resources to operate their programs and administer their overhead;

10. The underpayment of contract support costs in support of programs transferred from the BIA and IHS accounts for only a portion of the severe hardships faced by tribal contractors in administering federal programs. The remainder is caused by the failure of other federal agencies to abide by the government-wide OMB-controlled process for establishing indirect cost rates;

11. Indirect cost rates and contract support cost ratios have, in the aggregate, remained constant over the past decade, refuting allegations that either rates are on the rise or that the indirect cost system represents an open-ended or uncontrollable liability;

12. Tribal contracting and compacting activities accelerated to their peak in the mid-1990s in response to the 1994 ISDA Amendments and extension of the self-governance initiative to IHS. The trend in the transfer of federal Indian programs to tribal operation under the ISDA has leveled off from the peak experienced in the mid-1990s, and with a few notable exceptions should remain constant in the years ahead;

13. The stability in national aggregate contract support cost information, combined with the leveling off in new contracting activities, will yield improved long-term predictability over the next decade in contract support cost needs;

14. With respect to the Indian Health Service, IHS estimates that going in to FY 2000 there will be a total annual contract support cost requirement of approximately $284 million (including a 3.5% inflation factor for FY 1999 and FY 2000 ($20 million); and a $15 million ISD Fund for new and expanded ISDA operations);

15. The contract support cost Ashortfall" experienced by IHS in recent years is a combination of: (1) shortfalls in contract support cost funding for programs long ago transferred to tribal operation; and, (2) shortfalls in contract support funding for more recently transferred programs that did not receive any contract support at all for many years;

16. The IHS and the BIA have for many years used an identical system for funding the contract support costs associated with newly transferred programs, as follows: newly transferred programs have received funding on a first-come/first-served basis out of each agency's Indian Self-Determination Fund. In recent years, the BIA Indian Self-Determination Fund has been generally sufficient to cover all such new contracting needs (but for FY 1997), avoiding a large accumulated backlog. The IHS Indian Self-Determination Fund has not been similarly sufficient to keep pace with new ISDA activities;

17. The IHS and BIA have used different approaches for funding contract support cost needs associated with ongoing tribally-operated programs. Once IHS funds contract support costs associated with such programs in one year, then in subsequent years IHS would only reduce contract support payments if paying the same amount would overpay a tribe's contract support cost needs (such as where a tribe's indirect cost rate drops significantly from one year to the next). As opposed to the BIA who would fund contract support costs in the first year, then in subsequent years would reduce the payment of contract support costs to the tribe based on a national proration of all contract support cost needs. As a result, in the IHS system a program's contract support cost needs would often remain fully (or close to fully) funded for several years, whereas in the BIA system, a program's contract support cost needs would only be funded in the first year;

18. Of the total contract support funding required by tribes in connection with IHS programs transferred to tribal operation, on average 79% of the contract support reflects indirect costs, and 21% reflects direct contract support. The ratio of these two types of contract support does not vary substantially regardless of the size of the IHS programs under tribal operation;

19. Over one-half of the 330 tribally-operated IHS programs involve tribal health care programs totaling less than $500,000. Another one-quarter involve programs ranging between $1 million and $5 million. Only 27 of the IHS programs under tribal operation are in excess of $5 million (of which only seven are in excess of $20 million);

20. The rate of growth in the transfer of IHS programs to tribal operation is slowing. Earlier IHS forecasts that contract support costs associated with new program transfers would total $15 million are now being adjusted down beginning with FY 2001;

21. The only Aspikes" IHS anticipates in connection with future CSC needs would be associated with the transfer of certain programs presently under IHS operation to the Navajo Nation and the Cherokee Nation. Total program funding for IHS-operated programs for these two tribes is approximately $300 million, leading IHS to forecast a potential contract support demand associated with these two programs of between $60 million and $75 million;

22. Approximately 40% of the IHS budget and 57% of the BIA budget are currently being administered by tribes;

23. The Work Group estimates that the total annual Adirect" contract support cost burden not recognized or paid by the BIA is approximately $8 million. Putting aside this omission, the BIA anticipates that appropriations in FY 1999 will only be sufficient to fund 83% of all tribal needs for indirect costs associated with BIA programs presently under tribal operation ($115 million in funding distributed across $139 million in need). When the excluded direct contract support costs are factored in, the total BIA FY 1999 funding for contract support drops to approximately 78% of need, with a $32 million shortfall;

24. CSC funding covers a variety of fixed costs related to the administration of programs and facilities, and certain personnel and program expenses not otherwise funded under the ISDA. To the extent CSC is insufficiently funded, a contracting or self-governance tribe is generally forced to divert health care and social service funding, and to reduce services, since for many contractors, especially smaller contractors, the cost of functions paid for by contract support are stable and cannot be prudently reduced (i.e., a bookkeeper, for example);

25. In FY 1997, the average indirect rate for tribes that negotiated indirect costs based on a Adirect cost" base (the method used by most, but not all, tribes) declined as the total size of the program increased. For example, tribes whose direct-cost base is under $500,000 had an average indirect rate of 49.5%, whereas tribes with a direct-cost base in excess of $20 million had an average indirect cost rate of 22.7%. The single largest category of tribes, those with a direct-cost base of between $1 million and $5 million, had an average rate of 31%. In each instance, the average represents an average among a large range of rates;

26. There has been little overall variation in the average indirect cost rate negotiated for all tribes during the period 1988 through 1997. In most of these years, the average rate for each tribe was between 32.1% and 35.6%;

27. The Office of Inspector General reports that the aggregate indirect cost rate for the period from 1987 through 1997 is approximately 25%. The OIG computed the overall aggregate rate by dividing the total indirect cost pools by the total direct cost bases;

28. According to AA Guide for Nonprofit Organizations" (Univ. Calif. 1997), the following agencies have indirect cost rates in excess of 50%: the U.S. Information Agency, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Agriculture, state service delivery agencies, private foundations and fundraising organizations;

29. Comparing indirect cost rates with other public institutions, the Work Group found that during the period 1991 through 1995, 105 universities examined had an average indirect rate of between 52% and 53.1%;

30. Excluding the recently concluded phased transfer of IHS Alaska Area programs to tribal operation, contracting activities for both agencies have begun to level off from their peak in the mid-1990s. There are many reasons for this new development. In some parts of the country, tribes remain deeply suspicious of the self-determination initiative, viewing it as a poorly disguised move toward outright termination of the Federal-Tribal trust relationship. Other tribes see the local IHS and BIA agency operations as terribly underfunded and have chosen not to step into the federal government's shoes under such circumstances. Still other tribes are satisfied with the agencies continuing to operate various programs, particularly where the tribes feel they have secured substantial involvement in how each agency carries out its responsibilities. Finally, some tribes do not feel they possess the resources or capabilities yet to operate certain programs on their own;

31. There is little Congress can or ought to do to address the government's past liability for IHS and BIA failures to meet their statutory contract support obligations. To the extent tribes incurred damages, it is for the judiciary or other adjudicative bodies to determine the appropriate relief. Indeed, in cases such as United States v. Winstar, 116 S.Ct. 2432 (1996), the Supreme Court has time and again cautioned about the grave contractual and constitutional problems posed by Congressional efforts to repudiate past government contract obligations.

D. Guiding Principles for the Recommendations.

In the course of its work to respond to these findings, as well as the more technical findings contained in the body of this report, the NCAI Work Group developed a set of eight principles to guide the development of NCAI's recommendations.

 

First, improvements in the contract support cost system must preserve and promote the intent of the Indian Self-Determination Act to reduce federal paternalism, foster tribal operation of federal Indian programs, promote the devolution of federal authorities to local tribal governments, and avoid erecting barriers to the full exercise of tribal self-determination rights.

 

Second, full funding of contract support costs is essential to the success of the Self-Determination Policy.

 

Third, improvements in the contract support cost system should promote empowerment of the tribal governments, tribal financial stability and predictability, tribal choice, and tribal fiscal flexibility.

 

Fourth, improvements in the contract support system should be coordinated with continual downsizing of the BIA and IHS, and the transfer of operational savings to Indian tribes.

 

Fifth, new approaches in the contract support cost system must not include reallocations that attempt to shift to tribes the federal government's own responsibility for meeting the requirements of the Indian Self- Determination Act.

 

Sixth, improvements in the contract support cost system should continue to encourage tribes to adopt management practices that maximize efficiencies in the local delivery of health and social service programs, while remaining sensitive to real-world limitations confronting rural tribal communities.

 

Seventh, improvements in the contract support cost system should foster simplification wherever possible, without compromising the other principles.

 

Eighth, the continued stability of the entire self-determination contracting and compacting initiatives, and the Self-Determination Policy of which they form a critical part, depends upon the federal government's proper respect for the legal obligations it enters into with tribal governments, as a matter of statutory, contractual, fiduciary and constitutional law.

Within these broad parameters, the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs recommends the following reforms:

E. Recommendations

Recommendations pertaining to the determination of contract support cost needs.

 

1. The Office of Management and Budget should issue new circulars, in close consultation with an active participation by tribes and tribal organizations, concerning the negotiation of indirect cost rates and auditing issues unique to tribes and tribal organizations.

The NCAI Work Group recommends that the Office of Management and Budget undertake an initiative (and that it be directed by Congress) to develop new OMB circulars uniquely suited to tribes and tribal organizations in carrying out federal agency programs under the Indian Self-Determination Act and other federal laws.

Such circulars should reflect issues unique to Indian tribes, including the provisions set forth in section 106(k) of the ISDA, 25 U.S.C. ' 450j-1(k), and the rebudgeting and redesign provisions set forth in Titles I, III and IV of the ISDA. They should include provisions intended to determine the necessary and reasonable needs of tribes for administrative overhead costs consistent with sound and prudent management practices.

The circular can also be used as an opportunity to coordinate the activities of all federal agencies that provide funding to Indian tribes, as a further means of eliminating the problem created by the failure of agencies other than the BIA and IHS to recognize their financial responsibility to pay their appropriate share of each tribe's negotiated in direct cost rate.

 

2. The Department of Interior of Office of Inspector General, the Department of Health and Human Services Division of Cost Allocation, and the Department of Labor Office of Cost Determination should be directed to explore with NCAI and other tribal representatives the development of a Abenchmarking" approach which might guide the negotiation of contract support costs, including indirect cost rates.

This recommendation reflects an interest within NCAI to explore a possible refinement of the current processes for determining contract support cost needs. The development of nonbinding benchmarks for the different elements of contract support costs, and for certain components within each element, potentially might serve to encourage a greater standardization among tribes in similar situations, without mandating identical calculations that could overpay or underpay particular tribes given their local circumstances.

The development of Abenchmarking" percentages, as rebuttable guidelines in contract support negotiations, would also provide some means of standardizing the diverse approaches to the law currently being taken by different agencies (and by different negotiators within each agency), as well as by different tribes and tribal organizations.

With respect to each of the various categories of contract support costs, the development of a Abenchmarking" approach could potentially provide predictable start-up costs that are a function both of the size of the program being newly transferred to tribal operation, and the relationship between that program and other programs already under tribal administration. The Abenchmarking" of direct contract support costs could provide for a straight percentage of either program costs or program components (such as a percentage of direct program salary costs). Finally, a successful Abenchmarking" approach, as applied in the context of the indirect rate negotiation process, might suggest either overall indirect rates or components of an overall rate as a function of a tribal contractor's overall direct program base and other appropriate factors. Finally, a Abenchmarking" approach might also succeed in bringing some standardization to the different ways in which contract support costs associated with facilities have been handled over time by different tribes, by different cognizant agencies, and even within the same agency.

The NCAI Work Group recommends that Congress provide at least one year for the exploration of one or more Abenchmarking" proposals, and for Joint Tribal-Federal field testing of any such proposals. Thereafter, any proposal that is successfully field-tested should be issued jointly by the relevant Departments in the Federal Register for appropriate comment.

 

3. IHS and BIA should continue to explore the concept of Abase budgets" in which tribal contractors are paid their program costs and full contract support costs, and are thereafter fully responsible for managing, allocating and reallocating the combined budget as determined appropriate by the tribe or tribal organization.

By encouraging the agency's to move toward the Abase budget" concept, Congress can facilitate the ability of tribes to maximize efficiencies in operation by providing real incentives toward that goal. The key incentive would be that, in the event a tribe receives contract support cost funds as part of a Abase budget," there will be no adverse adjustment against that tribe if the tribe achieves greater efficiencies and, as a result, expends contract support cost funds instead for program enhancements.

Successful implementation of the base budget approach will require close coordination with the cognizant agencies such as OIG and DCA , to assure against any adverse adjustments to indirect cost rates in future years as a result of such activities. No such base budgeting can be successful, however, unless the full amount of contract support requirement is included in the base at the beginning.

 

4. Tribes should be encouraged to collaborate through inter-tribal consortia and other collaborative relationships in order to reduce their collective administrative costs and expand their economies of scale and the delivery of services.

Since the earliest days of the Indian Self-Determination Act, smaller tribes sharing a common interest in a defined geographic area have voluntarily collaborated through inter-tribal organizations in order to maximize their economies of scale and minimize their administrative overhead. At the same time, tribes organizing together in this fashion have also had to balance these principles against the importance of localizing the service delivery system as much as possible for the benefit of the Native American individuals being served.

Experience shows that this delicate balance is part of a dynamic process that changes and evolves over time. As a result, today most inter-tribal arrangements involve an integrated, highly creative and unique set of arrangements among a given group of tribes. At the same time, Congress should not mandate such relationships and should repeal legislation such as the FY 1999 Asection 351 rider" that dictate tribal choices and weakens meaningful tribal organization accountability.

The NCAI Work Group recommends that tribes be continually encouraged to explore these creative relationships, and further recommends that Congress direct the agencies to work with tribes in identifying any significant impediments to these arrangements.

 

5. The Bureau of Indian Affairs should conform with Indian Health Service practice by complying with 25 U.S.C. ' 450j-1(a)(3), paying Adirect" contract support, and reporting to Congress the full amount of tribal requirements for Adirect" program-specific contract support costs.

In 1999, 24 years after enactment of the ISDA, the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs for the first time stated in testimony to Congress that the BIA would very likely commence recognizing the tribal entitlement to receive contract support costs that are not a part of the indirect cost pool and are therefore Adirect" in nature. For too many years, the BIA has acted contrary to the mandate of the ISDA in failing to recognize and pay direct contract support costs. The ISDA is clear in this respect, and the ISDA regulations direct tribes to identify those costs as a part of their proposals, the BIA has refused to comply with the law.

 

6. The indirect cost methodologies applied by cognizant federal agencies such as the OIG, DCA or the Department of Labor, Office of Cost Determination should be modified, in close consultation with and active participation by tribes and tribal organizations, to comply with the requirements of the Tenth Circuit Decision in Ramah Navajo Chapter v. Lujan, 112 F.3d 1455 (10th Cir. 1997).

The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has correctly determined that the common methodology employed by the Department of Interior Office of Inspector General, the Department of Health and Human Services Division of Cost Allocation, and the Department of Labor Office of Cost Determination unlawfully dilute the responsibility of the BIA and IHS to pay full indirect costs associated with ISDA contracts. The NCAI Work Group recommends that this illegal practice be corrected in the following manner.

First, the cognizant agency should remove from the direct cost base tribally administered funds received from other federal agencies. Next, the agencies should develop a set of guidelines, in close coordination with NCAI, the Ramah plaintiffs, and other tribal contractors, to determine which portions of the other federal agencies' programs that have been removed from the direct cost base (in Step One) should be added back into the base. If, as was the case for the Ramah Navajo Chapter, the burden associated with administering the programs of other federal agencies does not materially or significantly add to the administrative overhead required to carry out the BIA and IHS programs, no portion of the other federal agencies' programs should be added back to the direct cost base. If, on the other hand, the relative size of the other federal agencies' programs is such that the administrative burden upon a tribe will necessarily increase, to that extent the other federal agencies' programs should be added back to the direct cost base. Guidelines will avoid excess or complicated negotiations, and will produce reasonable approximations of need that are predictable.

Finally, the OIG (or other cognizant agency) should calculate an indirect rate to be paid by the BIA and IHS on the adjusted direct cost base, and then apply a credit for any indirect costs actually paid the tribe from the other federal agencies.

 

7. Congress, OMB, and the Departments should reject any suggestions to move the negotiation of indirect cost rates out of the cognizant agencies' audit arms, either to outside negotiators or to local agency officials.

The audit arms of the cognizant agencies that negotiate tribal indirect rates do so for all other government contract and grant recipients. They have accumulated nearly 30 years of experience doing so. Their Aindirect" functions are carefully separated from their audit functions, and are also separated from those who determine how agency funds will be spent (i.e., the BIA and IHS). As a result, the agency indirect rate negotiators are free of any financial self-interest (on behalf of the federal government), and free of any partiality toward or against tribes.

It is for these reasons that study after study has confirmed the integrity of the indirect negotiation system. The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs therefore recommends that the federal responsibility for the indirect rate negotiation system (and any variant on that system such as future Abenchmarking") remain unchanged, and not moved either into the field or to negotiators situated outside the departments. There is a concern regarding OIG's staffing level to expeditiously process the rate proposals from the tribes. Congress should consider adjusting their FTE level to responsibly address this need.

 

Recommendations pertaining to the funding of contract support costs.

8. The BIA and IHS should fully report, and Congress should fully fund, contract support costs.

Congress must not retreat from its commitment in 1975, repeated and strengthened in 1988 and once again 1994, to provide full funding for contract support costs.

Long before Congress improved the ISDA to make clear the contract support cost obligation, the BIA and IHS recognized that such costs must be determined and paid in order to keep faith with Congress's commitment to make available to tribes the full program costs available to the Secretary. Without contract support costs, the agencies recognized that tribes would suffer a contracting penalty. In 25 years, this basic fact has not changed.

It is therefore essential that the BIA and IHS report to Congress the full level of contract support costs required in connection with ISDA contracts, in strict compliance with section 106(c) of the Act, and that Congress in turn fully fund that need. Further, the agencies should timely furnish to all tribal governments complete copies of its their annual congressional reports.

 

9. The BIA should promote stabilization and predictability by adopting the IHS approach of never reducing individual tribal contract support cost payments from one year to the next.

In years when IHS has received insufficient appropriations to pay all contract support cost obligations, IHS has refrained from reducing any tribe's contract support cost payment from the prior year (unless the same payment in the new year would exceed the full amount of a tribe's contract support cost entitlement). This practice has promoted stability in tribal financial operations because, regardless of appropriations, tribes can be confident they will receive no less than the amount of contract support costs paid in the prior year. For the same reason, this approach has promoted predictability from one year to the next, permitting tribes to engage in meaningful short- and long-term management and planning of tribal programs.

The BIA should reform its annual distribution of contract support costs to reflect the IHS approach. As criticized in the Alamo/Miccosukee case, tribes should not be forced to operate programs with a total amount of contract support costs that is unknown until 10 or 11 months into the programs' fiscal year.

 

10. Congress should restore each agency's ISD Fund to facilitate the ability of the IHS and BIA to address contract support cost needs associated with the initial first year transfer of federal programs to tribal operation.

The two ISD Funds have proven to be an important and valuable management tool facilitating the ability of the agencies to separately address the unique contract support cost needs associated with programs being transferred from federal to tribal operation for the first time.

In FY 1999, Congress eliminated the BIA's and IHS's ISD Funds as part of the one-year moratorium on any additional transfers of programs to tribal operations. In FY 2000, those two Funds should be restored and funded at no less than $7.5 million for the BIA and $15 million for the IHS (the recommended funding levels are intended to anticipate potential Apent-up" one-year requirements caused by the FY 1999 moratorium). In FY 2001, the Funds should be funded at $5.0 million for the BIA, and $12.5 million for IHS. Thereafter, the Funds should receive $5.0 million and $10 million, respectively.

 

11. In the management of agency shortfalls, IHS and BIA should distribute increases among all tribes that are funded at less than 100% of need.

Since tribes are only entitled to contract support costs to the extent they are necessary and reasonably required for prudent management of the transferred federal program, any tribe experiencing a shortfall in contract support cost suffers whether the shortfall is 10% or 50%. Regardless of the level of shortfall, the ultimate victims are the program beneficiaries who will suffer if direct services are reduced to cover this federal responsibility.

For this reason, the NCAI Work Group recommends that in distributing limited agency appropriations, the IHS and BIA should distribute congressional increases among all tribes receiving less than their full contract support cost entitlements. For example, for every $5 paid to a tribe that is 50% underfunded, $4 should be paid to a tribe that is 40% underfunded, $3 to a tribe that is 30% underfunded, and $1 to a tribe that is 10% underfunded.

 

12. Congress should reject any suggestions that the Self-Determination Policy should be curtailed through the imposition of a full, partial or temporary moratorium on the additional transfer of federal Indian programs to tribal operation.

For 25 years, the Self-Determination Policy has proven itself time and again to be the single greatest factor leading to the improvement in service delivery systems at the local tribal level. Tribes simply do a better, more creative, and more efficient job in designing, managing and delivering programs than is possible by the BIA or IHS. Tribal communities must not be denied the opportunity to continue with these powerful improvements simply due to difficulties in managing the technical aspects of the contract support cost system. The NCAI Work Group thus strongly urges Congress to reject any proposals for a moratorium of any kind whatsoever against the transfer of IHS or BIA programs to tribal operation.

 

13. In the budgeting process, direct contract support costs should be transferred into the appropriate direct program line items.

Direct contract support costs represent supplemental funds that are needed to support the delivery of a particular IHS or BIA program at the same level of funding enjoyed by the agencies when operating the same program. As such, these Aprogram-type" contract support costs should logically be funded together with the programs themselves, and enjoy mandatory increases and similar congressional adjustments.

The NCAI Work Group recommends that direct contract support cost amounts be transferred out of the contract support cost activity and into the appropriate program activity. Given the two-year budget formulation process employed by the Administration, the NCAI Work Group recommends that the transfer of direct contract support costs occur two fiscal years following the year in which the amounts are first identified and paid. Once transferred, these funds should continue to be separately tracked as contract support funds, and annually reported to Congress under section 106(c) of the Act. The transfer should not impair the tribal right to renegotiate the direct contract support costs as circumstances warrant under section 106(a)(3)(B) of the Act.

 

14. Congress should require the agencies to submit contract support cost requirements when requesting program enhancements or new initiatives.

Presently, tribes and tribal organizations operate approximately 40% of all IHS programs, and a comparable amount of the BIA's program budget. Taking IHS as an example, this means that to the extent Congress increases funding for a particular program by $10, of that sum $4 will be passed on to tribal organizations operating those programs under the ISDA. This, in turn, will require on average an additional $1.20 in contract support costs to support those programs. NCAI recommends that Congress be informed of that additional requirement at the same time Congress considers the underlying program increase.

Presently, the agencies make no effort to forecast the impact of requested budget increases on tribal contract support cost entitlements as part of the President's budget request. In the absence of such forecasting, there is often a lag of one to two years (and more) before the agencies bring to Congress the problem created by this essentially Aunfunded mandate." The recommended reform would add substantially to the ability of both the agencies and Congress to forecast accurately budget needs both for program administration and to support the self-determination initiative.

 

15. The BIA and IHS should cease and desist from efforts to extinguish past obligations incurred under solemn government-to-government contracts.

The BIA and IHS must accept that tribal contracts and compacts are first and foremost legal commitments and obligations of the United States, obligations whose terms are set forth in the ISDA and basic contract law.

Although it is the agencies which have primary responsibility for meeting the government's financial obligations under such contracts, this fact does not excuse the agencies' consistent practice of seeking to interject a multitude of terms and conditions into annual contract negotiations, intended to provide the government with loopholes and escape clauses in the event of insufficient agency appropriations. Nor does it excuse the agencies' consistent position that all tribal contractual rights are subject to the BIA's and IHS's discretionary authority to unilaterally alter those rights.

ISDA contracts and compacts are solemn and binding legal obligations of the United States, and IHS and BIA policies and practices should fully respect that fundamental principle.

 

16. Congress and the Office of Management and Budget should each explore and address the root causes of the failures of agencies other than the BIA and IHS to respect the full indirect rate negotiated by each tribe's cognizant federal agency.

From the very earliest days of ISDA implementation, the failure of other federal agencies to pay their appropriate share of indirect costs has undermined the ability of tribes to administer federal programs without suffering program reductions. Some federal agencies refuse to pay the full indirect rate as a matter of policy, some refuse to pay as a matter of regulatory limitation, and some refuse to pay as a matter of statutory limitation.

In the first two situations, the Office of Management and Budget should take corrective action to assure (and Congress should direct) that regulatory and policy reforms be made so that the principles of OMB Circular A-87 are uniformly followed by all federal agencies entering into funding agreements with Indian tribes.

To the extent limitations on federal agencies are statutory, the NCAI Work Group respectfully calls upon Congress to remove these statutory barriers.

 

Conclusion

The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs reaffirms its commitment to continue working with Indian country, Congress and the Administration, including the Office of Management and Budget, the Department of the Interior and the Department of Health and Human Services, to keep faith with the Nation's Self-Determination Policy.

No single policy in the history of American Indian Affairs has more forcefully and effectively permitted tribes to empower their tribal institutions and their people. No single policy has more effectively served to break the cycle of dependency and paternalism. No single policy has better served the philosophy of devolution -- moving federal resources and decision-making to that level of local government that is closest to the people. And, no single initiative has contributed more to the improvement in the conditions facing American Indian peoples.

As the Nation enters the new millennium, it is essential that the American people recommit fully and keep faith with the Self-Determination Policy and empowerment of tribal government consistent with the devolution movement. Only through the continuation of that policy can America both respect the fundamental government-to-government relationship that exists between tribes and the United States, and fulfill the federal government's trust responsibility to protect the interests of Native American tribes.

 

CHAPTER 1 - OVERVIEW AND HISTORY

A. The Indian Self-Determination Act.

For the last 30 years, the hallmarks of this Nation's Indian policy have been the promotion of tribal autonomy and self-governance, and the elimination of federal control and paternalism over daily tribal life. Those goals were first formally announced by President Nixon in 1970, and today they remain at the heart of Federal Indian policy. The cornerstone of that policy is the Indian Self-Determination Act of 1975, an Act repeatedly reaffirmed by Congress through extensive strengthening amendments enacted in 1988 and 1994.

Prior to the 1975 Act, most governmental programs in most tribal communities were designed, controlled and carried out by federal agencies, primarily through the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and the Indian Health Service (IHS). Although the Buy Indian Act permitted these agencies to contract with a tribe to carry out one or more programs, the choice was the agencies' and not the tribes'. As a consequence, tribes generally did not administer federal Indian programs, and those few that did had no autonomy whatsoever in how a contracted program was carried out.

With the enactment of the ISDA in 1975, this relationship fundamentally changed. Under the ISDA, it became a tribe's choice whether to take over the operation of a BIA or IHS program, and the agencies were mandated to transfer programs to the tribes unless the agencies could prove that one of several very limited reasons existed for declining to do so. Moreover, once a program had been transferred by contract to a tribe, the tribe was authorized to redesign the contracted program to best meet the local needs and priorities of the tribal community. Although BIA and IHS resistance to the Act's mandates has from time to time seriously impeded its implementation, this is not surprising, for there is no other example of a federal agency being required to transfer full operational control over a program to another government upon request; and in so doing, to fully divest itself of its own resources, including funds, equipment and even personnel.

The success of the Self-Determination Policy has been frequently noted, notwithstanding agency resistance and agency conflicts of interest. By the mid-1980s, the BIA had transferred over one-fifth of its programs ($234.8 million) to tribal operation, while the IHS had transferred to tribes six hospitals and 300 outpatient clinics. The most recent available figures indicate that today tribes contract for the operation of $907 million in BIA programs (57% of the total BIA budget) and $765 million in IHS programs (40% of the total IHS budget).

As detailed by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee in 1988, and more recently by the National Indian Health Board in 1998, the result consistently has been (1) improved service delivery, (2) increased service levels, and (3) strengthened tribal institutions. Today the greatest innovations occurring across Indian Country in health care, education, economic development, local employment, trust resource management, welfare reform, family support, alcohol and substance abuse treatment, and clinical care and preventive care are occurring in federal Indian programs transferred to and operated by tribes under the ISDA.

The Nation's Tribal Self-Determination Policy has been a resounding success for tribal communities. Virtually every tribe in the United States is involved in the operation of at least some BIA or IHS programs, and many operate or control all available programs. The Policy itself, embraced by every Administration from President Nixon to President Clinton, is also supported today by the increasing devolution of federal authorities to state and local governments, and the persistent congressional call for reductions in the federal bureaucracy.

Nonetheless, there have been severe obstacles to the full realization of this enlightened Policy. As we next describe, chief among these has been the problem associated with the failure of the BIA and IHS to fully pay contract support costs, including indirect costs.

B. Contract Support Costs Under the ISDA.

From the beginning, the ISDA has required the BIA and IHS to transfer to a contracting tribe the Federal Government's full resources supporting a particular program, such as a BIA law enforcement program or an IHS clinic or hospital. But for many years the agencies refused to transfer any resources other than those located at the community level, thus depriving tribes of essential supportive activities situated at the agencies' Area and central offices. Moreover, in many instances some of the federal resources supporting a given program were located in entirely different departments or agencies, such as the various functions carried out by the Office of Personnel Management, the Merit Systems Protection Board, the General Services Administration, the General Accounting Office, agency Inspector General functions, and the Treasury Department.

Understandably, neither agency could secure and transfer to tribes the federal resources provided from these other portions of the federal bureaucracy. To compound the problem, Congress and the agencies imposed upon tribes a multiplicity of requirements such as program reporting requirements, annual financial audits, insurance and the like that had no comparable cost for the federal government.

As explained in more detail in Part C, the agencies early on determined that contracting tribes should be paid these operational costs (largely representing necessary administrative overhead) through the indirect cost system. Under that system, a separate agency (typically the DOI Office of Inspector General, but occasionally the DHHS Division of Cost Allocation) would independently determine a tribe's reasonable and necessary costs to carry out such functions, and the BIA and IHS would then pay their calculated share of those costs.

 

Congress has consistently recognized the importance of paying indirect costs, along with other contract support costs, and in 1988 and 1994 Congress twice reinforced section 106 of the Act to assure that contract support costs would be paid.

The importance of the issue here cannot be understated, for if tribes are not reimbursed fully for their contract support costs and they therefore experience a shortfall, they are effectively penalized for exercising their self-determination rights, since the only choice left is to actually cut into the transferred BIA and IHS programs themselves in order to cover the shortfall.

The BIA and IHS have consistently failed to meet their obligations to fully fund contract support costs (including indirect costs), a failure that has emerged as the leading impediment to realizing the full promise of the Self-Determination Policy. Ten years ago the Senate Indian Affairs Committee put it well:

Perhaps the single most serious problem with implementation of the Indian self-determination policy has been the failure of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service to provide funding for the indirect costs associated with self-determination contracts. The consistent failure of federal agencies to fully fund tribal indirect costs has resulted in financial management problems for tribes as they struggle to pay for federally mandated annual single-agency audits, liability insurance, financial management systems, personnel systems, property management and procurement systems and other administrative requirements.

Unfortunately, throughout the same period, the IHS and BIA programs themselves have been woefully underfunded, even losing ground against inflation. As a result, the continual failure to fully fund contract support costs has compounded the gravity of program underfunding by requiring tribes to reduce those programs even further. This is the Acontracting penalty" which Congress has consistently sought to avoid in the ISDA.

In 1987, the Senate Indian Affairs Committee repeatedly targeted the agencies' failure to even request contract support funds:

For several years the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service have failed to request from the Congress the full amount of funds needed to fully fund indirect costs associated with self-determination contracts.

S. Rep. 100-274 at 9. The Committee noted that Aself-determination contractor's rights have been systematically violated particularly in the area of funding indirect costs." Id. at 37. The Committee directed IHS and the BIA to Acease the practice of requiring tribal contractors to take indirect costs from the direct program costs, which results in decreased amounts of funds for services." Id. at 12. The Committee highlighted Athe overwhelming administrative problems caused by indirect cost shortfalls, and concluded that:

Full funding of tribal indirect costs associated with self-determination contracts is essential if the federal policy of Indian Self-Determination is to succeed.

Id. at 12-13. As the Appropriations Committees have likewise noted from time to time, that statement is as true today as it was in 1988.

 

C. BIA and IHS Approaches to Contract Support Costs.

This section reviews the evolution in the BIA and IHS approaches to contract support costs. As this section reflects, the two agencies have approached contract support cost issues somewhat differently, and today those differences persist. The critical common denominator, however, is the two agencies' general failure to fully request and budget for contract support costs, leading to the repeated congressional criticisms.

The term Acontract support cost" was first coined by the BIA in the 1970s to designate the supplemental funds needed to assure that tribes would not be required to reduce contracted programs in order to operate those programs. In this way, the BIA sought to comply with original section 106(h)'s requirement that the funds made available to carry out a federal program not be less than Athe amount the Secretary would have otherwise provided for his direct operation of the programs or portions thereof for the period covered by the contract." The key concept-- carried forward to this day-- was to prevent a tribe from having to divert program funding to cover contract support cost needs, a consequence that would lead to fewer program funds being available to the tribe than the Bureau would have had to operate the programs itself.

The BIA (along with the IHS) recognized that when a tribe contracts a local BIA or IHS program based strictly on the agency's local budget, there will be costs, including even Secretarial program costs, that are not included in the contract because they are not situated locally. Costs incurred at another level in the BIA or incurred by other departmental offices in support of the local program would still need to be incurred by the tribe. In addition, ISDA contracts would require activities for contract compliance or prudent management which the federal agency would not incur at all. The agencies sought to address this issue by requesting additional Acontract support" funding and by establishing a procedure to negotiate a reasonable adjustment in self-determination contracts to determine such costs.

 

Early BIA policies regarding contract support costs. In 1976, the BIA began using the indirect cost system to pay contract support costs on self-determination contracts, using a budget item entitled AContract Support Funds." In its April 1977 AProcedural Guidelines on 25 C.F.R. 271," the BIA explained that Acontract support" funds were being provided to cover the additional administrative costs incurred as a result of tribal contracting of Bureau programs, emphasizing that these funds were essential and necessary Ato prevent program deterioration, and not for program enhancement or expansion."

The BIA made clear in the guidelines that tribal contract support funding needs normally would be based on a tribe's negotiated indirect cost rate. Only in certain special circumstances involving small contracts would such funds be provided based on a lump sum negotiation. The BIA also stated that all allowable indirect costs could and would be paid from the contract support budget category Abecause of their administrative nature".

 

Overview of the indirect cost system and early funding problems. Over the years, both agencies have employed the Aindirect cost" system for determining most contract support cost needs for most tribal contractors. AIndirect costs" are costs (such as procurement, auditing and other administrative costs) that are pooled together as a separate part of a tribal contractor's overall budget. These common pooled costs Aindirectly" benefit each of the programs operated by the tribal organization, thus leading to the term Aindirect costs."

Under the applicable OMB circulars and guidelines, a tribal contractor negotiates an indirect cost rate with the Department from which the tribe receives its relatively largest amount of federal funding. For most tribes and tribal organizations, that agency is the Department of the Interior, and DOI has assigned the responsibility for negotiating indirect cost rates to its Office of Inspector General (OIG). For the minority of tribes whose lead Acognizant" federal agency is the Department of Health and Human Services, DHHS has assigned a similar responsibility to the DHHS Division of Cost Allocation (DCA).

The function of the OIG and DCA is to reach agreement with a tribe on the appropriate level of pooled administrative costs that are incurred for a common purpose that jointly benefits all of the programs being operated by the tribal organization. So long as a particular item of cost is not readily assignable directly to each of the benefitted programs without an accounting effort that is disproportionate to the result achieved, the cost will be included along with other pooled indirect costs.

Indirect costs generally cover such categories as financial, personnel, property and records management, planning activities, activities of the tribal contractor's governing body, data processing and other office services, rent and utilities, housekeeping, maintenance and other facilities-related costs, insurance, legal and audit services, and other general support services. Once OIG (or DCA) gives final approval to the size of the indirect cost pool, the pool is divided by the total amount of programs under tribal operation to yield an indirect cost rate.

In the earliest years of ISDA implementation, tribes commonly experienced shortfalls in their indirect cost requirements, resulting in offsetting reductions in contracted programs. In 1980 the Senate Appropriations Committee directed the BIA and the OIG to develop a system to prevent indirect cost shortfalls in the future, and called for a BIA report. The result of this effort was a report confirming the BIA's failure to budget sufficient contract support funds to meet actual tribal needs. The report also highlighted the persistent problem caused by the failure of some federal agencies to respect the government-wide indirect cost rate that had been negotiated by the OIG, leaving tribes with shortfalls associated with those programs as well.

By the early 1980s, two things were firmly well established. First, that payment of contract support costs was necessary to comply fully with the full program funding mandate of the ISDA; and second, that the BIA and IHS were consistently failing to meet their responsibilities to pay contract support costs. In June 1982, the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs held field oversight hearings to explore these issues, and while no legislative proposals emerged, the hearings further documented both the failure of the BIA and IHS to fully pay contract support costs, and the failure of other federal agencies to follow the OIG and DCA indirect cost rate agreements.

AGrandfathering" and flat rates. In 1983, the Senate Appropriations Committee moved the contract support system into a new direction by calling for the transfer, or Agrandfathering," of contract support costs into each tribes's direct program base. This new approach was intended to give tribes greater flexibility in the management of their total BIA funding, and by memorandum dated May 21, 1984, the Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs announced the implementation of the policy. As indicated below, however, this experiment eventually failed because it was launched, once again, with insufficient funding.

Also in 1983, the American Indian Law Center, Inc. (AILC) completed a controversial review of the BIA's own overhead rate. The AILC study was requested as part of a BIA initiative to replace the indirect cost rate system with one that would simply try to mirror the BIA's overhead rate, and to then transfer a comparable amount to tribal contractors on a continuing annual basis regardless of local factors. The BIA's AILC study, severely criticized in later years by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, charged that tribal contractors had somehow manipulated indirect costs into an Aopen-ended uncontrollable entitlement fund" notwithstanding the involvement of a quasi law enforcement agency such as the Office of Inspector General. AILC eventually calculated that the Bureau's own overhead rate was a surprising 15.5%, and that tribal contractors should therefore be paid a flat add-on in that amount for contract support costs.

In response to the cursory AILC report, the Office of Inspector General undertook its own independent review of 81 tribes going back over a five-year period. OIG's analysis flatly impeached the AILC approach and reaffirmed the integrity of the indirect cost negotiation system. It also noted that historic increases in indirect cost needs reflected the fact that (1) salary costs over the five-year period had increased by 81.5% as a result of improving tribal administrative capacities; (2) tribal council costs had increased by 86.2% as a result of a trend toward professionalizing service on tribal councils; (3) audit costs had increased 230.5% (including 102.2% in one year only) as a result of the federal requirement to use certified public accountants for annual auditing purposes; and (4) the movement toward computerization (known then as Aelectronic data processing") had increased overhead costs by 225.7%.

Based largely on the OIG analysis of the A15 percent flat rate" idea, the BIA rejected the proposal, explaining:

To use a single uniform rate for all contracts simply cannot take into a consideration a number of variables such as programmatic differences, large and small tribe factors, geographic locations and a number of distinguishing elements which vary from contract to contract.

In a bizarre twist, however, the Bureau decided to request contract support funds from Congress using the 15.5% calculation, guaranteeing that the funds so received would be insufficient to meet all tribal requirements.

Although the AILC flat rate proposal died, the Agrandfathering" of contract support costs into the direct program base went forward. Nonetheless, the system contained the seeds of its own undoing, since the amount of contract support initially Agrandfathered" was woefully insufficient to meet the requirements of the statute. As a result, as the years went forward tribes became increasingly compelled to subsidize the grandfathered amount with direct program funds. With the grandfathered funds becoming almost impossible to track, and tribes facing uncontrollable increased costs as a result of inflation and new federal compliance requirements, the grandfathering experiment was eventually abandoned. In its FY 1988 budget request, the BIA proposed to Arecapture" the contract support funds previously Agrandfathered" to tribal contractors and proposed using the recaptured funds to implement a new Aadministrative fee" to pay contract support to all tribal contractors. In the face of tribal and congressional opposition, however, the new Aadministrative fee" proposal was abandoned.

 

Persistence of the Aother federal agencies" problem. Compounding the BIA's and IHS's shortcomings, it bears emphasizing once again that throughout the early 1980s, there was a growing awareness that a substantial part of the hardship faced by tribes in the indirect-cost system was also being caused by the failure of agencies other than the BIA and IHS to pay indirect costs according to the government-wide negotiated OIG rate.

By late 1983, the OIG complained vigorously to the Office of Management and Budget that the Aother agency" problem associated with indirect costs could not be resolved by any single department. The letter called upon OMB to exercise its authority by authorizing (and possibly mandating) a lump-sum approach to funding tribal contract support cost needs, by overriding all federal agency limitations on payment of indirect costs that are not based upon statutory limitations, and to propose curative legislation. Despite this plea, and despite the fact that the earlier OIG research (prompted by the AILC study) noted that tribally contracted programs would continue being penalized so long as indirect costs were underpaid, OMB, the agencies and Congress never responded.

 

Events immediately preceding the 1988 Amendments. By 1986, the indirect cost problem had become sufficiently severe to prompt major legislative proposals to overhaul the Indian Self-Determination Act. In hearings on H.R. 4174, witness after witness testified to the difficulties created by the failure of the IHS and BIA to honor the OIG-negotiated indirect cost rates, and the equally serious failure of other agencies to similarly pay indirect costs at the negotiated rate (again, a problem compounded by OIG's practice of penalizing tribes for failing to collect such sums from the other agencies). Although the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs reported a bill that would have mandated that all other agencies respect the OIG-negotiated indirect rates, the bill did not pass. (The same bill would have prohibited the BIA from again imposing a flat rate on all tribes, or once again Agrandfathering" indirect costs into the base.)

With the BIA having abandoned the Aflat rate" and Aadministrative fee" approaches, in mid-1987 the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs turned to a new work group to analyze the contract support cost situation. The work group reported that both the BIA and other federal agencies were failing to pay full indirect costs as determined in the OIG negotiations. The report also debunked the myth that tribal indirect cost rates were excessively high, and explained some of the factors that go into the calculation of indirect cost rates.

While the NCAI Work Group explored a number of options for overcoming the difficulties associated with the indirect rates, it ultimately recommended that the BIA adhere to the OIG-negotiated indirect cost process. The Work Group urged that the BIA request from Congress 100% of the need generated by that process, that the Secretary of the Interior seek authorization from OMB to establish the BIA as a lead agency for all federal agencies providing financial support to tribes, and that the Secretary request that OMB take action to eliminate the financial penalty suffered by tribes when other agencies fail to pay at the full negotiated rate.

During the same period, the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency (PCIE) directed that a study be undertaken by the Inspectors General of the Department of the Interior, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Education. The PCIE report sampled 38 Indian tribes to assess the nationwide impact of the contract support cost problem. Once again, this study confirmed that tribes had been severely underfunded in their indirect-cost requirements and that the underfunding was caused both by a failure of the BIA to secure sufficient funds to pay tribes, and the failure of other federal agencies to respect government-wide negotiated indirect cost rates.

The PCIE study recommended: (1) removing all restrictions that prevent any federal agency from fully reimbursing negotiated indirect costs; (2) authorizing the BIA to negotiate lump-sum agreements to fund all indirect costs associated with all federal grants and contracts; and (3) fully funding the BIA to cover the costs of these negotiated lump-sum agreements. Significantly, the PCIE study also expressed concern that Athe budget request submitted by the Bureau of Indian Affairs to Congress did not include sufficient funds to cover the anticipated indirect costs."

Throughout the 1980s, the Indian Health Service likewise recognized the need to pay contract support costs over and above the actual program amounts (although initially IHS did not establish a budget line item for this purpose). Most importantly, both agencies correctly viewed full payment of contract support costs as the necessary corollary to the legal requirement that tribes must have available for actual service delivery the same program amounts as the agencies had, with no service reductions compelled by the need to cover unfunded essential administrative costs. During this period IHS experimented less than did the BIA with alternative approaches to the continuing shortfall in contract support costs. In fact, prior to 1986 the only significant change made by IHS was to begin separately identifying contract support as a sub-subactivity in its budget request (beginning with the FY 1985 budget).

In the 1986 budget request, for the first time IHS requested a separate fund for the negotiation of contract support costs associated with new self-determination contracts. Since that time, IHS (and later the BIA) has generally identified in its budget request a separate amount to pay contract support costs associated with new contracts.

 

Congressional actions in 1988 to strengthen the contract support system. In 1988 Congress enacted substantial amendments designed to force the agencies to fully fund contract support costs associated with self-determination contracts, to relieve tribes of the accounting penalty resulting from the failure of other agencies to follow the government-wide negotiated indirect rates, and to grant tribes real remedies in the event such costs were not paid. At the same time, the 1988 amendments stopped short of requiring that other federal agencies fully pay their share of tribal indirect cost pools. (Instead, it required the BIA to pay the full costs associated with ISDA contracts.)

The 1988 amendments mandated that contract support costs, including indirect costs, be Aadded" to the program funding amounts being transferred to tribal operation under the ISDA. The amendments made clear that contract support costs should include funding for those activities which a tribe must perform to assure contract compliance and prudent management, but which for whatever reason are either not normally performed by the agency or are not provided within the program being transferred to tribal operation.

The amendments mandated detailed annual reports on contract support shortfalls (and other issues), to be furnished to Congress by April of each year in time for the supplemental appropriation process. The amendments also established new judicial remedies, including remedies available under the Contract Disputes Act, so that tribes would have a viable means of enforcing their contract rights and the ISDA's funding requirements.

 

IHS responses to the 1988 Amendments. In the wake of the 1988 amendments, the BIA and IHS each moved forward to reform their systems. In 1992, IHS issued Indian Self-Determination Memorandum (ISDM) 92-2. IHS ranked all new tribal contracting requests on a priority list or Aqueue." Tribal contract support cost needs on the queue would then be paid by a special budget line known as the AIndian Self-Determination Fund." For ongoing tribally contracted operations, contract support costs would continue being paid out of the amount budgeted by IHS for this purpose. Although the circular aspired to fully fund all such contract support costs, the circular made no provision for actually assuring that full contract support cost requirements would, in fact, be paid. And, in fact, they never were.

In its contract support policy, IHS departed from the BIA's practice in two respects. First, IHS recognized that some tribal contract support cost requirements might, by their nature, not be appropriate for inclusion in a tribe's indirect cost pool. This might occur if the particular contract support item was not an item of cost that equally benefitted all of a tribe's programs and instead only specifically benefitted the IHS program (such as workers compensation insurance). The IHS circular recognized such costs as Adirect contract support costs" (as distinguished from Aindirect contract support costs"), and it correctly included such costs as part of the tribal contract support entitlement.

Second, the IHS circular adopted a policy of not reducing the contract support amounts being paid to a tribe from one year to the next, unless the amount so paid would exceed 100% of the tribe's need in the new year. The intent (and the effect) of this policy has been to provide a small measure of predictability in the amount a tribe will receive from one year to the next.

Putting aside the severe problems generated by the growing unfunded Aqueue" list, the IHS policies described here were substantial improvements over the BIA's approach to contract support, and more closely met the spirit of the ISDA. The IHS policies set forth in ISDM 92-2 were carried through in IHS Circular 96-04. Although IHS Circular 96-04 has not been formally withdrawn, the IHS has abandoned that Circular's Aqueue" first-come-first-served system for new contracts in FY1999; and in April 1999, IHS proposed a new circular for implementation in FY 2000. The new proposal seeks to distribute future contract support cost increases among all unfunded tribes, while still preserving stability in the contract support base from one year to the next. As internal guidelines only, these circulars may guide IHS personnel but they are not binding on tribes.

 

BIA responses to the 1988 Amendments. For its part, the BIA has not issued a comprehensive contract support cost policy since the 1977 Procedural Guidelines. What the BIA has done, like IHS, is continue to sanction using the indirect-cost system for determining contract support cost needs, and has annually issued one-year policies governing each year's distribution of contract support costs.

Beginning in FY 1994, the BIA began issuing annual notices in the Federal Register that its contract support cost funding would be distributed based upon the indirect-cost rates negotiated with the OIG. Unlike IHS, the BIA announced that to the extent the amounts allocated within its budget for contract support costs were insufficient to meet all tribal indirect-cost needs, tribal contract support payments would be recalculated without regard to the amount paid in the prior year, with each tribe paid on an equal pro rata basis.

This pro rata approach was encouraged by language contained in the House/Senate Conference Report for the FY 1994 appropriation, and has been followed every year since. Although appearing equitable on its face, the result in fact has been substantial instability for tribal governments as they struggle to operate programs never knowing exactly how much they will have in contract support until the fiscal year is almost over.

Also in 1994, the BIA began ranking new contracting requests on a priority list (much like the IHS A'queue"), and paid such requests out of the BIA's annual ISD Fund on a first come-first served basis. That Fund has generally been funded at $5 million and has been sufficient in all but one year (1997) to fund all contract support needs associated with newly transferred BIA programs. (In comparison, by FY 1999 the IHS queue had unfunded requirements associated with newly transferred programs totaling some $59.9 million.)

In another serious departure from the statute (as well as IHS practice), the BIA has consistently failed and refused to fund Adirect-type" contract support costs that are not accounted for within tribal indirect cost pools, such as workers' compensation insurance that tribes must pay on program salaries. (Such federal costs are not transferred by the BIA or IHS as part of the program amount, but nonetheless must plainly be incurred by tribal contractors for prudent administration.) The BIA's practice is contrary both to the statute and its implementing regulations, and continues to expose the BIA to potential liability.

Finally, neither agency has complied consistently with the ISDA's section 106(c) directive to submit to Congress detailed shortfall reports by May 15 of each year. The reasons have been many: in some years the agencies simply have not done their work, in others the agencies' reports have been blocked at higher levels outside the IHS and BIA, and in the remaining years the agencies reports have generally been too late to fulfill the purpose of giving Congress an opportunity to assess fully the contract support cost funding situation, and to properly address it, as part of the supplemental and ordinary appropriations processes.

 

Appropriations Committee actions in 1994-1995 directed at the BIA. At the congressional level, in FY 1994 the Appropriations Committees began including a cap in the appropriations statute limiting the amount the BIA could allocate for payment of contract support costs. (A similar cap was not added to the appropriations statute for the IHS until FY 1998.) As discussed further below, subsequent litigation has focused on whether these appropriation limits on how the agencies may spend their funds also block the liability of the United States to pay contract support costs under duly executed ISDA contracts.

Also at the congressional level, in 1995 the appropriations committees instituted a new policy for the BIA that is somewhat surprising, given the historic difficulties confronting tribes as a result of the underfunding of contract support costs. Although study after study had shown (and continue to show) that tribal programs are penalized by the reductions necessary to cover the agencies' contract support cost shortfalls, beginning in FY 1995 the Appropriations Committees gave their blessing to the reallocation of program funds contained within the ATribal Priority Allocation" (TPA) budget line to cover precisely those shortfalls. This approach has represented a major break from the past policy of the appropriations committees, as well as a major break from the ongoing policies of the authorizing committees as reflected in the ISDA.

Along similar lines, the appropriations committees have at least once urged the BIA to move all contract support cost funding into the TPA group of programs, harkening back to the long-rejected Agrandfathering" approach of the 1980s. Fortunately, the BIA's proposal to carry out the appropriations committees' instruction was abandoned in 1996 in the face of overwhelming tribal opposition.

 

Recent appropriation shortfalls. Over the past five years, the shortfall between contract support cost requirements and contract support cost appropriations has grown. See Chapter 2 below. In most years, the Administration has simply failed to request any substantial increases in contract support funding for either agency, and it has never requested the full amount required by law to be paid. In some years, large agency requests have been rejected by OMB (as occurred for the IHS in FY 2000 budget request). In one or two years, significant Administration requests have been flatly rejected by Congress (such as the $40 million contract support funding increase requested in FY 97 for IHS). And in some years, Congress has appropriated substantial increases in the face of no requested Administration increase at all (as occurred in FY 1999 for IHS).

Tribes continue to be caught in the middle, with the perennial Hobson's choice of either reducing program operations to sustain fixed administrative overhead costs, diverting scarce tribal resources to cover the shortfalls, or turning the operation of programs back to the BIA and IHS. With the latter choice unthinkable for most tribes, the ultimate victims of the contract support cost shortfall are the tribal members who depend so vitally upon these programs for their health, education and welfare.

D. Recent Judicial and Administrative Decisions Concerning Contract Support Costs.

Although it is a President who first announced the Indian Self-Determination Policy, and Congress which put it into law, it is the Judiciary that has ultimately been called upon to enforce it. This is particularly so in recent years, as the pressure on the contract support cost system has become palpable and tribes press forward their claims in all available legal forums. The result has been a stunning uniformity in cases upholding the right of tribes to receive full contract support costs associated with the operation of federal Indian programs transferred under the Act. These victories have reflected not only the judicial interpretation of the law, but also the judicial enforcement of the federal government's trust responsibility to Indian tribes.

 

Ramah Navajo School Bd. v. Babbitt, 87 F.3d 1338 (D.C. Cir. 1996). This court ruling on contract support costs struck down the BIA's assertion of unreviewable discretion to manage contract support cost funds in whatever way the BIA deemed best. At issue was a BIA policy that penalized tribes if they did not submit indirect cost information to the Bureau by a certain date. The court found that the Secretary had no authority to impose such penalties, and that Congress intended in the ISDA to require the Secretary to fully fund contract support costs from all available appropriations. The court indicated that, although a flat pro rata distribution among all tribes would meet the Secretary's obligations under the ISDA (in years when the Secretary's available appropriations are insufficient to pay the government's obligations to all tribes), other methodologies might also comply with the law. The court did not have occasion to consider IHS's variation on the pro rata policy, in which IHS generally commits not to reduce tribal contract support payments from one year to the next.

 

Ramah Navajo Chapter v. Lujan, 112 F.3d 1455 (10th Cir. 1997). This case arose out of the persistent failure of most federal agencies other than the IHS and BIA to pay indirect costs at the full negotiated indirect rate determined by the OIG. The tribe argued that when the BIA and OIG assign a theoretical share of the indirect cost pool to some other federal agency which the BIA knows will not pay its share of the pool, the BIA in effect dilutes its own responsibility to pay the full contract support costs associated with carrying out its own programs. This common occurrence is readily apparent and has substantial impact when the administrative burden on a tribe to operate its programs is not materially increased by the administration of a few non-BIA and non-IHS programs.

The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the BIA practice of including in the program base Aother federal agencies" that do not contribute toward the indirect cost pool, diluted the BIA's own actual responsibility to fully fund contract support costs associated with the BIA's own contracts. The portion of the case relating to FYs 1989-1993 has since been settled with court approval for approximately $80 million, including prejudgment interest.

Not yet resolved in the case is the equitable relief necessary to change the BIA and OIG's practice regarding the calculation and payment of indirect costs. This issue has received considerable discussion within the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs, and a proposed recommended solution is contained in this report. Based upon those deliberations, however, it now appears that historically the BIA and OIG practice for negotiating indirect cost rates has reduced BIA and IHS calculated contract support entitlements by approximately 15% from the amounts to be paid under the ISDA. Regrettably, to date the DHHS, Division of Cost Allocation (which performs the same function as OIG for several tribal contractors) has consistently refused to participate in any of these NCAI-sponsored meetings and discussions.

 

Shoshone-Bannock Tribes v. Shalala, 988 F. Supp. 1306 (D. Or. 1997) (Shoshone-Bannock I) and Shoshone-Bannock Tribes v. Shalala, 999 F. Supp. 1395 (D. Or. 1998) (on reconsideration) (Shoshone-Bannock II). In the course of two rulings, the Federal District Court for the District of Oregon concluded that since IHS's lump sum appropriation was legally available in 1996 to meet the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes' contract support costs requirements, IHS was legally required to pay those requirements. The court rejected the argument that IHS retained discretion over its lump sum appropriation sufficient to avoid the contract support cost funding mandate of the ISDA:

[P]ermitting IHS to first allocate a certain amount of funding from its lump sum appropriation for CSC and then deny CSC funding if the requests exceed the allocation would create an enormous loophole, granting the Secretary nearly unfettered discretion to determine when appropriated funds are available.

The decision effectively nullified IHS's practice of placing tribes on a priority list (or Aqueue") and requiring tribes to wait years and years before receiving any contract support costs at all associated with new programs. Although IHS paid the resulting judgment and reserved its right to appeal, during the pendency of the appeal Congress enacted section 314 as a rider to the FY 1999 Appropriations Act for IHS and BIA. In response, the parties in the case have agreed to a limited remand to the district court for a determination whether section 314 retroactively extinguishes the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes' claims. A decision on that issue is pending.

 

Appeal of Alamo Navajo School Board, Inc. and Miccosukee Corp., IBCA 3463 (Dec. 4, 1997); Babbitt v. Miccosukee Corp., Federal Circuit No. 98-1457 (appeal pending). In this case, the Interior Board of Contract Appeals ruled that the BIA could not reduce the amount of the administrative funding owed to a tribally operated BIA school below the amount required under the formula provided in the Tribally Controlled Schools Act of 1988 (TCSA), simply to keep the total amount paid to schools within the amount budgeted for that purpose by the Bureau. The IBCA concluded that:

[when] making allocations and disbursements for indirect costs under contracts and grants pursuant to the ISDA and the TCSA, and funded under unrestricted lump sum appropriations . . . the department remains bound by the statutory language of the authorizing legislation, despite shortfalls in the total amounts appropriated, because in providing indirect costs under these Acts the department is performing an essentially ministerial function. It has no authority to modify administratively the clear statutory mandates giving priority to indirect costs.

This aspect of the IBCA ruling is very similar to the ruling issued in the Shoshone-Bannock litigation (insofar as it concerns agency responsibilities in managing a lump sum appropriation), and has not been appealed.

The IBCA also ruled that the Miccosukee's FY 1994 indirect cost entitlement remained a legal obligation that must be paid by the government, notwithstanding an appropriations cap that year on contract support costs limiting the total amount available to the BIA for this purpose. The IBCA noted in a lengthy decision that the Miccosukee had negotiated both its indirect rate and its BIA contract, and had also commenced performing the contract, long before Congress imposed the appropriations cap. The BIA has appealed this aspect of the IBCA ruling to the Federal Circuit, and oral argument was held June 11, 1999.

 

California Rural Indian Health Board v. Shalala, No. C-96-3526 (N.D. Cal.). In this case, the Federal District Court followed the lead of the Oregon District Court in Shoshone-Bannock and ruled that IHS's Apriority list" (or Aqueue") policy (under which Tribes receive no contract support costs at all for several years in connection with more recently transferred programs) was illegal. Like the Shoshone-Bannock litigation, the case involved years when contract support costs were paid out of the IHS lump sum appropriation, and not out of an appropriations earmark. In May 1999, the court also rejected IHS's argument that section 314 of the FY 1999 Appropriations Act (discussion below) is sufficiently clear to preclude the Tribe's right to continue its litigation against IHS through the discovery process.

 

Appeal of Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma v. United States Department of Health and Human Services, IBCA No. 3877-98. Appeal of Seldovia Village Tribe, IBCA Nos. 3782-97, 3862-97 and 3863-97. These appeals involve claims against the IHS for unpaid contract support costs. In both cases, the tribes argue that the ISDA and their contracts entitle them to full contract support costs, and in both cases the government has raised as a defense the section 314 rider (among other defenses). The Cherokee Nation case was argued April 15, 1999 and, along with the Seldovia case, is now awaiting decision.

 

Cherokee Nation and Shoshone-Paiute Indian Tribes v. Shalala, (E.D. Ok. CIV 99-092S). In this recently filed case, the Cherokee Nation and Shoshone-Paiute Tribes seek damages for the government's failure to pay contract support costs. In the case of Shoshone-Paiute, for two years the Tribes received no contract support costs at all associated with its operation of a 15-bed hospital in remote Owyhee, Nevada, causing severe curtailments in all hospital and community health programs. The case has been filed as a class action, and on May 10, 1999 the Federal District Court issued a scheduling order to address Phase I liability issues.

E. Congressional Actions in 1998 (FY 1999) Relating to Contract Support Costs

In 1998, the appropriations committees became increasingly concerned with the rising demands associated with contract support cost requirements due under the ISDA.

As this Report documents, over the years the agencies' available appropriations have failed to keep pace with the rising contract support cost requirements associated with the trend among tribes to take over the operation of increasing portions of the BIA and IHS. Although the committees recognized in 1998 that the widening gap between available agency appropriations and contract support cost requirements was not caused by any increase in indirect cost rates, pressure from the contract support system was nonetheless making it increasingly difficult for the appropriations committees (and subcommittees) to manage the IHS and BIA budget among competing demands. As a consequence, the appropriations committees took several actions either in the form of committee instructions or new statutory language.

 

FY 1999 moratorium. First, Congress imposed a one-year moratorium on any further transfers of IHS and BIA programs to tribal operations. The moratorium, promoted as a temporary measure to take stock of the situation, was nonetheless severely criticized by tribes and strongly opposed by the Administration. The moratorium was adopted without any involvement from the authorizing committees and without any hearings whatsoever.

Although all concerned parties recognize the severe problems caused by the lack of available appropriations to pay the federally negotiated contract support cost requirements, the moratorium is a dangerous interruption in the Nation's Self-Determination Policy. Moreover, the moratorium as finally enacted appears to have been unnecessary; had Congress continued its practice of appropriating $5 million for the BIA for needs associated with new contracting initiatives, it does not appear the new initiatives would have exceeded these sums. (For IHS, it is less clear whether a $7.5 million ISD Fund would have been sufficient to cover contract support costs associated with new interests signed in FY 1999.) By its own terms, the moratorium only has effect for one year.

 

The 1999 GAO Study. Second, the Senate Appropriations Committee directed the General Accounting Office Ato conduct a comprehensive examination of existing contracts and compacts for BIA and IHS programs, entered pursuant to the ISDEA, as they may be impacted by the available appropriations for associated contract support and other indirect costs." The primary focus of the GAO report is expected to be the impact of contract support cost shortfalls on the tribal operation of programs transferred under the ISDA. The report is expected to be issued in June 1999.

 

FY 1999 CSC increase for IHS. Third, in the face of an approximately $90 million shortfall in available IHS appropriations to meet FY 1999 requirements, and also in the face of a failure on the part of the Administration to request any increase at all to meet this shortfall, Congress appropriated an additional $35 million. As indicated elsewhere, the resulting $204 million so earmarked is presently estimated by IHS to still fall approximately $115 million short of the total need for contract support costs for FY 2000. (On a related note, in its FY 2000 budget request, the Administration has asked for an additional $35 million increase.)

 

FY 1999 CSC increase for the BIA. Fourth, in the face of an understated BIA calculated contract support cost need of $139 million, Congress appropriated $115 million, an amount sufficient to only pay approximately 83% of all BIA-computed tribal requirements for contract support costs in FY 1999. (This amount represents a very modest $4 million increase over the amount appropriated in the prior year.)

 

FY 1999 response to the ARamah Chapter" litigation. Fifth, and in apparent response to a possible misreading of a recent Tenth Circuit decision in Ramah Navajo Chapter v. Lujan, Congress included identical restrictions in the IHS and BIA portions of the Appropriations Act stating that contract support costs Amay be expended only for costs directly attributable to contracts, grants and compacts pursuant to the Indian Self-Determination Act," and stating that such funds are not available Afor any contract support costs or indirect costs associated with any [contract, compact or funding agreement] entered into between and Indian Tribe or tribal organization and any entity other than [the IHS or the BIA]." Although the BIA commonly refers to the Ramah case as having called upon the BIA to pay all indirect costs that are not paid by other federal agencies, the case required the BIA to stop the practice of diluting its own responsibility for the payment of indirect costs. Accordingly, this parallel provision, contained in both the IHS and BIA portions of 1999 Appropriations Act, should not have any impact on ongoing agency or tribal practices.

 

The FY 1999 Asection 314" rider. Sixth, Congress included a measure (section 314) stating that Aamounts appropriated to or earmarked in committee reports for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service" by the Appropriations Act for FYs 1994-1998 for contract support costs Aare the total amounts available" for those years for such purposes.

In the Appeal of Cherokee Nation and Appeal of Seldovia cases pending in the Interior Board of Contract Appeals, and in the Shoshone-Bannock litigation pending in the Oregon federal court, IHS and the Justice Department have taken the position that this language extinguishes any claims that arose during the last five fiscal years for unpaid contract support costs. IHS also takes the position that section 314 prohibits IHS from using any unexpended balances remaining in IHS's lump sum appropriations from those years to meet its contract support cost obligations, and further prohibits IHS from using the new FY 1999 contract support cost appropriation to pay any portion of any contract support costs incurred in four of the five prior years (such as startup costs).

Although the IBCA and the Federal District Court have not yet ruled on the issue, the District Court for the Northern District of California recently rejected IHS's attempt to cut off any further litigation based upon section 314, finding that section 314 does not Amoot plaintiffs' CSC claim." Affected tribes have been alarmed by IHS's interpretation of section 314, because it would mean that Congress has sought to extinguish claims that had already accrued many years earlier. Among the issues under review by the relevant judicial bodies is whether such action, if it was intended, would be constitutional under the Fifth Amendment.

Also as part of section 314, Congress provided that the new measure does not prohibit tribes from using Atribal priority allocations for unmet indirect costs of ongoing contracts, . . ." This measure, which is similar to comparable measures included by the appropriations committees in very recent years, once again represents a disturbing response to the contract support shortfall issue, for it effectively endorses the very penalty which Tribes have suffered under since the earliest days of self-determination contracting: requiring Tribes to divert desperately needed program resources to make up for the shortfall in contract support costs. This is precisely the practice which in years past the appropriations committees (and the authorizing committees) have sought to avoid by requiring full budgeting and full payment of contract support costs.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the debate over contract support cost issues in 1998 is that almost all of the debate occurred within the House and Senate Appropriations Committees. Until the very end of the process (when the leadership of the authorizing committees and the leadership of both chambers became involved), the appropriations committees' attempt to make far reaching changes in the contract support cost part of the Indian Self-Determination Act occurred without any meaningful involvement by, much less deference to, the House Resources Committee and the Senate Indian Affairs Committee. By contrast, in 1999 the House Resources Committee will in July 1999 hold the second of two oversight hearings on the issue, and the Senate Indian Affairs Committee is likewise expected to convene the first of its own oversight hearings in the summer of 1999. The NCAI National Policy Work Group on contract support costs plans to be actively involved in those hearings.

F. Funding Contract Support Cost Needs: Past, Present and Future.

As recent litigation reflects, considerable potential liabilities have arisen as a result of past agency failures to comply with the ISDA's contract support funding mandates. For the past, the Work Group has concluded there is little Congress can or ought to do to address the government's liability. To the extent tribes incurred damages, it is for the judiciary or other adjudicative bodies to determine the appropriate relief. Indeed, in cases such as Winstar the Supreme Court has time and again cautioned against the grave contractual and constitutional problems posed by Congressional efforts to repudiate past government contract obligations.

As for the present, the NCAI Work Group calls upon all interested parties to once again embrace the Federal-Tribal partnership embodied in the self-determination and self-governance initiatives. Contracting and self-governance tribes must not be penalized relative to other Adirect service" tribes by being compelled to Arob Peter to pay Paul," to reduce health and social service programs already underfunded at 40% to 60% of need, in order to cover the federal commitment to sustain contract support. An immediate and aggressive effort must be made now to close the current gap and thus keep faith with Indian country.

Turning to the future, the following chapter shows that Congress is already witnessing a significant slowing down in the rate at which IHS and BIA programs are being transferred to tribal operation.

There are many reasons for this leveling off in self-determination and self-governance activities. In some parts of the country, tribes remain deeply suspicious of the self-determination initiative, viewing it as a poorly disguised move toward outright termination of the Federal-Tribal trust relationship. Other tribes see local IHS and BIA agency operations as woefully underfunded, and are loath to step into the federal government's shoes under such circumstances. Still other tribes are satisfied with the agencies continuing to operate various programs, particularly where the tribes feel they have secured substantial involvement in how each agency carries out its responsibilities. Finally, some tribes do not feel they possess the resources or capabilities to operate certain programs on their own. Whatever the reasons, it is clear that a certain equipoise is being reached between the level of contracting activities and the level of agency direct operations.

This is not to say that new contracting and compacting is about to stop. For one thing, Congress's FY 1999 moratorium can be expected to produce an artificial backlog that will now have to be addressed, with two years' growth being compressed into FY 2000. In addition, as Congress moves forward to remedy the greatest problems in Indian country, new programs will demand new contract support, since self-determination and self-governance tribes will continue to fold those programs into their existing operations. Finally, from time to time there are likely to be contract support Aspikes" that occur when tribes such as the Navajo Nation or the Cherokee Nation move forward to take over the operation of unusually large agency programs not presently under tribal operation.

CHAPTER 2 - UNDERSTANDING CONTRACT SUPPORT COSTS:

THE MYTHS AND THE REALITIES

In this chapter, the NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs summarizes the available information on the determination of contract support cost needs. In presenting this data, two caveats are in order. First, the data presented here was not developed independently by the NCAI Work Group. Rather, the contract support data was furnished to the Work Group by the BIA and IHS, while the indirect cost data was furnished by the Department of the Interior's Office of the Inspector General. (As noted earlier, the Department Health and Human Service's Division of Cost Allocation refused to share its tribal indirect cost data and the Department of Labor's limited information on a small number of tribal organizations was not requested.) The second caveat is that within the limited resources available to NCAI, the Work Group did not independently collect additional data, nor did it independently review the analyses performed by the agencies.

 

Overview. Contract support costs eligible to be paid under the ISDA are comprised of three distinct categories: (1) start-up and pre-award Adirect" contract support costs; (2) annually recurring direct contract support costs; and, (3) annually recalculated indirect costs.

To determine the requirement for the first two components of contract support costs, a tribe must reach an agreement each year directly with the funding agency on a sum certain for direct contract support costs and, for the first year of a program's operation, non-recurring one-time start-up costs.

For the third component, each year a tribe must either negotiate an indirect cost rate with the accounting or audit arm of its Acognizant" (or lead) federal funding agency, or it must negotiate directly with the BIA or IHS a lump sum amount for Aindirect-type" costs. If (as is generally the case) the tribe negotiates an indirect rate, the BIA and IHS apply this rate to the appropriate direct cost base of funds paid by the agency, to arrive at the appropriate indirect contract support amount owed by the agency.

By law, no amount paid as contract support costs can duplicate the amounts already included in the program funding transferred to the tribe under the ISDA, and if duplicated costs are identified, the IHS or BIA will negotiate with the tribe to remove such amounts from the tribe's total contract support requirements.

Once a tribe's total contract support requirement has been determined, the agencies will pay the contract support amount from funds appropriated to the agency for that purpose. If the agencies determine that appropriated funds are not adequate to fully fund all tribal contract support requirements, full or partial payments are made among tribal contractors based on agency policies.

As indicated in the previous chapter, since at least FY1994, the BIA has allocated contract support costs on a straight pro-rata allocation of total available funding against the total calculated contract support need. Tribal amounts thus vary from year to year, and cannot be finally determined and paid until very close to the end of the fiscal year. By contrast, the IHS policy maintains each tribal contractor's contract support payment to at least the amount paid in the preceding year, unless that amount would exceed 100% of the tribe's computed need in the new year. All remaining unfunded amounts must be reported to Congress by May 1 of each year (although in many years, the IHS and BIA have either failed to provide timely reports, or have failed to provide any reports at all).

 

Start-up and pre-award costs are provided for under 25 U.S.C. ' 450j-1(a)(5) and represent a one-time non-recurring costs required to support a tribe when it initially takes over the operation of a BIA or IHS program. These costs are negotiated directly with the agency, normally in conjunction with a proposal to operate a new IHS or BIA program.

Start-up costs generally include the reasonable costs necessary to plan and prepare for the operation of a new program, and tribes typically provide the agency with a detailed start-up proposal for these costs. Start-up costs can include Apre-award" costs (that is, costs incurred before the transfer of a BIA or IHS program to tribal operation), to the extent the tribe has notified the Secretary in advance that these costs are going to be incurred. Typically such costs include the costs of negotiating a contract, securing space to operate the program, purchasing computer software or hardware necessary to integrate the federal program into the overall tribal operation, and purchasing consulting services necessary to prepare for and negotiate the contract, compact or annual funding agreement.

In general, start-up costs only represent between 2% and 3% of all contract support costs awarded by the agencies. Because these costs only occur once in the initial year of the award of a new program, they do not have a major impact on the overall need for contract support. In addition, the data indicates that over time, the proportion of start-up costs has trended downward as the proportion of new and expanded programs in any given year has decreased as a percentage of all programs under contract.

Both agencies report that they have been able to fund the entire need for start-up costs in the year in which the remaining portion of the contract support cost proposal has been funded, although there are certain important caveats. For instance, for the BIA, start-up costs are generally paid in the first year of contract operation. However, it became clear in the course of NCAI's work that many tribes and BIA local field personnel were unaware that the BIA recognized such costs, possibly because the only clear statement to the effect is the BIA's annual Federal Register notice.

As for IHS, while it is time that IHS pays all start-up costs, IHS has historically not paid such amounts in the first year of the contract. Instead IHS has only paid these sums in a much later year, when the balance of a tribe's annual contract support cost requirement is funded for the first time from the ISD Aqueue." (This policy was abandoned in FY 1999.) As noted in the previous chapter, however, in FY 1999 IHS attorneys have interpreted the provisions of section 314 of the Appropriations Act to prohibit IHS from paying start-up costs incurred in an earlier year, effectively extinguishing IHS's liability for these promised costs.

Since these costs are one time in nature, such an interpretation would mean that in FY 1999 a significant amount of prior year start-up costs which were negotiated as reasonable and necessary will never be paid, regardless of future appropriation levels and regardless of prior commitments made to tribes. Tribes and key members of Congress have protested this interpretation of section 314, and as of June 1999 IHS had not made a final decision in the matter.

 

Direct contract support costs. Theoretically, any contract support cost that is eligible for payment under the provisions of the ISDA may be paid either as a direct cost or as an indirect cost, depending on the structure of each tribe's accounting system and cost allocation plan, the IHS recognizes the tribal entitlement to all three forms of contract support costs (start-up costs, recurring direct contract support costs, and indirect costs). But since the current BIA system does not recognize the statutory tribal entitlement to Adirect" contract support costs, under the BIA system some contract support costs never got recognized or paid. The BIA's failure to recognize direct contract support costs is presently under active review and may be changed, according to testimony of the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs before the House Resources Committee provided in April 1999.

Direct contract support costs are determined through direct negotiations between the IHS and the tribe. Costs typically paid by IHS as Adirect" contract support include: workers compensation costs, unemployment insurance, certain retirement costs (especially Commissioned Corps retirement costs), and insurance. IHS will also recognize as direct contract support costs certain facilities costs, to the extent they are not included in either the program funding (the A106(a)(1)" amount) or in the indirect cost pool, together with any other unduplicated costs that meet the criteria of Section 106(a)(2) and that are not included in the tribe's indirect cost pool.

Direct contract support costs are paid by IHS on a Arecurring" basis, meaning that tribes are required to re-justify these costs each year. However, by statute a tribe retains the option renegotiate its direct contract support requirements in future years.

According to IHS data, direct contract support costs make up approximately 21% of the total negotiated contract support cost need in the IHS (with the remaining 79% representing indirect costs). Direct contract support cost needs have generally been computed by the IHS to be about 15% of the direct personnel costs being transferred in the new or expanded program. IHS data shows that the proportion of direct contract support costs to indirect costs generally does not vary significantly with the size of the tribal operation. However, these proportions will vary significantly depending upon the type of program being supported under the contract.

 

Indirect (or Aindirect-type") costs. The most important element of contract support costs is indirect (or Aindirect-type") costs. These costs now represent over 98% of contract support costs paid by the BIA, and about 79% of the total contract support costs paid by the IHS (excluding start-up costs).

Indirect costs typically support commonly used administrative facilities or functions and include funding for financial management and audit systems, personnel management systems, payroll systems, procurement systems, facility leases, interest and depreciation on facilities, facility support activities, and other administrative activities that must be carried out by a tribal contractor to ensure compliance with applicable federal laws and prudent management of all programs.

For the most part, functions funded through indirect costs are comparable to functions that are carried out by the federal government, either from portions of the agencies not transferred to tribal operation, from portions of the Departments located outside IHS and BIA, or from other departments altogether. These include functions performed by the General Services Administration, the Merit Systems Protection Board, the Office of Personnel Management, and the Treasury Department. To a lesser extent, indirect costs also cover the unique organization-wide requirements imposed upon tribes by such federal laws as the Single Agency Audit Act.

Indirect cost needs are determined in one of two ways. In most instances a tribe has a negotiated federal indirect cost rate that is applied to the IHS or BIA Adirect cost base." (That Abase" is typically smaller than the total Aprogram" amount being contracted, due to exclusions from the base of such items as major capital acquisitions and pass-through funds.) In cases where the tribe does not secure a federally negotiated rate, the tribe negotiates a lump sum amount directly with the BIA or IHS. (Usually tribes lacking rates are either very small tribes or are new tribal organizations entering into ISDA agreements for the first time.) By and large both the BIA and the IHS rely on negotiated indirect cost rates to determine the vast majority of indirect contract support cost needs paid to tribes.

 

Tribes without indirect cost rates. Tribes that do not have indirect cost rates will negotiate a Alump sum agreement" with the IHS or the BIA for Aindirect-type costs." The lump sum agreement requires the tribe to propose a budget for its reasonable and necessary costs associated with the BIA or IHS program, encompassing the same types of costs that would generally be approved under an indirect cost agreement. Thus, the categories typically considered in these negotiations include overall program governance, financial management, personnel management, data processing, planning facilities costs, legal costs, insurance, depreciation, and so forth.

 

Tribes with indirect cost rates. For tribes having negotiated federal indirect cost rates, the IHS and the BIA compute a tribe's contract support cost requirement by applying the most current federally negotiated rate to the appropriate Adirect cost base" being funded by the agency, subject to any special provisions in the rate. The amount determined to be the tribe's indirect contract support requirement must be consistent with the individual tribe's rate agreement, and will therefore reflect any exclusions required by the agreement. It will also reflect reductions negotiated by the agency to offset any duplication of costs between the tribe's indirect cost pool and its program funding.

 

Determining indirect cost rates. The must confusing and controversial element in the process for determining contract support costs in the method which tribes (and other federal contractors) use to determine and negotiate the indirect cost rate (IDC).

Cost principles for tribes seeking to establish indirect rates are published in OMB Circular A-87, ACost Principles for State, Local and Indian Tribal Governments." According to this Circular, indirect costs are those costs that are:

(a) Aincurred for a common or joint purpose benefitting more than one cost objective, and

(b) not readily assignable to the cost objectives specifically benefitted without effort disproportionate to the results achieved."

 

OMB Circular A-87 calls for each tribe and tribal organization to establish a cost allocation plan that allocates all indirect costs on a fair and uniform basis across all programs. In negotiating indirect cost rates, tribes are bound to the same set of rules that control state and local governments, and each tribe will negotiate with the cognizant federal agency to determine which costs will be classified as Adirect" and which costs will be classified as Aindirect." Costs must be treated consistently by the tribe and are subject to the Circular's allowability rules, as modified by section 106(k) of the ISDA. The Department of Interior, Office of Inspector General (OIG), has been assigned responsibility to negotiate indirect cost rates with most tribes.

As noted earlier, tribes generally include various administrative and overhead costs in their indirect cost pools, rather than directly attribute pieces of such costs to specific programs. After calculating the indirect cost pool, the tribe will categorize the direct costs received from all funding agencies either as a part of the program base or as an excluded cost. The net Adirect cost base" is then divided into the indirect cost pool to yield an indirect cost rate.

Once a tribe has submitted an indirect cost proposal, it is reviewed and negotiated by the OIG to verify that all of the costs are reasonable and necessary, and that costs have been treated consistently under the proposal. Once adjustments are negotiated and a rate agreement is approved, annually thereafter the tribe submits a new indirect cost proposal, together with an annual financial audit for the last completed year, prepared in conformity with the Single Agency Audit Act of 1984. The OIG will reconcile the budgeted IDC pool with the actual costs incurred, as shown in the tribes' audited financial statements, to verify that all costs were appropriately considered. Any necessary adjustments will then be made based on the reconciliation from the audited statements, and a final negotiated rate will be issued.

 

Variation in indirect cost rates among tribes. Determining contract support cost needs through the negotiation of indirect cost rates permits administrative overhead costs to be determined in the manner that is most appropriate to each tribe's unique situation, much in the same way that states and local governments negotiate their indirect rates independent of one another.

Factors influencing indirect rates can include variations in the manner that tribes treat certain costs, the availability of federal facilities to house tribal administrative functions and programs, the economies of scale for certain administrative functions, and a variety of other factors, including the cost allocation plan and type of financial management system in use by the particular tribe.

Moreover, there are a multiplicity of methods for computing indirect cost rates. For instance, there are several different types of indirect cost agreements; several different types of direct cost bases; and two different methods that can be used to negotiate indirect cost agreements with DOI-OIG or with DHHS-DCA. As a result, two apparently identical rates for two tribes may in fact represent substantially different contract support amounts for each tribe. Because of these factors, it is very difficult (and, indeed, usually grossly misleading) to compare tribal indirect cost rates from tribe to tribe.

When viewed in the aggregate, however, some rough comparisons can be made. Indirect or indirect like costs do generally vary with the total size of the tribe's operating budget. For example, in general, smaller tribes tend to have higher indirect cost rates. This is caused by the lack of economies of scale in small administrative units, and the difficulty of allocating very small portions of administrative time to small program functions. This causes small tribes to allocate more administrative functions to the indirect cost pool and to have relatively higher costs of carrying out the administrative responsibilities of the contract.

In his analysis of indirect cost rates of Northwest Indian tribes, Jim Sizemore has reported this fact, noting that in general, indirect rates tend to be higher in smaller tribes.

Figure 4.1

Average Indirect cost Rate by Size of Direct Cost base for 42

Northwest Tribes

Size of Direct Cost Base

FY 1993

FY 1994

FY 1995

FY 1996

Less than 1 million

41.5%

42.6%

45.2%

38.5%

More than 1 million and less than 5 million

41.4%

44.0%

41.8%

44.3%

More than 5 million and less than 10 million

32.6%

33.0%

32.6%

36.2%

More than 10 million

26.0%

27.5%

25.1%

30.3%

Overall numeric average

39.5%

39.0%

38.2%

38.7%

 

The OIG has provided figures consistent with the Northwest Report, indicating that for tribes negotiating with the OIG, and whose direct cost base is under $500,000, the average indirect rate is 49.5%, whereas tribes whose direct cost base exceeds $20 million have an average indirect rate of 22.7%. The single largest category of tribes, those with a direct cost base of between $1 million and $5 million for all programs included in the direct cost base, have an average indirect rate of 31%.

 

Alternatives to the current system. Several alternatives to the use of indirect rates have been offered over the past two decades. The complexities inherent in the indirect cost rate setting process, the variations in that system, and a desire to lower the amount required to be paid as contract support costs have all led to various alternate approaches being explored to compute tribal indirect contract support cost needs. As described in the previous chapter, these approaches have included flat rates, grandfathering, and other formula approaches. While many of these approaches have attractive elements, none have survived close scrutiny. Primarily, this is because none of these approaches provides for a more fair and equitable method of calculating indirect types of contract support costs than the current method of using negotiated indirect cost rates.

The NCAI Contract Support Work Group explored at length the use of alternative approaches for determining indirect types of contract support costs. In general, the NCAI Work Group concluded that no alternative method could work and be acceptable to tribes, no matter how carefully designed and implemented, if the alternative methodology is not first fully funded by Congress. Given the history of agency attempts to impose such systems in an environment of insufficient funding, the NCAI Work Group concluded that the use of fixed formulas or predetermined rates would simply serve to lock tribes in at insufficient and artificially low levels of contract support funding, contrary to the law and the Policy of Self-Determination.

 

ABenchmarking" contract support cost components. Because of this history, and the proven advantages of the indirect rate system, the NCAI Work Group was extremely reluctant to eliminate that system for determining indirect contract support requirements. At the same time, however, the NCAI Work Group acknowledged that the indirect cost rate negotiations process could possibly be improved upon. To explore such improvements, the Work Group envisioned the development and field testing of a Abenchmarking" process which might improve training and encourage greater consistency in the negotiation and application of indirect cost rates. Since such an approach might also run the risk of unnecessarily complicating an already complicated process, its development will require care and intense study to determine fair and equitable benchmarks for all situations.

 

Trends in indirect rates. Congress has in recent years expressed concern over the rising level of contract support shortfalls. There has been a perception in some quarters that this increase is attributable in large part to allegedly increasing tribal indirect cost rates, and a perception that rates are rising uncontrollably due to widespread abuse of the system. To respond to such concerns the agencies, in conjunction with the OIG, the DHHS-Division of Cost Allocation and the General Accounting Office (GAO), have time and again undertaken analyses of the tribal indirect cost rate system. Those analyses consistently dispel such misconceptions. Indeed, all of these analyses are consistent in their findings that the primary cause of the increases in contract support cost requirements is simply the increase in levels of tribal contracting of BIA and IHS programs. The cause is not an escalation in tribal indirect cost rates.

Recent data confirms these findings. In 1997, IHS collected data indicating that between 1993-1996 every dollar in IHS programs transferred to tribal operation required an additional 22 cents to 23 cents on average to support indirect costs. This ratio remained steady over the 4-year study period, reflecting that the aggregate total requirement for contract support cost needs is stable and not rising.

 

Figure 4.2

 

wpe6.jpg (58689 bytes)

Source: Office of the Inspector General, 1998 Note: FY 98 Source: Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1999.

 

Separate data provided from the OIG confirms this stable trend in tribal indirect cost rates over a ten-year period. During this period, there was surprisingly little overall variation in the average indirect cost rate OIG negotiated for all tribes. From 1988 to present, the average indirect rate negotiated by OIG collectively for all tribes was approximately 25%.

This stabilization in rates over a period of many years conclusively puts to rest the concern that indirect rates are an open-ended entitlement not subject to any meaningful control. Indeed, tribal indirect rates compare favorably to the indirect cost rates negotiated by the federal government with many other public governmental and private non-profit institutions. According to the BIA, in 1995 the GAO reported that indirect cost rates for 118 universities averaged about 50% for the 10-year period studied from 1986 to 1995.

 

Figure 4.3

Weighted Average Indirect Cost Rates for 118 Major Research Universities for

Fiscal Years 1986 to 1995

Rate Category Fiscal Year

1986 1987 1988 1989

1990

1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
Facilities 19.4 20.0 20.3 20.9 21.7 22.1 22.4 23.6 23.7 23.7
Use allowance and depreciation 5.0 5.2 5.4 5.9 6.3 6.7 7.1 8.1 8.2 8.3
Operations and maintenance 14.4 14.8 14.9 15.0 15.4 15.4 15.3 15.5 15.5 15.4
Administration 26.4 26.0 26.1 26.5 26.6 26.5 26.4 24.7 24.6 24.8
Library 2.2 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.8
Other1 0.8 0.8 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.2
Total average rate 48.8 48.8 48.9 49.6 50.5 50.8 51.1 50.4 50.4 50.5

1. Includes carry forward of costs from prior years, cots of special service centers, and other unspecified costs.
Source: GAO Report "University Research Effect of Indirect Cost Revisions on Future Changes," 1995
.

Contract support shortfalls. Contract support shortfalls are created when the agencies fail to pay a tribe's full computed contract support cost requirement. Although shortfalls have been endemic in the ISDA process, the shortfalls have worsened in recent years due to increases in tribal contracting of federal programs. This contracting increase was stimulated by the 1988 and 1994 ISDA amendments, and is consistent with the intent of Congress in those amendments to foster greater self-determination activities. Despite this Congressional policy to maximize self-determination activities, both the IHS and the BIA have been unable for a variety of reasons to achieve the level of appropriations necessary to support the contract support costs associated with increased self-determination contracting.

The figure below shows that over the past ten years BIA shortfalls have averaged about 15% of the total requirement for contract support. History confirms that both Congress and the agencies share responsibility for these shortfalls. Not only has the BIA not requested funds in the annual agency budget request sufficient to fully fund known contract support cost needs, but Congress has often refused to fund agency requests even in the face of substantial known shortfalls.

Figure 4.4

BIA Contract Support Appropriations and Shortfalls

(in thousands)

Fiscal Year

CSF

Need

Budget Request Enacted % Funded Shortfall

% Underfunded

1990

69,364 49,386 56,386 81% 12,978 19%
1991 64,034 44,386 53,107 83% 10,927 17%
1992 66,320 57,440 53,107 80% 13,213 20%
1993 85,189 57,703 65,223 77% 19,966 23%
1994 92,981 83,808 84,808 91% 8,173 9%
1995 103,945 95,823 95,640 92% 8,305 8%
1996 104,526 109,626 90,829 87% 13,697 13%
1997 117,346 110,608 90,829 77% 26,517 23%
1998 131,714 105,829 105,829 80% 25,885 20%
1999

138,914

114,917 114,891

83%

24,023* 17%*
2000

144,624

121,338 121,338*

84%

23,286* 16%*

Source: TPA Workgroup "A Study of Contract Support costs and Recommendations for Reform."
|Note: *Estimated for FYs 1999 and 2000



For the IHS, significant contract support shortfalls are a more recent development. Prior to FY 1995, IHS had very limited shortfalls in its contract support requirements. Beginning in FY 1996, however, rapid growth in self-determination contracting activities, coupled with static appropriations for the IHS's Indian Self-Determination Fund and no increases for inflation, led to sharp increases in contract support shortfalls. These shortfalls caused increasingly long delays on the agency's "queue," often resulting in tribes going several years with no contract support at all on programs they continued to operate on behalf of IHS.

Future trends in contract support need. Projecting contract support requirements for the future depends upon a number of factors. Such requirements will vary as current programs under contract experience inflationary increases, as new administrative requirements are placed on tribal programs by state and federal laws and regulations, and as tribes continue to exercise their rights under the ISDA to take over the operation of additional federal programs.

The tribal contract support requirements are currently growing at the same rate as the rate of new contracting activities. This growth in contracting is the most difficult factor to estimate as it is controlled by the decisions of the tribes. Nonetheless, both agencies' considered judgment is that the demand for contract support costs will level off in the future, a judgment with which the NCAI Work Group concurs.(1) In the near term, however, the FY 1999 "Section 328" moratorium on new contracting may have created a temporary backlog in ISDA contracting.

Although the agencies have had a mixed record of estimating the need for contract support costs on a year to year basis, the agencies' estimates have over the long-term been reasonably accurate (putting aside the underreporting errors found in the Ramah litigation). Agency projections for growth in contract support costs are based on the continued very modest growth in the operation of programs by tribes in future years.(2)

The Bureau of Indian Affairs. In FY 1999, the BIA had a projected $24 million shortfall on existing ISDA contracts, excluding direct contract support costs. In addition to funding this shortfall and normal inflationary increases, the Bureau has expanded several existing programs and initiated a number of new programs, all of which will be available for ISDA contracting. While tribes steadily continued to contract for existing BIA programs until the FY 1999 moratorium, the trend had not increased significantly in recent years. In FY 1996 though FY 1998, the Bureau received $5,000,000 in appropriations to the ISD Fund to fund new and expanded contracts. This Fund was more than sufficient to fully fund new tribal contracting in these years, and with adjustments for inflationary increases is anticipated to be adequate in the future.

The BIA contract support projections will necessarily be impacted by the Ramah decision, and by the agency's agreement to finally recognize direct contract support costs as a fundable category of contract support. The total impact of these decisions is difficult to estimate.

The projected contract support costs for the BIA are provided below for the next five years. The amounts estimated for the costs of the Ramah settlement are taken from estimates provided by the OIG. Direct contract support cost estimates for the BIA are more difficult to estimate, as some direct contract support amounts paid by the BIA may be offset by reductions in the indirect contract support amounts (i.e., facility costs).



Figure 4.5

BIA Projected Contract Support Needs

(in thousands)

Year Current

CSC

CSC

shortfall

New

Contracts

Inflation Ramah DCSC Total
2000 $115,000 $24,000 $7,500 $5,128 $21,000 $8,000 $180,628
2001 $180,828 $0 $5,000 $6,497 $0 $0 $192,124
2002 $192,124 $0 $5,000 $6,899 $0 $0 $204,024
2003 $204,024 $0 $5,000 $7,316 $0 $0 $216,340
2004 $216,340 $0 $5,000 $7,747 $0 $0 $229,087

Note: The above estimates are based on a continued level new contracting of $5 million per year, inflation of 3.5%. The estimates for the cost of the Ramah mandated changes are preliminary only and based on OIG estimates of the impact of the finding on the BIA.

 

The Indian Health Service. The Indian Health Service has experienced the fastest growth in contract support shortfalls in recent years. In FY 1999, the IHS experienced the largest ISDA compact in the history of the agency with the transfer of the Alaska Native Medical Center and the non-residual functions of the Alaska Area Office.

With this milestone now passed, the rate of growth in the transfer of IHS programs to tribal operation has begun to slow markedly. IHS estimates that future contract support costs associated with tribes initiating new or expanded contracts will, on average, increase less than $7.5 million per year. This represents a stunning change from recent years, when annual increased contract support cost demands ranged between $20 million to $30 million.

On going contract support cost requirements in the agency will continue to require inflationary and programmatic increases, consistent with the increases in direct program funding. An estimate of the total contract support cost increases for the next five years is provided in Figure 4.6.

Figure 4.6

IHS Projected Contract Support Needs

(in thousands)

Year Current

CSC

CSC

shortfall

New

contracts

Inflation Total
2000 $203,781 $55,424 $15,000 $9,597 $283,802
2001 $283,802 $0 $12,000 $10,353 $306,155
2002 $306,155 $0 $10,000 $11,065 $327,221
2003 $327,221 $0 $10,000 $11,803 $349,024
2004 $349,024 $0 $10,000 $12,566 $371,589

Note: The above estimates are based on IHS estimates of the level of new contracting and inflation of 3.5% per year. New programs which may be enacted within the agency are not included in the above estimate nor are adjustments required for population growth.

 

Although the amount of contract support costs required is anticipated to increase over the next five years, this increase is consistent generally with the continued steady growth of self determination contracting in both agencies. This growth is now trending downward and is expected to continue to grow at a declining rate for the foreseeable future.

CHAPTER 3 - CONCLUSION

The NCAI National Policy Work Group on Contract Support Costs reaffirms its commitment to continue working with Indian country, Congress and the Administration, including the Office of Management and Budget, the Department of the Interior and the Department of Health and Human Services, to keep faith with the Nation's Self-Determination Policy.

No single policy in the history of American Indian Affairs has more forcefully and effectively permitted tribes to empower their tribal institutions and their people. No single policy has more effectively served to break the cycle of dependency and paternalism. And, no single initiative has contributed more to the improvement in the conditions facing American Indian peoples.

As the Nation enters the new millennium, and consistent with the march toward greater devolution of governmental authority to local units of government, it is essential that the American people recommit fully and keep faith with the Self-Determination Policy and empowerment of tribal governments consistent with the devolution movement. Only through the continuation of that policy can America both respect the fundamental government-to-government relationship that exists between tribes and the United States, and fulfill the federal government's trust responsibility to protect the interests of Native American tribes.


1. As explained elsewhere in this Report, the size of the contract support shortfall itself may independently have a restraining effect on tribes weighing whether to contract for programs under the ISDA. It is very difficult to assess the impact (if any) this factor may be having on current contracting levels.

2. IHS projections regarding future contracts and demands could be influenced by a number of factors. First, to the extent tribal interests in ISDA activities have been dampened by the consistent failure to fully fund contract support costs, some speculate that a remedy to the contract support cost problem could lead to additional ISDA initiatives. (This speculation is questionable, however, given the history of tribal contracting of IHS programs.) Second, the unexpected moratorium in FY 1999 may lead to the temporary spike in new contracting activities. Third, although it appears that most of the major segments of the IHS system that are likely to move under tribal control have done so, two significant exceptions exist in portions of Oklahoma and in the Navajo Area Office. (In fact, in the FY 2001 budget formulation process, IHS is tentatively identifying an additional $40 million in contract support needs associated with new programs to be transferred to the Navajo Nation.)