4 FAH-3 H-320
COLLECTIONS
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
(Office of Origin: CGFS/FPRA/FP)
4 FAH-3 H-321 GENERAL PROVISIONS,
SCOPE, AND AUTHORITY
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
This subchapter contains policies for receipt and
accounting for collections. All collections must be processed in accordance
with the Department authorities to collect, deposit, and retain funds. All
collections must also be processed in accordance with U.S. Treasury guidance
and fund symbol requirements in this subchapter and 4 FAH-1, Account Structure
and Classification Codes Handbook.
4 FAH-3 H-321.1 Responsibilities
for Collections
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Unless otherwise identified in this subchapter, the
financial management officers (FMOs) in overseas posts and in domestic bureaus
and offices are responsible for overseeing the collection process and ensuring
the provisions in this subchapter are followed. In organizations and locations
where an FMO or budget and finance (B&F) officer may not be present,
executive directors and management officers are responsible for ensuring
appropriate delegations are in place to execute the collection responsibilities
in this subchapter. Similarly, the Global Financial Operations Directorate
(CGFS/F) oversees and implements the Bureau of the Comptroller and Global
Financial Services (CGFS) collection responsibilities at the Global Financial
Service Centers Charleston and Bangkok. The Executive Director of the Bureau
of Consular Affairs is responsible for supplemental policies and procedures for
consular collections.
b. Questions regarding policies and procedures for
collections or coding should be directed to either the Office of Financial
Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP) or Global Financial Operations Directorate, Office of
Accounting Operations (CGFS/F/AO).
4 FAH-3 H-321.2 Collection Methods
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. The Department of State uses the following methods
to make collections:
(1) Cash;
(2) Check (e.g., personal check, U.S. Treasury check,
bank draft, money order, or travelers check);
(3) Electronic funds transfer;
(4) Credit and debit cards; and
(5) Payroll deduction.
b. The available infrastructure and the method used in
domestic and overseas locations will depend on type of collection. See 4 FAH-3 H-324
and 4 FAH-3
H-325 for the methods available for domestic and overseas collections.
4 FAH-3 H-321.3 Collection
Arrangements
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. The Department of State uses the following
collection arrangements:
(1) Cashier;
(2) Lockbox arrangements (e.g., checks from the
public);
(3) Electronic point of sale (e.g., U.S.
Government/private credit cards, toll charges from telephone 900 numbers);
(4) Intra-governmental Payment and Collection System
(IPAC) (electronic collections from other agencies for services provided by the
Department and electronic collections made by Treasury or other agencies on
behalf of the Department); and
(5) Bank servicing and U.S. Postal Service agreements
(for passport and visa application fees).
b. Individuals and servicing organizations must be
authorized to use the official collection methods and internal controls must be
in place to ensure timely and accurate recording of all collections.
4 FAH-3 H-321.4 Collection
Documentation and Classifications
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. The purpose or basis for a collection needs to be
documented to ensure the appropriate accounting. The Department processes four
basic categories of collections:
(1) Accounts receivable debt;
(2) Inter-agency reimbursement agreements for goods
and services;
(3) Published fees and applications for consular and
other services; and
(4) Other transactions under revenue, fund-raising,
and trust authorities.
b. Department collections result from a number of specific
activities, including:
(1) Accounts receivable created by employees, private
individuals, vendors, foreign governments, and other groups in the private
sector;
(2) Return of unearned or unclaimed employee advances
authorized for official business;
(3) Rents/related charges and reimbursements for
Department of State property (e.g., OBO property used by other Federal agencies
or leased to private sector parties);
(4) Proceeds of sale for real and personal property;
(5) Reimbursements for goods and services provided to
other Federal agencies (e.g., Economy Act arrangements);
(6) Fees authorized by statute or regulation by the
Department of State (e.g., consular service fees);
(7) Requests to make payments for third parties (e.g.,
via Suspense Deposit Abroad and Overseas Citizen Services trust accounts);
(8) Gifts to the Department of State (e.g.,
unconditional donations via domestic and overseas collections, credit card
donations, and payroll deductions);
(9) Court judgments;
(10) Employee contributions to General Funds for Social
Security, FICA, etc;
(11) Miscellaneous Treasury receipts and contributions
to the U.S. Government; and
(12) Donations to the Foreign Service National
Emergency Relief Fund.
c. Cashiers that perform collection functions should
record and track collection activity in accordance with applicable
documentation and a Form OF-158, General Receipt. Attach copies of receipts to
the documentation.
4 FAH-3 H-321.5 Collection Types
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
a. The accounting for collections depends on the type
of collection (e.g., refund, reimbursement, general receipt) and the
availability of collected amounts. The FMO and other individuals involved in
the collection process must examine the documentation for each collection to
determine the purpose of the collection, its availability as a budgetary
resource, and the proper fund to be credited to ensure proper recording.
b. Collections for services provided by the Department
may be available as budgetary resources only if the Department has specific
authority to retain the collections.
c. Collections that may be available include the
following:
(1) Refunds are repayments of excess payments directly
related to a previous expenditure and must be returned to the appropriation and
allotment previously charged. Refund collections are available for current
obligations only if the appropriation and allotment previously charged are
still available for obligation. Refunds credited to closed (canceled)
appropriations must be deposited in the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts.
Refunds of amounts paid in prior fiscal years from no-year accounts are
normally available for current obligations, but they must be reapportioned and
reallotted before the amounts can be used to adjust or create obligations.
Examples of refunds include:
Repayments of unused travel advances
Refunds of value-added taxes
Refunds or collections of overpayments to vendors
or employees
(2) Reimbursements are collections for goods or
services provided by the Department that are authorized by law to be credited
to a specific appropriation (typically the appropriation initially charged for
the goods or service). Reimbursements differ from refunds in that they are
credited at the appropriation level and are not immediately available for
obligation until they have been reapportioned and reallotted. A common type of
reimbursement is a collection from another agency made pursuant to an
inter-agency agreement under the Economy Act, 31 U.S.C. 1535;
(3) Refunds and reimbursements are included in the
generic term repayments, since they replace funds which were or will be paid
from an agencys appropriation.
d. General Fund Receipts are amounts received from
other miscellaneous sources that the Department does not have authority to retain.
These collections are deposited as miscellaneous receipts of the U.S.
Government (a credit to the Treasury) and are not available budgetary
resources.
e. The 4 FAH-3
Exhibit H-321.5 provides examples of selected collections.
4 FAH-3 H-322 ACCOUNTING FOR OFFICIAL
COLLECTIONSACCOUNT TYPES AND FUND SYMBOLS
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
a. General fund accounts: Many
Department of State collections are credited directly to Department
appropriations. These collections will usually be for refunds for obligated
and expended amounts. When authorized by law, reimbursements and proceeds may
also be collected directly into Department appropriations. The appropriate
fund symbols for these collections are listed under 4 FAH-1 H-224,
Account Symbols (State):
(1) Examples of collections for various Department
appropriations are identified in 4 FAH-3
Exhibit H-321.5. The Bureau of Consular Affairs and the Bureau of Overseas
Buildings Operations also provide supplemental receipt and collection guidance
for specific program areas in 7 FAH-1 H-700,
Consular Fees, and 15 FAM 522.1,
Proceeds from Sale or Exchange;
(2) When a Department of State appropriation is not
available for a collection, the financial management officer (FMO), U.S.
disbursing officer (USDO), or other responsible individual must identify the
appropriate Treasury account for the collection.
b. General and miscellaneous receipt
accounts: There are many types of receipts collected
by the Department. Some receipts belong to Treasury and some belong to State:
(1) General fund receipt accounts are used for
receipts that are not earmarked by law for a specific account or for a specific
purpose. These receipts do not always belong to State and must be deposited
directly to Treasury. For example, interest and fees earned on funds held in
Class B cashier accounts belong to Treasury and should be credited to account
201435;
(2) General fund receipts that are not earmarked but
belong to State should be deposited to the designated State general receipt
account. For example, interest on public funds from Department of State
sources, such as delinquent receivables, should be credited to account 191435.
The fund symbols for general fund receipt account collections are identified at
4 FAH-1 H-222;
and
(3) Consular service fees:
Account 190830 is used for fees relating to U.S. passport and citizenship,
visa, documentary, and judicial assistance services for U.S. citizens and
foreign nationals:
(a) Miscellaneous receipt collections made at domestic
Passport offices or other Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA)-controlled facilities
must be properly identified and recorded to account 190830 if they may not be
retained by the Department under CA authorities. When collections are made
domestically through a third party (e.g., U.S. Postal Service, banking
institution), CA processing procedures or the contract/servicing agreement must
provide for recording these collections to account 190830;
(b) Overseas cash and credit card collections must be
processed through Class B cashiers at individual missions and posts or through
third-party collection agents (e.g., banks). The Bureau of Consular Affairs
has the responsibility to establish fee collection procedures for consular
officers. These procedures are found under 7 FAH-1 H-700,
Consular Fees. The Class B cashiers receive the collections from consular
cashiers (and, less commonly, from consular officers and consular agents) and
process Form OF-158, General Receipt, in accordance with procedures noted in 4 FAH-3 H-396.
Class B cashiers may also receive collections directly into the USDO account
from an offsite collection agent or bank collecting nonimmigrant visa
application fees (machine-readable visa (MRV) fees) and issue a corresponding
Form OF-158;
(c) Some consular collections are not miscellaneous
receipts. For example, the Department has specific authority to retain
machine-readable visa fees, which are credited to account 19X0113.6. FMOs,
cashiers, and other individuals involved in handling CA collections should confirm
the specific receipts and process in accordance with applicable CA guidance
(see 7 FAH-1 H-700);
(d) The fiscal coding to be used for the numerous
consular fee collections to be credited to Department of State funds is
identified in the applicable fund sections of 4 FAH-1 H-620.
Coding issues related to consular collections on behalf of other agencies
should be directed to CA;
(4) Other miscellaneous fee and fund collections. If
a specific account cannot be identified for a miscellaneous fee or other collection,
the general miscellaneous accounts (193200 series) should be used. The two
accounts most widely used are 193200 and 193220 (see 4 FAH-1 H-222):
(a) Collections to 193200 are for receivables to a
canceled account; and
(b) Collections to 193220 are for any other proprietary
receipt that cannot be identified with any other fund symbol.
c. Clearing accounts:
Clearing accounts are used for Federal source funds that must be temporarily
deposited until the proper accounting can be determined. These accounts are
often used when documentation is either unclear or nonexistent. The Department
of the Treasury has established clearing accounts in the 3800 series for
Federal agency use. Under a Treasury-issued waiver, the Department of State is
authorized to use clearing accounts with point limitations to distinguish the
source of collection. These clearing accounts may be used only for the
Treasury-authorized purpose (see 4 FAH-1 H-252
for the authorized point limitations):
(1) Clearing accounts may be used for proceeds of sale
in accordance with the Global Financial Operations Directorate (CGFS/F)
instructions. Specific policies and procedures for proceeds of sale are
outlined in 4
FAH-3 H-327; and
(2) Authorized transactions put into a clearing
account should be cleared as quickly as possible, preferably within 30 days.
No transaction amount should be in the clearing account for a period exceeding
60 days.
d. Deposit accounts: These accounts are primarily for
nongovernment funds collected by the Department for a third party. The funds
collected are available to carry out legislative mandates or for a specific
instruction requested by a third party. The accounts are only used when it is
clear that the collections are identifiable and intended for a specific
purpose. Specific accounts and the purpose for each clearing and deposit
account are identified in 4 FAH-1 H-252.
Examples of transactions processed through deposit accounts include:
(1) Proceeds from estates of Americans who die abroad;
(2) Moneys withheld from contractors and funds held
for the International Boundary and Water Commission;
(3) Contributions from employee and employer in CAPPS
processing; and
(4) Withholdings for foreign government social
security and related programs.
The Employee and Employer Contribution Account,
Foreign Government Social Security and Related Programs account (19X6130) is a
restricted use account used for payroll withholdings. The Suspense Deposits
Abroad (SDA) account (19X6809) is a restricted-use deposit account for
collection from third parties. Collections to the Suspense Deposits Abroad
account are governed by special rules contained in 4 FAH-3
H-326.2.
e. Special fund receipt accounts:
(1) These accounts are used for collections for
special funds, which are available for expenditure (after depositing and
recording). Some of these accounts are supplemented with appropriations.
Others are self-sustaining from collections received. Most of these funds need
to be allotted. Point limitations are commonly used to distinguish activities
in these accounts; and
(2) Special funds support statutory or other
responsibilities where there is a need to accept collections and to use the
collected amounts for defined expenditures. Examples of special funds include
the International Center, International Litigation Fund, and the Foreign
Service National Defined Contributions Retirement Fund. Fund symbols for all
special funds are identified in 4 FAH-1 H-242.
f. Trust fund receipt accounts:
These accounts are for collections received by the Department in the capacity
of trustee for third parties in accordance with terms of statutes or formal
agreements:
(1) There are several trust funds under Department
supervision, for example, the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund
(19X8186) and the Foreign Service National Separation Liability Trust Fund
(19X8340). Other trust funds include the Unconditional and Conditional Gift
Funds (19X8821 and 19X8822, respectively). These two gift funds have specific
policies and procedures identified in 4 FAM 380; and
(2) Trust funds generally have point limitations to
designate the receipt account. Specific accounts used by the Department along
with the point limitations and purposes for the accounts are identified in 4 FAH-1 H-262
and 4 FAH-1
H-263.
g. Revolving accounts:
(1) The Department has two revolving funds for
Department business. One fund is utilized for financing repatriation loans
(19X4107) and the other is the working capital fund (WCF) (19X4519) authorized
by 22 U.S.C. 2684. The latter fund is subdivided by point limitations to
accommodate various activities, including the International Cooperative
Administrative Support Services (ICASS). Fund symbols for revolving fund
collections are identified at 4 FAH-1 H-232.
Additional information concerning ICASS can be found in 6 FAH-5. Direct
questions regarding ICASS to CGFS/ICASS; and
(2) Revolving funds are available without fiscal year
limitation, and all collections to those funds are available for authorized
purposes unless procedurally restricted. See restrictions for proceeds of
sales in 4
FAH-3 H-327 and the requirements for host country taxation refunds in 4 FAH-3
H-329.1.
4 FAH-3 H-323 GENERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR
RECEIVING COLLECTIONS
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
a. U.S. disbursing officers (USDOs) and Department of
State Class B cashiers are authorized to receive collections, including
consular fees. When financial management officers (FMOs) in the bureau or post
must process noncash collections without access to a cashier, the FMO must
formally identify a responsible individual in the organization to accept the
collections. If necessary, the selected employee may be designated as a
subcashier for this purpose in accordance with 4 FAM 322.1, 4 FAH-3 H-392,
4 FAH-3 H-393.2-1
paragraph d, 4 FAH-3
H-394.3, 4
FAH-3 H-396, and 4 FAH-3
H-398.2. However, an individual that handles collections may not have
access to accounts receivable transactions or have access to data bases that
permit adjustments to accounts receivable records.
b. Financial management officers (FMOs) must limit the
number of employees entrusted with a collection function consistent with good
management practices. These employees are personally responsible and
accountable for the safekeeping of all collections in their custody until the
funds have been deposited and a receipt obtained. Financial management
officers (FMOs), or management officers in the absence of an FMO at post, must
closely monitor and set up procedures that allow post management to verify that
all collections are recorded in a timely manner and credited to the appropriate
fund cite.
c. Checks and cash received by cashiers must be
properly safeguarded and controlled with receipts issued in accordance with the
4 FAH-3 H-390
cashiering requirements. All funds collected by the cashiers are recorded on
Form OF-158, General Receipt. The Form OF-158 is a pre-numbered, accountable
official form that is controlled and produced by the automated cashiering
system, or, if issued under manual operation, acquired from CGFS Charleston or
CGFS Bangkok. The stocks of the form are signed out in blocks by the USDO.
Domestic cashiers should receive supplies of Form OF-158 from CGFS Charleston.
d. Cashiers must be familiar with the collection they
are accepting and are responsible for properly coding the collection
information on the Form OF-158. Similarly, supervisory personnel overseeing
the Intra-governmental Payment and Collection System (IPAC) or other domestic
collection processes are responsible for ensuring that employees have the
appropriate collection documentation and ensuring that collected amounts are
properly credited to the correct Department of State and Treasury accounts.
e. Domestic collections may be processed through a
variety of channels without a Department employee taking physical custody of
any cash (e.g., credit cards, lockboxes, IPAC payments). The preferred
practice is to instruct individuals or institutions making a payment to forward
all amounts directly to the lockbox along with any information that will assist
in the processing and reconciliation of the collected amounts. Consistent with
good management practices and controls, the Global Financial Operations
Directorate (CGFS/F) Charleston or the responsible financial management officer
must prepare and implement procedures to confirm and reconcile the actual
collections processed with amounts reported by a bank, a credit card company,
or other financial institution processing the collections.
f. Overseas collections are primarily processed
through post cashiers but may, under certain circumstances, involve a U.S.
disbursing officer (USDO) at CGFS Bangkok or CGFS Charleston. Cashiers must
follow the procedures for receiving collections detailed in 4 FAH-3 H-396
and the Cashier User Guide (CUG) Chapter 6. In accepting negotiable
instruments (e.g., local currency and checks) for collections, the cashier must
exercise precautions and maintain records and information as required in 4 FAH-3
H-396.4 and CUG Chapter 9.
g. Overseas collections may also involve third-party
banks and other foreign financial institutions. Some of these collections are
received through a payment process that may not involve the post cashier. When
this occurs, the servicing USDO will provide instructions for completing the
collection.
4 FAH-3 H-324 DOMESTIC COLLECTIONS
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. The Bureau of the Comptroller and Global Financial
Services (CGFS) and the Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) control or process most
Department collections originating in the United States. CGFS/F has the
overall responsibility for all domestic collections. The CA Executive Director
has the responsibility for overseeing the procedures and controls for
processing collections at the Departments domestic passport offices, visa
centers, and through CA-arranged third-party facilities.
b. Domestic lockbox arrangements for check collections
and/or checks/cash collected through a bank or the U.S. Post Office must be
sponsored by Treasury or be approved by CGFS/F. All lockbox arrangements or
third-party collection agreements, including agreements authorized by CA, must
be supported by a contract or written agreement with the institution performing
the collection process. The agreement must specify the collections to be handled
and the accounts that will be credited with the amounts collected.
c. All U.S.-based Department organizations that
receive checks in the United States must use the Treasury sponsored lockbox
unless an alternative lockbox has been approved by CGFS/F. All checks
forwarded to the lockbox must be accompanied with instructions identifying the
account or fund to be credited with the collection. CGFS/F will establish
procedures for this process; specify the required documentation for lockbox
collections; and address questions related to the domestic lockbox process.
d. CA may process domestic cash and credit cards
collections for consular fees at its passport offices. CA collections may also
be processed through the U.S. Postal Service and financial intermediaries, such
as major banks that have been approved by CGFS/F. CA passport offices and CA
locations receiving fees for passport and visa services should follow CA/EX
procedures for processing collections.
e. Domestic bureaus and organizations with revenue-generating
activities (e.g., M/EDCS donations for Foreign Service National Emergency
Relief Fund and Employee Emergency Fund, Foreign Service Institute,
Authentications, etc.) may make collections for services via credit cards or
through commercial banking institutions when approved by CGFS/F. Requests to
implement a domestic credit card process or third-party arrangement must
originate with the executive director or equivalent official in a bureau or
department organization and be approved by CGFS/F. When approved, all
organizations must comply with this subchapter and follow guidance issued by
CGFS (see 4
FAH-3 H-324.3).
f. The Main State cashier may accept collections when
authorized by the CGFS Washington Liaison Office (CGFS/F/WO), and the lockbox
option is not available or appropriate. Collections through third-party
depositories (e.g., banks or the U.S. Post Office) may be used only when
approved by CGFS/F.
g. CGFS/F may process credit card collections in
Charleston when appropriate division of duties and other controls are in
place. CGFS/F will manage inter-agency collections through the
Intra-governmental Payment and Collection System (IPAC) and may process
electronic fund collections originating in the United States from the public, a
foreign government, or an international organization. All transactions via
electronic applications must be credited to the correct account and be
supported by back-up documentation.
4 FAH-3 H-324.1 Domestic Lockbox
and Third-Party Collections
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Payments from other Federal agencies that cannot be
processed by IPAC should be processed through the lockbox.
b. Except where specifically authorized in 4 FAH-3 H-324,
all financial management officers in U.S.-based Department organizations must
follow CGFS/F procedures for processing lockbox and third-party collections.
Officers in domestic organizations with frequent collections are responsible
for preparing written bureau procedures for individuals handling collections.
The guidance should include:
(1) Where to send payments;
(2) How to prepare a check for the collection being
made;
(3) The documentation that must accompany the
collection and where to send the required documentation;
(4) Responsibility for providing official receipts;
and
(5) Actions required when a payment is not properly
processed.
c. Lockbox banks must complete a deposit ticket and
deposit the checks at the closest Federal Reserve Bank. The lockbox bank must
make a copy of each check deposited and a copy of the deposit ticket. These
documents or their electronic equivalent, along with a list of deposit
information for each check and a copy of any correspondence received by the
bank, must be forwarded to CGFS Charleston. CGFS/F is responsible for
reconciling all collections processed through the lockbox.
d. The address for the lockbox as of January 1, 2006 is
as follows:
U.S. Department of State
Accounts Receivable Division
P.O. Box 979005
St. Louis, MO 63197-9000
Since the lockbox address is likely to change from
time to time, all bureaus and other Department personnel involved in actual
collections should verify with the Office of Accounting Operations (CGFS/F/AO)
the exact address of the lockbox before issuing check collection instructions
to bureau personnel or the public.
4 FAH-3 H-324.2 Charleston Global
Financial Service Center Responsibilities
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Global
Financial Services (CGFS) Charleston personnel will reconcile all the official
collections from overseas and domestic sources with the cash balances held by
Treasury. CGFS is responsible for developing detailed procedures for recording
collections in the Department financial management system and for reconciling
the amounts collected with balances reported by Treasury.
b. Global Financial Operations Directorate, Accounts
Receivable (CGFS/F/RR) personnel are authorized to use IPAC and collect amounts
owed from other Federal agencies under reimbursement agreements. Collections
from other agencies via electronic means should be maximized, and CGFS/F/RR
must establish procedures to ensure inter-agency collections are properly
documented at the point and time of collection.
c. Collections for inter-agency reimbursement
agreements should not be processed by individual posts or through CGFS Bangkok.
4 FAH-3 H-324.3 Credit Card
Collection Requirements
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Bureau financial management officers are responsible
for ensuring that all approved electronic point of sale (e.g., credit card)
authorizations are properly controlled and are consistent with CGFS collection
requirements and instructions for maintaining internal controls.
b. Collections received from credit card arrangements
require a merchant status with a bank or other financial institution. Since
there is a different accounting model for transactions generated from U.S.
Government and private credit cards, collections received through credit card
arrangements must be processed using the correct transaction code to ensure proper
recording of the collection.
c. Credit card collections must be identified with the
correct fund cite and must be supported with sufficient documentation. Reports
must be in place to permit data analysis, posting to accounting records, error
correction, and reconciliations of collections to services provided. Bureau
financial management personnel must have written procedures at the point of
sale to ensure that credit card processing is controlled and consistently
executed. Bureau officers must also support any data requirements or
reconciliation actions needed to maintain adequate internal control of actual
collections.
d. Credit card transactions from other Federal agencies
must be approved by the Office of Accounting Operations (CGFS/F/AO) before they
can be processed. Due to differences in the accounting treatment for Federal
credit card transactions, financial management personnel must request guidance
from CGFS/F/AO before accepting U.S. Government credit card transactions or
establishing a procedure for these cards.
4 FAH-3 H-324.4 Intra-Governmental
Domestic Payments
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Inter-agency collection transactions are electronic
funds transfers through the Intra-governmental Payment and Collection (IPAC)
system, a major component of the Government On-Line Accounting Link System II
(GOALS II). Using the IPAC system is the standard method for making
collections from other Federal agencies. Each collection should be supported
by an inter-agency agreement or other appropriate collection transaction
document. See 4
FAM 450 for additional information concerning intra-governmental
transactions. CGFS Charleston is the only location authorized to process IPAC
collections. Overseas posts and other global financial service centers are not
authorized to make IPAC collections.
b. While IPAC is the standard process for
intra-governmental collections, there may be occasions when payment is received
in other forms from Federal agencies. For domestic locations, a check
collection should be processed through the approved lockbox arrangement in
accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-324.3. Department personnel who receive an intra-governmental collection
outside the IPAC system should contact the Global Financial Operations
Directorate (CGFS/F) to ensure that the collection documentation is sufficient
and that the check can be properly identified and processed through the
lockbox.
c. CGFS/F is responsible for ensuring that the
receivable for the intra-governmental transaction has been established and the
collection received is recorded in the accounting system in accordance with
CGFS procedures.
4 FAH-3 H-324.5 Main State Cashier
Collections
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
The Main State cashier may be requested to accept a
collection on behalf of the Department. Such collections should be minimized
to the maximum extent possible (see 4 FAH-3 H-323,
paragraph e) and should be accepted only with the concurrence and instruction
of CGFS/F/WO. Department employees or other individuals that request
permission to make a payment or other action involving a collection should be
referred to the lockbox process or the Global Financial Operations Directorate
(CGFS/F). All collections by the Main State cashier must be documented with a
Form OF-158, General Receipt. A copy of this receipt plus any supporting
documentation must be forwarded to CGFS/F/RR within 2 business days.
4 FAH-3 H-324.6 Overseas Citizens
Services (OCS) Trust Collections Originating in the United States
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Domestic collections for consular services from
private sources must be Overseas Citizens Services (OCS) trust transactions
administered by the Bureau of Consular Affairs. For all new OCS trust cases
originating October 1, 2006 and thereafter, collections will be deposited into
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) 19X6809, allotment 9941, and processed in
accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-324.6 (see 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-1 for OCS trust transactions originating overseas).
b. CA is authorized to assess a surcharge fee to
perform OCS trust transactions and forward the funds to the receiving post.
This fee is assessable annually on a fiscal year basis on the life of the OCS
trust account transaction. This fee and other fees that may be charged for
sending funds to multiple locations are assessable for both domestic and
overseas OCS trust transactions and deposited in the Treasury as miscellaneous
receipts.
c. The Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) is responsible for
directing the disposition of the Overseas Citizens Services (OCS) trust funds
originating in the United States. CA authorizes posts by telegram or other
instruction to disburse funds from the deposited collection to designated
persons or for the stated purposes. All dispositions and monitoring of the
funds are handled at the consular section level.
d. The OCS trust telegram or other instruction to post
regarding disbursement of funds must clearly identify the depositor and other
contact information, as well as the designated person to receive the funds, and
the purpose.
e. Upon receipt of an authorization from the
Department, the post arranges to make the payments. Vouchers are charged to
account 19X6809, allotment 9941. When instructed to do so, the post prepares
interim reports showing payments made and balances remaining.
f. When all transactions related to the specific
deposit are completed, the post prepares a final voucher to refund the
depositor. Unclaimed Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) residual balances must be
handled in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.3.
g. Additional guidance on CA procedures for processing
OCS trust transactions is contained in 7 FAM 300.
4 FAH-3 H-325 OVERSEAS COLLECTIONS
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
Overseas collections are processed through post-assigned
cashiers in accordance with this section, and detailed cashier procedures are
published in 4
FAH-3 H-390 and in the Cashier User Guide, Chapter 6. Consular fee
collections are processed in accordance with the guidance in 7 FAH-1 H-700.
4 FAH-3 H-325.1 Cashier Procedures
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
a. The post cashier and, when applicable, the financial
management office personnel, must carefully examine all collections before
processing to determine the proper fund to be credited. Criteria for
determining how the collection should be classified are identified in 4 FAH-3
H-321.5. A listing of the various types of collections is contained in 4 FAH-3
Exhibit H-321.5.
b. All cashiers must maintain accurate records for
collections and have sufficient documentation to maintain accountability over
collection activities. Cashiers must maintain controls and record all
collections, and both the cashier and cashier supervisor must execute
monitoring responsibilities in accordance with 4 FAH-3 H-390.
Specific procedures for collections are identified in 4 FAH-3 H-396.
Required systems and cashier record requirements are identified in 4 FAH-3
H-393.2-5.
c. All funds collected by an overseas Class B cashier
are recorded on Form OF-158, General Receipt, a prenumbered, accountable
official form that is either controlled and produced by the automated
cashiering system or, if manual, signed out in blocks by the USDO or financial
management officer to the cashier. The 4 FAH-3 H-396
and the CUG Chapter 6 provide additional guidance for documenting collections
and generating Form OF-158.
d. Appropriations, allotments, or other account
information to be entered on Form OF-158 for official collections are listed in
4 FAH-1. The person giving the funds to the cashier should provide or obtain
the fiscal data for the cashier to use in recording the collection.
e. If the collection is to be credited to another
agency and the detail coding information is not known, the deposit is credited
to the agency designated Budget Clearing Account (BCA) used for this purpose.
If the agency is not known, the deposit is credited to the Department of State
suspense account available for this purpose (see 4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph c, and 4 FAH-1 H-252).
When the fiscal data becomes known, the financial management officer prepares a
journal voucher transferring the deposit from the suspense account to the
correct account. Post financial management staff must maintain a log to
indicate the specifics of these collections being credited to these BCA
accounts to document the source and reason for the collection.
f. Money collected by the consular cashier is turned
over daily to the Class B cashier, following the procedures outlined in the
Cashier User Guide (CUG) Chapter 6 and 7 FAH-1 H-700.
Consular collections are kept with the other collections received by the Class
B cashier.
g. Procedures for collections using credit/debit cards
denominated in U.S. dollars, including the U.S. debit card issued to locally
employed (LE) staff overseas, are contained in the Cashier User Guide (CUG),
Chapter 6.
4 FAH-3 H-325.2 Handling and Use of
Collections
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Consistent with the guidance in 4 FAH-3
H-396.1, paragraph g, cashiers may keep collected funds, including consular
fees, with other cash resources, provided there is an adequate system to
account for the amounts collected.
b. Cashiers may use collected funds to cash
replenishment checks or to reduce replenishments, as authorized in 4 FAH-3
H-396.5.
4 FAH-3 H-325.2-1 Limits on
Amounts and Retention Time
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
Overseas cashiers must follow collection requirements in 4 FAH-3
H-396.5 and 4 FAH-3
H-311.9 for the disposition of money collected from the public. Since
disbursing officers must use available collections before purchasing local
currency, the U.S. disbursing officer (USDO) may require more frequent deposits
of cashier collections based on such factors as volume of collections,
stability of the exchange rate, ease of transmission of collections, and
distance or time.
4 FAH-3 H-325.2-2 Exchange Rate
for Overseas Collections
(CT:FMP-87; 01-07-2015)
With few exceptions, overseas cashiers use the prevailing
rate of exchange obtained from the International Currency Exchange Rates website (see 4 FAH-3
H-396.2).
4 FAH-3 H-325.2-3 Guidelines for
Accepting Overseas Local Currency Collections
(CT:FMP-94; 06-23-2016)
a. When refunds or reimbursements are due as repayments
to an appropriation or other fund, the repayment is considered completed if the
same kind of currency units is collected as was originally paid and in the
number of units for which repayment is due. For example, local currency can be
collected in payment of an amount due in local currency and dollars can be
collected for dollars due.
b. A refund or reimbursement may also be accepted in a
currency different from that originally paid. The number of units repaid in
one currency must be equivalent on the date of repayment to the number of
currency units due in the other currency. This principle applies to all
collections whether the original payment was in U.S. dollars or local
currency. To compute the equivalent units to be repaid, different rates are
used for different situations:
(1) Collections such as consular fees may be made at
rates slightly higher than the bank-selling rate to avoid handling numerous
coins of small denomination, or if coins are not readily available (see 7 FAH-1 H-724).
This adjusted rate is the consular rate, set jointly by the accountable consular
officer and the financial management officer, and used by both the consular
section for collecting fees and the Class B cashier on Form OF-158, General
Receipt, for consular collections;
(2) Amounts due in local currency may be collected in
U.S. dollars at the prevailing rate of exchange; and
(3) Amounts due in local currency that must be
reported in U.S. dollars are converted to dollar equivalents at the same rates
used (if known) for converting the original local currency payments (for
example, refunds of travel advances, erroneous payments, overpayments, or other
payments from official funds). If the original rates are not known, the
collected amounts are converted to dollar equivalents at the prevailing rate on
date of collection (for example, proceeds of sale of surplus materials).
4 FAH-3 H-325.3 Acceptance of
Checks for Collections
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Checks received by any U.S. Government employee are
accepted subject to actual collection of the funds. If any check cannot be
collected in full or is lost or destroyed before collection, the accepting
agency is responsible for obtaining the proper payment. A payment by check is
not effective unless and until the full proceeds have been received. Personal
checks are not accepted for consular services abroad.
b. Persons drawing checks overseas should be instructed
to draw them payable to the American Embassy [city name], and those in the
United States should be instructed to make checks payable to the U.S.
Department of State. If the refund is for another agency, the name of the
agency may be provided if appropriate. Checks already made payable to the
United States Treasurer can be accepted as written.
c. When accepting a check for collection, the cashier
or USDO must obtain full information about the maker of the check, in
accordance with CUG Chapter 6, and enter it on Form OF-158, General Receipt.
d. At overseas posts, cashiers may receive checks drawn
on host country currency local banks (e.g., vendor refunds of overpaid
invoices). These checks should also be made payable to the American Embassy
[city name]. The cashier should record the collection on Form OF-158 as a
collection by check and then deposit this host country currency check into the
U.S. disbursing officer (USDO) bank account. The cashier must obtain an
original bank deposit slip. The post financial management officers (FMO) or
designee must control these host currency deposits to ensure that that only
original bank deposit slips are on file and match appropriate collections.
4 FAH-3 H-325.3-1 Endorsement of
Checks
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
The employee depositing checks is responsible for properly
endorsing the reverse of the checks. USDOs provide the accepted notation to be
entered for overseas collections.
4 FAH-3 H-325.3-2 Deposit of
Checks
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
U.S. disbursing officers provide instructions for the
deposit of checks overseas. Detailed procedures are contained in 4 FAH-2 H-312
and 4 FAH-2
H-313.
4 FAH-3 H-325.3-3 Uncollectible
Checks
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
For checks that are returned by the depositary as
uncollectible, procedures are in 4 FAH-2 H-318.
4 FAH-3 H-325.4 Official
Collections by Overseas Consular Agents
(CT:FMP-94; 06-23-2016)
a. Consular agents are required to ensure that the
appropriate fee, as evidenced by an official receipt, is paid for any service
provided. All fees for consular services will be paid directly to the consular
agencys officially designated subcashier. This may be the consular agent if
the agency has no consular clerk or other employee to act as a subcashier.
Consular agents are not authorized to open official checking accounts with
local banks without specific authorization from the FMO and the servicing
USDO. The FMO, in consultation with the regional security officer, must ensure
that adequate controls are in place for the secure storage, deposit, and
transfer of official collections. Specific procedural guidance to consular
agents for consular agency fee collections is found in 7 FAH-1 H-735.
b. Fees collected by consular agents must be paid in
cash, either in U.S. dollars or local currency, except as provided otherwise in
this paragraph. Traveler checks, cashier checks, and money orders may also be
accepted. The rate of exchange is the consular rate, set jointly by the
Embassys accountable consular officer and the FMO. Personal checks may not be
accepted by consular agents; credit cards may be used on a country-by-country
basis as approved by the FMO.
c. Consular agents must use the Automated Cash
Register System (ACRS) or Form DS-4042 (formerly Form OF-233), Consular Cash
Receipt and Record of Fees, to receipt consular fees. Daily, or at least once
a week (or immediately when total collections on hand exceed $5,000 equivalent
in value), the consular agent must deposit the collections to the USDO bank
account or transfer the funds in accordance with written instructions provided
by the FMO. Supporting documentation, including cover memo, bank deposit
slips, ACRS end-of-day reports, or copies of Form DS-4042 receipts, as
appropriate, must be faxed or sent to the financial management office no later
than the next business day. After verifying the deposits, the Class B cashier
faxes a copy of the Form OF-158, General Receipt, to the consular agent; sends
the original to the subcashier; and provides a copy to the Embassys
supervisory consular officer.
4 FAH-3 H-325.5 Credit Card
Collections Overseas
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
a. Overseas electronic point-of-sale collections,
commonly referred to as credit card transactions, must be approved by the USDO
prior to establishing a process at the post or consulate. U.S. Government
credit cards may also be accepted subject to authorization and establishment of
procedures and accounting transactions by CGFS/F.
b. The financial management or consular officer is
responsible for submitting credit card collection requests to the servicing
USDO for approvals. CA/EX or the responsible consular officer at an overseas
post are responsible for coordinating consular credit card collection
activities, when authorized, with the USDO and/or FMO responsible for the post
Class B cashier.
c. The post financial management officer is
responsible for ensuring that all approved credit card authorizations are
properly controlled and consistent with CGFS collection instructions for
maintaining internal controls. A reconciliation and processing issue will
occur if there is a significant delay between the credit card collection
processed by CA through the Automated Cash Register System (ACRS)/banking
system and the corresponding Form OF-158 that is prepared for CA credit card
collections. The Form OF-158 should be issued soon after the consular agent
makes the deposit to the local USDO account in order for the dates to be
compatible and researchable in a reconciliation process.
d. The consular officer responsible for consular credit
card collections must follow the procedures found in 7 FAH-1 H-700 and
support FMO responsibilities to maintain proper internal controls over credit
cards processed through the Class B cashier. U.S.-based and -approved foreign
bank credit card collections must be identified with the correct fund cite and
supported with sufficient documentation. Reports must be in place to permit
data analysis, posting to accounting records, error correction, and
reconciliations of collections to services provided. Post financial management
personnel must have written procedures at the point of sale (where the card is
accepted) to ensure credit card processing is controlled and consistently
executed.
e. In countries where the U.S. debit card program has
been implemented, the Cashier User Guide (CUG), Chapter 6, provides the procedures for both financial
management personnel and LE staff travelers when it is necessary to collect
U.S. dollars using the pre-paid card.
4 FAH-3 H-325.6 Lockbox and
Collections Through Third Parties
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Individual posts may not establish lockbox
collection arrangements until approved by the USDO.
b. The Bureau of Consular Affairs is authorized to
negotiate third-party collection arrangements with banks in overseas
locations. However, this activity should be coordinated with the post FMO and
approved by the servicing USDO.
4 FAH-3 H-326 SUSPENSE DEPOSITS ABROAD
(SDA) TRANSACTIONS OVERSEAS
4 FAH-3 H-326.1 Suspense Deposits
Abroad (SDA) Transactions
(CT:FMP-87; 01-07-2015)
a. Suspense deposits abroad (SDA) transactions are
official collection amounts for payments on behalf of and as directed by the
depositors. The U.S. Government is responsible to each such depositor for
ensuring that amounts received are appropriately disbursed and/or returned.
b. The FMO (or the management officer if there is no
FMO) makes all the decisions regarding the collection and disbursement of SDA
transactions in accordance with depositor instructions and guidance in this
section. The Class B cashiers will accept approved deposits to 19X6809 SDA
accounts and the assigned allotment accountant will perform the account
maintenance to insure a separation of duties for internal control purposes.
c. SDA collections are deposited to 19X6809 and
recorded in the cashiers Form OF-209, Accountability Record, and the financial
management records in the same manner as other official collections. Moneys
received are not held separately, but are deposited, remitted, or retained
together with other official collections.
d. Deposits to the suspense deposits abroad (SDA)
Account are receipted on Form OF-158, General Receipt, in the same manner as
for other official collections. Form OF-158 is the cashier control document
for SDA transactions. This SDA record provides control figures for the
verification of balances shown on all active general receipts, and for the monthly
reconciliation of collection and payment totals reported on the disbursing
officers Statement of Transactions, Form SF-1221. The Cashier User Guide
(CUG), Chapter 6, provides procedures for recording SDA collections and the use
of Form OF-158.
e. Since the SDA account is maintained in dollars, a
local currency deposit is converted to the U.S. dollar equivalent at the
prevailing rate. This rate at the time of collection is then used for payments
against the deposit.
f. SDA payments may be made by a check from a
disbursing officer, via electronic funds transfer (EFT), or in cash from the
cashiers operating cash advance. Payments in foreign currency are made at the
exchange rate at the time of the original collection. Payments, including
refunds of unused balances to depositors, are recorded in the financial
management system in the same manner as other official payments. An SDA
payment cannot exceed the balance in the SDA account for the depositor. After
all payments are made, including any refund, the account balance must be zero.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2 Approved Uses of
the Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) Account
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Unless an exception is granted in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-8, the SDA account may only be used for the following purposes:
(1) Collections and payments for approved consular
services for American citizens (e.g., Overseas Citizens Services (OCS) trust
transactions, fees for deposition of a witness abroad for a U.S. court in
accordance with 7
FAM 920);
(2) Collections received by the Secretary of State
from foreign governments and other sources, in trust for citizens of the United
States and others under 22 U.S.C. 2686a;
(3) Collections and payments on behalf of Department
of State and other U.S. Government employees in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-4;
(4) Department of State-approved collections from
foreign governments, international organizations, nongovernment organizations
(NGOs), private individuals, or private organizations in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-5;
(5) Collections and payments involving international
schools and employee associations or commissaries in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-6; and
(6) Funds for which owners cannot be immediately
verified in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7.
b. Individual posts may further restrict the use of the
SDA when local conditions warrant. In addition, FMOs should establish post
policies that minimize the need to use the SDA for U.S. Government employees
under 4
FAH-3 H-326.2-4.
c. SDA accounts may not be used for deposits
originating from another Federal agency (i.e., appropriated funds) and may only
be used for transactions originating from sources outside the Treasury system
in accordance with guidance in this section. An FMO or other Department of
State official may not use the SDA to receive or make payments for other
Federal agencies when the funds come from appropriations, other official funds
(including gift funds), or any other source in the Treasury system.
d. Official collections, regardless of amount, that are
designated at time of collection for credit to U.S. Government funds, are
recorded to the relevant agencys accounts and not as SDA deposits. The only
exception applies when official and non-official funds are commingled in a
single collection (e.g., value-added tax (VAT) receipts from a host government)
and specific ownership cannot be immediately identified (see 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7).
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-1 Overseas
Citizens Services (OCS) Trust Collections and Dispositions
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. For all new Overseas Citizens Services (OCS) trust
cases originating October 1, 2006 and thereafter, the SDA 19X6809 with
allotment 9941 must be used for overseas OCS trust collections (see 4 FAH-3
H-324.6), with an assessment of the applicable fees described in 4 FAH-3
H-324.6 paragraph c.
b. The consular officer overseeing the collection and
deposit to the SDA account must clearly identify the name and post where the
deposit occurred (specific contact information for the post accepting the funds
and for the person authorizing the disposition) as well as the post that will
make the payment, the designated person to receive the funds where the payment
will be made, and the purpose of the funds.
c. Upon receipt of an authorization from the post that
accepted the funds, the paying post arranges to make the payments and
coordinates the collection with the post financial management officer (FMO).
The accepting consular officer will provide instructions to the paying post
consular officer. The FMO at the paying post should be apprised of these
instructions. Vouchers at the paying post are charged to account 19X6809
(allotment 9941) consistent with any fiscal strip information provided from the
accepting post. The reporting, final processing, and close-out of unclaimed
balance procedures are identical to the procedure at 4 FAH-3
H-324.6.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-2 Proceeds From
Estates of Deceased American Citizens
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
Collections and deposits of proceeds from estates of U.S.
citizens who die overseas will be credited to deposit fund 19X6066, which has
been established for this purpose. The Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) account
should not be used for this purpose. Address consular officer questions
regarding proceeds from estates of deceased American citizens to the Office of
the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Overseas Citizens Services (CA/OCS).
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-3 Other Consular
Functions
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. SDA transactions may hold funds that are provided to
pay consular fees in connection with the deposition of a witness in a foreign
country by consular officers (see 7 FAM 920 and 7 FAM 921,
paragraph n, since there are various types of dispositions subject to a
per-hour consular fee). Checks transmitting these funds should be immediately
deposited into the SDA account and not held until the depositions are completed
or otherwise allowed to expire. Since the consular fee is based on the time
spent on the deposition and is unknown at the time the funds are received, the
financial management officer (FMO) is permitted to deposit the funds in 19X6809
until the actual fee is known. Once the cost is identified, the FMO
coordinates with the consular section to collect the fee for this official
consular service through the Automated Cash Register System (ACRS) for credit
to the General Treasury Account (190830). Any unused funds are remitted to the
original depositor.
b. Except where authorized in this section or by
CGFS/FPRA/FP under 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-8, all consular fees and other payments by American and foreign
individuals should be processed through the official accounts for consular
functions. An FMO may not use the SDA for deposits from Americans seeking to
use it for personal matters related to immigration, adoption, or other personal
business between the individual and the host government.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-4 Using the
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) Account for U.S. Government Employees
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Unless an exception is granted by CGFS/FPRA/FP under
provisions in 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-8, the Suspense Deposits Abroad account may be used to support
certain U.S. Government employee payments for official business or when
required by the post as a result of the employees overseas assignment only in
the following circumstances:
(1) Deposits from employees leaving post to pay
utility bills (e.g., telephone, gas, water), where utilities are in the name of
the employee or are the responsibility of the employee;
(2) Deposits from employees leaving post to pay for
damage claims (e.g., caused by pets) that a post may assess for U.S.
Government-provided quarters where a final determination or disposition of the
claims cannot be made prior to departure;
(3) Deposits for residential telephones or other utilities
listed in the posts name, or for personal long-distance telephone call
invoices that will be received during a post billing cycle; and
(4) Deposits for drivers license/plate fees and other
payments that are the personal responsibility of the employee but which the
post (U.S. Government) is required to pay directly to the host government or
other designated entity.
b. The SDA account may not be used to make personal
payments on behalf of U.S. Government employees or dependents unless
specifically authorized in accordance with provisions in 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-8. The following are examples of SDA transactions that are not
authorized for U.S. Government employees:
(1) Deposits to purchase new vehicles or household
effects for delivery to the post, onward assignment, or to the United States;
and
(2) Deposits of currency or other financial
instruments for transfer to an employee bank account or other depository inside
or outside the host country.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-5 Using the
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) for Foreign Governments, International
Organizations, Nongovernment Organizations (NGOs), or Private Individuals or
Organizations
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Under unusual circumstances involving natural
disasters, terrorist incidents, or similar emergencies, the FMO may be
authorized to use the Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) to deposit collections
from a foreign government, international organization, nongovernment
organization (NGO), or private individual or organization donating funds for a
humanitarian need. However, the financial management officer (FMO) may only
use the SDA for this purpose when authorized in advance by the Department.
b. The SDA may not be used to transfer funds when there
is no official U.S. Government purpose for the transaction. Situations where
it would generally not be appropriate to use the SDA include:
(1) Deposits from individuals for transfer to NGOs
operating outside the host country;
(2) Deposits from NGOs operating in the host country
for transfer to a parent NGO outside the country;
(3) Any deposit or transfer on behalf of an
international organization, private individual, private organization, or NGO
that would violate local law; and
(4) Deposits for grant recipients.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-6 Suspense
Deposits Abroad (SDA) Payments in Support of International Schools and Employee
Associations and Commissaries
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. The Department of State provides certain types of
support to American International schools and employee associations and
commissaries (see 6 FAM 500). Posts, therefore, may use the SDA account to
support certain payment requirements of these organizations.
b. The FMO is authorized to use an SDA account for the
entities described in 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-6, paragraph a, without specific Department of State authorization
only when the purpose relates to the following activities:
(1) Overseas American International School deposits
for payments related to school procurement and shipping of items (i.e.,
supplies and books) when authorized by post regulations; and
(2) American Employee Association or commissaries
procuring food and other essential supplies and equipment in hardship locations
when other means for placing procurements and making payments are not
available. However, this provision applies to employee associations only when
the transactions do not violate local laws and the authorization for supporting
the association using the SDA is clearly documented in published post policies.
c. Financial management officers (FMOs) are prohibited
from using the SDA for the following purposes:
(1) Salary payments, building construction, or major
procurements to support overseas schools or employee associations; and
(2) Deposits and payments for American or other
contractors supporting the U.S. Mission that are not covered by this section.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-7 Using the
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) for Funds Whose Owners Cannot be Identified
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. There are occasions where funds are received without
specific identification of the owner or the owner cannot be immediately located
or where funds are owned by multiple individuals or entities, some of whom may
be private individuals. When this occurs, the SDA may be used as a temporary
holding account pending identification of actual ownership of the funds. FMOs
are authorized to use the SDA without specific Department approval only for the
following:
(1) Termination payments from the Foreign Service
National (FSN)-Defined Contributions Retirement Fund in those cases where the
payments are to be made in cash but the former employee is not paid immediately
and the funds must be temporarily held by post;
(2) Lump sum value-added tax (VAT) reimbursements made
by a host country government when the reimbursement payment includes refunds
for both the U.S. Government and individual employees. Once actual ownership
amounts for the refunds are determined, the VAT refunds for employees should be
paid from the SDA. The VAT refund owed to the U.S. Government for official
transactions should be cleared from the SDA and applied to the appropriation
and obligation from which it was paid; and
(3) For proceeds of sale situations authorized in 4 FAH-3
H-327.2-1, paragraph f.
b. The Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) account
(19X6809), for the purposes authorized in this section, may be used only to
hold funds temporarily. FMOs must ensure adjustments or changes are processed
as soon as possible to clear the entry and credit the appropriate official
accounts when the funds belong to the U.S. Government. Similarly, the FMO
should expeditiously process amounts owed to individuals with a goal to clear
all amounts owed to U.S. Government and private individuals within 30 business
days.
4 FAH-3 H-326.2-8 Policy and
Procedure for Requesting Exceptions for SDA Uses
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
The Office of Financial Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP) will
consider FMO requests for exceptions to SDA guidelines on a case-by-case basis
if there are extraordinary and compelling justifications to do so and the
exception does not violate applicable law or regulations. CGFS will not
consider exceptions to accommodate an individuals personal business needs or
to circumvent rules and procedures governing official funds.
4 FAH-3 H-326.3 Unused Suspense
Deposits Abroad (SDA) and Deposit Fund Balances
4 FAH-3 H-326.3-1 Disposition of
Unused SDA and Other Deposit Fund Balances
(CT:FMP-87; 01-07-2015)
a. Instructions for the disposition of unclaimed
balances in SDA accounts and other deposit funds are set forth in Treasury
Financial Manual, Part 6-3000, Payments of Unclaimed Moneys and Refund of
Moneys Erroneously Received and Covered.
b. Balances in SDA and other deposit accounts must be
reviewed quarterly to determine if there are unclaimed balances that should be
refunded to the depositor. Amounts of $25 or more should be returned promptly
to the depositor without the presentation of a claim. Any unused balance must
be refunded immediately when requested by the depositor. At the end of each
fiscal year, accounts having remaining balances with no further payments
anticipated should be processed according to Treasury criteria.
c. Properly refundable balances that have been held
for more than 1 year and cannot be refunded because the depositors whereabouts
are unknown are to be transferred to Treasury account for Payment of Unclaimed
Moneys (20X6133), if the following criteria are met:
(1) Amount is $25 or more;
(2) A refund, upon claim, would be absolutely
justified;
(3) There is no doubt as to legal ownership of the
funds; and
(4) A named individual, business, or other entity can
be identified with the item.
d. The Form OF-1017-G, Journal Voucher, or comparable
form should be prepared for the total of all balances meeting these criteria,
transferring the total from the deposit account to Treasury account 20X6133.
The voucher must bear the notation Unclaimed Balances. A list is attached to
include the following for each balance: name of depositor, last known address,
Form OF-158 receipt number by which collected, and the U.S. dollar equivalent
amount. The transfer is noted on the cashiers control copy of each Form OF-158
receipt.
e. Unclaimed balances of less than $25, or amounts of
$25 or more that have been held for more than 1 year but do not meet the
criteria in paragraph c above, are transferred on a Journal Voucher from the
deposit account to Treasury miscellaneous receipt account 19 1060, Forfeitures
of Unclaimed Money and Property. For individual amounts over $25, a depositor
list similar to that in paragraph d is included with the OF-1017-G voucher or
comparable form. A total of all balances of less than $25 is shown with the
legend Unclaimed balances of less than $25. The transfer is noted on the
cashiers control copy of each Form OF-158 receipt.
4 FAH-3 H-326.3-2 Subsequent
Requests for Transferred Deposit Fund Balances and Maintenance of Records
(CT:FMP-87; 01-07-2015)
a. Refunds of deposit fund balances that have been
transferred to Treasury accounts may be made. However, if there is any doubt
concerning the propriety or legality of a claim for payment, the post FMO
should refer the matter to the Office of the Legal Adviser (L) through the
Office of Financial Policy (CGFS/FPRA/FP).
b. Refunds of unclaimed balances from account 20X6133
(see 4
FAH-3 H-326.3-1, paragraph c) may be made by check or via EFT when approved
by the responsible FMO and supported by a voucher certified by an authorized
certifying officer, who is responsible for the validity and accuracy of the
claim.
c. Refunds of unclaimed balances from account 19 1060
(see 4
FAH-3 H-326.3-1, paragraph e) may be made by check from a certified
voucher. However, the account charged for the payment is Refund of Moneys
Erroneously Received and Covered (20X1807). This account should be charged
only when collections are deposited into Treasury as miscellaneous receipts and
the amount to be refunded is not properly chargeable to any other
appropriation.
d. Although such refunds are paid from Treasury
accounts, the post FMO that transferred money to 20X6133 is responsible for
maintaining adequate records and including the accounts in its internal audit
program. The individual records of all items transferred to the miscellaneous
receipt account 19 1060 should be filed in a closed file in the event claims
are received. In addition, the post must maintain manual records for 20X6133
and 20X1807 and maintain a file of paid disbursement voucher forms and
supporting documentation in accordance with any instructions received from the
servicing U.S. disbursing officer (USDO) or Office of the Assistant Secretary
for Global Financial Services (CGFS).
4 FAH-3 H-327 PROCEEDS OF SALE OF
PROPERTY
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Post financial management officers (FMOs) must
follow the policies and procedures in 4 FAH-3 H-327
for collections from the sale of personal and real property overseas. All the
collections identified in this section will be processed through an overseas
Class B cashier and/or deposited directly to an overseas USDO account.
b. The Department does not normally generate proceeds
of sale from the disposal of property in domestic locations, and the collection
guidance in this section does not apply to proceeds of sale generated by a
domestic bureau or collected via a domestic collection activity. Should a domestic
collection occur or appear evident, the responsible financial management
officer involved in the collection process should contact CGFS/FPRA/FP for
guidance.
c. Questions concerning the accounting for proceeds of
sale or property disposals that are not addressed in the Cashier User Guide
(CUG) should be referred to CGFS/FPRA/FP. Questions regarding policies and
procedures for the physical disposal of personal property should be addressed
to the Personal Property Management Division (A/LM/PMP/PPM).
4 FAH-3 H-327.1 Sources of Proceeds
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Proceeds of sales of the following categories of
property overseas must be collected, recorded, and utilized in accordance with
this section:
(1) Sales proceeds from real property, including land,
land improvements, buildings, and structures, are deposited to the Office of
Overseas Buildings Operations (OBO) appropriation 19X0535.4 and reallotted by
OBO for its asset management program. Additional guidance for the disposition
of real property is in 15 FAM 500;
(2) Regulations and procedures for the disposal of
personal property are in 14 FAM 417.
Examples of personal property include vehicles, furniture, equipment, supplies,
appliances, and machinery. Property is categorized with specific budget object
codes (BOCs) according to the nature of the property. For example, there are
BOCs for vehicles, security equipment, and communications equipment. Sales
proceeds from personal property are available for purchasing similar
replacement property within the same budget object codes, in accordance with
Department regulations. The proceeds must be reapportioned and allotted;
(3) The sale of some property and equipment requires
specific approval of the oversight bureau or responsible individual. For example,
the sale of any security equipment requires the approval of the regional
security officer (e.g., closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras, locking
mechanisms, alarm components, ballistic doors and windows, residential doors
and grilles, security vehicles, and metal detectors). The sale of computer or
other equipment funded under the border security program using machine-readable
visa (MRV) funds should be deposited to the MRV appropriation 19X0113. 6.
Similarly, communication equipment, information technology, and medical
equipment usually require coordination with functional bureaus prior to
disposal. FMOs are encouraged to work with the post general services officer
(GSO) to confirm the correct procedures and collection reporting requirements prior
to generating sale proceeds; and
(4) Department of State personal property in a foreign
area may be declared as excess property only with Department concurrence (see
14 FAM 400). Proceeds from sales of excess property are deposited to the
Treasury miscellaneous receipts account and are not available for obligations.
b. Proceeds of sales of personal property for other
U.S. Government agencies are processed in accordance with the regulations of
those agencies.
4 FAH-3 H-327.2 Processing Proceeds
of Sales
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
In addition to guidance provided in this section, detailed
procedures for collecting and reporting proceeds of sales are contained in the
Cashier User Guide (CUG) Chapter 6. Reporting codes and revenue source codes
pertaining to proceeds are found in 4 FAH-1 H-322
and 4 FAH-1
H-620, respectively.
4 FAH-3 H-327.2-1 Accounting for
Proceeds
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Cashiers must accurately record proceeds collection
information on Form OF-158, General Receipt, to ensure the proper recording of
proceeds in official accounting records. A copy of Form OF-158 for the sale of
real property must also be sent to the Charleston Global Financial Service
Center, Accounts Receivable office (CGFS/F/RR) in accordance with the
instructions in 4 FAH-3
H-327.4-2 and paragraph c of this section.
b. For both personal property and real property sales,
the accounting entry on Form OF-158 receipt is in dollars or the dollar
equivalent if received in local currency. For real property sales, if the sale
is in local currency and the currency amount is in excess of the posts
immediate disbursing needs or is a nonconvertible currency, the FMO must notify
the servicing USDO and make arrangements for handling the collection prior to
receipt.
c. For real property sales, the proceeds are recorded
as a deposit to fund symbol 19X0535.4 on the Form OF-158 receipt. The revenue
source code (AAAE) is also entered to show the source of the proceeds. A
complete description of the property sold, including the property (asset)
number and other accounting data as provided by Global Financial Operations
Directorate, Office of Accounting Operations (CGFS/F/AO) and/or Overseas
Buildings Operations (OBO) must be included on Form OF-158. Additionally, a
copy of the sales contract must be forwarded to OBO.
d. For personal property sales, the fund symbols and
allotments used for recording proceeds may vary in accordance with Department
authorities and authorized periods of availability. Appropriations must be
cited consistent with the applicable authorities for use of proceeds. The fund
symbol must be followed by the allotment (reporting code) and revenue source
codes shown in 4
FAH-1 H-322 and 4 FAH-1 H-620,
with a description of property sold or a reference to sales documents or sales
records, showing source of the funds. Supplemental guidance is also available
in the CUG.
e. A Form OF-158 receipt must be issued for each
vehicle sold, and reflect both the fiscal data for the property and the vehicle
identification number. Since all vehicles are capitalized property, this data
is needed to compute a gain or loss on individual vehicles. Therefore, the
fiscal data for vehicle sales must be accurate and identify the owning
organization and specific vehicle sold. For ICASS vehicles, a vehicle
description, vehicle identification number, purchase request number, and sale
amount are necessary.
f. For funds collected from bid auctions at the
Embassy where the appropriate account to credit cannot be identified
immediately, the cashier prepares a Form OF-158 crediting the SDA account the
same day the cash was collected. Upon receipt of the appropriate fiscal data,
the USDO issues a noncashier USD (U.S. dollar) voucher debiting the SDA account
with the corresponding check to liquidate the SDA account. Upon receipt of
this USD check, the cashier prepares a new collection in USD crediting the
appropriate fiscal data.
4 FAH-3 H-327.2-2 Proceeds
Generated From On-Line Internet Auction Sales
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. A/LM permits the sale of personal property over the
Internet. The actual process used is at the discretion of the post in
accordance with 14 FAM 417.2-3.
However, post property disposal policies using the Internet must be approved by
the FMO and USDO. These policies must provide instructions for receiving
collections, transferring property titles, paying fees or other costs, and
issuing receipts. The policies must also clearly describe the duties that must
be performed by the GSO, FMO, Class B cashier, and any other third party/agent
that will be involved in Internet property disposal process.
b. The FMO is not authorized to release the USDO
account information without the consent of the servicing USDO, and cashiers may
not process individual payments for on-line sales over the Internet or accept
electronic funds transfers directly from individuals. However, buyers of the
property may appear in person to complete the purchase with either cash or an
approved bank cashier check. (There is no mechanism for cashiers to receive
payment for sales by credit card.) Cashiers must issue a Form OF-158, General
Receipt, to each individual for the collected amount in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-327.2-3.
c. If Internet sales are held on-line but property is
transferred without a cashier being present, cashiers may accept cash or
authorized bank cashier checks presented by GSO personnel when they are presented
with the appropriate supporting documentation. Copies of the documentation
must be initialed by a property disposal officer or another official
responsible for property disposal, and the total collected must match the
amount identified in the documentation. Cashiers may issue a single Form OF-158
receipt for a collection resulting from the sale of noncapitalized property.
If the sale includes vehicles, individual Form OF-158s must be issued for each
vehicle sold (see 4 FAH-3
H-327.2-1, paragraph d, for receipt requirements for capitalized
property). The GSO-provided documentation must be attached and filed with hard
copies of any Form OF-158s issued for the collection.
d. In locations where the property disposal procedure
authorizes the use of an agent for disposals conducted on the Internet, the
procurement document for agent services must:
(1) Include instructions for agents making payments to
the USDO designated account;
(2) Specify that agents may not make more than one
transfer of proceeds of sale to the specified account per day;
(3) Establish a minimum amount to be deposited per day
with all amounts to be deposited by the last workday of the week;
(4) Require agents to itemize the total transaction
for the unit(s) of property sold/proceeds collected (Note: the final sales
price of each item must be separately identified, as well as the net proceeds
after sales commission, fees, or other costs); and
(5) Require that itemized listings reflect the date
the proceeds were transferred to the designated account and the corresponding
amount of the proceeds.
4 FAH-3 H-327.2-3 Expenses of
Sale
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. The 40 U.S.C. 571(b) permits expenses incurred in
connection with the sale of personal property to be paid directly from the
proceeds, with only the net proceeds deposited in the appropriate account.
Deducted costs must be legitimate expenses directly related to the sale.
b. Expenses of sale for personal property that may be
deducted from sale proceeds include advertising, auctioneer fees, customs fees,
duties, taxes, commercial transportation, contractor labor, additional
security, rental of temporary space, and equipment rentals directly related to
the sale of the property. Regular salary or overtime payments for American or
locally employed staff may not be deducted from sale proceeds since property
sales are considered normal post business.
c. Proceeds received for sale of personal property may
be deposited into the budget clearing account (BCA) when sale transactions are
incomplete (e.g., buyer has not made a complete payment) or when sales
documentation or invoices for selling expenses have not been identified or
completely paid. If reporting of the deposit would be delayed by waiting to
obtain documentation of these expenses, and the expenses are insignificant, the
gross proceeds should be deposited immediately in the appropriate account (not
into the BCA), and the expenses should be paid later from post funds once
documentation is available. However, to the maximum extent possible, all BCA
balances for incomplete transactions and sale expenses should be transferred to
the correct proceeds account within 10 business days of deposit.
d. Expenses associated with the disposal of real
property may not be deducted from the sale proceeds. Post personnel overseeing
the sale must request approval and funding for these expenses from the Bureau
of Overseas Buildings Operations, Office of Acquisitions and Disposals
(OBO/PRE/OAD) for sale, exchange, lease, or license expenses such as fees for
agents or brokers, surveys, advertising, legal services, appraisals, and
closing costs.
4 FAH-3 H-327.3 Use of Proceeds
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. Proceeds must be collected, reflected in the USDOs
reporting to Treasury, and recorded in the financial management system before
they may become available for allotment and obligation.
b. 40 U.S.C. 503 and the related GSA regulations (41
CFR 102-39) permit the Department to use personal property sale proceeds only
to pay for replacement property. This general authority governs the retention
and use of Department sale proceeds unless there is specific authority to use
sale proceeds for other purposes.
c. Proceeds from the sale of personal property are
available for obligation only during the fiscal year in which the property was
sold and for one full fiscal year thereafter. Specific authority for other
time periods available to the Department are as follows:
(1) Personal property sale proceeds credited to ICASS
(X4519.1) are available without fiscal year limitation consistent with Section
13 of the State Department Basic Authority Act (22 U.S.C. 2684); Personal
property sale proceeds credited to OBO (x0535) are available without fiscal
year limitation consistent with section 9 of the Foreign Service Buildings Act
(22 U.S.C. 300); and
(2) Proceeds from sales of official passenger motor
vehicles at posts abroad are available without fiscal year limitation for
replacement of an equal number of such vehicles under section 7 of the State
Department Basic Authority Act.
d. To make maximum use of available resources, proceeds
of sale of Department personal property may be applied to a different program
or activity within the Department, including to other regional bureaus,
offices, or appropriations, so long as the proceeds are used only for the
purchase of replacement property. However, most regional and functional
bureaus allot the funds for personal property to the post or organization that
generated the proceeds.
e. ICASS proceeds involve inter-agency property replacement
activity at the post level. Proceeds of sale of ICASS personal property
deposited to X4519.1 are allotted by the regional bureau to the post that
generated the proceeds.
f. Overseas real property proceeds of sale are
governed by section 9 the Foreign Service Buildings Act (22 U.S.C. 300). Real
property proceeds generated from OBO building sales are indefinite, credited to
19X0535.4 and allotted by the Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations.
4 FAH-3 H-327.4 Administrative
Control of Proceeds of Sale and Replacement Property
4 FAH-3 H-327.4-1 Reporting
Estimated Proceeds of Sale Amount
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
Each fiscal year, the FMO in consultation with the GSO
should estimate the personal property requirements for the post and constituent
locations for the following fiscal year. In accordance with any procedures
issued by the respective regional or functional (e.g., DS, OBO, INL) bureau,
the FMO should inform that bureau of its estimated sales and planned
replacement goals for personal property. A negative response is required if
the post does not anticipate generating proceeds of sale.
4 FAH-3 H-327.4-2 Cash
Collections and Property Records for Real Property and Vehicle Sales
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. OBO/PRE/OAD must notify CGFS of all the pending
overseas real property sales on a quarterly basis, regardless of the timing of
the cash collection. Real property sales and any related accounts receivable
will only be posted after the sale has actually closed.
b. For real property sales, the Global Financial
Operations Directorate, Office of Accounting Operations (CGFS/F/AO) and the
Global Financial Operations Directorate, Accounts Receivable office (CGFS/F/RR)
will coordinate the recording of an accounts receivable prior to the end of the
quarter. The receivable will represent all completed disposals/sales when the
cash collection has not yet been recorded in the general ledger and will be
based upon the OBO information supporting the sale, selling price, and disposal
date. The accounts receivable balance will be liquidated by subsequent
collections.
c. OBO must provide CGFS/F/AO/AA with a copy of the
sales contract (or other legal document) to support the selling price and
disposal/sale date of the property sold.
d. Upon completion of a vehicle sale, the post FMO must
provide CGFS/F/AO/AA the completed Form DS-1559, Authorization for Disposal of
Vehicle, consistent with instructions in 14 FAM 439. The
selling price recorded in the Form DS-1559, the collection amount on the Form OF-158,
and amount of adjustment to property records should all be consistent and be
reported on a timely basis. The completed Form DS-1559 should be scanned and
forwarded to the Personal Property mailbox (PersonalProperty@state.gov) within
10 days of sale.
4 FAH-3 H-327.4-3 Use
(Obligation) of Sale Proceeds for Replacement Property
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. A key element in proceeds of sale is the concept of
similarity of replacement items procured. Items are deemed similar when one
of the following conditions exists:
(1) They are identical in all material respects and
characteristics, excluding condition, year, model, size or capacity, and
manufacturer;
(2) They are designed or adapted for the same specific
purpose; or
(3) They constitute parts of (or parts for) similar
assembled items defined above.
b. For funds control and obligation purposes, the
working categories for similar items are defined by expense subobject, that
is, proceeds from the sale of household furnishings may be used for household
furnishings, office furniture, office equipment, and the like.
c. Since sales proceeds are funds with a limited
availability with respect to both time and purpose, the post financial
management office must maintain a record, by fiscal year, showing the proceeds
generated. The post must also have a procedure in place to ensure that the
replacement items purchased with sale proceeds are similar in nature to the
items that generated the proceeds. A detailed cross-reference between old and
new items is not required for each voucher. However, there must be sufficient
data to establish that the items acquired were similar to the items sold and
that the procurement process complies with 40 U.S.C. 503 (see 4 FAH-3
H-327.3).
4 FAH-3 H-327.4-4 Reporting
Proceeds and Replacements
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
By May 31 of each year, posts should finalize their plans
for generating sale proceeds and the replacement obligations that will be
created to use the proceeds. Unneeded proceeds should be reported to the
relevant regional bureau or the Bureau of Diplomatic Security (DS) in order to
allow the use of any unneeded proceeds by other posts. When the funds are to
be made available to another post, the reporting post must identify the type of
personal property sold to ensure that the replacement property meets the
similarity requirements in 4 FAH-3
H-327.4-3.
4 FAH-3 H-328 PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM FEE RECYCLING
4 FAH-3 H-328.1 Recycling Funds
Collected From the Public for Public Diplomacy and Educational Programs
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. The Department has specific authority under 22
U.S.C. 1475e to collect and retain fees for certain Public Diplomacy (PD) and
educational programs. This activity is commonly referred to as recycling.
b. Public diplomacy recycling is the process by which
the Department and overseas posts exercise legal authority to charge and retain
funds generated by English-teaching activities, the sale of agency and post
publications, library and student advising fees, educational advising programs,
exchange visitor programs, and other programs specifically authorized by
Congress to collect and retain fees.
c. The recycling ceiling is the overall limit or cap
authorized by Congress annually on the amount of fee income that can be
generated and retained by the Department for certain activities. The regional
bureaus, in coordination with the Bureau of Budget and Planning (BP), annually
establish recycling ceilings for each program and each post participating in
one or more of the programs. Ceilings must be adhered to in order to avoid the
Department as a whole exceeding its authorized limitation (see 10 FAM 229.1
for English-teaching materials; 10 FAM 229.3
for teaching fees; 10 FAM 227.8-8
for educational advising fees; and 10 FAM 363.6
for Information Resource Center fees).
4 FAH-3 H-328.2 Program Guidance
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
Department program contact offices for the various
recycling programs are:
English-Teaching Programs
|
ECA/A/L
|
Student Advising
|
ECA/A/S
|
Information Resource Centers
|
R/IIP/G/IR
|
Arabic Book Program
|
R/IIP/G/NEA
|
4 FAH-3 H-328.3 Accounting for
Recycling Funds
(CT:FMP-74; 07-09-2013)
a. Cashiers that receive funds for recycling activities
must complete a Form OF-158, General Receipt, and credit collections for the
recycling program to appropriation X0113.P. The revenue reporting codes and
revenue source codes for these programs are contained in 4 FAH-1 H-324
and 4 FAH-1
H-621.6, respectively. Cashiers must make sure the appropriation and
revenue source code are included in the fiscal strip that is printed on the
Form OF-158.
b. To ensure that the bureau can confirm the deposit,
personnel at post are required to report the receipt, including receipt number,
date, and amount, to the bureaus via telegram.
c. Collected funds are made available after the
deposit has been confirmed in the Departments financial system. The financial
management officers in the regional bureaus allot the funds to the posts after
the funding authority for the recycling program has been processed by BP.
d. Post FMO must retain copies of the Form OF-158
receipts and forward them if requested by the regional bureau or CGFS/F/AO.
4 FAH-3 H-329 Other Collections
4 FAH-3 H-329.1 Value-Added Tax and
Other Tax Collections
(CT:FMP-87; 01-07-2015)
a. Financial management officers are responsible for
processing reimbursement claims submitted to host governments when there is a
U.S. Government claim for a refund of the taxes. While there are a number of
local taxes that may be subject to refund (depending upon location), the most
widely known is value-added tax (VAT). The Office of Foreign Missions (M/OFM)
provides guidance on the taxes that can be claimed for refund and will assist
posts on these matters.
b. Value-added and other taxes that are paid to a host
government are accounted for as expenditure refunds when refunded by the host
government. Amounts collected should be associated with the actual
disbursement transaction and associated accounts receivable. At a minimum, the
FMO or designated financial management staff member must ensure that the refund
is credited to the same appropriation and allotment used to make the original
tax payment.
c. Tax refunds from the host government are not
available budgetary resources until collected. A financial management officer
(FMO) cannot use the funds to create new obligations until received and
deposited into an available appropriation and allotment. If the relevant
appropriation and allotment have expired but have not been closed, the refunded
taxes may be used only to adjust the amount of valid, existing obligations.
When a refund is received for a closed appropriation and allotment, the FMO
must deposit the funds as a general receipt of the Treasury. The Treasury fund
symbol to use for these collections is 193200.
4 FAH-3 H-329.1-1 Tax Collections
on Behalf of Other Agencies
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. When the post FMO is responsible for host country
tax refunds for multiple agencies, each agency should claim its tax refund
separately from the host country to the maximum extent local conditions will
allow. Reimbursements to non-Department of State entities are expenditure
refunds and must be handled in manner consistent with the requirements in 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7.
b. When the post FMO receives a single tax
reimbursement from a host government for multiple agencies, including the
Department of State, the FMO may initially deposit the reimbursement to an
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA) account until individual amounts can be
associated with the correct U.S. Government agency (see 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7). This should be an exception rather than a standard procedure,
and all amounts should be resolved within 15 business days.
c. Under no conditions should the SDA account be used
to make expenditures from host country tax refunds. All amounts must be
transferred to the appropriate appropriation and allotment before an obligation
or expenditure can be created with these funds.
4 FAH-3 H-329.1-2 Tax Collections
for Individuals Eligible for Reimbursement
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. At some overseas posts, individuals assigned to the
diplomatic mission are authorized to claim reimbursement for host country taxes
if the claim is submitted through the embassy or diplomatic mission. This is a
permissible activity to the extent authorized by post policy.
b. Consistent with 4 FAH-3
H-326.2, paragraph d, the SDA may be used for refunds received solely for
individuals or when official refunds are mixed with individual refunds in a
single transaction (see 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7). However, the FMO is responsible for expediting and depositing
all official funds to the appropriate appropriation and allotment in accordance
with this section. Further, all amounts owed to individuals should be cleared
from the SDA within 30 business days (see 4 FAH-3
H-326.2-7, paragraph b).
4 FAH-3 H-329.2 Collection of
Foreign Currency Under Terms of Settlement Agreements
(CT:FMP-50; 08-26-2008)
a. The U.S. Government concludes settlement agreements
with foreign governments for payments of principal and interest. In addition,
the agreements often provide that the U.S. Government may collect and use
certain percentages or amounts in local currency to pay for its requirements in
the country.
b. Each agreement specifies the method of computing the
equivalent dollar value of the local currency received. When the local
currency payment is received, the collecting post should check the exchange
rate provisions of the agreement and the rate used by the debtor government to
determine that the rate is in accord with the agreement and is the most
favorable the U.S. Government is entitled to receive.
c. Such agreements require careful recording and
reporting of host country payments on the part of cashiers, financial
management officers, and disbursing officers. If the post has questions
concerning these payments, including the exchange rate, it should request
guidance from the servicing USDO.
4 FAH-3 Exhibit H-321.5
Examples of Collections
(CT:FMP-96; 08-10-2017)
Reason for Collection
|
Symbol Credited
|
Type
|
FAH Reference
|
|
Overpayment of Pay, Allowance, Travel
Reimbursement to Employee
|
Fund, Allotment and Obligation Originally
Charged
|
Refund
|
4 FAH-3 H-321.5,
subparagraph c(1)
|
|
Overpayment for Goods/Service to Vendor,
Lessor
|
Fund, Allotment and Obligation Originally
Charged
|
Refund
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(1)
|
|
Erroneous PaymentSee Examples Above
|
Fund, Allotment and Obligation Originally
Charged
|
Refund
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(1)
|
|
Unused Travel Advance
|
Fund to be charged with claim, Allotment
9XXX
|
Refund
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(1)
|
|
Host Country Tax (e.g., VAT) refunded by
the Host Government
|
Fund, Allotment, and Obligation Originally
Charged
|
Refund
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(1); 4 FAH-3
H-329.1b; (see also 4 FAH-3
H-329.1, paragraph c)
|
|
PD Recycling Funds Collected From the
Public
|
19X0113.P
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2) and 4 FAH-3
H-328.3
|
|
Interagency Agreement-ICASS
|
19x4519.1
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2)
|
|
Interagency Agreement-Other
|
(Varies according to bureau providing the
services)
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2)
|
|
Rents or Utilities From Tenants of U.S. Government-Owned
Property
|
19X0535.3
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2) and 4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph a
|
|
Loss of, Damage to U.S. Government-Owned
Property (OBO only)*
|
19X0535 (appropriate point limitation)
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2) and 4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph a
|
Medical Benefits Collected by Employees
From Carriers
|
19_0113 (X4519.5 as of 10/01/06)
Allotment 6025
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2) and 4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph g
|
Repatriation Loan Repayments
|
19X4107
|
Reimbursement
|
4 FAH-3
H-321.5, subparagraph c(2) and 4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph g
|
Interest on Public Money/Cashier Accounts
|
191435 or 201435
|
General Fund Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph b
|
Gifts to the U.S. (see below for gifts to
Department of State)
|
191299
|
General Fund Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph b
|
Consular Fees not retained by Department
of State
|
190830
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(3)
|
Machine Readable Visa (MRV) fees retained
by the Department
|
19X0113.6
|
General Fund Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph a(1)
|
Other Consular fees
|
(Varies)
|
(Varies with type of fee collected)
|
4 FAH-1 H-222
and
4 FAH-1
H-224
|
Loss Damage to Property Funded From
D&CP*
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4)
|
Fees Collected by Embassy Health
Units for Services to Nonofficial Personnel
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4)
|
Interested Party Telegrams/Phone Calls
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4)
|
Denied Boarding Compensation
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4)
|
Government Transportation Home/Office
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4)
|
|
Proceeds of Sales-Personal Property to be
Replaced Under Post Program
|
(Varies)
|
(Varies)
|
4 FAH-3
H-327.1
(4 FAH-3
H-327.2-1)
|
|
Unidentified Collections Pending
Resolution
|
19F3875
|
Clearing
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph c
|
|
Suspense Deposits Abroad (SDA)
Col-lections/Payment
|
19X6809
|
Deposit
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
paragraph d; (see also 4 FAH-3
H-326.2)
|
|
Citizens Services Deposits/Payments
|
19X6809
Allotment 9941
|
Deposit
|
4 FAH-3
H-326.2, subparagraph a(1)
|
|
Conditional Gift Fund Host Country Gift
(Advance) of Funds for Reparations to U.S. Government Property
|
19X8822.1
|
Trust
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph f(1); (see also 4 FAM 380 for
Gift Fund policies and procedures)
|
|
Unconditional Gift FundGeneral (gift to
Department of State)
|
19X8821.1
|
Trust
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph f(1) and 4 FAM 380
|
|
Conditional Gift FundGeneral (gift to
Department of State)
|
19X8822.1
|
Trust
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph f(1) and 4 FAM 380
|
|
Proceeds of Sales-Property not to be
Replaced
|
193220
|
Miscellaneous Receipt
|
4 FAH-3 H-322,
subparagraph b(4); see also 4 FAH-3
H-327.3, paragraph b
|
|