home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0557>
- <title>
- Mar. 18, 1991: Scandal In The Laboratories
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 18, 1991 A Moment To Savor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 74
- Scandal in the Laboratories
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Inquiries at Stanford turn a harsh light on how university
- research is funded
- </p>
- <p>By Susan Tifft--Reported by Katherine L. Mihok/Palo Alto and
- Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The earthquake that rocked San Francisco almost two years
- ago did $160 million worth of damage to nearby Stanford
- University. This week tremors of a different sort threaten to
- rattle the elite Palo Alto-based institution--and dent its
- coffers by as much as $200 million. On Wednesday, Michigan
- Democrat John Dingell, chairman of a House investigative
- subcommittee, is to hold a daylong hearing on allegations that
- throughout the 1980s, Stanford routinely overcharged taxpayers
- for millions of dollars in research-related expenses.
- </p>
- <p> No fewer than four federal agencies are looking into the
- creative-bookkeeping practices that enabled the university to
- bill Uncle Sam for depreciation on a 72-ft. yacht; faculty
- discounts on tickets to athletic events; and a percentage of
- the cost of flowers, bedsheets, tablecloths and antiques for
- the president's house. In January, Stanford agreed to refund
- $500,000 in government money used to maintain three
- university-owned houses, including the president's, and to pay
- back more than $180,000 on the yacht, a charge that the school
- said was an accounting error. But Dingell, who has
- hyperbolically likened Stanford's deeds to the
- defense-contractor scandals of the 1980s, wants to use the
- transgressions to stir debate on the lack of accountability in
- the government-university relationship. "At a time when U.S.
- scientific efforts are falling behind," says Dingell, "to have
- research money spent frivolously is simply not acceptable."
- </p>
- <p> Stanford's predicament raises troubling questions about how
- the government and universities spend taxpayer dollars intended
- for scientific research. This week's hearing is expected to
- focus not only on Stanford's questionable accounting practices
- but also on the agency that monitored the school's federal
- contracts, the Defense Department's Office of Naval Research.
- That group failed to audit thoroughly Stanford's overhead
- costs for almost a decade. Says Middlebury College President
- Timothy Light of the current system for underwriting
- university-based research: "It's a ghastly mess."
- </p>
- <p> At the center of the maelstrom is a set of arcane rules,
- installed gradually after World War II, that turned the Federal
- Government into America's primary sponsor of university
- research. Under these regulations, the government foots the
- bill for research and many of the overhead costs of doing
- research. These so-called indirect costs, which are not
- attached to any single project, include university-wide
- expenses like administration, libraries, roads, utilities and
- building maintenance. Every university charges the government
- a different rate for overhead, based on such considerations as
- geography, which determines a school's energy and wage costs,
- and the size and age of its facilities. The rates are set
- during periodic haggling sessions with one of three U.S.
- agencies: the departments of Defense, Energy, or Health and
- Human Services.
- </p>
- <p> Stanford's 74% overhead rate was among the highest in the
- country (it was recently slashed to 70%), in part because the
- school was unusually aggressive about recouping every nickel
- it could. "I expect our controllers to do their best on behalf
- of the university," says Stanford President Donald Kennedy.
- Some would argue, however, that Stanford's controllers were
- overly zealous in their quest for money. Defense Department
- auditors say the university has been so uncooperative in the
- investigation that they threatened last week to turn the matter
- over to the Justice Department.
- </p>
- <p> Defenders of the funding system hasten to note that a 74%
- overhead rate does not mean that 74 cents out of every research
- dollar is spent on library books and electric bills. Under
- government regulations, universities are prohibited from
- applying overhead rates to certain research-related expenses.
- Equipment purchases, for instance, are not permitted in the
- total; neither are subcontracts over $25,000. Thus if a Johns
- Hopkins professor gets a $100,000 grant to cover his direct
- costs of research, he may be able to apply his school's
- indirect-cost rate--65%--to only $60,000 of it, making the
- tab for overhead $39,000. Consequently, the university would
- receive a total of $139,000 in government funds.
- </p>
- <p> Nor do low indirect-cost rates necessarily add up to a
- better deal for the public. The University of Wisconsin at
- Madison, for instance, has a rate of just 44%, but that is
- partly because state taxes help cover the cost of buildings,
- heat and other overhead expenses connected with research.
- Taxpayers still pay the bulk of the bill, just as they do at
- Stanford; there are simply more state tax dollars in the mix
- than at a private school. Rates are typically lower at public
- institutions anyway. Unlike Cornell or M.I.T., these schools
- have little incentive to comb federal guidelines for every
- allowable expense since, in some states, most of the overhead
- recovered from the government goes into state coffers, not the
- universities'.
- </p>
- <p> The items that schools include in their overhead bills vary
- widely. Columbia, Harvard, M.I.T. and Cornell argue that their
- presidents' residences are part of "general administration" in
- support of research, and they charge the government anywhere
- from 14% to 68% of the maintenance costs. Other universities,
- such as Yale and Johns Hopkins, consider the amount involved
- too small to bother recovering from the government. Unlike
- those for Stanford's yacht, such charges are legal. Still, they
- are difficult to defend. "The public doesn't think the
- president's mansion ought to be shifted to the research
- budget," says Norman Scott, vice president for research and
- advanced studies at Cornell. "It doesn't smell good."
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Government is supposed to audit a university's
- overhead charges every two or three years. In the case of
- Stanford, however, the Office of Naval Research did not
- adequately check claims and receipts for fiscal years 1983
- through 1988 and did not audit 1981-82 at all. Worse still,
- during that time it signed off on 125 "memoranda of
- understanding," formal agreements that exempted Stanford from
- accounting standards the government imposes at other schools.
- </p>
- <p> Washington also shoulders some blame for creating the
- impossible tangle of rules that govern overhead reimbursements.
- "It's important to remember that the same people who produced
- the tax law produced this horrible cost-recovery system," says
- Robert Zemsky, director of the Higher Education Research
- Program at the University of Pennsylvania. Even those schools
- that are determined to redeem allowable expenses say it is too
- complicated and time consuming to try to reclaim the full cost
- of doing research.
- </p>
- <p> Administrators point out that private industry charges
- overhead rates well over 100%, making university-based projects
- a relative bargain. "We're not looking at a situation where
- people are getting rich," says former M.I.T. Provost John
- Deutch. "This is not like Michael Milken." Despite an overhead
- rate of 77%, for example, Harvard Medical School in 1989 still
- had to finance 17% of research-related indirect costs out of
- its own pocket. The rate has since soared to 88%, and Harvard
- Medical is now asking government negotiators to agree to an
- even more mind-boggling figure: 104%.
- </p>
- <p> Lurking behind the debate about out-of-sight overhead rates
- and suspicious-sounding bills for flowers and bedsheets is a
- deeper issue: the high cost of modern research. During the
- Sputnik era, Washington launched an ambitious university
- building program, which it abruptly abandoned in the late
- 1960s. Since then, private universities have had to raise their
- own construction and renovation funds. At the same time, they
- have had to grapple with unrealistic government regulations
- that require them to write off building costs on a 50-year
- timetable, despite the fact that most scientific facilities
- outlive their usefulness in just two decades.
- </p>
- <p> In order to recoup some of the skyrocketing costs of
- erecting new labs and technical libraries, schools have become
- increasingly aggressive about billing Washington for overhead.
- It is no accident that Stanford's indirect-cost rate jumped 16%
- from 1982 to 1990, a period that coincided with a building boom
- on the campus. At some schools, reimbursements for overhead
- have come to account for alarming chunks of the budget. In
- fiscal 1990, Stanford relied on federal overhead to make up 22%
- of its operating funds. "They're hooked," says Middlebury's
- Light. "They've become dependent on the research money for
- regular functions."
- </p>
- <p> The government, meanwhile, faces a budget crunch that makes
- it less willing than ever to help universities expand or update
- their scientific infrastructure. "The National Science
- Foundation and others are saying, `If we've got to set
- priorities, we'd better do the substance,'" says Joseph
- Gilmour, vice president for strategic planning at Georgia Tech.
- </p>
- <p> Administrators fear that this week's hearing may turn into
- a university-bashing free-for-all. If that happens, Congress
- may move to limit sharply what can be considered a legitimate
- overhead expense, or anxious research institutions may have to
- cap their indirect-cost rates--or both. Closer regulation of
- indirect-cost charges is obviously needed. But for schools
- already squeezed by the recession, declining enrollments owing
- to the baby bust and outrage over high tuition costs, yet
- another budgetary constraint could prove devastating.
- "Universities are fragile places," says Marvin Ebel, associate
- dean of the graduate school at the University of Wisconsin at
- Madison. "They don't operate with big cushions. Bad years can
- lead to some real destruction."
- </p>
- <p> For the near term, universities had better be prepared for
- tighter belts and closer scrutiny. Already the General
- Accounting Office is delving into overhead charges at Harvard
- Medical School. And this spring Dingell's subcommittee plans
- to initiate similar probes at M.I.T., Johns Hopkins, Columbia,
- the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Southern
- California. The aftershocks of the Stanford tremors are certain
- to be felt for some time to come.
- </p>
- <p>FOCUS ON FUNDS
- </p>
- <p> Top 10 recipients of federal research-and-development
- expenditures and their indirect cost rates. (This rate
- determines what universities may charge for their overhead
- expenses.)
- </p>
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Johns Hopkins<cell type=i>65%
- <row><cell>Stanford<cell>70%
- <row><cell>M.I.T.<cell>57.5%
- <row><cell>U. of Washington<cell>53%
- <row><cell>U. of Michigan<cell>59%
- <row><cell>U.C. at San Diego<cell>49%
- <row><cell>U. of Wisconsin at Madison<cell>44%
- <row><cell>U.C. at San Francisco<cell>38.5%
- <row><cell>UCLA<cell>48%
- <row><cell>Cornell<cell>75%
- </table>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-
-