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The Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP) presents a meaningful opportunity for organizations working to expand access and improve outcomes in rural communities. But with federal funding comes a heightened level of scrutiny. Accounting professionals play a critical role in ensuring grant management activities are set up properly, funds are managed appropriately, compliance requirements are met, and risks are minimized. 

A strong foundation starts with understanding and applying the requirements in 2 CFR 200. Below are five essential areas every RHTP recipient should address to set up the grant management activities properly to support compliance and long-term success. 

1. Build an accounting system that meets federal standards 

Your accounting system should be designed to support clear, accurate grant tracking. At a minimum, it must allow you to: 

  • Track RHTP funds separately using unique fund identifiers 
  • Monitor budget-to-actual performance by approved cost categories 
  • Maintain transaction-level detail with supporting documentation 
  • Provide a complete audit trail from financial reports to source documents 
  • Align with federal or state reporting requirements for RHTP activities 
  • Adequately track grant activities for subrecipients 

Cost classification is a key component of this structure. Direct costs are tied specifically to the grant, such as program staff salaries, supplies, travel, and contracted services. Indirect costs support shared operations like administration, facilities, and IT. 

Organizations must either use a federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement (NICRA) or elect the 15% de minimis rate if the organization does not have a negotiated rate. 

Personnel expenses require particular attention. Time and effort reporting must reflect actual work performed, include total compensated activity, and be reviewed and approved. For employees working across multiple cost centers or activities, certifications should occur at least twice per year. 

2. Establish internal controls that support compliance with Section 200.303

This starts with a strong control environment. Organizations should have documented financial policies aligned with federal requirements, clearly defined roles and responsibilities, and ongoing staff training. Leadership should actively reinforce the importance of compliance. 

Day-to-day control activities are just as critical. These include: 

  • Segregating duties across authorization, custody, and recordkeeping (ARC) 
  • Defining clear mitigating controls in instances where the ARC activities cannot be separated  
  • Defining approval thresholds and workflows 
  • Performing regular reconciliations and management reviews 
  • Maintaining organized and complete documentation 
  • Retaining records for at least three years from the date of submission of the final financial report, in accordance with 2 CFR 200.334 (longer if required for audit, litigation, or other federal requirements)

If your program includes equipment purchases, you will also need property records and procedures for conducting physical inventories. 

3. Follow procurement standards to ensure fair and open competition 

Federal procurement rules are designed to promote competition and responsible spending. Your policies should align with the thresholds outlined in 2 CFR 200. 

  • Micro-purchases up to $10,000 do not require quotes but must be reasonably priced 
  • Small purchases up to $250,000 require quotes from multiple qualified sources 
  • Larger purchases may require sealed bids or competitive proposals, depending on the situation 
  • Sole-source procurement is allowed only in limited circumstances and must be fully justified and documented

Before entering into any covered transaction over $25,000, you must verify that the vendor is not suspended or debarred using SAM.gov. Many organizations extend this practice to all purchases as a risk mitigation step. These checks performed against SAM.gov are also required for any employees being paid under the grant in excess of $25,000. Organizations should have procedures in place to perform these checks on a monthly basis. 

Conflict of interest policies should also be clearly defined. These should address financial interests, family relationships, gifts, and outside employment, along with disclosure requirements and enforcement measures. 

4. Strengthen subrecipient oversight 

If your organization passes funding through to subrecipients, you are responsible for ensuring those subrecipients comply with federal requirements. 

Start by determining whether an entity is a subrecipient or a contractor. Subrecipients carry out program activities and make programmatic decisions. Contractors provide goods or services as part of normal business operations. This distinction affects how you monitor and manage the relationship, so it should be clearly documented. 

  • The prime recipient should develop clear grant agreements, terms and conditions, and other grant reporting templates that are in compliance with 2 CFR Part 200 and the specific requirements of the RHT program. These documents should be developed in order to provide the subrecipients with clear guidance and responsibilities under the grant.  
  • Before issuing an award, assess subrecipient risk based on factors like prior audit results, experience with federal funding, and internal systems. You will also need to confirm eligibility through SAM.gov and communicate all required award details. 
  • Ongoing monitoring should include reviewing financial and performance reports, conducting site visits when appropriate, and obtaining single audits for entities that meet the federal threshold. Any audit findings must be addressed with a formal management decision within six months. 

5. Apply the rules for allowable costs 

Every cost charged to RHTP funding must meet the five tests for allowability. Costs must be reasonable, allocable, consistent, conform to the award terms, and fully documented. 

Some expenses require prior written approval before they can be charged to the grant. These may include pre-award costs beyond 90 days, equipment purchases over $5,000, certain participant support costs, foreign travel, and significant budget changes. 

There are also costs that are always unallowable. These include alcohol, entertainment, fundraising expenses, personal-use items, lobbying, fines, and losses from other awards. Charging these costs can lead to audit findings or repayment requirements. 

Set the foundation early 

Managing RHTP funding successfully requires more than basic accounting. It demands a proactive approach to compliance across systems, processes, and people. 

By strengthening your accounting infrastructure, reinforcing internal controls, aligning procurement practices, developing clear guidance for your subrecipients, actively monitoring subrecipients, and applying allowability rules, you can reduce risk and position your organization for clean audits and successful program outcomes. 

A solid compliance framework does more than protect funding. It allows your organization to stay focused on its mission to improve rural health where it is needed most. 

How BerryDunn can help 

Our experienced consultants have decades of expertise advising rural healthcare providers. We partner with clients to deliver rural healthcare transformation services that are practical, compliant, and sustainable—grounded in firsthand experience with rural delivery models, workforce constraints, and community needs, and aligned with CMS requirements. Learn more about our services and team.  

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Accounting and compliance essentials for Rural Health Transformation Program recipients

Read this if you are a controller, accountant, or grant manager, or a CEO or CFO involved in HRSA grant management at a health center or nonprofit. 

Time and effort reporting is more than a routine administrative task—it’s a key control to ensure that payrolls charged to federally funded grants are allowable and properly supported. Because it is a high-risk area for HRSA grantees—and a frequent audit finding—strong documentation is critical to reducing compliance exposure and administrative burden. This article breaks down what time and effort reporting is, why the urgency has increased, and what health centers can do to strengthen practices and lower risks.

What is time and effort reporting? 

Time and effort reporting is the process by which federal grant recipients track time worked under their various grant programs. Any employee working on a federally funded project is required to document the time they spend on work related to the project. The tracking performed by the organization provides assurance that an employee's work allocated to the specified grants aligns with the terms and conditions of the award. Estimates are not allowed—only hours worked—and the work must comply with the allowable cost principles required for the grant recipient and in-scope services.

How tracking time and effort typically works 

There are two common approaches to tracking time and effort: 

  1. Charging 100% of an employee’s time to a grant with periodic attestation 

This is the easiest and most common method for tracking. On a regular basis (typically monthly), the employee signs an attestation form that they have spent this time on allowable activities under the scope of a grant.

This approach comes with an important caveat: tracking earnings up to the Federal Executive Level II wage cap. This wage cap is the maximum annual salary a federally paid employee can earn, currently set at $220,700 for calendar year 2026. If an employee’s gross wages exceed the executive-level compensation threshold and they charge 100% of their time to a federally funded grant, the organization must implement additional safeguards. These safeguards are to ensure the portion of compensation above the threshold is covered by operations. This process should be performed by pay period, which ensures that if an employee charged to the grant is terminated, their wages charged are within the allowable threshold. Some payroll and time entry systems can accommodate this process. However, it is more widely adopted via Excel spreadsheets.

  1. Specific identification of time across grants through detailed time-entry coding that must be reviewed and approved 

This more complex mechanism for tracking is commonly used by health centers with multiple federal grants and requires the employee to code their time by federally funded project. The executive-level threshold still applies under this methodology and becomes more cumbersome as the threshold must be reduced by the employee allocation to each grant. For example, if the employee's time for a period is 50% charged to a grant, the threshold is also reduced to 50%. 

Why time and effort reporting is critical now 

Documenting time and effort for work tied to a federal grant is a core compliance control linked to federal allowable cost requirements. To mitigate compliance risk, federal agencies are applying heightened oversight of grant funding in efforts to detect fraud and misuse. With this increased government scrutiny of federally funded projects, it’s imperative that health centers and nonprofits remain audit ready—and that means implementing stronger internal controls and verification of work performed. 

In the event of an audit, an organization will be required to provide underlying details relating to the purpose of drawdowns initiated within payment management systems (PMS). If a federal grantee is found not to be in compliance with time and effort, it could lead to penalties requiring repayment of federal funds. Audit findings lead to operational disruption and administrative effort that increase the pressure on already overextended and understaffed health centers. 

Best practices for time and effort reporting 

Create audit-ready habits to reduce risks of monetary penalties and avoid last-minute administrative scrambles to compile documentation.

1) Use 100% charging and monthly attestation when possible.  

When roles are clearly within the scope of the grant and allowable, a 100% allocation with monthly attestation can be the simplest, strongest approach.

2) If time is split, detailed time tracking is imperative. 

Partial work time allocations must be supported by detailed time entry and routine supervisor approval to validate accuracy. 

3) Build controls around the executive compensation threshold. 

Organizations should actively monitor the cap (and its annual changes) and ensure charges are reduced or allocated correctly to remain under the threshold—especially for higher-paid providers and any staff not 100% on the grant. 

4) Make audit readiness a priority. 

Retain and keep attestations forms, time records, approvals, and reconciliations readily available upon request. 

5) Plan for turnover and continuity in funded positions. 

When a funded provider leaves, controls should ensure the grant-charged role continues to be documented correctly as a position (not just tied to one individual). 

BerryDunn can help 

BerryDunn’s team partners with a diverse range of healthcare and nonprofit organizations, including Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and FQHC Look-Alikes (LALs), to enhance efficiency, improve patient outcomes, and strengthen community health systems. In a rapidly evolving regulatory environment, our healthcare compliance consultants help community health centers navigate complex compliance requirements, from grant and 340B program adherence to healthcare credentialing. With expert guidance, we help you mitigate risk, gain regulatory confidence, and enhance operational integrity. Learn more about our services and team.    

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Time & effort reporting: Compliance insights for health centers and nonprofits

Every organization experiences pain points from time to time: your costs may be too high, your cycle times too slow, your error rates are unacceptable, complaints are mounting. When things go wrong, it’s often the underlying processes and systems—not the people—that are at fault. To find a solution, organizations may turn to a consulting partner, like BerryDunn, for Business Process Improvement (BPI) services.

In this article, we discuss the types of BPI and related services like business process reengineering (BPR) you might consider, and how to decide which approach is right for your organization.

What is Business Process Improvement (BPI)?

BPI involves making changes to your existing processes. The core system remains intact; the goal is to make it work better—faster, cheaper, more accurately, or with less waste.

A BPI project begins with an assessment to measure how well your technology needs, business processes, and staff competencies align with your strategic goals and objectives. BPI projects typically:

  • Build on what already exists
  • Draw on philosophies and tools from Six Sigma and Lean
  • Involve incremental changes that may be easier for your employees to absorb

Following the assessment, your consulting partner will provide recommendations and action plans to help you establish priorities, adopt and implement action plans, and make informed decisions. The recommendations are designed to improve efficiency, effectiveness, streamlining, and accuracy, while prioritizing your business goals and objectives.

Central to our approach at BerryDunn is collaboration with stakeholders to gain a solid understanding of your current environment.

When do you need more than process improvement?

BPI can be a standalone service to improve your existing organizational structures, processes, procedures, operational practices, and technology. It can also be the starting point for business process reengineering (BPR), which takes the actions from BPI analysis a step further.

BPR involves a fundamental rethinking of how work gets done. Rather than asking “How do we do this better?” it asks “Should we be doing this at all?” Whereas BPI builds on what already exists, BPR starts with a clean mindset and the willingness to redesign your business process from scratch.

Before you decide on an approach, it pays to fully understand where the pain is coming from within your business process.

Diagnose before deciding

Your consultant can be an invaluable, objective partner in diagnosing your business process pain points. Consider this four-question framework for analyzing your problem:

  1. What is the nature of the problem? Is it contained within one process or is it systemic?
  2. Is the current problem fundamentally sound? Is it poorly executed or is it the wrong process entirely?
  3. What has already been tried? Have previous fixes resulted in long-term solutions?
  4. What is our organization's capacity for change? Not just appetite, but bandwidth, leadership alignment, and change management infrastructure

Understanding the problem before deciding on a solution can save your organization significant time, money, and disruption later.

Starting on the business process improvement path

If your process is structurally sound but has accumulated inefficiencies over time—if it’s localized rather than enterprise-wide—BPI is the place to start. Time and budget constraints favor the focused, lower-risk BPI approach, which involves incremental change rather than wholesale disruption.

Key questions your BPI consultant will want to explore at the start of your project include:

  • Who will be the internal champions who can own this work?
  • What project phases should they be involved in?
  • How will we engage them in outreach and information gathering?
  • How will we measure success, and over what timeframe?

Process improvement activities are focused on understanding the challenges in existing processes and their underlying causes, then developing solutions to eliminate or mitigate those causes. If staff performance issues are identified, they are handled through coaching, training, and escalation to supervisors as needed and appropriate.

If the root cause of your problem turns out to be structural rather than operational, an approach to more fundamental changes may be warranted; We call this Business Process Reengineering (BPR). BPR is the next step to the meaningful and sustainable business process improvements you are looking for.

When process reengineering makes sense

BPR takes the actions from BPI a step further by developing new solutions to current organizational challenges. Because it may require more transformational change, BPR can be a higher risk-higher reward undertaking. Important considerations for your team include:

  • Is leadership committed to disruptive change?
  • How will we manage resistance to change?
  • Do we have the governance structures to make cross-functional decisions?
  • What is our risk tolerance, and how do we manage it?
  • How do we maintain operational continuity while the redesign is underway?

An effective approach for conducting BPR initiatives will integrate best practices and industry standards from three key disciplines: process improvement, project management, and organizational change management (OCM).

In our experience at BerryDunn, a focus on process improvement/redesign alone does not lead to meaningful and sustainable improvements: in addition to redesigning processes, the organizational culture must reinforce—and stakeholders must fully support—the changes.

Key takeaways

  • Assess your pain points first to determine whether incremental improvement (BPI) or full redesign (BPR) is the right approach.
  • Differentiate between BPI and BPR—improve existing processes for efficiency or redesign them when they no longer meet organizational needs.
  • Align change efforts with business goals to ensure process improvements deliver measurable, sustainable outcomes.
  • Engage stakeholders across the organization to uncover root causes, build buy‑in, and support successful implementation.
  • Partner with experienced advisors to guide assessment, prioritization and execution for long‑term organizational change.

Leveraging your Business Process Improvement investment

Organizational capability building (OCB) is one of BerryDunn’s core services, designed to help organizations optimize their business operations and sustain the gains they made through the BPI/BPR initiative. We work with organizations of all kinds to solve business process problems, build a culture of continuous improvement, and provide the support and guidance necessary to successfully execute their project goals and objectives. Learn more about our services and team. 

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Business process improvement: Finding the right approach to organizational change

Read this if you are a fiduciary for a defined contribution retirement plan.

Over the past several years, fiduciaries of defined contribution (DC) retirement plans—particularly 401(k) plans—have faced a sustained wave of ERISA class‑action litigation. While early cases focused heavily on excessive recordkeeping fees and imprudent investment options, recent lawsuits have sharpened their focus on plan forfeitures and revenue-sharing accounts, alleging breaches of fiduciary duty related to how these amounts are used, allocated, and disclosed.

Plaintiffs’ firms are increasingly targeting routine plan practices that were historically viewed as operational or discretionary, arguing that these practices result in unnecessary plan expenses or unfair cost shifting to participants. As a result, plan sponsors, committees, and service providers are reassessing long‑standing practices through a litigation‑risk lens.

Forfeitures: From administrative tool to litigation target 


What’s being challenged  

Forfeitures typically arise when participants terminate employment before becoming fully vested in employer contributions. Most plan documents allow forfeitures to be used to: 

  • Reduce employer contributions 
  • Pay plan administrative expenses 
  • Be reallocated to participant accounts 

Recent litigation alleges that fiduciaries breach their duties of loyalty and prudence when forfeitures are used to reduce employer contributions instead of offsetting plan expenses paid by participants. Plaintiffs argue that this effectively benefits employers at participants’ expense, even when the plan document expressly allows such use. The DOL has also targeted plans that use language that is not clear or is inconsistent with the use of forfeitures. For instance, in 2023, the DOL alleged that a plan failed to follow its own governing documents regarding the use of forfeiture funds. The judge ruled in favor of the DOL, requiring the plan sponsor to restore $575,000 to plan participants.

Key litigation themes 

  • Failure to prioritize forfeiture use to pay plan expenses 
  • Inadequate consideration of participant impact 
  • Lack of documented fiduciary deliberation 
  • Mismatch between plan document language and actual practice 

Courts have not universally agreed with plaintiffs, but the claims themselves are costly to defend and have led to settlements—even where plan language is permissive.

Revenue sharing: Heightened expectations around fee controls 


What’s being challenged 

Revenue sharing—where a portion of investment fees is used to pay recordkeeping or administrative costs—remains a common industry practice. However, plaintiffs continue to challenge: 

  • The reasonableness of total plan fees 
  • The use of asset‑based revenue sharing instead of per‑participant fees 
  • Alleged failure to monitor accumulating revenue credits or “ERISA accounts” 

A frequent allegation is that fiduciaries allowed revenue-sharing balances to accumulate beyond reasonable plan needs or failed to rebate excess amounts to participants, resulting in participants indirectly subsidizing plan expenses without adequate disclosure.

Key litigation themes 

  • Inadequate benchmarking of recordkeeping fees 
  • Lack of periodic review and return of excess revenue 
  • Failure to convert to flat‑dollar (per‑capita) fees as plan assets grow 
  • Insufficient transparency around revenue‑sharing mechanics 

Best practices to prevent—or defend against—litigation 

While litigation risk cannot be fully eliminated, plan management can significantly reduce exposure through disciplined fiduciary governance.

1. Align plan operations with plan document provisions 

  • Confirm that forfeiture and revenue‑sharing practices strictly follow plan document language. 
  • Periodically review whether current provisions remain appropriate given plan size and demographics. 
  • Consider updating plan administrative policies to clearly follow the priority rules in the plan documents for forfeiture use, if ambiguity exists. 

2. Document fiduciary decision‑making 

  • Detailed committee minutes should reflect discussions of forfeiture usage, fee structures, and participant impact. 
  • Evidence that fiduciaries considered alternatives is often more important than the outcome itself. 
  • Regular review is essential, rather than relying on “set it and forget it” approaches. 

3. Benchmark fees regularly 

  • Perform periodic recordkeeping and investment fee benchmarking using independent data. 
  • Ensure comparisons reflect plan size, complexity, and service scope. 
  • Evaluate whether revenue-sharing remains appropriate as plan assets grow. 

4. Actively monitor revenue-sharing accounts 

  • Review revenue‑sharing or ERISA accounts at least annually. 
  • Establish policies for the timely use or rebate of excess balances. 
  • Ensure consistent and equitable allocation methodologies. 

5. Evaluate participant impact 

  • Analyze how forfeiture usage and revenue‑sharing arrangements affect different participant cohorts. 
  • Be especially mindful of whether participants bear expenses that could otherwise be offset. 

6. Enhance fee transparency and disclosures 

  • Confirm required participant disclosures accurately explain revenue‑sharing arrangements. 
  • Align committee understanding with what participants are told. 
  • Reduce confusion and litigation risk with clear communication. 

Focus on fiduciary process 

The recent litigation trend does not suggest that forfeitures or revenue sharing are inherently improper. Rather, courts and plaintiffs’ counsel are signaling that process, documentation, and participant‑centric decision‑making are paramount. For plan fiduciaries, the question is no longer just what the plan allows—but whether fiduciaries can demonstrate a prudent, well‑reasoned process that prioritizes participants’ interests. As always, your BerryDunn team is here to help.

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Reducing ERISA litigation risk for 401(k) plan fiduciaries

Community engagement is at the heart of what we do as parks and recreation professionals. When it works, it builds trust, strengthens programs, and leads to better, community-driven decisions. When it falls short, participation drops, projects lose momentum, and we risk hearing from the same voices over and over.  

The reality is that most engagement challenges are shared across agencies. The difference lies in how we respond. With the right strategies, even persistent barriers can become opportunities to connect more meaningfully with our communities. 

Why community engagement still matters 

Strong engagement leads to better outcomes—plain and simple. It increases transparency, improves equity in decision-making, and helps ensure parks and programs reflect real community needs.  

More importantly, it reinforces something we all value: trust. When people feel heard, they’re more likely to stay involved, support initiatives, and advocate for your system long term. 

Common barriers to community engagement—and practical ways to overcome them 
 

1. Balancing the vocal minority and the silent majority 

Every engagement process has its regulars—the highly engaged individuals who consistently show up and share feedback. Their input is valuable, but it can unintentionally skew perception if it’s the dominant voice. Meanwhile, the majority of the community often remains quiet due to time constraints, lack of awareness, or uncertainty about how to participate.

What works in practice: 

  • Diversify outreach methods (social, text, in-park signage, events) 
  • Offer low-effort ways to participate, such as quick polls or QR codes 
  • Facilitate meetings intentionally to prevent any one voice from dominating 

The goal isn’t to quiet the vocal group—it’s to broaden the conversation. 

2. Addressing survey fatigue 

Surveys are a staple in engagement, but over-reliance can backfire. Long, frequent surveys often lead to lower response rates and less reliable data.  

What works in practice: 

  • Keep surveys brief and focused on a single topic 
  • Reduce frequency and be strategic about timing 
  • Pair surveys with interactive experiences like idea walls or live feedback stations 

Closing the feedback loop is critical here. When people see how their input shaped outcomes, future participation becomes easier to earn. 

3. Competing with convenience 

We’re not just competing with other priorities—we’re competing with convenience. If engagement requires too much effort, many people will opt out. 

What works in practice: 

  • Bring engagement to existing touchpoints: events, rec programs, community spaces 
  • Offer hybrid options (in-person and digital) to meet different preferences 
  • Make participation engaging—interactive displays, giveaways, or hands-on activities 

Think about engagement as an experience, not an obligation. 

4. Navigating trust gaps 

In some communities, skepticism toward government can limit participation before engagement even begins. That hesitation often stems from past experiences or a perception that input won’t lead to meaningful change.  

What works in practice: 

  • Partner with trusted community leaders and organizations 
  • Use plain, approachable language—avoid overly formal or institutional tone 
  • Show consistency by engaging early and often, not just during major projects 

Trust is built through repetition and authenticity, not just well-designed outreach campaigns. 

5. Doing more with limited resources 

Budget constraints are a reality for most agencies, but meaningful engagement doesn’t require a large investment—it requires intentionality.  

What works in practice: 

  • Focus on high-impact, low-cost tactics (pop-up engagement, digital tools) 
  • Leverage partnerships with local organizations, schools, and businesses 
  • Use technology to scale outreach without significantly increasing costs 

The most effective strategies are often the ones that meet people where they already are. 

A more effective approach moving forward 

Across all of these barriers, one theme stands out: engagement works best when it’s designed around the community—not the process. 

Leading practices emphasize engagement that is: 

  • Immersive (interactive and participatory) 
  • Customized (tailored to specific audiences) 
  • Convenient (easy to access and contribute) 
  • Inclusive (welcoming to all voices) 
  • Defensible (transparent and data-informed) 

When these principles guide your approach, engagement becomes more than a checkbox—it becomes a strategic advantage. 

Now turn these ideas into action 

Overcoming barriers to community engagement isn’t about finding one perfect tactic. It’s about layering strategies, staying flexible, and continuously refining your approach based on what works. The communities we serve are dynamic. Our engagement strategies should be too. 

How we can help 

BerryDunn's consultants work with you to improve operations, drive innovation, and identify service improvements based on community need—all from the perspective of our team’s combined 100 years of hands-on experience. We provide practical park solutions, recreation expertise, and library consulting. Learn more about our team and services. 

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Overcoming barriers to community engagement in parks and recreation