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FIND A POLICY
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PROCEDUREThere are three scenarios for payment of cell phone and cellular PDA business expenses:
Supplemental compensation to qualified employees Contracts for cell phones used in conducting business on behalf of the University should be in the employee's name as the billing entity. When an employee's supervisor or manager determines that the employee's business need for a cell phone meets all of the conditions required in the University financial policy 3.1.3, Cellular Device Business Expenses, the employee will then be granted supplemental compensation of $65.00 per month for cell phones or $130.00 per month for cellular PDAs such as Blackberry or Treo. The supplement, spread across pay periods, is taxable compensation to the employee. However, the supplemental amounts have been calculated to take taxes into consideration. An annual review of the business need for cellular services and associated additional compensation must be completed by the employee's supervisor/manager. Establishing the supplement When an employee qualifies for supplemental compensation for their cellular or cellular PDA expenses, the following procedures are applicable:
Changing or discontinuing the supplement
Equipment purchase If the department determines that the equipment should be paid by the unit, the following procedures are applicable:
Reimbursing occasional, incremental actual expenses Reimbursements may be processed for those employees who do not qualify for the supplemental compensation and who occasionally incur incremental business call expenses that have caused them to exceed the monthly minutes on their personal cell phones. Note: If the business calls made did not cause the employee to incur additional (incremental) costs on their phone bill, no reimbursement is allowed. The following are the reimbursement procedures:
Direct payment to vendor for departmental owned cell phones. The University's exemption from federal and state taxes presumes that cell phones are primarily for business and not personal use. Therefore, cell phone purchases and contracts, where the University is the official billing entity, should be approved only for those situations where the University intends for the phone to be used solely for business. The department head or designee in the unit must approve cellular phone purchases and contracts where the University is the official billing entity. Cellular phone service plans should be selected to reflect the estimated business use (i.e. service minutes). Contracts should be reviewed on an annual basis and adjusted as necessary, to reflect average business use. If departments have employees that do not meet the criteria for receiving supplemental compensation but need to be reachable by cell phone or have a need to make calls economically when away from their land phones, the department may choose to purchase calling cards or purchase and rotate a departmental cell phone which could be used by employees on an as needed basis. In these cases, the employees would not receive a salary supplement nor an expense reimbursement and the equipment would be the property of the department, used 100% for business purposes and returned to the department daily (or other time interval, e.g., weekly, as the business need dictates) after the employees work shift, e.g., parking cashiers, delivery drivers, police officers, maintenance and other security personnel, need to be accessible by phone during their work shift. This should not be an option for administrators or faculty members. When processing payments to vendors for departmentally-owned phones, we recommend use of the departmental purchasing card. Transferring Contract Title from the University to the Employee University colleges and departments are expected to implement this policy change immediately, and work with the applicable employees to transition existing cell phone contracts to the individual no later than 06/30/06. The major cell service providers do not charge a fee for this transfer, but may require establishing a new contract. If encountering a provider that does charge for transferring the contract to the employee, the department may choose to pay the transfer fee or complete the transfer at the earliest date that allows the University to avoid the fee. No renewals or extensions of existing arrangements are allowed. If the contract already exists in the employee's name, but the billing goes directly to the department, the employee should ask the cellular provider to do an address change so that the future bills go directly to the employee. Please refer to Appendix A for cell service provider specific transfer instructions. |
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2006 Regents of the University of Minnesota The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. |