Purchasing Policy and Procedures

  • Table of Contents
  • I. Purpose.
  • II. Objective.
  • III. Scope.
  • IV. Policy Statement
  • V. When Does The Purchasing Staff Need To Be Involved.
  • VI. Who is Authorized to Legally Commit Morehouse School of Medicine.
  • VII. Ethical and Legal Considerations in Procurement.
  • VIII. Standards of Ethical Conduct.
  • IX. Conflict of Interest.
  • X. Unauthorized Purchases.
  • XI. Business Purpose.
  • XII. Purchasing Card (P-Card).
  • XIII. Grants and Contracts.
  • XIV. Vendor Selection.
  • XV. Bidding Process.
  • XVI. Initiating the Requisition.
  • XVII. Preparing and Issuing Direct Payment Request.
  • XVIII. Processing Sole Source Purchases.
  • XIX. Processing Standing Purchase Orders.
  • XX. Receiving Goods and Services.
  • XXI. Returning Goods and Canceling Goods & Services.
  • XXII. Preparing a Change Order.
  • XXIII. Tracking Open Purchase Orders.
  • XXIV. Performing Year-End Maintenance.
  • XXV. Other Customer Services Available.
  • XXVI. Definitions.

I. Purpose

To establish policy statements, guidelines and procedures to effectively manage the Morehouse School of Medicine’s purchasing process. It establishes procedures and practices that fully leverage MSM’s purchasing power in the marketplace; reflects good business practices; protects the best interest of the Institution and outlines the specific responsibility and authority of the departments, business units and the Purchasing office.

II. Objective

The policy and procedures are to guide all procurement transactions. Responsible stewardship in the expenditure of MSM funds entails the proper combination of price, quality, reliability, service and delivery terms, and compliance with donor and sponsor requirements, best practices, and sound internal control.

III. Scope

This policy applies to all individuals involved in making purchasing decisions or approving purchases on behalf of their department or business unit.

IV. Policy Statement

All funds deposited with the School, regardless of source, are considered School funds and must be expended in accordance with School policies and guidelines. The School assumes no obligations except on a duly authorized Purchase Order. Only those positions designated as the final approver in Section VI. are authorized to commit the School.

V. When Does The Purchasing Staff Need To Be Involved

The Purchasing Office needs to be involved from the very beginning, or as soon as you decide to spend money for any purchases of goods and/or services from unrestricted or restricted (grants & contracts) operating budgets.

VI. Who is Authorized to Legally Commit Morehouse School of Medicine

APPROVAL TABLE

The following table outlines the purchasing documents and the final approvers for each document.

Documents

Final Approver

Contracts and Purchase Requisitions up to $25,000

Department / Unit Head

Contracts and Purchase Requisitions $25,001 to $50,000

Vice President, Assoc. Dean

Contracts and Purchase Requisitions $50,001 and above

President or CFO/Sr. VP for Administration for Administrative purchases; President or Dean/Sr. VP for Academic Affairs for Academic purchases

International Travel Requests (includes Hawaii and Alaska)

President or designee (Dean for Academic requests and Sr. VP for Administration for Administrative requests.

VII. Ethical and Legal Considerations in Procurement

The school must comply with the laws governing its operations. Individuals making purchases on behalf of the school must adhere to specific practices in bidding, purchasing, and paying for goods and services. These practices are driven by compliance with applicable laws and regulations, school policies, and sound and ethical business management.

VIII. Standards of Ethical Conduct

All employees must adhere to the School’s Code of Conduct and adhere to the highest standards of ethical conduct. The Code of Conduct is located on the website for the School’s Office of Compliance and Internal Audit. Examples of illegal and unethical practices include engaging in price fixing arrangements; bid rigging acts; agreements with competitors to divide or allocate markets or customers; falsifying accounting records; intentional misrepresentations to the school’s auditors; bribery; kickbacks; and political contributions.

Federal law prohibits MSM from entering into a subcontract with a contractor who has been debarred, suspended, or proposed for debarment by the Federal government. Staff in the Office of Sponsor Research Administration and Purchasing should go (to (visit) www.epls.gov to see if a potential vendor is on the excluded parties list.

Personal gifts or gratuities should comply with the Employee Code of Conduct and Conflict of Interest Policy.

Environmentally Preferred Procurement

MSM will promote environmentally responsible procurement by identifying sustainable products and services, practices, processes, and procedures.

Supplier Diversity

MSM will promote the development of significant and mutually beneficial business relationships with diverse and local suppliers. For more information on diverse suppliers, see www.sba.gov/services.

Relationships with Suppliers

MSM will maintain the highest standards of business ethics and conduct when interacting with suppliers. Relationships with suppliers will support the promotion of environmentally preferred practices, diverse business utilization, and small business.

IX. Conflict of Interest

The school expects its faculty and staff to avoid any real or potential conflict of interest when procuring goods or services on its behalf. The MSM Conflict of Interest Policy is located on the MSM compliance webpage and the MSM Employee handbook.

X. Unauthorized Purchases

Individuals must not make unauthorized purchases, that is, those that are not in compliance with any aspect of this or other school policy. Such purposes include improper bidding and/or making commitments for payments without proper authorization. To do so the employee may be held personally liable and can be subject to disciplinary action.

XI. Business Purpose

Individuals must not make purchases from suppliers that are not for an approved business purpose. Procurement of goods or services, including the use of the School’s tax-exempt status, for personal use is strictly prohibited. There are several MSM discounts available to staff/faculty/students. For further information concerning these discounts check with the Purchasing Office. Procurement for the purposes of resale must be made in accordance with the authorized activity of the business unit.

XII. Purchasing Card (P-Card)

The MSM Purchasing card should be used to procure small dollar items not to exceed $1,500.00 per transaction. To obtain a P-Card the requestor must complete an application and have approval by the Department / Unit Head and Division Head. Detailed instructions are provided in the Purchasing Card Policy.

XIII. Grants and Contracts

When making purchases with funds from Grants and Contracts, individuals must comply with all governing laws or regulations. This applies to federal, state, local or private sources of funds.

XIV. Vendor Selection

The vendor selection process must identify the best, most qualified and/or suitable vendor to meet the needs of the School, while complying with all applicable laws and regulations. Vendor selection and approval must be managed by an authorized procurement agent. In many cases, suppliers are preselected based on campus input, screened, and negotiations conducted, resulting in preferred supplier agreements. Where such agreements exist, units should procure goods and services from these preferred suppliers.. In situations where a preferred supplier agreement does not exist and where the purchase exceeds the formal bid limit of $10,000, units must identify a vendor through competitive bidding or a sole source justification and accordance with Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR).

XV. Bidding Process

MSM will engage in competitive bidding in a manner that creates a fair, open, and competitive environment for qualified vendors, and that secures the best value possible.

Individuals must adhere to the following requirements when engaging the bid process:

  1. When a purchase will exceed $1000, but less than $5000 obtain a minimum of three telephones or electronic quotes prior to being processed by the Purchasing Office when a preferred vendor is not available.
  2. When a purchase will exceed $5000, but less than $10,000 obtain a Request for Quotation by a minimum of three vendors prior to processing by the Purchasing Office.
  3. When a purchase exceeds $10,000, obtain a Request for Quotation, Request for Bid, or Request for Proposal by the minimum of three vendors prior to processing by the Purchasing Office.

XVI. Initiating the Requisition

The purchaser initiates an electronic requisition using Self Service Banner. All support documentation such as; justification, bids and quotations should be included in an electronic folder and transmitted with the requisition. The requisition should be forwarded for approval as indicated in Section V. Once the requisition and supporting documentation has been reviewed and approved in purchasing a purchase order is generated.

XVII. Preparing and Issuing Direct Payment Requests

The electronic check request form should be completed and routed through the approval steps for direct payment. The form with supporting documentation should be emailed to Accounts Payable for processing. Examples of direct payments are: subscriptions, membership dues, publications, registration fees, license fees, application fees, honoraria; prizes, awards and human subject fees.

XVIII. Processing Sole Source Purchases

Sole source purchases result when a particular good or service can only be obtained from one vendor. If only one reputable, reliable, cost effective vendor exists which sells the requested goods or services and a reasonable substitute cannot be found, the sole source vendor selection must be justified in writing and included in the electronic form. The justification should address the specific reasoning that a sole source purchase is required. The electronic form is reviewed for the appropriateness and approved by the Director of Purchasing.

XIX. Processing Standing Purchase Orders

A standing purchase order is issued to select suppliers for consumable goods or services to be released over a period of time with multiple payments, normally monthly and may be on a specified schedule with a predictable payment stream. Standing purchase order items may include office, laboratory, and medical supplies, rents, leases, maintenance agreements and catering services and are valid up to one year.

Requisitions for Payment

Those request submitted for prepayments that equal the total cost for goods or services to be received should be forwarded to Accounts Payable on a Requisition for Goods and Services form. Give a brief description of the specific goods or services to be purchased (in the description area) and attach the order form (completely filled out) to the rear of the requisition. Examples of requests that should be forwarded directly to Accounts Payable are: subscriptions, membership dues, publications, software, registration fees, license fees, application fess honorarium, student stipends, human subjects, travel advances, travel expenses and mileage reimbursements. When possible attach the invoice in front of the approved requisition.

Processing of Small-Dollar Purchases

Small dollar purchases of $100.00 or less will be reimbursed through the web base expense reporting system.

XX. Receiving Goods and Services

Goods are delivered directly to the requesting office. The requestor receives the goods and packing slip. After the goods or services have been received the packing slip should be signed indication receipt of goods and scanned and emailed to Accounts Payable Office.

XXI. Returning Goods and Canceling Goods & Services

Sometimes the goods receives do not conform to the standard needed to do the job intended and need to be returned. The requestor should contact the vendor to inform them of the need to return and obtain a Return Authorization Number. The requesting office should repackage the goods and place the return address label on the package the package should be returned to the vendor. After the order has been received by the vendor notify the Purchasing Office and have the purchase order modified or voided.

When goods or services are ordered but not needed, the requesting office should contact the Purchasing Office staff to inform them of the need to cancel the order. The purchase order generated will be closed / modified in the Financial Accounting System.

XXII. Preparing a Change Order

Change orders to original purchase orders will be considered on a line item by line item basis, with the change not to exceed 10 percent (10%) of the original price. Order changes exceeding 10 percent require another requisition re-budgeting the difference in price. The Purchasing Office will issue the change order, referencing the same purchase order number and route copies to the necessary offices. The vendor will normally correspond with the purchasing Office indicating a difference in price on an item ordered. The Purchasing Office will contact the requestor for their approval before issuing the change order, once approved the change order is issued and copies are routed to the necessary offices.

XXIII. Tracking Open Purchase Orders

Purchase orders are considered “open” if the purchase order has been prepared and distributed but the requested goods or services have not been received. If a purchase order is still “open” forty-five days past the scheduled delivery date, the Purchasing Office performs various follow-up procedures to see if the vendor can provide the goods or services or if the requestor still wants the goods or services. If the requestor no longer wants the goods or services, the purchase order is closed / voided.

XXIV. Performing Year-End Maintenance

At the end of the fiscal, grant or contract year, all outstanding purchase orders must be accepted, paid and reconciled to allow the closing of the expense accounts.

XXV. Other Customer Services Available

Contact Purchasing at 404-752-1660

XXVI. Definitions

Agreement

See “Contract,” below.

Bid

A request for competitive quotation or proposal from a qualified vendor for the purpose of issuing a purchase order and contract for the procurement of goods or services.

Business Expense

A charge for goods or services, whether paid, committed, or accrued. These charges may include expenses (expenditures), debt service payments, and capital outlays.

Conflict of Interest

A situation in which a member of the MSM community has the opportunity to influence the school's business, administrative, academic, or other decisions in ways that could lead to

personal gain or advantage.

Contract

A written, legally binding agreement between MSM and an external supplier.

Diverse and Small Business Administration

A federal program that encourages the engagement of entities that are federally recognized as being “small, disadvantaged business enterprises.”

Emergency Situation

The occurrence of an unanticipated and sudden situation that is life-threatening, catastrophic in nature, or involves pressing necessity for immediate repairs, reconstruction, or maintenance in order to permit the safe continuation of a necessary use or function, or to protect the property or the life, health, or safety of any person.

e-procurement

The use of electronic systems to purchase goods and services and to process payments to third parties.

Foreign National

An individual who is a citizen of any country other than the United States

Goods

Tangible property for sale, lease, or rental (also known as merchandise or commodity).

Gifts / Gratuity

any gift, or invitation to entertainment venues, travel, room or housing, meals, transportation, and any other such action whereby the employee or family of the employee, sustain personal gain from its acceptance.

Independent Contractor

An individual or entity engaged to perform services and commonly referred to as consultant, freelancer, contractor, etc.

Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for Spend Delegation

An informal, written record containing the terms of a transaction or agreement signed between the Fixed Asset Office and one or more other unit(s) of MSM.

Preferred Supplier

A supplier with which Purchasing has negotiated and/or implemented a school-wide agreement, and that endorses as the “best overall value” in providing products, services, delivery, and customer service.

Procurement Agent

An individual who is part of a procurement organization at MSM and has been given transaction authority by the head of the procurement function to negotiate, authorize, and execute contracts on behalf of MSM.

Procurement Card (P-Card)

A credit card issued by a financial institution to employees to make purchases directly from vendors.

Purchase Order

A legally binding offer to buy goods and/or services between the school and the vendor.

Service

An activity in which labor is the major factor and not merely incidental to the production, acquisition, and/or delivery of a good.

Spend

An act of using funds to purchase goods or services, or the funds spent by a unit through its procurement processes.

Supplier

See “Vendor” definition, below.

Transaction Authority

The authority to execute transactions or agreements with external parties that commit the school.

Unit

An office, program, research center, business service center, office, or other operating unit.

Vendor

An individual or organization that provides specified and agreed upon goods and/or services to the school. May be used interchangeably with “Supplier.”

Last revised: October 21, 2010