A donor, for the purpose of this subchapter, is a non-profit charitable organization described by 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3), that is exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. 501(a).
資料由法律人 LawPlayer整理提供·U.S. federal law / curated by LawPlayer from GPO govinfo & eCFR
CONTRIBUTIONS AND AWARDS
Agencies may allow an employee to accept contributions and awards pertaining to training and payments incident to attendance at meetings when specifically authorized to do so in accordance with Office of Personnel Management guidelines (5 CFR part 410, subpart E).
Agencies may not reimburse an employee for expenses that are fully reimbursed by a donor for training in a non-Government facility, or travel expenses incident to attendance at a meeting.
Agencies may reimburse an employee for training expenses that are not fully paid by a donor, an amount considered sufficient to cover the balance of expenses to the extent authorized by law and regulation, including 5 U.S.C. 4109 and 5 U.S.C. 4110.
If agencies reimburse an employee for expenses that are also paid by a donor, agencies must establish and carry out policy in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5514 and the Federal Claims Collection Standards (31 CFR parts 900 through 904) to recover any excess amount paid to the employee.
Agencies are not required to reduce employee reimbursement when a donor pays for expenses the government cannot reimburse, for example, travel expenses for an employee's immediate family.
Agencies must set an internal policy to ensure collection of expense data in such detail as the agency deems necessary to carry out this part.
Cite this law
CONTRIBUTIONS AND AWARDS (U.S.C.). Retrieved via LawPlayer, https://lawplayer.com/us/act/cfr-title-41-part-304-9
United States government works (U.S. Code, Code of Federal Regulations) are in the public domain under 17 U.S.C. § 105.
本頁資料來源:GPO govinfo / eCFR·整理提供:法律人 LawPlayer· lawplayer.com