2,050: Conflict of Interest Policy
Revised: March 2024
The University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä, Reno (University) fosters and encourages research, creative and scholarly endeavors, entrepreneurial activity, and interactions with external entities. However, it recognizes that some external interests and relationships can lead to real or perceived conflicts of interest. Conflicts of interest (COI) arise when financial or other personal considerations have the potential to adversely affect, or have the appearance of adversely affecting, an employee’s professional judgment or ability to fulfill his or her obligations to the University.
Conflicts of interest do not necessarily imply wrongdoing. However, undisclosed conflicts of interest can call into question the professional objectivity and ethics of the individual, damage the collegial environment, and reflect negatively on the University.
The purpose of this policy is to establish the requirements for disclosing, reviewing, managing, and eliminating conflict of interest situations at the University.
Procedures for the implementation of this policy are available on the Sponsored Projects website.
Applicability
This policy applies to all employees of the University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä, Reno.
Colleges, schools, departments, and divisions within the University may have additional conflict of interest policies that address their specific needs and include additional processes and/or requirements.
Related Regulations and Policies
University employees are considered public employees and must comply with the Code of Ethical Standards of the State of ÁùºÏ±¦µä as codified in the ÁùºÏ±¦µä Revised Statutes (.
ÁùºÏ±¦µä System of Higher Education (NSHE) Board of Regents Handbook sections addressing conflicts of interest include:
- Title 4, Chapter 10, Section 1.7: Prohibited Conflicts of Interest
- Title 4, Chapter 3, Section 9: Compensated Outside Professional Services
- Title 4, Chapter 3, Section 7: Nepotism
- Title 4, Chapter 1, Section 27: Personal Use of System Property or Resources
University Administrative Manual (UAM) policies related to conflicts of interest include:
- UAM 2,690: Faculty Providing Scholarly and Professional Outside Compensated Services
- UAM 2,051: Policy on Institutional Conflict of Interest in Research Involving Human Subjects
- UAM 6,515: Ethical Standards in the Conduct of Research
- UAM 1,525: Personal Use of University Property
- UAM 5,302: Policy for Use of University Space
As recipients of federal funding, the University complies with all federal conflict of interest regulations, including:
- 2 CFR Part 200 – the Uniform Guidance
- 42 CFR Part 50, Subpart F – Promoting Objectivity in Research
- The National Science Foundation Grant Policy Manual
- As well as all sponsor requirements
Conflict of Interest Disclosure Requirements
Certain financial interests and relationships can result in situations that create a risk that an employee’s professional judgment or actions could be unduly influenced by external interests. Disclosure is central to the university’s ability to identify these situations and take action to eliminate, reduce or manage associated risks.
All university employees must submit a conflict of interest disclosure if they have any of the significant financial interests and/or external relationships listed below (1) at the time of hire and (2) within thirty days of discovering or acquiring a new significant financial interest or external relationship.
Additionally, the following employees must annually submit a conflict of interest disclosure during the university’s conflict of interest disclosure campaign.
- Academic faculty
- Administrative faculty
- Classified staff
- Postdoctoral fellows
- Medical residents
During the annual COI disclosure campaign, the aforementioned employees either identify potential conflict of interest situations or attest that they have none. Deans, directors, and vice presidents are responsible for compliance with annual disclosure requirements for employees in their units.
Investigators submitting proposals to a Public Health Service agency, the National Science Foundation or the Department of Energy must have a current COI disclosure on record no later than at the time of proposal submission.
A disclosure informs the University about a set of circumstances that involves risk. It is not a reflection on the likelihood that the employee would actually allow an outside interest to influence his or her professional judgment or use their university position to gain an unwarranted advantage for an outside interest.
Significant Financial Interests That Must Be Disclosed
Employees must disclose the following significant financial interests of (1) the employee and (2) persons to whom the employee has a commitment in a private capacity. Generally, only financial interests that could reasonably be considered to be related to an employee’s university responsibilities need to be disclosed. Additionally, financial interests in an entity that provides or plans to provide goods or services to the University as a direct vendor must be disclosed.
- Compensation from and/or equity interest in publicly traded companies: Disclose if the aggregate value of compensation and equity interests received from a U.S. or foreign publicly traded company exceeded $5,000 in the 12 months preceding the disclosure; or if it is anticipated that the aggregate value of compensation and equity interests from a U.S. or foreign publicly traded company will exceed $5,000 in the 12-month period following the disclosure.
- Equity interest in non-publicly traded companies: Disclose any equity interest in a U.S. or foreign non-publicly traded company within the 12 months preceding the disclosure or anticipated in the 12-month period following the disclosure.
- Compensation from non-publicly traded companies, non-profit institutions, educational institutions and governmental organizations: Disclose if the aggregate value of compensation received from a U.S. or foreign non-publicly traded company, non-profit institution, educational institution or governmental organization exceeded $5,000 in the 12 months preceding the disclosure; or it is anticipated that the aggregate value of compensation will exceed $5,000 in the 12-month period following the disclosure.
Intellectual Property rights and interests: Royalty income from Traditional Scholarly Works (see UAM 6,507: Intellectual Property Policy for definition) – disclose if the aggregate income from an external entity exceeded $5,000 in the 12 months preceding the disclosure. Royalty income and intellectual property rights not related to Traditional Security Works - Disclose any level of income earned as a result of licensing and commercialization of innovations; disclose inventor rights in licensing agreements or other agreements for commercialization of innovations, whether or not any royalties or payments have been received
Significant Financial Interests That Do Not Need To Be Disclosed
- Salary, royalties, or other remuneration paid by the University to an employee when they are currently employed or otherwise appointed by the University.
- Equity interests in or income from investment vehicles (e.g., mutual funds and retirement accounts) when the employee does not directly control the investment decisions made in these vehicles.
- Income from seminars, lectures, or teaching engagements sponsored by a S. federal, state, or local government agency; a U.S. institution of higher education (as defined by 20 U.S.C. 1001(a) ); an academic teaching hospital, a medical center, or a research institute that is affiliated with a U.S. institution of higher education.
- Income from service on advisory committees or review panels for a S. federal, state, or local government agency; a U.S. institution of higher education (as defined by 20 U.S.C. 1001 (a)); an academic teaching hospital, a medical center, or a research institute that is affiliated with a U.S. institution of higher education.
External Relationships That Must Be Disclosed
The following external relationships have the potential to create conflicts of interest and must be disclosed, regardless of the level of compensation:
- Industry affiliations with pharmaceutical, medical device or medical equipment companies.
- Management positions with fiduciary responsibilities such as a board member, director, partner, or trustee with an outside entity that has a business relationship with the University.
- Relationships with foreign institutions, businesses, governments or government entities for which the employee receives an honorary appointment or title; which require participation in a “talents” program; or for which the employee receives any other benefit that will not be disclosed as a financial interest.
- Any other relationship with an external entity that has the potential to result in a conflict of interest situation.
Paid Travel That Must Be Disclosed – Public Health Service Investigators Only
Investigators on research projects funded by a Public Health Service agency must disclose the occurrence of any reimbursed or sponsored travel from an outside entity that was related to their institutional responsibilities if the aggregate value was over $5,000. Disclosure must include the purpose of the trip, the identity of the sponsor, the destination and the duration.
This disclosure requirement does not apply to travel that is reimbursed or sponsored by a federal, state, or local government agency; a U.S. institution of higher education (as defined by 20 U.S.C. 1001 (a)); an academic teaching hospital, a medical center, or a research institute that is affiliated with a U.S. institution of higher education.
Student Impact That Must Be Disclosed
To protect students’ rights as researchers and scholars, faculty members must comply with the following requirements:
- Faculty members must disclose restrictions on publication or communication rights on sponsored projects when students are involved in the project and their involvement is the basis for evaluation of the student or fulfillment of degree requirements.
- Faculty members must disclose situations in which a university student will be working as an employee, independent contractor, volunteer or intern for an outside entity in which the faculty member has a financial interest and the student is (a) enrolled in a class that the faculty member teaches; (b) under the faculty member’s supervision on a research project; or (c) the faculty member is the chair of the student’s graduate committee.
Conflict of Interest Oversight
COI Designated Official
The Conflict of Interest Designated Official is appointed by the Assistant Vice President of Compliance and Research Administration to develop, maintain and enforce the university’s conflict of interest policies and procedures; solicit and review conflict of interest disclosures; provide information and training about conflicts of interest to the university community; recruit and train Conflict of Interest Committee members; coordinate Conflict of Interest Committee meetings; and serve as a resource to senior administrators regarding conflict of interest issues.
COI Committee
The COI Committee supports the university’s goal of assuring that education, research, administration, public service and all other university activities are free from the undue influence of external interests by providing collaborative review, discussion and recommendations regarding conflict of interest situations.
The COI Committee is comprised of a committee chair and five faculty members appointed by the Vice President for Research and Innovation. COI Committee members are recruited by the COI Designated Official through the Faculty Senate committee preference survey or in consultation with major unit/departmental administrators. To facilitate a balance of perspectives, the composition of the committee should represent a broad spectrum of the campus community, including units that are involved in research activities. The COI Designated Official may serve as the committee chair. The COI Committee also includes ex officio members as appropriate for the situation under consideration.
COI Committee members serve three-year terms, must complete COI training, and must be in compliance with this COI policy. A COI Committee member may serve for more than one term.
Conflict of Interest Reviews
The COI Designated Official provides the initial assessment of a potential conflict of interest situation. If the outcome of the initial assessment is that the situation is likely to be a conflict of interest, the situation will be referred to the COI Committee. If a conflict of interest determination is made, the COI Committee recommends actions to manage or eliminate the risk.
Conflict of Interest Management
When the COI Committee has determined that a conflict of interest situation can be managed, the COI Designated Official works with the employee and others to develop and implement a COI Management Plan based on the COI Committee’s recommendations. The COI Management Plan must be approved by all persons named in the plan, as well as the employee’s dean/vice president, the Associate Vice President for Compliance and Research Administration, and the Vice President for Research and Innovation. Upon recommendation of the COI Committee, the plan must also be signed by the President of the University. The COI Management Plan must be reviewed for compliance at least annually. The plan will be closed when the conflict of interest situation no longer exists or the COI Committee determines that the risk is no longer manageable and must be eliminated.
Conflict of Interest Elimination
The Vice President for Research and Innovation, in consultation with relevant executive, unit and departmental leaders has the authority to require elimination of the conflict rather than management.
Conflict of Interest Requirements for Subrecipients
The University is required to take reasonable steps to ensure that subrecipients on sponsored projects comply with the sponsor’s conflict of interest requirements.
Appealing Conflict of Interest Determinations
Employees may appeal a conflict of interest decision through written notification to the Vice President for Research and Innovation for research-related conflict of interests, or the Executive Vice President & Provost for a non-research related conflict of interests.
Employees may appeal to the President of the University concerning the decision of the Vice President for Research and Innovation or the Executive Vice President & Provost. The President’s decision on the appeal is final.
A Vice President may appeal a conflict of interest decision by notifying the President. The President’s decision on the appeal is final.
Conflict of Interest Reporting Requirements
Sponsored Projects
The University will comply with all requirements to disclose conflicts of interest to sponsors of externally funded grants and contracts.
NSHE Scholarly and Professional Outside Compensated Services Report
The University submits an annual report to NSHE regarding compensated outside professional and scholarly services completed by its full-time faculty (aggregate data). The report also includes data on the number of annual COI disclosures submitted by each unit and the number of employees in each unit with COI Management Plans. Data from this report is sent to the Board of Regents annually.
Noncompliance with Conflict of Interest Policy
Violation of this university policy may result in discipline as specified under NSHE Code Chapter 6 and UAM 2,370 and could result in civil and criminal penalties pursuant to NRS Chapter 281A.500-550.
Institutional Conflicts of Interests
The University and its employees are bound by ÁùºÏ±¦µä State Law regarding Ethics in Government (codified at ). The University must avoid and/or manage conflicts of interests where its beneficial relationship with corporate entities may place it in conflict with its responsibilities as a public institution. Also, the University must abide by NSHE Code. See Higher Education and the Common Good ()
Definitions
- “Related to an employee’s university responsibilities”: A significant financial interest is considered to be related to an employee’s university responsibilities and must be disclosed if:
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- The employee is in a position to make or influence decisions on behalf of the University that could benefit the external entity;
- The external entity sponsors the employee’s research or other activities at the University;
- The employee is engaged in research at the University that evaluates, tests, further develops or in any other way could affect the value of intellectual property controlled by the external entity;
- The employee discusses, refers to, or promotes the external entity’s products or services during classroom or clinical instruction as part of patient care activities;
- The financial interest could result in a situation that would cause a reasonable person to question the employee’s objectivity in fulfilling their potential responsibilities for the University.
- “Compensation”: Refers to anything of value received from an outside entity in any form, including, but not limited to salary, consulting fees, speaker fees, honoraria, gifts, paid authorship, high value laboratory equipment and materials, financial support for students and laboratory personnel, loans, stocks, bonds, stock options, and rights to patent or royalty payments.
- “Equity interest”: Stock, stock options, warrants, and other existing or contingent ownership interests in a commercial entity.
- “Commitment in a private capacity”: Per NRS 281A.065, means a commitment, interest or relationship of an employee to a person:
- Who is the spouse or domestic partner of the employee;
- Who is a member of the household of the employee;
- Who is related to the employee, or to the spouse or domestic partner of the employee, by blood, adoption, marriage or domestic partnership within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity;
- Who employs the employee, the spouse or domestic partner of the employee or a member of the household of the employee;
- With whom the employee has a substantial and continuing business relationship; or
- With whom the employee has any other commitment, interest or relationship that is substantially similar to a commitment, interest or relationship described in a. to e. inclusive.
- “Investigator”: The project director or principal investigator of a sponsored project, and any other person, regardless of title or position, who is responsible for the design, conduct, or reporting of research, which may include, for example, collaborators and consultants.
- “Traditional Scholarly and Creative Works”: See UAM 6,507: Intellectual Property Policy for definition.