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New York State Procurement Card (P-Card) |
Purchasing
Procedures By Dollar Amount Thresholds: State Purpose, IFR and Dormitory
Funds
Up To $2,500 Requestor may create and approve Purchase Orders using the campus Oracle software. Requestor may use the New York State Procurement card for most non-travel expenditures. $2,501-$19,999 $20,000-$30,000 $30,001-$150,000* $150,001+** * Transactions exceeding $100,000 require vendor's certification of responsibility per OSC Bulletin G-221. * *Certain exceptions, such as bids that have been protested, require OSC approval at lower thresholds. TAX EXEMPTION Sales and Use Tax Exemption Letter From New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (pdf file format). SUNY Tax Exemption Certificate From Florida Department of Revenue(pdf file format) Prompt Payment Section 179 of the State Finance Law requires New York State to pay vendors in a manner consistent with accepted business practices. Specifically, the law requires that when vendors are not paid within 30 calendar days (excluding legal holidays) after delivering acceptable goods/services and a proper invoice to the designated Payable Office, interest will begin to accrue. Interest will be calculated using the “overpayment rate” set by the Commissioner of Taxation and Finance. Interest will only be paid when it exceeds $10 per invoice and when payment is made directly by the State rather than through an intermediary organization such as the Trustee for Certificates of Participation, issued pursuant to Article 5-A of the State Finance Law. If a department or individual on its own authority, acting as an agent for the University, chooses to change the Purchase Order's designated Payable Office, that department shall solely bear the burden of proof of receipt of the vendor's proper invoice and assume any and all interest charges as stipulated by New York State's Prompt Payment Legislation from that point forward. If the department fails to properly record receipt date of vendor invoice, Accounts Payable will add four days to the invoice date and apply this as the invoice receipt date for interest calculation.
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