How Do Labor Distribution Templates Work With Time Records?
Eligibility Rules for Template Selection
Payroll Close (PR197) uses the following rules to determine which template to apply to a time record:
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The template with the most recent effective date with respect to the time record's date is used. For example, if the time record transaction date is October 6, and there are three templates, one effective September 1, one effective October 1, and one effective October 15. The template with the October 1 effective date is used.
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If the Company Control (GM00.3) has the All Approved flag set to Yes for a company, then the template with the most recent effective date where all template lines are in an approved status is used. For example, if the time record transaction date is June 15, and there are two templates, one with an effective date of May 1 where all template lines are approved and one with an effective date of June 1 where not all of the template lines have an approved state. The template with the May 1 effective date will be used.
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If there are multiple templates for an employee with the same effective date, the template that matches all data in the time record is selected. The template with company and employee only (in other words, no position/no job code or pay code) is the default template if no other template matched the data in the time record. The following flow chart explains how the eligible template is selected:
Daily Time Records Versus Pay Period Time Records
If you have one time record for an entire pay period, changes in labor distribution template dates may make it necessary to redistribute salary costs. For example, the pay period is from December 1 to December 15. You have one labor distribution template with a date range of November 7 to December 9, and a second template with a date range of December 10 to January 30. The December 15 payroll will use the template with the closest date, which is the December 10 template. To associate the employee's hours for December 1 through December 9 to the first template, you will have to create a labor cost transfer.
To more accurately charge labor distribution to grants based on grant start and end dates and to minimize the number of cost transfers required, create one time record for each day in the pay period. You only need daily time for employees who are eligible for labor distribution.
Time records can be created in a number of ways, including: standard time records, Lawson Employee Self-Service Time Entry, direct entry in Lawson Payroll, entry through Microsoft Add-Ins (Excel), or upload from a time collection system.
Implementation Tip You can create an employee group for employees eligible for labor distribution, then use the employee group to create and process standard time records for those employees.
Example — Time Records for Each Day in the Pay Period
Nathan is an hourly employee who is paid weekly. His pay period begins on November 10 and ends November 16.
One of the grants that funds Nathan's salary ends on November 12, and a new grant begins on November 13. Two templates will be setup for Nathan with the following information using Nathan's HR company and employee number:
Activity | Effective Date | End Date | Salary % |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 | 08/7/2003 | 08/06/2004 | 40% |
Clinical Trial Grant 1 Yr 2 | 08/7/2003 | 11/12/2003 | 60% |
Activity | Effective Date | End Date | Salary % |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 | 11/13/2003 | 08/06/2004 | 40% |
Cardiology Clinical | 11/13/2003 | 11/12/2004 | 60% |
Because time records are created daily, five time records have been created for Nathan for the pay period ending November 16:
Time Record Date | Pay Code | Hours | Rate of Pay | Wages |
November 10 | Regular | 8 | $25 | $200 |
November 11 | Regular | 8 | $25 | $200 |
November 12 | Regular | 8 | $25 | $200 |
November 13 | Regular | 8 | $25 | $200 |
November 14 | Regular | 8 | $25 | $200 |
Total | $1000 |
The first template is applied to the time records dated November 10, 11, and 12:
Time Record Date | Pay Code | Hrs | Wages | Activity | GL Account | Sal |
Nov 10 | Reg | 8 | $200 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Clinical Trial Grant 1 Yr 2 |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$80 $120 |
Nov 11 | Reg | 8 | $200 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Clinical Trial Grant 1 Yr 2 |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$80 $120 |
Nov 12 | Reg | 8 | $200 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Clinical Trial Grant 1 Yr 2 |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$80 $120 |
The second template, effective November 13, is applied to the November 13 and 14 time records:
Time Record Date | Pay Code | Hrs | Wages | Activity | GL Account | Sal |
Nov 13 | Reg | 8 | $200 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Cardiology Clinical |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$80 $120 |
Nov 14 | Reg | 8 | $200 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Cardiology Clinical |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$80 $120 |
The 8 hours on each time record are split based on the template's percentages. For example, 40% (3.2 hours), 60% (4.8 hours). Then the $25 rate is applied to the hours to calculate the distribution amounts.
Nathan's $1000 total salary is split and applied to the grants he worked on:
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NIH Grant 1/Year 1 = $400
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Clinical Trial Grant 1 Yr 2 = $360
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Cardiology Clinical = $240
Example — One Time Record for the Pay Period
In this example, Nathan has one time record for the pay period November 10 to November 16.
Time Record Date | Pay Code | Hours | Rate of Pay | Wages |
November 16 | Regular | 40 | $25 | $1000 |
Because the effective date of the second template is November 13, and the time record is dated November 16, template 2 is applied.
Time Record Date | Pay Code | Hrs | Wages | Activity | GL Account | Sal |
Nov 16 | Reg | 40 | $1000 |
NIH Grant 1/Year1 Cardiology Clinical |
Heart Inst Heart Inst |
$400 $600 |
Note that the Cardiology Clinical absorbs all of Nathan's salary for the week, even though it began in the middle of his pay period. To correct the distribution, a labor cost transfer must be done to reallocate a portion of the labor costs from Cardiology Clinical to the other grant, Clinical Trial Grant 1 Year 2.