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Government Contracts Monitor

Contracting Opportunities

Changes to Limitations on Subcontracting

As reported in this blog back in March of 2013, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2013 (FY13) made significant changes to the limitations on subcontracting for small business set-aside contracts.  Now, twenty-one months later, the Small Business Administration (SBA) has proposed a new rule to implement those changes.  While faithfully implementing the statutory…

ShortTake: Past Performance v. Experience - Don’t Conflate the Two

In a protest decided last week, a disappointed bidder, Amyx, argued that the government was inconsistent in its evaluation of Amyx’s bid since Amyx received only a “good” rating under the relevant experience criterion but an “outstanding” rating under the past performance criterion, an argument that intuitively may seem correct since the government’s ratings were based on the same projects for…

Avoid the ‘New and Improved’ Strain of Incumbentitis

Just as people across the country have begun to recover from this year’s particularly nasty flu variant, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has issued a decision involving an especially virulent form of Incumbentitis.  This strain manifests as an incumbent’s touting a new and improved version of the same technology it used to perform the prior contract.  However understandable…

Agency Did Not Properly Consider Awardee\'s Access to Inside Information

Beware the revolving door.  It can hit you or those with you on the way in or the way out.  The Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently reminded us of this fact when it sustained a protest by International Resources Group (IRG) regarding an organizational conflict of interest.  The problem? The Agency (USAID) failed to properly investigate the awardee AECOM’s hiring of a…

New Year’s Resolutions – Reassess Your Size Status, Update Your DSBS and SAM Listings and Check Your Past Performance Ratings

Happy New Year!  The start of a new year is a time for New Year’s Resolutions.  Here are several we strongly urge you to follow-through on early in 2015.

1.   Reassess Your (and Any Subcontractors’) Small Business Size Status:  Most companies operate on a calendar year for tax reporting purposes.  For such companies the start of a new tax year, and the end of the prior year, means a change…

Big Changes on the Horizon for ZPIC Contractors

Two years after a report critical of how the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) addresses potential conflicts of interest (COIs) when choosing Zone Program Integrity Contractors (ZPICs), the chickens are finally coming home to roost – with extreme prejudice.  In July 2012, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued a report

Defending Size Protests, Part I: Overview

Much has been written, including on this blog, about filing size protests.  However, less attention is paid to an equally important subject – namely, defending size protests.  This article, the first in what will be a five-part series on defending size protests, provides an overview of size protests.  Future articles will address (i) the importance of advance consideration and…

Buy American – What Can A Government Contractor Deliver?

Many government contractors and subcontractors ask the question, “What does ‘Buy American’ mean?”  Unfortunately, Buy American refers to number of complex statutory and regulatory schemes that impose different requirements. One thing is certain, however:  whether you are conducting business with the federal government directly, as a prime contractor, or indirectly, as a subcontractor,…

Short Take: The Slow Death of Cost Reimbursement Contracts

Contracting personnel are required to obtain approval of cost reimbursement contracts at least one level above the contracting officer. FAC 2005-50 states “the contracting officer shall document the rationale for selecting the contract type in the written acquisition plan and ensure that the plan is approved and signed at least one level above the contracting officer.” The documentation must…

Size Protests – Beware: Your Protest Deadline May Be Triggered by Indirect Notice

A recent decision by the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) reminds potential size protestors that the “notice” triggering the five business day size protest period in a negotiated procurement does not have to be in writing, nor does it have to come from the cognizant contracting officer (CO), and may even be indirect, including by published announcements,…

If You See Smoke, Check for Fire

Given the FAR 9.103(b) mandate that “no purchase or award shall be made unless the contracting officer makes an affirmative determination of responsibility,” FCi Federal, Inc. (FCi) was surprised when the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) awarded a $210 million contract to FCi’s competitor, USIS PSD. Why? Because  the award came after a flurry of media reports containing allegations of…

 

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