Probe questions small-business data

News

Probe questions small-business data

Democrats say contracts went to big businesses such as Microsoft and inflated White House figures

By Frank Bass
Contra Costa Times
July 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - At least $12 billion in contracts the government claimed it gave to small companies last year wound up instead in the coffers of corporate giants such as Microsoft and Rolls-Royce, greatly inflating the Bush administration's record of help to small businesses, Democratic congressional investigators say.

When small-business contracts with large companies are excluded, the government missed for a sixth straight year a requirement that 23 percent of its $314 billion in annual contracts go to small businesses, House Democrats conclude in a report to be released today.

There were two basic problems, the investigators said: Federal agencies miscoded thousands of contracts to big companies as small-business awards. And many other companies that started small grew large or were purchased by corporate giants but continued to get small-business contracts.

"It's just unbelievable," said Rep. Nydia Velazquez of New York, the top Democrat on the House Small Business Committee. "We have just got to start holding agencies accountable."

Velazquez is asking the Government Accountability Office and internal watchdogs for the State, Treasury, Defense and Transportation departments to investigate their contracting procedures and see whether criminal activity is involved.

Under federal law, representatives of large companies that falsely claim to be small firms can be punished with 10 years in prison, $500,000 in fines, and a permanent ban from doing government business.

Generally, the government defines a small business as one with fewer than 500 employees, though that limit can vary among industries. In general, retail firms can only have maximum average annual receipts of $6.5 million.

The Small Business Administration last month issued a report saying the government gave 25.4 percent of its contract dollars in 2005 to small firms. SBA said it relied on contracting figures provided by each federal agency. The Democrats' report said the accurate figure was 21.6 percent.

When asked about corporate giants appearing in the tally, SBA spokesman Raul Cisneros said, "That's the official information that agencies give us."

The House Democrats' report, however, said the administration's tally of small-business contracts in 2005 included some of the world's largest companies:

  • Computer giant Microsoft Corp. won eight small-business contracts worth $1.5 million. Five contracts, worth $475,000, came from the Pentagon. The others came from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Prisons.
  • Rolls-Royce plc received $2.2 million in 63 separate contract actions. The bulk came from the Navy, which spent $2 million on 53 Rolls contracts.
  • Wal-Mart, whose more than 1.5 million workers make it the nation's largest private employer, received three small-business contracts totaling $14,232 from the Department of the Army.
  • Exxon Mobil Corp., with $370 billion in annual revenues in 2005, won a $63,855 contract from the Pentagon's Defense Logistics Agency and a $50,000 award from the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service.
  • Google Inc., the Internet search giant, won separate contracts from the U.S. Coast Guard ($41,800), the Peace Corps ($15,000) and the Federal Highway Administration ($2,995).

Executives at the companies were not able to comment without researching the contracts.

Velazquez said she plans to write roughly 2,500 big companies, asking them to remove their names from a government list of approved small-business firms, and she also will seek legislation to punish agencies that cheat.

The issue of big businesses getting more than their fair share of federal contract dollars is not new.

Lloyd Chapman, head of the Petaluma-based American Small Business League, noted that government investigators have released more than a dozen reports on the issue in the past decade, but nothing has changed.

"It's fraud," Chapman said. "This is by design. It hasn't happened by miscoding. It's become an ongoing problem, and it's getting worse and worse. I feel like I'm on this mission alone."





Report: SBA subsidizes huge corporations

News

Report: SBA subsidizes huge corporations

News Daily
July 26, 2006

PETALUMA, Calif., July 26 (UPI) -- An advocacy group says the U.S. Small Business Administration is using deceptive numbers in reporting how it helps small business.

The American Small Business League said Wednesday that SBA claims to have awarded $119 billion to businesses with 100 workers or less is overstated by about $99 billion.

An SBA spokesman, however, noted his agency simply reports contracting data given it by participating departments.

"We are just reporting ... information obtained from the Federal Procurement Data System, which is the government's official source for certified data on contracting," said the SBA's Raul Cisneros.

The American Small Business League charges that, aside from $20 billion that actually went to small businesses, the SBA awarded $99 billion to giant conglomerates like Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Bechtel and General Dynamics.

And the SBA claim last month that small businesses got a "record-breaking" $79.6 billion in federal prime contracts for 2005, or 25.4 percent of total procurement dollars, is another lie, the league said, claiming the real percentage is less than 5 percent.




Small Businesses Cheated out of $100 Billion A Year in Federal Contracts, says the American Small Business League

Press Release

Small Businesses Cheated out of $100 Billion A Year in Federal Contracts, says the American Small Business League

July 26, 2006

PETALUMA, Calif., July 26, 2006 /PRNewswire/ -- Last year, the SBA Office of Advocacy reported that $119 billion was awarded to small businesses in prime and subcontracts. But the American Small Business League has projected that small businesses with 100 employees or less received no more than $20 billion that year. The remainder of the awards went to large businesses, including major defense contractors like Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Bechtel, and General Dynamics.

The Small Business Administration announced in June that small businesses had received a "record-breaking" $79.6 billion in federal prime contracts for 2005, or 25.4% of total procurement dollars. ASBL research has led to the conclusion that not only are small businesses not getting the 25.4% of federal contracts the government claims, but in reality small firms are getting less than 5%.

The ASBL has based its conclusions on U.S. Census Bureau statistics that 98% of firms in the United States have fewer than 100 employees. These 23 million firms are where over half of all Americans work. Every major business group in the country including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) has reported that the vast majority of their members have less than 100 employees. In the NFIB's case–72% of its members have less than 10.

Federal law mandates that small businesses receive their fair share–a minimum of 23%–of the total volume of government contracts. Using the 100-employee definition as the most appropriate standard for a small business in America, the ASBL projected that these firms are receiving less than 5% of all federal contracts.

A study performed by Eagle Eye Publishers on the government's data, reported only $65 billion in prime contracts coded to small business or 17% in of total federal procurements for 2005, including thousands of awards to Fortune 1000 firms and their subsidiaries. Eagle Eye president Paul Murphy told Washington Technology that the SBA is "either comparing apples to oranges" or else "has access to numbers that the general public does not." Murphy believes that the SBA is "manipulating the appearance of success."

The SBA's June announcement cited a total procurement figure of $314 billion for 2005, yet this is not the total volume of federal contracts. The SBA's figure is derived from taking total contracts and subtracting a number of exclusions including billions in government credit card purchases, contracts performed outside the U.S., and contracts with a variety of agencies including the Transportation Security Administration and Federal Aviation Administration. According to information obtained by the ASBL through the Freedom of Information Act, the total volume of federal contracts in 2005 was $380 billion. The ASBL believes that this figure is still low and may be as high as $450 billion if unreported defense contracts are included.

"It's time for small business owners to realize that business groups that have historically claimed to represent them are conspicuously silent on this issue," stated Lloyd Chapman, president of the American Small Business League. "The absence of any objections from these major groups in the face of the wholesale diversion of billions in contracts to large corporations is proof that they do not have the best interest of small business at heart."

The Senate Small Business & Entrepreneurship Committee will address some of these issues during their Small Business Reauthorization meeting this Thursday, July 27th.

About the ASBL
The American Small Business League was formed to promote and advocate policies that provide the greatest opportunity for small businesses - the 98% of U.S. companies with less than 100 employees. The ASBL is founded on the principle that small businesses, the backbone of a vital American economy, should receive the fair treatment promised by the Small Business Act of 1953. Representing small businesses in all fields and industries throughout the United States, the ASBL monitors existing policies and proposed policy changes by the Small Business Administration and other federal agencies that affect its members.

###

Contact:
Lloyd Chapman
lchapman@asbl.com
707-789-9575
www.asbl.com



Big companies cashed in on fed contracts geared for small business

News

Big companies cashed in on fed contracts geared for small business

By Frank Bass
San Diego Union Tribune
July 25, 2006

WASHINGTON – At least $12 billion in contracts the government claimed it gave to small companies last year wound up instead in the coffers of corporate giants like Microsoft and Rolls Royce, greatly inflating the Bush administration's record of help to small businesses, Democratic congressional investigators say.

When small business contracts with large companies are excluded, the government missed for a sixth straight year a requirement that 23 percent of its $314 billion in annual contracts go to small businesses, House Democrats conclude in a report to be released Wednesday.

There were two basic problems, the investigators said: Federal agencies miscoded thousands of contracts to big companies as small business awards. And many other companies that started small grew large or were purchased by corporate giants but continued to get small business contracts.

"It's just unbelievable," said Rep. Nydia Velazquez of New York, the top Democrat on the House Small Business Committee. "We have just got to start holding agencies accountable."

Velazquez is asking the Government Accountability Office and internal watchdogs for the State, Treasury, Defense and Transportation departments to investigate their contracting procedures and see if criminal activity is involved.

Under federal law, representatives of large companies that falsely claim to be small firms can be punished with 10 years in prison, $500,000 in fines, and a permanent ban from doing government business.

Generally, the government defines a small business as one with fewer than 500 employees, though that limit can vary among industries. In general, retail firms can only have maximum average annual receipts of $6.5 million.

The Small Business Administration last month issued a report saying the government gave 25.4 percent of its contract dollars in 2005 to small firms. SBA said it relied on contracting figures provided by each federal agency. The Democrats' report said the accurate figure was 21.6 percent.

When asked about corporate giants appearing in the tally, SBA spokesman Raul Cisneros said, "That's the official information that agencies give us."

The House Democrats' report, however, said the administration's tally of small business contracts in 2005 included some of the world's largest companies:

  • Computer giant Microsoft Corp. won eight small business contracts worth $1.5 million. Five contracts, worth $475,000, came from the Pentagon. The others came from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Prisons.
  • Rolls-Royce plc received $2.2 million in 63 separate contract actions. The bulk came from the Navy, which spent $2 million on 53 Rolls contracts.
  • Wal-Mart, whose more than 1.5 million workers make it the nation's largest private employer, received three small business contracts totaling $14,232 from the Department of the Army.
  • Exxon Mobil Corp., with $370 billion in annual revenues in 2005, won a $63,855 contract from the Pentagon's Defense Logistics Agency and a $50,000 award from the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service.
  • Google Inc., the Internet search giant, won separate contracts from the U.S. Coast Guard ($41,800), the Peace Corps ($15,000) and the Federal Highway Administration ($2,995).

Executives at the companies were not immediately able to comment without researching the contracts.

Velazquez said she plans to write roughly 2,500 big companies, asking them to remove their names from a government list of approved small business firms, and also will seek legislation to punish agencies that cheat.

House Republicans said much of the controversy can be attributed to small businesses that have prospered under the Bush administration, either adding enough employees to become a large company or being acquired by large businesses.

"Should the firm be penalized for success?" asked Rich Carter, a GOP spokesman for the House Small Business Committee. "Should the agency not be given credit for taking a risk by placing their initial confidence in this small business to perform this type of work? Maybe (Democrats) believe this company should have never received the contract in the first place to satisfy some accounting standard."

But Art Munn, a California, Md.-based contractor who said he lost several contracts to larger firms, said it's not just an accounting issue.

Munn said earlier this year he had to lodge a formal protest with the SBA to save a Marine Corps contract he'd been awarded for a radar dome installation in Bahrain. Munn said he was competing with a large company that had bought out a much smaller competitor.

"It gets ugly," he said. "This time, everything worked like it was supposed to work, and I got the contract. But it gets frustrating. I waste a lot of time and money."

The issue of big businesses getting more than their fair share of federal contract dollars is not new.

Lloyd Chapman, head of the Petaluma, Calif.-based American Small Business League, noted that government investigators have released more than a dozen reports on the issue over the last decade, but nothing has changed.

"It's fraud," Chapman said. "This is by design. It hasn't happened by miscoding. It's become an ongoing problem, and it's getting worse and worse. I feel like I'm on this mission alone."





Big companies cash in on fed contracts

News

Big companies cash in on fed contracts

By Frank Bass
Akron Beacon Journal
July 25, 2006

WASHINGTON – At least $12 billion in contracts the government claimed it gave to small companies last year wound up instead in the coffers of corporate giants like Microsoft and Rolls Royce, greatly inflating the Bush administration's record of help to small businesses, Democratic congressional investigators say.

When small business contracts with large companies are excluded, the government missed for a sixth straight year a requirement that 23 percent of its $314 billion in annual contracts go to small businesses, House Democrats conclude in a report to be released Wednesday.

There were two basic problems, the investigators said: Federal agencies miscoded thousands of contracts to big companies as small business awards. And many other companies that started small grew large or were purchased by corporate giants but continued to get small business contracts.

"It's just unbelievable," said Rep. Nydia Velazquez of New York, the top Democrat on the House Small Business Committee. "We have just got to start holding agencies accountable."

Velazquez is asking the Government Accountability Office and internal watchdogs for the State, Treasury, Defense and Transportation departments to investigate their contracting procedures and see if criminal activity is involved.

Under federal law, representatives of large companies that falsely claim to be small firms can be punished with 10 years in prison, $500,000 in fines, and a permanent ban from doing government business.

Generally, the government defines a small business as one with fewer than 500 employees, though that limit can vary among industries. In general, retail firms can only have maximum average annual receipts of $6.5 million.

The Small Business Administration last month issued a report saying the government gave 25.4 percent of its contract dollars in 2005 to small firms. SBA said it relied on contracting figures provided by each federal agency. The Democrats' report said the accurate figure was 21.6 percent.

When asked about corporate giants appearing in the tally, SBA spokesman Raul Cisneros said, "That's the official information that agencies give us."

The House Democrats' report, however, said the administration's tally of small business contracts in 2005 included some of the world's largest companies:

  • Computer giant Microsoft Corp. won eight small business contracts worth $1.5 million. Five contracts, worth $475,000, came from the Pentagon. The others came from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Prisons.
  • Rolls-Royce plc received $2.2 million in 63 separate contract actions. The bulk came from the Navy, which spent $2 million on 53 Rolls contracts.
  • Wal-Mart, whose more than 1.5 million workers make it the nation's largest private employer, received three small business contracts totaling $14,232 from the Department of the Army.
  • Exxon Mobil Corp., with $370 billion in annual revenues in 2005, won a $63,855 contract from the Pentagon's Defense Logistics Agency and a $50,000 award from the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service.
  • Google Inc., the Internet search giant, won separate contracts from the U.S. Coast Guard ($41,800), the Peace Corps ($15,000) and the Federal Highway Administration ($2,995).

Executives at the companies were not immediately able to comment without researching the contracts.

Velazquez said she plans to write roughly 2,500 big companies, asking them to remove their names from a government list of approved small business firms, and also will seek legislation to punish agencies that cheat.

House Republicans said much of the controversy can be attributed to small businesses that have prospered under the Bush administration, either adding enough employees to become a large company or being acquired by large businesses.

"Should the firm be penalized for success?" asked Rich Carter, a GOP spokesman for the House Small Business Committee. "Should the agency not be given credit for taking a risk by placing their initial confidence in this small business to perform this type of work? Maybe (Democrats) believe this company should have never received the contract in the first place to satisfy some accounting standard."

But Art Munn, a California, Md.-based contractor who said he lost several contracts to larger firms, said it's not just an accounting issue.

Munn said earlier this year he had to lodge a formal protest with the SBA to save a Marine Corps contract he'd been awarded for a radar dome installation in Bahrain. Munn said he was competing with a large company that had bought out a much smaller competitor.

"It gets ugly," he said. "This time, everything worked like it was supposed to work, and I got the contract. But it gets frustrating. I waste a lot of time and money."

The issue of big businesses getting more than their fair share of federal contract dollars is not new.

Lloyd Chapman, head of the Petaluma, Calif.-based American Small Business League, noted that government investigators have released more than a dozen reports on the issue over the last decade, but nothing has changed.

"It's fraud," Chapman said. "This is by design. It hasn't happened by miscoding. It's become an ongoing problem, and it's getting worse and worse. I feel like I'm on this mission alone."