Washington Post Story Ignores Fraud in Small Business Contracting Scandal

Press Release

Washington Post Story Ignores Fraud in Small Business Contracting Scandal

Bush Officials Claim Small Business Contracts are Miscoding Errors for the Seventh Consecutive Year

October 23, 2008

Petaluma, Calif. – For the seventh consecutive year, Bush Administration officials are still claiming that billions of dollars in federal small business contracts have been diverted to Fortune 500 firms through miscoding, human error and computer glitches.

A recent Washington Post story failed to mention 15 federal investigations, which found that blatant abuse and loopholes are rampant within federal small business contracting programs. Several investigations even found fraud.

As early as 1995, the Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General (SBA IG) found fraud in federal small business contracting programs. In its semiannual report to Congress the SBA IG stated, “of a particular fraudulent practice:  companies that SBA, after sustaining protests against them, had prohibited from representing themselves as small businesses, under a particular SIC code, were continuing to falsely certify themselves as eligible for small business set-aside contracts.” (http://www.sba.gov/ig/igsemiannual.html

In 2003, the SBA Office of Advocacy commissioned a report from Eagle Eye Publishers, which found "vendor deception" as one of the reasons large firms received federal small business contracts. (https://www.asbl.com/documents/eagkeeye_report%202002.pdf) The American Small Business League (ASBL) sued the SBA under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) forcing the SBA to release the original draft of the report that found fraud to be the cause of the problem. However, the edited version of the report released by the SBA had removed "vendor deception" as a reason for the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms and other large businesses.

In 2005, based on information provided by ASBL President Lloyd Chapman, the SBA IG issued Report 5-16 which found large firms had received federal small business contracts by making "false certifications" and "improper certifications." (http://www.sba.gov/IG/05-16.pdf)

Based on information provided by Chapman, the SBA IG found that GTSI and Insight Public Sector had misrepresented themselves as small businesses in order to receive federal small business contracts. In one investigation, GTSI was recommended for debarment for misrepresenting themselves as small and in another investigation Insight Public Sector paid a $1 million fine to settle a case in which the firm had misrepresented themselves as a small business to receive federal small business contracts. (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=533)

In 2005, the ASBL filed a lawsuit in Federal District Court, Northern District of California, which forced the SBA to release GTSI's name as the firm that had been recommend for debarment. (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=530)

This July, the Department of the Interior (DOI) Office of Inspector General released an investigation, which found the DOI had reported millions of dollars in small business awards to Fortune 500 firms. That investigation found Fortune 500 firms had listed themselves as small businesses in the government's Central Contractor Registration (CCR) database. (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=1092)

In February, Senator Obama released the statement, “It is time to end the division of federal small business contacts to corporate giants.”  Since then, Senator Obama has not mentioned the issue publicly and has not offered any specific solutions as to how his administration plans to address the problem.

Working with Senator Barbara Boxer (D - CA), ASBL President Lloyd Chapman has drafted legislation entitled, “The Small Business Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act.” The draft legislation is based on the definition of a small business in the Small Business Act of 1953, which states that a small business must be independently owned and operated. The legislation would preclude the federal government from reporting awards to publicly traded firms as small business contracts.

"The GAO first reported this problem in 2003, there have now been over a dozen investigations and hundreds of stories. It is time for Congress to pass legislation to stop small businesses from being cheated by the government," ASBL President Lloyd Chapman said.

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SBA Attempts to Minimize Diversion of Billions In Small Business Contracts to Corporate Giants

Press Release

SBA Attempts to Minimize Diversion of Billions In Small Business Contracts to Corporate Giants

SBA Tries to Conceal Magnitude of Diversion of Billions in Small Business Contracts to Fortune 500 Firms

October 23, 2008

Petaluma, Calif. - Yesterday, the Small Business Administration (SBA) distributed a press release attempting to characterize the recently presented findings of a Washington Post study as proof that only a small portion of federal small business contracts are diverted to large corporations.  However, in its release the SBA failed to recognize that the Post's study determined that the government had awarded more than $5 billion in small business contracts to large corporations from a sampling of only $13 billion in contracts.  According to the Post's findings, nearly 40 percent of the small business contracts they analyzed went to large corporations.

In July of this year, the SBA used the same technique in an attempt to counter an investigation by the Department of Interior Office of Inspector General (DOI IG), which found that the DOI had misstated the achievement of its small business goal by including Fortune 500 firms. (http://www.doioig.gov/upload/2008-G-0024.pdf) In its investigation, the DOI IG reviewed 0.3 percent of total contract actions during years 2006 and 2007 and found that over a dozen Fortune 500 firms were coded as receiving $5.7 million in small business contracts.  In response to the DOI IG's findings the SBA attempted to characterize the IG's findings as the total amount of small business contracts awarded to large businesses. 

The SBA has a long track record of attempting to misrepresent the magnitude of the problem of large corporations receiving federal small business contracts.  The SBA has gone so far as to claim that it is a myth that large corporations receive federal contracts intended for small businesses by issuing a press release on the subject. (http://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/documents/sba_homepage/news_07-30.pdf)  

It is difficult to know exactly how severe the problem is, because the government has extensively modified the data.  For example, one study found that 10,000 major contracts were removed from the government's contracting database and contract numbers for 2003 had been concealed. (https://www.asbl.com/documents/fpdsaccuracyletter10000.pdf

The SBA has fought every effort by the American Small Business League (ASBL) to expose the actual recipients of federal small business contracts.  The SBA has fought to the point that in August of this year, officials from the agency attempted to convince a United States District Court judge that the SBA did not have any information indicating the names of firms that had received federal small business contracts for FY 2005 and 2006.  After losing the case the SBA has now appealed the District Court's decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=1150)    

In Report 5-14, the SBA OIG found that the SBA itself was reporting awards to large businesses as small business awards.  In fact, the SBA was reporting awards to multinational Dutch conglomerate Buhrmann NV. (http://www.sba.gov/ig/8-14.pdf)

The pattern of what the SBA likes to call miscoding is anything but random.  One-hundred percent of the time, the miscoding results in contracts meant for legitimate small businesses being diverted to Fortune 500 firms; it's just not believable.

There have now been 15 federal investigations and hundreds of stories in the main stream media exposing the diversion of federal small business contracts to large corporations.  Despite all of this, officials at the SBA continue to try to convince the American people that the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 corporations is a myth," ASBL President Lloyd Chapman said.

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Washington Post Finds Bush Cheated Small Businesses Out of Over Half a Trillion Dollars in Contracts

Press Release

Washington Post Finds Bush Cheated Small Businesses Out of Over Half a Trillion Dollars in Contracts

October 23, 2008

Petaluma, Calif. - A recent story by the Washington Post concluded that over 40 percent of the contracts federal agencies were supposed to give to small businesses actually were diverted to Fortune 500 firms.

The Washington Post reviewed a sample of $13 billion in federal contracts that were reported as going to small businesses. In that sample, the Washington Post found over $5 billion or approximately 40 percent had actually been awarded to Fortune 500 firms such as Lockheed Martin, Dell Computer, L-3 Communications, SAIC, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics and British Aerospace (BAE).

The information reviewed by the Washington Post was the most accurate data the government has produced since 2000. In 2002, the General Accounting Office (GAO) launched an investigation based on information provided by American Small Business League (ASBL) President Lloyd Chapman (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=10), which found thousands of large businesses were receiving federal small business contracts.

The ASBL projects that the volume of federal small business contracts that were diverted to Fortune 500 firms was much larger in the earlier years of the Bush Administration, before the problem was exposed in investigative stories by CBS, ABC and CNN. (https://www.asbl.com/media2.php

The most recent estimates from the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Advocacy reported that approximately $140 billion in government contracts and subcontracts had been reported as going to small businesses each year.

The 40 percent figure uncovered by the Washington Post was just for Fortune 500 firms and other clearly large businesses. The Washington Post did not look at other large businesses that were not household names, but still would not qualify as small businesses. If all firms that did not qualify as legitimate small businesses were considered, the percentage could be much higher.

Several government officials have put the percentage of federal small business contracts that were diverted to large businesses between 50 percent and 86 percent.

Using the conservative 40 percent number uncovered by the Washington Post, during the eight years of the Bush Administration, approximately $448 billion in federal small business contracts would have been diverted to Fortune 500 firms and other large businesses.

Based on information obtained in a series of successful Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) law suits the ASBL has won against the Bush Administration, the ASBL projects that during the eight years of the Bush Administration over $600 billion and possibly as much as $800 billion in government small business contracts were diverted to corporate giants in the United States and Europe.

In February, Senator Obama stated, "Small businesses are the backbone of our nation's economy and we must protect this great resource. It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants." (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=1002)  

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Government Contracting and Small Businesses

News

Government Contracting and Small Businesses

By Carol D. Leonnig
October 22, 2008

 

Carol D.Leonnig

WashingtonPost Government Accountability Reporter

Wednesday,October 22, 2008; 2:00 PM

WashingtonPost government accountability reporter Carol D. Leonnig was online Wednesday,Oct. 22 at 2 p.m. ET to discuss problems with the government's measurements ofits contracting work with small businesses.

Thetranscript follows.

Washington: In the article you mention theAmerican Small Business League ... how representative is this organization ofsmall businesses in the U.S., and why is its voice not heard more often -- andmore loudly -- on the issues you raise?

 

Carol D.Leonnig: I'd like to give a tip of the hat to The AmericanSmall Business League, which definitely has shone a light on this problem foryears and which is like a junkyard dog on the subject. It, and leader LloydChapman, will not give up.

 

That said, Ithink at times the organization has been viewed as so strident in its argumentsthat it has turned off some of its adversaries, and even some of its potentialallies. That's not my field of expertise, but I've picked up on that vibe inreporting on this relatively small community of folks who work in smallbusiness contracting.

 

Still, at thecore, despite the strong language and the as-yet unproven allegations ofwidespread government fraud, the league's complaints about the U.S. governmentoverstating small businesses' share of federal work have been validated timeand again by independent reporting.

To view fullarticle, click here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2008/10/21/DI2008102102066.html


Agencies Counted Big Firms As Small

News

Agencies Counted Big Firms As Small

SBA Says It Will Correct Data on Federal Contracts

By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post
October 22, 2008

U.S. government agencies made at least $5 billion in mistakes in their recent reports of contracts awarded to small businesses, with many claiming credit for awards to companies that long ago outgrew the designation or never qualified in the first place, a Washington Post analysis shows.

The Post examined a sampling of the $89 billion in contracts the agencies classified as small-business awards, which help them satisfy a congressional mandate to award nearly a fourth of all government work to small firms.

In the data The Post analyzed, federal agencies counted Lockheed Martin and its subsidiaries as "small" on 207 contracts worth $143 million. Dell Computer, a Fortune 500 company, was listed as a small business on $89 million in contracts.

The Navy claimed that $60 million in work it gave to Digital System Resources, a division of General Dynamics, went to a small firm -- a year after agencies were warned that DSR did not qualify. The Defense Department, which for a century has used Electric Boat to build submarines, labeled the firm as a small business for $1 million in supplies and services. The Department of Veterans Affairs said a computer glitch caused it to claim a $29 million payment to defense security giant CACI as a small-business award.

Government officials questioned by The Post acknowledged that mistakes are a long-standing problem, leading to exaggerated claims about the amount of federal work directed to a growing sector of the economy. The Small Business Administration, which annually reports on how agencies performed, said it thinks that many agency mistakes, including some The Post identified, have been corrected in a long-delayed report it plans to release today. The SBA has worked with agencies in the past several weeks to scrub errors from the data.

An SBA spokesman said it will report that small businesses obtained $83.2 billion in federal work last year -- about a $6 billion drop from what agencies claimed last month in a federal database SBA uses to track small-business awards.

"Are there lots of errors in the data? We have to say yes," said Calvin Jenkins, SBA's deputy associate administrator for government contracting. "But is it getting more accurate? Absolutely, it is. We rely to some extent on the public to help us fix some of these obvious errors."

The federal definition of a small business varies dramatically from industry to industry. For some, a business qualifies as small if it has fewer than 500 employees. For others, it must have less than $17 million in annual revenue.

Advocates for small businesses contend that the mistaken agency claims are more than a numbers game. When agencies take credit for awarding contracts to companies that are not small, they penalize legitimate enterprises that need government help, they say.

"I keep asking, 'How does this keep happening, and why isn't it being caught?' " said Robert Taddeo, president of Pacifica Electronics, a small business that repairs military aircraft communication systems. "What I've learned is the U.S. government is just lazy and lax in making sure to use legitimate small businesses that can do the work and keep down the cost to the taxpayers."

Lloyd Chapman, president of the American Small Business League, said the Bush administration has hurt the economy by not protecting small businesses' fair share. "For very dollar that was taken away from small business and miscounted, companies were forced into bankruptcy and to close their doors," he said.

The administration pledged last year to impose new controls to ensure greater reporting accuracy. But problems persist.

Acting SBA Inspector General Peter McClintock said he is frustrated. "It is clear that more needs to be done and that contracting offices need to be held accountable for accurate reporting," he said.

Congress in 1997 established the government-wide goal of awarding 23 percent of its work to small businesses because they play an increasingly critical role in driving the economy. Small firms now employ more than half of the nation's workers and are responsible for 60 to 80 percent of jobs created each year.

The 23 percent goal is in addition to tailored government programs that reach out to disadvantaged or minority firms by setting aside certain contracts for them or programs that give bidding preferences to small businesses.

Companies doing work with the government are entered into a huge government database known as the Federal Procurement Data System and maintained by the General Services Administration. Procuring agencies note whether the company qualifies as a small business.

To sample the data's accuracy, The Post examined contracts awarded to the top 200 winners that were also classified last month as small businesses, a total of about $13 billion in contracts. The analysis also scrutinized $1 billion in contracts won by eight specific Fortune 1,000 companies and their subsidiaries.

The most errors -- 70 percent -- were made by the Defense and Homeland Security departments and the General Services Administration, the Post analysis showed.

The Post found that 36 of the 200 companies at the top of the government's list do not qualify as small under government definitions and were improperly counted. Federal procurement officials either did not check or ignored readily available records, including the government's own small-business registry.

About $1.2 billion in work was won directly by international conglomerates with thousands of employees. That included global defense giants such as British Aerospace, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) and their subsidiaries.

SAIC and its subsidiaries were the biggest winners of work that was improperly counted. The San Diego-based information technology firm and its subsidiaries won $258 million in contracts initially classified as small-business awards -- $223 million from the Defense Department. SAIC spokeswoman Laura Luke said the firm never presents itself as small and alerts the government that firms it has purchased should lose their small-business label.

The Pentagon said it is reviewing The Post's findings, but suspects some acquired companies remained classified as small under long-term contracts that were not modified.

"The department takes the accuracy of the information reported to FPDS very seriously," said James Finley, defense's deputy undersecretary for acquisition and technology.

The main reason why mistakes persist is that no real sanctions exist for agencies that consistently overstate their small-businesses awards. The errors are unlikely to be caught, officials say, because the SBA lacks the staff and the clout to stop them.

"These big companies have been allowed to get away with this for so long, they don't even bother to change or hide their name," said Bill Miera, chief executive of Fiore Industries, a military contractor in New Mexico. "The motivation is purely profit."

Corporate officials who reviewed The Post's findings said the government sometimes is mistakenly categorizing behemoth contractors as small, but more often is failing to notice when small companies are absorbed by larger corporations.

Leaders at Lockheed Martin, Dell and many other large corporations acknowledge the errors but say they are not to blame.

"We have not found any instances that Dell Marketing L.P. or Dell Federal Systems L.P. was inaccurately described (by Dell) as a small business," Dell said in a statement.

Lockheed Martin said in a statement that the government appears to have miscounted as small businesses some of the firms it purchased, and added: "We do not bid on or compete for federal contracts as a small business."

Last year, the Pentagon counted as small-business contracts the $62 million it gave to SYColeman, a video production company in Arlington.

The millions of dollars paid to produce pro-American articles and broadcasts for Iraqi television and radio, however, went to a subsidiary owned by L-3 Communications. The L-3 conglomerate headquartered in New York is the one of the world's largest defense contractors and boasted $12 billion in revenue last year.

A spokesman for U.S. Special Operations Command said that labeling SYColeman a small firm was human error.

"On June 10, 2008, the SYColeman contract was listed in the federal database as a 'small business' in error after a USSOCOM contracting officer entered the wrong code," Lt. Cmdr. Marc Boyd wrote.

Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), chairman of the Senate committee on small business, said it is another example of the government's "phony numbers" and broken promise to the small businesses that make up 99 percent of U.S. companies.

"They aren't checking. They don't care," he said. "They simply aren't doing their job of looking out for small business."

Database editors Sarah Cohen and Dan Keating and staff researchers Madonna Lebling and Julie Tate contributed to this report.

 

Source:  http://www.washingtonpost.com