Lawmakers seek probe on DoD subcontracting

News

Lawmakers seek probe on DoD subcontracting

By Sean Reilly
Federal Times
October 29, 2010

Five House members have asked the Government Accountability Office to look into whether a Defense Department program is accomplishing its mission of increasing small-business subcontracting opportunities.

Some two decades after its creation, the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program "has never been evaluated to determine if the goals of the program have been met," Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., and the other four lawmakers wrote last month in requesting the investigation.

Specifically, they want GAO to explore whether allowing large prime contractors to use subcontracting plans on a corporate, division or plantwide basis has led to an increase in small-business subcontracting opportunities and whether primes are meeting their annual subcontracting goals. The lawmakers are also seeking a detailed accounting of the extent to which small businesses are being used as subcontractors on contracts issued to large participants in the program.

At GAO, the request is under consideration by top management, a spokeswoman said Friday.

Source: http://www.federaltimes.com/article/20101029/DEPARTMENTS01/10290303/

Democrats call for investigation of Defense subcontracting

News

Democrats call for investigation of Defense subcontracting

By Robert Brodsky
Government Executive
October 27, 2010

Five House Democrats have called on the Government Accountability Office to investigate a little-known Defense Department program designed to increase subcontracting opportunities for small businesses.

The lawmakers, led by Rep. Yvette Clarke of New York, said the Pentagon's Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program has not been formally reviewed since it was established 20 years ago.

"Until the program is evaluated and audited there is no way of knowing whether these small businesses actually received their due contracts, or whether the money went to other large contractors," Clarke said.

The investigation would determine if the program has led to an increase in small business opportunities and whether prime contractors are meeting the annual goals they establish. It also would include a detailed accounting of the use of small firms on these contracts, according to the GAO request letter.

Reps. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, Carolyn Maloney of New York, Lynn Woolsey of California, and Chellie Pingree of Maine also signed on.

The Defense Department said it is in process of conducting its own study of the effectiveness of the subcontracting program. "At this point, it would be premature to discuss a still ongoing and incomplete study," spokeswoman Cheryl Irwin said. "The study should be complete in about 12 months."

The program allows 14 large Defense contractors, including industry goliaths such as BAE Systems, Boeing Co., Lockheed Martin Corp., Northrop Grumman Corp. and Raytheon Co., to consolidate their small business subcontracting plans into one companywide document, rather than submitting them on a contract-by-contract basis.

Typically, prime contractors are required to submit an Individual Subcontracting Report for every contract over a certain dollar threshold. The report, which includes the company's small business subcontracting plans and dollar goals, allows the government to track a company's progress in meeting those objectives.

Under the program, however, participants need to turn in only a Summary Subcontracting Report once every six months. Critics suggest the diminished reporting makes it more difficult to determine if the large prime contractors are meeting their small business subcontracting goals.

"Federal contracting data calls into question whether the 14 large prime contractors who are participants in the CSPTP are actually meeting their small business subcontracting goals," the letter stated.

The goal of the program is to increase the overall percentage of subcontracts awarded to small businesses, specifically to small disadvantaged businesses. But, some small business advocates suggest it actually serves as a loophole for participating firms to circumvent small business subcontracting goals.

"Clearly this program wasn't designed to help small businesses; it was designed to help prime contractors avoid paying liquidated damages for noncompliance with their small business subcontracting goals," said Lloyd Chapman, president of the California-based American Small Business League. "The elimination of this program would force prime contractors to award billions more in subcontracts to small businesses and create jobs across the country."

Chapman said ASBL has requested numerous documents on the subcontracting program through the Freedom of Information Act, but Defense has yet to provide them.

To be eligible for the program, a prime contractor must have performed at least three Defense contracts worth more than a combined $5 million in the preceding year and have achieved a small disadvantaged business subcontracting rate of 5 percent or more.

Participants must offer a broad range of subcontracting opportunities and accept -- or at least work toward -- a small disadvantaged business goal of 5 percent or more every fiscal year. The Defense Contract Management Agency must approve the plans annually.

Congress first authorized the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program in October 1990, and it has been reauthorized three times since.

Source: http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1010/102710rb1.htm

Small-business advocate plans suit against DoD

News

Small-business advocate plans suit against DoD

By Staff
Federal Times
October 26, 2010

The American Small Business League last week said it plans to sue the Pentagon to force it to release information on a program intended to steer more contracts to small-business subcontractors.

The Defense Department has ignored numerous Freedom of Information Act requests and refused to release information on the participation of large prime contractors in the 20-year-old Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program, ASBL said. The group believes Defense has used the program, which eliminated penalties for breaking small-business subcontracting goals, to allow prime contractors to circumvent federal law requiring 23 percent of contracts to be awarded to small businesses.

The program also eliminated reports that made subcontracting data available to the public, ABSL said.

The 2011 defense authorization bill would renew the subcontracting program. But ASBL said ending it would provide $100 billion to small businesses over the next five years.

"This program needs to be abolished," ASBL President Lloyd Chapman said. "Ending this fraud and abuse would direct billions of dollars a year in federal spending to our nation's middle class and create thousands of jobs."

Source:  http://www.federaltimes.com/article/20100926/CONGRESS01/9260304/

GAO may probe validity of Pentagon small business subcontracting program

News

GAO may probe validity of Pentagon small business subcontracting program

By Staff
Central Valley Business Times
October 26, 2010

•  Comprehensive Test Program never evaluated in 20 years

•  ‘Billions more in subcontracts to small businesses and create jobs across the country’

Five members of the House of Representatives want the Government Accountability Office to investigate a Pentagon subcontracting program that was supposed to prompt big contractors into helping small business subcontractors get federal business.

But despite being renewed three times in 20 years, the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program has never been evaluated, the members of Congress say in their request for a GAO investigation.

Instead of helping small businesses win federal contracts, the program actually allows large government contractors to circumvent small business subcontracting goals, contends the American Small Business League of Petaluma.

“Clearly this program wasn’t designed to help small businesses, it was designed to help prime contractors avoid paying liquidated damages for non-compliance with their small business subcontracting goals,” says ASBL President Lloyd Chapman. “The elimination of this program would force prime contractors to award billions more in subcontracts to small businesses and create jobs across the country.”

Participants in the program include BAE Systems, Boeing, GE Aviation, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Harris Corporation and seven other prime contractors. According to federal data, participants of the CSPTP received $55.24 billion in contracts from the Department of Defense during federal fiscal year 2009.

“Federal contracting data calls into question whether the 14 large prime contractors who are participants in the CSPTP are actually meeting their small business subcontracting goals,” says the letter to the GAO, signed by Reps. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y.; Bennie Thompson, D-Miss.; Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y.; Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif.; and Chellie Pingree, D-Maine.

 

Drilldown

Download a copy of the letter here (DoD CSPTP Letter.pdf, 89 KB)


Congress to Investigate Pentagon Comprehensive Test Program

Press Release

Congress to Investigate Pentagon Comprehensive Test Program

October 26, 2010

Petaluma, Calif. – On Thursday, October 21, five members of the House of Representatives, lead by Congresswoman Yvette Clarke (D-NY) asked the U.S. Government Accountability Office (U.S. GAO) to investigate a Department of Defense (DoD) subcontracting program that appears to have slashed subcontracting opportunities for small businesses. In addition to Congresswoman Clarke, the request was backed by Representatives Bennie Thompson (D-MS), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), and Chellie Pingree (D - ME).

While the stated mission of the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program (CSPTP) is to increase contracts to small businesses, the American Small Business League (ASBL) has long maintained that the program actually allows large government prime contractors to circumvent small business subcontracting goals.  As established, the program eliminated subcontracting reports available to the public, and penalties for non-compliance with subcontracting goals. 

“Federal contracting data calls into question whether the 14 large prime contractors who are participants in the CSPTP are actually meeting their small business subcontracting goals,” the letter states.

The CSPTP was established in 1990.  To date the Program has never been evaluated.

“Clearly this program wasn’t designed to help small businesses, it was designed to help prime contractors avoid paying liquidated damages for non-compliance with their small business subcontracting goals,” ASBL President Lloyd Chapman said. “The elimination of this program would force prime contractors to award billions more in subcontracts to small businesses and create jobs across the country.”

Participants of the program include BAE Systems, GE Aviation, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Harris Corporation and seven other prime contractors.  According to federal data, participants of the CSPTP received $55.24 billion in contracts from DoD during fiscal year (FY) 2009. 1 out of every 6 dollars spent by DoD during FY 2009 were awarded to participants of the program.

“As a Member of the House Small Business Committee, I know the importance of the federal government meeting goals that it has put in place to create business opportunities for small businesses.  Evaluating the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program (CSPTP) is imperative so that we fully understand if this program has created the subcontracting opportunities for small and disadvantaged businesses that it was designed to do.  For 20 years this program has been in place, and now is the time we fully examine its progress,” stated Rep. Clarke. “Small businesses are the economic engine for our country.  Know that I will continue to hold a high level of accountability for our federal government on behalf of our small businesses nationwide.”

-###-