Discovery In Sikorsky Case Raises Doubts About Small Business Subcontracting Program

Press Release

Discovery In Sikorsky Case Raises Doubts About Small Business Subcontracting Program

By Professor Charles Tiefer
Forbes
August 15, 2017

Alawsuit by the American Small Business League, heading for trial, is suggestingthat a Defense Department program intended to promote small businesssubcontracting may well be conducted in a deceitful way.

Discoveryin the lawsuit ― against the Defense Department and Sikorsky, amajor helicopter maker ― has suggested that major defensecontractors manipulate data to falsely claim they are meeting their smallbusiness subcontracting targets. Over its lifetime, then, the program wouldfail to provide promised small business subcontracting on hundreds of billionsof federal contracting dollars. Small business would lose out on theopportunities that Congress and the public want small business to get.

TheASBL and its president, Lloyd Chapman, seek the program's records under theFreedom of Information Act. Ahead of the trial, set for December, the ASBL hasobtained documents and depositions about Sikorsky's defense contracting.

The ASBL discovery and other information point to one waycontractors can evade their subcontracting obligations.

Aprime contractor may commit to the government to meet a goal that, say, 30% ofits subcontracting will go to small business. And it may report that it did soin the first half of 2017. But what the contractor actually does may be termeda sham pass-through. The prime contractor picks out some large contractors towhich it wishes to subcontract important products for installation in itshelicopters, planes or other products for its prime contract. Then the primecontractor gets a small company to agree for some nominal fee (like1%) to "buy" the product from the large contractor and then turn around,without doing any work, and "sell" the product to the prime contractor. All thesmall company has to do is sign a contract and some receipts.

Theprime contractor then lists the full percentage of products bought through suchsham pass-throughs as qualifying as subcontracting to small business.

Infact, the prime contractor can take this one phony step further. The smallcompany chosen as the sham pass-through may qualify as one of the specializedkinds of small business that have special federal assistance programs, likewomen-owned small business or service-disabled veteran-owned small business.In that case, the prime contractor may have the cheek to count the phony smallbusiness subcontracting as compliance with its duties for those special federalassistance programs.

Wheredoes the Defense Department program, traditionally known as the ComprehensiveSubcontracting Plan Test Program, come in?

Again,the ASBL discovery and other information suggest the Test Program reducesthe specificity and transparency of large contractor reporting of assertedsmall business subcontracting. This, in turn, emboldens the large contractorsto conduct a phony system. For example, much of Sikorsky's sales to thegovernment are sole source, meaning Sikorsky has no competitors. Sole sourcingmeans Sikorsky has no legitimate fear that disclosing its small business subcontractingfigures for the sole-sourced products would give an advantage to its(non-existent) competitors. Yet Sikorsky has tried to keep its informationsecret, conveniently veiling its claims about its asserted small-businesssubcontracting.

Underthe program, large contractors need not plan or report on individual contracts;they can just create a vague overall plan for their nationwide contracting.With so little transparency, the small business subcontracting may occur onlyon a sham basis, if that small business subcontracting occurs at all.

TheASBL has calculated that the Pentagon may have deprived small business ofsubcontracting on $2 trillion since the program was started in 1989. Andunfortunately, under the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act, theprogram was extended to 2027. This would bring the so-called test, supposedlyan experimental program, to its 38th year, which hasto be some kind of unfortunate record for a test program.

In a previous round ofthis case, in November 2014, the trial judge, William Alsup, accused thePentagon and Sikorsky of trying to "suppress the evidence." He instructed thePentagon and Sikorsky on two separate occasions to "highlight the parts thatare supposedly confidential" or that they believed were proprietary and toexplain why they believed the information should be exempt.

WhenJudge Alsup ruled for the ASBL, the Ninth Circuit reversed the decision. But itdid not end or even stall the case, sending it back to Judge Alsup fordiscovery and trial. Judge Alsup's order allowing ASBL to depose Sikorsky andPentagon witnesses in the case indicates that the case is going forward. So themask of the program may finally be removed.

For the full article, clickhere: https://www.forbes.com/sites/charlestiefer/2017/08/15/spuriously-conducted-federal-subcontracting-program-revealed-in-sikorsky-case/2/#2e5f7a754041

 


Pentagon, Sikorsky sued over small-business contracts

News

Pentagon, Sikorsky sued over small-business contracts

By Anna Radelat
The CT Mirror
August 14, 2017

Washington – A group representing small businesses is suing thePentagon and Sikorsky for information about the defense contractor's hiring ofsmall and minority businesses as subcontractors.

The Sonoma,Calif.-based American Small Business League says the information it has soughtfrom Sikorsky will show the Pentagon has for decades falsified the volume ofsubcontracts that have been awarded to small businesses.

The league's lawsuitstems from it's efforts to obtain information about Sikorsky's participation ina Defense Department program aimed at increasing subcontracting opportunitiesfor small businesses.

In April of 2014, theAmerican Small Business League filed a freedom of information request for theannual report submitted by Sikorsky and about a dozen large defense contractorsthat participate in the Pentagon's Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan TestProgram. By law, federal agencies are obligated to award a portion – currently23 percent – of their contracts to small businesses and those owned by women orother disadvantaged groups.

Sikorsky initiallydeclined to provide the information, but eventually was forced to do so by afederal judge.

Despite being orderedto release an un-redacted copy of the requested documents, Sikorsky onlysupplied the court with a heavilyredacted version and appealed the judge's order to the California-based 9thCircuit Court of Appeals. A trial date of Dec. 11 has been set for the case.

The redacted documentblacked out all names and addresses of the helicopter makers' subcontractors.Sikorsky projected spending more than $913 million on large subcontractors and$272 million on small businesses and those owned by women, veterans andminorities.

Sikorsky, purchased byLockheed Martin in late 2015, said it could not divulge details of itssubcontractors because that would put it at a competitive disadvantage withother defense companies.

"At Lockheed Martin oursuppliers are integral partners in delivering our products and services to ourcustomers," said Sikorsky spokesman Paul Jackson. "Sikorsky is an activeparticipant in the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program and hascomplied with all small business requirements under the Department of Defense'sguidelines."

Jackson also saidSikorsky's Comprehensive Small Business Plan "is competition sensitive" and wasrecognized as such by the appeals court.

"We will continue towork with the Department of Defense to ensure that our rights under FOIA areprotected," Jackson said.

The business leagueargues that  Sikorsky's contracts with the government are "solesource" contracts and Sikorsky has no competitors for their Pentagonbusiness.

Headed by smallbusiness advocate Lloyd Chapman, the American Small Business League isskeptical that the Pentagon's Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Programactually helps small business.

In a recent op-ed,Chapman said the CSPTP "was designed to eliminate all transparency for thePentagon's largest prime contractors."

Chapman said the CSPTPalso eliminated all penalties that defense contractors may face fornon-compliance with federal small business contracting goals.

Witnesses at December'strial include Janice Buffler, Department of Defense associate director ofsubcontracting policy; Andrew Driver, Sikorsky Aircraft senior manager ofmarket analytics; Amy Johnson, Sikorsky director of supply chain;and Martha Crawford, Sikorsky supplier diversity manager.

For the full article,click here: https://ctmirror.org/2017/08/14/pentagon-sikorsky-sued-over-small-business-contracts/

 


Pentagon And Sikorsky Identify Witnesses In Upcoming Trial

Press Release

Pentagon And Sikorsky Identify Witnesses In Upcoming Trial

Pentagon And Sikorsky Officials To Provide Testimony In December Freedom Of Information Trial

American Small Business League
August 10, 2017

PETALUMA, Calif., Aug. 10,2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Pentagon and Sikorsky have identified four witnessesthat will be providing testimony in the upcoming December trialin a case filed by the American Small Business League (ASBL). The ASBL filedthe case after the Pentagon and Sikorsky refused to release Sikorsky's smallbusiness subcontracting plan submitted to the Pentagon's 28-year-oldComprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program (CSPTP). The ASBL believes the information will show thePentagon has falsified the volume of subcontracts that have been awarded tosmall businesses since the program began in 1989.

In 2014, Pentagon spokeswoman, Maureen Schumann acknowledgedthat due to its lack of transparency and accountability, the CSPTP "has led to an erosion of our small business industrial base"

In 2015, the Pentagon revealed that the CSPTP had actually harmedsmall businesses when they released data showing subcontracts to smallbusinesses have dropped by 50 percent. This information was released followingthe Pentagons statement that they want the CSPTP scrapped, acknowledging that there has never been anyevidence that the program achieved its goal of increasing subcontractingopportunities for small businesses.

In a November 6, 2014 hearing Judge Alsup stated, "The purpose of the Freedom of Information Act is so the publiccan see how our government works. Congress passed this law to make smallbusinesses have access to some of these projects, and here is the United Statescovering it up." Judge Alsup described the ASBL as being in a David and Goliath battle against the big government and bigbusiness and accused the Pentagon of suppressing evidence.

The Pentagon and Sikorsky are claiming the release of the datain Sikorsky's small business subcontracting plan would cause them substantialcompetitive harm. The ASBL has countered by exposing the fact that Sikorsky'scontracts with the government are sole source contracts and Sikorsky has no competitors fortheir government contracts. The ASBL has also exposed the fact that the namesof Sikorsky's subcontractors are publicly available on the Federal Procurement Data System.

The ASBL believes the Pentagons efforts to withhold the smallbusiness subcontracting data may be to obscure the fact that the Pentagon isallowing their prime contractors to subcontract with their own wholly ownedsubsidiaries or report awards to Fortune 500 firms and other large businessesas small business subcontracts.

The identified witnesses in the trial include: Janice Buffler –DOD Associate director of Subcontracting policy, Andrew Driver – SikorskyAircraft Senior Manager of Market Analytics, Amy Johnson – Sikorsky AircraftCorporation Director of Supply Chain and Martha Crawford - Sikorsky AircraftCorporation Supplier Diversity Manager/Small Business LiaisonOfficer. Janice Buffler's deposition is set for August 21st 2017 in San Francisco, and the Trial is scheduled for December11th 2017.

For the full story click here: https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=2801