The FAR Councils have issued a correction
to the proposed rule they issued back in June of this year, concerning the
procedures that the Government must follow in documenting contractor
performance.
As a result of recent congressional hearings
on the matter, it became evident that the Government did not do a very good job
at documenting contractor performance. In many cases, performance was not
documented at all. In others, it was not in a useful format or didn’t contain
sufficient relevant data. In an effort to improve upon the process, the FAR
Councils issued proposed rules assigning responsibility and setting forth
standards for the information to be included.
Under the draft rules, the first thing each
Governmental agency must do is to establish procedures for performing past
performance evaluations. Generally, these procedures must somehow solicit input
from technical office, the contracting officer, and where applicable, the end
user.
Secondly, the procedures must identify and
assign roles and responsibilities to those individuals responsible for
preparing both interim (if the contract is multi-year) and final appraisals. If
the Agency does not identify specific individuals, the responsibility defaults
to the contracting officer.
Thirdly, the person(s) responsible for the
evaluations must obtain information from the program office, the audit office,
the end user of the product or service, and anyone else they can think of (as
appropriate).
Content of Report
The report must reflect how the contractor performed.
The report should include clear relevant information that accurately depicts
the contractor's performance, and be based on objective facts supported by
program and contract performance data. The evaluations should be tailored to
the contract type, size, content, and complexity of the contractual
requirements.
Evaluation factors for each assessment
shall include, at a minimum, the following five elements:
-
Technical or Quality.
-
Cost Control (as applicable).
-
Schedule/Timeliness.
-
Management or Business Relations.
-
Small Business Subcontracting (as
applicable).
Each of these five evaluation factors are
given ratings on a scale of one to five (exceptional, very good, satisfactory,
marginal, and unsatisfactory).
Each evaluation factor, as listed in paragraph
of this section, shall be rated in accordance with a five scale rating system (e.g.,
exceptional, very good, satisfactory, marginal, and unsatisfactory). For
contracts containing incentive fee provisions, the incentive-fee evaluation
must be included. The same goes for award fee information.
Agency evaluations (both negative and
positive) are to be provided to the contractor as soon as practicable after
completion of the evaluation. Contractors get at least 30 days to submit
comments, rebutting statements, or additional information. Any disagreements
are considered by a person at a level above the contracting officer however, the
ultimate conclusion on the performance evaluation is a decision of the contracting
agency.
Completed evaluations are not be released
to other than Government personnel and the contractor whose performance is
being evaluated during the period the information may be used to provide source
selection information. Disclosure of such information could cause harm both to
the commercial interest of the Government and to the competitive position of
the contractor being evaluated as well as impede the efficiency of Government
operations.
Performance information stays in the
Government database for three years (or six years for construction and
architect-engineer contracts).
No comments:
Post a Comment