According to Section 802 of the 2013 NDAA (National Defense
Authorization Act), the Department of Defense as well as the State Department
and the Agency for International Development (AID) were required to issue
guidance and regulations to ensure that contracting officers complete
additional analyses prior to awarding contracts over $700 thousand ($150
thousand for State and AID) where the prime contractor proposes to subcontract
70 percent or more of the total cost of work to be performed (these are called
pass-through contracts). The concern, of course, is that with significant
subcontracting activity, the Government might not be getting much value out of
the prime contractor’s involvement in the contract.
The NDAA requires a “Notification, Review, and Determination”
procedure for pass-through contracts. Under these procedures, if an offeror
intends to award subcontracts for more than 70 percent of the total cost of
work to be performed, it must inform the Government and identify the amount of
the indirect costs and profit/fee applicable to the subcontracted work as well
as a description of the value-added the offeror will provide to the Government.
The contracting officer then, must (i) consider the
availability of alternative contract vehicles and the feasibility of
contracting directly with a subcontractor or subcontractors that will perform
the bulk of the work, (ii) make a written determination that the contracting
approach selected is in the best interest of the Government and (iii) document
the basis for such determination.
In June of this year, the GAO (General Accountability
Office) initiated a review to determine how well the Agencies had implemented
this new rule. The GAO found that nothing had really changed in the interim. In
fact, DoD had done nothing because the Department was waiting for revisions to
its FAR Supplement. As a result, the GAO concluded that the Government continues
to be at risk for paying excessive contract prices.
As a result of its review, the GAO recommended that DOD,
State, and AID issue guidance to assist contracting officers by identifying
approaches for or examples of how to assess alternative contracting approaches
to include the feasibility of contracting directly with proposed subcontractors,
and documenting a determination that the approach selected is in the best interests
of the Government. Additionally, the GAO recommended that the Agencies revise
the processes and guidance governing management reviews of procurements to
ensure that such reviews assess whether contracting officers are complying with
the provisions of the 2013 NDAA.
You can read the entire GAO report here.
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