Congress Adopts Favorable A-76 Rules
Thursday, December 1, 2005
Last year, a last-minute veto threat by the
Bush administration blocked key provisions in
the 2005 omnibus spending bill that would have
made the outsourcing of federal jobs more
difficult. This year things worked out
better. The same provisions that were
stripped last year were included in the 2006
Transportation-Treasury-Housing Appropriations
bill, which applies to all federal agencies
except the Department of Defense (DoD) and the
Transportation Security Administration
(TSA).
The conference report was adopted by
both houses of Congress on November
18th. The measure was signed
into law by the President on November
30th.
One major improvement to the A-76 process is the ability of the in-house agency to form a “most efficient organization” when competing against contractors for work performed by 10 or more federal employees. Having this ability will allow federal employees to submit more competitive bids, and therefore, will likely help federal employees prevail more often in public/private competitions.
In addition to allowing federal employees
the ability to put forward their best bid, the
provisions also require contractors to
demonstrate a savings of at least 10% or $10
million. This savings would be necessary
to offset the cost the government incurs in
administering the contract. This would
also prevent contractors from winning bids
based on factors unrelated to
cost.
Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), who has been a primary advocate of the revised outsourcing rules, called the 10 percent or $10 million provision “the first step in leveling the playing field for federal employees.”
“We have been fighting for these provisions for years,” said NFFE National President/DBR Richard N. Brown. “The administration was hell-bent on making sure contractors have every possible advantage in competition studies. It seems that Congress has finally woken up and realized that giving contractors an unfair advantage is not in the best interest of the American taxpayer.”
