Greetings everyone. Hope you and yours are well.
In the first article of today's news you will read an
e-mail written by Joe Wynn of VetForce. Again, the Courts have upheld
the GAO's Ruling on HUB Zone Priority over all other small businesses,
including SDVOSBs. We know that the sure way this will change is when
amended Legislation provides "parity" to all. As I understand it, both
the House and the Senate Small Business Committees (SBCs) know we need
this parity but things are stalled. Why? I have been told that the
House and the Senate SBC's do not agree on which word should be used in
amended legislation, "may" or "shall." God forbid the Congress should
come together and "Just Do It!" At any rate, if the Congress fails us
again, there may be light at the end of the tunnel through the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (please read the article).
Prayers and blessings for you and your loved one's and for our dear Troops and their loved one's everywhere.
Best...................Wayne
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From our good friend and dedicated and life-time Veterans advocate - Joe Wynn. Thanks Joe!
VET-Force Members/Supporters:
You will see from the
article listed below that Veterans once again are Still Being Left
Behind. After 7 years of trying to get Federal agencies to adhere to
the law (PL 108-183), still only a few have met or surpassed the
mandatory requirement to procurement a minimum of 3% of their goods and
services from Service-Disabled Veteran Owned Businesses. The net effect
of not doing so, deprives Veterans and their families of millions of
dollars that would be used to improve their situation in exchange for
the sacrifices they have made for this country.
Now, with the recent
court ruling, Federal contracting officers are given another reason to
do less for Veterans. Its beginning to sound hypocritical when you hear
this administration talk about what all they are doing for our Veterans
and Wounded Warriors only to see that in reality Veterans aren't being
taken care of.
Just this year, the
President issued an Executive Order directing the SBA Administrator to
form an Interagency Task Force consisting of senior-level
representatives from key Federal agencies and four representatives from
Veteran Service Organizations examine way to increase contracting
opportunities, get Federal agencies to meet their small business goals,
and identify access to capital. This Order mirrors the law that was
passed in 2008, directing the SBA Administrator to do the exact same
thing.
To date, the
Interagency Task Force has not been formed. Thus, Federal agencies have
continued their poor performance when it comes to contracting with
Service Disabled Veteran Owned Businesses. It was hoped that Congress
would remedy this situation by amending or inserting corrective language
into some legislation. But now even that course is doubtful since the
Senate Small Business Committee's proposal is completely opposite from
the House Small Business Committee's proposal. One wants to change
'Shall' to 'May' and the other 'May' to 'Shall'.
Meanwhile, Veterans are Still Being Left Behind! Veterans, we need to call upon the President to intervene Now!
Joe Wynn, VET-Force -(202) 822-0011
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GovEx Article on Court Ruling and Parity
Court rules against government, again, in small business parity
By Robert Brodsky rbrodsky@govexec.com
August 16, 2010 For the second time this year, the U.S. Court of
Federal Claims has ruled that companies operating in Historically
Underutilized Business Zones must have top priority among small
businesses when competing for government contracts.
On Friday, the Court
of Federal Claims found the Air Force violated the 1953 Small Business
Act when it failed to first consider DGR Associates Inc., a HUBZone
firm, before awarding a contract to an 8(a) small business. The
set-aside procurement was for housing maintenance, inspection and repair
services at Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska.
The ruling is the
latest blow to the Justice Department and Small Business Administration
as they attempt to navigate an increasingly complex regulatory issue
that has divided the small business contracting community.
The Court of Federal
Claims and the Government Accountability Office have determined that
technical language in the Small Business Act puts HUBZone firms at the
top of the small business pecking order. The Obama administration
disagrees and has argued that Congress intended for there to be parity
among small business programs.
In Friday's case, the
Court of Federal Claims issued a permanent injunction requiring the Air
Force "to terminate the unlawful contract" awarded to General Trades and
Services of Waipahu, Hawaii. The Air Force must issue a new
solicitation and will be required to first consider DGR, the Terrell,
Texas, firm that had been the incumbent on the contract.
DGR performed the
military housing maintenance services on a five-year firm fixed-price
contract, which expired in 2009. After continuing for several months
under a blanket purchase agreement, the Air Force notified the firm in
June 2010 that it was ending the contract.
The Air Force decided
under the new contract it would limit competition to companies operating
in SBA's 8(a) Business Development program because the service wanted
to boost its percentage of awards issued to small disadvantaged
businesses, the court said. A contracting officer noted in documents
that the Air Force had exceeded its HUBZone goals by more than 600
percent but missed its small disadvantaged business goal -- which
includes the 8(a) program -- by 53 percent.
After the Air Force
refused to reconsider its decision, DGR filed a protest with GAO. In
May, the watchdog ruled in favor of the contractor.
But, the Air Force,
citing recent Justice Department and Office of Management and Budget
guidance, disregarded the decision, noting GAO's ruling was not binding.
"Contracting officers are not to provide a priority to HUBZones," Air
Force officials told agency attorneys, according to correspondence
Government Executive obtained.
Facing a July 15
termination of its contract, DGR took its case to the Court of Federal
Claims, whose decisions are binding. In his decision, Judge Thomas C.
Wheeler said the statute was unambiguous.
"The language of the
Small Business Act granting priority to the HUBZone program could not be
more clear," Wheeler wrote. "By using the phrases 'notwithstanding any
other provision of law . . . a contract opportunity shall be awarded on
the basis of competition to qualified HUBZone small business concerns,'
Congress established a priority for the HUBZone program over other
competing small business programs. . . . If Congress intended something
different from what it stated, Congress alone must enact an appropriate
amendment."
Similar to the March
2010 Mission Critical Systems case involving an Army information
technology contract, the decision came down to the words "shall" and
"may." The law that governs the 8(a) and the service-disabled
veteran-owned business program states, "a contracting officer may award
contracts" based on limited competition. The HUBZone statute uses the
word "shall."
In both cases, the
Court of Federal Claims ruled that before a contract can be set-aside
under the 8(a) program, the contracting officer first must determine if
two or more qualified HUBZone firms will submit offers. Wheeler noted
agencies that disagree with the ruling "would be better served to seek
legislative relief from Congress rather than judicial relief in this
Court."
Sen. Mary Landrieu,
D-La., is sponsoring a two-line bill that would change the HUBZone
statute from "shall" to "may." But the bill has only six co-sponsors and
has not moved from Landrieu's Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Committee. An identical bill has stalled in the House.
Parity advocates are
holding out hope lawmakers will be able to attach the language to the
upcoming Defense authorization bill. But an attempt by the Senate to add
similar parity language to last year's Defense bill proved unsuccessful
when a conference committee yanked the provision.
While legislation
remains in doubt, the dispute does appear to be reaching a judicial
conclusion. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit will soon
hear Justice's challenge of the Mission Critical Systems case. And,
unlike the Court of Federal Claims, the appeals court's ruling has
precedential effect, meaning its decision would apply to future HUBZone
priority cases.
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