The Federal Acquisitions Regulations Councils have withdrawn their advanced notice of proposed rulemaking to change contractor transparency.
By John Buckner
Federal News Radio
The Department of Defense, General Services Administration and NASA decided against amending the Federal Acquisitions Regulations to increase transparency in government contracting – for now.
The councils withdrew their notice of proposed rulemaking Thursday after determining information can be viewed on acquisition websites or through a Freedom of Information Act request.
The councils received 44 comments on the advanced notice of proposed rulemaking from agencies, industry associations, advocacy groups and private individuals.
Other comments the councils received stated increased transparency would decrease competition which the councils did not support.
Also, some respondents supported public access of contracts, which include information about prices and costs after they have been awarded. The respondents in these areas did acknowledge that information that could potentially harm a contractor should remain classified if those harms outweigh the public benefit.
The councils took these comments into consideration and say they understand the importance of protecting unclassified information. Along with feedback on the issue, respondents also offered alternatives.
Some of the alternatives included:
The councils took all of these comments into consideration and assessed that when posting requirements are determined, these suggestions should be included. DoD, GSA and NASA say no posting requirement can be successful without protections for both contractor and government employees.
John Buckner is an intern with Federal News Radio.
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