Contracting expert Joseph Petrillo of Petrillo and Powell joins The Federal Drive with a rundown.
wfedstaff | June 4, 2015 3:38 pm
By Jolie Lee
@jleewfed
Federal News Radio
Three new rules in the Federal Acquisition Regulation aim to crack down on practices that may be considered “somewhat dubious in procurement,” said Joseph Petrillo, attorney of Petrillo and Powell in an interview with The Federal Drive.
The rules, released Tuesday, will go into effect on Feb. 2.
The analysis will include, among other things, small business participation, contract administration costs, the potential effect of “diluting” other contracts, and the roles and responsibilities of contract administrators, he said.
The specifics of the content for a business case analysis are not set forth in the rule, but the Office of Procurement Policy set out a template in a September memo.
“The issue is the government is taking on added risk when the contractor is simply providing hours and not specific results or specific dollars,” Petrillo said.
The rule also clarifies that these contracts are neither fixed price nor cost reimbursement contracts, but a third type of contract, he said.
Any justification to use a brand name must be posted to eBuy or FedBizOpps
“Posting it in some cases might lead to vendor protesting that the determination that a brand name specification is necessary … if a protest is available for that kind of procurement,” he said.
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