Recently, a bill was introduced that could potentially help ensure that federal small business contracts actually go to small businesses. The Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act of 2009 would modify the definition of small business in the Small Business Act to exclude publicly traded companies and would create a complaint system for resolution of disputed contract awards.
Reports of government small business contracts going to subsidiaries of large corporations are not new. Since 2003, at least a dozen federal investigations have reportedly found contracts meant for small business going to Fortune 500 and other large companies around the world. This past March, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report finding fraud and abuse in the SBA’s Historically Underutilized Business Zone (HUBZone) initiative regarding approximately $30 million in contracts.
The bill, introduced by Georgia Representative Hank Johnson, would also require each federal department and agency to maintain a database detailing each business awards a contract based on being classified as a small business.
Furthermore, the bill would also create a system through which complaints could be filed with the SBA or head of any department or agency regarding contract awards to businesses of disputed smallness. Annually, the SBA would be required to report to Congress on these complaints and how they were resolved.
- Track the Bill (GovTrack)
- Rep. Johnson’s Press Release
- SBA Attempts to Minimize Diversion of Billions In Small Business Contracts to Corporate Giants (Huffington Post)
- Should Obama Do More To Help Small Businesses Win Government Contracts? (WSJ’s Independent Street)
- Government Contracts Law Terminology (FindLaw)
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