83_FR_62749 83 FR 62516 - National Defense Authorization Acts of 2016 and 2017, Recovery Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 2015, and Other Small Business Government Contracting

83 FR 62516 - National Defense Authorization Acts of 2016 and 2017, Recovery Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 2015, and Other Small Business Government Contracting

SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 233 (December 4, 2018)

Page Range62516-62532
FR Document2018-25705

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA or Agency) is proposing to amend its regulations to implement several provisions of the National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAA) of 2016 and 2017 and the Recovery Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE Act), as well as implementing other clarifying amendments. The proposed rule would clarify that contracting officers have the authority to request information in connection with a contractor's compliance with applicable limitations on subcontracting clauses; provide exclusions for purposes of compliance with the limitations on subcontracting for certain contracts performed outside of the United States, environmental remediation contracts, and information technology service acquisitions that require substantial cloud computing; require a prime contractor with a commercial subcontracting plan to include indirect costs in its subcontracting goals; establish that failure to provide timely subcontracting reports may constitute a material breach of the contract; clarify the requirements for size and status recertification; and limit the scope of Procurement Center Representative reviews of Department of Defense acquisitions performed outside of the United States and its territories. The proposed rule would also authorize agencies to receive double credit for small business goaling achievements as announced in SBA's scorecard for local area small business set asides in connection with a disaster. Finally, SBA is proposing to remove the kit assembler exception to the non- manufacturer rule.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 233 (Tuesday, December 4, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 233 (Tuesday, December 4, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 62516-62532]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-25705]


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Proposed Rules
                                                Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.

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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 62516]]



SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

13 CFR Parts 121, 124, 125, 126, 127, and 129

RIN 3245-AG86


National Defense Authorization Acts of 2016 and 2017, Recovery 
Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 2015, and Other 
Small Business Government Contracting

AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA or Agency) is 
proposing to amend its regulations to implement several provisions of 
the National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAA) of 2016 and 2017 and the 
Recovery Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 2015 
(RISE Act), as well as implementing other clarifying amendments. The 
proposed rule would clarify that contracting officers have the 
authority to request information in connection with a contractor's 
compliance with applicable limitations on subcontracting clauses; 
provide exclusions for purposes of compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting for certain contracts performed outside of the United 
States, environmental remediation contracts, and information technology 
service acquisitions that require substantial cloud computing; require 
a prime contractor with a commercial subcontracting plan to include 
indirect costs in its subcontracting goals; establish that failure to 
provide timely subcontracting reports may constitute a material breach 
of the contract; clarify the requirements for size and status 
recertification; and limit the scope of Procurement Center 
Representative reviews of Department of Defense acquisitions performed 
outside of the United States and its territories. The proposed rule 
would also authorize agencies to receive double credit for small 
business goaling achievements as announced in SBA's scorecard for local 
area small business set asides in connection with a disaster. Finally, 
SBA is proposing to remove the kit assembler exception to the non-
manufacturer rule.

DATES: Comments must be received on or before February 4, 2019.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3245-AG86, by any 
of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     For mail, paper, disk, or CD-ROM submissions: Brenda 
Fernandez, U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Policy, 
Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street SW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 
20416.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: Brenda Fernandez, U.S. Small 
Business Administration, Office of Policy, Planning and Liaison, 409 
Third Street SW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 20416.
    SBA will post all comments on www.regulations.gov. If you wish to 
submit confidential business information (CBI) as defined in the User 
Notice at www.regulations.gov, please submit the information to Brenda 
Fernandez, U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Policy, 
Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street SW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 
20416, or send an email to [email protected]. Highlight the 
information that you consider to be CBI and explain why you believe SBA 
should hold this information as confidential. SBA will review the 
information and make the final determination on whether it will publish 
the information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brenda Fernandez, Office of Policy, 
Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416; (202) 
205-7337; [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016, Public Law 
114-92, 129 Stat. 726, November 25, 2015 (NDAA of 2016)

Posting Notice of Substantial Bundling

    Section 863 of the NDAA of 2016 amended section 15(e)(3) of the 
Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644(e)(3)) to provide that if the head of 
a contracting agency determines that an acquisition plan involves a 
substantial bundling of contract requirements, the head of the 
contracting agency shall publish a notice of such determination on a 
public website within 7 days of making such determination. Section 863 
also amended section 44(c)(2) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
657q(c)(2)) to provide that upon determining that a consolidation of 
contract requirements is necessary and justified, the Senior 
Procurement Executive (SPE) or Chief Acquisition Officer (CAO) shall 
publish a notice on a public website that such determination has been 
made. An agency may not issue the solicitation any earlier than 7 days 
after publication of the notice. The SPE or CAO must also publish the 
justification along with the solicitation. The requirement may be 
delegated. SBA proposes to amend Sec.  125.2(d) by adding new 
paragraphs (d)(1)(v) and (d)(7) to implement these changes.

II. National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017, Public Law 
114-328, 130 Stat. 2000, December 23, 2016 (NDAA of 2017)

Procurement Center Representative Reviews

    Section 1811 of the NDAA of 2017 amended section 15(l) of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644(l)) to provide that Procurement Center 
Representatives (PCRs) may review any acquisition, even those where the 
acquisition is set aside, partially set aside or reserved for small 
business. SBA's current rules provide that PCRs will review all 
acquisitions that are not set aside or reserved for small business. 
These rules were intended to focus limited resources on acquisitions 
that were not already going to small business, but were not intended to 
prohibit a PCR from reviewing any acquisition as part of the PCR's role 
as an advocate for small business. SBA proposes to amend Sec.  
125.2(b)(1)(i) to provide that PCRs may review any acquisition 
regardless of whether it is set aside, partially set aside, or reserved 
for small business or other socioeconomic categories. SBA believes that 
this change will enable PCRs to advocate for total set asides, or 
partial set asides, when appropriate and necessary.
    Section 1811 of the NDAA of 2017 also amended section 15(l) of the 
Small Business Act to limit the scope of PCR review of solicitations 
for contracts or orders by or for the Department of

[[Page 62517]]

Defense if the acquisition is conducted pursuant to the Arms Control 
Export Act (22 U.S.C. 2762), is a humanitarian operation as defined in 
10 U.S.C. 401(e), is for a contingency operation as defined in 10 
U.S.C. 101(a)(13), is to be awarded pursuant to an agreement with the 
government of a foreign country in which Armed Forces of the United 
States are deployed, or where both the place of award and place of 
performance are outside of the United States and its territories. SBA 
is proposing to amend Sec.  125.2(b)(1)(i) to implement these 
amendments. PCRs may still review acquisitions awarded in the United 
States and its territories but performed outside of the United States 
and its territories, or awarded outside of the United States and its 
territories for performance in the United States or its territories, if 
the acquisition is not a foreign military sales, or in connection with 
a contingency operation, humanitarian operation or status of forces 
agreement. SBA considers performance to be outside of the United States 
and its territories if the acquisition is awarded and performed or 
delivered outside of the United States and its territories. If the 
acquisition is awarded in the United States and its territories or some 
performance or delivery occurs in the United States and its 
territories, SBA considers that to be performed in the United States 
and its territories.

Material Breach of Subcontracting Plan

    Section 1821 of the NDAA of 2017 amended section 8(d)(9) of the 
Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 637(d)(9)) to provide that it shall be a 
material breach of a contract or subcontract when the contractor or 
subcontractor with a subcontracting plan fails to comply in good faith 
with the requirement to provide assurances that the offeror shall 
submit such periodic reports or cooperate in any studies or surveys as 
may be required by the Federal agency or the Administration in order to 
determine the extent of compliance by the offeror with the 
subcontracting plan. Such a breach may be considered in any past 
performance evaluation of the contractor. SBA is proposing to revise 
Sec.  125.3(d) to implement this provision.
    Section 1821 also provides that SBA must provide examples of 
activities that would be considered a failure to make a good faith 
effort to comply with a small business subcontracting plan. Good faith 
effort considers a totality of the contractor's actions to provide the 
maximum practicable opportunity to small businesses to participate as 
subcontractors (including those in the socio-economic small business 
areas), consistent with the information and assurances provided in the 
subcontracting plan. A failure to exert good faith effort is first 
predicated upon evidence that an other-than-small-business (OTSB) 
federal prime contractor, required to have a subcontracting plan with 
negotiated Small Business Concern (SBC) goals approved by a federal 
contracting officer, has failed to attain these goals and this failure 
may be attributable to a lack of good faith effort by the OTSB prime 
contractor. The term SBC for purposes of this rule includes all 
categories of small business socio-economic concerns including small 
business, small disadvantaged businesses, veteran owned small 
businesses, service disabled veteran owned small businesses, women 
owned small businesses, small businesses in historically underutilized 
business zones, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU/
Minority Institutions (MI)) (NASA only) and any successor small 
business designations. A failure to exert good faith efforts must take 
into account all actions, or lack thereof, the contractor made to 
promote subcontracting opportunity to small businesses to the extent 
agreed upon in the approved subcontracting plan. SBA is reorganizing 
this section to reflect these new examples in proposed Sec.  
125.3(d)(3)(ii). SBA is proposing to renumber current Sec.  
125.3(d)(3)(i) through (iii) as Sec.  125.3(d)(3)(i)(A) through (C) to 
better organize this section for clarity and ease of understanding . 
This rule does not add a new requirement for supporting documentation 
for the subcontracting plan.

III. Recovery Improvements for Small Entities After Disaster Act of 
2015, Public Law 114-88, 129 Stat. 686, November 25, 2015 (RISE Act)

    Section 2108 of the RISE Act authorizes SBA to establish 
contracting preferences for small business concerns located in disaster 
areas, and provide agencies with double credit for awards to small 
business concerns located in disaster areas. In order to implement the 
changes made by section 2108 of the RISE Act, SBA is proposing to add a 
new part 129 to title 13 of the Code of Federal Regulations. SBA will 
implement section 2105 in a separate rulemaking.
    Section 2108 of the RISE Act amends section 15 of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644) by adding a subsection (f), which 
authorizes procuring agencies to provide contracting preferences for 
small business concerns located in areas for which the President has 
declared a major disaster, during the period of the declaration. 
Section 2108 provides that this contracting preference shall be 
available for small business concerns located in disaster areas if the 
small business will perform the work required under the contract in the 
disaster area. Under Sec.  6.208 of Federal Acquisition Regulation 
(FAR), title 48 of the Code of Federal Regulations, contracting 
officers may set aside solicitations to allow only offerors residing or 
doing business in the area affected by a major disaster. Under existing 
FAR 26.202-1, such local area set asides may be further set aside for 
small business concerns. SBA is proposing to use the existing FAR 
definitions to provide that an agency will receive credit for an 
``emergency response contract'' awarded to a ``local firm'' that 
qualifies as a small business concern under the applicable size 
standard for a ``Major disaster or emergency area.'' FAR 26.201.
    Section 2108 also provides that if an agency awards a contract to a 
small business located in a disaster area through a contracting 
preference, the value of the contract shall be doubled for purposes of 
determining compliance with the small business contracting goals 
described in section 15(g)(1)(A) of the Small Business Act. Proposed 
Sec.  129.300 states that agencies shall receive double credit for 
awarding a contract through the use of a local small business or 
socioeconomic set aside authorized by proposed Sec.  129.200, i.e., a 
set-aside restricted to SBCs, 8(a) Business Development (BD) Program 
Participants, Women-Owned, Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned or HUBZone 
SBCs located in a disaster area. It is SBA's intent that agencies will 
enter accurate data into the Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS). 
SBA will provide the extra credit through the agency scorecard process. 
Local area set aside and small business contract designations already 
exist in FPDS, and implementation has already occurred in FY 2017.

IV. Other Small Business Government Contracting Amendments

Clarification That the Non-Manufacturer 500 Employee Size Standard Does 
Not Apply to Information Technology Value Added Resellers

    On September 10, 2014, SBA proposed to eliminate the information 
technology value added reseller (ITVAR) exception to NAICS 541519, 
which had a size standard of 150 employees. 79 FR 53646. In the 
proposed rule, SBA specifically noted that elimination of the exception 
would

[[Page 62518]]

result in these acquisitions, which are primarily for supplies, being 
subject to the non-manufacturer rule (NMR), which has a size standard 
of 500 employees. As a result of public comment, SBA altered the 
language in the ITVAR exception (13 CFR 121.201, footnote 18) to make 
it clear that the manufacturing performance or limitations on 
subcontracting requirements and the NMR apply to acquisitions under the 
ITVAR exception, but retained the 150 employee size standard. 81 FR 
4436 (January 26, 2016). By definition, contractors under the ITVAR 
exception are non-manufacturers, and it would make no sense for SBA to 
retain a 150 employee size standard if concerns could also qualify 
under the NMR 500 employee size standard. In a size appeal before the 
SBA Office of Hearings and Appeals, a firm tried to argue that the size 
standard under the ITVAR exception was the 500 employee non-
manufacturer size standard. Size Appeal of York Telecom Corporation, 
SBA No. SIZ-5742 (May 18, 2016). The appeal was denied, and this rule 
proposes to clarify in Sec.  121.406(b)(1)(i) that the NMR size 
standard of 500 employees does not apply to acquisitions that have been 
assigned the ITVAR NAICS code 541519 exception, footnote 18. The size 
standard for any acquisition under 541519, footnote 18 is 150 employees 
for all offerors.

Setting Aside an Order Under a Multiple Award Set Aside Contract

    In the final rule implementing 15 U.S.C. 644(r), SBA contemplated 
the set aside of orders for certain types of SBCs, such as HUBZone 
SBCs, 8(a) BD Program Participants, SDVO SBCs, or WOSBs. 78 FR 61114, 
61124 (October 2, 2013). SBA noted that at the time, the small business 
programs had major differences with respect to application of the 
limitations on subcontracting (LOS) and NMR, and therefore it would be 
difficult for SBCs and agencies to determine the rules that applied to 
a particular order. SBA was also concerned about the possibility that 
SBCs could be deprived of an opportunity to compete for orders under a 
set aside contract if an agency repeatedly set aside orders for other 
socioeconomic categories. Since that time, SBA has attempted to 
harmonize the application of the LOS and NMR for each of the various 
types of small business contracts. The concerns identified in the SBA 
final rule have since been addressed to enable fair and proper 
implementation of order set asides. Specifically, the SBA final rule 
standardized the LOS and NMR across the socioeconomic programs. 81 FR 
34243. In addition, some agencies have pursued the strategy of allowing 
order set asides against set aside multiple award contracts, including 
notification and incorporation of the clause at FAR 52.219-13, and 
agencies have reported that they have not encountered any industry 
concerns. SBA is requesting comment on whether SBA should allow 
agencies to set aside orders for a socioeconomic small business program 
(8(a), HUBZone, SDVO, WOSB) under a multiple award contract that was 
originally conducted as a total small business set-aside. Because SBA 
believes that a change is appropriate at this time, SBA is proposing to 
remove the term ``Full and Open'' from Sec.  125.2(e)(6) to 
specifically afford discretion to an agency to set-aside one or more 
particular orders for HUBZone SBCs, 8(a) BD SBCs, SDVO SBCs or WOSBs, 
as appropriate, where the underlying multiple award contract was 
initially set-aside for small business. Set asides under multiple award 
set-aside contracts may be implemented by agencies in different ways, 
including: (1) Establishing set asides to socioeconomic programs at the 
order solicitation level under multiple award small business set-aside 
contracts, and (2) establishing socioeconomic set-aside pools at the 
master contract solicitation level for a multiple award small business 
set-aside contract. SBA is requesting comments on any burden or adverse 
impact associated with each of these two approaches. In addition, SBA 
is specifically interested in whether these two approaches impact the 
ability for all types of small businesses (e.g. 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, 
SDVOSB) to compete and receive orders.

Recertification of Size and Status

    SBA's rules require recertification of size and status for all 
long-term (over 5 years) contracts. This includes indefinite delivery 
contracts under which orders will be placed at a future date and 
contracts that had not been set-aside for small business, but were 
awarded to a small business. Thus, SBA is proposing to amend Sec. Sec.  
125.18(e), 126.601(h), and 127.503(h) to clarify that a concern must 
recertify its status on full and open contracts. In addition, SBA is 
adding a new paragraph to Sec. Sec.  124.521 and 124.1015 to reflect 
the status recertification requirements for 8(a) participants and SDB 
concerns, which are already present in the SDVO, HUBZone, and WOSB 
regulations. This change provides greater consistency among the status 
recertification requirements for small business program contracts. One 
result of these proposed changes, is that a prime contractor relying on 
similarly situated entities (an SDVOSB prime with an SDVOSB 
subcontractor, for example) to meet the applicable performance 
requirements may not count the subcontractor towards its performance 
requirements if the subcontractor recertifies as an entity other than 
that which it had previously certified.

Indirect Costs in Commercial Subcontracting Plans

    Other than small business concerns that have a commercial 
subcontracting plan report on performance through a summary 
subcontracting report (SSR), and SBA's rules currently require that a 
contractor using a commercial subcontracting plan must include all 
indirect costs in its SSR. However, SBA's rules do not require 
contractors to include indirect costs in their commercial 
subcontracting plan goals, which leads to inconsistencies when 
comparing the SSR to the commercial subcontracting plan. SBA is 
proposing to revise Sec.  125.3(c)(1)(iv) to require that prime 
contractors with commercial subcontracting plans must include indirect 
costs in the commercial subcontracting plan goals. This will allow 
agencies to negotiate more realistic commercial subcontracting plans 
and monitor performance through the SSR.

Subcontracting Compliance Reviews

    SBA is also proposing to change the nomenclature that applies to 
subcontracting compliance reviews. Instead of rating firms as 
``Outstanding,'' ``Highly Successful,'' or ``Acceptable,'' SBA will 
utilize the terminology ``Exceptional,'' ``Very Good,'' and 
``Satisfactory.'' SBA proposes to revise Sec.  125.3(f)(3) to implement 
these changes to align title 13 of the CFR and the FAR to rectify 
ambiguity in terminology which causes confusion by Government personnel 
and industry partners when attempting to ascertain the value and 
differences of the SBA's rating under Sec.  125.3(f)(3) in an SBA 
Compliance Review and the ratings in FAR 42.1503 under a Subcontracting 
Evaluation when FAR 52.219-9 is used and made part of the firm's past 
performance record.

Independent Contractors--Employees/Subcontractors

    SBA's size regulations provide that SBA considers ``all individuals 
employed on a full-time, part-time, or other basis'' to be employees of 
the firm whose size is at issue. 13 CFR 121.106(a). ``This includes 
employees obtained from a temporary employee

[[Page 62519]]

agency, professional employee organization or leasing concern.'' Id. 
Further, ``SBA will consider the totality of the circumstances, 
including criteria used by the IRS for Federal income tax purposes, in 
determining whether individuals are employees of a concern.'' Id. In 
determining what it means to be employed on an ``other'' basis, SBA 
issued Size Policy Statement No. 1. 51 FR 6099-01 (February 20, 1986). 
The Size Policy Statement sets forth 11 criteria SBA will consider in 
determining whether an individual should be treated as an employee. If 
an individual meets one or more of the criteria they may be treated as 
an employee. Pursuant to this guidance, an individual contractor paid 
through a 1099 may be properly treated as an employee for purposes of 
SBA's regulations (including SBA's regulations governing performance of 
work or LOS requirements). The reason for such treatment was to prevent 
a firm that exceeded an applicable employee-based size standard from 
``firing'' a specific number of employees in order to get below the 
size standard, but to then hire them back or ``subcontract'' to them as 
independent contractors. SBA did not want to encourage firms to attempt 
to evade SBA's size regulations.
    Historically, SBA has said that if an individual qualifies as an 
``employee'' under part 121 of SBA's regulations for purposes of 
determining size, then SBA should consider that individual to be an 
employee of the firm for the performance of work (or now LOS) 
requirements of 13 CFR 125.6 (or 124.510). It would not be equitable to 
say that a given individual counts against a firm in determining size 
(because he/she is considered an ``employee'' of the firm) and then to 
say that that same individual also counts against the firm for the LOS 
requirements (because he/she is not considered an ``employee'' of the 
firm). Thus, for a contract that is assigned a NAICS code having an 
employee-based size standard, an independent contractor could be deemed 
an ``employee'' of the concern for which he/she is doing work. If such 
an individual is considered an employee for size purposes, he/she would 
also be considered an employee for LOS purposes.
    It appears that SBA's regulation at 13 CFR 125.6(e)(3) has caused 
some confusion as to how to properly treat independent contractors for 
purposes of the LOS provisions. That provision provides that ``Work 
performed by an independent contractor shall be considered a 
subcontract, and may count toward meeting the applicable LOS where the 
independent contractor qualifies as a similarly situated entity.'' 
(Emphasis added). This provision was meant to apply to service or 
construction contracts. For service contracts, work performed by an 
independent contractor would always be considered a subcontract, so 
that a service contractor could not claim that a non-similarly situated 
entity independent contractor should be considered an employee of the 
service contractor. For example, for a WOSB service contract, SBA did 
not want a WOSB prime contractor to pass performance of the contract to 
one or more independent contractors that would not themselves qualify 
as WOSBs. The provision identifies that an independent contractor could 
qualify as a ``similarly situated entity'' and meet the LOS that way, 
but would not permit a service contractor to effectively avoid meeting 
the LOS by claiming that independent contractors were in fact employees 
of the firm.
    This proposed rule revises Sec.  125.6(e)(3) to clarify SBA's 
intent regarding both contracts assigned a NAICS code with an employee-
based size standard and those assigned a NAICS code with a receipts-
based size standard. Where a contract is assigned a NAICS code with an 
employee-based size standard, an independent contractor may be deemed 
an employee of the firm under the terms of the Size Policy Statement. 
Where a contract is assigned a NAICS code with a receipts-based size 
standard, an independent contractor could not be considered an employee 
of the firm for which he or she is performing work, but, rather, would 
always be deemed a subcontractor. In either case, as a subcontractor, 
an independent contractor may be considered a ``similarly situated 
entity'' and work performed by the independent contractor would then 
count toward meeting the applicable limitation on subcontracting.

Limitation on Subcontracting Compliance

    Congress has expressed its strong support for small business 
government contracting, and has provided agencies with numerous tools 
to set aside acquisitions for exclusive competition among, or in some 
cases award contracts on a sole source basis to, SBCs, 8(a) BD Program 
Participants, HUBZone SBCs, WOSBs, Economically Disadvantaged Women-
Owned (EDWOSB) SBCs, and SDVO SBCs. 15 U.S.C. 631(a), 637(a), (m), 
644(a), (j), 657a, 657f. As a condition of these preferences, small 
businesses are limited in their ability to subcontract to other than 
small business concerns, so that small businesses actually perform a 
certain percentage of the work. These LOS appear in solicitations and 
contract clauses for small business set aside and sole source awards. 
Like with all contract administration, it is the responsibility of the 
contracting officer to monitor compliance with terms and conditions of 
a contract. (FAR 1.602-2), including the LOS clause. SBA is proposing 
language to clarify that contracting officers have the discretion to 
request information from contractors to demonstrate compliance with LOS 
clauses. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has noted in 
reports that contracting officers have not been monitoring compliance 
with the limitations on subcontracting. ``Contract Management; 
Increased Use of Alaska Native Corporations' Special 8(a) Provisions 
Calls for Tailored Oversight,'' GAO-06-39, April 2006; ``8(a) 
Subcontracting Limitations, Continued Noncompliance with Monitoring 
Requirements Signals Need for Regulatory Change,'' GAO-14-706, 
September 2014; and ``Federal Contracting Monitoring and Oversight of 
Tribal 8(a) Firms Need Attention,'' GAO-12-84, January 2012. The type 
of information that small business prime contractors may be requested 
to provide to demonstrate compliance with the LOS could be copies of 
subcontracts for a particular procurement or an email that lists the 
amount that the prime contractor has paid to its subcontractors for a 
particular procurement and whether those subcontractors are similarly 
situated entities. In addition, SBA proposed to require information 
demonstrating compliance with the applicable LOS from all prime 
contractors performing set-aside and sole-source contracts awarded 
through SBA's small business programs when the prime contractor intends 
to rely on similarly situated subcontractors to comply with the LOS. 79 
FR 77955 (December 29, 2014). SBA did not adopt such a requirement in 
the final rule, but indicated that it intended to seek comment on this 
issue. 81 FR 34243 (May 31, 2016).
    SBA is proposing to add new Sec.  125.6(e)(4) to clarify that 
contracting officers may request information regarding LOS compliance, 
and to clarify that it is not required for every contract. SBA is 
requesting comment on whether all small business prime contractors 
performing set-aside or sole source contracts should be required to 
demonstrate compliance with LOS to the contracting officer, and if so, 
how

[[Page 62520]]

often should this be required, such as annually or quarterly. What 
salient data would best provide assurance of compliance? Should 
demonstrating compliance depend on the length of the contract or the 
type of contract? Whether it is for commercial products and services? 
Whether the contract is fixed price? Whether the contract is above the 
SAT or the TINA threshold? What other considerations should there be 
when applying the requirement for a contractor to document LOS 
compliance? We are requesting that industry provide comment on what 
information can be efficiently requested and provided.

Exclusions From the Limitations on Subcontracting

    SBA's LOS regulations provide that for a set aside service 
contract, the prime contractor must agree that it will not pay more 
than 50% of the amount paid from the government to firms that are not 
similarly situated. 13 CFR 125.6(a)(1). Unlike supply and construction 
contracts, where materials are excluded, no costs are specifically 
excluded under a service contract, other than for mixed contracts where 
the non-service portion, such as incidental supplies, are excluded. SBA 
has received several requests from industry for exclusions related to 
specific types of contracts, and one related to all industries. Some 
have advocated that certain direct costs, such as airline tickets and 
hotel costs, be excluded from the calculation of the amount paid under 
the contract. In addition, in certain types of contracts or industries, 
there are factors that may complicate compliance with the LOS, 
potentially hindering agencies from setting aside acquisitions for 
small business concerns.
    For example, for certain contracts performed outside of the United 
States, contractors must use non-U.S. local organizations or 
independent contractors to perform consulting services regarding a 
particular foreign country. These individuals are not located in the 
United States, do not reside in the United States, and are not likely 
to be employees of a United States SBC. SBA is proposing to further 
clarify how to determine whether an individual is an employee or 
independent contractor.
    In the environmental remediation industry (NAICS 562910), a large 
part of the cost of the contract is tied to the transportation and 
disposal of hazardous, toxic and radiological waste. According to some 
SBCs in this industry that have contacted SBA, given the fact that 
these services are highly regulated and capital intensive, these 
particular transportation services can generally be performed only by 
other than small business concerns. For example, all of the disposal 
facilities in the United States are large businesses, and most 
railroads and shipping companies that transport hazardous waste are 
other than small concerns. This rule proposes to exclude transportation 
and disposal services from the LOS compliance determination where small 
business concerns cannot provide the disposal or transportation 
services. Similarly, where the government acquires media services from 
small business concerns, the placement of the content in the media may 
require large payments to the other than small business concerns, even 
though that is not the principal purpose of the acquisition. SBA is 
proposing to exclude these media purchases from the LOS determination.
    In a prior rulemaking, SBA determined that remote hosting on 
servers or networks, or cloud computing, should be considered a service 
and therefore the NMR would not apply. 13 CFR 121.1203(d)(3). Due to 
the costs and scale involved, cloud computing is generally provided by 
other than small business concerns. SBA is proposing to exclude cloud 
computing from the LOS calculation, where the small business concern 
will perform other services that are the primary purpose of the 
acquisition. Alternatively, SBA is requesting comment on whether it 
should treat cloud computing as a supply, and therefore the NMR would 
apply, which would allow SBA to issue individual or class waivers of 
the NMR for cloud computing. SBA is also requesting comment on the 
definition of cloud computing, such as the definition in National 
Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-145, so 
that we can ensure the definition is not used to allow other than small 
businesses to provide an excessive portion of services on small 
business set aside contracts.
    SBA is requesting comment on whether these types of costs should be 
excluded from the calculation for purposes of compliance with the LOS. 
For example, some have suggested that travel costs should be excluded. 
However, SBA is also concerned about abuse of such exceptions. For 
example, SBA does not want agencies to receive credit for a small 
business contract award where the principal purpose of the acquisition 
is to obtain services from an other than small business concern. If 
that is the norm for a particular type of contract, perhaps that type 
of contract should not be set aside for small business concerns. The 
intent of the LOS is to prevent other than small business concerns from 
benefitting more than small business concerns on small business set 
aside contracts. SBA is requesting comment from industry on these 
issues.

Subcontracting to a Small Business Under a Socioeconomic Program Set 
Aside

    In the context of socioeconomic set aside or sole source service 
contracts, the ostensible subcontractor rule applies when a small 
business is unduly reliant on an other than small subcontractor, or 
when the other than small subcontractor will perform primary and vital 
parts of the contract. In such cases, assuming that an exception to 
joint venture affiliation does not apply, SBA will treat the small 
business prime contractor and its subcontractor as joint venturers, and 
therefore affiliates. If the subcontractor is other than small, the 
prime contractor is ineligible for award due to this affiliation. SBA 
has become aware of service contract set asides for the SDVO, HUBZone, 
8(a) or WOSB programs, where the prime contractor subcontracts most or 
all of the actual performance to a small business that is small for the 
applicable NAICS code but not eligible to compete for award of the 
prime contract, and thus not a similarly situated entity as that term 
is defined at Sec.  125.1.
    Under SBA's recently amended joint venture rules (81 FR 34243, May 
31, 2016; 13 CFR 121.103(h)(3)(i)), a joint venture can qualify as 
small as long as each member of the joint venture is small. In the 
scenario described above, the joint venture regulation prevents SBA 
from performing an analysis under the ostensible subcontractor rule 
because both the prime contractor and subcontractor are small for the 
size standard that applies to the contract and thus subject to the 
exception from affiliation for joint venture partners that are each 
small for the size standard. There is no existing regulatory mechanism 
for an unsuccessful offeror, SBA, or contracting officer to protest a 
socioeconomic set aside or sole source award to a prime contractor that 
is unduly reliant on a small, but not similarly situated entity 
subcontractor. The underlying premise that ostensible subcontractors 
and their prime contractors should be treated as joint ventures is 
still SBA's policy. Firms that are performing contracts in a manner 
more consistent with a joint venture than a prime/sub relationship 
should follow the requirements of SBA's regulations regarding 
socioeconomic joint ventures.

[[Page 62521]]

    The performance of a set-aside or sole source service contract by a 
small business concern that is not eligible to compete for the prime 
contract is contrary to the intent and purpose of the statutory 
authorities for socioeconomic category set-aside and sole source 
procurements. Thus, SBA is proposing language at Sec. Sec.  
124.507(b)(2), 125.18(f), 125.29(c), 126.601(i), 126.801(a), 
127.504(c), and 127.602, which will allow SBA to make a determination 
concerning a small business program participant's overreliance on a 
non-similarly situated subcontractor as part of an eligibility or 
status protest determination. SBA will evaluate these contractor 
relationships under the established ostensible subcontractor test. If 
SBA finds that the subcontractor is an ostensible subcontractor, SBA 
will treat the arrangement between the contractors as a joint venture 
that does not comply with the formal requirements necessary to receive 
and perform the socioeconomic program set aside or sole source award as 
a joint venture.
    This rulemaking will not apply to non-service contracts, such as 
construction contracts or contracts involving non-manufacturers. Due to 
the nature of the industry, SBA's rules allow small businesses to 
subcontract large amounts of performance on construction contracts. The 
Small Business Act, and SBA's regulations generally provide that for 
set aside supply contracts, a non-manufacturer must supply the product 
of a small business, unless SBA has issued a waiver. This means that 
for an SDVO, HUBZone, 8(a), or WOSB set aside or sole source supply 
contract, the prime contractor that is a non-manufacturer must qualify 
as an SDVO, HUBZone, 8(a) or WOSB, but the product can be made by a 
small business that does not qualify as SDVO, HUBZone, 8(a), or WOSB. 
When the non-manufacturer rule applies to a small business program 
contract, it is considered an exception to the limitations on 
subcontracting. Where a waiver of the non-manufacturer rule has been 
issued that applies to a small business program set-aside or sole 
source contract, the prime contractor may supply a product manufactured 
by any size business, also without regard to whether the subcontractor 
qualifies for the applicable small business program set-aside or sole 
source contract.

Kit Assemblers

    SBA is proposing to remove specific rules related to kit assemblers 
and the NMR, which are currently contained at 13 CFR 121.406(c). The 
existing kit assembler rule requires that 50 percent of the total value 
of the items in the kit must be manufactured by small business 
concerns, but excludes items manufactured by other than small business 
concerns if the contracting officer specifies the item for the kit. 
This rule has led to confusion concerning how to calculate total value, 
and whether a waiver of the non-manufacturer rule can or must be 
requested in order to supply items manufactured by other than small 
concerns. SBA recently amended its rules to address the NMR and 
multiple item acquisitions. If the majority of items in a kit are made 
by small business concerns, then the acquisition can be set aside for 
small business without the need to request a waiver. If the majority of 
items in a kit are not made by small business concerns, then an 
individual or class waiver of one or more of the items is necessary for 
the acquisition to be set aside for small business concerns for 
acquisitions above the simplified acquisition threshold or for all 
other socioeconomic set-asides, regardless of value. SBA is proposing 
to delete the kit assembler exception, and instead apply the multiple 
item rule in Sec.  121.406(e) to kit assembler acquisitions. Like all 
other acquisitions, the NMR will not apply to small business set-asides 
with a value at or below the simplified acquisition threshold.

Clarification on Size Determinations

    SBA is also proposing to amend its regulations to remove language 
that has caused confusion on when size is determined. The general rule 
is that size is determined at the time of initial offer including 
price, with the understanding that there are some exceptions such as 
architecture and engineering procurements, and certain unpriced 
indefinite delivery indefinite quantity (IDIQ) contracts. However, 
Sec.  121.404(a) also contains the parenthetical, ``(or other formal 
response to the solicitation).'' Some parties have misread this to mean 
formal responses that are after the initial offer, such as final 
proposal revisions. The clear intent of SBA's general rule is to give 
both firms and the government certainty as to when size will be 
determined, the initial response, including price, because in the 
current government contracting environment a vast amount of time may 
pass between initial offer and award. Offer covers bids and proposals, 
and SBA recognizes that in simplified acquisitions the initial response 
may be acceptance of the government's offer. Thus, SBA is proposing to 
amend Sec.  121.404(a) to make it clear that size is generally 
determined at the time of initial offer or response including price. 
SBA is also proposing to add a paragraph at Sec.  121.404(a)(1)(iv), to 
articulate an exception to the general rule for when size is 
determined. When an agency uses an IDIQ multiple award contract that 
does not require offers for the contract to include price, size will be 
determined on the date of initial offer for the IDIQ contract, which 
may not include price. This proposed change reflects the statutory 
change found at section 825 of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2017, 114 Public Law 328, (December 23, 2016), and 
section 876 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2019, 115 Public Law 232, (August 13, 2018). SBA is 
also proposing to remove the last sentence of paragraph Sec.  
121.404(g)(5), because it conflicts with recent rules that provide that 
a firm may rely on similarly situated entities to meet the applicable 
LOS. The last sentence of (g)(5) is unnecessary, as Sec.  121.103(h) is 
controlling with respect to the affiliation.
    SBA proposes to amend Sec.  121.103(h)(4) to clarify that when two 
or more small businesses either form a joint venture or are treated as 
joint venturers due to their relationship as prime and subcontractor, 
the joint venture exception to affiliation found at Sec.  
121.103(h)(3)(i) applies if both firms are considered small for the 
size standard associated with the procurement. SBA proposes to remove 
the phrase ``and therefore affiliates'' from the ostensible 
subcontractor rule at Sec.  121.103(h)(4) to clarify this point. To 
allow affiliation between firms that are considered joint venturers 
because of their ostensible subcontracting relationship, even when each 
firm is individually small for the size standard associated with the 
procurement, would negate the purpose of Sec.  121.103(h)(3)(i), which 
explicitly provides an exception to affiliation for such joint 
ventures.
    The purpose of the ostensible subcontractor rule is to treat the 
relationship between a prime contractor and its subcontractor as a 
joint venture where the subcontractor performs primary and vital work 
for the procurement. SBA's current joint venture rules do not aggregate 
the partners to a joint venture in determining the size of the joint 
venture, but rather permit a joint venture to qualify as small as long 
as each partner to the joint venture is individually small. Thus, a 
rule that equates a prime-sub relationship to that of a joint venture 
because the subcontractor is performing primary and vital work and then 
affiliates the two

[[Page 62522]]

parties (i.e., requiring them to aggregate their revenues or employees) 
is inconsistent with the joint venture size rules themselves. The 
phrase ``and therefore affiliates'' that SBA proposes to delete was a 
holdover from previous regulations that aggregated the receipts or 
employees of joint venture partners when determining whether a joint 
venture qualified as a small business. When SBA changed its size 
regulations to broaden the exclusion from affiliation for small 
business to allow two or more small businesses to joint venture for any 
procurement without being affiliated (i.e., the joint venture would be 
considered small provided each of the joint venture partners 
individually qualified as small and SBA would not aggregate the 
receipts or employees of joint venture partners), SBA amended Sec.  
121.103(h)(3), but did not make a correspondingly similar change in 
Sec.  121.103(h)(4). See 81 FR 34243, 34258 (May 31, 2016). This 
proposed rule intends to make it clear that if a prime-sub relationship 
is deemed to be a joint venture because of the ostensible subcontractor 
rule, then all of the rules pertaining to joint ventures would apply. 
As already noted, a prime-sub relationship where both parties 
individually qualified as small would be considered an award to small 
business. Similarly, if the ostensible subcontractor were a large 
business that was the SBA-approved mentor of the prime contractor, then 
the award could qualify as an award to small business if the prime 
contractor/prot[eacute]g[eacute] firm qualifies as small and the 
relationship (treated as a joint venture) meets the normal requirements 
for a joint venture. See Sec. Sec.  124.513(c) and (d); 125.18(b)(2) 
and (3); 126.616(c) and (d); and 127.506(c) and (d). Although SBA 
recognizes that it is unlikely that a prime-subcontractor relationship 
would meet the necessary joint venture requirements of those 
paragraphs, it is possible, and a prime-sub/joint venture that did in 
fact meet those requirements could qualify as small.
    In addition, the proposed rule further clarifies in Sec.  
121.103(h)(4) to provide that the ostensible subcontractor rule does 
not apply to similarly situated entities, as that term is defined at 
Sec.  125.1. SBA notes, however, that when both partners to a joint 
venture are small for the assigned NAICS code but the subcontractor 
partner is not a similarly situated entity, the prime alone is 
responsible for compliance with the applicable LOS and cannot rely on 
its subcontractors to satisfy the LOS requirement.

Clarification Where One Acceptable Offer Is Received on a Set Aside

    SBA is proposing to add new Sec.  125.2(e)(5) to clarify that a 
contracting officer may make an award under a small business or 
socioeconomic set-aside where only one acceptable offer is received. 
The decision to conduct a set aside is based on the contracting 
officer's expectation based on market research that he or she will 
obtain two or more fair market price offers from capable small business 
concerns. Pursuant to the FAR, the contracting officer must perform 
market research before issuing a solicitation to determine whether 
there are small businesses (including 8(a), HUBZone, SDVO SBCs, WOSBs) 
that can perform the requirement. 48 CFR 10.001(a)(2); 19.202-2. A 
contracting officer's ``rule of two'' determination is prospective. 
Whether there appear to be at least two small businesses that can 
perform a procurement at a fair price is an analysis that is done 
during acquisition strategy planning and prior to the issuance of a 
solicitation. As long as the market research leads a contracting 
officer to conclude that the agency will receive offers from at least 
two small business concerns that are technically acceptable and award 
will be made at a fair market price, the ``rule of two'' is satisfied, 
no matter how many offers are actually received or how many offers 
remain after evaluations are conducted, a competitive range is 
established, or offerors are eliminated in some other fashion.
    The FAR currently addresses small business set-asides below 
$150,000, and provides, ``If the contracting officer receives only one 
acceptable offer from a responsible small business concern in response 
to a set-aside, the contracting officer should make an award to that 
firm.'' FAR 19.502-2(a). There is no reason this policy should not 
apply to all set-asides above or below $150,000. The contracting 
officer must determine that an offeror is responsible and price is fair 
and reasonable before awarding any contract. FAR 9.103(a); 9.104-1; 
14.408-2; and 15.304(c)(1). It would be inefficient and detrimental to 
the Government and offerors to arbitrarily prevent an award where a 
competition was conducted but only one offer was received. Such a 
policy would unreasonably prolong the procurement process, requiring a 
procuring agency to cancel one solicitation and reprocure using another 
where only one small business offer is received, and could cause 
contracting officers to limit the use of set-asides.

Compliance With Executive Orders 12866, 13563, 12988, 13132, 13771, the 
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 
U.S.C. Ch. 35), and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612) 
Executive Order 12866

    The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this 
proposed rule is a ``significant'' regulatory action for purposes of 
Executive Order 12866. The benefits to small business from this 
proposed rule far outweigh any associated costs. The proposed rule 
makes several other changes needed to clarify ambiguities in or remedy 
perceived problems with the current regulations. These proposed changes 
should make SBA's regulations easier for SBCs to use and understand. 
The proposed change to Sec.  121.404 clarifies when size for a 
government contract is determined, which will reduce confusion for 
small business concerns. The proposed change to Sec.  121.406 clarifies 
that the size standard for information technology value added resellers 
is 150 employees, again to eliminate confusion among small business 
concerns. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(a) will benefit small 
business by clarifying that a contracting officer can award a contract 
to a small business under a set-aside if only one offer is received. 
The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(b) implement section 1811 of the 
NDAA of 2017, and govern what acquisitions PCRs can review and would 
not impact small business concerns. The proposed changes to Sec.  
125.2(d) implement section 863 of the NDAA of 2016 and direct 
contracting officers on how to notify the public about consolidation 
and substantial bundling, and will not impact small business concerns. 
The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(e) authorize agencies to set aside 
orders for socioeconomic programs where the contract was set aside for 
small business, and will benefit firms that qualify for those set 
asides. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.3 implement section 1821 of 
the NDAA of 2017 by providing examples of a failure to make a good 
faith effort to comply with small business subcontracting plans, and 
will benefit small businesses by providing such examples so that 
contracting officers can hold other than small prime contractors 
accountable for failing to make a good faith effort to comply with 
their small business subcontracting plan. The proposed changes to Sec.  
125.3 also implement section 1821 by providing that the contracting 
officer should evaluate whether an other than small business complied 
with the requirement to report

[[Page 62523]]

on small business subcontracting plan performance. The proposed changes 
to Sec.  125.6(a) will benefit small business concerns by allowing 
small businesses to exclude certain costs from the calculation of the 
limitations on subcontracting. Without these changes, some agencies 
will not be able to set contracts aside for small business, because 
certain costs attributable to other than small concerns are too high. 
The proposed changes to Sec.  125.6 also help small businesses by 
clarifying the difference between an employee and an independent 
contractor. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.6 will impose some 
requirements on small business concerns to demonstrate compliance with 
the LOS, but only to the extent the information is not already in the 
possession of the government. Contractors may have this information 
readily available since it pertains to contract performance and 
subcontracting of that performance. These information requests are not 
mandatory, as the contracting officer simply has the discretion to 
request such information. Contracting officers already have the 
authority to request information on performance, and this proposed 
change simply clarifies that the authority exists. Finally, the 
benefits to small business concerns of this proposed rule substantially 
outweigh any minor costs imposed by the exercise of existing 
contracting authority. The proposed addition of part 129 implements 
section 2108 of the RISE Act and benefits small businesses by providing 
agencies with an incentive to set aside contracts for small business 
concerns located in a disaster area. Accordingly, the next section 
contains SBA's Regulatory Impact Analysis. However, this is not a major 
rule under the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801, et seq.

Regulatory Impact Analysis

1. Is there a need for the regulatory action?
    The proposed rule implements section 863 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act of 2016, Public Law 114-92, 129 Stat. 726 (15 U.S.C. 
644(e)(3)); section 2108 of the Recovery Improvements for Small 
Entities After Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE Act), Public Law 114-88, 129 
Stat. 686 (15 U.S.C. 644(f)); and sections 1811 and 1821 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act of 2017, Public Law 114-328, 130 
Stat. 2000 (15 U.S.C. 637(d), 644(l)). In addition, it makes several 
other changes needed to clarify ambiguities in or remedy perceived 
problems with the current regulations. These proposed changes should 
make SBA's regulations easier to use and understand. With respect to 
contractors demonstrating compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting, for decades the general rule has been that on a set 
aside contract, a small business or socioeconomic small business must 
generally perform some of the work (services, construction, or 
manufacturing). This helps ensure that the benefits of a small business 
set-aside contract flow to the recipients whom Congress intends to help 
by creating the set aside authority. If performance of a set-aside 
contract is passed through to other-than-small business concerns, there 
may not be a need for set-asides in the first place, and the government 
may be paying more for a good or service without any value added. These 
limitations on subcontracting appear as a clause in a set aside 
contract and help to ensure that the intended beneficiaries of set 
aside contracts are receiving those benefits. The contracting officer 
is responsible for monitoring compliance with clauses in a contract. 
FAR 1.602. Nothing in SBA's regulations or the FAR prohibits a 
contracting officer from requesting documents demonstrating compliance 
with the limitations on subcontracting clause. It is SBA's view that 
such authority exists, but that the authority is not clear or express. 
Without clarifying the authority or process, some contracting officers 
simply are not monitoring compliance. The result is that there may be 
increased fraud, waste, and abuse, in the performance of contracts that 
are set aside for small business concerns, because subcontractors that 
are not eligible to receive the prime contract may be performing more 
work than section 46 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 657s), SBA 
regulations at 13 CFR 125.6, and FAR clause 52.219-14 permit. This type 
of fraud frustrates the policy goals associated with awarding contracts 
set aside for small business concerns.
    In this proposed rule, SBA proposes to clarify, by expressly 
stating, that the contracting officer may request information to 
demonstrate a contractor's compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting clause. SBA proposes to clarify that it is within the 
contracting officers' discretion to request such a showing of 
compliance, because in some cases it will not be necessary, such as 
when a small business performs the contract itself without the use of 
subcontractors or when information regarding compliance is already 
available to the Government. Through this proposed rule, SBA intends to 
deter and reduce potential fraud, waste, and abuse, due to 
noncompliance with the limitations on subcontracting. Additionally, 
clarifying a contracting officer's authority to request that a small 
business concern demonstrate compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting is consistent with recommendations made by the U.S. 
Government Accountability Office (GAO) in several reports: ``Contract 
Management; Increased Use of Alaska Native Corporations' Special 8(a) 
Provisions Calls for Tailored Oversight,'' GAO-06-39, April 2006; 
``8(a) Subcontracting Limitations, Continued Noncompliance with 
Monitoring Requirements Signals Need for Regulatory Change,'' GAO-14-
706, September 2014; and ``Federal Contracting Monitoring and Oversight 
of Tribal 8(a) Firms Need Attention,'' GAO-12-84, January 2012.
2. What are the potential benefits and costs of this regulatory action?
    The majority of the proposed changes in this rule will have de 
minimis costs and qualitative benefits that are difficult to quantity: 
Protecting the integrity of the small business procurement system. The 
rule proposes to provide exceptions to the LOS in certain service 
contracts where small businesses must use the services of other than 
small subcontractors in substantial amounts in order to fully perform a 
set aside service contract. This will help small business by making 
acquisitions available for small business set-asides that would not 
otherwise be available. Many of the other clarifications in this rule 
will benefit small businesses, by reducing confusion in the 
marketplace, but this benefit is difficult to quantify. The proposed 
rule allowing agencies to receive double credit toward its small 
business procurement goals for awards to local small business concerns 
in the event of a disaster is intended to benefit local small 
businesses and provide employment and revenue to concerns located in an 
area devastated by a disaster. While the authority for contracting 
preferences for businesses located in a disaster area already exists in 
FAR subpart 26.2, small businesses located in these areas may receive a 
greater benefit under this proposed rule due to the incentive for the 
procuring agency to receive double credit toward its small business 
procurement goals by utilizing this authority.
    SBA is proposing to clarify that the contracting officer may 
require the prime contractor to demonstrate compliance with the LOS. We 
believe that contracting officers already possesses the authority to 
request

[[Page 62524]]

information from a contractor concerning compliance with a clause in 
the contract pursuant to FAR 1.602-2. In addition, on some contracts, 
compliance can already be reviewed or monitored by reviewing invoices. 
The proposed rule would clarify that contracting officers have the 
authority to request information in connection with a contractor's 
compliance with applicable limitations on subcontracting clauses. 
Approximately 56,000 firms received approximately 180,000 sole source 
or set aside awards in FY 2016. SBA is proposing that a contracting 
officer may request information regarding compliance with prime 
contractors' limitations on subcontracting. In some cases this 
information may not be necessary based on the nature of the contract 
and the invoices submitted. SBA estimates that less than ten percent of 
small business concerns and contracts would be subject to a request for 
this information (5,600 small business concerns and 18,000 contracts), 
and compliance should take on average less than an hour. Small 
businesses that do not issue subcontracts will not have anything to 
report. Small businesses may be able to easily report on any 
subcontracts, as information on subcontracting and paying 
subcontractors is routinely compiled as part of the normal accounting 
procedures for any business concern. Accounting or contract management 
personnel should be able to determine whether the firm issued any 
subcontracts in connection with the prime contract. SBA estimates that 
this rule will be finalized in FY 2019. SBA estimates an overall annual 
cost of approximately $600,120 for small businesses to provide 
information on compliance with the limitations on subcontracting, as 
requested by the contracting officer.
    This proposed rule will require an other than small prime 
contractor with a commercial subcontracting plan to include indirect 
costs in its subcontracting goals. Based on data from the Electronic 
Subcontracting Reporting System (eSRS), in FY 2017 approximately 700 
firms had commercial subcontracting plans. SBA estimates that 
approximately 95% of those 700 firms include indirect costs in their 
subcontracting goals. Thus, this proposal would impact approximately 35 
firms. The burden would be de minimis, as the accounting or contract 
manager would know the firm's indirect costs. The benefit of requiring 
that indirect costs be included in subcontracting goals where a 
commercial subcontracting plan is utilized, is that it will increase 
the small business subcontracting goal and thus increase the amount of 
funds the prime contractor will subcontract to small business concerns. 
Increasing the value and number of awards to small business concerns 
provides financial benefits to those firms, who may hire more staff and 
invest in more resources to support the increased demand. Furthermore, 
increasing the number and value of awards to small business concerns 
has macroeconomic and qualitative benefits to the national economy 
because small businesses are the foundation of the country's economic 
success.
    This proposed rule will establish that failure to provide timely 
subcontracting reports may constitute a material breach of the 
contract. These reports are already required by law at 13 CFR 125.3(a). 
This rule will make failure to provide the report a material breach of 
the contract, which could subject other than small business concerns to 
liquidated damages. SBA is not aware of any case where a firm has been 
subject to liquidated damages for failure to comply with a 
subcontracting plan. Thus any costs would be de minimis. The benefit of 
this proposed rule is that it will assist SBA and contracting officers 
with oversight of prime contractor compliance with subcontracting plans 
and may result in increased compliance with subcontracting plans.
    This proposed rule requires recertification of status on full and 
open contracts. SBA intended for recertification to occur whenever an 
agency receives credit for an award towards it goals, and this proposed 
rule is just a clarification that socioeconomic recertification is 
required on all contracts, including full and open contracts. We 
estimate that approximately 150 firms a year recertify on full and open 
contracts. This will only impact firms that are acquired, merged, or 
where there is a novation or the firm grows to be other than small on a 
long term contract. Agencies have goals for the award of prime 
contractor dollars to small and socioeconomic concerns. The purpose of 
recertification is to ensure that an agency does not receive small 
business credit for an award to an other-than-small concern.
    This proposed rule will limit the scope of Procurement Center 
Representative reviews of Department of Defense acquisitions performed 
outside of the United States and its territories. This applies to the 
government and will not impose costs or burdens on the public.
    This proposed rule will remove the kit assembler exception to the 
non-manufacturer rule. This clarification requires agencies to request 
a waiver of the non-manufacturer rule for kits, in accordance with 
existing regulations. This will reduce confusion, by having only one 
non-manufacturer rule procedure for purposes of multi-item 
procurements.
3. What are the alternatives to this rule?
    Many of the proposed regulations are required to implement 
statutory provisions, thus there are no apparent alternatives for these 
regulations. With respect to the proposal clarifying that contracting 
officers may request information on compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting, SBA considered whether prime contractors should be 
required to provide this information on compliance with the LOS on all 
set aside or sole source contracts. However, that may unnecessarily 
burden small businesses, if compliance is already readily apparent to 
the contracting officer based on the type of contract, invoicing, or 
observation. We estimate the alternative considered, having all small 
businesses provide information on compliance, would have an annual cost 
of $1,867,040. SBA decided to clarify instead that the contracting 
officer has the discretion to request such information to the extent 
such information is not already available. This will enable the 
contracting officer to request this information as he or she sees fit, 
in order to ensure that the benefits of the small business programs are 
flowing to the intended recipients. However, SBA is requesting comment 
on whether all small businesses should provide information on 
compliance with the LOS for set aside or sole source contracts.

Executive Order 13563

    This executive order directs agencies to, among other things: (a) 
Afford the public a meaningful opportunity to comment through the 
internet on proposed regulations, with a comment period that should 
generally consist of not less than 60 days; (b) provide for an ``open 
exchange'' of information among government officials, experts, 
stakeholders, and the public; and (c) seek the views of those who are 
likely to be affected by the rulemaking, even before issuing a notice 
of proposed rulemaking. As far as practicable or relevant, SBA 
considered these requirements in developing this rule, as discussed 
below.
    1. Did the agency use the best available techniques to quantify 
anticipated present and future costs when responding to E.O. 12866 
(e.g.,

[[Page 62525]]

identifying changing future compliance costs that might result from 
technological innovation or anticipated behavioral changes)?
    To the extent possible, the agency utilized the most recent data 
available in the Federal Procurement Data System--Next Generation, 
System for Award Management and Electronic Subcontracting Reporting 
System.
    2. Public participation: Did the agency: (a) Afford the public a 
meaningful opportunity to comment through the internet on any proposed 
regulation, with a comment period that should generally consist of not 
less than 60 days; (b) provide for an ``open exchange'' of information 
among government officials, experts, stakeholders, and the public; (c) 
provide timely online access to the rulemaking docket on 
Regulations.gov; and (d) seek the views of those who are likely to be 
affected by rulemaking, even before issuing a notice of proposed 
rulemaking?
    The proposed rule will have a 60 day comment period and will be 
posted on www.regulations.gov to allow the public to comment 
meaningfully on its provisions. In addition, the proposed rule was 
discussed with the Small Business Procurement Advisory Council, which 
consists of the Directors of the Office of Small and Disadvantaged 
Business Utilization. SBA also submitted the rule to multiple agencies 
with representatives on the FAR Small Business Subcommittee prior to 
submitting the rule to the Office of Management and Budget for 
interagency review.
    3. Flexibility: Did the agency identify and consider regulatory 
approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of 
choice for the public?
    Yes, the proposed rule implements statutory provisions and will 
provide clarification to rules that were requested by agencies and 
stakeholders. In addition, SBA is proposing to make clear that 
contracting officers may request information from their contractors in 
order to determine whether the contractor is complying with the LOS. 
This information may already be provided as part of invoicing under 
certain contracts, and in any event, the information should be readily 
provided by the contractor, as it simply pertains to what extent the 
prime contractor is subcontracting work under the contract. Clarifying 
that the contracting officer has the authority to request this 
information, instead of requiring all small businesses to submit 
reports, significantly reduces cost and burden.

Executive Order 12988

    This action meets applicable standards set forth set forth in 
section 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice 
Reform, to minimize litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden. 
This action does not have any retroactive or preemptive effect.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    This rule will not result in an unfunded mandate that will result 
in expenditures by State governments of $100 million or more (adjusted 
annually for inflation since 1995).

Executive Order 13132

    SBA has determined that this proposed rule will not have 
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between 
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.

Executive Order 13771

    This proposed rule is expected to be an Executive Order 13771 
regulatory action. Details on the estimated costs of this proposed rule 
can be found in the rule's economic analysis.

Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Ch. 35

    Small businesses, such as 8(a) BD Program Participants, HUBZone 
SBCs, WOSBs, Economically Disadvantaged Women-Owned (EDWOSBCs, and SDVO 
SBCs, are eligible to receive set-aside or sole source contracts. 15 
U.S.C. 631(a), 637(a), (m), 644(a), (j), 657a, 657f. As a condition of 
these preferences, and to help ensure that small businesses actually 
perform a certain percentage of the work on a contract, the recipients 
of set-aside or sole source contracts are limited in their ability to 
subcontract to other-than-small business concerns by the limitations on 
subcontracting (LOS) clauses in the particular contract. See, 48 CFR 
52.219-3, 52.219-4, 52.219-7, 52.219-14, 52.219-18, 52.219-27, 52.219-
29, 52.219-30. Contracting officers are responsible for ensuring 
contractor compliance with the terms of a contract (FAR 1.602-2). The 
SBA proposed rule will provide express authority for contracting 
officers to request information on contractor's compliance with the 
LOS. Therefore, SBA will seek PRA review and approval from the Office 
of Management and Budget (OMB) to cover contracting officers' requests 
for information from small businesses regarding their LOS compliance.
    A summary description of the reporting requirement, description of 
respondents, and estimate of the annual burden is described below. 
Included in the estimate is the time for reviewing requirements, 
gathering and maintaining the data needed, and submitting the report to 
the contracting officer.
    Title: Compliance with the Limitations on Subcontracting.
    OMB Control Number: (To be determined; new collection).
    Summary Description of Compliance Information: In order to show 
that it is in compliance with the limitations on subcontracting terms 
that are included in its set-aside or sole source contract, a small 
business concern may be required to submit certain information to the 
contracting officer. The specific information relevant to a particular 
contract will be identified by the contracting officer but could 
include, where applicable, identification of subcontractor, dollar 
amount of subcontract, and costs to be excluded from the LOS 
calculation (e.g., for contracts for supplies, materials).
    Description of and Estimated Number of Respondents: Small business 
concerns that are awarded set-aside or sole source contracts. Based on 
FPDS data, SBA estimates that approximately 56,000 concerns receive 
approximately 180,000 small business sole source or set-aside awards in 
a fiscal year and that no more than ten percent (5,600) of concerns 
will be asked to provide information on compliance with the limitations 
on subcontracting for no more than ten percent (18,000) of the awards 
that have been received.
    Estimated Annual Responses: 18,000.
    Estimated Response Time per Respondent: 1 hour.
    Total Estimated Annual Hour Burden: 18,000.
    Estimated costs based on officer's salary: $33.34/hour (based on 
median pay for accountants and auditors, Bureau of Labor Statistics).
    Total estimated hour annual cost burden: 18,000 hours x $33.34/hour 
= $600,120.
    SBA will submit this new information collection (reporting 
requirement) to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review, 
and invites the public to comment on: (1) Whether the reporting 
requirement is necessary for the proper performance of SBA programs, 
including whether the information will have a practical utility; (2) 
the accuracy of SBA's estimate of the burden for the reporting 
requirement; (3) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of 
the information to be collected; and (4) ways to minimize the

[[Page 62526]]

burden imposed as a result of the reporting requirement on the 
respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques, when 
appropriate, and other forms of information technology.
    Comments must be received by the deadline stated in the DATES 
section of this rule. Refer to the ADDRESS section for instructions on 
how and where to submit comments.

Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612

    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), this proposed rule may 
have a significant impact on a substantial number of small businesses. 
Immediately below, SBA sets forth an initial regulatory flexibility 
analysis (IRFA) addressing the impact of the proposed rule in 
accordance with section 603, Title 5, of the United States Code. The 
IRFA examines the objectives and legal basis for this proposed rule; 
the kind and number of small entities that may be affected; the 
projected recordkeeping, reporting, and other requirements; whether 
there are any Federal rules that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict 
with this proposed rule; and whether there are any significant 
alternatives to this proposed rule.
1. What are the need for and objective of the rule?
    The proposed rule implements section 863 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act of 2016, Public Law 114-92, 129 Stat. 726 (15 U.S.C. 
644(e)(3)); section 2108 of the Recovery Improvements for Small 
Entities After Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE Act), Public Law 114-88, 129 
Stat. 686 (15 U.S.C. 644(f)); and sections 1811 and 1821 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act of 2017, Public Law 114-328, 130 
Stat. 2000 (15 U.S.C. 637(d), 644(l)). In addition, the proposed rule 
makes several other changes needed to clarify ambiguities in or remedy 
perceived problems with the current regulations. These proposed changes 
should make SBA's regulations easier to use and understand. The 
proposed rule will make it easier for agencies to award set aside 
contracts to SBCs. Failure to promulgate this rule could result in a 
loss of set aside opportunities for SBCs.
    The proposed change to Sec.  121.404 clarifies when size for a 
government contract is determined, which will reduce confusion for 
small business concerns. The proposed change to Sec.  121.406 clarifies 
that the size standard for information technology value added resellers 
is 150 employees, again to eliminate confusion among small business 
concerns. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(a) will benefit small 
business by clarifying that a contracting officer can award a contract 
to a small business under a set aside if only one offer is received. 
The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(b) implement section 1811 of the 
NDAA 2017, and govern what acquisitions PCRs can review and would not 
impact small business concerns. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(d) 
implement section 863 of the NDAA of 2016 and direct contracting 
officers on how to notify the public about consolidation and 
substantial bundling, and will not impact small business concerns. The 
proposed changes to Sec.  125.2(e) authorize agencies to set aside 
orders for socioeconomic programs where the contract was set aside for 
small business, and will benefit firms that qualify for those set 
asides. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.3 implement section 1821 of 
the NDAA of 2017 by providing examples of a failure to make a good 
faith effort to comply with small business subcontracting plans, and 
will benefit small businesses by providing such examples so that 
contracting officers can hold other than small prime contractors 
accountable for failing to make a good faith effort to comply with 
their small business subcontracting plan. The proposed changes to Sec.  
125.3 also implement section 1821 by providing that the contracting 
officer should evaluate whether an other than small business complied 
with the requirement to report on small business subcontracting plan 
performance. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.6(a) will benefit small 
business concerns by allowing small businesses to exclude certain costs 
from the calculation of the limitations on subcontracting. Without 
these changes, some agencies will not be able to set contracts aside 
for small business, because certain costs attributable to other than 
small concerns are too high. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.6 also 
help small businesses by clarifying the difference between an employee 
and an independent contractor. The proposed changes to Sec.  125.6 will 
impose some information production requirements on small business 
concerns, but only to the extent the information is not already in the 
possession of the government. Further, this information is readily 
available since it pertains to contract performance and subcontracting 
of that performance. These reports are not mandatory, as the 
contracting officer simply has the discretion to request such reports. 
Contracting officers already have the authority to request information 
demonstrating performance, and this proposed change simply clarifies 
that the authority exists. Finally, the benefits to small business 
concerns of this proposed rule substantially outweigh any minor costs 
imposed by the reporting authority. The proposed addition of part 129 
implements section 2108 of the RISE Act and benefits small businesses 
by providing agencies with an incentive to set aside contracts for 
small business concerns located in a disaster area.
    With respect to the limitation on subcontracting to an ineligible 
small business under a socioeconomic set aside (proposed 13 CFR 
124.507(b)(2)(vi), 125.29(c), 126.601(i), and 127.504(c)), the rule 
will impact very few firms. The vast majority of small business prime 
contractors self-perform the required percentage of work, or will 
subcontract to a similarly situated entity, as is allowed under FAR 
52.219-3 (Notice of HUBZone Set-Aside or Sole Source Award), 52-219-27 
(Notice of Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business Set-Aside), 
and as will be allowed when SBA's rules on similarly situated entities 
(13 CFR 125.6) are implemented in the FAR. The benefits that will flow 
to the intended beneficiaries of a socio-economic set-aside far 
outweigh any impact on firms that have no intention of performing the 
contract or are not eligible to bid on that contract.
2. What are SBA's description and estimate of the number of small 
entities to which the rule will apply?
    If the proposed rule is adopted in its present form, the rule would 
be applicable to all small business concerns participating in the 
Federal procurement market that seek to perform government prime 
contracts or to perform subcontracts awarded by other than small 
concerns. SBA estimates that there are approximately 320,000 firms 
identified as small business concerns in the Dynamic Small Business 
Search database.
3. What are the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and other 
compliance requirements of the rule and an estimate of the classes of 
small entities which will be subject to the requirements?
    The proposed rule does not impose new recordkeeping requirements. 
Contractors already keep records on contract performance and 
subcontracting. Information may be required, but only to the extent the 
information is not available through invoices or existing progress 
reports. The proposed rule would clarify that contracting officers may 
request access to information in connection with a

[[Page 62527]]

contractor's compliance with applicable limitations on subcontracting 
clauses. Approximately 56,000 firms received sole source or set aside 
awards in FY 2016. SBA is clarifying that a contracting officer may 
request information to assure compliance with the LOS clause, and in 
some cases this information may not be necessary based on the nature of 
the contract and the invoices submitted. We estimate that less than ten 
percent of contracts would be subject to a request to provide this 
information (18,000), and compliance should take less than an hour for 
each of those contracts. Accounting or contract management personnel 
should be able to determine whether the firm issued any subcontracts in 
connection with the prime contract. We estimate the SBA rule will be 
finalized in FY 2019. We estimate an overall annual cost of 
approximately $600,120.
4. What are the relevant Federal rules which may duplicate, overlap or 
conflict with the rule?
    We are not aware of any rules that duplicate, overlap or conflict 
with this rule. The FAR will have to be amended to implement portions 
of this rule. That will be done through a separate rulemaking.
5. What alternatives will allow the Agency to accomplish its regulatory 
objectives while minimizing the impact on small entities?
    Many of the proposed changes are required to implement statute, and 
impose requirements on contracting personnel, agencies or other than 
small concerns, and do not impact small business concerns. Further, 
many of the proposed changes will benefit small business concerns by 
clarifying areas where there is confusion and by making it easier for 
agencies to set aside contracts and orders for small business and small 
socioeconomic concerns. As an alternative, SBA considered whether prime 
contractors should be required to provide information on compliance 
with the LOS on all set aside or sole source contracts. However, that 
may unnecessarily burden small businesses, if compliance is already 
readily apparent to the contracting officer based on the type of 
contract, invoicing, or observation.

List of Subjects

13 CFR Part 121

    Government procurement; Government property; Grant programs--
business, Individuals with disabilities; Loan programs--business; Small 
businesses.

13 CFR Part 124

    Administrative practice and procedure, Government procurement, 
Government property, Small businesses.

13 CFR Part 125

    Government contracts, Government procurement, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements, Small businesses, Technical assistance.

13 CFR Part 126

    Administrative practice and procedure, Government procurement, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Small businesses.

13 CFR Part 127

    Government contracts, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
Small businesses.

13 CFR Part 129

    Administrative practice and procedure, Government contracts, 
Government procurement, Small businesses.

    Accordingly, for the reasons stated in the preamble, SBA proposes 
to amend 13 CFR parts 121, 124, 125, 126, and 127 and to add 13 CFR 
part 129 as follows:

PART 121--SMALL BUSINESS SIZE REGULATIONS

0
1. The authority citation for part 121 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 662, and 694a(9).

0
2. Amend Sec.  121.103 by revising the first sentence of paragraph 
(h)(4) to read as follows:


Sec.  121.103  How does SBA determine affiliation?

* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (4) A contractor and its ostensible subcontractor are treated as 
joint venturers for size determination purposes. * * *
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec.  121.404 by revising paragraph (a) introductory text, 
adding paragraph (a)(1)(iv), and revising paragraph (g)(5) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  121.404  When is the size status of a business concern 
determined?

    (a) SBA determines the size status of a concern, including its 
affiliates, as of the date the concern submits a written self-
certification that it is small to the procuring activity as part of its 
initial offer or response which includes price.
    (1) * * *
    (iv) For an indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity (IDIQ), 
Multiple Award Contract, where concerns are not required to submit 
price as part of the offer for the IDIQ contract, size will be 
determined as of the date of initial offer, which may not include 
price.
* * * * *
    (g) * * *
    (5) If during contract performance a subcontractor that is not a 
similarly situated entity performs primary and vital requirements of a 
contract, the contractor and its ostensible subcontractor will be 
treated as joint venturers. See Sec.  121.103(h)(4).
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec.  121.406 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i);
0
b. Removing paragraph (c); and
0
c. Redesignating paragraphs (d) through (f) as paragraphs (c) through 
(e) respectively.
    The revision to read as follows:


Sec.  121.406  How does a small business concern qualify to provide 
manufactured products or other supply items under a small business set-
aside, service-disabled veteran-owned small business, HUBZone, WOSB or 
EDWOSB, or 8(a) contract?

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) Does not exceed 500 employees (or 150 employees for the 
Information Technology Value Added Reseller exception to NAICS Code 
541519, which is found at Sec.  121.201, footnote 18);
* * * * *

PART 124--8(a) BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT/SMALL DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS 
STATUS DETERMINATIONS

0
5. The authority citation for part 124 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634(b)(6), 636(j), 637(a), 637(d), 644 and 
Pub. L. 99-661, Pub. L. 100-656, sec. 1207, Pub. L. 101-37, Pub. L. 
101-574, section 8021, Pub. L. 108-87, and 42 U.S.C. 9815.

0
6. Amend Sec.  124.503 by revising paragraphs (c)(1)(iii) and (iv) and 
adding paragraph (c)(1)(v) to read as follows:


Sec.  124.503  How does SBA accept a procurement for award through the 
8(a) BD program?

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (iii) The Participant is small for the size standard corresponding 
to the NAICS code assigned to the requirement by the procuring activity 
contracting officer;
    (iv) The Participant has submitted required financial statements to 
SBA; and

[[Page 62528]]

    (v) The Participant is performing the primary and vital 
requirements of the service contract, or of an order, and is not 
unusually reliant on a subcontractor that is not similarly situated, as 
that term is defined at Sec.  125.1.
0
7. In Sec.  124.507, add paragraph (b)(2)(vi) to read as follows:


Sec.  124.507  What procedures apply to competitive 8(a) procurements?

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (2) * * *
    (vi) Performing the primary and vital requirements of the service 
contract, or of an order, or is unusually reliant on a subcontractor 
that is not a similarly situated entity, as that term is defined at 
Sec.  125.1.
0
8. In Sec.  124.521, add paragraph (e) to read as follows:


Sec.  124.521  What are the requirements for representing 8(a) status, 
and what are the penalties for misrepresentation?

* * * * *
    (e) Recertification. (1) Generally, a concern that represents 
itself and qualifies as an 8(a) Participant at the time of initial 
offer (or other formal response to a solicitation), which includes 
price, including a Multiple Award Contract, is considered an 8(a) 
Participant throughout the life of that contract. For an indefinite 
delivery, indefinite quantity (IDIQ), Multiple Award Contract, where 
concerns are not required to submit price as part of the offer for the 
contract, a concern that represents itself and qualifies as an 8(a) 
Participant at the time of initial offer, which may not include price, 
is considered an 8(a) Participant throughout the life of that contract. 
This means that if an 8(a) Participant is qualified at the time of 
initial offer for a Multiple Award Contract, then it will be considered 
an 8(a) Participant for each order issued against the contract, unless 
a contracting officer requests a new 8(a) certification in connection 
with a specific order. Where a concern later fails to qualify as an 
8(a) Participant, the procuring agency may exercise options and still 
count the award as an award to an SDB. However, the following 
exceptions apply:
    (i) Where an 8(a) contract is novated to another business concern, 
or where the concern performing the 8(a) contract is acquired by, 
acquires, or merges with another concern and contract novation is not 
required, the concern must comply with the process outlined at 
Sec. Sec.  124.105(i) and 124.515.
    (ii) Where an 8(a) Participant receives a non-8(a) contract that is 
novated to another business concern, the concern that will continue 
performance on the contract must certify its status as an 8(a) 
Participant to the procuring agency, or inform the procuring agency 
that it does not qualify as an 8(a) Participant, within 30 days of the 
novation approval. If the concern is not an 8(a) Participant, the 
agency can no longer count the options or orders issued pursuant to the 
contract, from that point forward, towards its SDB goals.
    (iii) Where an 8(a) Participant receives a non-8(a) contract, and 
that Participant acquires, is acquired by, or merges with another 
concern and contract novation is not required, the concern must, within 
30 days of the transaction becoming final, recertify its 8(a) status to 
the procuring agency, or inform the procuring agency that it no longer 
qualifies as an 8(a) Participant. If the contractor is not an 8(a) 
Participant, the agency can no longer count the options or orders 
issued pursuant to the contract, from that point forward, towards its 
SDB goals. The agency and the contractor must immediately revise all 
applicable Federal contract databases to reflect the new status.
    (2) For the purposes of contracts (including Multiple Award 
Contracts) with durations of more than five years (including options), 
a contracting officer must request that a business concern recertify 
its 8(a) status no more than 120 days prior to the end of the fifth 
year of the contract, and no more than 120 days prior to exercising any 
option. Where a concern fails to recertify its 8(a) status during the 
120 days prior to the end of the fifth year of the contract, the option 
shall not be exercised.
    (3) Recertification does not change the terms and conditions of the 
contract. The limitations on subcontracting, nonmanufacturer and 
subcontracting plan requirements in effect at the time of contract 
award remain in effect throughout the life of the contract.
    (4) Where the contracting officer explicitly requires concerns to 
recertify their status in response to a solicitation for an order, SBA 
will determine eligibility as of the date the concern submits its self-
representation as part of its response to the solicitation for the 
order.
    (5) A concern's status may be determined at the time of a response 
to a solicitation for an basic ordering agreement (BOA), basic 
agreement (BA), or blanket purchase agreement (BPA) and each order 
issued pursuant to the BPA, BOA, or BA.
0
9. In Sec.  124.1015, add paragraph (f) to read as follows:


Sec.  124.1015  What are the requirements for representing SDB status, 
and what are the penalties for misrepresentation?

* * * * *
    (f) Recertification. (1) Generally, a concern that represents 
itself and qualifies as an SDB at the time of initial offer (or other 
formal response to a solicitation), which includes price, including a 
Multiple Award Contract, is considered an SDB throughout the life of 
that contract. For an indefinite delivery indefinite quantity (IDIQ), 
Multiple Award Contract, where concerns are not required to submit 
price as part of their offer for the contract, a concern that 
represents itself and qualifies as an SDB at the time of initial offer, 
which may not include price, is considered an SDB throughout the life 
of that contract. This means that if an SDB is qualified at the time of 
initial offer for a Multiple Award Contract, then it will be considered 
an SDB for each order issued against the contract, unless a contracting 
officer requests a new SDB certification in connection with a specific 
order. Where a concern later fails to qualify as an SDB, the procuring 
agency may exercise options and still count the award as an award to an 
SDB. However, the following exceptions apply:
    (i) Where a contract is novated to another business concern, the 
concern that will continue performance on the contract must certify its 
status as an SDB to the procuring agency, or inform the procuring 
agency that it does not qualify as an SDB, within 30 days of the 
novation approval. If the concern is not an SDB, the agency can no 
longer count the options or orders issued pursuant to the contract, 
from that point forward, towards its SDB goals.
    (ii) Where a concern that is performing a contract acquires, is 
acquired by, or merges with another concern and contract novation is 
not required, the concern must, within 30 days of the transaction 
becoming final, recertify its SDB status to the procuring agency, or 
inform the procuring agency that it no longer qualifies as an SDB. If 
the contractor is not an SDB, the agency can no longer count the 
options or orders issued pursuant to the contract, from that point 
forward, towards its SDB goals. The agency and the contractor must 
immediately revise all applicable Federal contract databases to reflect 
the new status.
    (2) For the purposes of contracts (including Multiple Award 
Contracts) with durations of more than five years (including options), 
a contracting officer must request that a business concern recertify 
its SDB status no more than 120 days prior to the end of the fifth

[[Page 62529]]

year of the contract, and no more than 120 days prior to exercising any 
option.
    (3) A business concern that did not certify itself as an SDB, 
either initially or prior to an option being exercised, may recertify 
itself as an SDB for a subsequent option period if it meets the 
eligibility requirements at that time.
    (4) Recertification does not change the terms and conditions of the 
contract. The limitations on subcontracting, nonmanufacturer and 
subcontracting plan requirements in effect at the time of contract 
award remain in effect throughout the life of the contract.
    (5) Where the contracting officer explicitly requires concerns to 
recertify their status in response to a solicitation for an order, SBA 
will determine eligibility as of the date the concern submits its self-
representation as part of its response to the solicitation for the 
order.
    (6) A concern's status may be determined at the time of a response 
to a solicitation for an Agreement and each order issued pursuant to 
the Agreement.

PART 125--GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING PROGRAMS

0
9. The authority citation for part 125 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632(p), (q); 634(b)(6); 637; 644; 657f; 
657r.

0
10. Amend Sec.  125.2 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a);
0
b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A):
0
i. Revising the second sentence; and
0
ii. Adding a sentence at the end of the paragraph;
0
c. Adding paragraph (d)(1)(v);
0
d. Redesignating paragraph (d)(7) as paragraph (d)(8);
0
e. Adding new paragraph (d)(7); and
0
f. Revising paragraph (e)(6).
    The revisions and additions to read as follows:


Sec.  125.2  What are SBA's and the procuring agency's responsibilities 
when providing contracting assistance to small businesses?

    (a)(1) The objective of the SBA's contracting programs is to assist 
small business concerns, including 8(a) BD Participants, HUBZone small 
business concerns, Service Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business 
Concerns, Women-Owned Small Businesses and Economically Disadvantaged 
Women-Owned Small Businesses, in obtaining a fair share of Federal 
Government prime contracts, subcontracts, orders, and property sales. 
Therefore, these regulations apply to all types of Federal Government 
contracts, including Multiple Award Contracts, and contracts for 
architectural and engineering services, research, development, test and 
evaluation. Small business concerns must receive any award (including 
orders, and orders placed against Multiple Award Contracts) or 
contract, part of any such award or contract, any contract for the sale 
of Government property, or any contract resulting from a reverse 
auction, regardless of the place of performance, which SBA and the 
procuring or disposal agency determine to be in the interest of:
    (i) Maintaining or mobilizing the Nation's full productive 
capacity;
    (ii) War or national defense programs;
    (iii) Assuring that a fair proportion of the total purchases and 
contracts for property, services and construction for the Government in 
each industry category are placed with small business concerns; or
    (iv) Assuring that a fair proportion of the total sales of 
Government property is made to small business concerns.
    (2) If the contracting officer receives only one acceptable offer 
from a responsible small business concern in response to any small or 
socioeconomic set-aside, the contracting officer should make an award 
to that firm.
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) * * * (A) * * * At the SBA's discretion, PCRs may review any 
acquisition to determine whether a set aside or sole source award to a 
small business under one of SBA's programs is appropriate and to 
identify alternative strategies to maximize the participation of small 
businesses in the procurement. * * * Unless the contracting agency 
requests a review, PCRs will not review an acquisition by or on behalf 
of the Department of Defense if the acquisition is conducted for a 
foreign government pursuant to section 22 of the Arms Control Export 
Act (22 U.S.C. 2762), is a humanitarian operation as defined in 10 
U.S.C. 401(e), is for a contingency operation as defined in 10 U.S.C. 
101(a)(13), is to be awarded pursuant to an agreement with the 
government of a foreign country in which Armed Forces of the United 
States are deployed, or where both the place of award and place of 
performance are entirely outside of the United States and its 
territories.
* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (v) Not later than 7 days after making a determination that an 
acquisition strategy involving a consolidation of contract requirements 
is necessary and justified under subparagraph (d)(1)(i) of this 
section, the Senior Procurement Executive (SPE) or Chief Acquisition 
Officer (CAO), or designee, shall publish a notice on the agency's 
website that such determination has been made. Any solicitation for a 
procurement related to the acquisition strategy shall not be issued 
earlier than 7 days after such notice is published. Along with the 
publication of the solicitation, the SPE or CAO (or designee) must 
publish in the Government-wide Point of Entry (GPE) the justification 
for the determination, which shall include the information in 
paragraphs (d)(1)(i)(A) through (E) of this section.
* * * * *
    (7) Notification to Public of Rationale for Substantial Bundling. 
If the head of a contracting agency determines that an acquisition plan 
for a procurement involves a substantial bundling of contract 
requirements, the head of a contracting agency shall publish a notice 
on the agency's website that such determination has been made not later 
than 7 days after making such determination. Any solicitation for a 
procurement related to the acquisition plan may not be published 
earlier than 7 days after such notice is published. Along with the 
publication of the solicitation, the head of a contracting agency shall 
publish in the GPE a justification for the determination, which shall 
include the following information:
    (i) The specific benefits anticipated to be derived from the 
bundling of contract requirements and a determination that such 
benefits justify the bundling.
    (ii) An identification of any alternative contracting approaches 
that would involve a lesser degree of bundling of contract 
requirements.
    (iii) An assessment of--the specific impediments to participation 
by small business concerns as prime contractors that result from the 
bundling of contract requirements; and
    (iv) The specific actions designed to maximize participation of 
small business concerns as subcontractors (including suppliers) at 
various tiers under the contract or contracts that are awarded to meet 
the requirements.
* * * * *
    (e) * * *
    (6) * * *
    (i) Notwithstanding the fair opportunity requirements set forth in 
10 U.S.C. 2304c and 41 U.S.C. 253j, the contracting officer has the 
authority to set aside orders against Multiple Award Contracts, 
including contracts that were set aside for small business. This 
includes order set asides for 8(a) Participants, HUBZone SBCs, SDVO 
SBCs and WOSBs.
* * * * *

[[Page 62530]]

0
11. Amend Sec.  125.3 by:
0
a. Revising the last sentence of paragraph (c)(1)(iv);
0
b. Revising paragraph (d)(3);
0
c. Adding paragraph (d)(11); and
0
d. Revising the first sentence of paragraph (f)(3).
    The revisions and addition to read as follows:


Sec.  125.3  What types of subcontracting assistance are available to 
small businesses?

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (iv) * * * A contractor authorized to use a commercial 
subcontracting plan must include all indirect costs in its 
subcontracting goals and in its SSR;
* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (3) Evaluating whether the prime contractor made a good faith 
effort to comply with its small business subcontracting plan.
    (i) Evidence that a large business prime contractor has made a good 
faith effort to comply with its subcontracting plan or other 
subcontracting responsibilities includes supporting documentation that:
    (A) The contractor performed one or more of the actions described 
in paragraph (b) of this section, as appropriate for the procurement;
    (B) Although the contractor may have failed to achieve its goal in 
one socioeconomic category, it over-achieved its goal by an equal or 
greater amount in one or more of the other categories; or
    (C) The contractor fulfilled all of the requirements of its 
subcontracting plan.
    (ii) Examples of activities reflective of a failure to make a good 
faith effort to comply with a subcontracting plan include, but are not 
limited, to:
    (A) Failure to submit the acceptable individual or summary 
subcontracting reports in eSRS by the report due dates or as provided 
by other agency regulations within prescribed time frames;
    (B) Failure to pay small business concern subcontractors in 
accordance with the terms of the contract with the prime;
    (C) Failure to designate and maintain a company official to 
administer the subcontracting program and monitor and enforce 
compliance with the plan;
    (D) Failure to maintain records or otherwise demonstrate procedures 
adopted to comply with the plan including subcontracting flow-down 
requirements;
    (E) Adoption of company policies or documented procedures that have 
as their objectives the frustration of the objectives of the plan;
    (F) Failure to correct substantiated findings from federal 
subcontracting compliance reviews or participate in subcontracting plan 
management training offered by the government;
    (G) Failure to conduct market research identifying potential small 
business concern subcontractors through all reasonable means including 
outreach, industry days, or the use of federal database marketing 
systems such as SBA's Dynamic Small Business Search (DSBS) or SUBNet 
Systems or any successor federal systems;
    (H) Failure to comply with regulations requiring approval by the 
contracting officer to change small business concern subcontractors 
that were used in preparing offers; or
    (I) Falsifying records of subcontracting awards to SBCs.
* * * * *
    (11) Evaluating whether the contractor or subcontractor complied in 
good faith with the requirement to provide periodic reports and 
cooperate in any studies or surveys as may be required by the Federal 
agency or the Administration in order to determine the extent of 
compliance by the contractor or subcontractor with the subcontracting 
plan. Failure to make a good faith effort shall be a material breach of 
such contract or subcontract and may be considered in any past 
performance evaluation of the contractor.
* * * * *
    (f) * * *
    (3) Upon completion of the review and evaluation of a contractor's 
performance and efforts to achieve the requirements in its 
subcontracting plans, the contractor's performance will be assigned one 
of the following ratings: Exceptional, Very Good, Satisfactory, 
Marginal or Unsatisfactory. * * *
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec.  125.6 by:
0
a. Adding two sentences at the end of paragraph (a)(1);
0
b. Adding a sentence at the end of paragraph (c);
0
c. Revising paragraph (e)(3); and
0
d. Adding paragraph (e)(4).
    The revision and additions to read as follows:


Sec.  125.6  What are the prime contractor's limitations on 
subcontracting?

    (a) * * *
    (1) * * * Other direct costs may be excluded to the extent they are 
not the principal purpose of the acquisition and small business 
concerns do not provide the service, such as airline travel, work 
performed by a transportation or disposal entity under a contract 
assigned the environmental remediation NAICS code (562910), cloud 
computing services, or mass media purchases. In addition, work 
performed by an independent contractor under a contract that was 
awarded pursuant to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 may also be 
excluded.
* * * * *
    (c) * * * A prime contractor may no longer count a similarly 
situated entity towards compliance with the limitations on 
subcontracting where the subcontractor ceases to qualify as small or 
under the relevant socioeconomic status.
* * * * *
    (e) * * *
    (3)(i) For contracts assigned a NAICS code with an employee-based 
size standard, where an independent contractor is not otherwise treated 
as an employee of the concern for which he/she is performing work for 
size purposes under Sec.  121.106(a) of this chapter, work performed by 
the independent contractor shall be considered a subcontract. Such work 
will count toward meeting the applicable limitation on subcontracting 
where the independent contractor qualifies as a similarly situated 
entity.
    (ii) For contracts assigned a NAICS code with a revenue-based size 
standard, work performed by an independent contractor shall be 
considered a subcontract, and will count toward meeting the applicable 
limitation on subcontracting where the independent contractor qualifies 
as a similarly situated entity. A firm's treatment and reporting of an 
individual for tax purposes governs whether that individual should be 
treated as an employee or independent contractor for limitations on 
subcontracting purposes.
    (4) The contracting officer may require the contractor to 
demonstrate its compliance with the limitations on subcontracting, if 
the information regarding such compliance is not already available to 
the contracting officer (e.g., invoices).
* * * * *
0
13. Amend Sec.  125.18 by:
0
a. In paragraph (e)(1)(i), removing the phrase ``an SDVO contract'' and 
adding in its place the phrase ``a contract'';
0
b. In paragraph (e)(1)(ii), removing the phrase ``an SDVO SBC 
contract'' and adding in its place the phrase ``a contract''; and
0
c. Adding paragraph (f).
    The addition to read as follows:

[[Page 62531]]

Sec.  125.18  What requirements must an SDVO SBC meet to submit an 
offer on a contract?

* * * * *
    (f) Ostensible subcontractor. Where a subcontractor that is not 
similarly situated performs primary and vital requirements of a set 
aside or sole source service contract or order, or where a prime 
contractor is unduly reliant on a small business that is not similarly 
situated to perform the set aside service or sole source contract or 
order, the prime contractor is not eligible for award of an SDVO 
contract. When the subcontractor is small for the size standard 
assigned to the procurement, this issue may be grounds for an SDVO 
status protest, as described in subpart D of this part. When the 
subcontractor is other than small, or alleged to be other than small 
for the size standard assigned to the procurement, this issue may be 
grounds for a size protest subject to the ostensible subcontractor 
rule, as described at Sec.  121.103(h)(4) of this chapter.
0
14. In Sec.  125.29, add paragraph (c) to read as follows:


Sec.  125.29  What are the grounds for filing an SDVO SBC protest?

* * * * *
    (c) Ostensible subcontractor. In cases where the prime contractor 
appears unduly reliant on a small, non-similarly situated entity 
subcontractor or where the small non-similarly situated entity is 
performing the primary and vital requirements of the contract, the 
Director, Office of Government Contracting will consider a protest only 
if the protester presents credible evidence of the alleged undue 
reliance or credible evidence that the primary and vital requirements 
will be performed by the subcontractor.

PART 126--HUBZONE PROGRAM

0
15. The authority citation for part 126 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority:  15 U.S.C. 632(a), 632(j), 632(p), 644 and 657a; Pub. 
L. 111-240, 24 Stat. 2504.

0
16. Amend Sec.  126.601 by:
0
 a. In paragraph (h)(1)(i), removing the phrase ``HUBZone contract (or 
a HUBZone contract awarded through full and open competition based on 
the HUBZone price evaluation preference'' and adding in its place the 
word ``contract'';
0
 b. In paragraph (h)(1)(ii), removing the phrase ``HUBZone contract'' 
and adding in its place the word ``contract''; and
0
 c. Adding paragraph (i).
    The addition to read as follows:


Sec.  126.601  What additional requirements must a qualified HUBZone 
SBC meet to bid on a contract?

* * * * *
    (i) Ostensible subcontractor. Where a subcontractor that is not 
similarly situated performs primary and vital requirements of a set 
aside service contract, or where a prime contractor is unduly reliant 
on a small business that is not similarly situated to perform the set 
aside service contract, the prime contractor is not eligible for award 
of a HUBZone contract. When the subcontractor is small for the size 
standard assigned to the procurement, this issue may be grounds for a 
HUBZone status protest, as described in subpart H of this part. When 
the subcontractor is alleged to be other than small for the size 
standard assigned to the procurement, this issue may be grounds for a 
size protest under the ostensible subcontractor rule, as described at 
Sec.  121.103(h)(4) of this chapter.
0
17. Amend Sec.  126.801 by adding in paragraph (a) a sentence after the 
third sentence to read as follows:


Sec.  126.801  How does one file a HUBZone status protest?

    (a) * * * SBA will also consider a protest challenging whether a 
HUBZone prime contractor is unduly reliant on a small, non-similarly 
situated entity subcontractor or if such subcontractor performs the 
primary and vital requirements of the contract. * * *
* * * * *

PART 127--WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT PROGRAM

0
18. The authority citation for part 127 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 637(m), 644 and 657r.


Sec.  127.503  [Amended]

0
 19. In Sec.  127.503, amend paragraphs (h)(1)(i) and (ii) by removing 
the phrase ``WOSB/EDWOSB contract'' wherever it appears and adding in 
its place the word ``contract''.
0
20. In Sec.  127.504, add paragraph (c) to read as follows:


Sec.  127.504  What additional requirements must a concern satisfy to 
submit an offer on an EDWOSB or WOSB requirement?

* * * * *
    (c) Where a subcontractor that is not similarly situated performs 
primary and vital requirements of a set aside service contract, or 
where a prime contractor is unduly reliant on a small business that is 
not similarly situated to perform the set aside service contract, the 
prime contractor is not eligible for award of a WOSB or EDWOSB 
contract. When the subcontractor is small for the size standard 
assigned to the procurement, this issue may be grounds for a WOSB or 
EDWOSB status protest, as described in subpart F of this part. When the 
subcontractor is other than small, or alleged to be other than small, 
for the size standard assigned to the procurement, this issue may be a 
ground for a size protest, as described at Sec.  121.103(h)(4) of this 
chapter.
0
 21. Amend Sec.  127.602 by revising the second sentence and adding a 
new third sentence to read as follows:


Sec.  127.602  What are the grounds for filing an EDWOSB or WOSB status 
protest?

    * * * SBA will also consider a protest challenging the status of a 
concern as an EDWOSB or WOSB if the contracting officer has protested 
because the WOSB or EDWOSB apparent successful offeror has failed to 
provide all of the required documents, as set forth in Sec.  127.300. 
In addition, when sufficient credible evidence is presented, SBA will 
consider a protest challenging whether the prime contractor is 
unusually reliant on a small, non-similarly situated entity 
subcontractor, as defined in Sec.  125.1 of this chapter, or a protest 
alleging that such subcontractor is performing the primary and vital 
requirements of a set aside or sole source WOSB or EDWOSB contract.
0
22. Add part 129 to read as follows:

PART 129--CONTRACTS FOR SMALL BUSINESSES LOCATED IN DISASTER AREAS

Sec.
129.100 What definitions are important in this part?
129.200 What contracting preferences are available for small 
business concerns located in disaster areas?
129.300 What small business goaling credit do agencies receive for 
awarding a contract to a small business concern under this part?
129.400 What are the applicable performance requirements?
129.500 What are the penalties of misrepresentation of size or 
status?

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(j)(13)(F)(ii), 644(f).


Sec.  129.100  What definitions are important in this part?

    For the purposes of this part:
    Concern located in a disaster area is a firm that during the last 
twelve months--
    (1)(i) Had its main operating office in the area; and

[[Page 62532]]

    (ii) That office generated at least half of the firm's gross 
revenues and employed at least half of the offeror's permanent 
employees.
    (2) If the firm does not meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of this 
definition, factors to be considered in determining whether a firm 
resides or primarily does business in the disaster area include--
    (i) Physical location(s) of the firm's permanent office(s) and date 
any office in the disaster area(s) was established;
    (ii) Current state licenses;
    (iii) Record of past work in the disaster area(s) (e.g., how much 
and for how long);
    (iv) Contractual history the firm has had with subcontractors and/
or suppliers in the disaster area;
    (v) Percentage of the firm's gross revenues attributable to work 
performed in the disaster area;
    (vi) Number of permanent employees the firm employs in the disaster 
area;
    (vii) Membership in local and state organizations in the disaster 
area; and
    (viii) Other evidence that establishes the firm resides or 
primarily does business in the disaster area. For example, sole 
proprietorships may submit utility bills and bank statements.
    Disaster area means the area for which the President has declared a 
major disaster under section 401 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster 
Relief and Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5170), during the period of the 
declaration.
    Emergency response contract means a contract with private entities 
that supports assistance activities in a disaster area, such as debris 
cleanup, distribution of supplies, or reconstruction.


Sec.  129.200   What contracting preferences are available for small 
business concerns located in disaster areas?

    Contracting officers may set aside solicitations for emergency 
response contracts to allow only small businesses located in the 
disaster area to compete.


Sec.  129.300   What small business goaling credit do agencies receive 
for awarding an emergency response contract to a small business concern 
under this part?

    If an agency awards an emergency response contract to a local small 
business concern through the use of a local area set aside that is also 
set aside under a small business or socioeconomic set-aside (8(a), 
HUBZone, SDVO, WOSB, EDWOSB), the value of the contract shall be 
doubled for purposes of determining compliance with the goals for 
procurement contracts under section 15(g)(1)(A) of the Small Business 
Act (15 U.S.C. 644(g)(1)(A)). The procuring agency shall enter the 
actual contract value, not the doubled contract value in the required 
contract reporting systems, and appropriately code the contract action 
to receive the credit. SBA will provide the double credit as part of 
the Scorecard process.


Sec.  129.400  What are the applicable performance requirements?

    The performance requirements of Sec.  125.6 of this chapter apply 
to small and socioeconomic set asides under this part. A similarly 
situated entity as that term is used in Sec.  125.6 of this chapter 
must qualify as a concern located in a disaster area.


Sec.  129.500  What are the penalties of misrepresentation of size or 
status?

    The penalties relevant to the particular size or socioeconomic 
status representation under title 13 Sec. Sec.  121.108, 125.32, 
126.900, and 127.700 of this chapter are applicable to set asides under 
this part.

    Dated: November 8, 2018.
Linda E. McMahon,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018-25705 Filed 12-3-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 8025-01-P



     62516

     Proposed Rules                                                                                                Federal Register
                                                                                                                   Vol. 83, No. 233

                                                                                                                   Tuesday, December 4, 2018



     This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER                    announced in SBA’s scorecard for local                contracting agency shall publish a
     contains notices to the public of the proposed          area small business set asides in                     notice of such determination on a public
     issuance of rules and regulations. The                  connection with a disaster. Finally, SBA              website within 7 days of making such
     purpose of these notices is to give interested          is proposing to remove the kit assembler              determination. Section 863 also
     persons an opportunity to participate in the            exception to the non-manufacturer rule.               amended section 44(c)(2) of the Small
     rule making prior to the adoption of the final
                                                             DATES: Comments must be received on                   Business Act (15 U.S.C. 657q(c)(2)) to
     rules.
                                                             or before February 4, 2019.                           provide that upon determining that a
                                                             ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
                                                                                                                   consolidation of contract requirements
     SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION                           identified by RIN 3245–AG86, by any of                is necessary and justified, the Senior
                                                             the following methods:                                Procurement Executive (SPE) or Chief
     13 CFR Parts 121, 124, 125, 126, 127,                      • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://              Acquisition Officer (CAO) shall publish
     and 129                                                 www.regulations.gov. Follow the                       a notice on a public website that such
                                                             instructions for submitting comments.                 determination has been made. An
     RIN 3245–AG86                                                                                                 agency may not issue the solicitation
                                                                • For mail, paper, disk, or CD–ROM
                                                             submissions: Brenda Fernandez, U.S.                   any earlier than 7 days after publication
     National Defense Authorization Acts of                                                                        of the notice. The SPE or CAO must also
     2016 and 2017, Recovery                                 Small Business Administration, Office
                                                                                                                   publish the justification along with the
     Improvements for Small Entities After                   of Policy, Planning and Liaison, 409
                                                                                                                   solicitation. The requirement may be
     Disaster Act of 2015, and Other Small                   Third Street SW, 8th Floor, Washington,
                                                                                                                   delegated. SBA proposes to amend
     Business Government Contracting                         DC 20416.
                                                                                                                   § 125.2(d) by adding new paragraphs
                                                                • Hand Delivery/Courier: Brenda
     AGENCY:  U.S. Small Business                                                                                  (d)(1)(v) and (d)(7) to implement these
                                                             Fernandez, U.S. Small Business
     Administration.                                                                                               changes.
                                                             Administration, Office of Policy,
     ACTION: Proposed rule.                                  Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street                II. National Defense Authorization Act
                                                             SW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 20416.                  for Fiscal Year 2017, Public Law 114–
     SUMMARY:    The U.S. Small Business                        SBA will post all comments on                      328, 130 Stat. 2000, December 23, 2016
     Administration (SBA or Agency) is                       www.regulations.gov. If you wish to                   (NDAA of 2017)
     proposing to amend its regulations to                   submit confidential business
     implement several provisions of the                                                                           Procurement Center Representative
                                                             information (CBI) as defined in the User
     National Defense Authorization Acts                                                                           Reviews
                                                             Notice at www.regulations.gov, please
     (NDAA) of 2016 and 2017 and the                         submit the information to Brenda                        Section 1811 of the NDAA of 2017
     Recovery Improvements for Small                         Fernandez, U.S. Small Business                        amended section 15(l) of the Small
     Entities After Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE               Administration, Office of Policy,                     Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644(l)) to
     Act), as well as implementing other                     Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street                provide that Procurement Center
     clarifying amendments. The proposed                     SW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 20416,                  Representatives (PCRs) may review any
     rule would clarify that contracting                     or send an email to brenda.fernandez@                 acquisition, even those where the
     officers have the authority to request                  sba.gov. Highlight the information that               acquisition is set aside, partially set
     information in connection with a                        you consider to be CBI and explain why                aside or reserved for small business.
     contractor’s compliance with applicable                 you believe SBA should hold this                      SBA’s current rules provide that PCRs
     limitations on subcontracting clauses;                  information as confidential. SBA will                 will review all acquisitions that are not
     provide exclusions for purposes of                      review the information and make the                   set aside or reserved for small business.
     compliance with the limitations on                      final determination on whether it will                These rules were intended to focus
     subcontracting for certain contracts                    publish the information.                              limited resources on acquisitions that
     performed outside of the United States,                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      were not already going to small
     environmental remediation contracts,                    Brenda Fernandez, Office of Policy,                   business, but were not intended to
     and information technology service                      Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street                prohibit a PCR from reviewing any
     acquisitions that require substantial                   SW, Washington, DC 20416; (202) 205–                  acquisition as part of the PCR’s role as
     cloud computing; require a prime                        7337; brenda.fernandez@sba.gov.                       an advocate for small business. SBA
     contractor with a commercial                                                                                  proposes to amend § 125.2(b)(1)(i) to
                                                             SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
     subcontracting plan to include indirect                                                                       provide that PCRs may review any
     costs in its subcontracting goals;                      I. National Defense Authorization Act                 acquisition regardless of whether it is
     establish that failure to provide timely                for Fiscal Year 2016, Public Law 114–                 set aside, partially set aside, or reserved
     subcontracting reports may constitute a                 92, 129 Stat. 726, November 25, 2015                  for small business or other
     material breach of the contract; clarify                (NDAA of 2016)                                        socioeconomic categories. SBA believes
     the requirements for size and status                                                                          that this change will enable PCRs to
     recertification; and limit the scope of                 Posting Notice of Substantial Bundling
                                                                                                                   advocate for total set asides, or partial
     Procurement Center Representative                         Section 863 of the NDAA of 2016                     set asides, when appropriate and
     reviews of Department of Defense                        amended section 15(e)(3) of the Small                 necessary.
     acquisitions performed outside of the                   Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644(e)(3)) to                   Section 1811 of the NDAA of 2017
     United States and its territories. The                  provide that if the head of a contracting             also amended section 15(l) of the Small
     proposed rule would also authorize                      agency determines that an acquisition                 Business Act to limit the scope of PCR
     agencies to receive double credit for                   plan involves a substantial bundling of               review of solicitations for contracts or
     small business goaling achievements as                  contract requirements, the head of the                orders by or for the Department of


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                         62517

     Defense if the acquisition is conducted                 consistent with the information and                   major disaster, during the period of the
     pursuant to the Arms Control Export                     assurances provided in the                            declaration. Section 2108 provides that
     Act (22 U.S.C. 2762), is a humanitarian                 subcontracting plan. A failure to exert               this contracting preference shall be
     operation as defined in 10 U.S.C. 401(e),               good faith effort is first predicated upon            available for small business concerns
     is for a contingency operation as defined               evidence that an other-than-small-                    located in disaster areas if the small
     in 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(13), is to be awarded               business (OTSB) federal prime                         business will perform the work required
     pursuant to an agreement with the                       contractor, required to have a                        under the contract in the disaster area.
     government of a foreign country in                      subcontracting plan with negotiated                   Under § 6.208 of Federal Acquisition
     which Armed Forces of the United                        Small Business Concern (SBC) goals                    Regulation (FAR), title 48 of the Code of
     States are deployed, or where both the                  approved by a federal contracting                     Federal Regulations, contracting officers
     place of award and place of performance                 officer, has failed to attain these goals             may set aside solicitations to allow only
     are outside of the United States and its                and this failure may be attributable to a             offerors residing or doing business in
     territories. SBA is proposing to amend                  lack of good faith effort by the OTSB                 the area affected by a major disaster.
     § 125.2(b)(1)(i) to implement these                     prime contractor. The term SBC for                    Under existing FAR 26.202–1, such
     amendments. PCRs may still review                       purposes of this rule includes all                    local area set asides may be further set
     acquisitions awarded in the United                      categories of small business socio-                   aside for small business concerns. SBA
     States and its territories but performed                economic concerns including small                     is proposing to use the existing FAR
     outside of the United States and its                    business, small disadvantaged                         definitions to provide that an agency
     territories, or awarded outside of the                  businesses, veteran owned small                       will receive credit for an ‘‘emergency
     United States and its territories for                   businesses, service disabled veteran                  response contract’’ awarded to a ‘‘local
     performance in the United States or its                 owned small businesses, women owned                   firm’’ that qualifies as a small business
     territories, if the acquisition is not a                small businesses, small businesses in                 concern under the applicable size
     foreign military sales, or in connection                historically underutilized business                   standard for a ‘‘Major disaster or
     with a contingency operation,                           zones, Historically Black Colleges and                emergency area.’’ FAR 26.201.
     humanitarian operation or status of                     Universities (HBCU/Minority                              Section 2108 also provides that if an
     forces agreement. SBA considers                         Institutions (MI)) (NASA only) and any                agency awards a contract to a small
     performance to be outside of the United                 successor small business designations.                business located in a disaster area
     States and its territories if the                       A failure to exert good faith efforts must            through a contracting preference, the
     acquisition is awarded and performed or                 take into account all actions, or lack                value of the contract shall be doubled
     delivered outside of the United States                  thereof, the contractor made to promote               for purposes of determining compliance
     and its territories. If the acquisition is              subcontracting opportunity to small                   with the small business contracting
     awarded in the United States and its                    businesses to the extent agreed upon in               goals described in section 15(g)(1)(A) of
     territories or some performance or                      the approved subcontracting plan. SBA                 the Small Business Act. Proposed
     delivery occurs in the United States and                is reorganizing this section to reflect               § 129.300 states that agencies shall
     its territories, SBA considers that to be               these new examples in proposed                        receive double credit for awarding a
     performed in the United States and its                  § 125.3(d)(3)(ii). SBA is proposing to                contract through the use of a local small
     territories.                                            renumber current § 125.3(d)(3)(i)                     business or socioeconomic set aside
                                                             through (iii) as § 125.3(d)(3)(i)(A)                  authorized by proposed § 129.200, i.e., a
     Material Breach of Subcontracting Plan
                                                             through (C) to better organize this                   set-aside restricted to SBCs, 8(a)
       Section 1821 of the NDAA of 2017                      section for clarity and ease of                       Business Development (BD) Program
     amended section 8(d)(9) of the Small                    understanding . This rule does not add                Participants, Women-Owned, Service-
     Business Act (15 U.S.C. 637(d)(9)) to                   a new requirement for supporting                      Disabled Veteran-Owned or HUBZone
     provide that it shall be a material breach              documentation for the subcontracting                  SBCs located in a disaster area. It is
     of a contract or subcontract when the                   plan.                                                 SBA’s intent that agencies will enter
     contractor or subcontractor with a
                                                             III. Recovery Improvements for Small                  accurate data into the Federal
     subcontracting plan fails to comply in
                                                             Entities After Disaster Act of 2015,                  Procurement Data System (FPDS). SBA
     good faith with the requirement to
     provide assurances that the offeror shall               Public Law 114–88, 129 Stat. 686,                     will provide the extra credit through the
     submit such periodic reports or                         November 25, 2015 (RISE Act)                          agency scorecard process. Local area set
     cooperate in any studies or surveys as                     Section 2108 of the RISE Act                       aside and small business contract
     may be required by the Federal agency                   authorizes SBA to establish contracting               designations already exist in FPDS, and
     or the Administration in order to                       preferences for small business concerns               implementation has already occurred in
     determine the extent of compliance by                   located in disaster areas, and provide                FY 2017.
     the offeror with the subcontracting plan.               agencies with double credit for awards                IV. Other Small Business Government
     Such a breach may be considered in any                  to small business concerns located in                 Contracting Amendments
     past performance evaluation of the                      disaster areas. In order to implement the
     contractor. SBA is proposing to revise                  changes made by section 2108 of the                   Clarification That the Non-
     § 125.3(d) to implement this provision.                 RISE Act, SBA is proposing to add a                   Manufacturer 500 Employee Size
       Section 1821 also provides that SBA                   new part 129 to title 13 of the Code of               Standard Does Not Apply to
     must provide examples of activities that                Federal Regulations. SBA will                         Information Technology Value Added
     would be considered a failure to make                   implement section 2105 in a separate                  Resellers
     a good faith effort to comply with a                    rulemaking.                                              On September 10, 2014, SBA
     small business subcontracting plan.                        Section 2108 of the RISE Act amends                proposed to eliminate the information
     Good faith effort considers a totality of               section 15 of the Small Business Act (15              technology value added reseller
     the contractor’s actions to provide the                 U.S.C. 644) by adding a subsection (f),               (ITVAR) exception to NAICS 541519,
     maximum practicable opportunity to                      which authorizes procuring agencies to                which had a size standard of 150
     small businesses to participate as                      provide contracting preferences for                   employees. 79 FR 53646. In the
     subcontractors (including those in the                  small business concerns located in areas              proposed rule, SBA specifically noted
     socio-economic small business areas),                   for which the President has declared a                that elimination of the exception would


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     62518                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     result in these acquisitions, which are                 the socioeconomic programs. 81 FR                     proposed changes, is that a prime
     primarily for supplies, being subject to                34243. In addition, some agencies have                contractor relying on similarly situated
     the non-manufacturer rule (NMR),                        pursued the strategy of allowing order                entities (an SDVOSB prime with an
     which has a size standard of 500                        set asides against set aside multiple                 SDVOSB subcontractor, for example) to
     employees. As a result of public                        award contracts, including notification               meet the applicable performance
     comment, SBA altered the language in                    and incorporation of the clause at FAR                requirements may not count the
     the ITVAR exception (13 CFR 121.201,                    52.219–13, and agencies have reported                 subcontractor towards its performance
     footnote 18) to make it clear that the                  that they have not encountered any                    requirements if the subcontractor
     manufacturing performance or                            industry concerns. SBA is requesting                  recertifies as an entity other than that
     limitations on subcontracting                           comment on whether SBA should allow                   which it had previously certified.
     requirements and the NMR apply to                       agencies to set aside orders for a
                                                                                                                   Indirect Costs in Commercial
     acquisitions under the ITVAR                            socioeconomic small business program
                                                                                                                   Subcontracting Plans
     exception, but retained the 150                         (8(a), HUBZone, SDVO, WOSB) under a
     employee size standard. 81 FR 4436                      multiple award contract that was                         Other than small business concerns
     (January 26, 2016). By definition,                      originally conducted as a total small                 that have a commercial subcontracting
     contractors under the ITVAR exception                   business set-aside. Because SBA                       plan report on performance through a
     are non-manufacturers, and it would                     believes that a change is appropriate at              summary subcontracting report (SSR),
     make no sense for SBA to retain a 150                   this time, SBA is proposing to remove                 and SBA’s rules currently require that a
     employee size standard if concerns                      the term ‘‘Full and Open’’ from                       contractor using a commercial
     could also qualify under the NMR 500                    § 125.2(e)(6) to specifically afford                  subcontracting plan must include all
     employee size standard. In a size appeal                discretion to an agency to set-aside one              indirect costs in its SSR. However,
     before the SBA Office of Hearings and                   or more particular orders for HUBZone                 SBA’s rules do not require contractors to
     Appeals, a firm tried to argue that the                 SBCs, 8(a) BD SBCs, SDVO SBCs or                      include indirect costs in their
     size standard under the ITVAR                           WOSBs, as appropriate, where the                      commercial subcontracting plan goals,
     exception was the 500 employee non-                     underlying multiple award contract was                which leads to inconsistencies when
     manufacturer size standard. Size Appeal                 initially set-aside for small business. Set           comparing the SSR to the commercial
     of York Telecom Corporation, SBA No.                    asides under multiple award set-aside                 subcontracting plan. SBA is proposing
     SIZ–5742 (May 18, 2016). The appeal                     contracts may be implemented by                       to revise § 125.3(c)(1)(iv) to require that
     was denied, and this rule proposes to                   agencies in different ways, including:                prime contractors with commercial
     clarify in § 121.406(b)(1)(i) that the NMR              (1) Establishing set asides to                        subcontracting plans must include
     size standard of 500 employees does not                 socioeconomic programs at the order                   indirect costs in the commercial
     apply to acquisitions that have been                    solicitation level under multiple award               subcontracting plan goals. This will
     assigned the ITVAR NAICS code 541519                    small business set-aside contracts, and               allow agencies to negotiate more
     exception, footnote 18. The size                        (2) establishing socioeconomic set-aside              realistic commercial subcontracting
     standard for any acquisition under                      pools at the master contract solicitation             plans and monitor performance through
     541519, footnote 18 is 150 employees                    level for a multiple award small                      the SSR.
     for all offerors.                                       business set-aside contract. SBA is                   Subcontracting Compliance Reviews
                                                             requesting comments on any burden or
     Setting Aside an Order Under a Multiple                                                                          SBA is also proposing to change the
                                                             adverse impact associated with each of
     Award Set Aside Contract                                                                                      nomenclature that applies to
                                                             these two approaches. In addition, SBA
        In the final rule implementing 15                    is specifically interested in whether                 subcontracting compliance reviews.
     U.S.C. 644(r), SBA contemplated the set                 these two approaches impact the ability               Instead of rating firms as ‘‘Outstanding,’’
     aside of orders for certain types of SBCs,              for all types of small businesses (e.g.               ‘‘Highly Successful,’’ or ‘‘Acceptable,’’
     such as HUBZone SBCs, 8(a) BD                           8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, SDVOSB) to                       SBA will utilize the terminology
     Program Participants, SDVO SBCs, or                     compete and receive orders.                           ‘‘Exceptional,’’ ‘‘Very Good,’’ and
     WOSBs. 78 FR 61114, 61124 (October 2,                                                                         ‘‘Satisfactory.’’ SBA proposes to revise
     2013). SBA noted that at the time, the                  Recertification of Size and Status                    § 125.3(f)(3) to implement these changes
     small business programs had major                          SBA’s rules require recertification of             to align title 13 of the CFR and the FAR
     differences with respect to application                 size and status for all long-term (over 5             to rectify ambiguity in terminology
     of the limitations on subcontracting                    years) contracts. This includes                       which causes confusion by Government
     (LOS) and NMR, and therefore it would                   indefinite delivery contracts under                   personnel and industry partners when
     be difficult for SBCs and agencies to                   which orders will be placed at a future               attempting to ascertain the value and
     determine the rules that applied to a                   date and contracts that had not been set-             differences of the SBA’s rating under
     particular order. SBA was also                          aside for small business, but were                    § 125.3(f)(3) in an SBA Compliance
     concerned about the possibility that                    awarded to a small business. Thus, SBA                Review and the ratings in FAR 42.1503
     SBCs could be deprived of an                            is proposing to amend §§ 125.18(e),                   under a Subcontracting Evaluation
     opportunity to compete for orders under                 126.601(h), and 127.503(h) to clarify                 when FAR 52.219–9 is used and made
     a set aside contract if an agency                       that a concern must recertify its status              part of the firm’s past performance
     repeatedly set aside orders for other                   on full and open contracts. In addition,              record.
     socioeconomic categories. Since that                    SBA is adding a new paragraph to
     time, SBA has attempted to harmonize                    §§ 124.521 and 124.1015 to reflect the                Independent Contractors—Employees/
     the application of the LOS and NMR for                  status recertification requirements for               Subcontractors
     each of the various types of small                      8(a) participants and SDB concerns,                     SBA’s size regulations provide that
     business contracts. The concerns                        which are already present in the SDVO,                SBA considers ‘‘all individuals
     identified in the SBA final rule have                   HUBZone, and WOSB regulations. This                   employed on a full-time, part-time, or
     since been addressed to enable fair and                 change provides greater consistency                   other basis’’ to be employees of the firm
     proper implementation of order set                      among the status recertification                      whose size is at issue. 13 CFR
     asides. Specifically, the SBA final rule                requirements for small business                       121.106(a). ‘‘This includes employees
     standardized the LOS and NMR across                     program contracts. One result of these                obtained from a temporary employee


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           62519

     agency, professional employee                           LOS where the independent contractor                  subcontract to other than small business
     organization or leasing concern.’’ Id.                  qualifies as a similarly situated entity.’’           concerns, so that small businesses
     Further, ‘‘SBA will consider the totality               (Emphasis added). This provision was                  actually perform a certain percentage of
     of the circumstances, including criteria                meant to apply to service or                          the work. These LOS appear in
     used by the IRS for Federal income tax                  construction contracts. For service                   solicitations and contract clauses for
     purposes, in determining whether                        contracts, work performed by an                       small business set aside and sole source
     individuals are employees of a                          independent contractor would always                   awards. Like with all contract
     concern.’’ Id. In determining what it                   be considered a subcontract, so that a                administration, it is the responsibility of
     means to be employed on an ‘‘other’’                    service contractor could not claim that               the contracting officer to monitor
     basis, SBA issued Size Policy Statement                 a non-similarly situated entity                       compliance with terms and conditions
     No. 1. 51 FR 6099–01 (February 20,                      independent contractor should be                      of a contract. (FAR 1.602–2), including
     1986). The Size Policy Statement sets                   considered an employee of the service                 the LOS clause. SBA is proposing
     forth 11 criteria SBA will consider in                  contractor. For example, for a WOSB                   language to clarify that contracting
     determining whether an individual                       service contract, SBA did not want a                  officers have the discretion to request
     should be treated as an employee. If an                 WOSB prime contractor to pass                         information from contractors to
     individual meets one or more of the                     performance of the contract to one or                 demonstrate compliance with LOS
     criteria they may be treated as an                      more independent contractors that                     clauses. The Government
     employee. Pursuant to this guidance, an                 would not themselves qualify as                       Accountability Office (GAO) has noted
     individual contractor paid through a                    WOSBs. The provision identifies that an               in reports that contracting officers have
     1099 may be properly treated as an                      independent contractor could qualify as               not been monitoring compliance with
     employee for purposes of SBA’s                          a ‘‘similarly situated entity’’ and meet              the limitations on subcontracting.
     regulations (including SBA’s regulations                the LOS that way, but would not permit                ‘‘Contract Management; Increased Use
     governing performance of work or LOS                    a service contractor to effectively avoid             of Alaska Native Corporations’ Special
     requirements). The reason for such                      meeting the LOS by claiming that                      8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored
     treatment was to prevent a firm that                    independent contractors were in fact                  Oversight,’’ GAO–06–39, April 2006;
     exceeded an applicable employee-based                   employees of the firm.                                ‘‘8(a) Subcontracting Limitations,
     size standard from ‘‘firing’’ a specific                   This proposed rule revises                         Continued Noncompliance with
     number of employees in order to get                     § 125.6(e)(3) to clarify SBA’s intent                 Monitoring Requirements Signals Need
     below the size standard, but to then hire               regarding both contracts assigned a                   for Regulatory Change,’’ GAO–14–706,
     them back or ‘‘subcontract’’ to them as                 NAICS code with an employee-based                     September 2014; and ‘‘Federal
     independent contractors. SBA did not                    size standard and those assigned a                    Contracting Monitoring and Oversight of
     want to encourage firms to attempt to                   NAICS code with a receipts-based size                 Tribal 8(a) Firms Need Attention,’’
     evade SBA’s size regulations.                           standard. Where a contract is assigned                GAO–12–84, January 2012. The type of
        Historically, SBA has said that if an                a NAICS code with an employee-based                   information that small business prime
     individual qualifies as an ‘‘employee’’                 size standard, an independent                         contractors may be requested to provide
     under part 121 of SBA’s regulations for                 contractor may be deemed an employee                  to demonstrate compliance with the
     purposes of determining size, then SBA                  of the firm under the terms of the Size               LOS could be copies of subcontracts for
     should consider that individual to be an                Policy Statement. Where a contract is                 a particular procurement or an email
     employee of the firm for the                            assigned a NAICS code with a receipts-                that lists the amount that the prime
     performance of work (or now LOS)                        based size standard, an independent
                                                                                                                   contractor has paid to its subcontractors
     requirements of 13 CFR 125.6 (or                        contractor could not be considered an
                                                                                                                   for a particular procurement and
     124.510). It would not be equitable to                  employee of the firm for which he or
                                                                                                                   whether those subcontractors are
     say that a given individual counts                      she is performing work, but, rather,
                                                                                                                   similarly situated entities. In addition,
     against a firm in determining size                      would always be deemed a
                                                                                                                   SBA proposed to require information
     (because he/she is considered an                        subcontractor. In either case, as a
                                                                                                                   demonstrating compliance with the
     ‘‘employee’’ of the firm) and then to say               subcontractor, an independent
                                                                                                                   applicable LOS from all prime
     that that same individual also counts                   contractor may be considered a
                                                                                                                   contractors performing set-aside and
     against the firm for the LOS                            ‘‘similarly situated entity’’ and work
                                                                                                                   sole-source contracts awarded through
     requirements (because he/she is not                     performed by the independent
     considered an ‘‘employee’’ of the firm).                contractor would then count toward                    SBA’s small business programs when
     Thus, for a contract that is assigned a                 meeting the applicable limitation on                  the prime contractor intends to rely on
     NAICS code having an employee-based                     subcontracting.                                       similarly situated subcontractors to
     size standard, an independent                                                                                 comply with the LOS. 79 FR 77955
                                                             Limitation on Subcontracting                          (December 29, 2014). SBA did not adopt
     contractor could be deemed an
                                                             Compliance                                            such a requirement in the final rule, but
     ‘‘employee’’ of the concern for which
     he/she is doing work. If such an                          Congress has expressed its strong                   indicated that it intended to seek
     individual is considered an employee                    support for small business government                 comment on this issue. 81 FR 34243
     for size purposes, he/she would also be                 contracting, and has provided agencies                (May 31, 2016).
     considered an employee for LOS                          with numerous tools to set aside                         SBA is proposing to add new
     purposes.                                               acquisitions for exclusive competition                § 125.6(e)(4) to clarify that contracting
        It appears that SBA’s regulation at 13               among, or in some cases award contracts               officers may request information
     CFR 125.6(e)(3) has caused some                         on a sole source basis to, SBCs, 8(a) BD              regarding LOS compliance, and to
     confusion as to how to properly treat                   Program Participants, HUBZone SBCs,                   clarify that it is not required for every
     independent contractors for purposes of                 WOSBs, Economically Disadvantaged                     contract. SBA is requesting comment on
     the LOS provisions. That provision                      Women-Owned (EDWOSB) SBCs, and                        whether all small business prime
     provides that ‘‘Work performed by an                    SDVO SBCs. 15 U.S.C. 631(a), 637(a),                  contractors performing set-aside or sole
     independent contractor shall be                         (m), 644(a), (j), 657a, 657f. As a                    source contracts should be required to
     considered a subcontract, and may                       condition of these preferences, small                 demonstrate compliance with LOS to
     count toward meeting the applicable                     businesses are limited in their ability to            the contracting officer, and if so, how


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     62520                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     often should this be required, such as                  and capital intensive, these particular               business concerns. The intent of the
     annually or quarterly. What salient data                transportation services can generally be              LOS is to prevent other than small
     would best provide assurance of                         performed only by other than small                    business concerns from benefitting more
     compliance? Should demonstrating                        business concerns. For example, all of                than small business concerns on small
     compliance depend on the length of the                  the disposal facilities in the United                 business set aside contracts. SBA is
     contract or the type of contract?                       States are large businesses, and most                 requesting comment from industry on
     Whether it is for commercial products                   railroads and shipping companies that                 these issues.
     and services? Whether the contract is                   transport hazardous waste are other
                                                                                                                   Subcontracting to a Small Business
     fixed price? Whether the contract is                    than small concerns. This rule proposes
                                                                                                                   Under a Socioeconomic Program Set
     above the SAT or the TINA threshold?                    to exclude transportation and disposal
                                                                                                                   Aside
     What other considerations should there                  services from the LOS compliance
     be when applying the requirement for a                  determination where small business                       In the context of socioeconomic set
     contractor to document LOS                              concerns cannot provide the disposal or               aside or sole source service contracts,
     compliance? We are requesting that                      transportation services. Similarly, where             the ostensible subcontractor rule applies
     industry provide comment on what                        the government acquires media services                when a small business is unduly reliant
     information can be efficiently requested                from small business concerns, the                     on an other than small subcontractor, or
     and provided.                                           placement of the content in the media                 when the other than small subcontractor
                                                             may require large payments to the other               will perform primary and vital parts of
     Exclusions From the Limitations on                                                                            the contract. In such cases, assuming
                                                             than small business concerns, even
     Subcontracting                                                                                                that an exception to joint venture
                                                             though that is not the principal purpose
        SBA’s LOS regulations provide that                   of the acquisition. SBA is proposing to               affiliation does not apply, SBA will treat
     for a set aside service contract, the                   exclude these media purchases from the                the small business prime contractor and
     prime contractor must agree that it will                LOS determination.                                    its subcontractor as joint venturers, and
     not pay more than 50% of the amount                        In a prior rulemaking, SBA                         therefore affiliates. If the subcontractor
     paid from the government to firms that                  determined that remote hosting on                     is other than small, the prime contractor
     are not similarly situated. 13 CFR                      servers or networks, or cloud                         is ineligible for award due to this
     125.6(a)(1). Unlike supply and                          computing, should be considered a                     affiliation. SBA has become aware of
     construction contracts, where materials                 service and therefore the NMR would                   service contract set asides for the SDVO,
     are excluded, no costs are specifically                 not apply. 13 CFR 121.1203(d)(3). Due                 HUBZone, 8(a) or WOSB programs,
     excluded under a service contract, other                to the costs and scale involved, cloud                where the prime contractor subcontracts
     than for mixed contracts where the non-                 computing is generally provided by                    most or all of the actual performance to
     service portion, such as incidental                     other than small business concerns.                   a small business that is small for the
     supplies, are excluded. SBA has                         SBA is proposing to exclude cloud                     applicable NAICS code but not eligible
     received several requests from industry                 computing from the LOS calculation,                   to compete for award of the prime
     for exclusions related to specific types                where the small business concern will                 contract, and thus not a similarly
     of contracts, and one related to all                    perform other services that are the                   situated entity as that term is defined at
     industries. Some have advocated that                    primary purpose of the acquisition.                   § 125.1.
     certain direct costs, such as airline                   Alternatively, SBA is requesting                         Under SBA’s recently amended joint
     tickets and hotel costs, be excluded                    comment on whether it should treat                    venture rules (81 FR 34243, May 31,
     from the calculation of the amount paid                 cloud computing as a supply, and                      2016; 13 CFR 121.103(h)(3)(i)), a joint
     under the contract. In addition, in                     therefore the NMR would apply, which                  venture can qualify as small as long as
     certain types of contracts or industries,               would allow SBA to issue individual or                each member of the joint venture is
     there are factors that may complicate                   class waivers of the NMR for cloud                    small. In the scenario described above,
     compliance with the LOS, potentially                    computing. SBA is also requesting                     the joint venture regulation prevents
     hindering agencies from setting aside                   comment on the definition of cloud                    SBA from performing an analysis under
     acquisitions for small business                         computing, such as the definition in                  the ostensible subcontractor rule
     concerns.                                               National Institute of Standards and                   because both the prime contractor and
        For example, for certain contracts                   Technology Special Publication 800–                   subcontractor are small for the size
     performed outside of the United States,                 145, so that we can ensure the definition             standard that applies to the contract and
     contractors must use non-U.S. local                     is not used to allow other than small                 thus subject to the exception from
     organizations or independent                            businesses to provide an excessive                    affiliation for joint venture partners that
     contractors to perform consulting                       portion of services on small business set             are each small for the size standard.
     services regarding a particular foreign                 aside contracts.                                      There is no existing regulatory
     country. These individuals are not                         SBA is requesting comment on                       mechanism for an unsuccessful offeror,
     located in the United States, do not                    whether these types of costs should be                SBA, or contracting officer to protest a
     reside in the United States, and are not                excluded from the calculation for                     socioeconomic set aside or sole source
     likely to be employees of a United States               purposes of compliance with the LOS.                  award to a prime contractor that is
     SBC. SBA is proposing to further clarify                For example, some have suggested that                 unduly reliant on a small, but not
     how to determine whether an individual                  travel costs should be excluded.                      similarly situated entity subcontractor.
     is an employee or independent                           However, SBA is also concerned about                  The underlying premise that ostensible
     contractor.                                             abuse of such exceptions. For example,                subcontractors and their prime
        In the environmental remediation                     SBA does not want agencies to receive                 contractors should be treated as joint
     industry (NAICS 562910), a large part of                credit for a small business contract                  ventures is still SBA’s policy. Firms that
     the cost of the contract is tied to the                 award where the principal purpose of                  are performing contracts in a manner
     transportation and disposal of                          the acquisition is to obtain services from            more consistent with a joint venture
     hazardous, toxic and radiological waste.                an other than small business concern. If              than a prime/sub relationship should
     According to some SBCs in this industry                 that is the norm for a particular type of             follow the requirements of SBA’s
     that have contacted SBA, given the fact                 contract, perhaps that type of contract               regulations regarding socioeconomic
     that these services are highly regulated                should not be set aside for small                     joint ventures.


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                          62521

        The performance of a set-aside or sole               of the total value of the items in the kit            initial offer or response including price.
     source service contract by a small                      must be manufactured by small business                SBA is also proposing to add a
     business concern that is not eligible to                concerns, but excludes items                          paragraph at § 121.404(a)(1)(iv), to
     compete for the prime contract is                       manufactured by other than small                      articulate an exception to the general
     contrary to the intent and purpose of the               business concerns if the contracting                  rule for when size is determined. When
     statutory authorities for socioeconomic                 officer specifies the item for the kit. This          an agency uses an IDIQ multiple award
     category set-aside and sole source                      rule has led to confusion concerning                  contract that does not require offers for
     procurements. Thus, SBA is proposing                    how to calculate total value, and                     the contract to include price, size will
     language at §§ 124.507(b)(2), 125.18(f),                whether a waiver of the non-                          be determined on the date of initial offer
     125.29(c), 126.601(i), 126.801(a),                      manufacturer rule can or must be                      for the IDIQ contract, which may not
     127.504(c), and 127.602, which will                     requested in order to supply items                    include price. This proposed change
     allow SBA to make a determination                       manufactured by other than small                      reflects the statutory change found at
     concerning a small business program                     concerns. SBA recently amended its                    section 825 of the National Defense
     participant’s overreliance on a non-                    rules to address the NMR and multiple                 Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017,
     similarly situated subcontractor as part                item acquisitions. If the majority of                 114 Public Law 328, (December 23,
     of an eligibility or status protest                     items in a kit are made by small                      2016), and section 876 of the John S.
     determination. SBA will evaluate these                  business concerns, then the acquisition               McCain National Defense Authorization
     contractor relationships under the                      can be set aside for small business                   Act for Fiscal Year 2019, 115 Public
     established ostensible subcontractor                    without the need to request a waiver. If              Law 232, (August 13, 2018). SBA is also
     test. If SBA finds that the subcontractor               the majority of items in a kit are not                proposing to remove the last sentence of
     is an ostensible subcontractor, SBA will                made by small business concerns, then                 paragraph § 121.404(g)(5), because it
     treat the arrangement between the                       an individual or class waiver of one or               conflicts with recent rules that provide
     contractors as a joint venture that does                more of the items is necessary for the                that a firm may rely on similarly
     not comply with the formal                              acquisition to be set aside for small                 situated entities to meet the applicable
     requirements necessary to receive and                   business concerns for acquisitions above              LOS. The last sentence of (g)(5) is
     perform the socioeconomic program set                   the simplified acquisition threshold or               unnecessary, as § 121.103(h) is
     aside or sole source award as a joint                   for all other socioeconomic set-asides,               controlling with respect to the
     venture.                                                regardless of value. SBA is proposing to              affiliation.
        This rulemaking will not apply to                    delete the kit assembler exception, and                  SBA proposes to amend
     non-service contracts, such as                          instead apply the multiple item rule in               § 121.103(h)(4) to clarify that when two
     construction contracts or contracts                     § 121.406(e) to kit assembler                         or more small businesses either form a
     involving non-manufacturers. Due to the                 acquisitions. Like all other acquisitions,            joint venture or are treated as joint
     nature of the industry, SBA’s rules                     the NMR will not apply to small                       venturers due to their relationship as
     allow small businesses to subcontract                   business set-asides with a value at or                prime and subcontractor, the joint
     large amounts of performance on                         below the simplified acquisition                      venture exception to affiliation found at
     construction contracts. The Small                       threshold.                                            § 121.103(h)(3)(i) applies if both firms
     Business Act, and SBA’s regulations                                                                           are considered small for the size
     generally provide that for set aside                    Clarification on Size Determinations                  standard associated with the
     supply contracts, a non-manufacturer                       SBA is also proposing to amend its                 procurement. SBA proposes to remove
     must supply the product of a small                      regulations to remove language that has               the phrase ‘‘and therefore affiliates’’
     business, unless SBA has issued a                       caused confusion on when size is                      from the ostensible subcontractor rule at
     waiver. This means that for an SDVO,                    determined. The general rule is that size             § 121.103(h)(4) to clarify this point. To
     HUBZone, 8(a), or WOSB set aside or                     is determined at the time of initial offer            allow affiliation between firms that are
     sole source supply contract, the prime                  including price, with the understanding               considered joint venturers because of
     contractor that is a non-manufacturer                   that there are some exceptions such as                their ostensible subcontracting
     must qualify as an SDVO, HUBZone,                       architecture and engineering                          relationship, even when each firm is
     8(a) or WOSB, but the product can be                    procurements, and certain unpriced                    individually small for the size standard
     made by a small business that does not                  indefinite delivery indefinite quantity               associated with the procurement, would
     qualify as SDVO, HUBZone, 8(a), or                      (IDIQ) contracts. However, § 121.404(a)               negate the purpose of § 121.103(h)(3)(i),
     WOSB. When the non-manufacturer                         also contains the parenthetical, ‘‘(or                which explicitly provides an exception
     rule applies to a small business program                other formal response to the                          to affiliation for such joint ventures.
     contract, it is considered an exception to              solicitation).’’ Some parties have                       The purpose of the ostensible
     the limitations on subcontracting.                      misread this to mean formal responses                 subcontractor rule is to treat the
     Where a waiver of the non-manufacturer                  that are after the initial offer, such as             relationship between a prime contractor
     rule has been issued that applies to a                  final proposal revisions. The clear intent            and its subcontractor as a joint venture
     small business program set-aside or sole                of SBA’s general rule is to give both                 where the subcontractor performs
     source contract, the prime contractor                   firms and the government certainty as to              primary and vital work for the
     may supply a product manufactured by                    when size will be determined, the initial             procurement. SBA’s current joint
     any size business, also without regard to               response, including price, because in                 venture rules do not aggregate the
     whether the subcontractor qualifies for                 the current government contracting                    partners to a joint venture in
     the applicable small business program                   environment a vast amount of time may                 determining the size of the joint
     set-aside or sole source contract.                      pass between initial offer and award.                 venture, but rather permit a joint
                                                             Offer covers bids and proposals, and                  venture to qualify as small as long as
     Kit Assemblers                                          SBA recognizes that in simplified                     each partner to the joint venture is
       SBA is proposing to remove specific                   acquisitions the initial response may be              individually small. Thus, a rule that
     rules related to kit assemblers and the                 acceptance of the government’s offer.                 equates a prime-sub relationship to that
     NMR, which are currently contained at                   Thus, SBA is proposing to amend                       of a joint venture because the
     13 CFR 121.406(c). The existing kit                     § 121.404(a) to make it clear that size is            subcontractor is performing primary and
     assembler rule requires that 50 percent                 generally determined at the time of                   vital work and then affiliates the two


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     62522                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     parties (i.e., requiring them to aggregate              Clarification Where One Acceptable                    Compliance With Executive Orders
     their revenues or employees) is                         Offer Is Received on a Set Aside                      12866, 13563, 12988, 13132, 13771, the
     inconsistent with the joint venture size                                                                      Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
     rules themselves. The phrase ‘‘and                         SBA is proposing to add new                        1995, the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
     therefore affiliates’’ that SBA proposes                § 125.2(e)(5) to clarify that a contracting           U.S.C. Ch. 35), and the Regulatory
     to delete was a holdover from previous                  officer may make an award under a                     Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612)
     regulations that aggregated the receipts                small business or socioeconomic set-                  Executive Order 12866
     or employees of joint venture partners                  aside where only one acceptable offer is
                                                                                                                      The Office of Management and Budget
     when determining whether a joint                        received. The decision to conduct a set
                                                                                                                   (OMB) has determined that this
     venture qualified as a small business.                  aside is based on the contracting                     proposed rule is a ‘‘significant’’
     When SBA changed its size regulations                   officer’s expectation based on market                 regulatory action for purposes of
     to broaden the exclusion from affiliation               research that he or she will obtain two               Executive Order 12866. The benefits to
     for small business to allow two or more                 or more fair market price offers from                 small business from this proposed rule
     small businesses to joint venture for any               capable small business concerns.                      far outweigh any associated costs. The
                                                             Pursuant to the FAR, the contracting                  proposed rule makes several other
     procurement without being affiliated
                                                             officer must perform market research                  changes needed to clarify ambiguities in
     (i.e., the joint venture would be
                                                             before issuing a solicitation to                      or remedy perceived problems with the
     considered small provided each of the
                                                             determine whether there are small                     current regulations. These proposed
     joint venture partners individually
                                                             businesses (including 8(a), HUBZone,                  changes should make SBA’s regulations
     qualified as small and SBA would not
                                                             SDVO SBCs, WOSBs) that can perform                    easier for SBCs to use and understand.
     aggregate the receipts or employees of
                                                             the requirement. 48 CFR 10.001(a)(2);                 The proposed change to § 121.404
     joint venture partners), SBA amended
                                                             19.202–2. A contracting officer’s ‘‘rule              clarifies when size for a government
     § 121.103(h)(3), but did not make a                     of two’’ determination is prospective.
     correspondingly similar change in                                                                             contract is determined, which will
                                                             Whether there appear to be at least two               reduce confusion for small business
     § 121.103(h)(4). See 81 FR 34243, 34258                 small businesses that can perform a
     (May 31, 2016). This proposed rule                                                                            concerns. The proposed change to
                                                             procurement at a fair price is an analysis            § 121.406 clarifies that the size standard
     intends to make it clear that if a prime-               that is done during acquisition strategy
     sub relationship is deemed to be a joint                                                                      for information technology value added
                                                             planning and prior to the issuance of a               resellers is 150 employees, again to
     venture because of the ostensible                       solicitation. As long as the market
     subcontractor rule, then all of the rules                                                                     eliminate confusion among small
                                                             research leads a contracting officer to               business concerns. The proposed
     pertaining to joint ventures would                      conclude that the agency will receive
     apply. As already noted, a prime-sub                                                                          changes to § 125.2(a) will benefit small
                                                             offers from at least two small business               business by clarifying that a contracting
     relationship where both parties                         concerns that are technically acceptable
     individually qualified as small would be                                                                      officer can award a contract to a small
                                                             and award will be made at a fair market               business under a set-aside if only one
     considered an award to small business.                  price, the ‘‘rule of two’’ is satisfied, no
     Similarly, if the ostensible subcontractor                                                                    offer is received. The proposed changes
                                                             matter how many offers are actually                   to § 125.2(b) implement section 1811 of
     were a large business that was the SBA-                 received or how many offers remain
     approved mentor of the prime                                                                                  the NDAA of 2017, and govern what
                                                             after evaluations are conducted, a                    acquisitions PCRs can review and
     contractor, then the award could qualify                competitive range is established, or
     as an award to small business if the                                                                          would not impact small business
                                                             offerors are eliminated in some other                 concerns. The proposed changes to
     prime contractor/protégé firm qualifies               fashion.
     as small and the relationship (treated as                                                                     § 125.2(d) implement section 863 of the
                                                                The FAR currently addresses small                  NDAA of 2016 and direct contracting
     a joint venture) meets the normal
                                                             business set-asides below $150,000, and               officers on how to notify the public
     requirements for a joint venture. See
                                                             provides, ‘‘If the contracting officer                about consolidation and substantial
     §§ 124.513(c) and (d); 125.18(b)(2) and
                                                             receives only one acceptable offer from               bundling, and will not impact small
     (3); 126.616(c) and (d); and 127.506(c)
                                                             a responsible small business concern in               business concerns. The proposed
     and (d). Although SBA recognizes that
                                                             response to a set-aside, the contracting              changes to § 125.2(e) authorize agencies
     it is unlikely that a prime-subcontractor
                                                             officer should make an award to that                  to set aside orders for socioeconomic
     relationship would meet the necessary
                                                             firm.’’ FAR 19.502–2(a). There is no                  programs where the contract was set
     joint venture requirements of those
                                                             reason this policy should not apply to                aside for small business, and will
     paragraphs, it is possible, and a prime-
                                                             all set-asides above or below $150,000.               benefit firms that qualify for those set
     sub/joint venture that did in fact meet
                                                             The contracting officer must determine                asides. The proposed changes to § 125.3
     those requirements could qualify as                                                                           implement section 1821 of the NDAA of
                                                             that an offeror is responsible and price
     small.                                                  is fair and reasonable before awarding                2017 by providing examples of a failure
        In addition, the proposed rule further               any contract. FAR 9.103(a); 9.104–1;                  to make a good faith effort to comply
     clarifies in § 121.103(h)(4) to provide                 14.408–2; and 15.304(c)(1). It would be               with small business subcontracting
     that the ostensible subcontractor rule                  inefficient and detrimental to the                    plans, and will benefit small businesses
     does not apply to similarly situated                    Government and offerors to arbitrarily                by providing such examples so that
     entities, as that term is defined at                    prevent an award where a competition                  contracting officers can hold other than
     § 125.1. SBA notes, however, that when                  was conducted but only one offer was                  small prime contractors accountable for
     both partners to a joint venture are small              received. Such a policy would                         failing to make a good faith effort to
     for the assigned NAICS code but the                     unreasonably prolong the procurement                  comply with their small business
     subcontractor partner is not a similarly                process, requiring a procuring agency to              subcontracting plan. The proposed
     situated entity, the prime alone is                     cancel one solicitation and reprocure                 changes to § 125.3 also implement
     responsible for compliance with the                     using another where only one small                    section 1821 by providing that the
     applicable LOS and cannot rely on its                   business offer is received, and could                 contracting officer should evaluate
     subcontractors to satisfy the LOS                       cause contracting officers to limit the               whether an other than small business
     requirement.                                            use of set-asides.                                    complied with the requirement to report


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           62523

     on small business subcontracting plan                   changes should make SBA’s regulations                 intends to deter and reduce potential
     performance. The proposed changes to                    easier to use and understand. With                    fraud, waste, and abuse, due to
     § 125.6(a) will benefit small business                  respect to contractors demonstrating                  noncompliance with the limitations on
     concerns by allowing small businesses                   compliance with the limitations on                    subcontracting. Additionally, clarifying
     to exclude certain costs from the                       subcontracting, for decades the general               a contracting officer’s authority to
     calculation of the limitations on                       rule has been that on a set aside                     request that a small business concern
     subcontracting. Without these changes,                  contract, a small business or                         demonstrate compliance with the
     some agencies will not be able to set                   socioeconomic small business must                     limitations on subcontracting is
     contracts aside for small business,                     generally perform some of the work                    consistent with recommendations made
     because certain costs attributable to                   (services, construction, or                           by the U.S. Government Accountability
     other than small concerns are too high.                 manufacturing). This helps ensure that                Office (GAO) in several reports:
     The proposed changes to § 125.6 also                    the benefits of a small business set-aside            ‘‘Contract Management; Increased Use
     help small businesses by clarifying the                 contract flow to the recipients whom                  of Alaska Native Corporations’ Special
     difference between an employee and an                   Congress intends to help by creating the              8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored
     independent contractor. The proposed                    set aside authority. If performance of a              Oversight,’’ GAO–06–39, April 2006;
     changes to § 125.6 will impose some                     set-aside contract is passed through to               ‘‘8(a) Subcontracting Limitations,
     requirements on small business                          other-than-small business concerns,                   Continued Noncompliance with
     concerns to demonstrate compliance                      there may not be a need for set-asides                Monitoring Requirements Signals Need
     with the LOS, but only to the extent the                in the first place, and the government                for Regulatory Change,’’ GAO–14–706,
     information is not already in the                       may be paying more for a good or                      September 2014; and ‘‘Federal
     possession of the government.                           service without any value added. These                Contracting Monitoring and Oversight of
     Contractors may have this information                   limitations on subcontracting appear as               Tribal 8(a) Firms Need Attention,’’
     readily available since it pertains to                  a clause in a set aside contract and help             GAO–12–84, January 2012.
     contract performance and                                to ensure that the intended beneficiaries             2. What are the potential benefits and
     subcontracting of that performance.                     of set aside contracts are receiving those            costs of this regulatory action?
     These information requests are not                      benefits. The contracting officer is
     mandatory, as the contracting officer                   responsible for monitoring compliance                    The majority of the proposed changes
     simply has the discretion to request                    with clauses in a contract. FAR 1.602.                in this rule will have de minimis costs
     such information. Contracting officers                                                                        and qualitative benefits that are difficult
                                                             Nothing in SBA’s regulations or the FAR
     already have the authority to request                                                                         to quantity: Protecting the integrity of
                                                             prohibits a contracting officer from
     information on performance, and this                                                                          the small business procurement system.
                                                             requesting documents demonstrating
     proposed change simply clarifies that                                                                         The rule proposes to provide exceptions
                                                             compliance with the limitations on
     the authority exists. Finally, the benefits                                                                   to the LOS in certain service contracts
                                                             subcontracting clause. It is SBA’s view
     to small business concerns of this                                                                            where small businesses must use the
                                                             that such authority exists, but that the
     proposed rule substantially outweigh                                                                          services of other than small
                                                             authority is not clear or express.
                                                                                                                   subcontractors in substantial amounts in
     any minor costs imposed by the exercise                 Without clarifying the authority or
                                                                                                                   order to fully perform a set aside service
     of existing contracting authority. The                  process, some contracting officers
                                                                                                                   contract. This will help small business
     proposed addition of part 129                           simply are not monitoring compliance.                 by making acquisitions available for
     implements section 2108 of the RISE                     The result is that there may be increased             small business set-asides that would not
     Act and benefits small businesses by                    fraud, waste, and abuse, in the                       otherwise be available. Many of the
     providing agencies with an incentive to                 performance of contracts that are set                 other clarifications in this rule will
     set aside contracts for small business                  aside for small business concerns,                    benefit small businesses, by reducing
     concerns located in a disaster area.                    because subcontractors that are not                   confusion in the marketplace, but this
     Accordingly, the next section contains                  eligible to receive the prime contract                benefit is difficult to quantify. The
     SBA’s Regulatory Impact Analysis.                       may be performing more work than                      proposed rule allowing agencies to
     However, this is not a major rule under                 section 46 of the Small Business Act (15              receive double credit toward its small
     the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C.                  U.S.C. 657s), SBA regulations at 13 CFR               business procurement goals for awards
     801, et seq.                                            125.6, and FAR clause 52.219–14                       to local small business concerns in the
     Regulatory Impact Analysis                              permit. This type of fraud frustrates the             event of a disaster is intended to benefit
                                                             policy goals associated with awarding                 local small businesses and provide
     1. Is there a need for the regulatory                   contracts set aside for small business                employment and revenue to concerns
     action?                                                 concerns.                                             located in an area devastated by a
        The proposed rule implements                            In this proposed rule, SBA proposes                disaster. While the authority for
     section 863 of the National Defense                     to clarify, by expressly stating, that the            contracting preferences for businesses
     Authorization Act of 2016, Public Law                   contracting officer may request                       located in a disaster area already exists
     114–92, 129 Stat. 726 (15 U.S.C.                        information to demonstrate a                          in FAR subpart 26.2, small businesses
     644(e)(3)); section 2108 of the Recovery                contractor’s compliance with the                      located in these areas may receive a
     Improvements for Small Entities After                   limitations on subcontracting clause.                 greater benefit under this proposed rule
     Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE Act), Public                 SBA proposes to clarify that it is within             due to the incentive for the procuring
     Law 114–88, 129 Stat. 686 (15 U.S.C.                    the contracting officers’ discretion to               agency to receive double credit toward
     644(f)); and sections 1811 and 1821 of                  request such a showing of compliance,                 its small business procurement goals by
     the National Defense Authorization Act                  because in some cases it will not be                  utilizing this authority.
     of 2017, Public Law 114–328, 130 Stat.                  necessary, such as when a small                          SBA is proposing to clarify that the
     2000 (15 U.S.C. 637(d), 644(l)). In                     business performs the contract itself                 contracting officer may require the
     addition, it makes several other changes                without the use of subcontractors or                  prime contractor to demonstrate
     needed to clarify ambiguities in or                     when information regarding compliance                 compliance with the LOS. We believe
     remedy perceived problems with the                      is already available to the Government.               that contracting officers already
     current regulations. These proposed                     Through this proposed rule, SBA                       possesses the authority to request


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     62524                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     information from a contractor                           utilized, is that it will increase the small          manufacturer rule. This clarification
     concerning compliance with a clause in                  business subcontracting goal and thus                 requires agencies to request a waiver of
     the contract pursuant to FAR 1.602–2.                   increase the amount of funds the prime                the non-manufacturer rule for kits, in
     In addition, on some contracts,                         contractor will subcontract to small                  accordance with existing regulations.
     compliance can already be reviewed or                   business concerns. Increasing the value               This will reduce confusion, by having
     monitored by reviewing invoices. The                    and number of awards to small business                only one non-manufacturer rule
     proposed rule would clarify that                        concerns provides financial benefits to               procedure for purposes of multi-item
     contracting officers have the authority to              those firms, who may hire more staff                  procurements.
     request information in connection with                  and invest in more resources to support
                                                                                                                   3. What are the alternatives to this rule?
     a contractor’s compliance with                          the increased demand. Furthermore,
     applicable limitations on subcontracting                increasing the number and value of                       Many of the proposed regulations are
     clauses. Approximately 56,000 firms                     awards to small business concerns has                 required to implement statutory
     received approximately 180,000 sole                     macroeconomic and qualitative benefits                provisions, thus there are no apparent
     source or set aside awards in FY 2016.                  to the national economy because small                 alternatives for these regulations. With
     SBA is proposing that a contracting                     businesses are the foundation of the                  respect to the proposal clarifying that
     officer may request information                         country’s economic success.                           contracting officers may request
     regarding compliance with prime                            This proposed rule will establish that             information on compliance with the
     contractors’ limitations on                             failure to provide timely subcontracting              limitations on subcontracting, SBA
     subcontracting. In some cases this                      reports may constitute a material breach              considered whether prime contractors
     information may not be necessary based                  of the contract. These reports are                    should be required to provide this
     on the nature of the contract and the                   already required by law at 13 CFR                     information on compliance with the
     invoices submitted. SBA estimates that                  125.3(a). This rule will make failure to              LOS on all set aside or sole source
     less than ten percent of small business                 provide the report a material breach of               contracts. However, that may
     concerns and contracts would be subject                 the contract, which could subject other               unnecessarily burden small businesses,
     to a request for this information (5,600                than small business concerns to                       if compliance is already readily
     small business concerns and 18,000                      liquidated damages. SBA is not aware of               apparent to the contracting officer based
     contracts), and compliance should take                  any case where a firm has been subject                on the type of contract, invoicing, or
     on average less than an hour. Small                     to liquidated damages for failure to                  observation. We estimate the alternative
                                                             comply with a subcontracting plan.                    considered, having all small businesses
     businesses that do not issue
                                                             Thus any costs would be de minimis.                   provide information on compliance,
     subcontracts will not have anything to
                                                             The benefit of this proposed rule is that             would have an annual cost of
     report. Small businesses may be able to
                                                             it will assist SBA and contracting                    $1,867,040. SBA decided to clarify
     easily report on any subcontracts, as
                                                             officers with oversight of prime                      instead that the contracting officer has
     information on subcontracting and
                                                             contractor compliance with                            the discretion to request such
     paying subcontractors is routinely
                                                             subcontracting plans and may result in                information to the extent such
     compiled as part of the normal
                                                             increased compliance with                             information is not already available.
     accounting procedures for any business
                                                             subcontracting plans.                                 This will enable the contracting officer
     concern. Accounting or contract
                                                                This proposed rule requires                        to request this information as he or she
     management personnel should be able
                                                             recertification of status on full and open            sees fit, in order to ensure that the
     to determine whether the firm issued
                                                             contracts. SBA intended for                           benefits of the small business programs
     any subcontracts in connection with the
                                                             recertification to occur whenever an                  are flowing to the intended recipients.
     prime contract. SBA estimates that this                 agency receives credit for an award                   However, SBA is requesting comment
     rule will be finalized in FY 2019. SBA                  towards it goals, and this proposed rule              on whether all small businesses should
     estimates an overall annual cost of                     is just a clarification that socioeconomic            provide information on compliance
     approximately $600,120 for small                        recertification is required on all                    with the LOS for set aside or sole source
     businesses to provide information on                    contracts, including full and open                    contracts.
     compliance with the limitations on                      contracts. We estimate that
     subcontracting, as requested by the                     approximately 150 firms a year recertify              Executive Order 13563
     contracting officer.                                    on full and open contracts. This will                    This executive order directs agencies
        This proposed rule will require an                   only impact firms that are acquired,                  to, among other things: (a) Afford the
     other than small prime contractor with                  merged, or where there is a novation or               public a meaningful opportunity to
     a commercial subcontracting plan to                     the firm grows to be other than small on              comment through the internet on
     include indirect costs in its                           a long term contract. Agencies have                   proposed regulations, with a comment
     subcontracting goals. Based on data                     goals for the award of prime contractor               period that should generally consist of
     from the Electronic Subcontracting                      dollars to small and socioeconomic                    not less than 60 days; (b) provide for an
     Reporting System (eSRS), in FY 2017                     concerns. The purpose of recertification              ‘‘open exchange’’ of information among
     approximately 700 firms had                             is to ensure that an agency does not                  government officials, experts,
     commercial subcontracting plans. SBA                    receive small business credit for an                  stakeholders, and the public; and (c)
     estimates that approximately 95% of                     award to an other-than-small concern.                 seek the views of those who are likely
     those 700 firms include indirect costs in                  This proposed rule will limit the                  to be affected by the rulemaking, even
     their subcontracting goals. Thus, this                  scope of Procurement Center                           before issuing a notice of proposed
     proposal would impact approximately                     Representative reviews of Department of               rulemaking. As far as practicable or
     35 firms. The burden would be de                        Defense acquisitions performed outside                relevant, SBA considered these
     minimis, as the accounting or contract                  of the United States and its territories.             requirements in developing this rule, as
     manager would know the firm’s indirect                  This applies to the government and will               discussed below.
     costs. The benefit of requiring that                    not impose costs or burdens on the                       1. Did the agency use the best
     indirect costs be included in                           public.                                               available techniques to quantify
     subcontracting goals where a                               This proposed rule will remove the                 anticipated present and future costs
     commercial subcontracting plan is                       kit assembler exception to the non-                   when responding to E.O. 12866 (e.g.,


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                          62525

     identifying changing future compliance                  Executive Order 12988                                    A summary description of the
     costs that might result from                               This action meets applicable                       reporting requirement, description of
     technological innovation or anticipated                 standards set forth set forth in section              respondents, and estimate of the annual
     behavioral changes)?                                    3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order                   burden is described below. Included in
        To the extent possible, the agency                   12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize              the estimate is the time for reviewing
     utilized the most recent data available                 litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and                  requirements, gathering and
     in the Federal Procurement Data                         reduce burden. This action does not                   maintaining the data needed, and
     System—Next Generation, System for                      have any retroactive or preemptive                    submitting the report to the contracting
     Award Management and Electronic                         effect.                                               officer.
     Subcontracting Reporting System.                                                                                 Title: Compliance with the
        2. Public participation: Did the                     Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                          Limitations on Subcontracting.
     agency: (a) Afford the public a                           This rule will not result in an                        OMB Control Number: (To be
     meaningful opportunity to comment                       unfunded mandate that will result in                  determined; new collection).
     through the internet on any proposed                    expenditures by State governments of                     Summary Description of Compliance
     regulation, with a comment period that                  $100 million or more (adjusted annually               Information: In order to show that it is
     should generally consist of not less than               for inflation since 1995).                            in compliance with the limitations on
     60 days; (b) provide for an ‘‘open                                                                            subcontracting terms that are included
                                                             Executive Order 13132                                 in its set-aside or sole source contract,
     exchange’’ of information among
     government officials, experts,                            SBA has determined that this                        a small business concern may be
     stakeholders, and the public; (c) provide               proposed rule will not have substantial               required to submit certain information
     timely online access to the rulemaking                  direct effects on the States, on the                  to the contracting officer. The specific
     docket on Regulations.gov; and (d) seek                 relationship between the national                     information relevant to a particular
     the views of those who are likely to be                 government and the States, or on the                  contract will be identified by the
     affected by rulemaking, even before                     distribution of power and                             contracting officer but could include,
     issuing a notice of proposed                            responsibilities among the various                    where applicable, identification of
     rulemaking?                                             levels of government.                                 subcontractor, dollar amount of
        The proposed rule will have a 60 day                                                                       subcontract, and costs to be excluded
                                                             Executive Order 13771
     comment period and will be posted on                                                                          from the LOS calculation (e.g., for
                                                               This proposed rule is expected to be                contracts for supplies, materials).
     www.regulations.gov to allow the public                 an Executive Order 13771 regulatory
     to comment meaningfully on its                                                                                   Description of and Estimated Number
                                                             action. Details on the estimated costs of             of Respondents: Small business
     provisions. In addition, the proposed                   this proposed rule can be found in the
     rule was discussed with the Small                                                                             concerns that are awarded set-aside or
                                                             rule’s economic analysis.                             sole source contracts. Based on FPDS
     Business Procurement Advisory
     Council, which consists of the Directors                Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Ch.                data, SBA estimates that approximately
     of the Office of Small and                              35                                                    56,000 concerns receive approximately
     Disadvantaged Business Utilization.                                                                           180,000 small business sole source or
                                                               Small businesses, such as 8(a) BD                   set-aside awards in a fiscal year and that
     SBA also submitted the rule to multiple                 Program Participants, HUBZone SBCs,
     agencies with representatives on the                                                                          no more than ten percent (5,600) of
                                                             WOSBs, Economically Disadvantaged                     concerns will be asked to provide
     FAR Small Business Subcommittee                         Women-Owned (EDWOSBCs, and
     prior to submitting the rule to the Office                                                                    information on compliance with the
                                                             SDVO SBCs, are eligible to receive set-               limitations on subcontracting for no
     of Management and Budget for                            aside or sole source contracts. 15 U.S.C.
     interagency review.                                                                                           more than ten percent (18,000) of the
                                                             631(a), 637(a), (m), 644(a), (j), 657a,               awards that have been received.
        3. Flexibility: Did the agency identify              657f. As a condition of these                            Estimated Annual Responses: 18,000.
     and consider regulatory approaches that                 preferences, and to help ensure that                     Estimated Response Time per
     reduce burdens and maintain flexibility                 small businesses actually perform a                   Respondent: 1 hour.
     and freedom of choice for the public?                   certain percentage of the work on a                      Total Estimated Annual Hour Burden:
        Yes, the proposed rule implements                    contract, the recipients of set-aside or              18,000.
     statutory provisions and will provide                   sole source contracts are limited in their               Estimated costs based on officer’s
     clarification to rules that were requested              ability to subcontract to other-than-                 salary: $33.34/hour (based on median
     by agencies and stakeholders. In                        small business concerns by the                        pay for accountants and auditors,
     addition, SBA is proposing to make                      limitations on subcontracting (LOS)                   Bureau of Labor Statistics).
     clear that contracting officers may                     clauses in the particular contract. See,                 Total estimated hour annual cost
     request information from their                          48 CFR 52.219–3, 52.219–4, 52.219–7,                  burden: 18,000 hours × $33.34/hour =
     contractors in order to determine                       52.219–14, 52.219–18, 52.219–27,                      $600,120.
     whether the contractor is complying                     52.219–29, 52.219–30. Contracting                        SBA will submit this new information
     with the LOS. This information may                      officers are responsible for ensuring                 collection (reporting requirement) to the
     already be provided as part of invoicing                contractor compliance with the terms of               Office of Management and Budget
     under certain contracts, and in any                     a contract (FAR 1.602–2). The SBA                     (OMB) for review, and invites the public
     event, the information should be readily                proposed rule will provide express                    to comment on: (1) Whether the
     provided by the contractor, as it simply                authority for contracting officers to                 reporting requirement is necessary for
     pertains to what extent the prime                       request information on contractor’s                   the proper performance of SBA
     contractor is subcontracting work under                 compliance with the LOS. Therefore,                   programs, including whether the
     the contract. Clarifying that the                       SBA will seek PRA review and approval                 information will have a practical utility;
     contracting officer has the authority to                from the Office of Management and                     (2) the accuracy of SBA’s estimate of the
     request this information, instead of                    Budget (OMB) to cover contracting                     burden for the reporting requirement;
     requiring all small businesses to submit                officers’ requests for information from               (3) ways to enhance the quality, utility,
     reports, significantly reduces cost and                 small businesses regarding their LOS                  and clarity of the information to be
     burden.                                                 compliance.                                           collected; and (4) ways to minimize the


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     62526                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     burden imposed as a result of the                       business concerns. The proposed                       and this proposed change simply
     reporting requirement on the                            changes to § 125.2(a) will benefit small              clarifies that the authority exists.
     respondents, including the use of                       business by clarifying that a contracting             Finally, the benefits to small business
     automated collection techniques, when                   officer can award a contract to a small               concerns of this proposed rule
     appropriate, and other forms of                         business under a set aside if only one                substantially outweigh any minor costs
     information technology.                                 offer is received. The proposed changes               imposed by the reporting authority. The
       Comments must be received by the                      to § 125.2(b) implement section 1811 of               proposed addition of part 129
     deadline stated in the DATES section of                 the NDAA 2017, and govern what                        implements section 2108 of the RISE
     this rule. Refer to the ADDRESS section                 acquisitions PCRs can review and                      Act and benefits small businesses by
     for instructions on how and where to                    would not impact small business                       providing agencies with an incentive to
     submit comments.                                        concerns. The proposed changes to                     set aside contracts for small business
     Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–               § 125.2(d) implement section 863 of the               concerns located in a disaster area.
                                                             NDAA of 2016 and direct contracting                      With respect to the limitation on
     612
                                                             officers on how to notify the public                  subcontracting to an ineligible small
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act                                                                       business under a socioeconomic set
                                                             about consolidation and substantial
     (RFA), this proposed rule may have a                                                                          aside (proposed 13 CFR
                                                             bundling, and will not impact small
     significant impact on a substantial                                                                           124.507(b)(2)(vi), 125.29(c), 126.601(i),
     number of small businesses.                             business concerns. The proposed
                                                             changes to § 125.2(e) authorize agencies              and 127.504(c)), the rule will impact
     Immediately below, SBA sets forth an                                                                          very few firms. The vast majority of
     initial regulatory flexibility analysis                 to set aside orders for socioeconomic
                                                                                                                   small business prime contractors self-
     (IRFA) addressing the impact of the                     programs where the contract was set
                                                                                                                   perform the required percentage of
     proposed rule in accordance with                        aside for small business, and will
                                                                                                                   work, or will subcontract to a similarly
     section 603, Title 5, of the United States              benefit firms that qualify for those set
                                                                                                                   situated entity, as is allowed under FAR
     Code. The IRFA examines the objectives                  asides. The proposed changes to § 125.3
                                                                                                                   52.219–3 (Notice of HUBZone Set-Aside
     and legal basis for this proposed rule;                 implement section 1821 of the NDAA of
                                                                                                                   or Sole Source Award), 52–219–27
     the kind and number of small entities                   2017 by providing examples of a failure
                                                                                                                   (Notice of Service-Disabled Veteran-
     that may be affected; the projected                     to make a good faith effort to comply
                                                                                                                   Owned Small Business Set-Aside), and
     recordkeeping, reporting, and other                     with small business subcontracting
                                                                                                                   as will be allowed when SBA’s rules on
     requirements; whether there are any                     plans, and will benefit small businesses              similarly situated entities (13 CFR
     Federal rules that may duplicate,                       by providing such examples so that                    125.6) are implemented in the FAR. The
     overlap, or conflict with this proposed                 contracting officers can hold other than              benefits that will flow to the intended
     rule; and whether there are any                         small prime contractors accountable for               beneficiaries of a socio-economic set-
     significant alternatives to this proposed               failing to make a good faith effort to                aside far outweigh any impact on firms
     rule.                                                   comply with their small business                      that have no intention of performing the
                                                             subcontracting plan. The proposed                     contract or are not eligible to bid on that
     1. What are the need for and objective                  changes to § 125.3 also implement
     of the rule?                                                                                                  contract.
                                                             section 1821 by providing that the
        The proposed rule implements                         contracting officer should evaluate                   2. What are SBA’s description and
     section 863 of the National Defense                     whether an other than small business                  estimate of the number of small entities
     Authorization Act of 2016, Public Law                   complied with the requirement to report               to which the rule will apply?
     114–92, 129 Stat. 726 (15 U.S.C.                        on small business subcontracting plan                    If the proposed rule is adopted in its
     644(e)(3)); section 2108 of the Recovery                performance. The proposed changes to                  present form, the rule would be
     Improvements for Small Entities After                   § 125.6(a) will benefit small business                applicable to all small business
     Disaster Act of 2015 (RISE Act), Public                 concerns by allowing small businesses                 concerns participating in the Federal
     Law 114–88, 129 Stat. 686 (15 U.S.C.                    to exclude certain costs from the                     procurement market that seek to
     644(f)); and sections 1811 and 1821 of                  calculation of the limitations on                     perform government prime contracts or
     the National Defense Authorization Act                  subcontracting. Without these changes,                to perform subcontracts awarded by
     of 2017, Public Law 114–328, 130 Stat.                  some agencies will not be able to set                 other than small concerns. SBA
     2000 (15 U.S.C. 637(d), 644(l)). In                     contracts aside for small business,                   estimates that there are approximately
     addition, the proposed rule makes                       because certain costs attributable to                 320,000 firms identified as small
     several other changes needed to clarify                 other than small concerns are too high.               business concerns in the Dynamic Small
     ambiguities in or remedy perceived                      The proposed changes to § 125.6 also                  Business Search database.
     problems with the current regulations.                  help small businesses by clarifying the
     These proposed changes should make                      difference between an employee and an                 3. What are the projected reporting,
     SBA’s regulations easier to use and                     independent contractor. The proposed                  recordkeeping, and other compliance
     understand. The proposed rule will                      changes to § 125.6 will impose some                   requirements of the rule and an estimate
     make it easier for agencies to award set                information production requirements on                of the classes of small entities which
     aside contracts to SBCs. Failure to                     small business concerns, but only to the              will be subject to the requirements?
     promulgate this rule could result in a                  extent the information is not already in                 The proposed rule does not impose
     loss of set aside opportunities for SBCs.               the possession of the government.                     new recordkeeping requirements.
        The proposed change to § 121.404                     Further, this information is readily                  Contractors already keep records on
     clarifies when size for a government                    available since it pertains to contract               contract performance and
     contract is determined, which will                      performance and subcontracting of that                subcontracting. Information may be
     reduce confusion for small business                     performance. These reports are not                    required, but only to the extent the
     concerns. The proposed change to                        mandatory, as the contracting officer                 information is not available through
     § 121.406 clarifies that the size standard              simply has the discretion to request                  invoices or existing progress reports.
     for information technology value added                  such reports. Contracting officers                    The proposed rule would clarify that
     resellers is 150 employees, again to                    already have the authority to request                 contracting officers may request access
     eliminate confusion among small                         information demonstrating performance,                to information in connection with a


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             62527

     contractor’s compliance with applicable                 13 CFR Part 124                                       Award Contract, where concerns are not
     limitations on subcontracting clauses.                    Administrative practice and                         required to submit price as part of the
     Approximately 56,000 firms received                     procedure, Government procurement,                    offer for the IDIQ contract, size will be
     sole source or set aside awards in FY                   Government property, Small businesses.                determined as of the date of initial offer,
     2016. SBA is clarifying that a                                                                                which may not include price.
     contracting officer may request                         13 CFR Part 125                                       *      *     *     *    *
     information to assure compliance with                     Government contracts, Government                       (g) * * *
     the LOS clause, and in some cases this                  procurement, Reporting and                               (5) If during contract performance a
     information may not be necessary based                  recordkeeping requirements, Small                     subcontractor that is not a similarly
     on the nature of the contract and the                   businesses, Technical assistance.                     situated entity performs primary and
     invoices submitted. We estimate that                                                                          vital requirements of a contract, the
     less than ten percent of contracts would                13 CFR Part 126                                       contractor and its ostensible
     be subject to a request to provide this                   Administrative practice and                         subcontractor will be treated as joint
     information (18,000), and compliance                    procedure, Government procurement,                    venturers. See § 121.103(h)(4).
     should take less than an hour for each                  Reporting and recordkeeping                           *      *     *     *    *
     of those contracts. Accounting or                       requirements, Small businesses.                       ■ 4. Amend § 121.406 by:
     contract management personnel should                                                                          ■ a. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i);
                                                             13 CFR Part 127
     be able to determine whether the firm                                                                         ■ b. Removing paragraph (c); and
     issued any subcontracts in connection                     Government contracts, Reporting and                 ■ c. Redesignating paragraphs (d)
     with the prime contract. We estimate                    recordkeeping requirements, Small                     through (f) as paragraphs (c) through (e)
     the SBA rule will be finalized in FY                    businesses.                                           respectively.
     2019. We estimate an overall annual                     13 CFR Part 129                                          The revision to read as follows:
     cost of approximately $600,120.
                                                               Administrative practice and                         § 121.406 How does a small business
     4. What are the relevant Federal rules                  procedure, Government contracts,                      concern qualify to provide manufactured
     which may duplicate, overlap or                         Government procurement, Small                         products or other supply items under a
     conflict with the rule?                                                                                       small business set-aside, service-disabled
                                                             businesses.                                           veteran-owned small business, HUBZone,
       We are not aware of any rules that                      Accordingly, for the reasons stated in              WOSB or EDWOSB, or 8(a) contract?
     duplicate, overlap or conflict with this                the preamble, SBA proposes to amend                   *     *    *     *    *
     rule. The FAR will have to be amended                   13 CFR parts 121, 124, 125, 126, and                    (b) * * *
     to implement portions of this rule. That                127 and to add 13 CFR part 129 as                       (1) * * *
     will be done through a separate                         follows:                                                (i) Does not exceed 500 employees (or
     rulemaking.                                                                                                   150 employees for the Information
                                                             PART 121—SMALL BUSINESS SIZE                          Technology Value Added Reseller
     5. What alternatives will allow the                     REGULATIONS
     Agency to accomplish its regulatory                                                                           exception to NAICS Code 541519,
     objectives while minimizing the impact                  ■ 1. The authority citation for part 121              which is found at § 121.201, footnote
     on small entities?                                      continues to read as follows:                         18);
                                                               Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 662,
                                                                                                                   *     *    *     *    *
        Many of the proposed changes are
     required to implement statute, and                      and 694a(9).
                                                                                                                   PART 124—8(a) BUSINESS
     impose requirements on contracting                      ■  2. Amend § 121.103 by revising the                 DEVELOPMENT/SMALL
     personnel, agencies or other than small                 first sentence of paragraph (h)(4) to read            DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS STATUS
     concerns, and do not impact small                       as follows:                                           DETERMINATIONS
     business concerns. Further, many of the
     proposed changes will benefit small                     § 121.103 How does SBA determine                      ■ 5. The authority citation for part 124
     business concerns by clarifying areas                   affiliation?                                          continues to read as follows:
     where there is confusion and by making                  *     *    *     *     *                                Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634(b)(6), 636(j),
     it easier for agencies to set aside                       (h) * * *                                           637(a), 637(d), 644 and Pub. L. 99–661, Pub.
     contracts and orders for small business                   (4) A contractor and its ostensible                 L. 100–656, sec. 1207, Pub. L. 101–37, Pub.
     and small socioeconomic concerns. As                    subcontractor are treated as joint                    L. 101–574, section 8021, Pub. L. 108–87,
     an alternative, SBA considered whether                  venturers for size determination                      and 42 U.S.C. 9815.
     prime contractors should be required to                 purposes. * * *                                       ■ 6. Amend § 124.503 by revising
     provide information on compliance                       *     *    *     *     *                              paragraphs (c)(1)(iii) and (iv) and adding
     with the LOS on all set aside or sole                   ■ 3. Amend § 121.404 by revising                      paragraph (c)(1)(v) to read as follows:
     source contracts. However, that may                     paragraph (a) introductory text, adding
     unnecessarily burden small businesses,                  paragraph (a)(1)(iv), and revising                    § 124.503 How does SBA accept a
                                                             paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:                  procurement for award through the 8(a) BD
     if compliance is already readily                                                                              program?
     apparent to the contracting officer based
                                                             § 121.404 When is the size status of a                *      *    *     *    *
     on the type of contract, invoicing, or                  business concern determined?
     observation.                                                                                                    (c) * * *
                                                               (a) SBA determines the size status of                 (1) * * *
     List of Subjects                                        a concern, including its affiliates, as of              (iii) The Participant is small for the
                                                             the date the concern submits a written                size standard corresponding to the
     13 CFR Part 121
                                                             self-certification that it is small to the            NAICS code assigned to the requirement
       Government procurement;                               procuring activity as part of its initial             by the procuring activity contracting
     Government property; Grant programs—                    offer or response which includes price.               officer;
     business, Individuals with disabilities;                  (1) * * *                                             (iv) The Participant has submitted
     Loan programs—business; Small                             (iv) For an indefinite delivery,                    required financial statements to SBA;
     businesses.                                             indefinite quantity (IDIQ), Multiple                  and


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     62528                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

       (v) The Participant is performing the                 that will continue performance on the                 § 124.1015 What are the requirements for
     primary and vital requirements of the                   contract must certify its status as an 8(a)           representing SDB status, and what are the
     service contract, or of an order, and is                Participant to the procuring agency, or               penalties for misrepresentation?
     not unusually reliant on a subcontractor                inform the procuring agency that it does              *       *    *     *     *
     that is not similarly situated, as that                 not qualify as an 8(a) Participant, within               (f) Recertification. (1) Generally, a
     term is defined at § 125.1.                             30 days of the novation approval. If the              concern that represents itself and
     ■ 7. In § 124.507, add paragraph                        concern is not an 8(a) Participant, the               qualifies as an SDB at the time of initial
     (b)(2)(vi) to read as follows:                          agency can no longer count the options                offer (or other formal response to a
                                                             or orders issued pursuant to the                      solicitation), which includes price,
     § 124.507 What procedures apply to                                                                            including a Multiple Award Contract, is
     competitive 8(a) procurements?                          contract, from that point forward,
                                                             towards its SDB goals.                                considered an SDB throughout the life
     *      *     *    *     *                                                                                     of that contract. For an indefinite
        (b) * * *                                               (iii) Where an 8(a) Participant receives           delivery indefinite quantity (IDIQ),
        (2) * * *                                            a non-8(a) contract, and that Participant             Multiple Award Contract, where
        (vi) Performing the primary and vital                acquires, is acquired by, or merges with              concerns are not required to submit
     requirements of the service contract, or                another concern and contract novation                 price as part of their offer for the
     of an order, or is unusually reliant on                 is not required, the concern must,                    contract, a concern that represents itself
     a subcontractor that is not a similarly                 within 30 days of the transaction                     and qualifies as an SDB at the time of
     situated entity, as that term is defined                becoming final, recertify its 8(a) status             initial offer, which may not include
     at § 125.1.                                             to the procuring agency, or inform the                price, is considered an SDB throughout
     ■ 8. In § 124.521, add paragraph (e) to                 procuring agency that it no longer                    the life of that contract. This means that
     read as follows:                                        qualifies as an 8(a) Participant. If the              if an SDB is qualified at the time of
                                                             contractor is not an 8(a) Participant, the            initial offer for a Multiple Award
     § 124.521 What are the requirements for                 agency can no longer count the options                Contract, then it will be considered an
     representing 8(a) status, and what are the
                                                             or orders issued pursuant to the                      SDB for each order issued against the
     penalties for misrepresentation?
                                                             contract, from that point forward,                    contract, unless a contracting officer
     *       *    *     *     *                              towards its SDB goals. The agency and                 requests a new SDB certification in
        (e) Recertification. (1) Generally, a                the contractor must immediately revise                connection with a specific order. Where
     concern that represents itself and                      all applicable Federal contract databases             a concern later fails to qualify as an
     qualifies as an 8(a) Participant at the                 to reflect the new status.                            SDB, the procuring agency may exercise
     time of initial offer (or other formal                                                                        options and still count the award as an
     response to a solicitation), which                         (2) For the purposes of contracts
                                                             (including Multiple Award Contracts)                  award to an SDB. However, the
     includes price, including a Multiple                                                                          following exceptions apply:
     Award Contract, is considered an 8(a)                   with durations of more than five years
                                                                                                                      (i) Where a contract is novated to
     Participant throughout the life of that                 (including options), a contracting officer
                                                                                                                   another business concern, the concern
     contract. For an indefinite delivery,                   must request that a business concern
                                                                                                                   that will continue performance on the
     indefinite quantity (IDIQ), Multiple                    recertify its 8(a) status no more than 120
                                                                                                                   contract must certify its status as an
     Award Contract, where concerns are not                  days prior to the end of the fifth year of
                                                                                                                   SDB to the procuring agency, or inform
     required to submit price as part of the                 the contract, and no more than 120 days
                                                                                                                   the procuring agency that it does not
     offer for the contract, a concern that                  prior to exercising any option. Where a               qualify as an SDB, within 30 days of the
     represents itself and qualifies as an 8(a)              concern fails to recertify its 8(a) status            novation approval. If the concern is not
     Participant at the time of initial offer,               during the 120 days prior to the end of               an SDB, the agency can no longer count
     which may not include price, is                         the fifth year of the contract, the option            the options or orders issued pursuant to
     considered an 8(a) Participant                          shall not be exercised.                               the contract, from that point forward,
     throughout the life of that contract. This                 (3) Recertification does not change the            towards its SDB goals.
     means that if an 8(a) Participant is                    terms and conditions of the contract.                    (ii) Where a concern that is
     qualified at the time of initial offer for              The limitations on subcontracting,                    performing a contract acquires, is
     a Multiple Award Contract, then it will                 nonmanufacturer and subcontracting                    acquired by, or merges with another
     be considered an 8(a) Participant for                   plan requirements in effect at the time               concern and contract novation is not
     each order issued against the contract,                 of contract award remain in effect                    required, the concern must, within 30
     unless a contracting officer requests a                 throughout the life of the contract.                  days of the transaction becoming final,
     new 8(a) certification in connection                       (4) Where the contracting officer                  recertify its SDB status to the procuring
     with a specific order. Where a concern                  explicitly requires concerns to recertify             agency, or inform the procuring agency
     later fails to qualify as an 8(a)                       their status in response to a solicitation            that it no longer qualifies as an SDB. If
     Participant, the procuring agency may                   for an order, SBA will determine                      the contractor is not an SDB, the agency
     exercise options and still count the                    eligibility as of the date the concern                can no longer count the options or
     award as an award to an SDB. However,                   submits its self-representation as part of            orders issued pursuant to the contract,
     the following exceptions apply:                         its response to the solicitation for the              from that point forward, towards its
        (i) Where an 8(a) contract is novated                order.                                                SDB goals. The agency and the
     to another business concern, or where                                                                         contractor must immediately revise all
     the concern performing the 8(a) contract                   (5) A concern’s status may be                      applicable Federal contract databases to
     is acquired by, acquires, or merges with                determined at the time of a response to               reflect the new status.
     another concern and contract novation                   a solicitation for an basic ordering                     (2) For the purposes of contracts
     is not required, the concern must                       agreement (BOA), basic agreement (BA),                (including Multiple Award Contracts)
     comply with the process outlined at                     or blanket purchase agreement (BPA)                   with durations of more than five years
     §§ 124.105(i) and 124.515.                              and each order issued pursuant to the                 (including options), a contracting officer
        (ii) Where an 8(a) Participant receives              BPA, BOA, or BA.                                      must request that a business concern
     a non-8(a) contract that is novated to                  ■ 9. In § 124.1015, add paragraph (f) to              recertify its SDB status no more than
     another business concern, the concern                   read as follows:                                      120 days prior to the end of the fifth


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           62529

     year of the contract, and no more than                  engineering services, research,                       Officer (CAO), or designee, shall publish
     120 days prior to exercising any option.                development, test and evaluation. Small               a notice on the agency’s website that
        (3) A business concern that did not                  business concerns must receive any                    such determination has been made. Any
     certify itself as an SDB, either initially              award (including orders, and orders                   solicitation for a procurement related to
     or prior to an option being exercised,                  placed against Multiple Award                         the acquisition strategy shall not be
     may recertify itself as an SDB for a                    Contracts) or contract, part of any such              issued earlier than 7 days after such
     subsequent option period if it meets the                award or contract, any contract for the               notice is published. Along with the
     eligibility requirements at that time.                  sale of Government property, or any                   publication of the solicitation, the SPE
        (4) Recertification does not change the              contract resulting from a reverse                     or CAO (or designee) must publish in
     terms and conditions of the contract.                   auction, regardless of the place of                   the Government-wide Point of Entry
     The limitations on subcontracting,                      performance, which SBA and the                        (GPE) the justification for the
     nonmanufacturer and subcontracting                      procuring or disposal agency determine                determination, which shall include the
     plan requirements in effect at the time                 to be in the interest of:                             information in paragraphs (d)(1)(i)(A)
     of contract award remain in effect                         (i) Maintaining or mobilizing the                  through (E) of this section.
     throughout the life of the contract.                    Nation’s full productive capacity;                    *       *    *     *    *
        (5) Where the contracting officer                       (ii) War or national defense programs;                (7) Notification to Public of Rationale
     explicitly requires concerns to recertify                  (iii) Assuring that a fair proportion of           for Substantial Bundling. If the head of
     their status in response to a solicitation              the total purchases and contracts for                 a contracting agency determines that an
     for an order, SBA will determine                        property, services and construction for               acquisition plan for a procurement
     eligibility as of the date the concern                  the Government in each industry                       involves a substantial bundling of
     submits its self-representation as part of              category are placed with small business               contract requirements, the head of a
     its response to the solicitation for the                concerns; or                                          contracting agency shall publish a
     order.                                                     (iv) Assuring that a fair proportion of            notice on the agency’s website that such
        (6) A concern’s status may be                        the total sales of Government property                determination has been made not later
     determined at the time of a response to                 is made to small business concerns.                   than 7 days after making such
     a solicitation for an Agreement and each                   (2) If the contracting officer receives            determination. Any solicitation for a
     order issued pursuant to the Agreement.                 only one acceptable offer from a                      procurement related to the acquisition
                                                             responsible small business concern in                 plan may not be published earlier than
     PART 125—GOVERNMENT                                     response to any small or socioeconomic                7 days after such notice is published.
     CONTRACTING PROGRAMS                                    set-aside, the contracting officer should             Along with the publication of the
     ■  9. The authority citation for part 125               make an award to that firm.                           solicitation, the head of a contracting
     is revised to read as follows:                             (b) * * *                                          agency shall publish in the GPE a
                                                                (1) * * *                                          justification for the determination,
       Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632(p), (q); 634(b)(6);             (i) * * * (A) * * * At the SBA’s
     637; 644; 657f; 657r.                                                                                         which shall include the following
                                                             discretion, PCRs may review any                       information:
     ■ 10. Amend § 125.2 by:                                 acquisition to determine whether a set                   (i) The specific benefits anticipated to
     ■ a. Revising paragraph (a);                            aside or sole source award to a small                 be derived from the bundling of contract
     ■ b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i)(A):                         business under one of SBA’s programs                  requirements and a determination that
     ■ i. Revising the second sentence; and                  is appropriate and to identify alternative            such benefits justify the bundling.
     ■ ii. Adding a sentence at the end of the               strategies to maximize the participation                 (ii) An identification of any
     paragraph;                                              of small businesses in the procurement.               alternative contracting approaches that
     ■ c. Adding paragraph (d)(1)(v);                        * * * Unless the contracting agency                   would involve a lesser degree of
     ■ d. Redesignating paragraph (d)(7) as                  requests a review, PCRs will not review               bundling of contract requirements.
     paragraph (d)(8);                                       an acquisition by or on behalf of the                    (iii) An assessment of—the specific
     ■ e. Adding new paragraph (d)(7); and                   Department of Defense if the acquisition              impediments to participation by small
     ■ f. Revising paragraph (e)(6).                         is conducted for a foreign government                 business concerns as prime contractors
       The revisions and additions to read as                pursuant to section 22 of the Arms                    that result from the bundling of contract
     follows:                                                Control Export Act (22 U.S.C. 2762), is               requirements; and
     § 125.2 What are SBA’s and the procuring                a humanitarian operation as defined in                   (iv) The specific actions designed to
     agency’s responsibilities when providing                10 U.S.C. 401(e), is for a contingency                maximize participation of small
     contracting assistance to small                         operation as defined in 10 U.S.C.                     business concerns as subcontractors
     businesses?                                             101(a)(13), is to be awarded pursuant to              (including suppliers) at various tiers
        (a)(1) The objective of the SBA’s                    an agreement with the government of a                 under the contract or contracts that are
     contracting programs is to assist small                 foreign country in which Armed Forces                 awarded to meet the requirements.
     business concerns, including 8(a) BD                    of the United States are deployed, or                 *       *    *     *    *
     Participants, HUBZone small business                    where both the place of award and place                  (e) * * *
     concerns, Service Disabled Veteran-                     of performance are entirely outside of                   (6) * * *
     Owned Small Business Concerns,                          the United States and its territories.                   (i) Notwithstanding the fair
     Women-Owned Small Businesses and                        *       *     *    *     *                            opportunity requirements set forth in 10
     Economically Disadvantaged Women-                          (d) * * *                                          U.S.C. 2304c and 41 U.S.C. 253j, the
     Owned Small Businesses, in obtaining a                     (1) * * *                                          contracting officer has the authority to
     fair share of Federal Government prime                     (v) Not later than 7 days after making             set aside orders against Multiple Award
     contracts, subcontracts, orders, and                    a determination that an acquisition                   Contracts, including contracts that were
     property sales. Therefore, these                        strategy involving a consolidation of                 set aside for small business. This
     regulations apply to all types of Federal               contract requirements is necessary and                includes order set asides for 8(a)
     Government contracts, including                         justified under subparagraph (d)(1)(i) of             Participants, HUBZone SBCs, SDVO
     Multiple Award Contracts, and                           this section, the Senior Procurement                  SBCs and WOSBs.
     contracts for architectural and                         Executive (SPE) or Chief Acquisition                  *       *    *     *    *


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     62530                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

     ■ 11. Amend § 125.3 by:                                 their objectives the frustration of the               performed by a transportation or
     ■ a. Revising the last sentence of                      objectives of the plan;                               disposal entity under a contract
     paragraph (c)(1)(iv);                                      (F) Failure to correct substantiated               assigned the environmental remediation
     ■ b. Revising paragraph (d)(3);                         findings from federal subcontracting                  NAICS code (562910), cloud computing
     ■ c. Adding paragraph (d)(11); and                      compliance reviews or participate in                  services, or mass media purchases. In
     ■ d. Revising the first sentence of                     subcontracting plan management                        addition, work performed by an
     paragraph (f)(3).                                       training offered by the government;                   independent contractor under a contract
       The revisions and addition to read as                    (G) Failure to conduct market research             that was awarded pursuant to the
     follows:                                                identifying potential small business                  Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 may also
                                                             concern subcontractors through all                    be excluded.
     § 125.3 What types of subcontracting
     assistance are available to small                       reasonable means including outreach,                  *       *    *     *      *
     businesses?                                             industry days, or the use of federal                     (c) * * * A prime contractor may no
                                                             database marketing systems such as                    longer count a similarly situated entity
     *       *    *    *     *
        (c) * * *                                            SBA’s Dynamic Small Business Search                   towards compliance with the limitations
        (1) * * *                                            (DSBS) or SUBNet Systems or any                       on subcontracting where the
        (iv) * * * A contractor authorized to                successor federal systems;                            subcontractor ceases to qualify as small
     use a commercial subcontracting plan                       (H) Failure to comply with regulations             or under the relevant socioeconomic
     must include all indirect costs in its                  requiring approval by the contracting                 status.
     subcontracting goals and in its SSR;                    officer to change small business concern
                                                             subcontractors that were used in                      *       *    *     *      *
     *       *    *    *     *                               preparing offers; or                                     (e) * * *
        (d) * * *                                               (I) Falsifying records of                             (3)(i) For contracts assigned a NAICS
        (3) Evaluating whether the prime                                                                           code with an employee-based size
                                                             subcontracting awards to SBCs.
     contractor made a good faith effort to                                                                        standard, where an independent
     comply with its small business                          *      *     *     *    *
                                                                (11) Evaluating whether the contractor             contractor is not otherwise treated as an
     subcontracting plan.                                                                                          employee of the concern for which he/
        (i) Evidence that a large business                   or subcontractor complied in good faith
                                                             with the requirement to provide                       she is performing work for size purposes
     prime contractor has made a good faith                                                                        under § 121.106(a) of this chapter, work
     effort to comply with its subcontracting                periodic reports and cooperate in any
                                                             studies or surveys as may be required by              performed by the independent
     plan or other subcontracting                                                                                  contractor shall be considered a
     responsibilities includes supporting                    the Federal agency or the
                                                             Administration in order to determine                  subcontract. Such work will count
     documentation that:                                                                                           toward meeting the applicable
        (A) The contractor performed one or                  the extent of compliance by the
                                                             contractor or subcontractor with the                  limitation on subcontracting where the
     more of the actions described in                                                                              independent contractor qualifies as a
     paragraph (b) of this section, as                       subcontracting plan. Failure to make a
                                                             good faith effort shall be a material                 similarly situated entity.
     appropriate for the procurement;
        (B) Although the contractor may have                 breach of such contract or subcontract                   (ii) For contracts assigned a NAICS
     failed to achieve its goal in one                       and may be considered in any past                     code with a revenue-based size
     socioeconomic category, it over-                        performance evaluation of the                         standard, work performed by an
     achieved its goal by an equal or greater                contractor.                                           independent contractor shall be
     amount in one or more of the other                      *      *     *     *    *                             considered a subcontract, and will
     categories; or                                             (f) * * *                                          count toward meeting the applicable
        (C) The contractor fulfilled all of the                 (3) Upon completion of the review                  limitation on subcontracting where the
     requirements of its subcontracting plan.                and evaluation of a contractor’s                      independent contractor qualifies as a
        (ii) Examples of activities reflective of            performance and efforts to achieve the                similarly situated entity. A firm’s
     a failure to make a good faith effort to                requirements in its subcontracting                    treatment and reporting of an individual
     comply with a subcontracting plan                       plans, the contractor’s performance will              for tax purposes governs whether that
     include, but are not limited, to:                       be assigned one of the following ratings:             individual should be treated as an
        (A) Failure to submit the acceptable                 Exceptional, Very Good, Satisfactory,                 employee or independent contractor for
     individual or summary subcontracting                    Marginal or Unsatisfactory. * * *                     limitations on subcontracting purposes.
     reports in eSRS by the report due dates                 *      *     *     *    *                                (4) The contracting officer may
     or as provided by other agency                          ■ 12. Amend § 125.6 by:                               require the contractor to demonstrate its
     regulations within prescribed time                      ■ a. Adding two sentences at the end of               compliance with the limitations on
     frames;                                                 paragraph (a)(1);                                     subcontracting, if the information
        (B) Failure to pay small business                    ■ b. Adding a sentence at the end of                  regarding such compliance is not
     concern subcontractors in accordance                    paragraph (c);                                        already available to the contracting
     with the terms of the contract with the                 ■ c. Revising paragraph (e)(3); and                   officer (e.g., invoices).
     prime;                                                  ■ d. Adding paragraph (e)(4).                         *       *    *     *      *
        (C) Failure to designate and maintain                   The revision and additions to read as              ■ 13. Amend § 125.18 by:
     a company official to administer the                    follows:                                              ■ a. In paragraph (e)(1)(i), removing the
     subcontracting program and monitor
                                                             § 125.6 What are the prime contractor’s               phrase ‘‘an SDVO contract’’ and adding
     and enforce compliance with the plan;
                                                             limitations on subcontracting?                        in its place the phrase ‘‘a contract’’;
        (D) Failure to maintain records or
     otherwise demonstrate procedures                          (a) * * *                                           ■ b. In paragraph (e)(1)(ii), removing the
     adopted to comply with the plan                           (1) * * * Other direct costs may be                 phrase ‘‘an SDVO SBC contract’’ and
     including subcontracting flow-down                      excluded to the extent they are not the               adding in its place the phrase ‘‘a
     requirements;                                           principal purpose of the acquisition and              contract’’; and
        (E) Adoption of company policies or                  small business concerns do not provide                ■ c. Adding paragraph (f).
     documented procedures that have as                      the service, such as airline travel, work                The addition to read as follows:


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                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                               62531

     § 125.18 What requirements must an                      § 126.601 What additional requirements                set aside service contract, the prime
     SDVO SBC meet to submit an offer on a                   must a qualified HUBZone SBC meet to bid              contractor is not eligible for award of a
     contract?                                               on a contract?                                        WOSB or EDWOSB contract. When the
     *      *    *      *    *                               *      *    *      *    *                             subcontractor is small for the size
        (f) Ostensible subcontractor. Where a                   (i) Ostensible subcontractor. Where a              standard assigned to the procurement,
     subcontractor that is not similarly                     subcontractor that is not similarly                   this issue may be grounds for a WOSB
     situated performs primary and vital                     situated performs primary and vital                   or EDWOSB status protest, as described
     requirements of a set aside or sole                     requirements of a set aside service                   in subpart F of this part. When the
     source service contract or order, or                    contract, or where a prime contractor is              subcontractor is other than small, or
     where a prime contractor is unduly                      unduly reliant on a small business that               alleged to be other than small, for the
     reliant on a small business that is not                 is not similarly situated to perform the              size standard assigned to the
     similarly situated to perform the set                   set aside service contract, the prime                 procurement, this issue may be a ground
     aside service or sole source contract or                contractor is not eligible for award of a             for a size protest, as described at
     order, the prime contractor is not                      HUBZone contract. When the                            § 121.103(h)(4) of this chapter.
     eligible for award of an SDVO contract.                 subcontractor is small for the size                   ■ 21. Amend § 127.602 by revising the
     When the subcontractor is small for the                 standard assigned to the procurement,                 second sentence and adding a new third
     size standard assigned to the                           this issue may be grounds for a                       sentence to read as follows:
     procurement, this issue may be grounds                  HUBZone status protest, as described in
     for an SDVO status protest, as described                subpart H of this part. When the                      § 127.602 What are the grounds for filing
     in subpart D of this part. When the                     subcontractor is alleged to be other than             an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest?
     subcontractor is other than small, or                   small for the size standard assigned to                  * * * SBA will also consider a
     alleged to be other than small for the                  the procurement, this issue may be                    protest challenging the status of a
     size standard assigned to the                           grounds for a size protest under the                  concern as an EDWOSB or WOSB if the
     procurement, this issue may be grounds                  ostensible subcontractor rule, as                     contracting officer has protested because
     for a size protest subject to the                       described at § 121.103(h)(4) of this                  the WOSB or EDWOSB apparent
     ostensible subcontractor rule, as                       chapter.                                              successful offeror has failed to provide
     described at § 121.103(h)(4) of this                    ■ 17. Amend § 126.801 by adding in                    all of the required documents, as set
     chapter.                                                paragraph (a) a sentence after the third              forth in § 127.300. In addition, when
     ■ 14. In § 125.29, add paragraph (c) to                 sentence to read as follows:                          sufficient credible evidence is
     read as follows:                                                                                              presented, SBA will consider a protest
                                                             § 126.801 How does one file a HUBZone                 challenging whether the prime
     § 125.29 What are the grounds for filing an             status protest?
                                                                                                                   contractor is unusually reliant on a
     SDVO SBC protest?                                         (a) * * * SBA will also consider a                  small, non-similarly situated entity
     *      *    *     *    *                                protest challenging whether a HUBZone                 subcontractor, as defined in § 125.1 of
        (c) Ostensible subcontractor. In cases               prime contractor is unduly reliant on a               this chapter, or a protest alleging that
     where the prime contractor appears                      small, non-similarly situated entity                  such subcontractor is performing the
     unduly reliant on a small, non-similarly                subcontractor or if such subcontractor                primary and vital requirements of a set
     situated entity subcontractor or where                  performs the primary and vital                        aside or sole source WOSB or EDWOSB
     the small non-similarly situated entity is              requirements of the contract. * * *                   contract.
     performing the primary and vital                        *     *    *     *     *                              ■ 22. Add part 129 to read as follows:
     requirements of the contract, the
     Director, Office of Government                          PART 127—WOMEN–OWNED SMALL                            PART 129—CONTRACTS FOR SMALL
     Contracting will consider a protest only                BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT                             BUSINESSES LOCATED IN DISASTER
     if the protester presents credible                      PROGRAM                                               AREAS
     evidence of the alleged undue reliance                  ■ 18. The authority citation for part 127             Sec.
     or credible evidence that the primary                   continues to read as follows:                         129.100 What definitions are important in
     and vital requirements will be                                                                                     this part?
     performed by the subcontractor.                           Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6),
                                                             637(m), 644 and 657r.                                 129.200 What contracting preferences are
                                                                                                                        available for small business concerns
     PART 126—HUBZONE PROGRAM                                § 127.503    [Amended]                                     located in disaster areas?
                                                                                                                   129.300 What small business goaling credit
     ■  15. The authority citation for part 126              ■ 19. In § 127.503, amend paragraphs                       do agencies receive for awarding a
     is revised to read as follows:                          (h)(1)(i) and (ii) by removing the phrase                  contract to a small business concern
       Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632(a), 632(j), 632(p),          ‘‘WOSB/EDWOSB contract’’ wherever it                       under this part?
     644 and 657a; Pub. L. 111–240, 24 Stat. 2504.           appears and adding in its place the                   129.400 What are the applicable
                                                             word ‘‘contract’’.                                         performance requirements?
     ■  16. Amend § 126.601 by:                                                                                    129.500 What are the penalties of
                                                             ■ 20. In § 127.504, add paragraph (c) to
     ■  a. In paragraph (h)(1)(i), removing the                                                                         misrepresentation of size or status?
     phrase ‘‘HUBZone contract (or a                         read as follows:
                                                                                                                     Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(j)(13)(F)(ii),
     HUBZone contract awarded through full                   § 127.504 What additional requirements                644(f).
     and open competition based on the                       must a concern satisfy to submit an offer
     HUBZone price evaluation preference’’                   on an EDWOSB or WOSB requirement?                     § 129.100 What definitions are important in
     and adding in its place the word                                                                              this part?
                                                             *      *    *     *     *
     ‘‘contract’’;                                              (c) Where a subcontractor that is not                 For the purposes of this part:
     ■ b. In paragraph (h)(1)(ii), removing the              similarly situated performs primary and                  Concern located in a disaster area is
     phrase ‘‘HUBZone contract’’ and adding                  vital requirements of a set aside service             a firm that during the last twelve
     in its place the word ‘‘contract’’; and                 contract, or where a prime contractor is              months—
     ■ c. Adding paragraph (i).                              unduly reliant on a small business that                  (1)(i) Had its main operating office in
        The addition to read as follows:                     is not similarly situated to perform the              the area; and


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     62532                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 233 / Tuesday, December 4, 2018 / Proposed Rules

       (ii) That office generated at least half              agency shall enter the actual contract                instructions in the ADDRESSES section of
     of the firm’s gross revenues and                        value, not the doubled contract value in              the direct final rule located in the rules
     employed at least half of the offeror’s                 the required contract reporting systems,              section of this Federal Register.
     permanent employees.                                    and appropriately code the contract                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
       (2) If the firm does not meet the                     action to receive the credit. SBA will                Karolina Ruan Lei, 214–665–7346, ruan-
     criteria in paragraph (1) of this                       provide the double credit as part of the              lei.karolina@epa.gov.
     definition, factors to be considered in                 Scorecard process.                                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
     determining whether a firm resides or
                                                             § 129.400 What are the applicable                     final rules section of this Federal
     primarily does business in the disaster
                                                             performance requirements?                             Register, the EPA is approving the
     area include—
                                                               The performance requirements of                     State’s SIP submittal as a direct rule
       (i) Physical location(s) of the firm’s
                                                             § 125.6 of this chapter apply to small                without prior proposal because the
     permanent office(s) and date any office
                                                             and socioeconomic set asides under this               Agency views this as noncontroversial
     in the disaster area(s) was established;
       (ii) Current state licenses;                          part. A similarly situated entity as that             submittal and anticipates no adverse
       (iii) Record of past work in the                      term is used in § 125.6 of this chapter               comments. A detailed rationale for the
     disaster area(s) (e.g., how much and for                must qualify as a concern located in a                approval is set forth in the direct final
     how long);                                              disaster area.                                        rule. If no relevant adverse comments
       (iv) Contractual history the firm has                                                                       are received in response to this action
     had with subcontractors and/or                          § 129.500 What are the penalties of                   no further activity is contemplated. If
                                                             misrepresentation of size or status?                  the EPA receives relevant adverse
     suppliers in the disaster area;
       (v) Percentage of the firm’s gross                      The penalties relevant to the                       comments, the direct final rule will be
     revenues attributable to work performed                 particular size or socioeconomic status               withdrawn and all public comments
     in the disaster area;                                   representation under title 13 §§ 121.108,             received will be addressed in a
       (vi) Number of permanent employees                    125.32, 126.900, and 127.700 of this                  subsequent final rule based on this
     the firm employs in the disaster area;                  chapter are applicable to set asides                  proposed rule. The EPA will not
       (vii) Membership in local and state                   under this part.                                      institute a second comment period. Any
     organizations in the disaster area; and                   Dated: November 8, 2018.                            parties interested in commenting on this
       (viii) Other evidence that establishes                Linda E. McMahon,
                                                                                                                   action should do so at this time.
     the firm resides or primarily does                                                                               For additional information, see the
                                                             Administrator.
     business in the disaster area. For                                                                            direct final rule which is located in the
                                                             [FR Doc. 2018–25705 Filed 12–3–18; 8:45 am]
     example, sole proprietorships may                                                                             rules section of this Federal Register.
     submit utility bills and bank statements.               BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
                                                                                                                     Dated: November 26, 2018.
       Disaster area means the area for
                                                                                                                   Anne Idsal,
     which the President has declared a
     major disaster under section 401 of the                 ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                              Regional Administrator, Region 6.
     Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and                  AGENCY                                                [FR Doc. 2018–26297 Filed 12–3–18; 8:45 am]
     Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5170), during                                                                       BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
     the period of the declaration.                          40 CFR Part 52
       Emergency response contract means a                   [EPA–R06–OAR–2018–0676; FRL–9986–65–
     contract with private entities that                                                                           ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                             Region 6]
     supports assistance activities in a                                                                           AGENCY
     disaster area, such as debris cleanup,                  Air Plan Approval; Texas; Emission
                                                                                                                   40 CFR Part 52
     distribution of supplies, or                            Statements
     reconstruction.
                                                             AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                     [EPA–R01–OAR–2018–0771; FRL–9987–00–
     § 129.200 What contracting preferences                  Agency (EPA).                                         Region 1]
     are available for small business concerns               ACTION: Proposed rule.
     located in disaster areas?                                                                                    Air Plan Approval; Massachusetts; Air
       Contracting officers may set aside                    SUMMARY:   Pursuant to the Federal Clean              Emissions Inventory, Emissions
     solicitations for emergency response                    Air Act (CAA or the Act), the                         Statements, Source Registration, and
     contracts to allow only small businesses                Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)                 Emergency Episode Planning
     located in the disaster area to compete.                is proposing to approve a portion of a                Provisions
                                                             State Implementation Plan (SIP)
     § 129.300 What small business goaling                                                                         AGENCY:  Environmental Protection
                                                             revision submitted by the State of Texas
     credit do agencies receive for awarding an                                                                    Agency (EPA).
     emergency response contract to a small                  for the 2008 8-hour ozone national
                                                             ambient air quality standards (NAAQS).                ACTION: Proposed rule.
     business concern under this part?
       If an agency awards an emergency                      The portion of the SIP revision being                 SUMMARY:   The Environmental Protection
     response contract to a local small                      approved pertains to CAA 2008 ozone                   Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
     business concern through the use of a                   NAAQS requirement for emission                        State Implementation Plan (SIP)
     local area set aside that is also set aside             statements in the Dallas/Fort Worth                   revisions submitted by the
     under a small business or                               ozone nonattainment area (DFW area).                  Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The
     socioeconomic set-aside (8(a),                          DATES: Written comments should be                     revisions establish a 2011 base year
     HUBZone, SDVO, WOSB, EDWOSB),                           received on or before January 3, 2019.                emissions inventory, an emissions
     the value of the contract shall be                      ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,                      statement certification, revisions to an
     doubled for purposes of determining                     identified by EPA–R06–OAR–2018–                       existing stationary source registration
     compliance with the goals for                           0676, at https://www.regulations.gov or               program, and requirements to be
     procurement contracts under section                     via email to ruan-lei.karolina@epa.gov.               undertaken during air pollution
     15(g)(1)(A) of the Small Business Act                   For additional information on how to                  emergencies. This action is being taken
     (15 U.S.C. 644(g)(1)(A)). The procuring                 submit comments see the detailed                      under the Clean Air Act.


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Document Created: 2018-12-04 00:42:33
Document Modified: 2018-12-04 00:42:33
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule.
DatesComments must be received on or before February 4, 2019.
ContactBrenda Fernandez, Office of Policy, Planning and Liaison, 409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416; (202) 205-7337; [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 62516 
RIN Number3245-AG86
CFR Citation13 CFR 121
13 CFR 124
13 CFR 125
13 CFR 126
13 CFR 127
13 CFR 129
CFR AssociatedGovernment Procurement; Government Property; Grant Programs-Business; Individuals with Disabilities; Loan Programs-Business; Small Businesses; Administrative Practice and Procedure; Government Procurement; Government Property; Small Businesses; Government Contracts; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Technical Assistance

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