Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Government Small Business Contracts Went to Fortune 500 Companies, According to Latest Federal Investigation
| Quelle: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - July 9, 2008) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
On July 1st, 2008, the Department of Interior (DOI) became the latest
federal agency to issue a report that found Fortune 500 firms were the
actual recipients of federal small business contracts. The report
(http://www.doioig.gov/upload/2008-G-0024.pdf) also found contracts to
Fortune 500 firms were used to falsify the DOI's compliance with its small
business contracting goal and significantly misrepresent the Bush
Administration's compliance with the Congressionally mandated 23 percent
small business contracting goal.
The report stated that despite regulations and policies put in place to
ensure data integrity, contracting officers intentionally reported
contracts to some of the nation's largest corporations as small business
contracts. The DOI Inspector General found contracting officers knowingly
entered GSA contract information into the Federal Procurement Data System -
Next Generation (FPDS-NG) improperly, which allowed them to code a contract
to an obvious large firm as a small business set-aside contract. The
report noted that DOI contracting officers had recently received training
on the proper entry of GSA acquisitions into FPDS-NG.
During 2006 and 2007, DOI reported millions of dollars in contracts to
Fortune 500 corporations such as Dell, GTSI, Home Depot, John Deere,
McGraw-Hill, Ricoh, Sherwin Williams, Starwood Hotels, Waste Management
Incorporated, Weyerhaeuser, World Wide Technology and Xerox Corporation as
small business contracts.
The DOI Office of Inspector General's report is the latest investigation to
contradict two Small Business Administration (SBA) press releases, which
claimed that it was a "myth" that large businesses received federal small
business contracts.
The General Accounting Office (GAO) first uncovered the diversion of
federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 corporations in 2002.
Since then, there have been approximately a dozen federal investigations
that have all found Fortune 500 firms and other large corporations were the
actual recipients of billions of dollars in federal small business
contracts every year. Despite the series of federal investigations and
over 400 stories in the press since 2002, no legislation has been passed to
address the problem.
As opposed to adopting policies to stop the flow of federal small business
contracts to Fortune 500 firms, former SBA Administer Steven Preston
adopted a SBA policy in June of 2007 that will allow Fortune 500 firms to
continue to receive federal small business contracts until the year 2012.
Preston also removed all information from the government's Central
Contractor Registration (CCR) database that could be used to determine if a
firm was small or large. Additionally, Preston refused to release the
specific names of all firms that received government small business
contracts.
Senator Barbara Boxer (CA - D) has written a bill entitled, the Fairness
and Transparency in Contracting Act of 2008. If passed into law, the bill
would completely stop the diversion of federal small business contracts to
large corporations.
The American Small Business League (ASBL) projects that the diversion of
federal small business contracts to large corporations during the Bush
Administration could top $800 billion.
"Federal investigations have been coming out for roughly 6 years now that
clearly show that Fortune 500 corporations are the actual recipients of
federal small business contracts and yet the Bush Administration continues
to maintain that it is a 'myth' that large firms receive federal small
business contracts (http://www.sba.gov/ig/05-15.pdf)," ASBL President Lloyd
Chapman said. "This situation is obviously not limited to the DOI. The
intentional diversion of federal small business contract dollars to Fortune
500 firms is a government wide problem. The SBA's own Inspector General
found widespread fraud in federal contracting in Report 5-16.
(http://www.sba.gov/ig/05-16.pdf) It is time for Congress to finally pass
Senator Boxer's, Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act of 2008, and
it is time for the GAO to look at the federal government as a whole and get
to the bottom of this problem. I am confident that if Senator Obama
becomes President, his administration will right these wrongs in short
order. You won't see Fortune 500 firms receiving U.S. government small
business contracts under an Obama administration."