Contact Information: Contact: Lloyd Chapman President American Small Business League http://www.asbl.com Email Contact (707) 789-9575
House Passes H.R. 1873 and Gives Billions in Federal Small Business Contracts to Fortune 500 Companies, Says the American Small Business League
Yesterday, the House of Representatives Passed Bill H.R. 1873, Which Will Force Small Businesses to Compete With Large Corporations for Small Business Contracts
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- May 11, 2007 -- The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
Yesterday, the House of Representatives passed Bill H.R. 1873, the "Small
Business Fairness in Contracting Act." Although the bill has some positive
provisions for small businesses, it does not contain any provision that
will stop the diversion of billions of dollars in Federal small business
contracts to Fortune 500 firms that have existing Federal small business
contracts.
Twelve Federal investigations since 2002 have all found billions of dollars
in Federal small business contracts actually wound up in the hands of some
of the largest firms in the United States and Europe.
In Report 5-15, the
Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General referred to the
diversion of Federal small business contracts to large businesses as one of
the biggest challenges facing the Federal government today.
Under H.R. 1873, the Federal government would be allowed to continue to
report contracts to corporate giants like Boeing, Lockheed Martin,
Northrop-Grumman, Raytheon, Rolls Royce and L3 Communications as small
business contracts.
As early as 2002, the SBA Office of the Inspector General, the SBA, the
Office of Federal Procurement Policy, the Office of Management and Budget,
the Government Accountability Office and the Senate Committee on Small
Business and Entrepreneurship all recommended annual re-certification for
all firms receiving Federal small business contracts. H.R. 1873 only
requires firms receiving new small business contracts to re-certify their
status as legitimate small businesses. Firms with existing small business
contracts are unaffected by H.R. 1873.
Beginning in 2002, the SBA acknowledged that large businesses had received
small business contracts through miscoding, computer glitches and honest
mistakes. Two separate investigations by the SBA Office of Advocacy and the
SBA Office of the Inspector General found fraud was responsible for large
businesses receiving Federal small business contracts.
H.R. 1873 will allow large businesses that currently have small business
contracts to keep them regardless of how they originally obtained them. In
its current form, the bill will allow firms that obtained small business
contracts fraudulently to keep their contracts for at least five more
years.
The bill now goes to the Senate. Small business owners and advocates are
hoping that Senator John Kerry will save the day for small businesses
across America and add the annual re-certification provision for all firms
holding Federal small business contracts. If he does, as much as $60
billion a year in Federal small business contracts could begin to flow to
America's 23 million small businesses.