Contact Information: Contact: Lloyd Chapman President American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Small Business Administration Myth vs. Fact News Release Struggles to Defend New Multi-Billion Dollar Loophole for Big Business
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - July 19, 2007) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
In the Small Business Administration's July 18th news release, they claim
that it is a myth that there is a loophole in their latest five-year
grandfathering/five-year re-certification policy that will allow the SBA to
continue to report contracts to large business as small business awards
until the year 2012.
Nationally recognized federal contracting expert Professor Charles Tiefer
of the University of Baltimore School of Law disagrees.
In Professor Tiefer's December 5, 2006 opinion on the new SBA policy
entitled, "Opinion on the Loophole In SBA Size Standard Regulations,"
Professor Tiefer stated: "The Small Business Administration's latest size
standard regulations issued in mid-November will still result in the
federal government reporting many of its prime contracts performed by large
businesses, as small business contract awards, for at least five years to
come. I have reviewed the new regulations. Also, I have reviewed the many
independent inquiries about the government's enormous loopholes for large
businesses to enjoy contracts purportedly awarded to small businesses. It
is clear that, after three years of hesitation about doing something, the
SBA simply ducked action for even partially closing those loopholes."
Professor Tiefer is not alone in his opposition to the new SBA five-year
grandfathering/five-year re-certification policy. In 2006, the Senate
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship voted to close loopholes
that have allowed the SBA to report billions of dollars in contracts to
many of the largest firms in America as small business awards
(http://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=296). They voted unanimously to
endorse the annual re-certification policy that was originally proposed by
the Office of Federal Procurement Policy in February of 2003
(http://www.washingtontechnology.com/print/17_22/20148-1.html). An annual
re-certification policy would require all firms claiming small business
status to recertify that status annually, as opposed to every five-years as
dictated by the SBA's recently implemented policy.
Under the annual re-certification policy, large businesses with existing
federal small business contracts and firms holding small business contracts
that were acquired or had out grown their small business status, would be
allowed to keep the contracts they were awarded. However, the federal
government would no longer be allowed to include those contracts towards
the federal government's 23 percent small business contracting goal. This
would ensure that firms transitioning from small to large would not be
punished for growing, and that only contracts to legitimate small
businesses would be counted towards the government's 23 percent small
business contracting goal.
Other supporters of the annual re-certification policy included the SBA
itself before the arrival of current SBA Administrator Steven Preston, the
SBA Office of Inspector General, and the Office of Management and Budget.
SBA Administrator Preston ignored the overwhelming support for an annual
re-certification policy and instead initiated the current five-year
re-certification policy the SBA had originally proposed in 2005 as a
five-year grandfathering policy.
The American Small Business League plans to file their fourth federal
lawsuit against the SBA to overturn the policy. They believe the five-year
grandfathering/five-year re-certification policy is an intentional loophole
the SBA has created that will falsify the government's compliance with the
23 percent small business contracting goal and divert billions of dollars
in federal small business contracts to Fortune 1000 firms and other large
businesses.