Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
SBA Accused of Falsifying Small Business Contracting Data by the American Small Business League
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - December 3, 2007) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
In response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the American Small Business League for the
specific names of firms that were coded as small businesses for FY 2005 and
FY 2006, the Small Business Administration responded Friday by issuing a
press release with the Top 100 report of small businesses that received the
most small business procurement dollars for FY 2006. The ASBL accuses the
SBA of falsifying the data to cover up the fact that Fortune 500 firms have
received most small business contracts dollars in recent years.
The ASBL points to the fact that in a July 6, 2006 New York Times story
titled, "Impersonators
in the Land of Small Business," by Ron Nixon; spokesmen from General
Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and Boeing acknowledged that they had millions
of dollars in federal small business contracts. In fact, the story stated
that General Dynamics had 47 small business contracts, Northrop Grumman had
121 small business contracts and Boeing had 37. Northrop Grumman and Boeing
were conspicuously absent from the SBA's list of the top 100 recipients
despite stories from ABC, CBS and CNN, which found that the Fortune 500
firms had received millions of dollars in small business contracts.
"Clearly this is an attempt by the SBA to do what they have always done; to
cover up the fact that Fortune 500 corporations are actually the recipients
of most small business contracts," President of the ASBL, Lloyd Chapman
said. "To date no one has been able to obtain a list of all recipients of
small business contracts. With this in mind, we intend to file a lawsuit
against the SBA as a means of forcing them to release the names of all the
firms that received small business contracts for FY 2005 and FY 2006, which
should total $75.1 and $77.8 billion respectively."
In Report 5-15, the
SBA Office of Inspector General stated that, "One of the most important
challenges facing the SBA and the entire Federal Government today is that
large businesses are receiving small business procurement awards and
agencies are receiving credit for these awards."
"The SBA's list of the Top 100 small business contractors flies in the face
of more than 15 federal investigations that have found fraud, abuse,
loopholes and a lack of oversight in federal small business contracting,"
Chapman said. "With this list, they made more of an attempt at muddying the
waters surrounding this issue than at legitimately solving the problem of
large firms receiving federal small business contracts."
According to a report by FEDMINE.US containing the Top 50 recipients of
federal small business contracts, firms like: UT Battelle LLC, Blackwater,
GTSI, Thales and Hewlett-Packard received billions of dollars in federal
small business contracts during FY 2006. However, the SBA's report for the
same year contains no mention of these firms. Additionally, the top
recipient of federal small business contracts for FY 2006 is,
"Miscellaneous Foreign Contractors," According to FEDMINE.US. With this in
mind, the ASBL challenges the SBA to explain Miscellaneous Foreign
Contractors, the disparity between the two lists and publish their
methodology for compiling their list.
FEDMINE.US has access to the XML data feed from FPDS-NG.