Acquisition Regulation: Contractor Business Systems-Definition and Administration, 18415-18439 [2014-07086]
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Vol. 79
Tuesday,
No. 62
April 1, 2014
Part II
Department of Energy
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48 CFR Parts 915, 934, 942, et al.
Acquisition Regulation: Contractor Business Systems—Definition and
Administration; Proposed Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 62 / Tuesday, April 1, 2014 / Proposed Rules
F. Review Under Executive Order 13132
G. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995
H. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999
I. Review Under Executive Order 13211
J. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Approval by the Office of the Secretary
of Energy
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
48 CFR Parts 915, 934, 942, 944, 945
and 952
RIN 1991–AC01
Acquisition Regulation: Contractor
Business Systems—Definition and
Administration
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Department of Energy
(DOE) is proposing to amend the
Department of Energy Acquisition
Regulation (DEAR) to define contractor
business system as accounting system,
estimating system, purchasing system,
earned value management system
(EVMS), and property management
system. DOE is proposing to implement
compliance enforcement mechanisms in
the form of a contractor business system
clause and related clauses that includes
a provision that would allow
contracting officers to withhold a
percentage of payments, under certain
conditions, when a contractor’s business
system contains significant deficiencies.
DATES: Written comments on the
proposed rulemaking must be received
on or before close of business June 2,
2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by ‘‘DEAR—Contractor
Business Systems—Definition and
Administration and RIN 1991–AC01,’’
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email to: DEARrulemaking@
hq.doe.gov mailto:. Include DEAR:
Contractor Business Systems—
Definition and Administration and RIN
1991–AC01 in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail to: U.S. Department of Energy,
Office of Procurement and Assistance
Management, MA–611, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. Comments by
email are encouraged.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara Binney, (202) 287–1340 or
barbara.binney@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
I. Background
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
III. Procedural Requirements:
A. Review Under Executive Orders 12866
and 13563
B. Review Under Executive Order 12988
C. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act
D. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction
Act
E. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act
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I. Background
The purpose of this rulemaking is to
define a contractor’s business system as
their accounting system, estimating
system, purchasing system, earned
value management system (EVMS), and
property management system. DOE
proposes to implement compliance
enforcement mechanisms in the form of
a business system clause and related
clauses that allow contracting officers to
withhold a percentage of payments,
under certain conditions, when a
contractor’s business system contains
significant deficiencies. DOE proposes,
when the prime contract is awarded to
a large business, to include a contractor
teaming arrangement, and the total
contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime
contract totaling $10 million or more
including options (but less than $50
million) is awarded to a large business,
to include a contractor teaming
arrangement, and the contracting officer
determines it to be in the best interest
of the Government (e.g., significant
estimating problems are believed to
exist or the contractor’s sales are
predominantly Government) to
prescribe these clauses for contracts in
support of Capital Asset Projects (other
than management and operating
contracts), as prescribed in DOE Order
(DOE O) 413.3B, Program and Project
Management for the Acquisition of
Capital Assets, or non-capital asset
projects. Under the proposed rule, DOE
could withhold a percentage of interim
payments invoiced under—cost
reimbursement contracts; incentive type
contracts; time-and-materials contracts
and; labor-hour contracts; as well as
progress payments; and performancebased payments. The proposed changes
affect DOE, which includes the National
Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA), as well as DOE contractors,
which include both DOE and NNSA
contractors. The proposed changes do
not affect Management & Operating
(M&O) contracts. M&O contracts include
M&O specific clauses that need to be
considered and possibly revised to
incorporate the clauses for the business
system. For example, DOE authorizes
the M&O contractor to finance contract
performance by use of Special Financial
Institution Accounts and requires the
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M&O contractor to maintain integrated
accounting systems, under which the
contractors budgeting and accounting
follow DOE’s Accounting Handbook.
Because of these differences the
business system clause and related
clauses for the M&O contracts will be
different from this rule; it is our intent
to publish a separate proposed rule for
M&O contracts at a later time.
The proposed changes include policy
revisions under DOE contracts.
Contractor business systems and
internal controls are the first line of
defense against waste, fraud, and abuse.
Weak control systems increase the risk
of unallowable and unreasonable costs
on Government contracts. To improve
the effectiveness of DOE’s oversight of
contractor business systems, DOE is
considering a rule to clarify the
definition and administration of
contractor business systems. It applies
to designated fixed-price contracts
awarded to a large business on the basis
of adequate price competition without
submission of cost or pricing data or
covered contracts subject to the Cost
Accounting Standards under 41 U.S.C.
chapter 15, as implemented in
regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201–
1(a) and not exempted at 9903.201–
1(b)(1) through (14). DOE proposes to:
1. Define contractor business system
as estimating system, purchasing
system, earned value management
system (EVMS), accounting system and
property management system.
2. Implement compliance
enforcement mechanisms in the form of
a business system clause that allows
contracting officers to withhold a
percentage of payments, under certain
conditions, when a contractor’s business
system contains significant deficiencies.
Significant deficiency means a
shortcoming in the system that
materially affects the ability of officials
of the Department of Energy to rely
upon information produced by the
system that is needed for management
purposes. Under such circumstances,
payments could be withheld on—
Æ Interim payments under—
• Cost reimbursement contracts;
• Incentive type contracts;
• Time-and-materials contracts; or
• Labor-hour contracts;
Æ Progress payments to include fixedprice contracts; and
Æ Performance-based payments to
include fixed-price contracts.
If the contracting officer issues the
final determination with a notice to
withhold payments for significant
deficiencies in a contractor business
system required under the contract, the
contracting officer will withhold no
more than five percent of amounts for
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one or more significant deficiencies in
any single contractor business system
and no more than ten percent of
amounts for significant deficiencies in
multiple contractor business system by
directing the contractor, in writing, to
withhold five percent or ten percent
from its invoices until the contracting
officer has determined that the
contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies as directed by the
contracting officer’s final determination.
When the contracting officer has
determined that all significant
deficiencies are corrected, the
contracting officer will direct the
contractor to discontinue the payment
withholding from invoices and
authorize the contractor to invoice for
any monies previously withheld that are
not also being withheld due to other
significant deficiencies. This final
determination is not a final decision
within the meaning of the Contract
Disputes Act of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 7101, et
seq.).
At the end of contract performance, if
significant deficiencies remain in the
disapproved system or systems and
payment withholdings are in effect, the
payment withholdings will be released
during contract closeout. However, the
release of the payment withholdings
from one contract will not mean the
system is approved. If there are other
contracts where payment withholdings
are in effect, the payment withholdings
will continue on those contracts. These
payment withholding are contract
financing payments, and therefore are
not subject to the interest penalty
provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
When the Final Rule becomes
effective, the clauses will be
incorporated into solicitations that meet
the established applicability
requirements and will apply
prospectively after being incorporated
into affected contracts. Affected
contracts are contracts awarded to large
businesses, to include teaming
arrangements, in support of Capital
Asset Projects (other than management
and operating contracts), as prescribed
in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, Program
and Project Management for the
Acquisition of Capital Assets, and noncapital asset projects when the total
contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime
contract totaling $10 million or more,
including options (but less than $50
million) is awarded to a large business,
to include a contractor teaming
arrangement, and the contracting officer
determines it to be in the best interest
of the Government (e.g., significant
estimating problems are believed to
exist or the contractor’s sales a
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predominantly Government). After the
effective date of the Final Rule,
contracting officers will negotiate
bilaterally with contractors who hold
affected contracts to incorporate the
changes of the Final Rule into their
contracts within 60 days. Contracting
officers must also incorporate the
changes of the Final Rule into affected
contracts before extending them or
exercising options under them by
negotiating bilaterally with the
contractors.
DOE notes that the Department of
Defense (DoD) clauses were considered
in drafting the proposed clauses. The
system criteria in the clauses are based
on the DoD clauses. Because the
applicable DOE contracts are performed
mostly at the DOE sites, each contractor
will provide documentation to support
the system criteria that they are using
for that DOE contract. In circumstances
where the contractor is using the same
business system for a DoD contract and
a DOE contract, the contractor would
explain this circumstance and provide
the results of DoD’s review of their
business system so that DOE can
coordinate with DoD concerning use of
the business system under the DOE
contract.
Today’s proposed rule does not alter
substantive rights or obligations under
current law.
DOE requests comments on all aspects
of this proposed rule.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
1. Part 915 is amended to add new
Sections 915.407 Special cost or pricing
areas, 915.407–5 Estimating system, and
915.407–5–70 Disclosure, maintenance,
and review requirements. Section
915.407–5–70 establishes the policy that
DOE contractors have acceptable
estimating systems. It adds definitions,
describes applicability requirements,
system criteria, and provides procedures
for addressing significant deficiencies in
estimating system.
The applicable contract is subject to
estimating system disclosure,
maintenance, and review requirements
for prime contractors (large business to
include contractor teaming arrangement,
as defined at 48 CFR 9.601(1)) when the
total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime
contract totaling $10 million or more
including options (but less than $50
million) is awarded to a large business,
to include a contractor teaming
arrangement and the contracting officer
determines it to be in the best interest
of the Government (e.g., significant
estimating problems are believed to
exist). Also, Subpart 952 is amended to
add the related clause 952.215–71 Cost
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Estimating System Requirements. A
contractor’s acceptable estimating
system accurately describes the policies,
procedures, and practices that the
contractor currently uses in preparing
cost proposal (budgeting planning
controls, generating estimates of costs
and other data included in proposals)
with sufficient detail for the
Government to reasonably make an
informed judgment regarding the
acceptability of the contractor’s
estimating practices.
In the event any significant
deficiencies are found in the estimating
system, the contracting officer will
provide to the contractor an initial
determination of a significant deficiency
and allow the contractor to respond
within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If the contracting officer does
not receive a written response from the
contractor within 30 days, the
contractor will be deemed to agree with
the initial determination. The
contracting officer will evaluate the
contractor’s response or the contractor’s
lack of response and notify the
contractor of a final determination
concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed
or completed corrective action, and
system disapproval if one or more
significant deficiencies remain. If the
contractor receives a final
determination, the contractor shall,
within 45 days, correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies. When the
contracting officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the
contractor’s estimating system, the
contracting officer will withhold
payments in accordance with the clause
952.242–71, Contractor Business
Systems.
2. Section 915.408–70 is amended by
revising the language to add instructions
on when to use the cost estimating
clause.
3. Subchapter E is amended to add a
new part 934—Major System
Acquisition and Subpart 934.2—Earned
Value Management System, and
Sections 934.201–70 and 934.203.
Subpart 952 is amended to add the
related provision and clause, 952.234–
70 Notice of Earned Value Management
System, and 952.234–71 Earned Value
Management System, respectively. The
Subpart and Sections add DEAR text, a
provision, and a clause addressing
earned value management policy for
DOE contracts. The rule supplements
the final Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) rule published at 71 FR 38238 on
July 5, 2006, and establishes DOE
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specific earned value management
requirements, as permitted by the FAR.
This section establishes policy that DOE
contractors have an acceptable earned
value management system (EVMS). It
adds definitions, applicability
requirements, system criteria, and
provides procedures for addressing
significant deficiencies in estimating
systems.
EVMS requirements apply to Capital
Asset Projects on cost or incentive
contracts and subcontracts based on
dollar thresholds. For contracts valued
at $20,000,000 or more, the contractor
shall have an EVMS determined to be in
compliance with the guidelines in the
American National Standards Institute/
Electronic Industries Alliance Standard
748, EVMS (ANSI/EIA–748). In
addition, for contracts valued at
$20,000,000 but not exceeding
$50,000,000, the contractor shall
conduct self-certification review and
periodic surveillance reviews.
When the contractor has two or more
contracts in support of capital asset
projects at DOE and the total contract
value for a contract is $20,000,000 or
greater and the combined total contract
values for these contracts is $50,000,000
or more, those contracts shall be subject
to certification and surveillance reviews
for contract values for $50,000,000 and
above. For example, the contractor has
3 contracts in support of a DOE capital
asset projects. Contract A is for
$15,000,000. Contract B is for
$21,000,000. Contract C is for
$30,000,000. Contracts B and C are each
by themselves $20,000,000 or greater.
The combined total contract values for
these two contracts (B at $21,000,000
and C at $30,000,000) is $50,000,000 or
more. Therefore, DOE would conduct
certification reviews and surveillance
reviews for these 2 contracts.
When the contract value is
$50,000,000 but not exceeding
$100,000,000, the applicable DOE
Program Office will conduct
certification reviews and periodic
surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance with ANSI/EIA–
748.
When the contract value is
$100,000,000 or more, DOE Office of
Acquisition and Project Management
will conduct certification reviews and
periodic surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance with ANSI/EIA–
748.
Also for solicitations and contracts
valued at $20,000,000 or more, DOE will
use the provision 952.234–70, Notice of
Earned Value Management System,
instead of the provisions at FAR 52.234–
2, Notice of Earned Value Management
System—Pre-Award IBR, and FAR
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52.234–3, Notice of Earned Value
Management System—Post-Award IBR;
and the clause at 952.234–71, Earned
Value Management System, instead of
the clause at FAR 52.234–4, Earned
Value Management System. For
proposals in the amount of $50,000,000
or more, the provision 952.234–70,
Notice of Earned Value Management
System, requires the offeror to comply
with the EVMS guidelines of the ANSI/
EIA–748. If offeror proposes to use a
system that has not been determined to
be in compliance with ANSI/EIA–748,
the offeror shall submit a
comprehensive plan for compliance
with the guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748.
For a contract valued at $50 million
or more, the clause 952.234–71, Earned
Value Management System, requires the
contractor to use an EVMS that has been
determined to be acceptable by DOE. If,
at the time of award, the contractor’s
EVMS has not been determined by DOE
to be in compliance with the EVMS
guidelines, the contractor shall apply its
current system to the contract and shall
take necessary actions to meet the
milestones in the contractor’s EVMS
plan.
In the event any significant
deficiencies are found in the earned
value management system, the
contracting officer will provide to the
contractor an initial determination of a
significant deficiency and allow the
contractor 30 days to respond if the
contractor disagrees. If there is no
written response from the contractor
within 30 days, it will indicate that the
contractor agrees with the initial
determination. The contracting officer
will evaluate the contractor’s response
or the contractor’s lack of response and
notify the contractor of a final
determination concerning any
remaining significant deficiencies;
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action; system
noncompliance when the EVMS fails to
comply with ANSI/EIA–748 guidelines;
and system disapproval if EVMS
validation is not successfully completed
or that there is one or more significant
deficiencies in guidelines.
The contracting officer’s final
determination of the contractor’s EVMS
will indicate that the system is
acceptable and approved with no
significant deficiencies remaining, or
that the system contains one or more
significant deficiencies in high-risk
guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748 standards
(guidelines 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 16,
21, 23, 26, 27, 28, 30, or 32). When the
contracting officer determines that the
existing earned value management
system contains one or more significant
deficiencies in one or more of the
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remaining 16 guidelines in ANSI/EIA–
748 standards, the contracting officer
shall use discretion to disapprove the
system based on input received from
functional specialists and the auditor.
The contractor will have 45 days to
either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies. When the
contracting officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the
contractor’s system, the contracting
officer will withhold payments in
accordance with the clause 952.242–71,
Contractor Business Systems.
4. Part 942 is amended to add a new
Subpart 942.70—Contractor Business
System, Sections 942.7001 through
942.7005. Subpart 952 is amended to
add the related clause 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System. The
proposed amendments will permit a
contracting officer to withhold payment
not to exceed five percent for one or
more significant deficiencies in any
single contractor business system and
not to exceed ten percent for significant
deficiencies in multiple contractor
business systems after making a final
determination to disapprove a
contractor’s business system for
designated fixed-price contracts
awarded to a large business on the basis
of adequate price competition with or
without submission of cost or pricing
data; or for covered contract(s) subject to
the Cost Accounting Standards under 41
U.S.C. chapter 15, as implemented in
regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201–
1(a) and are not exempted at (b)(1)
through (14).
In solicitations and contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project (other
than a management and operating
contract), as prescribed in DOE Order
413.3B, or for a non-capital asset
project, for prime contractors (large
business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract
value exceeds $50 million, including
options; or when the prime contract
totaling $10 million or more, including
options, (but less than $50 million) is
awarded to a large business, to include
a contractor teaming arrangement and
the contracting officer determines it to
be in the best interest of the Government
(e.g., significant estimating problems are
believed to exist) use the clause
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System. Also, the solicitation or contract
will include any of the following
clauses: 952.215–71, Cost Estimating
System Requirements; 952.234–71,
Earned Value Management System;
952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration; 952.244–71, Contractor
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Purchasing System Administration; and
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
The requirements of this subpart
942.70 will not apply to acquisitions
for—
• Small business set-asides;
• Energy savings performance
contracts as required by the Energy
Policy Act of 1992;
• Services for—
Æ ‘‘Advisory and assistance
services’’ as defined at 48 CFR 2.101,
unless otherwise designated as
applicable by the Senior Procurement
Executive or the Head of the Contracting
Activity;
Æ Security Guards;
Æ Housekeeping;
Æ Education and training;
Æ National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 Support; or
Æ Utilities;
• Office of the Deputy Administrator
for Naval Reactors;
• Interagency acquisitions in
accordance with 48 CFR 17.5; or
• Orders against another Federal
agency contract, e.g. Federal Supply
Services (48 CFR 8.4).
During contract performance, the
contracting officer, or designee, shall
evaluate the contractor’s business
system performance and compliance in
accordance with 48 CFR 42.15 and DOE
procedures. At the end of contract
performance, if significant deficiencies
remain in the disapproved system or
systems and payment withholdings are
in effect, the payment withholdings will
be released during contract closeout.
However, the release of the payment
withholdings from one contract will not
mean the system is approved. If there
are other contracts where payment
withholdings are in effect, the payment
withholdings will continue on those
contracts. These payment withholding
are contract financing payments;
therefore, these payments withholdings
are not subject to the interest penalty
provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
5. Part 942 is amended to add a new
Subpart 942.71—Contractor Accounting
System and Related Controls, Sections
942.7101, 942.7102 and 942.7103.
Subpart 952 is amended to add the
related clause 952.242–72, Accounting
System Administration. The proposed
amendments will require DOE
contractors to have acceptable
accounting systems. It adds definitions,
describes applicability requirements,
system criteria, and provides procedures
for addressing significant deficiencies in
contractor accounting systems.
In solicitations and contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project, (other
than a management and operating
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contract), as prescribed in DOE Order
413.3B, or for a non-capital asset
project, for prime contractors, (large
business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract
value exceeds $50 million, including
options; or when the prime contract
totaling $10 million or more, including
options, (but less than $50 million) is
awarded to a large business, to include
a contractor teaming arrangement and
the contracting officer determines it to
be in the best interest of the Government
(e.g., significant estimating problems are
believed to exist) and the contract will
be either a cost-reimbursement,
incentive type, time-and-materials, or
labor-hour contract; or a contractor with
progress payments made on the basis of
cost incurred by the contractor or on a
percentage or stage of completion, or
fixed-price contracts awarded on the
basis of adequate price competition
without submission of cost or pricing
data with a large business, to include
contractor teaming arrangement, use the
clause 952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration. The clause requires the
contractor to establish and maintain an
acceptable accounting system in
accordance with the system criteria
described in the clause.
In the event any significant
deficiencies are found in the accounting
system, the contracting officer will
provide to the contractor an initial
determination of a significant deficiency
and allows the contractor to respond
within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If there is no written response
from the contractor within 30 days, it
will indicate that the contractor agrees
with the initial determination. The
contracting officer will evaluate the
contractor’s response or the contractor’s
lack of response and notify the
contractor of a final determination
concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed
or completed corrective action, and
system disapproval if one or more
significant deficiencies remain. If the
contractor receives a final
determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the
significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan
showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies.
When the contracting officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the
contractor’s accounting system, the
contracting officer will withhold
payments in accordance with the clause
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System.
6. Subchapter G is amended to add a
new Part 944—Subcontracting Policies
and Procedures, Subpart 944.3—
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Contractors’ Purchasing System Review,
and Sections 944.301, 944.303, 944.305,
944.305–70 and 944.305–71. Subpart
952 is amended to add the related
clause 952.244–71, Contractor
Purchasing System Administration. The
proposed amendment requires that DOE
contractors have acceptable purchasing
system. The amendment add
definitions, describe applicability
requirements, define system criteria,
and provide procedures for addressing
significant deficiencies in contractor
purchasing systems.
In solicitations and contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project (other
than a management and operating
contract), as prescribed in DOE Order
413.3B, or for a non-capital asset
project, for prime contractors (large
business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract
value exceeds $50 million, including
options; or when the prime contract
totaling $10 million or more, including
options, (but less than $50 million) is
awarded to a large business, to include
a contractor teaming arrangement and
the contracting officer determines it to
be in the best interest of the Government
(e.g., significant estimating problems are
believed to exist) and the contract
contains the clause at 48 CFR 52.244–
2 Subcontracts, use the clause 952.244–
71, Contractor Purchasing System
Administration. The clause requires the
contractor to establish and maintain an
acceptable purchasing system in
accordance with the system criteria
described in the clause.
In the event any significant
deficiencies are found in the purchasing
system, the contracting officer will
provide to the contractor an initial
determination of a significant deficiency
and allows the contractor to respond
within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If there is no written response
from the contractor within 30 days, it
will indicate that the contractor agrees
with the initial determination. The
contracting officer will evaluate the
contractor’s response or the contractor’s
lack of response and notify the
contractor of a final determination
concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed
or completed corrective action, and
system disapproval if one or more
significant deficiencies remain. If the
contractor receives a final
determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the
significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan
showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies.
When the contracting officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the
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contractor’s purchasing system, the
contracting officer will withhold
payments in accordance with the clause
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System.
7. Part 945 is amended to add new
Sections 945.105, and 945.107. Subpart
952 is amended to add the related
clause 952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
The proposed amendments requires that
DOE contractors have acceptable
property management systems. The
amendments add definitions, describe
applicability requirements, define
system criteria, and provide procedures
for addressing significant deficiencies in
the contractor property management
systems.
In solicitations and contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project (other
than a management and operating
contract), as prescribed in DOE Order
413.3B, or for a non-capital asset
project, for prime contractors (large
business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract
value exceeds $50 million, including
options; or when the prime contract
totaling $10 million or more, including
options, (but less than $50 million) is
awarded to a large business, to include
a contractor teaming arrangement and
the contracting officer determines it to
be in the best interest of the Government
(e.g., significant estimating problems are
believed to exist and the contract
contains the clause at 48 CFR 52.245–
1, Government Property, use the clause
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System. The clause
requires the contractor to establish and
maintain an acceptable property
management system in accordance with
the system criteria described in the
clause.
In the event any significant
deficiencies are found in the property
management system, the contracting
officer will provide the contractor an
initial determination of a significant
deficiency and allow the contractor 30
days to respond within if the contractor
disagrees. If there is no written response
from the contractor within 30 days, it
will indicate that the contractor agrees
with the initial determination. The
contracting officer will evaluate the
contractor’s response or the contractor’s
lack of response and notify the
contractor of a final determination
concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed
or completed corrective action, and
system disapproval if one or more
significant deficiencies remain. If the
contractor receives a final
determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the
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significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan
showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies.
When the contracting officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the
contractor’s property management
system, the contracting officer will
withhold payments in accordance with
the clause 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System.
III. Procedural Requirements
A. Review Under Executive Orders
12866 and 13563
Today’s regulatory action has been
determined to be a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under Executive
Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review,’’ 58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993).
Accordingly, this proposed rule was
reviewed under that Executive Order by
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
DOE has also reviewed this regulation
pursuant to Executive Order 13563,
issued on January 18, 2011 (76 FR 3281
(Jan. 21, 2011)). Executive Order 13563
is supplemental to and explicitly
reaffirms the principles, structures, and
definitions governing regulatory review
established in Executive Order 12866.
To the extent permitted by law, agencies
are required by Executive Order 13563
to: (1) Propose or adopt a regulation
only upon a reasoned determination
that its benefits justify its costs
(recognizing that some benefits and
costs are difficult to quantify); (2) tailor
regulations to impose the least burden
on society, consistent with obtaining
regulatory objectives, taking into
account, among other things, and to the
extent practicable, the costs of
cumulative regulations; (3) select, in
choosing among alternative regulatory
approaches, those approaches that
maximize net benefits (including
potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety, and other
advantages; distributive impacts; and
equity); (4) to the extent feasible, specify
performance objectives, rather than
specifying the behavior or manner of
compliance that regulated entities must
adopt; and (5) identify and assess
available alternatives to direct
regulation, including providing
economic incentives to encourage the
desired behavior, such as user fees or
marketable permits, or providing
information upon which choices can be
made by the public.
DOE emphasizes as well that
Executive Order 13563 requires agencies
to use the best available techniques to
quantify anticipated present and future
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benefits and costs as accurately as
possible. In its guidance, the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
emphasized that such techniques may
include identifying changing future
compliance costs that might result from
technological innovation or anticipated
behavioral changes. DOE believes that
today’s NOPR is consistent with these
principles, including the requirement
that, to the extent permitted by law,
agencies adopt a regulation only upon a
reasoned determination that its benefits
justify its costs and, in choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, those
approaches maximize net benefits.
B. Review Under Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing
regulations and the promulgation of
new regulations, section 3(a) of
Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil Justice
Reform,’’ 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996),
imposes on Executive agencies the
general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and
(3) provide a clear legal standard for
affected conduct rather than a general
standard and promote simplification
and burden reduction.
With regard to the review required by
section 3(a), section 3(b) of Executive
Order 12988 specifically requires that
Executive agencies make every
reasonable effort to ensure that the
regulation: (1) Clearly specifies the
preemptive effect, if any; (2) clearly
specifies any effect on existing Federal
law or regulation; (3) provides a clear
legal standard for affected conduct
while promoting simplification and
burden reduction; (4) specifies the
retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately
defines key terms; and (6) addresses
other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship under any
guidelines issued by the United States
Attorney General. Section 3(c) of
Executive Order 12988 requires
Executive agencies to review regulations
in light of applicable standards in
section 3(a) and section 3(b) to
determine whether they are met or if it
is unreasonable to meet one or more of
them. DOE has completed the required
review and determined that, to the
extent permitted by law, this rule meets
the relevant standards of Executive
Order 12988.
C. Review Under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires preparation
of an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis for any rule that by law must
be proposed for public comment, unless
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the agency certifies that the rule, if
promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. As required by
Executive Order 13272, ‘‘Proper
Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking,’’ 67 FR 53461
(August 16, 2002), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19,
2003, to ensure that the potential
impacts of its rules on small entities are
properly considered during the
rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE
has made its procedures and policies
available on the Office of General
Counsel’s Web site at https://energy.gov/
gc/guidance-opinions-0.
Today’s proposed rule establishes a
definition for contractor business
systems and implements compliance
mechanisms to improve DOE oversight
of those contractor business systems.
The requirements of the rule will apply
to solicitations and contracts that are
subject to the Cost Accounting
Standards (CAS) under 41 U.S.C.
chapter 15, as implemented in
regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201–
1 (see the FAR Appendix), other than in
contracts with educational institutions
or Federally Funded Research and
Development Centers (FFRDCs)
operated by educational institutions,
and include one or more of the defined
contractor business systems. Contracts
and subcontracts with small businesses
are exempt from CAS requirements.
This rule would not have a significant
economic impact on small entities
because it does not apply to small
businesses. Consequently, this proposed
rule is exempt from the requirements of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
D. Review Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. chapter 35) applies because the
proposed rule contains information
collection requirements. DOE invites
comments on the following aspects of
the proposed rule: (a) Whether the
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of DOE, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the estimate of the
burden of the information collection; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the information collection on
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
The following is a summary of the
information collection requirement: The
business systems clause in this
proposed rule contains a requirement
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for contractors to respond to initial and
final determinations of deficiencies. The
information that contractors will be
required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in one of the five business
systems defined in this rule has been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) is the Accounting
Systems—OMB Clearance 9000–0011
concerning preaward surveys. DOE
estimates that there will be 5 new
contracts awarded per year, which will
have these 5 clauses. DOE is also
proposing a new information collection
requirement as follows:
Title: Department of Energy
Acquisition Regulation (DEAR) Business
Systems—Definition and
Administration.
Type of Request: New request.
The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in contractors’ cost
estimating system is estimated as
follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2
hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in contractors’ earned value
management system (EVMS) is
estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Burden per Response: 10.4 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 104 hours.
The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in contractors’ accounting
systems is estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2
hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in contractors’ purchasing
system is estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2
hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to
deficiencies in contractors’ property
management system is estimated as
follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
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Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2
hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
Needs and Uses: DOE needs the
information required by the business
system clause in this proposed rule to
mitigate the risk of unallowable and
unreasonable costs on Government
contracts when a contractor has one or
more deficiencies in a business system.
Affected Public: The business system
clause (952.242–71) will be used in
solicitations and contracts that include
any of the following clauses:
(1) 952.215–71, Cost Estimating
System Requirements;
(2) 952.234–71, Earned Value
Management System;
(3) 952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration;
(4) 952.244–71, Contractor Purchasing
System Administration; and
(5) 952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
Frequency: On occasion.
Written comments and
recommendations on the proposed
information collection should be sent to:
DOE Desk Officer, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building, Room 10102,
735 17th Street NW., Washington, DC
20503.
The Desk Officer may be telephoned
at 202–395–4718 or contacted by email
at chad_s_whiteman@omb.eop.gov.
Please send a copy by mail to the U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of
Acquisition and Project Management,
Attn: MA–611, Ms. Barbara Binney,
1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; or email to:
DEARrulemaking@hq.doe.gov. Include
DEAR: Contractor Business Systems—
Proposed Information Collection RIN
1991–AC01 in the subject line of the
message.
Comments can be received from 60
days after the date of this notice, but
comments to OMB will be most useful
if received by OMB within 30 days after
the date of this notice.
To request more information on this
proposed information collection or to
obtain a copy of the proposal and
associated collection instruments,
please write to the U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Acquisition and
Project Management, Attn: MA–611, Ms.
Barbara Binney, 1000 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585; or
email to DEARrulemaking@hq.doe.gov.
Include DEAR: Contractor Business
Systems—Proposed Information
Collection RIN 1991–AC01 in the
subject line of the message.
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E. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act
does not impose any unfunded
mandates.
DOE has concluded that promulgation
of this proposed rule falls into a class of
actions which would not individually or
cumulatively have significant impact on
the human environment, as determined
by DOE’s regulations (10 CFR part 1021,
subpart D) implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
Specifically, this proposed rule is
categorically excluded from NEPA
review because the amendments to the
DEAR are strictly procedural
(categorical exclusion A6). Therefore,
this proposed rule does not require an
environmental impact statement or
environmental assessment pursuant to
NEPA.
H. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105–277), requires
Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any
rulemaking or policy that may affect
family well-being. This rulemaking will
have no impact on the autonomy or
integrity of the family as an institution.
Accordingly, DOE has concluded that it
is not necessary to prepare a Family
Policymaking Assessment.
F. Review Under Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, 64 FR 43255
(August 4, 1999), imposes certain
requirements on agencies formulating
and implementing policies or
regulations that preempt State law or
that have federalism implications.
Agencies are required to examine the
constitutional and statutory authority
supporting any action that would limit
the policymaking discretion of the
States and carefully assess the necessity
for such actions. The Executive Order
requires agencies to have an
accountability process to ensure
meaningful and timely input by state
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.
On March 14, 2000, DOE published a
statement of policy describing the
intergovernmental consultation process
it will follow in the development of
such regulations (65 FR 13735). DOE
has examined the proposed rule and has
determined that it does not preempt
State law and does not have a
substantial direct effect 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. No further action
is required by Executive Order 13132.
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G. Review Under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) generally
requires a Federal agency to perform a
written assessment of costs and benefits
of any rule imposing a Federal Mandate
with costs to State, local or tribal
governments, or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more. Costs imposed by
this proposed rule would be reimburse
under the contract. This proposed rule
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I. Review Under Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations that
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use, 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001), requires Federal agencies to
prepare and submit to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA), of the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), a Statement of
Energy Effects for any proposed
significant energy action. A ‘‘significant
energy action’’ is defined as any action
by an agency that promulgates or is
expected to lead to promulgation of a
final rule, and that: (1) Is a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866, or any successor order, (2) is
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy, or (3) is designated by the
Administrator of OIRA as a significant
energy action. For any proposed
significant energy action, the agency
must give a detailed statement of any
adverse effects on energy supply,
distribution or use should the proposal
be implemented, and of reasonable
alternatives to the action and their
expected benefits on energy supply,
distribution and use. Today’s proposed
rule is not a significant energy action.
Accordingly, DOE has not prepared a
Statement of Energy Effects.
J. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 2001
The Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001
(44 U.S.C. 3516, note) provides for
agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under
guidelines established by each agency
pursuant to general guidelines issued by
OMB. OMB’s guidelines were published
at 67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002), and
DOE’s guidelines were published at 67
FR 62446 (October 7, 2002). DOE has
reviewed the proposed rule under the
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OMB and DOE guidelines and has
concluded that it is consistent with
applicable policies in those guidelines.
K. Approval by the Office of the
Secretary of Energy
Issuance of this proposed rule has
been approved by the Office of the
Secretary of Energy.
List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 915,
934, 942, 944, 945 and 952
Government procurement.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 24,
2014.
Paul Bosco,
Director, Office of Acquisition and Project
Management, Department of Energy.
Joseph Waddell,
Deputy Associate Administrator, Acquisition
and Project Management, National Nuclear
Security Administration.
For reasons set out in the preamble,
the DOE is proposing to amend Chapter
9 of Title 48 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as set forth below.
■ 1. The authority citations for parts
915, 942, 945, and 952 continue to read
as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50
U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
PART 915—CONTRACTING BY
NEGOTIATION
Subpart 915.4—Contract Pricing
2. Add sections 915.407, 915.407–5,
and 915.407–5–70 to subpart 915.4 to
read as follows:
■
915.407
Special cost or pricing areas.
915.407–5
Estimating system.
915.407–5–70 Disclosure, maintenance,
and review requirements.
(a) Definitions. (1) Acceptable
estimating system is defined in the
clause at 952.215–71, Cost Estimating
System Requirements.
(2) Contractor means a business unit
as defined in 48 CFR 2.101.
(3) Estimating system is as defined in
the clause at 952.215–71, Cost
Estimating System Requirements.
(4) Significant deficiency is defined in
the clause at 952.215–71, Cost
Estimating System Requirements.
(b) Applicability. (1) DOE policy is
that contractors have acceptable
estimating systems that consistently
produce well-supported proposals that
are acceptable as a basis for negotiation
of fair and reasonable prices.
(2) The estimating system
requirements apply when a large
business contractor, to include a
contractor teaming arrangement, as
defined at 48 CFR 9.601(1), performs a
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contract in support of a Capital Asset
Project, (other than a management and
operating contract), as prescribed in
DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or current
version, or a non-capital asset project.
See 942.7003 for exceptions. The
applicable contract is subject to
estimating system disclosure,
maintenance, and review
requirements—
(i) For a DOE prime contract totaling
$50 million, including options; or
(ii) For a DOE prime contract totaling
$10 million or more including options
(but less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government (e.g.,
significant estimating problems are
believed to exist).
(c) Policy. (1) When the solicitation or
contract includes the clause 952.242–71
Contractor Business System and related
clauses, the contracting officer shall—
(i) Through use of the clause at
952.215–71, Cost Estimating System
Requirements, apply the disclosure,
maintenance, and review requirements
to large business contractors meeting the
criteria in paragraph (b)(2)(i) or (ii) of
this section;
(ii) Ensure that contract, Part I—The
Schedule, addresses in the business
administration section, or similar
section, that the contractor shall submit
its cost estimating system for DOE
review and acceptance with full
implementation of the system to be in
place no later than 60 days after contract
award;
(iii) Consider whether to apply the
disclosure, maintenance, and review
requirements to large business
contractors under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of
this section; and
(iv) Not apply the disclosure,
maintenance, and review requirements
to other than large business contractors.
(2) The cognizant contracting officer,
in consultation with the auditor, for
contractors subject to paragraph (b)(2) of
this section, shall—
(i) Determine the acceptability of the
disclosure and approve or disapprove
the system; and
(ii) Pursue correction of any
deficiencies.
(3) The auditor conducts estimating
system reviews.
(4) An acceptable system shall
provide for the use of appropriate
source data, utilize sound estimating
techniques and good judgment,
maintain a consistent approach, and
adhere to established policies and
procedures.
(5) In evaluating the acceptability of a
contractor’s estimating system, the
contracting officer, in consultation with
the auditor, shall determine whether the
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contractor’s estimating system complies
with the system criteria for an
acceptable estimating system as
prescribed in the clause at 952.215–71,
Cost Estimating System Requirements.
(d) Disposition of findings—(1)
Reporting of findings. The auditor shall
document findings and
recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the auditor
identifies any significant deficiencies in
the contractor’s estimating system, the
report shall describe the deficiencies in
sufficient detail to allow the contracting
officer to understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall review all
findings and recommendations and, if
there are no significant deficiencies,
shall promptly notify the contractor, in
writing, that the contractor’s estimating
system is acceptable and approved;
or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that
there are one or more significant
deficiencies (as defined in the clause at
952.215–71, Cost Estimating System
Requirements) due to the contractor’s
failure to meet one or more of the
estimating system criteria in the clause
at 952.215–71, the contracting officer
shall—
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the
report, provide an initial determination
of deficiencies in writing, describing
each significant deficiency in sufficient
detail to allow the contractor to
understand the deficiency and provide
a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor respond in
writing to the initial determination
within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the
contractor’s response or if the contractor
does not submit a response, the date the
response was due, in consultation with
the auditor or cognizant functional
specialist, evaluate the contractor’s
response or the contractor’s lack of
response and make a final
determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall make a final
determination and notify the contractor
in writing that—(A) The contractor’s
estimating system is acceptable and
approved, and no significant
deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain.
The notice shall identify any remaining
significant deficiencies, and indicate the
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action.
The contracting officer shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within
45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
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corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in
accordance with the clause at 952.215–
71, Cost estimating System
Requirements; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, if the
clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor’s
corrective action and the correction of
significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor’s corrective
action. The contracting officer or
designee shall monitor the contractor’s
progress in correcting deficiencies. If the
contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall
take whatever action is necessary to
ensure that the contractor corrects the
deficiencies. Examples of actions the
contracting officer can take include
reducing or suspending progress
payments (see 48 CFR 32.503–6),
implementing the withholding in
accordance with 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System, if applicable, and
recommending non-award of potential
contracts.
(B) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer, in
writing, that the contractor has
corrected the significant deficiencies,
the contracting officer shall request that
the auditor review the correction to
determine if the deficiencies have been
resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall
determine if the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer
determines the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies, the contracting officer’s
notification shall be sent to the auditor;
invoice approving official; payment
office; appropriate action officers
responsible for reporting past
performance; and the Department of
Energy’s or National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior
Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting
officer shall promptly approve a
previously disapproved estimating
system and notify the contractor when
the contracting officer determines that
there are no remaining significant
deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications.
The cognizant contracting officer shall
promptly distribute copies of a
determination to approve a system,
disapprove a system and withhold
payments, or approve a previously
disapproved system and release
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withheld payments, to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, affected DOE contracting offices,
and the Department of Energy’s or
National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior
Procurement Executives.
■ 3. Revise section 915.408–70 to read
as follows:
915.408–70 Solicitation provisions and
contract clauses.
(a) The contracting officer (after
deleting ‘‘under the clause at 970.5203–
3, Contractor’s Organization’’ from
paragraph (a) if not a management and
operating contract) shall insert the
clause at 952.215–70, Key Personnel, in
contracts under which performance is
largely dependent on the expertise of
specific key personnel.
(b) Unless one of the exceptions at
942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.215–71, Cost Estimating System
Requirements, in all solicitations and
contracts, in support of a Capital Asset
Project (other than a management and
operating contract), as prescribed in
DOE O 413.3B, or current version, or for
a non-capital asset project as described
at 915.407–5–70(b)(2), for a prime
contract, when the total contract value
exceeds $50 million, including options,
or when the total contract exceeds $10
million or more, including options, (but
less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government (e.g.,
significant estimating problems are
believed to exist or the contractor’s sales
are predominantly Government).
■ 4. Add part 934 to Subchapter F to
read as follows:
PART 934—MAJOR SYSTEM
ACQUISITION
Subpart 934.2—Earned Value Management
System
Sec.
934.201–70 Policy.
934.203 Solicitation provisions and
contract clause.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50
U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
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Subpart 934.2—Earned Value
Management System
934.201–70
Policy.
(a) The Department of Energy (DOE)
applies the earned value management
system (EVMS) requirement as follows:
(1) For cost or incentive contracts and
subcontracts valued at $20,000,000 or
more, the contractor in support of a
Capital Asset Project, as prescribed in
DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or current
version, shall have an EVMS that has
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been determined to be in compliance
with the guidelines in the American
National Standards Institute/Electronic
Industries Alliance Standard 748, EVMS
(ANSI/EIA–748) (current version at time
of award) in accordance with the
thresholds in paragraphs (a)(1)(i)
through (iii) of this section.
(i) For cost or incentive contracts and
subcontracts valued at $20,000,000 but
not exceeding $50,000,000, the
contractor shall conduct a selfcertification review by an entity
independent of the contractor personnel
assigned to programs and projects
specified in the contract and provide
self-certifying documentation of its
EVMS compliance with ANSI/EIA–748.
The contractor shall conduct periodic
surveillance reviews and provide
documentation of results to show
continued compliance of contractor’s
EVMS with ANSI/EIA–748. When the
contractor has two or more contracts in
support of capital asset projects at DOE
and the total contract values are
$20,000,000 or greater per contract for
total contract values of $50,000,000 or
more, those contracts shall be subject to
certification and surveillance reviews as
described in paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) or (iii)
of this section.
(ii) For contracts valued at
$50,000,000 but not exceeding
$100,000,000, the contracting officer
will receive a copy of the certification
review which certifies that the
contractor’s EVMS is compliant with
ANSI/EIA–748 from the cognizant DOE
program office. The cognizant DOE
Program Office shall conduct
certification reviews and periodic
surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance of contractor’s
EVMS with ANSI/EIA–748, the
contracting officer will receive a copy of
these reviews from the cognizant DOE
program office.
(iii) For contracts valued at
$100,000,000 or more, the contracting
officer will receive a copy of the
certification review which certifies that
the contractor’s EVMS is compliant with
ANSI/EIA–748 from DOE’s Office of
Acquisition and Project Management
(OAPM). OAPM shall conduct
certification reviews and periodic
surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance of contractor’s
EVMS with ANSI/EIA–748, and the
contracting officer shall receive a copy
of these reviews from OAPM. Also,
OAPM shall conduct certification
reviews and surveillance reviews and
certify the contractor’s EVMS
compliance with ANSI/EIA–748 for
contracts of lesser value if requested by
the contracting officer, the contractor or
the DOE program office; or if the
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contractor or cognizant DOE program
office does not complete its required
actions in (a)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section
within one year of contract award.
(2) For cost or incentive contracts and
subcontracts valued at less than
$20,000,000—
(i) The application of earned value
management is optional and is a riskbased decision;
(ii) A decision to apply earned value
management shall be documented in the
contract file; and
(iii) When the DOE program manager
decides to implement earned value
management on contracts and
subcontracts valued at less than
$20,000,000, a cost-benefit analysis
shall be conducted and the documented
results provided to the contracting
officer for the contract file.
(3) For fixed-price contracts and
subcontracts of any dollar value:
(i) The application of earned value
management is not required.
(ii) In extraordinary cases where cost/
schedule visibility is required and
cannot be obtained using other means,
the DOE program manager shall request
a waiver for individual contracts from
the applicable Acquisition Executive
(AE), as defined in DOE Order 413.3B,
or current version. In these cases, the
program manager will conduct a
business case analysis that includes
rationale as to why a cost or fixed-price
incentive contract was not an
appropriate contracting vehicle.
(b) Under the provision at 952.234–
70, Notice of Earned Value Management
System, when an offeror proposes a plan
for compliance with the earned value
management system guidelines in
ANSI/EIA–748, the contracting officer
shall obtain the assistance of the
cognizant DOE program office or OAPM,
as applicable, in determining the
adequacy of an earned value
management system plan. The
Government will review and approve
the offeror’s EVMS plan to achieve
compliance before contract award.
Guidance and instructions for
performing EVMS plan reviews can be
found at DOE Order 413.3B, Program
and Project Management for the
Acquisition of Capital Assets, Appendix
C, Section 5 and DOE Guide 413.3–10A,
Earned Value Management System.
(c) For contracts of $50,000,000 or
more, DOE is responsible for
determining the contractor’s earned
value management system compliance.
Furthermore, when the contractor has
two or more contracts in support of
capital asset projects at the same DOEsite and the total contract values are
$20,000,000 or greater per contract for
total contract values of $50,000,000 or
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more, DOE is responsible for
determining the contractor’s earned
value management system compliance.
(d) The cognizant contracting officer,
in consultation with the cognizant DOE
program office or OAPM (both are
herein referred to as functional
specialist) or auditor, as applicable,
shall—
(1) Determine the acceptability of the
contractor’s earned value management
system through certification reviews
and periodic surveillance reviews
conducted by the cognizant DOE
program office or OAPM, as applicable,
and approve or disapprove the system;
and
(2) Pursue correction of any
deficiencies identified during
certification reviews or surveillance
reviews.
(e) In evaluating the acceptability of a
contractor’s earned value management
system, the contracting officer, in
consultation with the cognizant
functional specialist or auditor, as
applicable, shall determine whether the
contractor’s earned value management
system complies with the system
criteria for an acceptable earned value
management system as prescribed in the
clause at 952.234–71, Earned Value
Management System.
(f) Disposition of findings—(1)
Reporting of findings. The cognizant
functional specialist or auditor shall
document findings and
recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the cognizant
functional specialist or auditor
identifies any significant deficiencies in
the contractor’s earned value
management system, the report shall
describe the deficiencies in sufficient
detail to allow the contracting officer to
understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall review all
findings and recommendations and, if
there are no significant deficiencies,
shall promptly notify the contractor, in
writing, that the contractor’s earned
value management system is acceptable
and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that
there are one or more significant
deficiencies (as defined in the clause at
952.234–71, Earned Value Management
System) due to the contractor’s failure to
meet one or more of the earned value
management system criteria in the
clause at 952.234–71, the contracting
officer shall—
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the
report, provide an initial determination
of deficiencies, in writing, describing
each significant deficiency in sufficient
detail to allow the contractor to
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understand the deficiencies and provide
a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond,
in writing, to the initial determination
within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the
contractor’s response or if the contractor
does not submit a response, the date the
response was due, in consultation with
the auditor or cognizant functional
specialist, evaluate the contractor’s
response and make a final
determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The
contracting officer, in consultation with
the cognizant functional specialist or
auditor, shall make a final
determination and notify the contractor,
in writing, that—
(A) The contractor’s earned value
management system is acceptable and
approved, and no significant
deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain.
The notice shall identify any remaining
significant deficiencies, and indicate the
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action. The contracting officer
shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within
45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in
accordance with the clause at 952.234–
71, Earned Value Management System,
when initial validation is not
successfully completed within the
timeframe approved by the contracting
officer or the contracting officer
determines that the existing earned
value management system contains one
or more significant deficiencies in the
high-risk guidelines in ANSI/EIA 748
standards (guidelines 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
12, 16, 21, 23, 26, 27, 28, 30, or 32).
When the contracting officer determines
that the existing earned value
management system contains one or
more significant deficiencies in one or
more of the remaining 16 guidelines in
ANSI/EIA–748 standards, the
contracting officer shall use discretion
to disapprove the system based on input
received from functional specialists and
the auditor; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, if the
clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring contractor’s corrective
action and the correction of significant
deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor’s corrective
action. The contracting officer or
designee shall monitor the contractor’s
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progress in correcting deficiencies. If the
contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall
take whatever action is necessary to
ensure that the contractor corrects the
deficiencies. Example of an action the
contracting officer can take is to
increase the withholding in accordance
with 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System.
(B) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request the cognizant functional
specialist or auditor to review the
correction to determine if the
deficiencies have been resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall
determine if the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer
determines the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies, the contracting officer’s
notification shall be sent to the
cognizant functional specialist, auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, DOE contracting offices having
substantial business with the contractor,
and the Department of Energy’s or
National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior
Procurement Executives.
(g) System approval. The contracting
officer shall promptly approve a
previously disapproved earned value
management system and notify the
contractor when the contracting officer
determines that there are no remaining
significant deficiencies.
(h) Contracting officer notifications.
The cognizant contracting officer shall
promptly distribute copies of a
determination to approve a system,
disapprove a system and withhold
payments, or approve a previously
disapproved system and release
withheld payments to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, DOE contracting offices having
substantial business with the contractor,
and the Department of Energy’s or
National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and both Senior
Procurement Executives.
(i) Contract reporting. For a cost
reimbursement contract requiring
EVMS, the contract shall include
instructions to the prime contractor to
electronically upload earned value and
schedule data into the Project
Assessment and Reporting System
(PARS II) (or current DOE project
performance reporting system) in
accordance with the ‘‘Contractor Project
Performance Upload Requirements’’
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document maintained by the OAPM.
Unless OAPM has granted a temporary
exemption, all requested data shall be
submitted timely and accurately. Data
shall be loaded into PARS II no later
than the last workday of every month.
This data shall be current as of the close
of the previous month’s accounting
period.
Accounting Standards under 41 U.S.C.
chapter 15, as implemented in
regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201–
1(a) and are not exempted at 9903.201–
1(b)(1) through (14) (see the 48 CFR
Appendix).
Significant deficiency is defined in
the clause at 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System.
934.203 Solicitation provisions and
contract clause.
942.7003
For cost or incentive contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project, as
prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O)
413.3B, or current version, valued at
$20,000,000 or more, and for other
contracts for which EVMS will be
applied in accordance with
934.201(a)(1)—
(a) Use the provision at 952.234–70,
Notice of Earned Value Management
System, instead of the provisions at FAR
52.234–2, Notice of Earned Value
Management System—Pre-Award IBR,
and FAR 52.234–3, Notice of Earned
Value Management System—PostAward IBR, in the solicitation; and
(b) Use the clause at 952.234–71,
Earned Value Management System,
instead of the clause at FAR 52.234–4,
Earned Value Management System, in
the solicitation and contract.
PART 942—CONTRACT
ADMINISTRATION AND AUDIT
SERVICES
942.7004 Contractor business system
deficiencies procedures.
5. Add subpart 942.70 to part 942 to
read as follows:
■
Subpart 942.70—Contractor Business
System
Sec.
942.7001 Scope of subpart.
942.7002 Definitions.
942.7003 Exceptions.
942.7004 Contractor business system
deficiencies procedures.
942.7005 Contract clause.
Subpart 942.70—Contractor Business
System
942.7001
Scope of subpart.
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This subpart prescribes procedures to
implement contractor business system
requirements in applicable contracts to
include how to determine and withhold
payments when the contractor business
system has deficiencies.
942.7002
Definitions.
Definitions. As used in this subpart—
Acceptable contractor business
system and contractor business system
are defined in the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System.
Covered contract means a contract
(other than a management and operating
contract) that is subject to the Cost
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Exceptions.
The requirements of this subpart do
not apply to acquisitions for—
(a) Small business set-asides;
(b) Energy savings performance
contracts as required by the Energy
Policy Act of 1992;
(c) Services for—
(1) ‘‘Advisory and assistance services’’
as defined at 48 CFR 2.101, unless
otherwise designated as applicable by
the Senior Procurement Executive or the
Head of the Contracting Activity;
(2) Security Guards;
(3) Housekeeping;
(4) Education and training;
(5) National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969 Support; or
(6) Utilities;
(d) Office of the Deputy Administrator
for Naval Reactors;
(e) Interagency acquisitions in
accordance with 48 CFR 17.5; or
(f) Orders against another Federal
agency contract, e.g. Federal Supply
Services (48 CFR 8.4).
(a) Determination to withhold
payments. If the contracting officer
makes a final determination to
disapprove a contractor’s business
system in accordance with the clause at
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, the contracting officer shall—
(1) Identify if within DOE there is one
or more fixed-price contracts awarded
on the basis of adequate price
competition without submission of cost
or pricing data with large businesses or
covered contracts containing the clause
at 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, from which payments will be
withheld. When identifying the
contracts from which to withhold
payments, the contracting officer shall
ensure that the total amount of payment
withholding under the clause at
952.242–71, does not exceed 10 percent
of progress payments, performancebased payments, and interim payments
under cost-reimbursement, labor-hour,
and time-and-materials, contracts billed
under each of the identified contracts.
Similarly, the contracting officer shall
ensure that the total amount of payment
withholding under the clause at
952.242–71, Contractor Business
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System, for each business system does
not exceed five percent of progress
payments, performance-based
payments, and interim payments under
cost-reimbursement, labor-hour, and
time-and-materials contracts billed
under each of the identified covered
contracts. The contracting officer has
the sole discretion to identify the
covered contracts from which to
withhold payments.
(2) Promptly notify the contractor, in
writing, of the contracting officer’s
determination to implement payment
withholding in accordance with the
clause at 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System. The notice of payment
withholding shall be included in the
contracting officer’s written final
determination for the contractor
business system and shall inform the
contractor that—
(i) Payments shall be withheld from
the contract or contracts identified in
the written determination in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, until the
contracting officer determines that there
are no remaining significant
deficiencies; and
(ii) The contracting officer reserves
the right to take other actions within the
terms and conditions of the contract.
(3) Provide all contracting officers
administering the selected contracts
from which payments will be withheld,
a copy of the determination. The
contracting officer shall also provide a
copy of the determination to the auditor,
invoice approving official, and payment
office.
(b) Monitoring contractor’s corrective
action. The contracting officer, in
consultation with the auditor,
functional specialist, or designee, shall
monitor the contractor’s progress in
correcting the deficiencies. The
contracting officer shall notify the
contractor of any decision to decrease or
increase the amount of payment
withholding in accordance with the
clause at 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System.
(c) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) If the contractor notifies
the contracting officer that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request the auditor or functional
specialist to review the correction to
verify that the deficiencies have been
corrected. If, after receipt of verification,
the contracting officer determines that
the contractor has corrected all
significant deficiencies as directed by
the contracting officer’s final
determination, the contracting officer
shall discontinue the withholding of
payments, release any payments
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previously withheld, and approve the
system, unless other significant
deficiencies remain.
(2) Prior to the receipt of verification,
the contracting officer may discontinue
withholding payments pending receipt
of verification, and release any
payments previously withheld, if the
contractor submits evidence that the
significant deficiencies have been
corrected, and the contracting officer, in
consultation with the auditor or
functional specialist, determines that
there is a reasonable expectation that
the corrective actions have been
implemented and are expected to
correct the significant deficiencies.
(3) Within 90 days of receipt of the
contractor notification that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer
shall—
(i) Make a determination that—
(A) The contractor has corrected all
significant deficiencies as directed by
the contracting officer’s final
determination in accordance with
paragraph (d)(1) of this section;
(B) There is a reasonable expectation
that the corrective actions have been
implemented in accordance with
paragraph (d)(2) of this section; or
(C) The contractor has not corrected
all significant deficiencies as directed
by the contracting officer’s final
determination in accordance with
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, or there
is not a reasonable expectation that the
corrective actions have been
implemented in accordance with
paragraph (d)(2) of this section; or
(ii) Direct the contractor, in writing, to
reduce the percentage withheld on
invoices by at least 50 percent, until the
contracting officer makes a
determination in accordance with
paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section.
(4) If, at any time, the contracting
officer determines that the contractor
has failed to correct the significant
deficiencies identified in the
contractor’s notification, the contracting
officer will continue, reinstate, or
increase withholding and direct the
contractor, in writing, to continue,
reinstate, or increase the percentage
withheld on invoices to the percentage
initially withheld, until the contracting
officer determines that the contractor
has corrected all significant deficiencies
as directed by the contracting officer’s
final determination.
(d) Determinations regarding payment
withholding. The contracting officer
shall use the written notification format
or similar format to document the
contracting officer determinations to
initiate payment withholding, reduce
payment withholding, and discontinue
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payment withholding in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System. The final
determination regarding payment
withholding is not a final decision
within the meaning of the Contract
Disputes Act of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 7101, et
seq.).
(1) Final determination for payment
withholding. Use the sample format or
similar format for final determination
for payment withholding in accordance
with the clause 952.242–71, Contractor
Business Systems. Tailor the notice in
paragraph (4) to use the appropriate
version to reflect invoice payments or
advance payments under a special bank
account (letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Payment Withholding
(1) The purpose of this final determination
is to disapprove your [identify the contractor
business system(s)] and implement payment
withholding per the terms of the clause at 48
CFR 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System.
(2) It is my final determination that XXX
System(s) contains the following significant
deficiencies:
—[list all significant deficiencies]
(3) Effective immediately, five percent (or
a lesser percentage if five percent will exceed
the withhold limitations in the clause 48 CFR
952.242–71) of each request for payment
under the contracts in Attachment A will be
withheld as described below for significant
deficiencies in XXX system. Upon receipt of
an acceptable corrective action plan and my
determination that this corrective action plan
is being effectively implemented, I will issue
a notification with respect to reducing the
percentage being withheld to two percent
until I determine that all significant
deficiencies, as identified in this final
determination, have been corrected. Failure
to follow the accepted corrective action plan
will result in an increase in the percentage
withheld against each payment under this
contract to five percent (or a lesser
percentage if five percent will exceed the
withhold limitations in clause 48 CFR
952.242–71). [Repeat this paragraph, as
necessary, if multiple withholds are being
applied to multiple systems in accordance
with 952.242–71(d)].
(4) [For invoice payments use the following
paragraph.] For invoice payments, the
Contractor shall apply a five percent (or a
lesser percentage if five percent will exceed
the withhold limitations in 48 CFR 952.242–
71) withhold to the amount requested. For
invoices in Vendor Invoicing Payment
Electronic Reporting System (VIPERS), the
Contractor shall invoice for the net amount
due after application of the withhold and
show the amount withheld on the current
billing, as well as the cumulative amount
withheld to date on this contract in
accordance with the clause 48 CFR 952.242–
71, in the Description field of the VIPERS
invoice or as supporting documentation
attached to the voucher. When approving the
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invoice for payment in the Vendor Invoice
Approval System (VIAS), the Contracting
Officer or Invoice Approving Official will
verify that the Contractor reduced the invoice
the five percent (or a lesser percentage if five
percent will exceed the withhold limitations
in 48 CFR 952.242–71). In the event the
Contractor did not submit the invoice with
the proper withholding, the Contracting
Officer or Invoice Approving Official will
reject the invoice and enter the reason for the
rejection in the VIAS Comments field. When
the Contractor reviews the Invoice Status
Report in VIPERS, the reason for the reduced
payment will be displayed in the Invoice
Description field.
[For advance payments under a special
bank account (letter of credit) use the
following paragraph.] For advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of
credit), the Contractor shall immediately be
subject to the advance approval requirements
by the Contracting Officer or Government
countersigning agent for cash withdrawals
against the letter of credit. Each Contractor
request for cash withdrawal for the net
amount due after the withhold shall contain
the amount of expenditure, the amount
withheld on the current request, as well as
the cumulative amount withheld to date on
this contract in accordance with the clause
48 CFR 952.242–71, and the net amount
requested after application of the withhold.
When approving the request for cash
withdrawal, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will verify
that the Contractor reduced the request by
five percent (or a lesser percentage if five
percent will exceed the withhold limitations
in 48 CFR 952.242–71). In the event the
Contractor did not submit the cash
withdrawal request with the proper
withholding, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will reject
the request for cash withdrawal for noncompliance with the requirements of this
clause in his/her response.
[End of notice]
(2) Reduction of temporary payment
withholding. Use the sample format or
similar format for determination to
reduce payment withholding in
accordance with the clause 48 CFR
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System. Tailor the notice in paragraph
(3) to use the appropriate version to
reflect invoice payments or advance
payments under a special bank account
(letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Reduction of Temporary Payment
Withholding
(1) The purpose of this determination is to
reduce the payment withholding percentage
per the terms of the clause 48 CFR 952.242–
71, Contractor Business System, as a result of
receiving an acceptable corrective action plan
from the contractor, dated YYYY/MM/DD,
for resolving deficiencies in its XXX
system(s) as identified in the Contracting
Officer’s determination, dated YYYY/MM/
DD. This reduction is prospective and
previous amounts withheld will not be
reduced or released at this time.
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(2) Effective immediately, two percent of
each request for payment under this contract
will be withheld as described below. The two
percent being withheld will remain in effect
until the Contracting Officer determines that
the Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies as directed by the Contracting
Officer’s determination. Failure to follow the
accepted corrective action plan will result in
an increase in the percentage withheld
against each payment under this contract to
five percent (or a lesser percentage if five
percent will exceed the withhold limitations
in 48 CFR 952.242–71).
(3) [For invoice payments use the following
paragraph.] For invoice payments, the
Contractor shall apply a two percent
withhold to the amount being requested. For
invoices in Vendor Invoicing Payment
Electronic Reporting System (VIPERS), the
Contractor shall invoice for the net amount
due after withholding and show the amount
withheld on the current billing, as well as the
cumulative amount withheld to date on this
contract in accordance with the clause 48
CFR 952.242–71, in the Description field of
the VIPERS invoice or as supporting
documentation attached to the invoice. When
approving the invoice for payment in the
Vendor Invoice Approval System (VIAS), the
Contracting Officer or Invoice Approving
Official will verify that the Contractor
reduced the invoice the two percent. In the
event the Contractor did not submit the
invoice with the proper withholding, the
Contracting Officer or Invoice Approving
Official will reject the invoice and enter the
reason for the rejection in the VIAS
Comments field. When the Contractor
reviews the Invoice Status Report in VIPERS,
the reason for the reduced payment will be
displayed in the Invoice Description field.
[For advance payments under a special
bank account (letter of credit) use the
following paragraph.] For advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of
credit), the Contractor shall immediately be
subject to the advance approval requirements
by the Contracting Officer or Government
countersigning agent for cash withdrawals
against the letter of credit. Each Contractor
request for cash withdrawal for the net
amount due after the withhold shall contain
the amount of expenditure, the amount
withheld on the current request, as well as
the cumulative amount withheld to date on
this contract in accordance with the clause
48 CFR 952.242–71, and the net amount
requested after application of the withhold.
When approving the request for cash
withdrawal, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will verify
that the Contractor reduced the request by
five percent (or a lesser percentage if two
percent will exceed the withhold limitations
in 48 CFR 952.242–71). In the event the
Contractor did not submit the cash
withdrawal request with the proper
withholding, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will reject
the request for cash withdrawal for noncompliance with the requirements of this
clause in his/her response.
[End of notice]
(3) Discontinuation of payment
withholding pending verification. Use
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the sample format or similar format if
payment withholding is discontinued
after auditor or functional specialist
verification and based on evidence that
the Contractor has corrected all
significant deficiencies, in accordance
with clause 48 CFR 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System. Tailor the
notice in paragraph (3) to use the
appropriate version to reflect invoice
payments or advance payments under a
special bank account (letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Discontinuation of Payment Withholding
Pending Verification
(1) The purpose of this determination is to
approve your [identify system(s)] pending
verification, discontinue the payment
withhold as identified in the Contracting
Officer’s determination dated YYYY/MM/
DD, and release previous amounts withheld
on the contracts in Attachment A, in
accordance with clause 48 CFR 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System.
(2) The discontinuation of the payment
withhold is made pending receipt of
verification and based on my review of the
evidence submitted by the Contractor that all
the Contractor’s system(s) deficiencies
identified in the Contracting Officer’s
determination dated YYYY/MM/DD have
been corrected.
(3) [For invoice payments use the following
paragraph.] For invoice payments in Vendor
Invoicing Payment Electronic Reporting
system (VIPERS), the Contractor is
authorized to submit an invoice in the
amount of $XXXXXXXX. The billed amount
should be submitted on the same type of
invoice as the withhold was originally taken,
as appropriate.
[For advance payments under a special
bank account (letter of credit) use the
following paragraph.] For advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of
credit), the Contractor is authorized to submit
a request for cash withdrawal for amount of
$XXXXXXXX.
[End of notice]
(4) Discontinuation of Payment
Withholding. Use the sample format or
similar format if payment withholding
is discontinued after auditor or
functional specialist verification that the
Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies, in accordance with clause
48 CFR 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System. Tailor the notice in paragraph
(3) to use the appropriate version to
reflect invoice payments or advance
payments under a special bank account
(letter of credit).
[Begin of notice]
Discontinuation of Payment Withholding
(1) The purpose of this determination is to
approve your [identify system(s)],
discontinue the payment withhold as
identified in the Contracting Officer’s
determination dated YYYY/MM/DD, and
release previous amounts withheld on the
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contracts in Attachment A, in accordance
with clause 48 CFR 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System.
(2) The discontinuation of the payment
withhold is made based on verification that
all the Contractor’s system(s) deficiencies
identified in the Contracting Officer’s final
determination dated YYYY/MM/DD have
been corrected.
(3) [For invoice payments use the following
paragraph.] For invoice payments in Vendor
Invoicing Payment Electronic Reporting
system (VIPERS), the Contractor is
authorized to submit an invoice in the
amount of $XXXXXXXX. The billed amount
should be submitted on the same type of
invoice as the withhold was originally taken,
as appropriate.
[For advance payments under a special
bank account (letter of credit) use the
following paragraph.] For advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of
credit), the Contractor is authorized to submit
a request for cash withdrawal for amount of
$XXXXXXXX.
[End of notice]
(e) Contractor performance
information. The contracting officer, or
designee, shall evaluate the contractor’s
business system performance and
compliance in all evaluations in
accordance with 48 CFR 42.15 and DOE
procedures.
(f) Contract closeout. At the end of
contract performance, if significant
deficiencies remain in the disapproved
system or systems and payment
withholdings are in effect, the payment
withholdings will be released during
contract closeout. However, the release
of the payment withholdings from one
contract will not mean the system is
approved. If there are other contracts
where payment withholdings are in
effect, the payment withholdings will
continue on those contracts. These
payment withholding are contract
financing payments; therefore, these
payments withholdings are not subject
to the interest penalty provisions of the
Prompt Payment Act.
942.7005
Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at
942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, in solicitations and contracts in
support of a Capital Asset Project (other
than a management and operating
contract), as prescribed in DOE O
413.3B, or current version, or for a noncapital asset project as described at
915.407–5–70(b)(2), for a prime
contract, the total contract value
exceeds $50 million, including options,
or when the total contract value exceeds
$10 million or more, including options,
(but less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government (e.g.,
significant estimating problems are
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believed to exist or the contractor’s sales
are predominantly Government) when—
(a) The resulting contract will be—
(1) Fixed-price contract awarded to a
large business to include contractor
teaming arrangement on the basis of
adequate price competition without
submission of cost or pricing data; or
(2) A covered contract as defined in
942.7001(a); and
(b) The solicitation or contract
includes any of the following clauses:
(1) 952.215–71, Cost Estimating
System Requirements.
(2) 952.234–71, Earned Value
Management System.
(3) 952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration.
(4) 952.244–71, Contractor Purchasing
System Administration.
(5) 952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
■ 6. Add subpart 942.71 to part 942 to
read as follows:
Subpart 942.71—Contractor Accounting
System and Related Controls
Sec.
942.7101 Definitions.
942.7102 Policy.
942.7103 Contract clause.
Subpart 942.71—Contractor
Accounting System and Related
Controls
942.7101
Definitions.
As used in this subpart—
Acceptable accounting system and
accounting system are defined in the
clause at 952.242–72, Accounting
System Administration.
Significant deficiency is defined in
the clause at 952.242–72, Accounting
System Administration.
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942.7102
Policy.
(a) Contractors receiving costreimbursement, incentive type, timeand-materials, fixed-price, or labor-hour
contracts, or contracts which provide for
progress payments based on costs or on
a percentage or stage of completion,
shall maintain an accounting system.
(b) When the solicitation or contract
includes the clause 952.242–71
Contractor Business System and related
clauses, the cognizant contracting
officer, in consultation with the auditor
or functional specialist, shall—
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I—The
Schedule, addresses in the business
administration section, or similar
section, that the contractor shall submit
its accounting system for DOE review
and acceptance with full
implementation of the system to be in
place no later than 60 days after contract
award;
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(2) Determine the acceptability of a
contractor’s accounting system and
approve or disapprove the system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any
deficiencies.
(c) In evaluating the acceptability of a
contractor’s accounting system, the
contracting officer, in consultation with
the auditor or functional specialist, shall
determine whether the contractor’s
accounting system complies with the
system criteria for an acceptable
accounting system as prescribed in the
clause at 952.242–72, Accounting
System Administration.
(d) Disposition of findings—(1)
Reporting of findings. The auditor shall
document findings and
recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the auditor
identifies any significant accounting
system deficiencies, the report shall
describe the deficiencies in sufficient
detail to allow the contracting officer to
understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall review findings
and recommendations and, if there are
no significant deficiencies, shall
promptly notify the contractor, in
writing, that the contractor’s accounting
system is acceptable and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that
there are one or more significant
deficiencies (as defined in the clause at
952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration) due to the contractor’s
failure to meet one or more of the
accounting system criteria in the clause
at 952.242–72, the contracting officer
shall—
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the
report, provide an initial determination
of deficiencies in writing, describing
each significant deficiency in sufficient
detail to allow the contractor to
understand the deficiency and provide
a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond,
in writing, to the initial determination
within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the
contractor’s response or if the contractor
does not submit a response, the date the
response was due, in consultation with
the auditor or cognizant functional
specialist, evaluate the contractor’s
response or the contractor’s lack of
response and make a final
determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall make a final
determination and notify the contractor,
in writing, that—
(A) The contractor’s accounting
system is acceptable and approved, and
no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain.
The notice shall identify any remaining
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18429
significant deficiencies, and indicate the
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action. The contracting officer
shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within
45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies;
(2) Make a determination to
disapprove the system in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–72,
Accounting System Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, if the
clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor’s
corrective action and the correction of
significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor’s corrective
action. The contracting officer or
designee shall monitor the contractor’s
progress in correcting deficiencies. If the
contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall
take whatever action is necessary to
ensure that the contractor corrects the
deficiencies. Examples of actions the
contracting officer can take include
disapproving the system; implementing
or increasing the withholding in
accordance with 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System, if applicable; and
recommending non-award of potential
contracts.
(B) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request that the auditor review the
correction to determine if the
deficiencies have been resolved. (2) The
contracting officer shall determine if the
contractor has corrected the
deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer
determines the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies, the contracting officer’s
notification shall be sent to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, appropriate action officers
responsible for reporting past
performance, affected DOE contracting
offices having substantial business with
the contractor, and the Department of
Energy’s or National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior
Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting
officer shall promptly approve a
previously disapproved accounting
system and notify the contractor when
the contracting officer determines that
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there are no remaining significant
deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications.
The cognizant contracting officer shall
promptly distribute copies of a
determination to approve a system,
disapprove a system and withhold
payments, or approve a previously
disapproved system and release
withheld payments to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, and affected contracting offices.
(g) Mitigating the risk of accounting
system deficiencies on specific
proposals. (1) The functional specialist
or field pricing team shall discuss
identified accounting system
deficiencies and their impact in all
reports on contractor proposals until the
deficiencies are resolved.
(2) The contracting officer responsible
for negotiation of a proposal generated
by an accounting system with an
identified deficiency shall evaluate
whether the deficiency impacts the
negotiations. If it does not, the
contracting officer should proceed with
negotiations. If it does, the contracting
officer should consider other
alternatives, e.g.—
(i) Allowing the contractor additional
time to correct the accounting system
deficiency and submit a corrected
proposal;
(ii) Considering another type of
contract;
(iii) Using additional cost analysis
techniques to determine the
reasonableness of the cost elements
affected by the accounting system’s
deficiency;
(iv) Reducing the negotiation
objective for profit or fee; or
(v) Including a contract (reopener)
clause that provides for adjustment of
the contract amount after award.
(3) The contracting officer is
responsible for negotiating price
adjustments required by the clause. Any
reopener clause necessitated by an
accounting system deficiency should—
(i) Clearly identify the amounts and
items that are in question at the time of
negotiation;
(ii) Indicate a specific time or
subsequent event by which the
contractor will submit a supplemental
proposal, including certified cost or
pricing data, identifying the cost impact
adjustment necessitated by the deficient
accounting system;
(iii) Provide for the contracting officer
to adjust the contract price unilaterally
if the contractor fails to submit the
supplemental proposal; and
(iv) Provide that failure of the
Government and the contractor to agree
to the price adjustment shall be a
dispute under the Disputes clause.
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942.7103
Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at
942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.242–72, Accounting System
Administration, in solicitations and
contracts when contemplating a contract
in support of a Capital Asset Project
(other than a management and operating
contract), as prescribed in DOE O
413.3B, or current version, or for a noncapital asset project as described at
915.407–5–70(b)(2), for a prime
contract, when the total contract value
exceeds $50 million, including options,
or when the prime contract totaling $10
million or more including options (but
less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government (e.g.,
significant estimating problems are
believed to exist or the contractor’s sales
are predominantly Government and—
(a) A cost-reimbursement, incentive
type, time-and-materials, or labor-hour
contract;
(b) A contract with progress payments
made on the basis of costs incurred by
the contractor or on a percentage or
stage of completion; or
(c) A fixed-price contract that is not
a small business set-aside.
■ 7. Add part 944 to Subchapter G to
read as follows:
PART 944—SUBCONTRACTING
POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
Subpart 944.3—Contractors’ Purchasing
System Reviews
Sec.
944.301 Objective.
944.303 Extent of review.
944.305 Granting, withholding, or
withdrawing approval.
944.305–70 Policy.
944.305–71 Contract clause.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50
U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
Subpart 944.3—Contractors’
Purchasing System Reviews
944.301
Objective.
The contracting officer is responsible
for initiating reviews of the contractor’s
purchasing systems, but other
organizations may request that the
contracting officer initiate such reviews.
944.303
Extent of review.
In addition to the review
requirements of 48 CFR 44.303, the
contracting officer shall review the
adequacy of rationale documenting
commercial item determinations to
ensure compliance with the definition
of ‘‘commercial item’’ in 48 CFR 2.101.
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944.305 Granting, withholding, or
withdrawing approval.
944.305–70
Policy.
The contracting officer shall use the
days in this subsection instead of the
days in 48 CFR 44.305–2(c) and 44.305–
3(b) to permit the contractor’s response.
(a) When the solicitation or contract
includes the clause 952.242–71
Contractor Business Systems and related
clauses, the cognizant contracting
officer, in consultation with the
purchasing system analyst or auditor,
shall—
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I—The
Schedule, addresses in the business
administration section, or similar
section, that the contractor shall submit
its purchasing system for DOE review
and acceptance with full
implementation of the system to be in
place no later than 60 days after contract
award;
(2) Determine the acceptability of the
contractor’s purchasing system and
approve or disapprove the system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any
deficiencies.
(b) In evaluating the acceptability of
the contractor’s purchasing system, the
contracting officer, in consultation with
the purchasing system analyst or
auditor, shall determine whether the
contractor’s purchasing system complies
with the system criteria for an
acceptable purchasing system as
described in the clause at 952.244–71,
Contractor Purchasing System
Administration.
(c) Disposition of findings—(1)
Reporting of findings. The purchasing
system analyst or auditor shall
document findings and
recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the auditor or
purchasing system analyst identifies any
significant purchasing system
deficiencies, the report shall describe
the deficiencies in sufficient detail to
allow the contracting officer to
understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall review all
findings and recommendations and, if
there are no significant deficiencies,
shall promptly notify the contractor that
the contractor’s purchasing system is
acceptable and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that
there are one or more significant
deficiencies (as defined in the clause at
952.244–71, Contractor Purchasing
System Administration) due to the
contractor’s failure to meet one or more
of the purchasing system criteria in the
clause at 952.244–71, the contracting
officer shall—
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(A) Within 30 days of receiving the
report, provide an initial determination
of deficiencies in writing, describing
each significant deficiency in sufficient
detail to allow the contractor to
understand the deficiency and provide
a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond,
in writing, to the initial determination
within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the
contractor’s response or if the contractor
does not submit a response, the date the
response was due, in consultation with
the auditor or cognizant functional
specialist, evaluate the contractor’s
response or the contractor’s lack of
response and make a final
determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall make a final
determination and notify the contractor,
in writing, that—
(A) The contractor’s purchasing
system is acceptable and approved, and
no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain.
The notice shall identify any remaining
significant deficiencies, and indicate the
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action. The contracting officer
shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within
45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in
accordance with the clause at 952.244–
71, Contractor Purchasing System
Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, if the
clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor’s
corrective action and the correction of
significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractors’ corrective
action. The contracting officer and
either the purchasing system analyst or
auditor shall monitor the contractor’s
progress in correcting deficiencies. If the
contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall
take whatever action is necessary to
ensure that the contractor corrects the
deficiencies. Examples of actions the
contracting officer can take include
withdraw or withhold approval of the
system or implementing or increasing
the withholding in accordance with
952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, and recommending non-award
of potential contracts.
(B) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
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notifies the contracting officer that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request the purchasing system analyst or
auditor to review the correction to
determine if the deficiencies have been
resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall
determine if the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer
determines the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies, the contracting officer’s
notification shall be sent to the
purchasing system analyst, auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, appropriate action officers
responsible for reporting past
performance, and the Department of
Energy’s or National Nuclear Security
Administration’s Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior
Procurement Executives.
(d) System approval. The contracting
officer shall promptly approve a
previously disapproved purchasing
system and notify the contractor when
the contracting officer determines that
there are no remaining significant
deficiencies.
(e) Contracting officer notifications.
The cognizant contracting officer shall
promptly distribute copies of a
determination to approve a system,
disapprove a system and withhold
payments, or approve a previously
disapproved system and release
withheld payments to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, and affected contracting offices.
(f) Mitigating the risk of purchasing
system deficiencies on specific
proposals.
(1) The functional specialist shall
discuss identified purchasing system
deficiencies and their impact in all
reports on contractor proposals until the
deficiencies are resolved.
(2) The contracting officer responsible
for negotiation of a proposal generated
by a purchasing system with an
identified deficiency shall evaluate
whether the deficiency impacts the
negotiations. If it does not, the
contracting officer should proceed with
negotiations. If it does, the contracting
officer should consider other
alternatives, e.g.—
(i) Allowing the contractor additional
time to correct the purchasing system
deficiency and submit a corrected
proposal;
(ii) Considering another type of
contract, e.g., a fixed-price incentive
(firm target) contract instead of firmfixed-price;
(iii) Using additional cost analysis
techniques to determine the
reasonableness of the cost elements
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affected by the purchasing system’s
deficiency;
(iv) Segregating the questionable areas
as a cost-reimbursable line item;
(v) Reducing the negotiation objective
for profit or fee; or
(vi) Including a contract (reopener)
clause that provides for adjustment of
the contract amount after award.
(3) The contracting officer is
responsible for negotiating price
adjustments required by the clause. Any
reopener clause necessitated by a
purchasing system deficiency shall—
(i) Clearly identify the amounts and
items that are in question at the time of
negotiation;
(ii) Indicate a specific time or
subsequent event by which the
contractor will submit a supplemental
proposal, including certified cost or
pricing data, identifying the cost impact
adjustment necessitated by the deficient
purchasing system;
(iii) Provide for the contracting officer
to adjust the contract price unilaterally
if the contractor fails to submit the
supplemental proposal; and
(iv) Provide that failure of the
Government and the contractor to agree
to the price adjustment shall be a
dispute under the Disputes clause.
944.305–71
Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at
942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.244–71, Contractor Purchasing
System Administration, in solicitations
and contracts, in support of a Capital
Asset Project (other than a management
and operating contract), as prescribed in
DOE O 413.3B, or current version, or for
a non-capital asset project as described
at 915.407–5–70(b)(2), for a prime
contract, when the total contract value
exceeds $50 million, including options,
or when the prime contract totaling $10
million or more including options (but
less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government
(significant purchasing problems are
believed to exist or the contractor’s sales
are predominantly Government and
containing the clause at 48 CFR 52.244–
2, Subcontracts.
PART 945—GOVERNMENT PROPERTY
8. Add section 945.105 to read as
follows:
■
945.105 Contractor’s property
management system compliance.
(a) Definitions—
(1) Acceptable property management
system and property management
system are defined in the clause at
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
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(2) Significant deficiency is defined in
the clause at 952.245–70, Contractor
Property Management System
Administration.
(b) Policy. When the solicitation or
contract includes the clause 952.242–71
Contractor Business System and related
clauses, the cognizant contracting
officer, in consultation with the
property administrator, shall—
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I—The
Schedule, addresses in the business
administration section, or similar
section, that the contractor shall submit
its property management system for
DOE review and acceptance with full
implementation of the system to be in
place no later than 60 days after contract
award;
(2) Determine the acceptability of the
system and approve or disapprove the
system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any
deficiencies.
(c) In evaluating the acceptability of a
contractor’s property management
system, the contracting officer, in
consultation with the property
administrator, shall determine whether
the contractor’s property management
system complies with the system
criteria for an acceptable property
management system as prescribed in the
clause at 952.245–70, Contractor
Property Management System
Administration.
(d) Disposition of findings—(1)
Reporting of findings. The property
administrator shall document findings
and recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the property
administrator identifies any significant
property system deficiencies, the report
shall describe the deficiencies in
sufficient detail to allow the contracting
officer to understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall review findings
and recommendations and, if there are
no significant deficiencies, shall
promptly notify the contractor, in
writing, that the contractor’s property
management system is acceptable and
approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that
there are one or more significant
deficiencies (as defined in the clause at
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration)
due to the contractor’s failure to meet
one or more of the property
management system criteria in the
clause at 952.245–70, the contracting
officer shall—
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the
report, provide an initial determination
of deficiencies in writing, describing
each significant deficiency in sufficient
detail to allow the contractor to
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understand the deficiency and provide
a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond,
in writing, to the initial determination
within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the
contractor’s response or if the contractor
does not submit a response, the date the
response was due, the contracting
officer, in consultation with the auditor
or cognizant functional specialist,
should evaluate the contractor’s
response or the contractor’s lack of
response and make a final
determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The
contracting officer shall make a final
determination and notify the contractor,
in writing, that—
(A) The contractor’s property
management system is acceptable and
approved, and no significant
deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain.
The notice shall identify any remaining
significant deficiencies, and indicate the
adequacy of any proposed or completed
corrective action.
The contracting officer shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within
45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in
accordance with the clause at 952.245–
70, Contractor Property Management
System Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance
with the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, if the
clause is included in the contract.
(ii)(A) Monitoring contractor’s
corrective action. The contracting officer
and property administrator shall
monitor the contractor’s progress in
correcting deficiencies. If the contractor
fails to make adequate progress, the
contracting officer shall take whatever
action is necessary to ensure that the
contractor corrects the deficiencies.
Examples of actions the contracting
officer can take include withdraw or
withhold approval of the system; or
implementing or increasing the
withholding in accordance with the
clause at 952.242.71, Contractor
Business System, and recommending
non-award of potential contracts.
(B) Correction of significant
deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the
contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request the property administrator to
review the correction to determine if the
deficiencies have been resolved.
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(2) The contracting officer shall
determine if the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer
determines the contractor has corrected
the deficiencies, the contracting officer’s
notification shall be sent to the property
administrator, auditor, invoice
approving official, payment office,
appropriate action officers responsible
for reporting past performance, and the
Department of Energy’s or National
Nuclear Security Administration’s
Heads of the Contracting Activities and
Senior Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting
officer shall promptly approve a
previously disapproved property
management system and notify the
contractor when the contracting officer
determines, in consultation with the
property administrator, that there are no
remaining significant deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications.
The cognizant contracting officer shall
promptly distribute copies of a
determination to approve a system,
disapprove a system and withhold
payments, or approve a previously
disapproved system and release
withheld payments to the auditor,
invoice approving official, payment
office, and affected contracting offices.
■ 9. Add section 945.107 to read as
follows:
945.107
Contract clauses.
(a) Unless one of the exceptions at
942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration, in
solicitations and contracts in support of
a Capital Asset Project, (other than a
management and operating contract as
described at 917.6), as prescribed in
DOE O 413.3B, or current version, or for
a non-capital asset project as described
at 915.407–5–70(b)(2), for a prime
contract, when the total contract value
exceeds $50 million, including options,
or when the prime contract totaling $10
million or more including options (but
less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government
(significant property problems are
believed to exist or the contractor’s sales
are predominantly Government) and
containing the clause at 48 CFR 52.245–
1, Government Property. (b) For
negotiated fixed-price contract, not
subject to 48 CFR 942.7002, awarded on
a basis other than submission of
certified cost or pricing data for which
Government property is provided, use
the clause at 48 CFR 52.245–1,
Government Property, without its
Alternate I.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 62 / Tuesday, April 1, 2014 / Proposed Rules
PART 952—SOLICITATION
PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT
CLAUSES
10. Revise section 952.215–70
introductory text to read as follows:
■
952.215–70
Key Personnel.
As prescribed in 915.408–70(a), the
contracting officer shall insert the
following clause:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Add section 952.215.71 to read as
follows:
952.215–71 Cost estimating system
requirements.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
As prescribed in 915.408–70(b), use
the following clause:
COST ESTIMATING SYSTEM
REQUIREMENTS (xxx 201x)
(a) Definitions.
Acceptable estimating system means an
estimating system that complies with the
system criteria in paragraph (d) of this clause,
and provides for a system that—
(1) Is maintained, reliable, and consistently
applied;
(2) Produces verifiable, supportable,
documented, and timely cost estimates that
are an acceptable basis for negotiation of fair
and reasonable prices;
(3) Is consistent with and integrated with
the Contractor’s related management systems;
and
(4) Is subject to applicable financial control
systems.
Estimating system means the Contractor’s
policies, procedures, and practices for
budgeting and planning controls, and
generating estimates of costs and other data
included in proposals submitted to
customers in the expectation of receiving
contract awards or contract modifications.
Estimating system includes the
Contractor’s—
(1) Organizational structure;
(2) Established lines of authority, duties,
and responsibilities;
(3) Internal controls and managerial
reviews;
(4) Flow of work, coordination, and
communication; and
(5) Budgeting, planning, estimating
methods, techniques, accumulation of
historical costs, and other analyses used to
generate cost estimates.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming
in the system that materially affects the
ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by
the system that is needed for management
purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish,
maintain, and comply with an acceptable
estimating system.
(c) Applicability. Paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this clause apply if the Contractor is a large
business to include a contractor teaming
arrangement, as defined at 48 CFR 9.601(1),
performing a contract in support of a Capital
Asset Project (other than a management and
operating contract as described at 917.6), as
prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or
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current version; or a non-capital asset project
and either—
(1) The total prime contract value exceeds
$50 million, including options; or
(2) The Contractor was notified, in writing,
by the Contracting Officer that paragraphs (d)
and (e) of this clause apply.
(d) System requirements. (1) The
Contractor shall disclose its estimating
system to the Contracting Officer, in writing.
If the Contractor wishes the Government to
protect the information as privileged or
confidential, the Contractor must mark the
documents with the appropriate legends
before submission. If the Contractor plans to
adopt the existing system from the previous
Contractor, the Contractor is responsible for
the system and shall comply with the system
requirements required in this clause.
(2) An estimating system disclosure is
acceptable when the Contractor has provided
the Contracting Officer with documentation
no later than 60 days after contract award
that—
(i) Accurately describes those policies,
procedures, and practices that the Contractor
currently uses in preparing cost proposals;
and
(ii) Provides sufficient detail for the
Government to reasonably make an informed
judgment regarding the acceptability of the
Contractor’s estimating practices.
(3) The Contractor shall—
(i) Comply with its disclosed estimating
system; and
(ii) Disclose significant changes to the cost
estimating system to the Contracting Officer
on a timely basis.
(4) The Contractor’s estimating system
shall provide for the use of appropriate
source data, utilize sound estimating
techniques and good judgment, maintain a
consistent approach, and adhere to
established policies and procedures. An
acceptable estimating system shall
accomplish the following functions:
(i) Establish clear responsibility for
preparation, review, and approval of cost
estimates and budgets.
(ii) Provide a written description of the
organization and duties of the personnel
responsible for preparing, reviewing, and
approving cost estimates and budgets.
(iii) Ensure that relevant personnel have
sufficient training, experience, and guidance
to perform estimating and budgeting tasks in
accordance with the Contractor’s established
procedures.
(iv) Identify and document the sources of
data and the estimating methods and
rationale used in developing cost estimates
and budgets.
(v) Provide for adequate supervision
throughout the estimating and budgeting
process.
(vi) Provide for consistent application of
estimating and budgeting techniques.
(vii) Provide for detection and timely
correction of errors.
(viii) Protect against cost duplication and
omissions.
(ix) Provide for the use of historical
experience, including historical vendor
pricing information, where appropriate.
(x) Require use of appropriate analytical
methods.
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18433
(xi) Integrate information available from
other management systems.
(xii) Require management review,
including verification of compliance with the
company’s estimating and budgeting policies,
procedures, and practices.
(xiii) Provide for internal review of, and
accountability for, the acceptability of the
estimating system, including the budgetary
data supporting indirect cost estimates and
comparisons of projected results to actual
results, and an analysis of any differences.
(xiv) Provide procedures to update cost
estimates and notify the Contracting Officer
in a timely manner.
(xv) Provide procedures that ensure
subcontract prices are reasonable based on a
documented review and analysis provided
with the prime proposal, when practicable.
(xvi) Provide estimating and budgeting
practices that consistently generate sound
proposals that are compliant with the
provisions of the solicitation and are
adequate to serve as a basis to reach a fair
and reasonable price.
(xvii) Have an adequate system
description, including policies, procedures,
and estimating and budgeting practices, that
comply with the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (48 CFR chapter 1) and
Department of Energy Acquisition Regulation
(48 CFR chapter 9).
(e) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contracting Officer will provide an initial
determination to the Contractor, in writing,
of any significant deficiencies. The initial
determination will describe the deficiency in
sufficient detail to allow the Contractor to
understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30
days to a written initial determination from
the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor’s
estimating system. If the Contractor disagrees
with the initial determination, the Contractor
shall state, in writing, its rationale for
disagreeing. In the event the Contractor did
not respond in writing to the initial
determination within the response time, this
lack of response shall indicate that the
Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response or the Contractor’s
lack of response and notify the Contractor, in
writing, of the Contracting Officer’s final
determination concerning—
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting
Officer determines that one or more
significant deficiencies remain.
(f) If the Contractor receives the
Contracting Officer’s final determination of
significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing milestones
and actions to eliminate the significant
deficiencies.
(g) Withholding payments. If the
Contracting Officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the Contractor’s
estimating system, and the contract includes
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the clause at 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, the Contracting Officer will withhold
payments in accordance with that clause.
(End of clause)
■ 12. Add section 952.234.70 to read as
follows:
952.234–70 Notice of earned value
management system.
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As prescribed in 934.203(a), use the
following provision:
NOTICE OF EARNED VALUE
MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (xxx 201x)
(a) If the offeror submits a proposal for a
Department of Energy (DOE) Capital Asset
Project—
(1) In the amount of $50,000,000 or more;
or
(2) Where the offeror has a contract or
other contracts in support of DOE Capital
Asset Projects and the total contract values
are $20,000,000 or greater per contract for a
total contract values of $50,000,000 or
more—
(i) The offeror shall provide documentation
that an authorized government representative
has determined that the proposed Earned
Value Management System (EVMS) complies
with the EVMS guidelines in the American
National Standards Institute/Electronic
Industries Alliance Standard 748, Earned
Value Management Systems (ANSI/EIA–748)
(current version at time of solicitation). The
Government reserves the right to perform
reviews of the EVMS when deemed
necessary to verify compliance.
(ii) If the offeror proposes to use a system
that has not been determined to be in
compliance with the requirements of
paragraph (a)(1) of this provision, the offeror
shall submit a comprehensive plan for
compliance with the guidelines in ANSI/
EIA–748.
(A) The plan shall—
(1) Describe the EVMS the offeror intends
to use in performance of the contract, and
how the proposed EVMS complies with the
EVMS guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748;
(2) Distinguish between the offeror’s
existing management system and
modifications proposed to meet the EVMS
guidelines;
(3) Describe the management system and
its application in terms of the EVMS
guidelines;
(4) Describe the proposed procedure for
administration of the EVMS guidelines as
applied to subcontractors; and
(5) Describe the process the offeror will use
to determine subcontractor compliance with
ANSI/EIA–748.
(B) The offeror shall provide information
and assistance as required by the Contracting
Officer to support review of the plan.
(C) The offeror’s EVMS plan must provide
milestones that indicate when the offeror
anticipates that the EVMS will be compliant
with the guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748.
(b) If the offeror submits a proposal in an
amount less than $50,000,000 and does not
meet the condition described at (a)(2)
above—
(1) The offeror shall submit a written
description of the management procedures it
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will use and maintain in the performance of
any resultant contract to comply with the
requirements of the Earned Value
Management System clause of the contract.
The description shall include—
(i) A matrix that correlates each guideline
in ANSI/EIA–748 (current version at time of
solicitation) to the corresponding process in
the offeror’s written management procedures;
and
(ii) The process the offeror will use to
determine subcontractor compliance with
ANSI/EIA–748.
(2) If the offeror proposes to use an EVMS
that has been determined by the CFA to be
in compliance with the EVMS guidelines in
ANSI/EIA–748, the offeror may submit a
copy of the documentation of such
determination instead of the written
description required by paragraph (b)(1) of
this provision.
(c) The offeror shall identify the
subcontractors (or the subcontracted effort if
subcontractors have not been selected) to
whom the EVMS requirements will apply.
The offeror and the Government shall agree
to the contractors or the subcontracted effort
selected for application of the EVMS
requirements. The offeror shall be
responsible for ensuring that the selected
subcontractors comply with the requirements
of the Earned Value Management System
clause of the contract.
(End of provision)
■ 13. Add section 952.234.71 to read as
follows:
952.234–71
system.
Earned value management
As prescribed in 934.203(b), use the
following clause:
EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
(XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
Acceptable earned value management
system means an earned value management
system that generally complies with system
criteria in paragraph (b) of this clause.
Earned value management system means
an earned value management system that
complies with the earned value management
system guidelines in the ANSI/EIA–748.
Over Target Baseline means an overrun to
the Contract Budget Base (CBB) which is
formally incorporated into the Performance
Measurement Baseline (PMB) for
management purposes.
Over Target Schedule means the term used
to describe a condition where a baseline
schedule is time-phased beyond the contract
completion date.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming
in the system that materially affects the
ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by
the system that is needed for management
purposes.
(b) System criteria. In the performance of
this contract, the Contractor shall use—
(1) An Earned Value Management System
(EVMS) that complies with the EVMS
guidelines in the American National
Standards Institute/Electronic Industries
Alliance Standard 748, Earned Value
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Management Systems (ANSI/EIA–748)
(current version at time of award; and
(2) Management procedures. (i)
Management procedures provide for
generation of timely, reliable, and verifiable
information for the Department of Energy
(DOE) Integrated Program Management
Report (IPMR) data item of this contract.
(ii) The Contractor shall use Department of
Energy’s (DOE) modified version of
Department of Defense’s Data Item
Description (DID) Integrated Program
Management Report (IPMR), DI–MGMT–
81861, (DOE version, current version at time
of contract award) which contains data for
measuring cost and schedule performance for
this DOE contract. The Contractor shall
submit the data electronically by uploading
the data into the Project Assessment and
Reporting System (PARS II) in accordance
with the ‘‘Contractor Project Performance
Upload Requirements’’ document maintained
by the DOE Office of Acquisition and Project
Management (OAPM). All requested data
shall be submitted timely and accurately, and
shall be current as of the close of the
previous month’s accounting period.
(c) If the Contractor has one or more DOE
contracts valued at $20,000,000 or greater per
contract for a total contract value of
$50,000,000 or more which support DOE
Capital Asset Projects, the Contractor shall
use an EVMS that has been determined to be
acceptable by DOE. If, at the time of award,
the Contractor’s EVMS has not been
determined by DOE to be in compliance with
the EVMS guidelines as stated in paragraph
(b)(1) of this clause, the Contractor shall
apply its current system to the contract and
shall take necessary actions to meet the
milestones in the Contractor’s EVMS plan.
(d) If this contract has a total value of less
than $50,000,000 and does not meet the
condition described at (c) above, the
Government will not make a formal
determination that the Contractor’s EVMS
complies with the EVMS guidelines in ANSI/
EIA–748 with respect to the contract. The use
of the Contractor’s EVMS for this contract
does not imply a Government determination
of the Contractor’s compliance with the
EVMS guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748 for
application to future contracts.
(e) The Contractor shall submit notification
of all proposed changes to the EVMS
procedures and the impact of those changes
to DOE. If this contractor has one or more
contracts in support of DOE Capital Asset
Projects and the total contract values are
$20,000,000 or greater per contract for total
contract values of $50,000,000 or more,
unless a waiver is granted by DOE, any
EVMS changes proposed by the Contractor
require approval of DOE prior to
implementation. DOE will advise the
Contractor of the acceptability of such
changes as soon as practicable (generally
within 30 calendar days) after receipt of the
Contractor’s notice of proposed changes. If
DOE waives the advance approval
requirements, the Contractor shall disclose
EVMS changes to DOE at least 14 calendar
days prior to the effective date of
implementation.
(f) Integrated baseline reviews. (1) The
purpose of the integrated baseline reviews
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(IBR) is to verify the technical content and
the realism of the related performance
budgets, resources, and schedules. It should
provide a mutual understanding of the
inherent risks in the offerors’/contractors’
performance plans and the underlying
management control systems, and it should
formulate a plan to handle these risks. DOE
and the Contractor will use the IBR process
described in the National Defense Industrial
Association Program Management Systems
Committee Integrated Baseline Review (NDIA
PMSC IBR) Guide (current version at time of
award).
(2) The Government will schedule IBRs as
early as practicable, and the review process
will be conducted not later than 180 calendar
days after—
(i) Contract award;
(ii) The exercise of significant contract
options; and
(iii) The incorporation of major
modifications.
During such reviews, the Government and
the Contractor will jointly assess the
Contractor’s baseline to be used for
performance measurement to ensure
complete coverage of the statement of work,
logical scheduling of the work activities,
adequate resourcing, and identification of
inherent risks.
(g) The Contractor shall provide access to
all pertinent records and data requested by
the Contracting Officer or duly authorized
representative as necessary to permit
Government surveillance to ensure that the
EVMS complies, and continues to comply,
with the performance criteria referenced in
paragraph (b) of this clause.
(h) When indicated by contract
performance, the Contractor shall submit a
request for approval to initiate an over-target
baseline or over-target schedule to the
Contracting Officer. The request shall include
a top-level projection of cost and/or schedule
growth, a determination of whether or not
performance variances will be retained, and
a schedule of implementation for the
rebaselining. The Government will
acknowledge receipt of the request in a
timely manner (generally within 30 calendar
days).
(i) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contracting Officer will provide an initial
determination to the Contractor, in writing,
on any significant deficiencies. The initial
determination will describe the deficiency in
sufficient detail to allow the Contractor to
understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30
days to a written initial determination from
the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor’s
EVMS. If the Contractor disagrees with the
initial determination, the Contractor shall
state, in writing, its rationale for disagreeing.
In the event the Contractor did not respond
in writing to the initial determination within
the response time, this lack of response shall
indicate that the Contractor agrees with the
initial determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response or the Contractor’s
lack of response and notify the Contractor, in
writing, of the Contracting Officer’s final
determination concerning—
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(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action;
(iii) System noncompliance, when the
Contractor’s existing EVMS fails to comply
with the earned value management system
guidelines in the ANSI/EIA–748; and
(iv) System disapproval, if initial EVMS
validation is not successfully completed
within the timeframe approved by the
Contracting Officer, or if the Contracting
Officer determines that the Contractor’s
earned value management system contains
one or more significant deficiencies in highrisk guidelines in ANSI/EIA–748 standards
(guidelines 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 16, 21, 23,
26, 27, 28, 30, or 32). When the Contracting
Officer determines that the existing earned
value management system contains one or
more significant deficiencies in one or more
of the remaining 16 guidelines in ANSI/EIA–
748 standards, the contracting officer will use
discretion to disapprove the system based on
input received from the DOE Office of
Acquisition and Project Management or the
DOE Program Office, herein referred to as the
functional specialists.
(4) If the Contractor receives the
Contracting Officer’s final determination of
significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing milestones
and actions to eliminate the significant
deficiencies.
(j) Withholding payments. If the
Contracting Officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the Contractor’s
EVMS, and the contract includes the clause
at 952.242–71, Contractor Business System,
the Contracting Officer will withhold
payments in accordance with that clause.
(k) With the exception of paragraphs (i)
and (j) of this clause, for contracts valued at
$20 million or more requiring EVMS, the
contractor shall flow down appropriate
EVMS requirements to its subcontractors in
order for the contractor to meet all
requirements of this clause.
[Contracting Officer to insert names of
subcontractors (or subcontracted effort if
subcontractors have not been selected)
designated for application of the EVMS
requirements of this clause.]
(l) Adopting previous Contractor’s
previously certified earned value
management (EVM) process. If the Contractor
plans to adopt the existing system from the
previous Contractor or DOE-site, the
Contractor is responsible for the system and
shall comply with the system requirements
required in this clause. The existing system
shall utilize the same DOE approved EVM
Process Description and the same EVM
training as the previous system. The
Contractor shall—
(1) Identify the corporate entity which
owns the certified EVM process and provide
the certification documentation;
(2) Obtain DOE prior approval or
Advanced Agreement including DOE
approval of process changes and joint
surveillance;
(3) Be responsible for compliance with the
system criteria required in paragraph (b) of
this clause; and
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(4) Be responsible for correcting any
significant deficiencies previously identified
to the previous Contractor by the Contracting
Officer in accordance with paragraph (i) of
this clause. Within 45 days after receiving a
copy of the previous contractor’s final
determination, the Contractor shall follow
paragraph (i)(4) and either correct any
significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan. The
Contracting Officer or designee, will provide
a copy of the previous contractor’s final
determination.
(End of clause)
■ 14. Add section 952.242.71 to read as
follows:
952.242–71
Contractor business system.
As prescribed in 942.7002, use the
following clause:
CONTRACTOR BUSINESS SYSTEM (xxx
201x)
(a) This clause only applies to fixed-price
contract awarded to a large business on the
basis of adequate price competition with or
without submission of cost or pricing data; or
covered contract that is subject to the Cost
Accounting Standards under 41 U.S.C.
chapter 15, as implemented in regulations
found at 48 CFR 9903.201–1(a) and is not
exempted at 9903.201–1(b)(1) through (14)
(see the 48 CFR Appendix).
(b) Definitions. As used in this clause—
Acceptable contractor business system
means contractor business system that
comply with the terms and conditions of the
applicable business system clauses listed in
the definition of ‘‘contractor business
system’’ in this clause.
Contractor business system means—
(1) Accounting system, if this contract
includes the clause at 48 CFR 952.242–72,
Accounting System Administration;
(2) Earned value management system, if
this contract includes the clause at 48 CFR
952.234–70, Earned Value Management
System;
(3) Estimating system, if this contract
includes the clause at 48 CFR 952.215–71,
Cost Estimating System Requirements;
(4) Property management system, if this
contract includes the clause at 48 CFR
952.245–70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration; and
(5) Purchasing system, if this contract
includes the clause at 48 CFR 952.244–71,
Contractor Purchasing System
Administration.
Significant deficiency, in the case of a
contractor business system, means a
shortcoming in the system that materially
affects the ability of officials of the
Department of Energy to rely upon
information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(c) General. The Contractor shall establish
and maintain acceptable business systems in
accordance with the terms and conditions of
this contract. If the Contractor plans to adopt
any existing business system from the
previous Contractor, the Contractor is
responsible for the system and shall comply
with the system requirements and criteria
required in that specific business system
clause.
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(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contractor shall respond, in writing, within
30 days to an initial determination that there
are one or more significant deficiencies in
one or more of the Contractor’s business
systems.
(2) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the final
determination as to whether the Contractor’s
business system contains significant
deficiencies. If the Contracting Officer
determines that the Contractor’s business
system contains significant deficiencies, the
final determination will include a notice to
withhold payments.
(e) Withholding payments. (1) If the
Contracting Officer issues the final
determination with a notice to withhold
payments for significant deficiencies in a
contractor business system required under
this contract, the Contracting Officer will
direct the Contractor, in writing, to withhold
five percent from its invoices until the
Contracting Officer has determined that the
Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies as directed by the Contracting
Officer’s final determination. The Contractor
shall, within 45 days of receipt of the notice,
either—
(i) Correct the deficiencies; or
(ii) Submit an acceptable corrective action
plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies. The plan shall
contain—
(A) Root cause(s) identification of the
problem(s);
(B) The proposed corrective action(s) to
address the root cause(s);
(C) A schedule for implementation; and
(D) The name of the person responsible for
the implementation.
(2) If the Contractor submits an acceptable
corrective action plan within 45 days of
receipt of a notice of the Contracting Officer’s
intent to withhold payments, and the
Contracting Officer, in consultation with the
auditor or functional specialist, determines
that the Contractor is effectively
implementing such plan, the Contracting
Officer will direct the Contractor, in writing,
to reduce the percentage withheld on
invoices to two percent until the Contracting
Officer determines the Contractor has
corrected all significant deficiencies as
directed by the Contracting Officer’s final
determination. However, if at any time, the
Contracting Officer determines that the
Contractor has failed to follow the accepted
corrective action plan, the Contracting
Officer will increase withholding and direct
the Contractor, in writing, to increase the
percentage withheld on invoices to the
percentage initially withheld, until the
Contracting Officer determines that the
Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies as directed by the Contracting
Officer’s final determination.
(3) Payment withhold percentage limits.
(i) The total percentage of payments
withheld on amounts due on this contract
shall not exceed—
(A) Five percent for one or more significant
deficiencies in any single contractor business
system; and
(B) Ten percent for significant deficiencies
in multiple contractor business systems.
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(ii) If this contract contains pre-existing
withholds, and the application of any
subsequent payment withholds will cause
withholding under this clause to exceed the
payment withhold percentage limits in
paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this clause, the
Contracting Officer will reduce the payment
withhold percentage in the final
determination to an amount that will not
exceed the payment withhold percentage
limits.
(4) For the purpose of this clause, payment
means invoicing for any of the following
payments authorized under this contract:
(i) Interim payments under—
(A) Cost-reimbursement contracts;
(B) Incentive type contracts;
(C) Time-and-materials contracts; or
(D) Labor-hour contracts.
(ii) Progress payments to include fixedprice contracts.
(iii) Performance-based payments to
include fixed-price contracts.
(5) Payment withholding shall not apply to
payments on fixed-price line items where
performance is complete and the items were
accepted by the Government.
(6) The withholding of any amount or
subsequent payment to the Contractor shall
not be construed as a waiver of any rights or
remedies the Government has under this
contract.
(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of any
clause in this contract providing for interim,
partial, or other payment withholding on any
basis, the Contracting Officer may withhold
payment in accordance with the provisions
of this clause.
(8) The payment withholding authorized in
this clause is not subject to the interestpenalty provisions of the Prompt Payment
Act.
(f) Correction of deficiencies. (1) The
Contractor shall notify the Contracting
Officer, in writing, when the Contractor has
corrected the business system’s deficiencies.
(2) Once the Contractor has notified the
Contracting Officer that all deficiencies have
been corrected, the Contracting Officer will
take one of the following actions:
(i) If the Contracting Officer determines
that the Contractor has corrected all
significant deficiencies as directed by the
Contracting Officer’s final determination, the
Contracting Officer will direct the Contractor,
in writing, to discontinue the payment
withholding from invoices under this
contract associated with the Contracting
Officer’s final determination, and authorize
the Contractor to bill for any monies
previously withheld that are not also being
withheld due to other significant
deficiencies. Any payment withholding
under this contract due to other significant
deficiencies, will remain in effect until the
Contracting Officer determines that those
significant deficiencies are corrected.
(ii) If the Contracting Officer determines
that the Contractor still has significant
deficiencies, the Contractor shall continue
withholding amounts from its invoices in
accordance with paragraph (e) of this clause,
and not invoice for any monies previously
withheld.
(iii) If the Contracting Officer determines,
based on the evidence submitted by the
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Contractor, that there is a reasonable
expectation that the corrective actions have
been implemented and are expected to
correct the significant deficiencies, the
Contracting Officer will discontinue
withholding payments, and release any
payments previously withheld directly
related to the significant deficiencies
identified in the Contractor notification, and
direct the Contractor, in writing, to
discontinue the payment withholding from
invoices associated with the Contracting
Officer’s final determination, and authorize
the Contractor to bill for any monies
previously withheld.
(iv) If, within 90 days of receipt of the
Contractor notification that the Contractor
has corrected the significant deficiencies, the
Contracting Officer has not made a
determination in accordance with paragraphs
(f)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this clause, the
Contracting Officer will direct the Contractor,
in writing, to reduce the payment
withholding from invoices directly related to
the significant deficiencies identified in the
Contractor notification by a specified
percentage that is at least 50 percent, but not
authorize the Contractor to bill for any
monies previously withheld until the
Contracting Officer makes a determination in
accordance with paragraphs (f)(2)(i), (ii), or
(iii) of this clause.
(v) At any time after the Contracting Officer
directs the Contractor to reduce or
discontinue the payment withholding from
invoices under this contract, if the
Contracting Officer determines that the
Contractor has failed to correct the significant
deficiencies identified in the Contractor’s
notification, the Contracting Officer will
reinstate or increase withholding and direct
the Contractor, in writing, to reinstate or
increase the percentage withheld on invoices
to the percentage initially withheld, until the
Contracting Officer determines that the
Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies as directed by the Contracting
Officer’s final determination.
(End of clause)
■ 15. Add section 952.242.72 to read as
follows:
952.242–72 Accounting system
administration.
As prescribed in 942.7103, use the
following clause:
ACCOUNTING SYSTEM
ADMINISTRATION (XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) Acceptable accounting system means a
system that complies with the system criteria
in paragraph (c) of this clause to provide
reasonable assurance that—
(i) Applicable laws and regulations are
complied with;
(ii) The accounting system and cost data
are reliable;
(iii) Risk of misallocations and mischarges
are minimized; and
(iv) Contract allocations and charges are
consistent with billing procedures.
(2) Accounting system means the
Contractor’s system or systems for accounting
methods, procedures, and controls
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established to gather, record, classify,
analyze, summarize, interpret, and present
accurate and timely financial data for
reporting in compliance with applicable
laws, regulations, and management
decisions, and may include subsystems for
specific areas such as indirect and other
direct costs, compensation, billing, labor, and
general information technology.
(3) Significant deficiency means a
shortcoming in the system that materially
affects the ability of officials of the
Department of Energy to rely upon
information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish
and maintain an acceptable accounting
system. If the Contractor plans to adopt the
existing system from the previous Contractor,
the Contractor is responsible for the system
and shall comply with the system criteria
required in this clause. The Contractor shall
provide in writing to the Contracting Officer
documentation that its accounting system
meets the system criteria in paragraph (c) of
this clause no later than 60 days after
contract award. Failure to maintain an
acceptable accounting system, as defined in
this clause, shall result in the withholding of
payments if the contract includes the clause
at 48 CFR 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, and also may result in disapproval
of the system.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor’s
accounting system shall provide for—
(1) A sound internal control environment,
accounting framework, and organizational
structure;
(2) Proper segregation of direct costs from
indirect costs;
(3) Identification and accumulation of
direct costs by contract;
(4) A logical and consistent method for the
accumulation and allocation of indirect costs
to intermediate and final cost objectives;
(5) Accumulation of costs under general
ledger control;
(6) Reconciliation of subsidiary cost
ledgers and cost objectives to general ledger;
(7) Approval and documentation of
adjusting entries;
(8) Management reviews or internal audits
of the system to ensure compliance with the
Contractor’s established policies, procedures,
and accounting practices;
(9) A timekeeping system that identifies
employees’ labor by intermediate or final cost
objectives;
(10) A labor distribution system that
charges direct and indirect labor to the
appropriate cost objectives;
(11) Interim (at least monthly)
determination of costs charged to a contract
through routine posting of books of account;
(12) Exclusion from costs charged to
Government contracts of amounts which are
not allowable in terms of 48 CFR part 31,
Contract Cost Principles and Procedures, and
other contract provisions;
(13) Identification of costs by contract line
item and by units (as if each unit or line item
were a separate contract), if required by the
contract;
(14) Segregation of preproduction costs
from production costs, as applicable;
(15) Cost accounting information, as
required—
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(i) By contract clauses concerning
limitation of cost (48 CFR 52.232–20),
limitation of funds (48 CFR 52.232–22), or
allowable cost and payment (48 CFR 52.216–
7); and
(ii) To readily calculate indirect cost rates
from the books of accounts;
(16) Billings that can be reconciled to the
cost accounts for both current and
cumulative amounts claimed and comply
with contract terms;
(17) Adequate, reliable data for use in
pricing follow-on acquisitions; and
(18) Accounting practices in accordance
with standards promulgated by the Cost
Accounting Standards Board, if applicable,
otherwise, Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles.
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contracting Officer will provide an initial
determination to the Contractor, in writing,
on any significant deficiencies. The initial
determination will describe the deficiency in
sufficient detail to allow the Contractor to
understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30
days to a written initial determination from
the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor’s
accounting system. If the Contractor
disagrees with the initial determination, the
Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale
for disagreeing. In the event the Contractor
did not respond in writing to the initial
determination within the response time, this
lack of response shall indicate that the
Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response or the Contractor’s
lack of response and notify the Contractor, in
writing, of the Contracting Officer’s final
determination concerning—
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting
Officer determines that one or more
significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the
Contracting Officer’s final determination of
significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing milestones
and actions to eliminate the significant
deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the
Contracting Officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the Contractor’s
accounting system, and the contract includes
the clause 48 CFR 952.242–71, Contractor
Business System, the Contracting Officer will
withhold payments in accordance with that
clause.
(End of clause)
■ 16. Add section 952.244.71 to read as
follows:
952.244–71 Contractor purchasing system
administration.
As prescribed in 944.305–71, insert
the following clause:
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CONTRACTOR PURCHASING SYSTEM
ADMINISTRATION (XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
Acceptable purchasing system means a
purchasing system that complies with the
system criteria in paragraph (c) of this clause.
Purchasing system means the Contractor’s
system or systems for purchasing and
subcontracting, including make-or-buy
decisions, the selection of vendors, analysis
of quoted prices, negotiation of prices with
vendors, placing and administering of orders,
and expediting delivery of materials.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming
in the system that materially affects the
ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by
the system that is needed for management
purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish
and maintain an acceptable purchasing
system. If the Contractor plans to adopt the
existing system from the previous Contractor,
the Contractor is responsible for the system
and shall comply with the system criteria
required in this clause. The Contractor shall
provide in writing to the Contracting Officer
documentation that its purchasing system
meets the system criteria in paragraph (c) of
this clause no later than 60 days after
contract award. Failure to maintain an
acceptable purchasing system, as defined in
this clause, may result in disapproval of the
system by the Contracting Officer and/or
withholding of payments.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor’s
purchasing system shall—
(1) Have an adequate system description
including policies, procedures, and
purchasing practices that comply with the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) (48
CFR Chapter 1) and the Department of Energy
Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR Chapter 9);
(2) Ensure that all applicable purchase
orders and subcontracts contain all
flowdown clauses, including terms and
conditions and any other clauses needed to
carry out the requirements of the prime
contract;
(3) Maintain an organization plan that
establishes clear lines of authority and
responsibility;
(4) Ensure all purchase orders are based on
authorized requisitions and include a
complete and accurate history of purchase
transactions to support vendor selected, price
paid, and document the subcontract/
purchase order files which are subject to
Government review;
(5) Establish and maintain adequate
documentation to provide a complete and
accurate history of purchase transactions to
support vendors selected and prices paid;
(6) Apply a consistent make-or-buy policy
that is in the best interest of the Government;
(7) Use competitive sourcing to the
maximum extent practicable, and ensure
debarred or suspended contractors are
properly excluded from contract award;
(8) Evaluate price, quality, delivery,
technical capabilities, and financial
capabilities of competing vendors to ensure
fair and reasonable prices;
(9) Require management level justification
and adequate cost or price analysis, as
applicable, for any sole or single source
award;
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(10) Perform timely and adequate cost or
price analysis and technical evaluation for
each subcontractor and supplier proposal or
quote to ensure fair and reasonable
subcontract prices;
(11) Document negotiations in accordance
with 48 CFR 15.406–3;
(12) Seek, take, and document
economically feasible purchase discounts,
including cash discounts, trade discounts,
quantity discounts, rebates, freight
allowances, and company-wide volume
discounts;
(13) Ensure proper type of contract
selection and prohibit issuance of cost-plusa-percentage-of-cost subcontracts;
(14) Maintain subcontract surveillance to
ensure timely delivery of an acceptable
product and procedures to notify the
Government of potential subcontract
problems that may impact delivery, quantity,
or price;
(15) Document and justify reasons for
subcontract changes that affect cost or price;
(16) Notify the Government of the award of
all subcontracts that contain the 48 CFR
Chapter 1 and 48 CFR Chapter 9 flowdown
clauses that allow for Government audit of
those subcontracts, and ensure the
performance of audits of those subcontracts;
(17) Enforce adequate policies on conflict
of interest, gifts, and gratuities, including the
requirements of the 41 U.S.C. chapter 87,
Kickbacks;
(18) Perform internal audits or
management reviews, training, and maintain
policies and procedures for the purchasing
department to ensure the integrity of the
purchasing system;
(19) Establish and maintain policies and
procedures to ensure purchase orders and
subcontracts contain mandatory and
applicable flowdown clauses, as required by
the 48 CFR chapter 1, including terms and
conditions required by the prime contract
and any clauses required to carry out the
requirements of the prime contract;
(20) Provide for an organizational and
administrative structure that ensures
effective and efficient procurement of
required quality materials and parts at the
best value from responsible and reliable
sources;
(21) Establish and maintain selection
processes to ensure the most responsive and
responsible sources for furnishing required
quality parts and materials and to promote
competitive sourcing among dependable
suppliers so that purchases are reasonably
priced and from sources that meet contractor
quality requirements;
(22) Establish and maintain procedures to
ensure performance of adequate price or cost
analysis on purchasing actions;
(23) Establish and maintain procedures to
ensure that proper types of subcontracts are
selected, and that there are controls over
subcontracting, including oversight and
surveillance of subcontracted effort; and
(24) Establish and maintain procedures to
timely notify the Contracting Officer, in
writing, if—
(i) The Contractor changes the amount of
subcontract effort after award such that it
exceeds 70 percent of the total cost of the
work to be performed under the contract, task
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order, or delivery order. The notification
shall identify the revised cost of the
subcontract effort and shall include
verification that the Contractor will provide
added value; or
(ii) Any subcontractor changes the amount
of lower-tier subcontractor effort after award
such that it exceeds 70 percent of the total
cost of the work to be performed under its
subcontract. The notification shall identify
the revised cost of the subcontract effort and
shall include verification that the
subcontractor will provide added value as
related to the work to be performed by the
lower-tier subcontractor(s).
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contracting Officer will provide notification
of initial determination to the Contractor, in
writing, of any significant deficiencies. The
initial determination will describe the
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the
Contractor to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30
days to a written initial determination from
the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor’s
purchasing system. If the Contractor
disagrees with the initial determination, the
Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale
for disagreeing. In the event the Contractor
did not respond in writing to the initial
determination within the response time, this
lack of response shall indicate that the
Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response or the Contractor’s
lack of response and notify the Contractor, in
writing, of the Contracting Officer’s final
determination concerning—
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting
Officer determines that one or more
significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the
Contracting Officer’s final determination of
significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing milestones
and actions to eliminate the deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the
Contracting Officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the Contractor’s
purchasing system, and the contract includes
the clause at 952.242–71, Contractor Business
System, the Contracting Officer will withhold
payments in accordance with that clause.
(End of clause)
■ 17. Add section 952.245.70 to read as
follows:
952.245–70 Contractor property
management system administration.
As prescribed in 945.107(a), insert the
following clause:
CONTRACTOR PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION (xxx 201x)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
Acceptable property management system
means a property system that complies with
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the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this
clause.
Property management system means the
Contractor’s system or systems for managing
and controlling Government property.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming
in the system that materially affects the
ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by
the system that is needed for management
purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish
and maintain an acceptable property
management system. If the Contractor plans
to adopt the existing system from the
previous Contractor, the Contractor is
responsible for the system and shall comply
with the system criteria required in this
clause. The Contractor shall provide in
writing to the Contracting Officer
documentation that its property management
system meets the system criteria in paragraph
(c) of this clause no later than 60 days after
contract award. Failure to maintain an
acceptable property management system, as
defined in this clause, may result in
disapproval of the system by the Contracting
Officer and/or withholding of payments.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor’s
property management system shall be in
accordance with paragraph (f) of the contract
clause at 48 CFR 52.245–1.
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The
Contracting Officer will provide an initial
determination to the Contractor, in writing,
of any significant deficiencies. The initial
determination will describe the deficiency in
sufficient detail to allow the Contractor to
understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30
days to a written initial determination from
the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor’s
property management system. If the
Contractor disagrees with the initial
determination, the Contractor shall state, in
writing, its rationale for disagreeing. In the
event the Contractor did not respond in
writing to the initial determination within
the response time, this lack of response shall
indicate that the Contractor agrees with the
initial determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate
the Contractor’s response or the Contractor’s
lack of response and notify the Contractor, in
writing, of the Contracting Officer’s final
determination concerning—
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting
Officer determines that one or more
significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the
Contracting Officer’s final determination of
significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final
determination, either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan showing milestones
and actions to eliminate the significant
deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the
Contracting Officer makes a final
determination to disapprove the Contractor’s
property management system, and the
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contract includes the clause at 952.242–71,
Contractor Business System, the Contracting
Officer will withhold payments in
accordance with that clause.
(End of clause)
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 62 (Tuesday, April 1, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 18415-18439]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-07086]
[[Page 18415]]
Vol. 79
Tuesday,
No. 62
April 1, 2014
Part II
Department of Energy
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48 CFR Parts 915, 934, 942, et al.
Acquisition Regulation: Contractor Business Systems--Definition and
Administration; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79 , No. 62 / Tuesday, April 1, 2014 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 18416]]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
48 CFR Parts 915, 934, 942, 944, 945 and 952
RIN 1991-AC01
Acquisition Regulation: Contractor Business Systems--Definition
and Administration
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) is proposing to amend the
Department of Energy Acquisition Regulation (DEAR) to define contractor
business system as accounting system, estimating system, purchasing
system, earned value management system (EVMS), and property management
system. DOE is proposing to implement compliance enforcement mechanisms
in the form of a contractor business system clause and related clauses
that includes a provision that would allow contracting officers to
withhold a percentage of payments, under certain conditions, when a
contractor's business system contains significant deficiencies.
DATES: Written comments on the proposed rulemaking must be received on
or before close of business June 2, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by ``DEAR--Contractor
Business Systems--Definition and Administration and RIN 1991-AC01,'' by
any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Email to: DEARrulemaking@hq.doe.gov mailto:. Include DEAR:
Contractor Business Systems--Definition and Administration and RIN
1991-AC01 in the subject line of the message.
Mail to: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Procurement
and Assistance Management, MA-611, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. Comments by email are encouraged.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara Binney, (202) 287-1340 or
barbara.binney@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
III. Procedural Requirements:
A. Review Under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
B. Review Under Executive Order 12988
C. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
E. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act
F. Review Under Executive Order 13132
G. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
H. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
I. Review Under Executive Order 13211
J. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Approval by the Office of the Secretary of Energy
I. Background
The purpose of this rulemaking is to define a contractor's business
system as their accounting system, estimating system, purchasing
system, earned value management system (EVMS), and property management
system. DOE proposes to implement compliance enforcement mechanisms in
the form of a business system clause and related clauses that allow
contracting officers to withhold a percentage of payments, under
certain conditions, when a contractor's business system contains
significant deficiencies. DOE proposes, when the prime contract is
awarded to a large business, to include a contractor teaming
arrangement, and the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more including options (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement, and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to exist
or the contractor's sales are predominantly Government) to prescribe
these clauses for contracts in support of Capital Asset Projects (other
than management and operating contracts), as prescribed in DOE Order
(DOE O) 413.3B, Program and Project Management for the Acquisition of
Capital Assets, or non-capital asset projects. Under the proposed rule,
DOE could withhold a percentage of interim payments invoiced under--
cost reimbursement contracts; incentive type contracts; time-and-
materials contracts and; labor-hour contracts; as well as progress
payments; and performance-based payments. The proposed changes affect
DOE, which includes the National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA), as well as DOE contractors, which include both DOE and NNSA
contractors. The proposed changes do not affect Management & Operating
(M&O) contracts. M&O contracts include M&O specific clauses that need
to be considered and possibly revised to incorporate the clauses for
the business system. For example, DOE authorizes the M&O contractor to
finance contract performance by use of Special Financial Institution
Accounts and requires the M&O contractor to maintain integrated
accounting systems, under which the contractors budgeting and
accounting follow DOE's Accounting Handbook. Because of these
differences the business system clause and related clauses for the M&O
contracts will be different from this rule; it is our intent to publish
a separate proposed rule for M&O contracts at a later time.
The proposed changes include policy revisions under DOE contracts.
Contractor business systems and internal controls are the first line of
defense against waste, fraud, and abuse. Weak control systems increase
the risk of unallowable and unreasonable costs on Government contracts.
To improve the effectiveness of DOE's oversight of contractor business
systems, DOE is considering a rule to clarify the definition and
administration of contractor business systems. It applies to designated
fixed-price contracts awarded to a large business on the basis of
adequate price competition without submission of cost or pricing data
or covered contracts subject to the Cost Accounting Standards under 41
U.S.C. chapter 15, as implemented in regulations found at 48 CFR
9903.201-1(a) and not exempted at 9903.201-1(b)(1) through (14). DOE
proposes to:
1. Define contractor business system as estimating system,
purchasing system, earned value management system (EVMS), accounting
system and property management system.
2. Implement compliance enforcement mechanisms in the form of a
business system clause that allows contracting officers to withhold a
percentage of payments, under certain conditions, when a contractor's
business system contains significant deficiencies. Significant
deficiency means a shortcoming in the system that materially affects
the ability of officials of the Department of Energy to rely upon
information produced by the system that is needed for management
purposes. Under such circumstances, payments could be withheld on--
[cir] Interim payments under--
Cost reimbursement contracts;
Incentive type contracts;
Time-and-materials contracts; or
Labor-hour contracts;
[cir] Progress payments to include fixed-price contracts; and
[cir] Performance-based payments to include fixed-price contracts.
If the contracting officer issues the final determination with a
notice to withhold payments for significant deficiencies in a
contractor business system required under the contract, the contracting
officer will withhold no more than five percent of amounts for
[[Page 18417]]
one or more significant deficiencies in any single contractor business
system and no more than ten percent of amounts for significant
deficiencies in multiple contractor business system by directing the
contractor, in writing, to withhold five percent or ten percent from
its invoices until the contracting officer has determined that the
contractor has corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by
the contracting officer's final determination. When the contracting
officer has determined that all significant deficiencies are corrected,
the contracting officer will direct the contractor to discontinue the
payment withholding from invoices and authorize the contractor to
invoice for any monies previously withheld that are not also being
withheld due to other significant deficiencies. This final
determination is not a final decision within the meaning of the
Contract Disputes Act of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 7101, et seq.).
At the end of contract performance, if significant deficiencies
remain in the disapproved system or systems and payment withholdings
are in effect, the payment withholdings will be released during
contract closeout. However, the release of the payment withholdings
from one contract will not mean the system is approved. If there are
other contracts where payment withholdings are in effect, the payment
withholdings will continue on those contracts. These payment
withholding are contract financing payments, and therefore are not
subject to the interest penalty provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
When the Final Rule becomes effective, the clauses will be
incorporated into solicitations that meet the established applicability
requirements and will apply prospectively after being incorporated into
affected contracts. Affected contracts are contracts awarded to large
businesses, to include teaming arrangements, in support of Capital
Asset Projects (other than management and operating contracts), as
prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, Program and Project Management
for the Acquisition of Capital Assets, and non-capital asset projects
when the total contract value exceeds $50 million, including options;
or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or more, including
options (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a large business, to
include a contractor teaming arrangement, and the contracting officer
determines it to be in the best interest of the Government (e.g.,
significant estimating problems are believed to exist or the
contractor's sales a predominantly Government). After the effective
date of the Final Rule, contracting officers will negotiate bilaterally
with contractors who hold affected contracts to incorporate the changes
of the Final Rule into their contracts within 60 days. Contracting
officers must also incorporate the changes of the Final Rule into
affected contracts before extending them or exercising options under
them by negotiating bilaterally with the contractors.
DOE notes that the Department of Defense (DoD) clauses were
considered in drafting the proposed clauses. The system criteria in the
clauses are based on the DoD clauses. Because the applicable DOE
contracts are performed mostly at the DOE sites, each contractor will
provide documentation to support the system criteria that they are
using for that DOE contract. In circumstances where the contractor is
using the same business system for a DoD contract and a DOE contract,
the contractor would explain this circumstance and provide the results
of DoD's review of their business system so that DOE can coordinate
with DoD concerning use of the business system under the DOE contract.
Today's proposed rule does not alter substantive rights or
obligations under current law.
DOE requests comments on all aspects of this proposed rule.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
1. Part 915 is amended to add new Sections 915.407 Special cost or
pricing areas, 915.407-5 Estimating system, and 915.407-5-70
Disclosure, maintenance, and review requirements. Section 915.407-5-70
establishes the policy that DOE contractors have acceptable estimating
systems. It adds definitions, describes applicability requirements,
system criteria, and provides procedures for addressing significant
deficiencies in estimating system.
The applicable contract is subject to estimating system disclosure,
maintenance, and review requirements for prime contractors (large
business to include contractor teaming arrangement, as defined at 48
CFR 9.601(1)) when the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more including options (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to
exist). Also, Subpart 952 is amended to add the related clause 952.215-
71 Cost Estimating System Requirements. A contractor's acceptable
estimating system accurately describes the policies, procedures, and
practices that the contractor currently uses in preparing cost proposal
(budgeting planning controls, generating estimates of costs and other
data included in proposals) with sufficient detail for the Government
to reasonably make an informed judgment regarding the acceptability of
the contractor's estimating practices.
In the event any significant deficiencies are found in the
estimating system, the contracting officer will provide to the
contractor an initial determination of a significant deficiency and
allow the contractor to respond within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If the contracting officer does not receive a written
response from the contractor within 30 days, the contractor will be
deemed to agree with the initial determination. The contracting officer
will evaluate the contractor's response or the contractor's lack of
response and notify the contractor of a final determination concerning
any remaining significant deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed or
completed corrective action, and system disapproval if one or more
significant deficiencies remain. If the contractor receives a final
determination, the contractor shall, within 45 days, correct the
significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective action plan
showing milestones and actions to eliminate the significant
deficiencies. When the contracting officer makes a final determination
to disapprove the contractor's estimating system, the contracting
officer will withhold payments in accordance with the clause 952.242-
71, Contractor Business Systems.
2. Section 915.408-70 is amended by revising the language to add
instructions on when to use the cost estimating clause.
3. Subchapter E is amended to add a new part 934--Major System
Acquisition and Subpart 934.2--Earned Value Management System, and
Sections 934.201-70 and 934.203. Subpart 952 is amended to add the
related provision and clause, 952.234-70 Notice of Earned Value
Management System, and 952.234-71 Earned Value Management System,
respectively. The Subpart and Sections add DEAR text, a provision, and
a clause addressing earned value management policy for DOE contracts.
The rule supplements the final Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)
rule published at 71 FR 38238 on July 5, 2006, and establishes DOE
[[Page 18418]]
specific earned value management requirements, as permitted by the FAR.
This section establishes policy that DOE contractors have an acceptable
earned value management system (EVMS). It adds definitions,
applicability requirements, system criteria, and provides procedures
for addressing significant deficiencies in estimating systems.
EVMS requirements apply to Capital Asset Projects on cost or
incentive contracts and subcontracts based on dollar thresholds. For
contracts valued at $20,000,000 or more, the contractor shall have an
EVMS determined to be in compliance with the guidelines in the American
National Standards Institute/Electronic Industries Alliance Standard
748, EVMS (ANSI/EIA-748). In addition, for contracts valued at
$20,000,000 but not exceeding $50,000,000, the contractor shall conduct
self-certification review and periodic surveillance reviews.
When the contractor has two or more contracts in support of capital
asset projects at DOE and the total contract value for a contract is
$20,000,000 or greater and the combined total contract values for these
contracts is $50,000,000 or more, those contracts shall be subject to
certification and surveillance reviews for contract values for
$50,000,000 and above. For example, the contractor has 3 contracts in
support of a DOE capital asset projects. Contract A is for $15,000,000.
Contract B is for $21,000,000. Contract C is for $30,000,000. Contracts
B and C are each by themselves $20,000,000 or greater. The combined
total contract values for these two contracts (B at $21,000,000 and C
at $30,000,000) is $50,000,000 or more. Therefore, DOE would conduct
certification reviews and surveillance reviews for these 2 contracts.
When the contract value is $50,000,000 but not exceeding
$100,000,000, the applicable DOE Program Office will conduct
certification reviews and periodic surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance with ANSI/EIA-748.
When the contract value is $100,000,000 or more, DOE Office of
Acquisition and Project Management will conduct certification reviews
and periodic surveillance reviews to ensure continued compliance with
ANSI/EIA-748.
Also for solicitations and contracts valued at $20,000,000 or more,
DOE will use the provision 952.234-70, Notice of Earned Value
Management System, instead of the provisions at FAR 52.234-2, Notice of
Earned Value Management System--Pre-Award IBR, and FAR 52.234-3, Notice
of Earned Value Management System--Post-Award IBR; and the clause at
952.234-71, Earned Value Management System, instead of the clause at
FAR 52.234-4, Earned Value Management System. For proposals in the
amount of $50,000,000 or more, the provision 952.234-70, Notice of
Earned Value Management System, requires the offeror to comply with the
EVMS guidelines of the ANSI/EIA-748. If offeror proposes to use a
system that has not been determined to be in compliance with ANSI/EIA-
748, the offeror shall submit a comprehensive plan for compliance with
the guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748.
For a contract valued at $50 million or more, the clause 952.234-
71, Earned Value Management System, requires the contractor to use an
EVMS that has been determined to be acceptable by DOE. If, at the time
of award, the contractor's EVMS has not been determined by DOE to be in
compliance with the EVMS guidelines, the contractor shall apply its
current system to the contract and shall take necessary actions to meet
the milestones in the contractor's EVMS plan.
In the event any significant deficiencies are found in the earned
value management system, the contracting officer will provide to the
contractor an initial determination of a significant deficiency and
allow the contractor 30 days to respond if the contractor disagrees. If
there is no written response from the contractor within 30 days, it
will indicate that the contractor agrees with the initial
determination. The contracting officer will evaluate the contractor's
response or the contractor's lack of response and notify the contractor
of a final determination concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies; adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action;
system noncompliance when the EVMS fails to comply with ANSI/EIA-748
guidelines; and system disapproval if EVMS validation is not
successfully completed or that there is one or more significant
deficiencies in guidelines.
The contracting officer's final determination of the contractor's
EVMS will indicate that the system is acceptable and approved with no
significant deficiencies remaining, or that the system contains one or
more significant deficiencies in high-risk guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748
standards (guidelines 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 16, 21, 23, 26, 27, 28,
30, or 32). When the contracting officer determines that the existing
earned value management system contains one or more significant
deficiencies in one or more of the remaining 16 guidelines in ANSI/EIA-
748 standards, the contracting officer shall use discretion to
disapprove the system based on input received from functional
specialists and the auditor.
The contractor will have 45 days to either correct the significant
deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the significant deficiencies. When
the contracting officer makes a final determination to disapprove the
contractor's system, the contracting officer will withhold payments in
accordance with the clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business Systems.
4. Part 942 is amended to add a new Subpart 942.70--Contractor
Business System, Sections 942.7001 through 942.7005. Subpart 952 is
amended to add the related clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System. The proposed amendments will permit a contracting officer to
withhold payment not to exceed five percent for one or more significant
deficiencies in any single contractor business system and not to exceed
ten percent for significant deficiencies in multiple contractor
business systems after making a final determination to disapprove a
contractor's business system for designated fixed-price contracts
awarded to a large business on the basis of adequate price competition
with or without submission of cost or pricing data; or for covered
contract(s) subject to the Cost Accounting Standards under 41 U.S.C.
chapter 15, as implemented in regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201-1(a)
and are not exempted at (b)(1) through (14).
In solicitations and contracts in support of a Capital Asset
Project (other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed
in DOE Order 413.3B, or for a non-capital asset project, for prime
contractors (large business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more, including options, (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to
exist) use the clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business System. Also, the
solicitation or contract will include any of the following clauses:
952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements; 952.234-71, Earned
Value Management System; 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration;
952.244-71, Contractor
[[Page 18419]]
Purchasing System Administration; and 952.245-70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
The requirements of this subpart 942.70 will not apply to
acquisitions for--
Small business set-asides;
Energy savings performance contracts as required by the
Energy Policy Act of 1992;
Services for--
[cir] ``Advisory and assistance services'' as defined at 48 CFR
2.101, unless otherwise designated as applicable by the Senior
Procurement Executive or the Head of the Contracting Activity;
[cir] Security Guards;
[cir] Housekeeping;
[cir] Education and training;
[cir] National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 Support; or
[cir] Utilities;
Office of the Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors;
Interagency acquisitions in accordance with 48 CFR 17.5;
or
Orders against another Federal agency contract, e.g.
Federal Supply Services (48 CFR 8.4).
During contract performance, the contracting officer, or designee,
shall evaluate the contractor's business system performance and
compliance in accordance with 48 CFR 42.15 and DOE procedures. At the
end of contract performance, if significant deficiencies remain in the
disapproved system or systems and payment withholdings are in effect,
the payment withholdings will be released during contract closeout.
However, the release of the payment withholdings from one contract will
not mean the system is approved. If there are other contracts where
payment withholdings are in effect, the payment withholdings will
continue on those contracts. These payment withholding are contract
financing payments; therefore, these payments withholdings are not
subject to the interest penalty provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
5. Part 942 is amended to add a new Subpart 942.71--Contractor
Accounting System and Related Controls, Sections 942.7101, 942.7102 and
942.7103. Subpart 952 is amended to add the related clause 952.242-72,
Accounting System Administration. The proposed amendments will require
DOE contractors to have acceptable accounting systems. It adds
definitions, describes applicability requirements, system criteria, and
provides procedures for addressing significant deficiencies in
contractor accounting systems.
In solicitations and contracts in support of a Capital Asset
Project, (other than a management and operating contract), as
prescribed in DOE Order 413.3B, or for a non-capital asset project, for
prime contractors, (large business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more, including options, (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to
exist) and the contract will be either a cost-reimbursement, incentive
type, time-and-materials, or labor-hour contract; or a contractor with
progress payments made on the basis of cost incurred by the contractor
or on a percentage or stage of completion, or fixed-price contracts
awarded on the basis of adequate price competition without submission
of cost or pricing data with a large business, to include contractor
teaming arrangement, use the clause 952.242-72, Accounting System
Administration. The clause requires the contractor to establish and
maintain an acceptable accounting system in accordance with the system
criteria described in the clause.
In the event any significant deficiencies are found in the
accounting system, the contracting officer will provide to the
contractor an initial determination of a significant deficiency and
allows the contractor to respond within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If there is no written response from the contractor within
30 days, it will indicate that the contractor agrees with the initial
determination. The contracting officer will evaluate the contractor's
response or the contractor's lack of response and notify the contractor
of a final determination concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action,
and system disapproval if one or more significant deficiencies remain.
If the contractor receives a final determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies. When the contracting officer
makes a final determination to disapprove the contractor's accounting
system, the contracting officer will withhold payments in accordance
with the clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business System.
6. Subchapter G is amended to add a new Part 944--Subcontracting
Policies and Procedures, Subpart 944.3--Contractors' Purchasing System
Review, and Sections 944.301, 944.303, 944.305, 944.305-70 and 944.305-
71. Subpart 952 is amended to add the related clause 952.244-71,
Contractor Purchasing System Administration. The proposed amendment
requires that DOE contractors have acceptable purchasing system. The
amendment add definitions, describe applicability requirements, define
system criteria, and provide procedures for addressing significant
deficiencies in contractor purchasing systems.
In solicitations and contracts in support of a Capital Asset
Project (other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed
in DOE Order 413.3B, or for a non-capital asset project, for prime
contractors (large business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more, including options, (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to
exist) and the contract contains the clause at 48 CFR 52.244-2
Subcontracts, use the clause 952.244-71, Contractor Purchasing System
Administration. The clause requires the contractor to establish and
maintain an acceptable purchasing system in accordance with the system
criteria described in the clause.
In the event any significant deficiencies are found in the
purchasing system, the contracting officer will provide to the
contractor an initial determination of a significant deficiency and
allows the contractor to respond within 30 days if the contractor
disagrees. If there is no written response from the contractor within
30 days, it will indicate that the contractor agrees with the initial
determination. The contracting officer will evaluate the contractor's
response or the contractor's lack of response and notify the contractor
of a final determination concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action,
and system disapproval if one or more significant deficiencies remain.
If the contractor receives a final determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies. When the contracting officer
makes a final determination to disapprove the
[[Page 18420]]
contractor's purchasing system, the contracting officer will withhold
payments in accordance with the clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System.
7. Part 945 is amended to add new Sections 945.105, and 945.107.
Subpart 952 is amended to add the related clause 952.245-70, Contractor
Property Management System Administration. The proposed amendments
requires that DOE contractors have acceptable property management
systems. The amendments add definitions, describe applicability
requirements, define system criteria, and provide procedures for
addressing significant deficiencies in the contractor property
management systems.
In solicitations and contracts in support of a Capital Asset
Project (other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed
in DOE Order 413.3B, or for a non-capital asset project, for prime
contractors (large business to include contractor teaming
arrangements), when the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or when the prime contract totaling $10 million or
more, including options, (but less than $50 million) is awarded to a
large business, to include a contractor teaming arrangement and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to exist
and the contract contains the clause at 48 CFR 52.245-1, Government
Property, use the clause 952.245-70, Contractor Property Management
System. The clause requires the contractor to establish and maintain an
acceptable property management system in accordance with the system
criteria described in the clause.
In the event any significant deficiencies are found in the property
management system, the contracting officer will provide the contractor
an initial determination of a significant deficiency and allow the
contractor 30 days to respond within if the contractor disagrees. If
there is no written response from the contractor within 30 days, it
will indicate that the contractor agrees with the initial
determination. The contracting officer will evaluate the contractor's
response or the contractor's lack of response and notify the contractor
of a final determination concerning any remaining significant
deficiencies, adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action,
and system disapproval if one or more significant deficiencies remain.
If the contractor receives a final determination, the contractor shall
within 45 days either correct the significant deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the significant deficiencies. When the contracting officer
makes a final determination to disapprove the contractor's property
management system, the contracting officer will withhold payments in
accordance with the clause 952.242-71, Contractor Business System.
III. Procedural Requirements
A. Review Under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Today's regulatory action has been determined to be a ``significant
regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning
and Review,'' 58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993). Accordingly, this proposed
rule was reviewed under that Executive Order by the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) of the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB).
DOE has also reviewed this regulation pursuant to Executive Order
13563, issued on January 18, 2011 (76 FR 3281 (Jan. 21, 2011)).
Executive Order 13563 is supplemental to and explicitly reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions governing regulatory review
established in Executive Order 12866. To the extent permitted by law,
agencies are required by Executive Order 13563 to: (1) Propose or adopt
a regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits
justify its costs (recognizing that some benefits and costs are
difficult to quantify); (2) tailor regulations to impose the least
burden on society, consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives,
taking into account, among other things, and to the extent practicable,
the costs of cumulative regulations; (3) select, in choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, those approaches that maximize net
benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health
and safety, and other advantages; distributive impacts; and equity);
(4) to the extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather than
specifying the behavior or manner of compliance that regulated entities
must adopt; and (5) identify and assess available alternatives to
direct regulation, including providing economic incentives to encourage
the desired behavior, such as user fees or marketable permits, or
providing information upon which choices can be made by the public.
DOE emphasizes as well that Executive Order 13563 requires agencies
to use the best available techniques to quantify anticipated present
and future benefits and costs as accurately as possible. In its
guidance, the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has
emphasized that such techniques may include identifying changing future
compliance costs that might result from technological innovation or
anticipated behavioral changes. DOE believes that today's NOPR is
consistent with these principles, including the requirement that, to
the extent permitted by law, agencies adopt a regulation only upon a
reasoned determination that its benefits justify its costs and, in
choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, those approaches
maximize net benefits.
B. Review Under Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing regulations and the
promulgation of new regulations, section 3(a) of Executive Order 12988,
``Civil Justice Reform,'' 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996), imposes on
Executive agencies the general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and (3) provide a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather than a general standard and
promote simplification and burden reduction.
With regard to the review required by section 3(a), section 3(b) of
Executive Order 12988 specifically requires that Executive agencies
make every reasonable effort to ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly
specifies the preemptive effect, if any; (2) clearly specifies any
effect on existing Federal law or regulation; (3) provides a clear
legal standard for affected conduct while promoting simplification and
burden reduction; (4) specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5)
adequately defines key terms; and (6) addresses other important issues
affecting clarity and general draftsmanship under any guidelines issued
by the United States Attorney General. Section 3(c) of Executive Order
12988 requires Executive agencies to review regulations in light of
applicable standards in section 3(a) and section 3(b) to determine
whether they are met or if it is unreasonable to meet one or more of
them. DOE has completed the required review and determined that, to the
extent permitted by law, this rule meets the relevant standards of
Executive Order 12988.
C. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires
preparation of an initial regulatory flexibility analysis for any rule
that by law must be proposed for public comment, unless
[[Page 18421]]
the agency certifies that the rule, if promulgated, will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
As required by Executive Order 13272, ``Proper Consideration of Small
Entities in Agency Rulemaking,'' 67 FR 53461 (August 16, 2002), DOE
published procedures and policies on February 19, 2003, to ensure that
the potential impacts of its rules on small entities are properly
considered during the rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE has made its
procedures and policies available on the Office of General Counsel's
Web site at https://energy.gov/gc/guidance-opinions-0.
Today's proposed rule establishes a definition for contractor
business systems and implements compliance mechanisms to improve DOE
oversight of those contractor business systems. The requirements of the
rule will apply to solicitations and contracts that are subject to the
Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) under 41 U.S.C. chapter 15, as
implemented in regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201- 1 (see the FAR
Appendix), other than in contracts with educational institutions or
Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs) operated by
educational institutions, and include one or more of the defined
contractor business systems. Contracts and subcontracts with small
businesses are exempt from CAS requirements. This rule would not have a
significant economic impact on small entities because it does not apply
to small businesses. Consequently, this proposed rule is exempt from
the requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
D. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35) applies because
the proposed rule contains information collection requirements. DOE
invites comments on the following aspects of the proposed rule: (a)
Whether the collection of information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of DOE, including whether the information
will have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the estimate of the
burden of the information collection; (c) ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (d) ways
to minimize the burden of the information collection on respondents,
including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of
information technology.
The following is a summary of the information collection
requirement: The business systems clause in this proposed rule contains
a requirement for contractors to respond to initial and final
determinations of deficiencies. The information that contractors will
be required to submit to respond to deficiencies in one of the five
business systems defined in this rule has been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) is the Accounting Systems--OMB Clearance
9000-0011 concerning preaward surveys. DOE estimates that there will be
5 new contracts awarded per year, which will have these 5 clauses. DOE
is also proposing a new information collection requirement as follows:
Title: Department of Energy Acquisition Regulation (DEAR) Business
Systems--Definition and Administration.
Type of Request: New request.
The information that contractors will be required to submit to
respond to deficiencies in contractors' cost estimating system is
estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will be required to submit to
respond to deficiencies in contractors' earned value management system
(EVMS) is estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Burden per Response: 10.4 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 104 hours.
The information that contractors will be required to submit to
respond to deficiencies in contractors' accounting systems is estimated
as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will be required to submit to
respond to deficiencies in contractors' purchasing system is estimated
as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
The information that contractors will be required to submit to
respond to deficiencies in contractors' property management system is
estimated as follows:
Number of Respondents: 5.
Responses per Respondent: 2.
Annual Responses: 10.
Average Burden per Response: 1.2 hours.
Annual Burden Hours: 12 hours.
Needs and Uses: DOE needs the information required by the business
system clause in this proposed rule to mitigate the risk of unallowable
and unreasonable costs on Government contracts when a contractor has
one or more deficiencies in a business system.
Affected Public: The business system clause (952.242-71) will be
used in solicitations and contracts that include any of the following
clauses:
(1) 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements;
(2) 952.234-71, Earned Value Management System;
(3) 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration;
(4) 952.244-71, Contractor Purchasing System Administration; and
(5) 952.245-70, Contractor Property Management System
Administration.
Frequency: On occasion.
Written comments and recommendations on the proposed information
collection should be sent to: DOE Desk Officer, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, New Executive
Office Building, Room 10102, 735 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503.
The Desk Officer may be telephoned at 202-395-4718 or contacted by
email at chad_s_whiteman@omb.eop.gov.
Please send a copy by mail to the U.S. Department of Energy, Office
of Acquisition and Project Management, Attn: MA-611, Ms. Barbara
Binney, 1000 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585; or email
to: DEARrulemaking@hq.doe.gov. Include DEAR: Contractor Business
Systems--Proposed Information Collection RIN 1991-AC01 in the subject
line of the message.
Comments can be received from 60 days after the date of this
notice, but comments to OMB will be most useful if received by OMB
within 30 days after the date of this notice.
To request more information on this proposed information collection
or to obtain a copy of the proposal and associated collection
instruments, please write to the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of
Acquisition and Project Management, Attn: MA-611, Ms. Barbara Binney,
1000 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585; or email to
DEARrulemaking@hq.doe.gov. Include DEAR: Contractor Business Systems--
Proposed Information Collection RIN 1991-AC01 in the subject line of
the message.
[[Page 18422]]
E. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act
DOE has concluded that promulgation of this proposed rule falls
into a class of actions which would not individually or cumulatively
have significant impact on the human environment, as determined by
DOE's regulations (10 CFR part 1021, subpart D) implementing the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.). Specifically, this proposed rule is categorically excluded from
NEPA review because the amendments to the DEAR are strictly procedural
(categorical exclusion A6). Therefore, this proposed rule does not
require an environmental impact statement or environmental assessment
pursuant to NEPA.
F. Review Under Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, 64 FR 43255 (August 4, 1999), imposes
certain requirements on agencies formulating and implementing policies
or regulations that preempt State law or that have federalism
implications. Agencies are required to examine the constitutional and
statutory authority supporting any action that would limit the
policymaking discretion of the States and carefully assess the
necessity for such actions. The Executive Order requires agencies to
have an accountability process to ensure meaningful and timely input by
state and local officials in the development of regulatory policies
that have federalism implications.
On March 14, 2000, DOE published a statement of policy describing
the intergovernmental consultation process it will follow in the
development of such regulations (65 FR 13735). DOE has examined the
proposed rule and has determined that it does not preempt State law and
does not have a substantial direct effect 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. No further action is required by Executive Order 13132.
G. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) generally
requires a Federal agency to perform a written assessment of costs and
benefits of any rule imposing a Federal Mandate with costs to State,
local or tribal governments, or to the private sector, of $100 million
or more. Costs imposed by this proposed rule would be reimburse under
the contract. This proposed rule does not impose any unfunded mandates.
H. Review Under the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act,
1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105-277), requires Federal agencies to issue a
Family Policymaking Assessment for any rulemaking or policy that may
affect family well-being. This rulemaking will have no impact on the
autonomy or integrity of the family as an institution. Accordingly, DOE
has concluded that it is not necessary to prepare a Family Policymaking
Assessment.
I. Review Under Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations that
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use, 66 FR 28355
(May 22, 2001), requires Federal agencies to prepare and submit to the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), a Statement of Energy Effects for any
proposed significant energy action. A ``significant energy action'' is
defined as any action by an agency that promulgates or is expected to
lead to promulgation of a final rule, and that: (1) Is a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, or any successor order,
(2) is likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy, or (3) is designated by the
Administrator of OIRA as a significant energy action. For any proposed
significant energy action, the agency must give a detailed statement of
any adverse effects on energy supply, distribution or use should the
proposal be implemented, and of reasonable alternatives to the action
and their expected benefits on energy supply, distribution and use.
Today's proposed rule is not a significant energy action. Accordingly,
DOE has not prepared a Statement of Energy Effects.
J. Review Under the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act,
2001
The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001 (44
U.S.C. 3516, note) provides for agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under guidelines established by each
agency pursuant to general guidelines issued by OMB. OMB's guidelines
were published at 67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002), and DOE's guidelines
were published at 67 FR 62446 (October 7, 2002). DOE has reviewed the
proposed rule under the OMB and DOE guidelines and has concluded that
it is consistent with applicable policies in those guidelines.
K. Approval by the Office of the Secretary of Energy
Issuance of this proposed rule has been approved by the Office of
the Secretary of Energy.
List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 915, 934, 942, 944, 945 and 952
Government procurement.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 24, 2014.
Paul Bosco,
Director, Office of Acquisition and Project Management, Department of
Energy.
Joseph Waddell,
Deputy Associate Administrator, Acquisition and Project Management,
National Nuclear Security Administration.
For reasons set out in the preamble, the DOE is proposing to amend
Chapter 9 of Title 48 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth
below.
0
1. The authority citations for parts 915, 942, 945, and 952 continue to
read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
PART 915--CONTRACTING BY NEGOTIATION
Subpart 915.4--Contract Pricing
0
2. Add sections 915.407, 915.407-5, and 915.407-5-70 to subpart 915.4
to read as follows:
915.407 Special cost or pricing areas.
915.407-5 Estimating system.
915.407-5-70 Disclosure, maintenance, and review requirements.
(a) Definitions. (1) Acceptable estimating system is defined in the
clause at 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements.
(2) Contractor means a business unit as defined in 48 CFR 2.101.
(3) Estimating system is as defined in the clause at 952.215-71,
Cost Estimating System Requirements.
(4) Significant deficiency is defined in the clause at 952.215-71,
Cost Estimating System Requirements.
(b) Applicability. (1) DOE policy is that contractors have
acceptable estimating systems that consistently produce well-supported
proposals that are acceptable as a basis for negotiation of fair and
reasonable prices.
(2) The estimating system requirements apply when a large business
contractor, to include a contractor teaming arrangement, as defined at
48 CFR 9.601(1), performs a
[[Page 18423]]
contract in support of a Capital Asset Project, (other than a
management and operating contract), as prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O)
413.3B, or current version, or a non-capital asset project. See
942.7003 for exceptions. The applicable contract is subject to
estimating system disclosure, maintenance, and review requirements--
(i) For a DOE prime contract totaling $50 million, including
options; or
(ii) For a DOE prime contract totaling $10 million or more
including options (but less than $50 million) and the contracting
officer determines it to be in the best interest of the Government
(e.g., significant estimating problems are believed to exist).
(c) Policy. (1) When the solicitation or contract includes the
clause 952.242-71 Contractor Business System and related clauses, the
contracting officer shall--
(i) Through use of the clause at 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System
Requirements, apply the disclosure, maintenance, and review
requirements to large business contractors meeting the criteria in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section;
(ii) Ensure that contract, Part I--The Schedule, addresses in the
business administration section, or similar section, that the
contractor shall submit its cost estimating system for DOE review and
acceptance with full implementation of the system to be in place no
later than 60 days after contract award;
(iii) Consider whether to apply the disclosure, maintenance, and
review requirements to large business contractors under paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section; and
(iv) Not apply the disclosure, maintenance, and review requirements
to other than large business contractors.
(2) The cognizant contracting officer, in consultation with the
auditor, for contractors subject to paragraph (b)(2) of this section,
shall--
(i) Determine the acceptability of the disclosure and approve or
disapprove the system; and
(ii) Pursue correction of any deficiencies.
(3) The auditor conducts estimating system reviews.
(4) An acceptable system shall provide for the use of appropriate
source data, utilize sound estimating techniques and good judgment,
maintain a consistent approach, and adhere to established policies and
procedures.
(5) In evaluating the acceptability of a contractor's estimating
system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor,
shall determine whether the contractor's estimating system complies
with the system criteria for an acceptable estimating system as
prescribed in the clause at 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System
Requirements.
(d) Disposition of findings--(1) Reporting of findings. The auditor
shall document findings and recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the auditor identifies any significant
deficiencies in the contractor's estimating system, the report shall
describe the deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow the contracting
officer to understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The contracting officer shall review
all findings and recommendations and, if there are no significant
deficiencies, shall promptly notify the contractor, in writing, that
the contractor's estimating system is acceptable and approved;
or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more
significant deficiencies (as defined in the clause at 952.215-71, Cost
Estimating System Requirements) due to the contractor's failure to meet
one or more of the estimating system criteria in the clause at 952.215-
71, the contracting officer shall--
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, provide an initial
determination of deficiencies in writing, describing each significant
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand
the deficiency and provide a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor respond in writing to the initial
determination within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response or if the
contractor does not submit a response, the date the response was due,
in consultation with the auditor or cognizant functional specialist,
evaluate the contractor's response or the contractor's lack of response
and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The contracting officer shall make a
final determination and notify the contractor in writing that--(A) The
contractor's estimating system is acceptable and approved, and no
significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain. The notice shall identify any
remaining significant deficiencies, and indicate the adequacy of any
proposed or completed corrective action.
The contracting officer shall--
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the
final determination, either correct the deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 952.215-
71, Cost estimating System Requirements; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor's corrective action and the correction
of significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor's corrective action. The contracting
officer or designee shall monitor the contractor's progress in
correcting deficiencies. If the contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall take whatever action is
necessary to ensure that the contractor corrects the deficiencies.
Examples of actions the contracting officer can take include reducing
or suspending progress payments (see 48 CFR 32.503-6), implementing the
withholding in accordance with 952.242-71, Contractor Business System,
if applicable, and recommending non-award of potential contracts.
(B) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer, in writing, that the contractor has
corrected the significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall
request that the auditor review the correction to determine if the
deficiencies have been resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall determine if the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification
shall be sent to the auditor; invoice approving official; payment
office; appropriate action officers responsible for reporting past
performance; and the Department of Energy's or National Nuclear
Security Administration's Heads of the Contracting Activities and
Senior Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve
a previously disapproved estimating system and notify the contractor
when the contracting officer determines that there are no remaining
significant deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting
officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve
a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a
previously disapproved system and release
[[Page 18424]]
withheld payments, to the auditor, invoice approving official, payment
office, affected DOE contracting offices, and the Department of
Energy's or National Nuclear Security Administration's Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior Procurement Executives.
0
3. Revise section 915.408-70 to read as follows:
915.408-70 Solicitation provisions and contract clauses.
(a) The contracting officer (after deleting ``under the clause at
970.5203-3, Contractor's Organization'' from paragraph (a) if not a
management and operating contract) shall insert the clause at 952.215-
70, Key Personnel, in contracts under which performance is largely
dependent on the expertise of specific key personnel.
(b) Unless one of the exceptions at 942.7003 applies, use the
clause at 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements, in all
solicitations and contracts, in support of a Capital Asset Project
(other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed in DOE
O 413.3B, or current version, or for a non-capital asset project as
described at 915.407-5-70(b)(2), for a prime contract, when the total
contract value exceeds $50 million, including options, or when the
total contract exceeds $10 million or more, including options, (but
less than $50 million) and the contracting officer determines it to be
in the best interest of the Government (e.g., significant estimating
problems are believed to exist or the contractor's sales are
predominantly Government).
0
4. Add part 934 to Subchapter F to read as follows:
PART 934--MAJOR SYSTEM ACQUISITION
Subpart 934.2--Earned Value Management System
Sec.
934.201-70 Policy.
934.203 Solicitation provisions and contract clause.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
Subpart 934.2--Earned Value Management System
934.201-70 Policy.
(a) The Department of Energy (DOE) applies the earned value
management system (EVMS) requirement as follows:
(1) For cost or incentive contracts and subcontracts valued at
$20,000,000 or more, the contractor in support of a Capital Asset
Project, as prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or current version,
shall have an EVMS that has been determined to be in compliance with
the guidelines in the American National Standards Institute/Electronic
Industries Alliance Standard 748, EVMS (ANSI/EIA-748) (current version
at time of award) in accordance with the thresholds in paragraphs
(a)(1)(i) through (iii) of this section.
(i) For cost or incentive contracts and subcontracts valued at
$20,000,000 but not exceeding $50,000,000, the contractor shall conduct
a self-certification review by an entity independent of the contractor
personnel assigned to programs and projects specified in the contract
and provide self-certifying documentation of its EVMS compliance with
ANSI/EIA-748. The contractor shall conduct periodic surveillance
reviews and provide documentation of results to show continued
compliance of contractor's EVMS with ANSI/EIA-748. When the contractor
has two or more contracts in support of capital asset projects at DOE
and the total contract values are $20,000,000 or greater per contract
for total contract values of $50,000,000 or more, those contracts shall
be subject to certification and surveillance reviews as described in
paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) or (iii) of this section.
(ii) For contracts valued at $50,000,000 but not exceeding
$100,000,000, the contracting officer will receive a copy of the
certification review which certifies that the contractor's EVMS is
compliant with ANSI/EIA-748 from the cognizant DOE program office. The
cognizant DOE Program Office shall conduct certification reviews and
periodic surveillance reviews to ensure continued compliance of
contractor's EVMS with ANSI/EIA-748, the contracting officer will
receive a copy of these reviews from the cognizant DOE program office.
(iii) For contracts valued at $100,000,000 or more, the contracting
officer will receive a copy of the certification review which certifies
that the contractor's EVMS is compliant with ANSI/EIA-748 from DOE's
Office of Acquisition and Project Management (OAPM). OAPM shall conduct
certification reviews and periodic surveillance reviews to ensure
continued compliance of contractor's EVMS with ANSI/EIA-748, and the
contracting officer shall receive a copy of these reviews from OAPM.
Also, OAPM shall conduct certification reviews and surveillance reviews
and certify the contractor's EVMS compliance with ANSI/EIA-748 for
contracts of lesser value if requested by the contracting officer, the
contractor or the DOE program office; or if the contractor or cognizant
DOE program office does not complete its required actions in (a)(1)(i)
and (ii) of this section within one year of contract award.
(2) For cost or incentive contracts and subcontracts valued at less
than $20,000,000--
(i) The application of earned value management is optional and is a
risk-based decision;
(ii) A decision to apply earned value management shall be
documented in the contract file; and
(iii) When the DOE program manager decides to implement earned
value management on contracts and subcontracts valued at less than
$20,000,000, a cost-benefit analysis shall be conducted and the
documented results provided to the contracting officer for the contract
file.
(3) For fixed-price contracts and subcontracts of any dollar value:
(i) The application of earned value management is not required.
(ii) In extraordinary cases where cost/schedule visibility is
required and cannot be obtained using other means, the DOE program
manager shall request a waiver for individual contracts from the
applicable Acquisition Executive (AE), as defined in DOE Order 413.3B,
or current version. In these cases, the program manager will conduct a
business case analysis that includes rationale as to why a cost or
fixed-price incentive contract was not an appropriate contracting
vehicle.
(b) Under the provision at 952.234-70, Notice of Earned Value
Management System, when an offeror proposes a plan for compliance with
the earned value management system guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748, the
contracting officer shall obtain the assistance of the cognizant DOE
program office or OAPM, as applicable, in determining the adequacy of
an earned value management system plan. The Government will review and
approve the offeror's EVMS plan to achieve compliance before contract
award. Guidance and instructions for performing EVMS plan reviews can
be found at DOE Order 413.3B, Program and Project Management for the
Acquisition of Capital Assets, Appendix C, Section 5 and DOE Guide
413.3-10A, Earned Value Management System.
(c) For contracts of $50,000,000 or more, DOE is responsible for
determining the contractor's earned value management system compliance.
Furthermore, when the contractor has two or more contracts in support
of capital asset projects at the same DOE-site and the total contract
values are $20,000,000 or greater per contract for total contract
values of $50,000,000 or
[[Page 18425]]
more, DOE is responsible for determining the contractor's earned value
management system compliance.
(d) The cognizant contracting officer, in consultation with the
cognizant DOE program office or OAPM (both are herein referred to as
functional specialist) or auditor, as applicable, shall--
(1) Determine the acceptability of the contractor's earned value
management system through certification reviews and periodic
surveillance reviews conducted by the cognizant DOE program office or
OAPM, as applicable, and approve or disapprove the system; and
(2) Pursue correction of any deficiencies identified during
certification reviews or surveillance reviews.
(e) In evaluating the acceptability of a contractor's earned value
management system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the
cognizant functional specialist or auditor, as applicable, shall
determine whether the contractor's earned value management system
complies with the system criteria for an acceptable earned value
management system as prescribed in the clause at 952.234-71, Earned
Value Management System.
(f) Disposition of findings--(1) Reporting of findings. The
cognizant functional specialist or auditor shall document findings and
recommendations in a report to the contracting officer. If the
cognizant functional specialist or auditor identifies any significant
deficiencies in the contractor's earned value management system, the
report shall describe the deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow
the contracting officer to understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The contracting officer shall review
all findings and recommendations and, if there are no significant
deficiencies, shall promptly notify the contractor, in writing, that
the contractor's earned value management system is acceptable and
approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more
significant deficiencies (as defined in the clause at 952.234-71,
Earned Value Management System) due to the contractor's failure to meet
one or more of the earned value management system criteria in the
clause at 952.234-71, the contracting officer shall--
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, provide an initial
determination of deficiencies, in writing, describing each significant
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand
the deficiencies and provide a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial
determination within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response or if the
contractor does not submit a response, the date the response was due,
in consultation with the auditor or cognizant functional specialist,
evaluate the contractor's response and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The contracting officer, in
consultation with the cognizant functional specialist or auditor, shall
make a final determination and notify the contractor, in writing,
that--
(A) The contractor's earned value management system is acceptable
and approved, and no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain. The notice shall identify any
remaining significant deficiencies, and indicate the adequacy of any
proposed or completed corrective action. The contracting officer
shall--
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the
final determination, either correct the deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 952.234-
71, Earned Value Management System, when initial validation is not
successfully completed within the timeframe approved by the contracting
officer or the contracting officer determines that the existing earned
value management system contains one or more significant deficiencies
in the high-risk guidelines in ANSI/EIA 748 standards (guidelines 1, 3,
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 16, 21, 23, 26, 27, 28, 30, or 32). When the
contracting officer determines that the existing earned value
management system contains one or more significant deficiencies in one
or more of the remaining 16 guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748 standards, the
contracting officer shall use discretion to disapprove the system based
on input received from functional specialists and the auditor; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring contractor's corrective action and the correction
of significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor's corrective action. The contracting
officer or designee shall monitor the contractor's progress in
correcting deficiencies. If the contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall take whatever action is
necessary to ensure that the contractor corrects the deficiencies.
Example of an action the contracting officer can take is to increase
the withholding in accordance with 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System.
(B) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the
significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall request the
cognizant functional specialist or auditor to review the correction to
determine if the deficiencies have been resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall determine if the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification
shall be sent to the cognizant functional specialist, auditor, invoice
approving official, payment office, DOE contracting offices having
substantial business with the contractor, and the Department of
Energy's or National Nuclear Security Administration's Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior Procurement Executives.
(g) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve
a previously disapproved earned value management system and notify the
contractor when the contracting officer determines that there are no
remaining significant deficiencies.
(h) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting
officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve
a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a
previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the
auditor, invoice approving official, payment office, DOE contracting
offices having substantial business with the contractor, and the
Department of Energy's or National Nuclear Security Administration's
Heads of the Contracting Activities and both Senior Procurement
Executives.
(i) Contract reporting. For a cost reimbursement contract requiring
EVMS, the contract shall include instructions to the prime contractor
to electronically upload earned value and schedule data into the
Project Assessment and Reporting System (PARS II) (or current DOE
project performance reporting system) in accordance with the
``Contractor Project Performance Upload Requirements''
[[Page 18426]]
document maintained by the OAPM. Unless OAPM has granted a temporary
exemption, all requested data shall be submitted timely and accurately.
Data shall be loaded into PARS II no later than the last workday of
every month. This data shall be current as of the close of the previous
month's accounting period.
934.203 Solicitation provisions and contract clause.
For cost or incentive contracts in support of a Capital Asset
Project, as prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or current version,
valued at $20,000,000 or more, and for other contracts for which EVMS
will be applied in accordance with 934.201(a)(1)--
(a) Use the provision at 952.234-70, Notice of Earned Value
Management System, instead of the provisions at FAR 52.234-2, Notice of
Earned Value Management System--Pre-Award IBR, and FAR 52.234-3, Notice
of Earned Value Management System--Post-Award IBR, in the solicitation;
and
(b) Use the clause at 952.234-71, Earned Value Management System,
instead of the clause at FAR 52.234-4, Earned Value Management System,
in the solicitation and contract.
PART 942--CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION AND AUDIT SERVICES
0
5. Add subpart 942.70 to part 942 to read as follows:
Subpart 942.70--Contractor Business System
Sec.
942.7001 Scope of subpart.
942.7002 Definitions.
942.7003 Exceptions.
942.7004 Contractor business system deficiencies procedures.
942.7005 Contract clause.
Subpart 942.70--Contractor Business System
942.7001 Scope of subpart.
This subpart prescribes procedures to implement contractor business
system requirements in applicable contracts to include how to determine
and withhold payments when the contractor business system has
deficiencies.
942.7002 Definitions.
Definitions. As used in this subpart--
Acceptable contractor business system and contractor business
system are defined in the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System.
Covered contract means a contract (other than a management and
operating contract) that is subject to the Cost Accounting Standards
under 41 U.S.C. chapter 15, as implemented in regulations found at 48
CFR 9903.201-1(a) and are not exempted at 9903.201-1(b)(1) through (14)
(see the 48 CFR Appendix).
Significant deficiency is defined in the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System.
942.7003 Exceptions.
The requirements of this subpart do not apply to acquisitions for--
(a) Small business set-asides;
(b) Energy savings performance contracts as required by the Energy
Policy Act of 1992;
(c) Services for--
(1) ``Advisory and assistance services'' as defined at 48 CFR
2.101, unless otherwise designated as applicable by the Senior
Procurement Executive or the Head of the Contracting Activity;
(2) Security Guards;
(3) Housekeeping;
(4) Education and training;
(5) National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 Support; or
(6) Utilities;
(d) Office of the Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors;
(e) Interagency acquisitions in accordance with 48 CFR 17.5; or
(f) Orders against another Federal agency contract, e.g. Federal
Supply Services (48 CFR 8.4).
942.7004 Contractor business system deficiencies procedures.
(a) Determination to withhold payments. If the contracting officer
makes a final determination to disapprove a contractor's business
system in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System, the contracting officer shall--
(1) Identify if within DOE there is one or more fixed-price
contracts awarded on the basis of adequate price competition without
submission of cost or pricing data with large businesses or covered
contracts containing the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System, from which payments will be withheld. When identifying the
contracts from which to withhold payments, the contracting officer
shall ensure that the total amount of payment withholding under the
clause at 952.242-71, does not exceed 10 percent of progress payments,
performance-based payments, and interim payments under cost-
reimbursement, labor-hour, and time-and-materials, contracts billed
under each of the identified contracts. Similarly, the contracting
officer shall ensure that the total amount of payment withholding under
the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business System, for each business
system does not exceed five percent of progress payments, performance-
based payments, and interim payments under cost-reimbursement, labor-
hour, and time-and-materials contracts billed under each of the
identified covered contracts. The contracting officer has the sole
discretion to identify the covered contracts from which to withhold
payments.
(2) Promptly notify the contractor, in writing, of the contracting
officer's determination to implement payment withholding in accordance
with the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business System. The notice
of payment withholding shall be included in the contracting officer's
written final determination for the contractor business system and
shall inform the contractor that--
(i) Payments shall be withheld from the contract or contracts
identified in the written determination in accordance with the clause
at 952.242-71, Contractor Business System, until the contracting
officer determines that there are no remaining significant
deficiencies; and
(ii) The contracting officer reserves the right to take other
actions within the terms and conditions of the contract.
(3) Provide all contracting officers administering the selected
contracts from which payments will be withheld, a copy of the
determination. The contracting officer shall also provide a copy of the
determination to the auditor, invoice approving official, and payment
office.
(b) Monitoring contractor's corrective action. The contracting
officer, in consultation with the auditor, functional specialist, or
designee, shall monitor the contractor's progress in correcting the
deficiencies. The contracting officer shall notify the contractor of
any decision to decrease or increase the amount of payment withholding
in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System.
(c) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) If the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the
significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall request the
auditor or functional specialist to review the correction to verify
that the deficiencies have been corrected. If, after receipt of
verification, the contracting officer determines that the contractor
has corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by the
contracting officer's final determination, the contracting officer
shall discontinue the withholding of payments, release any payments
[[Page 18427]]
previously withheld, and approve the system, unless other significant
deficiencies remain.
(2) Prior to the receipt of verification, the contracting officer
may discontinue withholding payments pending receipt of verification,
and release any payments previously withheld, if the contractor submits
evidence that the significant deficiencies have been corrected, and the
contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor or functional
specialist, determines that there is a reasonable expectation that the
corrective actions have been implemented and are expected to correct
the significant deficiencies.
(3) Within 90 days of receipt of the contractor notification that
the contractor has corrected the significant deficiencies, the
contracting officer shall--
(i) Make a determination that--
(A) The contractor has corrected all significant deficiencies as
directed by the contracting officer's final determination in accordance
with paragraph (d)(1) of this section;
(B) There is a reasonable expectation that the corrective actions
have been implemented in accordance with paragraph (d)(2) of this
section; or
(C) The contractor has not corrected all significant deficiencies
as directed by the contracting officer's final determination in
accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this section, or there is not a
reasonable expectation that the corrective actions have been
implemented in accordance with paragraph (d)(2) of this section; or
(ii) Direct the contractor, in writing, to reduce the percentage
withheld on invoices by at least 50 percent, until the contracting
officer makes a determination in accordance with paragraph (d)(3)(i) of
this section.
(4) If, at any time, the contracting officer determines that the
contractor has failed to correct the significant deficiencies
identified in the contractor's notification, the contracting officer
will continue, reinstate, or increase withholding and direct the
contractor, in writing, to continue, reinstate, or increase the
percentage withheld on invoices to the percentage initially withheld,
until the contracting officer determines that the contractor has
corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by the contracting
officer's final determination.
(d) Determinations regarding payment withholding. The contracting
officer shall use the written notification format or similar format to
document the contracting officer determinations to initiate payment
withholding, reduce payment withholding, and discontinue payment
withholding in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor
Business System. The final determination regarding payment withholding
is not a final decision within the meaning of the Contract Disputes Act
of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 7101, et seq.).
(1) Final determination for payment withholding. Use the sample
format or similar format for final determination for payment
withholding in accordance with the clause 952.242-71, Contractor
Business Systems. Tailor the notice in paragraph (4) to use the
appropriate version to reflect invoice payments or advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Payment Withholding
(1) The purpose of this final determination is to disapprove
your [identify the contractor business system(s)] and implement
payment withholding per the terms of the clause at 48 CFR 952.242-
71, Contractor Business System.
(2) It is my final determination that XXX System(s) contains the
following significant deficiencies:
--[list all significant deficiencies]
(3) Effective immediately, five percent (or a lesser percentage
if five percent will exceed the withhold limitations in the clause
48 CFR 952.242-71) of each request for payment under the contracts
in Attachment A will be withheld as described below for significant
deficiencies in XXX system. Upon receipt of an acceptable corrective
action plan and my determination that this corrective action plan is
being effectively implemented, I will issue a notification with
respect to reducing the percentage being withheld to two percent
until I determine that all significant deficiencies, as identified
in this final determination, have been corrected. Failure to follow
the accepted corrective action plan will result in an increase in
the percentage withheld against each payment under this contract to
five percent (or a lesser percentage if five percent will exceed the
withhold limitations in clause 48 CFR 952.242-71). [Repeat this
paragraph, as necessary, if multiple withholds are being applied to
multiple systems in accordance with 952.242-71(d)].
(4) [For invoice payments use the following paragraph.] For
invoice payments, the Contractor shall apply a five percent (or a
lesser percentage if five percent will exceed the withhold
limitations in 48 CFR 952.242-71) withhold to the amount requested.
For invoices in Vendor Invoicing Payment Electronic Reporting System
(VIPERS), the Contractor shall invoice for the net amount due after
application of the withhold and show the amount withheld on the
current billing, as well as the cumulative amount withheld to date
on this contract in accordance with the clause 48 CFR 952.242-71, in
the Description field of the VIPERS invoice or as supporting
documentation attached to the voucher. When approving the invoice
for payment in the Vendor Invoice Approval System (VIAS), the
Contracting Officer or Invoice Approving Official will verify that
the Contractor reduced the invoice the five percent (or a lesser
percentage if five percent will exceed the withhold limitations in
48 CFR 952.242-71). In the event the Contractor did not submit the
invoice with the proper withholding, the Contracting Officer or
Invoice Approving Official will reject the invoice and enter the
reason for the rejection in the VIAS Comments field. When the
Contractor reviews the Invoice Status Report in VIPERS, the reason
for the reduced payment will be displayed in the Invoice Description
field.
[For advance payments under a special bank account (letter of
credit) use the following paragraph.] For advance payments under a
special bank account (letter of credit), the Contractor shall
immediately be subject to the advance approval requirements by the
Contracting Officer or Government countersigning agent for cash
withdrawals against the letter of credit. Each Contractor request
for cash withdrawal for the net amount due after the withhold shall
contain the amount of expenditure, the amount withheld on the
current request, as well as the cumulative amount withheld to date
on this contract in accordance with the clause 48 CFR 952.242-71,
and the net amount requested after application of the withhold. When
approving the request for cash withdrawal, the Contracting Officer
or Government countersigning agent will verify that the Contractor
reduced the request by five percent (or a lesser percentage if five
percent will exceed the withhold limitations in 48 CFR 952.242-71).
In the event the Contractor did not submit the cash withdrawal
request with the proper withholding, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will reject the request for cash
withdrawal for non-compliance with the requirements of this clause
in his/her response.
[End of notice]
(2) Reduction of temporary payment withholding. Use the sample
format or similar format for determination to reduce payment
withholding in accordance with the clause 48 CFR 952.242-71, Contractor
Business System. Tailor the notice in paragraph (3) to use the
appropriate version to reflect invoice payments or advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Reduction of Temporary Payment Withholding
(1) The purpose of this determination is to reduce the payment
withholding percentage per the terms of the clause 48 CFR 952.242-
71, Contractor Business System, as a result of receiving an
acceptable corrective action plan from the contractor, dated YYYY/
MM/DD, for resolving deficiencies in its XXX system(s) as identified
in the Contracting Officer's determination, dated YYYY/MM/DD. This
reduction is prospective and previous amounts withheld will not be
reduced or released at this time.
[[Page 18428]]
(2) Effective immediately, two percent of each request for
payment under this contract will be withheld as described below. The
two percent being withheld will remain in effect until the
Contracting Officer determines that the Contractor has corrected all
significant deficiencies as directed by the Contracting Officer's
determination. Failure to follow the accepted corrective action plan
will result in an increase in the percentage withheld against each
payment under this contract to five percent (or a lesser percentage
if five percent will exceed the withhold limitations in 48 CFR
952.242-71).
(3) [For invoice payments use the following paragraph.] For
invoice payments, the Contractor shall apply a two percent withhold
to the amount being requested. For invoices in Vendor Invoicing
Payment Electronic Reporting System (VIPERS), the Contractor shall
invoice for the net amount due after withholding and show the amount
withheld on the current billing, as well as the cumulative amount
withheld to date on this contract in accordance with the clause 48
CFR 952.242-71, in the Description field of the VIPERS invoice or as
supporting documentation attached to the invoice. When approving the
invoice for payment in the Vendor Invoice Approval System (VIAS),
the Contracting Officer or Invoice Approving Official will verify
that the Contractor reduced the invoice the two percent. In the
event the Contractor did not submit the invoice with the proper
withholding, the Contracting Officer or Invoice Approving Official
will reject the invoice and enter the reason for the rejection in
the VIAS Comments field. When the Contractor reviews the Invoice
Status Report in VIPERS, the reason for the reduced payment will be
displayed in the Invoice Description field.
[For advance payments under a special bank account (letter of
credit) use the following paragraph.] For advance payments under a
special bank account (letter of credit), the Contractor shall
immediately be subject to the advance approval requirements by the
Contracting Officer or Government countersigning agent for cash
withdrawals against the letter of credit. Each Contractor request
for cash withdrawal for the net amount due after the withhold shall
contain the amount of expenditure, the amount withheld on the
current request, as well as the cumulative amount withheld to date
on this contract in accordance with the clause 48 CFR 952.242-71,
and the net amount requested after application of the withhold. When
approving the request for cash withdrawal, the Contracting Officer
or Government countersigning agent will verify that the Contractor
reduced the request by five percent (or a lesser percentage if two
percent will exceed the withhold limitations in 48 CFR 952.242-71).
In the event the Contractor did not submit the cash withdrawal
request with the proper withholding, the Contracting Officer or
Government countersigning agent will reject the request for cash
withdrawal for non-compliance with the requirements of this clause
in his/her response.
[End of notice]
(3) Discontinuation of payment withholding pending verification.
Use the sample format or similar format if payment withholding is
discontinued after auditor or functional specialist verification and
based on evidence that the Contractor has corrected all significant
deficiencies, in accordance with clause 48 CFR 952.242-71, Contractor
Business System. Tailor the notice in paragraph (3) to use the
appropriate version to reflect invoice payments or advance payments
under a special bank account (letter of credit).
[Begin notice]
Discontinuation of Payment Withholding Pending Verification
(1) The purpose of this determination is to approve your
[identify system(s)] pending verification, discontinue the payment
withhold as identified in the Contracting Officer's determination
dated YYYY/MM/DD, and release previous amounts withheld on the
contracts in Attachment A, in accordance with clause 48 CFR 952.242-
71, Contractor Business System.
(2) The discontinuation of the payment withhold is made pending
receipt of verification and based on my review of the evidence
submitted by the Contractor that all the Contractor's system(s)
deficiencies identified in the Contracting Officer's determination
dated YYYY/MM/DD have been corrected.
(3) [For invoice payments use the following paragraph.] For
invoice payments in Vendor Invoicing Payment Electronic Reporting
system (VIPERS), the Contractor is authorized to submit an invoice
in the amount of $XXXXXXXX. The billed amount should be submitted on
the same type of invoice as the withhold was originally taken, as
appropriate.
[For advance payments under a special bank account (letter of
credit) use the following paragraph.] For advance payments under a
special bank account (letter of credit), the Contractor is
authorized to submit a request for cash withdrawal for amount of
$XXXXXXXX.
[End of notice]
(4) Discontinuation of Payment Withholding. Use the sample format
or similar format if payment withholding is discontinued after auditor
or functional specialist verification that the Contractor has corrected
all significant deficiencies, in accordance with clause 48 CFR 952.242-
71, Contractor Business System. Tailor the notice in paragraph (3) to
use the appropriate version to reflect invoice payments or advance
payments under a special bank account (letter of credit).
[Begin of notice]
Discontinuation of Payment Withholding
(1) The purpose of this determination is to approve your
[identify system(s)], discontinue the payment withhold as identified
in the Contracting Officer's determination dated YYYY/MM/DD, and
release previous amounts withheld on the contracts in Attachment A,
in accordance with clause 48 CFR 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System.
(2) The discontinuation of the payment withhold is made based on
verification that all the Contractor's system(s) deficiencies
identified in the Contracting Officer's final determination dated
YYYY/MM/DD have been corrected.
(3) [For invoice payments use the following paragraph.] For
invoice payments in Vendor Invoicing Payment Electronic Reporting
system (VIPERS), the Contractor is authorized to submit an invoice
in the amount of $XXXXXXXX. The billed amount should be submitted on
the same type of invoice as the withhold was originally taken, as
appropriate.
[For advance payments under a special bank account (letter of
credit) use the following paragraph.] For advance payments under a
special bank account (letter of credit), the Contractor is
authorized to submit a request for cash withdrawal for amount of
$XXXXXXXX.
[End of notice]
(e) Contractor performance information. The contracting officer, or
designee, shall evaluate the contractor's business system performance
and compliance in all evaluations in accordance with 48 CFR 42.15 and
DOE procedures.
(f) Contract closeout. At the end of contract performance, if
significant deficiencies remain in the disapproved system or systems
and payment withholdings are in effect, the payment withholdings will
be released during contract closeout. However, the release of the
payment withholdings from one contract will not mean the system is
approved. If there are other contracts where payment withholdings are
in effect, the payment withholdings will continue on those contracts.
These payment withholding are contract financing payments; therefore,
these payments withholdings are not subject to the interest penalty
provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
942.7005 Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at 942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.242-71, Contractor Business System, in solicitations and contracts
in support of a Capital Asset Project (other than a management and
operating contract), as prescribed in DOE O 413.3B, or current version,
or for a non-capital asset project as described at 915.407-5-70(b)(2),
for a prime contract, the total contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options, or when the total contract value exceeds $10 million
or more, including options, (but less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (e.g., significant estimating problems are
[[Page 18429]]
believed to exist or the contractor's sales are predominantly
Government) when--
(a) The resulting contract will be--
(1) Fixed-price contract awarded to a large business to include
contractor teaming arrangement on the basis of adequate price
competition without submission of cost or pricing data; or
(2) A covered contract as defined in 942.7001(a); and
(b) The solicitation or contract includes any of the following
clauses:
(1) 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements.
(2) 952.234-71, Earned Value Management System.
(3) 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration.
(4) 952.244-71, Contractor Purchasing System Administration.
(5) 952.245-70, Contractor Property Management System
Administration.
0
6. Add subpart 942.71 to part 942 to read as follows:
Subpart 942.71--Contractor Accounting System and Related Controls
Sec.
942.7101 Definitions.
942.7102 Policy.
942.7103 Contract clause.
Subpart 942.71--Contractor Accounting System and Related Controls
942.7101 Definitions.
As used in this subpart--
Acceptable accounting system and accounting system are defined in
the clause at 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration.
Significant deficiency is defined in the clause at 952.242-72,
Accounting System Administration.
942.7102 Policy.
(a) Contractors receiving cost-reimbursement, incentive type, time-
and-materials, fixed-price, or labor-hour contracts, or contracts which
provide for progress payments based on costs or on a percentage or
stage of completion, shall maintain an accounting system.
(b) When the solicitation or contract includes the clause 952.242-
71 Contractor Business System and related clauses, the cognizant
contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor or functional
specialist, shall--
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I--The Schedule, addresses in the
business administration section, or similar section, that the
contractor shall submit its accounting system for DOE review and
acceptance with full implementation of the system to be in place no
later than 60 days after contract award;
(2) Determine the acceptability of a contractor's accounting system
and approve or disapprove the system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any deficiencies.
(c) In evaluating the acceptability of a contractor's accounting
system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor or
functional specialist, shall determine whether the contractor's
accounting system complies with the system criteria for an acceptable
accounting system as prescribed in the clause at 952.242-72, Accounting
System Administration.
(d) Disposition of findings--(1) Reporting of findings. The auditor
shall document findings and recommendations in a report to the
contracting officer. If the auditor identifies any significant
accounting system deficiencies, the report shall describe the
deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow the contracting officer to
understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The contracting officer shall review
findings and recommendations and, if there are no significant
deficiencies, shall promptly notify the contractor, in writing, that
the contractor's accounting system is acceptable and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more
significant deficiencies (as defined in the clause at 952.242-72,
Accounting System Administration) due to the contractor's failure to
meet one or more of the accounting system criteria in the clause at
952.242-72, the contracting officer shall--
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, provide an initial
determination of deficiencies in writing, describing each significant
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand
the deficiency and provide a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial
determination within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response or if the
contractor does not submit a response, the date the response was due,
in consultation with the auditor or cognizant functional specialist,
evaluate the contractor's response or the contractor's lack of response
and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The contracting officer shall make a
final determination and notify the contractor, in writing, that--
(A) The contractor's accounting system is acceptable and approved,
and no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain. The notice shall identify any
remaining significant deficiencies, and indicate the adequacy of any
proposed or completed corrective action. The contracting officer
shall--
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the
final determination, either correct the deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies;
(2) Make a determination to disapprove the system in accordance
with the clause at 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor's corrective action and the correction
of significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractor's corrective action. The contracting
officer or designee shall monitor the contractor's progress in
correcting deficiencies. If the contractor fails to make adequate
progress, the contracting officer shall take whatever action is
necessary to ensure that the contractor corrects the deficiencies.
Examples of actions the contracting officer can take include
disapproving the system; implementing or increasing the withholding in
accordance with 952.242-71, Contractor Business System, if applicable;
and recommending non-award of potential contracts.
(B) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the
significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall request that
the auditor review the correction to determine if the deficiencies have
been resolved. (2) The contracting officer shall determine if the
contractor has corrected the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification
shall be sent to the auditor, invoice approving official, payment
office, appropriate action officers responsible for reporting past
performance, affected DOE contracting offices having substantial
business with the contractor, and the Department of Energy's or
National Nuclear Security Administration's Heads of the Contracting
Activities and Senior Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve
a previously disapproved accounting system and notify the contractor
when the contracting officer determines that
[[Page 18430]]
there are no remaining significant deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting
officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve
a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a
previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the
auditor, invoice approving official, payment office, and affected
contracting offices.
(g) Mitigating the risk of accounting system deficiencies on
specific proposals. (1) The functional specialist or field pricing team
shall discuss identified accounting system deficiencies and their
impact in all reports on contractor proposals until the deficiencies
are resolved.
(2) The contracting officer responsible for negotiation of a
proposal generated by an accounting system with an identified
deficiency shall evaluate whether the deficiency impacts the
negotiations. If it does not, the contracting officer should proceed
with negotiations. If it does, the contracting officer should consider
other alternatives, e.g.--
(i) Allowing the contractor additional time to correct the
accounting system deficiency and submit a corrected proposal;
(ii) Considering another type of contract;
(iii) Using additional cost analysis techniques to determine the
reasonableness of the cost elements affected by the accounting system's
deficiency;
(iv) Reducing the negotiation objective for profit or fee; or
(v) Including a contract (reopener) clause that provides for
adjustment of the contract amount after award.
(3) The contracting officer is responsible for negotiating price
adjustments required by the clause. Any reopener clause necessitated by
an accounting system deficiency should--
(i) Clearly identify the amounts and items that are in question at
the time of negotiation;
(ii) Indicate a specific time or subsequent event by which the
contractor will submit a supplemental proposal, including certified
cost or pricing data, identifying the cost impact adjustment
necessitated by the deficient accounting system;
(iii) Provide for the contracting officer to adjust the contract
price unilaterally if the contractor fails to submit the supplemental
proposal; and
(iv) Provide that failure of the Government and the contractor to
agree to the price adjustment shall be a dispute under the Disputes
clause.
942.7103 Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at 942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.242-72, Accounting System Administration, in solicitations and
contracts when contemplating a contract in support of a Capital Asset
Project (other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed
in DOE O 413.3B, or current version, or for a non-capital asset project
as described at 915.407-5-70(b)(2), for a prime contract, when the
total contract value exceeds $50 million, including options, or when
the prime contract totaling $10 million or more including options (but
less than $50 million) and the contracting officer determines it to be
in the best interest of the Government (e.g., significant estimating
problems are believed to exist or the contractor's sales are
predominantly Government and--
(a) A cost-reimbursement, incentive type, time-and-materials, or
labor-hour contract;
(b) A contract with progress payments made on the basis of costs
incurred by the contractor or on a percentage or stage of completion;
or
(c) A fixed-price contract that is not a small business set-aside.
0
7. Add part 944 to Subchapter G to read as follows:
PART 944--SUBCONTRACTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
Subpart 944.3--Contractors' Purchasing System Reviews
Sec.
944.301 Objective.
944.303 Extent of review.
944.305 Granting, withholding, or withdrawing approval.
944.305-70 Policy.
944.305-71 Contract clause.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq. and 50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq.
Subpart 944.3--Contractors' Purchasing System Reviews
944.301 Objective.
The contracting officer is responsible for initiating reviews of
the contractor's purchasing systems, but other organizations may
request that the contracting officer initiate such reviews.
944.303 Extent of review.
In addition to the review requirements of 48 CFR 44.303, the
contracting officer shall review the adequacy of rationale documenting
commercial item determinations to ensure compliance with the definition
of ``commercial item'' in 48 CFR 2.101.
944.305 Granting, withholding, or withdrawing approval.
944.305-70 Policy.
The contracting officer shall use the days in this subsection
instead of the days in 48 CFR 44.305-2(c) and 44.305-3(b) to permit the
contractor's response.
(a) When the solicitation or contract includes the clause 952.242-
71 Contractor Business Systems and related clauses, the cognizant
contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing system analyst
or auditor, shall--
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I--The Schedule, addresses in the
business administration section, or similar section, that the
contractor shall submit its purchasing system for DOE review and
acceptance with full implementation of the system to be in place no
later than 60 days after contract award;
(2) Determine the acceptability of the contractor's purchasing
system and approve or disapprove the system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any deficiencies.
(b) In evaluating the acceptability of the contractor's purchasing
system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing
system analyst or auditor, shall determine whether the contractor's
purchasing system complies with the system criteria for an acceptable
purchasing system as described in the clause at 952.244-71, Contractor
Purchasing System Administration.
(c) Disposition of findings--(1) Reporting of findings. The
purchasing system analyst or auditor shall document findings and
recommendations in a report to the contracting officer. If the auditor
or purchasing system analyst identifies any significant purchasing
system deficiencies, the report shall describe the deficiencies in
sufficient detail to allow the contracting officer to understand the
deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The contracting officer shall review
all findings and recommendations and, if there are no significant
deficiencies, shall promptly notify the contractor that the
contractor's purchasing system is acceptable and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more
significant deficiencies (as defined in the clause at 952.244-71,
Contractor Purchasing System Administration) due to the contractor's
failure to meet one or more of the purchasing system criteria in the
clause at 952.244-71, the contracting officer shall--
[[Page 18431]]
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, provide an initial
determination of deficiencies in writing, describing each significant
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand
the deficiency and provide a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial
determination within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response or if the
contractor does not submit a response, the date the response was due,
in consultation with the auditor or cognizant functional specialist,
evaluate the contractor's response or the contractor's lack of response
and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The contracting officer shall make a
final determination and notify the contractor, in writing, that--
(A) The contractor's purchasing system is acceptable and approved,
and no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain. The notice shall identify any
remaining significant deficiencies, and indicate the adequacy of any
proposed or completed corrective action. The contracting officer
shall--
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the
final determination, either correct the deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 952.244-
71, Contractor Purchasing System Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Monitoring a contractor's corrective action and the correction
of significant deficiencies.
(A) Monitoring contractors' corrective action. The contracting
officer and either the purchasing system analyst or auditor shall
monitor the contractor's progress in correcting deficiencies. If the
contractor fails to make adequate progress, the contracting officer
shall take whatever action is necessary to ensure that the contractor
corrects the deficiencies. Examples of actions the contracting officer
can take include withdraw or withhold approval of the system or
implementing or increasing the withholding in accordance with 952.242-
71, Contractor Business System, and recommending non-award of potential
contracts.
(B) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the
significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall request the
purchasing system analyst or auditor to review the correction to
determine if the deficiencies have been resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall determine if the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification
shall be sent to the purchasing system analyst, auditor, invoice
approving official, payment office, appropriate action officers
responsible for reporting past performance, and the Department of
Energy's or National Nuclear Security Administration's Heads of the
Contracting Activities and Senior Procurement Executives.
(d) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve
a previously disapproved purchasing system and notify the contractor
when the contracting officer determines that there are no remaining
significant deficiencies.
(e) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting
officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve
a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a
previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the
auditor, invoice approving official, payment office, and affected
contracting offices.
(f) Mitigating the risk of purchasing system deficiencies on
specific proposals.
(1) The functional specialist shall discuss identified purchasing
system deficiencies and their impact in all reports on contractor
proposals until the deficiencies are resolved.
(2) The contracting officer responsible for negotiation of a
proposal generated by a purchasing system with an identified deficiency
shall evaluate whether the deficiency impacts the negotiations. If it
does not, the contracting officer should proceed with negotiations. If
it does, the contracting officer should consider other alternatives,
e.g.--
(i) Allowing the contractor additional time to correct the
purchasing system deficiency and submit a corrected proposal;
(ii) Considering another type of contract, e.g., a fixed-price
incentive (firm target) contract instead of firm-fixed-price;
(iii) Using additional cost analysis techniques to determine the
reasonableness of the cost elements affected by the purchasing system's
deficiency;
(iv) Segregating the questionable areas as a cost-reimbursable line
item;
(v) Reducing the negotiation objective for profit or fee; or
(vi) Including a contract (reopener) clause that provides for
adjustment of the contract amount after award.
(3) The contracting officer is responsible for negotiating price
adjustments required by the clause. Any reopener clause necessitated by
a purchasing system deficiency shall--
(i) Clearly identify the amounts and items that are in question at
the time of negotiation;
(ii) Indicate a specific time or subsequent event by which the
contractor will submit a supplemental proposal, including certified
cost or pricing data, identifying the cost impact adjustment
necessitated by the deficient purchasing system;
(iii) Provide for the contracting officer to adjust the contract
price unilaterally if the contractor fails to submit the supplemental
proposal; and
(iv) Provide that failure of the Government and the contractor to
agree to the price adjustment shall be a dispute under the Disputes
clause.
944.305-71 Contract clause.
Unless one of the exceptions at 942.7003 applies, use the clause at
952.244-71, Contractor Purchasing System Administration, in
solicitations and contracts, in support of a Capital Asset Project
(other than a management and operating contract), as prescribed in DOE
O 413.3B, or current version, or for a non-capital asset project as
described at 915.407-5-70(b)(2), for a prime contract, when the total
contract value exceeds $50 million, including options, or when the
prime contract totaling $10 million or more including options (but less
than $50 million) and the contracting officer determines it to be in
the best interest of the Government (significant purchasing problems
are believed to exist or the contractor's sales are predominantly
Government and containing the clause at 48 CFR 52.244-2, Subcontracts.
PART 945--GOVERNMENT PROPERTY
0
8. Add section 945.105 to read as follows:
945.105 Contractor's property management system compliance.
(a) Definitions--
(1) Acceptable property management system and property management
system are defined in the clause at 952.245-70, Contractor Property
Management System Administration.
[[Page 18432]]
(2) Significant deficiency is defined in the clause at 952.245-70,
Contractor Property Management System Administration.
(b) Policy. When the solicitation or contract includes the clause
952.242-71 Contractor Business System and related clauses, the
cognizant contracting officer, in consultation with the property
administrator, shall--
(1) Ensure that contract, Part I--The Schedule, addresses in the
business administration section, or similar section, that the
contractor shall submit its property management system for DOE review
and acceptance with full implementation of the system to be in place no
later than 60 days after contract award;
(2) Determine the acceptability of the system and approve or
disapprove the system; and
(3) Pursue correction of any deficiencies.
(c) In evaluating the acceptability of a contractor's property
management system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the
property administrator, shall determine whether the contractor's
property management system complies with the system criteria for an
acceptable property management system as prescribed in the clause at
952.245-70, Contractor Property Management System Administration.
(d) Disposition of findings--(1) Reporting of findings. The
property administrator shall document findings and recommendations in a
report to the contracting officer. If the property administrator
identifies any significant property system deficiencies, the report
shall describe the deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow the
contracting officer to understand the deficiencies.
(2) Initial determination. (i) The contracting officer shall review
findings and recommendations and, if there are no significant
deficiencies, shall promptly notify the contractor, in writing, that
the contractor's property management system is acceptable and approved;
or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more
significant deficiencies (as defined in the clause at 952.245-70,
Contractor Property Management System Administration) due to the
contractor's failure to meet one or more of the property management
system criteria in the clause at 952.245-70, the contracting officer
shall--
(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, provide an initial
determination of deficiencies in writing, describing each significant
deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand
the deficiency and provide a copy of the report to the contractor;
(B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial
determination within 30 days; and
(C) Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response or if the
contractor does not submit a response, the date the response was due,
the contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor or cognizant
functional specialist, should evaluate the contractor's response or the
contractor's lack of response and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination. (i) The contracting officer shall make a
final determination and notify the contractor, in writing, that--
(A) The contractor's property management system is acceptable and
approved, and no significant deficiencies remain, or
(B) Significant deficiencies remain. The notice shall identify any
remaining significant deficiencies, and indicate the adequacy of any
proposed or completed corrective action.
The contracting officer shall--
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the
final determination, either correct the deficiencies or submit an
acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to
eliminate the deficiencies;
(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 952.245-
70, Contractor Property Management System Administration; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii)(A) Monitoring contractor's corrective action. The contracting
officer and property administrator shall monitor the contractor's
progress in correcting deficiencies. If the contractor fails to make
adequate progress, the contracting officer shall take whatever action
is necessary to ensure that the contractor corrects the deficiencies.
Examples of actions the contracting officer can take include withdraw
or withhold approval of the system; or implementing or increasing the
withholding in accordance with the clause at 952.242.71, Contractor
Business System, and recommending non-award of potential contracts.
(B) Correction of significant deficiencies. (1) When the contractor
notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the
significant deficiencies, the contracting officer shall request the
property administrator to review the correction to determine if the
deficiencies have been resolved.
(2) The contracting officer shall determine if the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies.
(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has
corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification
shall be sent to the property administrator, auditor, invoice approving
official, payment office, appropriate action officers responsible for
reporting past performance, and the Department of Energy's or National
Nuclear Security Administration's Heads of the Contracting Activities
and Senior Procurement Executives.
(e) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve
a previously disapproved property management system and notify the
contractor when the contracting officer determines, in consultation
with the property administrator, that there are no remaining
significant deficiencies.
(f) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting
officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve
a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a
previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the
auditor, invoice approving official, payment office, and affected
contracting offices.
0
9. Add section 945.107 to read as follows:
945.107 Contract clauses.
(a) Unless one of the exceptions at 942.7003 applies, use the
clause at 952.245-70, Contractor Property Management System
Administration, in solicitations and contracts in support of a Capital
Asset Project, (other than a management and operating contract as
described at 917.6), as prescribed in DOE O 413.3B, or current version,
or for a non-capital asset project as described at 915.407-5-70(b)(2),
for a prime contract, when the total contract value exceeds $50
million, including options, or when the prime contract totaling $10
million or more including options (but less than $50 million) and the
contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the
Government (significant property problems are believed to exist or the
contractor's sales are predominantly Government) and containing the
clause at 48 CFR 52.245-1, Government Property. (b) For negotiated
fixed-price contract, not subject to 48 CFR 942.7002, awarded on a
basis other than submission of certified cost or pricing data for which
Government property is provided, use the clause at 48 CFR 52.245-1,
Government Property, without its Alternate I.
[[Page 18433]]
PART 952--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
0
10. Revise section 952.215-70 introductory text to read as follows:
952.215-70 Key Personnel.
As prescribed in 915.408-70(a), the contracting officer shall
insert the following clause:
* * * * *
0
11. Add section 952.215.71 to read as follows:
952.215-71 Cost estimating system requirements.
As prescribed in 915.408-70(b), use the following clause:
COST ESTIMATING SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS (xxx 201x)
(a) Definitions.
Acceptable estimating system means an estimating system that
complies with the system criteria in paragraph (d) of this clause,
and provides for a system that--
(1) Is maintained, reliable, and consistently applied;
(2) Produces verifiable, supportable, documented, and timely
cost estimates that are an acceptable basis for negotiation of fair
and reasonable prices;
(3) Is consistent with and integrated with the Contractor's
related management systems; and
(4) Is subject to applicable financial control systems.
Estimating system means the Contractor's policies, procedures,
and practices for budgeting and planning controls, and generating
estimates of costs and other data included in proposals submitted to
customers in the expectation of receiving contract awards or
contract modifications. Estimating system includes the
Contractor's--
(1) Organizational structure;
(2) Established lines of authority, duties, and
responsibilities;
(3) Internal controls and managerial reviews;
(4) Flow of work, coordination, and communication; and
(5) Budgeting, planning, estimating methods, techniques,
accumulation of historical costs, and other analyses used to
generate cost estimates.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming in the system that
materially affects the ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish, maintain, and
comply with an acceptable estimating system.
(c) Applicability. Paragraphs (d) and (e) of this clause apply
if the Contractor is a large business to include a contractor
teaming arrangement, as defined at 48 CFR 9.601(1), performing a
contract in support of a Capital Asset Project (other than a
management and operating contract as described at 917.6), as
prescribed in DOE Order (DOE O) 413.3B, or current version; or a
non-capital asset project and either--
(1) The total prime contract value exceeds $50 million,
including options; or
(2) The Contractor was notified, in writing, by the Contracting
Officer that paragraphs (d) and (e) of this clause apply.
(d) System requirements. (1) The Contractor shall disclose its
estimating system to the Contracting Officer, in writing. If the
Contractor wishes the Government to protect the information as
privileged or confidential, the Contractor must mark the documents
with the appropriate legends before submission. If the Contractor
plans to adopt the existing system from the previous Contractor, the
Contractor is responsible for the system and shall comply with the
system requirements required in this clause.
(2) An estimating system disclosure is acceptable when the
Contractor has provided the Contracting Officer with documentation
no later than 60 days after contract award that--
(i) Accurately describes those policies, procedures, and
practices that the Contractor currently uses in preparing cost
proposals; and
(ii) Provides sufficient detail for the Government to reasonably
make an informed judgment regarding the acceptability of the
Contractor's estimating practices.
(3) The Contractor shall--
(i) Comply with its disclosed estimating system; and
(ii) Disclose significant changes to the cost estimating system
to the Contracting Officer on a timely basis.
(4) The Contractor's estimating system shall provide for the use
of appropriate source data, utilize sound estimating techniques and
good judgment, maintain a consistent approach, and adhere to
established policies and procedures. An acceptable estimating system
shall accomplish the following functions:
(i) Establish clear responsibility for preparation, review, and
approval of cost estimates and budgets.
(ii) Provide a written description of the organization and
duties of the personnel responsible for preparing, reviewing, and
approving cost estimates and budgets.
(iii) Ensure that relevant personnel have sufficient training,
experience, and guidance to perform estimating and budgeting tasks
in accordance with the Contractor's established procedures.
(iv) Identify and document the sources of data and the
estimating methods and rationale used in developing cost estimates
and budgets.
(v) Provide for adequate supervision throughout the estimating
and budgeting process.
(vi) Provide for consistent application of estimating and
budgeting techniques.
(vii) Provide for detection and timely correction of errors.
(viii) Protect against cost duplication and omissions.
(ix) Provide for the use of historical experience, including
historical vendor pricing information, where appropriate.
(x) Require use of appropriate analytical methods.
(xi) Integrate information available from other management
systems.
(xii) Require management review, including verification of
compliance with the company's estimating and budgeting policies,
procedures, and practices.
(xiii) Provide for internal review of, and accountability for,
the acceptability of the estimating system, including the budgetary
data supporting indirect cost estimates and comparisons of projected
results to actual results, and an analysis of any differences.
(xiv) Provide procedures to update cost estimates and notify the
Contracting Officer in a timely manner.
(xv) Provide procedures that ensure subcontract prices are
reasonable based on a documented review and analysis provided with
the prime proposal, when practicable.
(xvi) Provide estimating and budgeting practices that
consistently generate sound proposals that are compliant with the
provisions of the solicitation and are adequate to serve as a basis
to reach a fair and reasonable price.
(xvii) Have an adequate system description, including policies,
procedures, and estimating and budgeting practices, that comply with
the Federal Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR chapter 1) and Department
of Energy Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR chapter 9).
(e) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contracting Officer will
provide an initial determination to the Contractor, in writing, of
any significant deficiencies. The initial determination will
describe the deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the Contractor
to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30 days to a written
initial determination from the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor's estimating system. If
the Contractor disagrees with the initial determination, the
Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale for disagreeing.
In the event the Contractor did not respond in writing to the
initial determination within the response time, this lack of
response shall indicate that the Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response or the Contractor's lack of response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the Contracting Officer's final
determination concerning--
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective
action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting Officer determines
that one or more significant deficiencies remain.
(f) If the Contractor receives the Contracting Officer's final
determination of significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct
the significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective
action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies.
(g) Withholding payments. If the Contracting Officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the Contractor's estimating
system, and the contract includes
[[Page 18434]]
the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business System, the
Contracting Officer will withhold payments in accordance with that
clause.
(End of clause)
0
12. Add section 952.234.70 to read as follows:
952.234-70 Notice of earned value management system.
As prescribed in 934.203(a), use the following provision:
NOTICE OF EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (xxx 201x)
(a) If the offeror submits a proposal for a Department of Energy
(DOE) Capital Asset Project--
(1) In the amount of $50,000,000 or more; or
(2) Where the offeror has a contract or other contracts in
support of DOE Capital Asset Projects and the total contract values
are $20,000,000 or greater per contract for a total contract values
of $50,000,000 or more--
(i) The offeror shall provide documentation that an authorized
government representative has determined that the proposed Earned
Value Management System (EVMS) complies with the EVMS guidelines in
the American National Standards Institute/Electronic Industries
Alliance Standard 748, Earned Value Management Systems (ANSI/EIA-
748) (current version at time of solicitation). The Government
reserves the right to perform reviews of the EVMS when deemed
necessary to verify compliance.
(ii) If the offeror proposes to use a system that has not been
determined to be in compliance with the requirements of paragraph
(a)(1) of this provision, the offeror shall submit a comprehensive
plan for compliance with the guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748.
(A) The plan shall--
(1) Describe the EVMS the offeror intends to use in performance
of the contract, and how the proposed EVMS complies with the EVMS
guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748;
(2) Distinguish between the offeror's existing management system
and modifications proposed to meet the EVMS guidelines;
(3) Describe the management system and its application in terms
of the EVMS guidelines;
(4) Describe the proposed procedure for administration of the
EVMS guidelines as applied to subcontractors; and
(5) Describe the process the offeror will use to determine
subcontractor compliance with ANSI/EIA-748.
(B) The offeror shall provide information and assistance as
required by the Contracting Officer to support review of the plan.
(C) The offeror's EVMS plan must provide milestones that
indicate when the offeror anticipates that the EVMS will be
compliant with the guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748.
(b) If the offeror submits a proposal in an amount less than
$50,000,000 and does not meet the condition described at (a)(2)
above--
(1) The offeror shall submit a written description of the
management procedures it will use and maintain in the performance of
any resultant contract to comply with the requirements of the Earned
Value Management System clause of the contract. The description
shall include--
(i) A matrix that correlates each guideline in ANSI/EIA-748
(current version at time of solicitation) to the corresponding
process in the offeror's written management procedures; and
(ii) The process the offeror will use to determine subcontractor
compliance with ANSI/EIA-748.
(2) If the offeror proposes to use an EVMS that has been
determined by the CFA to be in compliance with the EVMS guidelines
in ANSI/EIA-748, the offeror may submit a copy of the documentation
of such determination instead of the written description required by
paragraph (b)(1) of this provision.
(c) The offeror shall identify the subcontractors (or the
subcontracted effort if subcontractors have not been selected) to
whom the EVMS requirements will apply. The offeror and the
Government shall agree to the contractors or the subcontracted
effort selected for application of the EVMS requirements. The
offeror shall be responsible for ensuring that the selected
subcontractors comply with the requirements of the Earned Value
Management System clause of the contract.
(End of provision)
0
13. Add section 952.234.71 to read as follows:
952.234-71 Earned value management system.
As prescribed in 934.203(b), use the following clause:
EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause--
Acceptable earned value management system means an earned value
management system that generally complies with system criteria in
paragraph (b) of this clause.
Earned value management system means an earned value management
system that complies with the earned value management system
guidelines in the ANSI/EIA-748.
Over Target Baseline means an overrun to the Contract Budget
Base (CBB) which is formally incorporated into the Performance
Measurement Baseline (PMB) for management purposes.
Over Target Schedule means the term used to describe a condition
where a baseline schedule is time-phased beyond the contract
completion date.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming in the system that
materially affects the ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) System criteria. In the performance of this contract, the
Contractor shall use--
(1) An Earned Value Management System (EVMS) that complies with
the EVMS guidelines in the American National Standards Institute/
Electronic Industries Alliance Standard 748, Earned Value Management
Systems (ANSI/EIA-748) (current version at time of award; and
(2) Management procedures. (i) Management procedures provide for
generation of timely, reliable, and verifiable information for the
Department of Energy (DOE) Integrated Program Management Report
(IPMR) data item of this contract.
(ii) The Contractor shall use Department of Energy's (DOE)
modified version of Department of Defense's Data Item Description
(DID) Integrated Program Management Report (IPMR), DI-MGMT-81861,
(DOE version, current version at time of contract award) which
contains data for measuring cost and schedule performance for this
DOE contract. The Contractor shall submit the data electronically by
uploading the data into the Project Assessment and Reporting System
(PARS II) in accordance with the ``Contractor Project Performance
Upload Requirements'' document maintained by the DOE Office of
Acquisition and Project Management (OAPM). All requested data shall
be submitted timely and accurately, and shall be current as of the
close of the previous month's accounting period.
(c) If the Contractor has one or more DOE contracts valued at
$20,000,000 or greater per contract for a total contract value of
$50,000,000 or more which support DOE Capital Asset Projects, the
Contractor shall use an EVMS that has been determined to be
acceptable by DOE. If, at the time of award, the Contractor's EVMS
has not been determined by DOE to be in compliance with the EVMS
guidelines as stated in paragraph (b)(1) of this clause, the
Contractor shall apply its current system to the contract and shall
take necessary actions to meet the milestones in the Contractor's
EVMS plan.
(d) If this contract has a total value of less than $50,000,000
and does not meet the condition described at (c) above, the
Government will not make a formal determination that the
Contractor's EVMS complies with the EVMS guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748
with respect to the contract. The use of the Contractor's EVMS for
this contract does not imply a Government determination of the
Contractor's compliance with the EVMS guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748 for
application to future contracts.
(e) The Contractor shall submit notification of all proposed
changes to the EVMS procedures and the impact of those changes to
DOE. If this contractor has one or more contracts in support of DOE
Capital Asset Projects and the total contract values are $20,000,000
or greater per contract for total contract values of $50,000,000 or
more, unless a waiver is granted by DOE, any EVMS changes proposed
by the Contractor require approval of DOE prior to implementation.
DOE will advise the Contractor of the acceptability of such changes
as soon as practicable (generally within 30 calendar days) after
receipt of the Contractor's notice of proposed changes. If DOE
waives the advance approval requirements, the Contractor shall
disclose EVMS changes to DOE at least 14 calendar days prior to the
effective date of implementation.
(f) Integrated baseline reviews. (1) The purpose of the
integrated baseline reviews
[[Page 18435]]
(IBR) is to verify the technical content and the realism of the
related performance budgets, resources, and schedules. It should
provide a mutual understanding of the inherent risks in the
offerors'/contractors' performance plans and the underlying
management control systems, and it should formulate a plan to handle
these risks. DOE and the Contractor will use the IBR process
described in the National Defense Industrial Association Program
Management Systems Committee Integrated Baseline Review (NDIA PMSC
IBR) Guide (current version at time of award).
(2) The Government will schedule IBRs as early as practicable,
and the review process will be conducted not later than 180 calendar
days after--
(i) Contract award;
(ii) The exercise of significant contract options; and
(iii) The incorporation of major modifications.
During such reviews, the Government and the Contractor will
jointly assess the Contractor's baseline to be used for performance
measurement to ensure complete coverage of the statement of work,
logical scheduling of the work activities, adequate resourcing, and
identification of inherent risks.
(g) The Contractor shall provide access to all pertinent records
and data requested by the Contracting Officer or duly authorized
representative as necessary to permit Government surveillance to
ensure that the EVMS complies, and continues to comply, with the
performance criteria referenced in paragraph (b) of this clause.
(h) When indicated by contract performance, the Contractor shall
submit a request for approval to initiate an over-target baseline or
over-target schedule to the Contracting Officer. The request shall
include a top-level projection of cost and/or schedule growth, a
determination of whether or not performance variances will be
retained, and a schedule of implementation for the rebaselining. The
Government will acknowledge receipt of the request in a timely
manner (generally within 30 calendar days).
(i) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contracting Officer will
provide an initial determination to the Contractor, in writing, on
any significant deficiencies. The initial determination will
describe the deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the Contractor
to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30 days to a written
initial determination from the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor's EVMS. If the Contractor
disagrees with the initial determination, the Contractor shall
state, in writing, its rationale for disagreeing. In the event the
Contractor did not respond in writing to the initial determination
within the response time, this lack of response shall indicate that
the Contractor agrees with the initial determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response or the Contractor's lack of response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the Contracting Officer's final
determination concerning--
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective
action;
(iii) System noncompliance, when the Contractor's existing EVMS
fails to comply with the earned value management system guidelines
in the ANSI/EIA-748; and
(iv) System disapproval, if initial EVMS validation is not
successfully completed within the timeframe approved by the
Contracting Officer, or if the Contracting Officer determines that
the Contractor's earned value management system contains one or more
significant deficiencies in high-risk guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748
standards (guidelines 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 16, 21, 23, 26, 27,
28, 30, or 32). When the Contracting Officer determines that the
existing earned value management system contains one or more
significant deficiencies in one or more of the remaining 16
guidelines in ANSI/EIA-748 standards, the contracting officer will
use discretion to disapprove the system based on input received from
the DOE Office of Acquisition and Project Management or the DOE
Program Office, herein referred to as the functional specialists.
(4) If the Contractor receives the Contracting Officer's final
determination of significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct
the significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective
action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies.
(j) Withholding payments. If the Contracting Officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the Contractor's EVMS, and the
contract includes the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System, the Contracting Officer will withhold payments in accordance
with that clause.
(k) With the exception of paragraphs (i) and (j) of this clause,
for contracts valued at $20 million or more requiring EVMS, the
contractor shall flow down appropriate EVMS requirements to its
subcontractors in order for the contractor to meet all requirements
of this clause.
[Contracting Officer to insert names of subcontractors (or
subcontracted effort if subcontractors have not been selected)
designated for application of the EVMS requirements of this clause.]
(l) Adopting previous Contractor's previously certified earned
value management (EVM) process. If the Contractor plans to adopt the
existing system from the previous Contractor or DOE-site, the
Contractor is responsible for the system and shall comply with the
system requirements required in this clause. The existing system
shall utilize the same DOE approved EVM Process Description and the
same EVM training as the previous system. The Contractor shall--
(1) Identify the corporate entity which owns the certified EVM
process and provide the certification documentation;
(2) Obtain DOE prior approval or Advanced Agreement including
DOE approval of process changes and joint surveillance;
(3) Be responsible for compliance with the system criteria
required in paragraph (b) of this clause; and
(4) Be responsible for correcting any significant deficiencies
previously identified to the previous Contractor by the Contracting
Officer in accordance with paragraph (i) of this clause. Within 45
days after receiving a copy of the previous contractor's final
determination, the Contractor shall follow paragraph (i)(4) and
either correct any significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable
corrective action plan. The Contracting Officer or designee, will
provide a copy of the previous contractor's final determination.
(End of clause)
0
14. Add section 952.242.71 to read as follows:
952.242-71 Contractor business system.
As prescribed in 942.7002, use the following clause:
CONTRACTOR BUSINESS SYSTEM (xxx 201x)
(a) This clause only applies to fixed-price contract awarded to
a large business on the basis of adequate price competition with or
without submission of cost or pricing data; or covered contract that
is subject to the Cost Accounting Standards under 41 U.S.C. chapter
15, as implemented in regulations found at 48 CFR 9903.201-1(a) and
is not exempted at 9903.201-1(b)(1) through (14) (see the 48 CFR
Appendix).
(b) Definitions. As used in this clause--
Acceptable contractor business system means contractor business
system that comply with the terms and conditions of the applicable
business system clauses listed in the definition of ``contractor
business system'' in this clause.
Contractor business system means--
(1) Accounting system, if this contract includes the clause at
48 CFR 952.242-72, Accounting System Administration;
(2) Earned value management system, if this contract includes
the clause at 48 CFR 952.234-70, Earned Value Management System;
(3) Estimating system, if this contract includes the clause at
48 CFR 952.215-71, Cost Estimating System Requirements;
(4) Property management system, if this contract includes the
clause at 48 CFR 952.245-70, Contractor Property Management System
Administration; and
(5) Purchasing system, if this contract includes the clause at
48 CFR 952.244-71, Contractor Purchasing System Administration.
Significant deficiency, in the case of a contractor business
system, means a shortcoming in the system that materially affects
the ability of officials of the Department of Energy to rely upon
information produced by the system that is needed for management
purposes.
(c) General. The Contractor shall establish and maintain
acceptable business systems in accordance with the terms and
conditions of this contract. If the Contractor plans to adopt any
existing business system from the previous Contractor, the
Contractor is responsible for the system and shall comply with the
system requirements and criteria required in that specific business
system clause.
[[Page 18436]]
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contractor shall respond,
in writing, within 30 days to an initial determination that there
are one or more significant deficiencies in one or more of the
Contractor's business systems.
(2) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response and notify the Contractor, in writing, of the final
determination as to whether the Contractor's business system
contains significant deficiencies. If the Contracting Officer
determines that the Contractor's business system contains
significant deficiencies, the final determination will include a
notice to withhold payments.
(e) Withholding payments. (1) If the Contracting Officer issues
the final determination with a notice to withhold payments for
significant deficiencies in a contractor business system required
under this contract, the Contracting Officer will direct the
Contractor, in writing, to withhold five percent from its invoices
until the Contracting Officer has determined that the Contractor has
corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by the
Contracting Officer's final determination. The Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the notice, either--
(i) Correct the deficiencies; or
(ii) Submit an acceptable corrective action plan showing
milestones and actions to eliminate the deficiencies. The plan shall
contain--
(A) Root cause(s) identification of the problem(s);
(B) The proposed corrective action(s) to address the root
cause(s);
(C) A schedule for implementation; and
(D) The name of the person responsible for the implementation.
(2) If the Contractor submits an acceptable corrective action
plan within 45 days of receipt of a notice of the Contracting
Officer's intent to withhold payments, and the Contracting Officer,
in consultation with the auditor or functional specialist,
determines that the Contractor is effectively implementing such
plan, the Contracting Officer will direct the Contractor, in
writing, to reduce the percentage withheld on invoices to two
percent until the Contracting Officer determines the Contractor has
corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by the
Contracting Officer's final determination. However, if at any time,
the Contracting Officer determines that the Contractor has failed to
follow the accepted corrective action plan, the Contracting Officer
will increase withholding and direct the Contractor, in writing, to
increase the percentage withheld on invoices to the percentage
initially withheld, until the Contracting Officer determines that
the Contractor has corrected all significant deficiencies as
directed by the Contracting Officer's final determination.
(3) Payment withhold percentage limits.
(i) The total percentage of payments withheld on amounts due on
this contract shall not exceed--
(A) Five percent for one or more significant deficiencies in any
single contractor business system; and
(B) Ten percent for significant deficiencies in multiple
contractor business systems.
(ii) If this contract contains pre-existing withholds, and the
application of any subsequent payment withholds will cause
withholding under this clause to exceed the payment withhold
percentage limits in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this clause, the
Contracting Officer will reduce the payment withhold percentage in
the final determination to an amount that will not exceed the
payment withhold percentage limits.
(4) For the purpose of this clause, payment means invoicing for
any of the following payments authorized under this contract:
(i) Interim payments under--
(A) Cost-reimbursement contracts;
(B) Incentive type contracts;
(C) Time-and-materials contracts; or
(D) Labor-hour contracts.
(ii) Progress payments to include fixed-price contracts.
(iii) Performance-based payments to include fixed-price
contracts.
(5) Payment withholding shall not apply to payments on fixed-
price line items where performance is complete and the items were
accepted by the Government.
(6) The withholding of any amount or subsequent payment to the
Contractor shall not be construed as a waiver of any rights or
remedies the Government has under this contract.
(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of any clause in this
contract providing for interim, partial, or other payment
withholding on any basis, the Contracting Officer may withhold
payment in accordance with the provisions of this clause.
(8) The payment withholding authorized in this clause is not
subject to the interest-penalty provisions of the Prompt Payment
Act.
(f) Correction of deficiencies. (1) The Contractor shall notify
the Contracting Officer, in writing, when the Contractor has
corrected the business system's deficiencies.
(2) Once the Contractor has notified the Contracting Officer
that all deficiencies have been corrected, the Contracting Officer
will take one of the following actions:
(i) If the Contracting Officer determines that the Contractor
has corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by the
Contracting Officer's final determination, the Contracting Officer
will direct the Contractor, in writing, to discontinue the payment
withholding from invoices under this contract associated with the
Contracting Officer's final determination, and authorize the
Contractor to bill for any monies previously withheld that are not
also being withheld due to other significant deficiencies. Any
payment withholding under this contract due to other significant
deficiencies, will remain in effect until the Contracting Officer
determines that those significant deficiencies are corrected.
(ii) If the Contracting Officer determines that the Contractor
still has significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall continue
withholding amounts from its invoices in accordance with paragraph
(e) of this clause, and not invoice for any monies previously
withheld.
(iii) If the Contracting Officer determines, based on the
evidence submitted by the Contractor, that there is a reasonable
expectation that the corrective actions have been implemented and
are expected to correct the significant deficiencies, the
Contracting Officer will discontinue withholding payments, and
release any payments previously withheld directly related to the
significant deficiencies identified in the Contractor notification,
and direct the Contractor, in writing, to discontinue the payment
withholding from invoices associated with the Contracting Officer's
final determination, and authorize the Contractor to bill for any
monies previously withheld.
(iv) If, within 90 days of receipt of the Contractor
notification that the Contractor has corrected the significant
deficiencies, the Contracting Officer has not made a determination
in accordance with paragraphs (f)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this
clause, the Contracting Officer will direct the Contractor, in
writing, to reduce the payment withholding from invoices directly
related to the significant deficiencies identified in the Contractor
notification by a specified percentage that is at least 50 percent,
but not authorize the Contractor to bill for any monies previously
withheld until the Contracting Officer makes a determination in
accordance with paragraphs (f)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this clause.
(v) At any time after the Contracting Officer directs the
Contractor to reduce or discontinue the payment withholding from
invoices under this contract, if the Contracting Officer determines
that the Contractor has failed to correct the significant
deficiencies identified in the Contractor's notification, the
Contracting Officer will reinstate or increase withholding and
direct the Contractor, in writing, to reinstate or increase the
percentage withheld on invoices to the percentage initially
withheld, until the Contracting Officer determines that the
Contractor has corrected all significant deficiencies as directed by
the Contracting Officer's final determination.
(End of clause)
0
15. Add section 952.242.72 to read as follows:
952.242-72 Accounting system administration.
As prescribed in 942.7103, use the following clause:
ACCOUNTING SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION (XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause--
(1) Acceptable accounting system means a system that complies
with the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this clause to provide
reasonable assurance that--
(i) Applicable laws and regulations are complied with;
(ii) The accounting system and cost data are reliable;
(iii) Risk of misallocations and mischarges are minimized; and
(iv) Contract allocations and charges are consistent with
billing procedures.
(2) Accounting system means the Contractor's system or systems
for accounting methods, procedures, and controls
[[Page 18437]]
established to gather, record, classify, analyze, summarize,
interpret, and present accurate and timely financial data for
reporting in compliance with applicable laws, regulations, and
management decisions, and may include subsystems for specific areas
such as indirect and other direct costs, compensation, billing,
labor, and general information technology.
(3) Significant deficiency means a shortcoming in the system
that materially affects the ability of officials of the Department
of Energy to rely upon information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish and maintain an
acceptable accounting system. If the Contractor plans to adopt the
existing system from the previous Contractor, the Contractor is
responsible for the system and shall comply with the system criteria
required in this clause. The Contractor shall provide in writing to
the Contracting Officer documentation that its accounting system
meets the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this clause no later
than 60 days after contract award. Failure to maintain an acceptable
accounting system, as defined in this clause, shall result in the
withholding of payments if the contract includes the clause at 48
CFR 952.242-71, Contractor Business System, and also may result in
disapproval of the system.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor's accounting system shall
provide for--
(1) A sound internal control environment, accounting framework,
and organizational structure;
(2) Proper segregation of direct costs from indirect costs;
(3) Identification and accumulation of direct costs by contract;
(4) A logical and consistent method for the accumulation and
allocation of indirect costs to intermediate and final cost
objectives;
(5) Accumulation of costs under general ledger control;
(6) Reconciliation of subsidiary cost ledgers and cost
objectives to general ledger;
(7) Approval and documentation of adjusting entries;
(8) Management reviews or internal audits of the system to
ensure compliance with the Contractor's established policies,
procedures, and accounting practices;
(9) A timekeeping system that identifies employees' labor by
intermediate or final cost objectives;
(10) A labor distribution system that charges direct and
indirect labor to the appropriate cost objectives;
(11) Interim (at least monthly) determination of costs charged
to a contract through routine posting of books of account;
(12) Exclusion from costs charged to Government contracts of
amounts which are not allowable in terms of 48 CFR part 31, Contract
Cost Principles and Procedures, and other contract provisions;
(13) Identification of costs by contract line item and by units
(as if each unit or line item were a separate contract), if required
by the contract;
(14) Segregation of preproduction costs from production costs,
as applicable;
(15) Cost accounting information, as required--
(i) By contract clauses concerning limitation of cost (48 CFR
52.232-20), limitation of funds (48 CFR 52.232-22), or allowable
cost and payment (48 CFR 52.216-7); and
(ii) To readily calculate indirect cost rates from the books of
accounts;
(16) Billings that can be reconciled to the cost accounts for
both current and cumulative amounts claimed and comply with contract
terms;
(17) Adequate, reliable data for use in pricing follow-on
acquisitions; and
(18) Accounting practices in accordance with standards
promulgated by the Cost Accounting Standards Board, if applicable,
otherwise, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contracting Officer will
provide an initial determination to the Contractor, in writing, on
any significant deficiencies. The initial determination will
describe the deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the Contractor
to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30 days to a written
initial determination from the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor's accounting system. If
the Contractor disagrees with the initial determination, the
Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale for disagreeing.
In the event the Contractor did not respond in writing to the
initial determination within the response time, this lack of
response shall indicate that the Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response or the Contractor's lack of response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the Contracting Officer's final
determination concerning--
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective
action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting Officer determines
that one or more significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the Contracting Officer's final
determination of significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct
the significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective
action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the Contracting Officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the Contractor's accounting
system, and the contract includes the clause 48 CFR 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, the Contracting Officer will withhold
payments in accordance with that clause.
(End of clause)
0
16. Add section 952.244.71 to read as follows:
952.244-71 Contractor purchasing system administration.
As prescribed in 944.305-71, insert the following clause:
CONTRACTOR PURCHASING SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION (XXX 201X)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause--
Acceptable purchasing system means a purchasing system that
complies with the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this clause.
Purchasing system means the Contractor's system or systems for
purchasing and subcontracting, including make-or-buy decisions, the
selection of vendors, analysis of quoted prices, negotiation of
prices with vendors, placing and administering of orders, and
expediting delivery of materials.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming in the system that
materially affects the ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish and maintain an
acceptable purchasing system. If the Contractor plans to adopt the
existing system from the previous Contractor, the Contractor is
responsible for the system and shall comply with the system criteria
required in this clause. The Contractor shall provide in writing to
the Contracting Officer documentation that its purchasing system
meets the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this clause no later
than 60 days after contract award. Failure to maintain an acceptable
purchasing system, as defined in this clause, may result in
disapproval of the system by the Contracting Officer and/or
withholding of payments.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor's purchasing system shall--
(1) Have an adequate system description including policies,
procedures, and purchasing practices that comply with the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) (48 CFR Chapter 1) and the Department
of Energy Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR Chapter 9);
(2) Ensure that all applicable purchase orders and subcontracts
contain all flowdown clauses, including terms and conditions and any
other clauses needed to carry out the requirements of the prime
contract;
(3) Maintain an organization plan that establishes clear lines
of authority and responsibility;
(4) Ensure all purchase orders are based on authorized
requisitions and include a complete and accurate history of purchase
transactions to support vendor selected, price paid, and document
the subcontract/purchase order files which are subject to Government
review;
(5) Establish and maintain adequate documentation to provide a
complete and accurate history of purchase transactions to support
vendors selected and prices paid;
(6) Apply a consistent make-or-buy policy that is in the best
interest of the Government;
(7) Use competitive sourcing to the maximum extent practicable,
and ensure debarred or suspended contractors are properly excluded
from contract award;
(8) Evaluate price, quality, delivery, technical capabilities,
and financial capabilities of competing vendors to ensure fair and
reasonable prices;
(9) Require management level justification and adequate cost or
price analysis, as applicable, for any sole or single source award;
[[Page 18438]]
(10) Perform timely and adequate cost or price analysis and
technical evaluation for each subcontractor and supplier proposal or
quote to ensure fair and reasonable subcontract prices;
(11) Document negotiations in accordance with 48 CFR 15.406-3;
(12) Seek, take, and document economically feasible purchase
discounts, including cash discounts, trade discounts, quantity
discounts, rebates, freight allowances, and company-wide volume
discounts;
(13) Ensure proper type of contract selection and prohibit
issuance of cost-plus-a-percentage-of-cost subcontracts;
(14) Maintain subcontract surveillance to ensure timely delivery
of an acceptable product and procedures to notify the Government of
potential subcontract problems that may impact delivery, quantity,
or price;
(15) Document and justify reasons for subcontract changes that
affect cost or price;
(16) Notify the Government of the award of all subcontracts that
contain the 48 CFR Chapter 1 and 48 CFR Chapter 9 flowdown clauses
that allow for Government audit of those subcontracts, and ensure
the performance of audits of those subcontracts;
(17) Enforce adequate policies on conflict of interest, gifts,
and gratuities, including the requirements of the 41 U.S.C. chapter
87, Kickbacks;
(18) Perform internal audits or management reviews, training,
and maintain policies and procedures for the purchasing department
to ensure the integrity of the purchasing system;
(19) Establish and maintain policies and procedures to ensure
purchase orders and subcontracts contain mandatory and applicable
flowdown clauses, as required by the 48 CFR chapter 1, including
terms and conditions required by the prime contract and any clauses
required to carry out the requirements of the prime contract;
(20) Provide for an organizational and administrative structure
that ensures effective and efficient procurement of required quality
materials and parts at the best value from responsible and reliable
sources;
(21) Establish and maintain selection processes to ensure the
most responsive and responsible sources for furnishing required
quality parts and materials and to promote competitive sourcing
among dependable suppliers so that purchases are reasonably priced
and from sources that meet contractor quality requirements;
(22) Establish and maintain procedures to ensure performance of
adequate price or cost analysis on purchasing actions;
(23) Establish and maintain procedures to ensure that proper
types of subcontracts are selected, and that there are controls over
subcontracting, including oversight and surveillance of
subcontracted effort; and
(24) Establish and maintain procedures to timely notify the
Contracting Officer, in writing, if--
(i) The Contractor changes the amount of subcontract effort
after award such that it exceeds 70 percent of the total cost of the
work to be performed under the contract, task order, or delivery
order. The notification shall identify the revised cost of the
subcontract effort and shall include verification that the
Contractor will provide added value; or
(ii) Any subcontractor changes the amount of lower-tier
subcontractor effort after award such that it exceeds 70 percent of
the total cost of the work to be performed under its subcontract.
The notification shall identify the revised cost of the subcontract
effort and shall include verification that the subcontractor will
provide added value as related to the work to be performed by the
lower-tier subcontractor(s).
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contracting Officer will
provide notification of initial determination to the Contractor, in
writing, of any significant deficiencies. The initial determination
will describe the deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the
Contractor to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30 days to a written
initial determination from the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor's purchasing system. If
the Contractor disagrees with the initial determination, the
Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale for disagreeing.
In the event the Contractor did not respond in writing to the
initial determination within the response time, this lack of
response shall indicate that the Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response or the Contractor's lack of response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the Contracting Officer's final
determination concerning--
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective
action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting Officer determines
that one or more significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the Contracting Officer's final
determination of significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct
the significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective
action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the
deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the Contracting Officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the Contractor's purchasing
system, and the contract includes the clause at 952.242-71,
Contractor Business System, the Contracting Officer will withhold
payments in accordance with that clause.
(End of clause)
0
17. Add section 952.245.70 to read as follows:
952.245-70 Contractor property management system administration.
As prescribed in 945.107(a), insert the following clause:
CONTRACTOR PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION (xxx 201x)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause--
Acceptable property management system means a property system
that complies with the system criteria in paragraph (c) of this
clause.
Property management system means the Contractor's system or
systems for managing and controlling Government property.
Significant deficiency means a shortcoming in the system that
materially affects the ability of officials of the Department of
Energy to rely upon information produced by the system that is
needed for management purposes.
(b) General. The Contractor shall establish and maintain an
acceptable property management system. If the Contractor plans to
adopt the existing system from the previous Contractor, the
Contractor is responsible for the system and shall comply with the
system criteria required in this clause. The Contractor shall
provide in writing to the Contracting Officer documentation that its
property management system meets the system criteria in paragraph
(c) of this clause no later than 60 days after contract award.
Failure to maintain an acceptable property management system, as
defined in this clause, may result in disapproval of the system by
the Contracting Officer and/or withholding of payments.
(c) System criteria. The Contractor's property management system
shall be in accordance with paragraph (f) of the contract clause at
48 CFR 52.245-1.
(d) Significant deficiencies. (1) The Contracting Officer will
provide an initial determination to the Contractor, in writing, of
any significant deficiencies. The initial determination will
describe the deficiency in sufficient detail to allow the Contractor
to understand the deficiency.
(2) The Contractor shall respond within 30 days to a written
initial determination from the Contracting Officer that identifies
significant deficiencies in the Contractor's property management
system. If the Contractor disagrees with the initial determination,
the Contractor shall state, in writing, its rationale for
disagreeing. In the event the Contractor did not respond in writing
to the initial determination within the response time, this lack of
response shall indicate that the Contractor agrees with the initial
determination.
(3) The Contracting Officer will evaluate the Contractor's
response or the Contractor's lack of response and notify the
Contractor, in writing, of the Contracting Officer's final
determination concerning--
(i) Remaining significant deficiencies;
(ii) The adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective
action; and
(iii) System disapproval, if the Contracting Officer determines
that one or more significant deficiencies remain.
(e) If the Contractor receives the Contracting Officer's final
determination of significant deficiencies, the Contractor shall,
within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct
the significant deficiencies or submit an acceptable corrective
action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the
significant deficiencies.
(f) Withholding payments. If the Contracting Officer makes a
final determination to disapprove the Contractor's property
management system, and the
[[Page 18439]]
contract includes the clause at 952.242-71, Contractor Business
System, the Contracting Officer will withhold payments in accordance
with that clause.
(End of clause)
[FR Doc. 2014-07086 Filed 3-31-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P