Procurement Through Commercial e-Commerce Portals, 59619-59621 [2017-26964]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 240 / Friday, December 15, 2017 / Notices
As in prior proposals,11 commenters
requested that the Board undertake a
periodic, full-scale review of the data
items required in the FR Y–14
submissions, and that the Board
increase edit check thresholds or allow
for permanent closure options. In
response, the Board confirms that it
regularly reviews the required elements
of the FR Y–14 submissions and will
continue to review the requirements to
ensure they are appropriate. The current
edit check thresholds and permanent
closure of edit checks are varied and
have been determined on a case-by-case
basis depending on the data item to
which the edit check pertains. Given the
disparate nature of the data items being
collected, it would be inappropriate to
create uniform minimum thresholds
across all schedules.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, December 11, 2017.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2017–26960 Filed 12–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
[Notice-MV–2017–05; Docket No. 2017–
0002; Sequence No. 25]
Procurement Through Commercial eCommerce Portals
Office of Acquisition Policy,
General Services Administration.
ACTION: Notice of a public meeting and
request for information.
AGENCY:
The General Services
Administration (GSA) and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) are
interested in conducting an ongoing
dialogue with industry about Section
846 of the National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal
Year 2018, Procurement through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals. The
dialogue begins with this public notice
and request for comment.
GSA is providing external
stakeholders the opportunity to offer
input on the first implementation phase
outlined in Section 846, an
implementation plan due to Congress
within 90 days of enactment.
GSA and OMB are hosting a modified
town-hall style public meeting to help
inform the Phase I submittal.
DATES: The public meeting will be
conducted on January 9, 2018, at 8:30
a.m. Eastern Standard Time. Further
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SUMMARY:
11 See, for example, responses to comments
outline in the final tailoring rule (82 FR 9308).
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Information for the public meeting may
be found under the heading
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
GSA’s Central Office, at 1800 F St NW,
Washington, DC 20405.
Submit comments identified by
‘‘Procurement Through Commercial eCommerce Portals’’, by any of the
following methods:
• Regulations.gov: https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit comments
by searching for ‘‘Procurement Through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals’’.
Select the link ‘‘Comment Now’’ and
follow the instructions provided at the
‘‘You are commenting on’’ screen.
Please include your name, company
name (if any), and ‘‘Procurement
Through Commercial e-Commerce
Portals’’, on your attached document.
• Mail: U.S. General Services
Administration, Regulatory Secretariat
Division (MVCB), 1800 F Street NW,
2nd Floor, ATTN: Lois Mandell,
Washington, DC 20405–0001.
Instructions: Please submit comments
only and cite ‘‘Procurement Through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals’’ in all
correspondence related to this case. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal and/or business confidential
information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Matthew McFarland at section846@
gsa.gov, or 202–690–9232, for
clarification of content, public meeting
information and submission of
comment. For information pertaining to
status or publication schedules, contact
the Regulatory Secretariat at 202–501–
4755. Please cite ‘‘Procurement Through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals’’.
Written Comments/Statements:
Interested parties may submit written
comments to www.regulations.gov by
January 16, 2018.
GSA and OMB encourage early
engagement so that public input may be
considered in the formulation of the
Phase I implementation plan, which is
due to Congress within 90 days of
enactment of the NDAA for Fiscal Year
2018.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The General Services Administration
(GSA) was established to provide the
United States Government with
centralized procurement. For decades,
GSA has provided access to commercial
products through a number of channels
including GSA Advantage!, GSA eBuy,
GSA Global Supply, and the Federal
Supply Schedules. Across the
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59619
Government, the market for commercial
products is estimated to be greater than
$50 billion annually.
GSA has long been focused on
improving the acquisition of
commercial items. Throughout its
history, GSA has sought to leverage the
best available technology to help
agencies shorten the time to delivery,
reduce administrative cost, make
compliance easier, be a strategic thought
leader and supplier of choice across the
Federal Government, and be a good
partner to industry. Today, the best
available technology includes
commercial e-commerce portals.
The National Defense Authorization
Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2018,
Section 846 Procurement Through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals, directs
the Administrator of the GSA to
establish a program to procure
commercial products through
commercial e-commerce portals. Section
846 language can be found at the
following link—https://interact.gsa.gov/
group/commercial-platform-initiative.
Section 846 paragraph (c) instructs the
‘‘Director of the Office of Management
and Budget, in consultation with the
GSA Administrator and the heads of
other relevant departments and
agencies,’’ to carry out three
implementation phases. Phase I
requires:
Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, an implementation
plan and schedule for carrying out the
program established pursuant to subsection
(a), including a discussion and
recommendations regarding whether any
changes to, or exemptions from, laws that set
forth policies, procedures, requirements, or
restrictions for the procurement of property
or services by the Federal Government are
necessary for effective implementation of this
section.
GSA and OMB intend to establish an
ongoing dialogue with industry and
interested parties in Government
throughout the program’s
implementation. As a first step, GSA
and OMB are seeking feedback from
outside stakeholders on initial ideas for
general program design and buying
practices and, in that context, whether
existing laws, Executive Orders, policies
or other requirements may hinder
effective implementation of the
program.
II. Written Comments
To assist GSA and OMB in drafting
the Phase I implementation plan, GSA
and OMB are inviting interested parties
to submit written comments. GSA and
OMB are encouraging those comments
be submitted before the public meeting
on January 9, 2018, which will help
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 240 / Friday, December 15, 2017 / Notices
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
GSA and OMB prepare informed
questions for the public meeting
discussions. However, all comments
must be submitted by January 16, 2018,
which will allow the Government to
take them into account before drafting
the Phase I implementation plan.
To facilitate comment submission,
GSA and OMB have developed a
number of questions grouped around
three focus areas—program design,
business practices, and implementation.
Each question is intended to provide
respondents with a general framework
for commenting. These questions are not
intended to be all-inclusive; other
comments and observations are
encouraged. GSA and OMB understand
the tight timeframe for initial comment
may limit commenters’ ability to fully
address every issue and are therefore
encouraging commenters to continue
their analysis and provide additional
input at future outreach sessions.
A. General Program Design
1. Leveraging existing e-commerce
portal providers. What factors would
encourage portal providers to contract
with GSA to operate e-commerce portals
for Government use? What are the
standard terms and conditions relating
to purchasing through the portal? Which
of these standard terms and conditions
would need to change for Federal
Government buying? What relief from
applicable laws, Executive Orders,
regulations, and policies is necessary for
portal providers to want to enter this
marketplace?
2. Number of portals. What factors
should GSA take into consideration
when determining the appropriate
number of contracts to award to portal
providers to achieve the objectives of
the law (i.e., enhancing competition,
expediting procurement, enabling
market research, and ensuring
reasonable pricing of commercial
products)? For example, would it be
appropriate for GSA to seek to limit
overlap of product categories and/or
make award to a single portal provider
for a product category? In some
industries, such as travel, aggregators
and metasearch engines permit easy
comparison shopping. Does such a
model fit into a commercial-off-the-shelf
(COTS) product marketplace?
3. Phase-in. Section 846 envisions
that the program would be available to
acquisitions under the simplified
acquisition threshold (SAT), which
pursuant to NDAA Section 806, will be
$250,000. Notwithstanding this
limitation, should GSA take an
incremental approach to the roll-out of
the program? If so, should the phase-in
be based on dollar value (e.g., focus
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initially on a threshold below the SAT),
certain product categories (e.g., lab
equipment, office supplies, clothing),
and/or some other variable? Explain.
4. Relationship between GSA,
Government buyers, e-commerce portal
providers, and sellers through portal
providers. What is the commercial
practice for the privity of contract
relationship between e-commerce portal
providers, sellers through portal
providers, and buyers? Who should
have privity of contract under the
program? Should the portal provider
have privity of contract with the sellers?
Should the Government buyer have
privity of contract with the seller
through the portal provider?
5. Relationship to existing programs.
How should GSA consider the
relationship between this program and
other GSA managed Government-wide
acquisition programs that provide ready
access to COTS items, such as the
Federal Supply Schedules and the
national supply system? What
unintended consequences, if any, do
you envision, and what steps, if any, do
you recommend to avoid them?
B. Buying Practices
1. Competition. How do commercial
firms consider competition when
conducting purchases through
commercial e-commerce portals,
compared to the Federal Government’s
approach to competition in its
acquisition system? Should all
purchases between the micro-purchase
threshold and the SAT be treated in
identical fashion in terms of
competition? How, if at all, should the
competition rules be modified from
what is currently required by the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)
for COTS purchases?
2. Pricing, delivery and other terms of
sale. How do commercial firms establish
pricing, delivery, and other terms of
sales when buying COTS products
through commercial e-commerce
portals? Should the Government’s
commercial e-commerce portal program
allow GSA and/or Government buyers
to negotiate discounts from stated prices
and other concessions (e.g., volume
discounts, faster delivery, longer
warranties), as is done under the
Federal Supply Schedules contracts?
Alternatively, should Government
buyers be restricted to a ‘‘take it or leave
it’’ approach that limits customers to the
prices sellers offer commercial
customers based on the competitive
pressures of the platform? How does the
relationship between the e-commerce
portal provider and supplier drive the
approach?
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3. Compliance. What is the
commercial practice of e-commerce
portal providers for monitoring
compliance with applicable laws/
regulations and supply chain risk
management of sellers through the
portal? To the extent that purchases
made through the portal are subject to
certain Government-unique
requirements, who should be
responsible for ensuring compliance
(e.g., the platform provider, the seller,
the government buyer, other)?
4. Considerations for small
businesses, socio-economic programs,
and mandatory sources. What, if any,
adjustments should be made to existing
requirements associated with small
businesses, socio-economic programs,
and mandatory sources?
5. Supplier and product performance.
What are the commercial practices for
reviewing supplier and product
performance on commercial ecommerce portals? How should the
Government use supplier and product
reviews for this program? Should
Government reviews be public? Should
the Government rely on commercial
reviews integrated in the existing ecommerce platform when making
purchases through the program? What
role should existing Government past
performance data play in the program?
6. Responsibility of platform sellers.
What are the commercial practices of ecommerce portal providers vetting the
sellers on their platform? What, if any,
responsibility determination should be
made for companies selling through the
portals, who should make the
responsibility determination, and when
should such a determination be made?
C. Implementation
1. Changes to existing acquisition
framework for COTS items. If the
program were only to apply core
commercial item clauses in contracts
with e-commerce portal providers and
suppliers who sell through the portal,
could the program operate successfully
in part or in full? If not, what additional
changes are needed to statutes,
Executive Orders, regulations, policies,
and other guidance and tools, to make
the program successful? Where possible,
please tie recommendations for relief to
suggestions made in response to other
questions to help illustrate the potential
benefits of action and the potential
consequences of inaction.
2. Level of relief. Should the list of
applicable laws, Executive Orders,
regulations, and policies applicable to
program purchases be identical for all
COTS transactions over the micropurchase threshold and up to the SAT?
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 240 / Friday, December 15, 2017 / Notices
3. Rulemaking. Should the regulations
for this program be in the FAR, in
separate GSA regulations, or both?
Why?
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D. Additional Considerations
What other issues are especially
important in thinking about Phase I and
the initial implementation plan?
III. Public Meeting
GSA and OMB are holding a modified
town-hall style public meeting on
January 9, 2018. The meeting will start
at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time and
conclude no later than 4:00 p.m. Eastern
Standard Time. Attendees can attend
the meeting in person at GSA Central
Office or virtually through GSA’s
internet meeting platform, Adobe
Connect. Further details on the virtual
meeting will be made available via GSA
Interact at https://interact.gsa.gov/
group/commercial-platform-initiative.
(GSA may encourage industry-toindustry dialogue through this interact
site.)
GSA and OMB will not make
presentations and will not answer
questions during this meeting. Instead,
GSA and OMB will actively listen to the
viewpoints and information presented
by different interested parties. GSA and
OMB may pose questions to participants
to clarify feedback, to generate dialogue,
or to increase understanding.
This meeting will focus on Phase I.
Future sessions are envisioned to gather
information for subsequent
implementation phases.
In-person Attendance: Interested
parties may attend the public meeting to
be held in the GSA Auditorium at GSA
Headquarters, located at 1800 F St NW,
Washington, DC 20405. The public is
asked to pre-register by January 2, 2018,
due to security and seating limitations.
To pre-register, email the names of
attendees (required) and the name of
their organization (not required) to Mr.
Matthew McFarland at section846@
gsa.gov.
Registration check-in will begin at
7:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time
January 9, 2018, and the meeting will
start promptly at 8:30 a.m. Eastern
Standard Time, January 9, 2018.
Attendees must be prepared to present
a form of government-issued photo
identification.
Oral Presentations: GSA and OMB
intend to conduct a modified town-hall/
panel style discussion focused around
each of the three main topics outlined
above (i.e., program design, buying
practices, and implementation). GSA
will assign parties interested in
presenting (at the public meeting) into
panels.
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GSA intends to organize panel
discussions around each of the three
topic areas (General Program Design,
Buying Practices, and Implementation).
Each panel discussion will include up
to five panelists and is expected to run
between one to two hours. Parties
wishing to participate as a panel
member should email Mr. Matthew
McFarland at section846@gsa.gov by
December 28, 2017, noting which of the
three topics they wish to address.
GSA will select the panelists from
amongst those expressing an interest
and will formally notify them of which
panel and estimated starting time. In
selecting panelists, GSA will seek an
array of perspectives, backgrounds, and
views.
As part of the facilitated dialogue,
GSA and OMB employees will ask the
panelists questions. Time permitting,
other attendees may also be invited to
ask questions. Time will be reserved
before the conclusion of the meeting for
attendees to comment on issues not
already addressed.
Note: Requests made after the
deadline to participate on a panel may
be accepted if space permits.
Virtual Attendance: Interested parties
may also attend virtually through GSA’s
virtual meeting platform, hosted by
Adobe Connect. Further details on the
virtual meeting will be made available
via GSA Interact at https://
interact.gsa.gov/group/commercialplatform-initiative.
Meeting Accommodations: The public
meeting is physically accessible to
people with disabilities. Request for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to Mr.
Matthew McFarland at section846@
gsa.gov or 202–690–9232 by December
28, 2017.
The TTY number for further
information is: 1–800–877–8339. When
the operator answers the call, let them
know the agency is the General Services
Administration; the point-of-contact is
Mr. Matthew McFarland at 202–690–
9232.
Dated: December 11, 2017.
Jeffrey A. Koses,
Senior Procurement Executive, Office of
Acquisition Policy, Office of Governmentwide Policy, General Services Administration.
[FR Doc. 2017–26964 Filed 12–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–61–P
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Designation of a Class of Employees
for Addition to the Special Exposure
Cohort
National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
HHS gives notice of a
decision to designate a class of
employees from the Idaho National
Laboratory (INL) in Scoville, Idaho, as
an addition to the Special Exposure
Cohort (SEC) under the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act of 2000.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stuart L. Hinnefeld, Director, Division
of Compensation Analysis and Support,
NIOSH, 1090 Tusculum Avenue, MS C–
46, Cincinnati, OH 45226–1938,
Telephone 1–877–222–7570.
Information requests can also be
submitted by email to DCAS@CDC.GOV.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7384q(b). 42 U.S.C.
7384l(14)(C).
On November 22, 2017, as provided
for under 42 U.S.C. 7384l(14)(C),the
Acting Secretary of HHS designated the
following class of employees as an
addition to the SEC:
All employees of the Department of
Energy, its predecessor agencies, and their
contractors and subcontractors who worked
at the Idaho National Laboratory (INL) in
Scoville, Idaho, and who were monitored for
external radiation at the Idaho Chemical
Processing Plant (CPP) (e.g., at least one film
badge or TLD dosimeter from CPP) between
January 1, 1975, and December 31, 1980, for
a number of work days aggregating at least
250 work days, occurring solely under this
employment, or in combination with work
days within the parameters established for
one or more other classes of employees in the
Special Exposure Cohort.
This designation will become
effective on December 22, 2017, unless
Congress provides otherwise prior to the
effective date. After this effective date,
HHS will publish a notice in the
Federal Register reporting the addition
of this class to the SEC or the result of
any provision by Congress regarding the
decision by HHS to add the class to the
SEC.
John Howard,
Director, National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health.
[FR Doc. 2017–27038 Filed 12–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–19–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 240 (Friday, December 15, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 59619-59621]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-26964]
=======================================================================
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GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
[Notice-MV-2017-05; Docket No. 2017-0002; Sequence No. 25]
Procurement Through Commercial e-Commerce Portals
AGENCY: Office of Acquisition Policy, General Services Administration.
ACTION: Notice of a public meeting and request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The General Services Administration (GSA) and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) are interested in conducting an ongoing
dialogue with industry about Section 846 of the National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2018, Procurement through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals. The dialogue begins with this public
notice and request for comment.
GSA is providing external stakeholders the opportunity to offer
input on the first implementation phase outlined in Section 846, an
implementation plan due to Congress within 90 days of enactment.
GSA and OMB are hosting a modified town-hall style public meeting
to help inform the Phase I submittal.
DATES: The public meeting will be conducted on January 9, 2018, at 8:30
a.m. Eastern Standard Time. Further Information for the public meeting
may be found under the heading SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at GSA's Central Office, at 1800 F
St NW, Washington, DC 20405.
Submit comments identified by ``Procurement Through Commercial e-
Commerce Portals'', by any of the following methods:
Regulations.gov: https://www.regulations.gov. Submit
comments by searching for ``Procurement Through Commercial e-Commerce
Portals''. Select the link ``Comment Now'' and follow the instructions
provided at the ``You are commenting on'' screen. Please include your
name, company name (if any), and ``Procurement Through Commercial e-
Commerce Portals'', on your attached document.
Mail: U.S. General Services Administration, Regulatory
Secretariat Division (MVCB), 1800 F Street NW, 2nd Floor, ATTN: Lois
Mandell, Washington, DC 20405-0001.
Instructions: Please submit comments only and cite ``Procurement
Through Commercial e-Commerce Portals'' in all correspondence related
to this case. All comments received will be posted without change to
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal and/or business
confidential information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Matthew McFarland at
[email protected], or 202-690-9232, for clarification of content,
public meeting information and submission of comment. For information
pertaining to status or publication schedules, contact the Regulatory
Secretariat at 202-501-4755. Please cite ``Procurement Through
Commercial e-Commerce Portals''.
Written Comments/Statements: Interested parties may submit written
comments to www.regulations.gov by January 16, 2018.
GSA and OMB encourage early engagement so that public input may be
considered in the formulation of the Phase I implementation plan, which
is due to Congress within 90 days of enactment of the NDAA for Fiscal
Year 2018.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The General Services Administration (GSA) was established to
provide the United States Government with centralized procurement. For
decades, GSA has provided access to commercial products through a
number of channels including GSA Advantage!, GSA eBuy, GSA Global
Supply, and the Federal Supply Schedules. Across the Government, the
market for commercial products is estimated to be greater than $50
billion annually.
GSA has long been focused on improving the acquisition of
commercial items. Throughout its history, GSA has sought to leverage
the best available technology to help agencies shorten the time to
delivery, reduce administrative cost, make compliance easier, be a
strategic thought leader and supplier of choice across the Federal
Government, and be a good partner to industry. Today, the best
available technology includes commercial e-commerce portals.
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2018,
Section 846 Procurement Through Commercial e-Commerce Portals, directs
the Administrator of the GSA to establish a program to procure
commercial products through commercial e-commerce portals. Section 846
language can be found at the following link--https://interact.gsa.gov/group/commercial-platform-initiative. Section 846 paragraph (c)
instructs the ``Director of the Office of Management and Budget, in
consultation with the GSA Administrator and the heads of other relevant
departments and agencies,'' to carry out three implementation phases.
Phase I requires:
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, an implementation plan and schedule for carrying out the
program established pursuant to subsection (a), including a
discussion and recommendations regarding whether any changes to, or
exemptions from, laws that set forth policies, procedures,
requirements, or restrictions for the procurement of property or
services by the Federal Government are necessary for effective
implementation of this section.
GSA and OMB intend to establish an ongoing dialogue with industry
and interested parties in Government throughout the program's
implementation. As a first step, GSA and OMB are seeking feedback from
outside stakeholders on initial ideas for general program design and
buying practices and, in that context, whether existing laws, Executive
Orders, policies or other requirements may hinder effective
implementation of the program.
II. Written Comments
To assist GSA and OMB in drafting the Phase I implementation plan,
GSA and OMB are inviting interested parties to submit written comments.
GSA and OMB are encouraging those comments be submitted before the
public meeting on January 9, 2018, which will help
[[Page 59620]]
GSA and OMB prepare informed questions for the public meeting
discussions. However, all comments must be submitted by January 16,
2018, which will allow the Government to take them into account before
drafting the Phase I implementation plan.
To facilitate comment submission, GSA and OMB have developed a
number of questions grouped around three focus areas--program design,
business practices, and implementation. Each question is intended to
provide respondents with a general framework for commenting. These
questions are not intended to be all-inclusive; other comments and
observations are encouraged. GSA and OMB understand the tight timeframe
for initial comment may limit commenters' ability to fully address
every issue and are therefore encouraging commenters to continue their
analysis and provide additional input at future outreach sessions.
A. General Program Design
1. Leveraging existing e-commerce portal providers. What factors
would encourage portal providers to contract with GSA to operate e-
commerce portals for Government use? What are the standard terms and
conditions relating to purchasing through the portal? Which of these
standard terms and conditions would need to change for Federal
Government buying? What relief from applicable laws, Executive Orders,
regulations, and policies is necessary for portal providers to want to
enter this marketplace?
2. Number of portals. What factors should GSA take into
consideration when determining the appropriate number of contracts to
award to portal providers to achieve the objectives of the law (i.e.,
enhancing competition, expediting procurement, enabling market
research, and ensuring reasonable pricing of commercial products)? For
example, would it be appropriate for GSA to seek to limit overlap of
product categories and/or make award to a single portal provider for a
product category? In some industries, such as travel, aggregators and
metasearch engines permit easy comparison shopping. Does such a model
fit into a commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) product marketplace?
3. Phase-in. Section 846 envisions that the program would be
available to acquisitions under the simplified acquisition threshold
(SAT), which pursuant to NDAA Section 806, will be $250,000.
Notwithstanding this limitation, should GSA take an incremental
approach to the roll-out of the program? If so, should the phase-in be
based on dollar value (e.g., focus initially on a threshold below the
SAT), certain product categories (e.g., lab equipment, office supplies,
clothing), and/or some other variable? Explain.
4. Relationship between GSA, Government buyers, e-commerce portal
providers, and sellers through portal providers. What is the commercial
practice for the privity of contract relationship between e-commerce
portal providers, sellers through portal providers, and buyers? Who
should have privity of contract under the program? Should the portal
provider have privity of contract with the sellers? Should the
Government buyer have privity of contract with the seller through the
portal provider?
5. Relationship to existing programs. How should GSA consider the
relationship between this program and other GSA managed Government-wide
acquisition programs that provide ready access to COTS items, such as
the Federal Supply Schedules and the national supply system? What
unintended consequences, if any, do you envision, and what steps, if
any, do you recommend to avoid them?
B. Buying Practices
1. Competition. How do commercial firms consider competition when
conducting purchases through commercial e-commerce portals, compared to
the Federal Government's approach to competition in its acquisition
system? Should all purchases between the micro-purchase threshold and
the SAT be treated in identical fashion in terms of competition? How,
if at all, should the competition rules be modified from what is
currently required by the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) for COTS
purchases?
2. Pricing, delivery and other terms of sale. How do commercial
firms establish pricing, delivery, and other terms of sales when buying
COTS products through commercial e-commerce portals? Should the
Government's commercial e-commerce portal program allow GSA and/or
Government buyers to negotiate discounts from stated prices and other
concessions (e.g., volume discounts, faster delivery, longer
warranties), as is done under the Federal Supply Schedules contracts?
Alternatively, should Government buyers be restricted to a ``take it or
leave it'' approach that limits customers to the prices sellers offer
commercial customers based on the competitive pressures of the
platform? How does the relationship between the e-commerce portal
provider and supplier drive the approach?
3. Compliance. What is the commercial practice of e-commerce portal
providers for monitoring compliance with applicable laws/regulations
and supply chain risk management of sellers through the portal? To the
extent that purchases made through the portal are subject to certain
Government-unique requirements, who should be responsible for ensuring
compliance (e.g., the platform provider, the seller, the government
buyer, other)?
4. Considerations for small businesses, socio-economic programs,
and mandatory sources. What, if any, adjustments should be made to
existing requirements associated with small businesses, socio-economic
programs, and mandatory sources?
5. Supplier and product performance. What are the commercial
practices for reviewing supplier and product performance on commercial
e-commerce portals? How should the Government use supplier and product
reviews for this program? Should Government reviews be public? Should
the Government rely on commercial reviews integrated in the existing e-
commerce platform when making purchases through the program? What role
should existing Government past performance data play in the program?
6. Responsibility of platform sellers. What are the commercial
practices of e-commerce portal providers vetting the sellers on their
platform? What, if any, responsibility determination should be made for
companies selling through the portals, who should make the
responsibility determination, and when should such a determination be
made?
C. Implementation
1. Changes to existing acquisition framework for COTS items. If the
program were only to apply core commercial item clauses in contracts
with e-commerce portal providers and suppliers who sell through the
portal, could the program operate successfully in part or in full? If
not, what additional changes are needed to statutes, Executive Orders,
regulations, policies, and other guidance and tools, to make the
program successful? Where possible, please tie recommendations for
relief to suggestions made in response to other questions to help
illustrate the potential benefits of action and the potential
consequences of inaction.
2. Level of relief. Should the list of applicable laws, Executive
Orders, regulations, and policies applicable to program purchases be
identical for all COTS transactions over the micro-purchase threshold
and up to the SAT?
[[Page 59621]]
3. Rulemaking. Should the regulations for this program be in the
FAR, in separate GSA regulations, or both? Why?
D. Additional Considerations
What other issues are especially important in thinking about Phase
I and the initial implementation plan?
III. Public Meeting
GSA and OMB are holding a modified town-hall style public meeting
on January 9, 2018. The meeting will start at 8:30 a.m. Eastern
Standard Time and conclude no later than 4:00 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time. Attendees can attend the meeting in person at GSA Central Office
or virtually through GSA's internet meeting platform, Adobe Connect.
Further details on the virtual meeting will be made available via GSA
Interact at https://interact.gsa.gov/group/commercial-platform-initiative. (GSA may encourage industry-to-industry dialogue through
this interact site.)
GSA and OMB will not make presentations and will not answer
questions during this meeting. Instead, GSA and OMB will actively
listen to the viewpoints and information presented by different
interested parties. GSA and OMB may pose questions to participants to
clarify feedback, to generate dialogue, or to increase understanding.
This meeting will focus on Phase I. Future sessions are envisioned
to gather information for subsequent implementation phases.
In-person Attendance: Interested parties may attend the public
meeting to be held in the GSA Auditorium at GSA Headquarters, located
at 1800 F St NW, Washington, DC 20405. The public is asked to pre-
register by January 2, 2018, due to security and seating limitations.
To pre-register, email the names of attendees (required) and the name
of their organization (not required) to Mr. Matthew McFarland at
[email protected].
Registration check-in will begin at 7:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time
January 9, 2018, and the meeting will start promptly at 8:30 a.m.
Eastern Standard Time, January 9, 2018. Attendees must be prepared to
present a form of government-issued photo identification.
Oral Presentations: GSA and OMB intend to conduct a modified town-
hall/panel style discussion focused around each of the three main
topics outlined above (i.e., program design, buying practices, and
implementation). GSA will assign parties interested in presenting (at
the public meeting) into panels.
GSA intends to organize panel discussions around each of the three
topic areas (General Program Design, Buying Practices, and
Implementation). Each panel discussion will include up to five
panelists and is expected to run between one to two hours. Parties
wishing to participate as a panel member should email Mr. Matthew
McFarland at [email protected] by December 28, 2017, noting which of
the three topics they wish to address.
GSA will select the panelists from amongst those expressing an
interest and will formally notify them of which panel and estimated
starting time. In selecting panelists, GSA will seek an array of
perspectives, backgrounds, and views.
As part of the facilitated dialogue, GSA and OMB employees will ask
the panelists questions. Time permitting, other attendees may also be
invited to ask questions. Time will be reserved before the conclusion
of the meeting for attendees to comment on issues not already
addressed.
Note: Requests made after the deadline to participate on a panel
may be accepted if space permits.
Virtual Attendance: Interested parties may also attend virtually
through GSA's virtual meeting platform, hosted by Adobe Connect.
Further details on the virtual meeting will be made available via GSA
Interact at https://interact.gsa.gov/group/commercial-platform-initiative.
Meeting Accommodations: The public meeting is physically accessible
to people with disabilities. Request for sign language interpretation
or other auxiliary aids should be directed to Mr. Matthew McFarland at
[email protected] or 202-690-9232 by December 28, 2017.
The TTY number for further information is: 1-800-877-8339. When the
operator answers the call, let them know the agency is the General
Services Administration; the point-of-contact is Mr. Matthew McFarland
at 202-690-9232.
Dated: December 11, 2017.
Jeffrey A. Koses,
Senior Procurement Executive, Office of Acquisition Policy, Office of
Government-wide Policy, General Services Administration.
[FR Doc. 2017-26964 Filed 12-14-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820-61-P