Posts in Government Contracts
The Service Contract Act and the Gig Economy: Are the Ubers and Lyfts of the World Covered?

The relationship between gig economy businesses such as Uber and Lyft and the people who do their work has come under considerable scrutiny as state and local governments have struggled over whether their wage and hour laws should apply to gig economy workers. But what happens to gig businesses if they have federal contracts? Will their workers be entitled to prevailing wages and benefits? Well—perhaps yes.

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The Deal's the Deal: ASBCA Rejects Claim Seeking Price Adjustment for Overseas Wage Increases

We’ve all heard the old adage that a deal’s a deal. The Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals recently demonstrated how this adage can cost a federal contractor a fair chunk of change when it comes to the cost of increasing wages owed to service contract employees—especially for work performed overseas. Bottom line - carefully determine what your contract requires for service employee wages and benefits. Then, make sure your proposal meets those requirements and ensure that you’re protected from the shock of increased costs.

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Transcript of President Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865)

“…. insurgent agents were in the city seeking to destroy it without war -- seeking to dissolve the Union, and divide effects, by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive; and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. And the war came.”

— Lincoln, Second Inaugural

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Choosing NAICS Codes: In the Size of the Beholder

A Contracting Officer’s choice of what industry classification (aka NAICS code) applies to a contract can determine whether a business is or is not eligible to compete for a small business set aside contract. It all comes down to the size standards applicable to the chosen category. Read on to learn more about the implications of such classifications and whether you can do something about a bad choice.

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DIY No More: The End of Self-Certifying Woman-owned Small Businesses

The Small Business Adminstration (“SBA”) recently changed the process by which companies can obtain certification as Women-Owned Small Businesses (WOSB) or Economically Disadvantaged Small Businesses (EDWOSB). Self-certification no longer is an option. Here’s what companies need to know to obtain new certifications or to figure out if your current certification might be in jeopardy.

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Can I Please Have Some More, Sir -- Advancing Vacation Benefits Under the Service Contract Act

When new employees start work on a SCA covered contract, the employer faces a connundrum with respect to vacation bnefits. The employer can furnish the benefits immediately, and just pay benefits in excess of the SCA, resulting in payments above the minimum prevailing wage and impairing its right to a price adjustment the next option year. Or it can pay no vacation benefits, or just give leave without pay, and demoralize the new workers. But there is a third although relatively infrequently used course of action called an advanced or prepayment agreement or policy whereby the worker elects to receive the vacation benefit immediately on hiring, but the employer reserves the ability to get a credit for furnishing the benefit on the next anniversay date of employment.

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Left at the Altar: What to do if Key Personnel Proposed for a Service Contract Break their Commitments?

Many service contracts require that certain jobs, i.e., “key positions,” be held by highly qualified personnel dedicated to the project. So, what happens if that rock star project manager you spent months recruiting for a “key position” bails out on you in the middle of the competition to win the very contract the rock star was proposed to manage?

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In a Qui Tam Case Where It Is the Real Party in Interest, the Government Can Be Responsible for the Contractor's Legal Fees Under the Spearin Doctrine

The Government has several avenues to pursue damages when a contractor commits fraud, including bringing its own False Claims Act suit or joining a proxy qui tam lawsuit. But what happens when the Government’s mistake leads to a contractor’s damages? In a recent case, a contractor invoked the so-called Spearin doctrine to recover legal fees from an erroneous qui tam lawsuit.

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COFC Rejects Sole Source Procurement to Replace Out-of-Favor Incumbent

The Court of Federal Claims sustained the protest of a contractor that argued that the Government could not hire a replacement contractor through the use of an improperly justified sole source acquisition. The Court set aside the new award—a result that likely will require the Government to continue working with a contractor with which it allegedly was dissatisfied. Should an agency have the ability to make a change using a sole source procurement? In the commercial world, feathers might get ruffled, but a jilted vendor wouldn’t be able to get a court to throw out a replacement. In our world, it’s all different.

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