Posts in Government Contracts
COVID Vaccine Mandate: What does Compliance Look Like?

Many federal contractors are being asked to accept contract modifications to implement President Biden’s vaccine mandate. So, what will compliance look like? For now, things are a bit vague; however, we hope the roll-out of this mandate will be reasonable. Contractors should be allowed some flexibility if they’re making good-faith efforts to cajole their workforces into being fully vaccinated.

Read More
Davis-Bacon Classification Decision Was Not Arbitrable, Tenth Cir. Holds

The Tenth Circuit holds that the Union in this case cannot compel the Contractor to arbitrate Davis-Bacon job classifications. However, the court did not hold that Davis-Bacon job classifications are not arbitrable. This article was written by our very own Kirby Rousseau for The Government Contractor publication.

Read More
COVID Vaccine Mandate for Federal Contractors: A Work in Progress

The evolving COVID-19 vaccine mandates for federal employees and contractor employees are a work in progress. New Executive Orders that will require near universal vaccination of employees are replacing the vaccine-or-test mandate issued mere weeks ago. Read on for more about the new requirements and the confusion that may ensue in the meantime.

Read More
Catch-22: No Contractor Price Adjustments for State Minimum Wage Increases

When bidding on and pricing US government extended term fixed price contracts, contractors need to price in the possibility that state minimum wages will exceed the SCA or DBA wage levels, and require an escalation be paid, but the contracting agency will not adjust the contract price for that occurrence.

Read More
Getting Back on the Horse - District of Columbia Plaintiffs May Have Found a Way to Privately Enforce Prevailing Wages

The District of Columbia is allowing workers to bring a prevailing wage claim under the guise of a municipal statute, thereby eroding the rule that only DOL enforces the federal prevailing wage laws and there is no private cause of action.

Read More
Vaccine or Test: Do Contractors Have to Foot the Bill to Test Employees Who Refuse Vaccines?

UPDATE: President Biden is expected to announce executive orders that will mandate universal vaccination for federal workers and contractor employees with no testing option. We will post an update when the expected orders are issued. Federal contractor employees who work on Government sites must comply with President Biden’s vaccine or test policy. Must contractors pay employees for their time to get tested if they refuse to get a vaccine? Must contractors foot the bill for the tests? So far, these questions are going unanswered.

Read More
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.

Read More
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.

Read More
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

Read More