Some changes agencies make to US Government contracts may vary existing rules and thus constitute deviations to the Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”). Deviations to the FAR require approval of the FAR Council. The contracting agency is not free to implement special contract terms which deviate from the FAR without securing that approval.
Read MoreA Texas federal court issued a nationwide preliminary injunction that bars the U.S. Department of Labor from enforcing key elements of the updates to DOL’s Davis-Bacon Act. In so doing, the Court rolled back several of DOL’s attempts to extend DBA coverage more broadly.
Read MoreThe 1-800-MEDICARE call center contractor is being punished unfairly. A dangerous example is being made of Maximus. Its contract is being terminated. A new solicitation is being issued. It will have a “labor harmony requirement“ which will force the winning offeror to essentially accede to the demands of the union. That is not how the procurement system is supposed to work.
Read MoreThe timing of when to add a new Service Contract Act (“SCA”) wage determination (“WD”) to a contract for remote workers can get rather complex. It depends on the facts. And the guidance is rather sparse. Here we try to parse the rules and offer some practical guidance.
Read MoreThe Government asks for past performance information in many, many solicitations. The Government usually will reserve the right to look at other information, not just that submitted by offerors. What happens if there’s information readily available to a contracting officer that he or she doesn’t review?
Read MoreCongress is seeking to legislate to restrict Federal employee remote work arrangements. Meanwhile, the private sector and government contractors are embracing remote work arrangements. Here are my own ambiguous views on remote work.
Read MoreThe Civilian Board of Contract Appeals (“CBCA”) holds that a Montgomery County, MD janitorial contractor cannot recover the costs under its Federal Government contract for a local county law requiring increases of the applicable minimum wage. Is the Board right? Can there be different facts with different results?
Read MoreThe Department of Labor has issued a new bulletin meant to reiterate the need for human supervision and responsibility over artificial intelligence software used in the workplace for compliance with the FLSA and other requirements.
Read MoreA federal enclave doctrine has emerged that precludes the application of state laws to those contracts, including state wage and hour laws, which are being performed in enclaves where only the federal government has exclusive jurisdiction. But the devil is in the details of figuring out if an enclave exists. This blog is meant to identify a process to make that determination.
Read MoreThe Wage and Hour Division (“WHD”) of the US Department of Labor (“DOL”) announced last week that it recovered “$1.5 million dollars of back wages and damages for more than 400 workers” working for employers that had “federally funded” contracts. The announcement doesn’t convey the underlying cause of this multi-contractor compliance breakdown—the scale of which actually is extremely rare. I sure would like to know what happened here.
Read MoreNew rules are now issued and Project Labor Agreements (“PLAs”), which are pre-hire collective bargaining agreements with one or more labor organizations that establishes the terms and conditions of employment will be mostly mandatory for federal government construction projects of $35M or more.
Read MoreA newly proposed policy and related rules would require federal contractors to disclose the compensation and benefits they intend to furnish to job applicants. Contractors also would be prohibited from seeking or using an applicant’s salary history as part of its hiring decision. If adopted, the proposal would apply to almost all federal contractors.
Read MoreThe Congressional Review Act (“CRA”) gives Congress a shot at nullifying executive branch regulations. Look for the Republicans to try to invoke it as we approach election day and in the next session of Congress thereafter, depending on the election outcome.
Read MoreLast week my distinguished colleague wrote about the new Davis Bacon “operation of law” rule that requires the use of a new DOL-issued contract clause. But what’s happening now? Is there a currently valid contract clause that federal Contracting Officers can modify into a contract? For now, the answer appears to be no.
Read MoreNew Davis-Bacon Act (“DBA”) regulations went into effect at the end of October 2023. Among other things, they purport to make the DBA clauses and wage determinations apply by operation of law. But they also provide for price adjustments for contractors. Exactly how it plays out is yet to be determined, but it might be prudent for the contractor to take any omitted clauses or wage determination problem slowly, and not just jump ahead into supposed compliance only to find out they have a fight to get a price adjustment.
Read MoreThe Service Contract Act (“SCA”) Price Adjustment clause provides for certain timely notices to be given by both the Government and the contractor. This blog explores several timeliness issues which can show up as a result of late notice furnished by either the Government or the contractor.
Read MoreMany construction projects are made up of components that are fabricated at locations other than the place where a building or work is being erected. The Department of Labor’s recent revisions to the Davis-Bacon Act (“DBA”) regulations update its take on when work at a secondary site is DBA covered.
Read MoreLast week a Texas judge rejected President Biden’s Executive Order that requires federal contractors to pay a minimum wage when they are working on or in connection with a covered federal contract. This is the latest installment in the ongoing battle over the President’s use of Executive Orders to direct federal contractors to adopt workplace rules under the federal Procurement Act.
Read MoreHere is a practical guide to doing research on whether federal government facilities and lands are federal enclaves such that the application of state employment laws (including state or local wage and hour laws) are barred.
Read MoreSomething old, some things new… DOL publishes final rule that represents the most significant overhaul of its Davis Bacon Act regulations in over 40 years. Numbering over 800 pages, the new rule and its commentary offers a lot to chew on. Here are some highlights.
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