Posts in Service Contract Act
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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Wage and Hour Posting Requirements in the Remote Workplace

For many who are working remotely, it feels like decades since they’ve strolled down to the break room where they can view many notices required by various employment laws such as the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), the Service Contract Act (“SCA”), and the Employee Polygraph Protection Act (“EPPA”). A recent bulletin issued by the Department of Labor provides much needed guidance about how employers may use electronic posting to fulfill their posting obligations in the remote working world.

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Do You Hear Me Now – GAO Studies Communications Problems Arising From Service Contract Act Enforcement

In October of this year, the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) published a study titled Federal Contracting – Actions Needed to Improve Department of Labor’s Enforcement of Service Worker Wage Protections (Oct. 2020). The GAO report has offered up some interesting factual nuggets on SCA investigations along with six rather bland recommendations to improve enforcement.

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Ch-ch-ch Changes? What the Transition Could Mean for Government Contracts and Wage and Hour Policy

Regardless of the ultimate outcome of the electoral process, government contractors wonder whether there will be wholesale changes for them, particularly with respect to their employment policies. Well, as with most things, the unsatisfactory answer is yes and no. Here are some examples of what might be on the horizon.

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A Modest Wage-Hour Proposal: A Paid Day Off for Democracy

Declaring Election Day a national holiday isn’t exactly a novel idea. While the 2020 Presidential election may be the most participated U.S. election in recent memory, more can always be done to remove the obstacles faced by each voter. Accordingly, we make a modest proposal that Election Day be made a mandatory paid holiday with guaranteed time off to vote. Let’s tip a glass of cider to a new Democracy Day holiday!

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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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Drill, Baby, Drill – Overlapping Coverage of Drilling Work under the Service Contract Act and Davis-Bacon Act

Drilling work presents a a perrenial issue of which prevailing wage law is in play. One of the most challenging parts of wage and hour law revolves around the overlap of Service Contract Act (“SCA”) and Davis-Bacon Act (“DBA”) coverage. It is entirely possible for an employee doing the same physical drilling activity to be covered by a different wage law on the next contract.

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Can Federal Contractors Offset Coronavirus Leave or Avoid Paying H&W Benefits Thereon: No, Maybe, Whatever!

Under The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (“FFCRA”), employers must pay the coronavirus leave in addition to any other leave requried by the prevailing wage laws. There is no credit or offset. As to whether government contractors must also pay additional health and welfare benefits, on top of the virus leave, for the time being that ball is up in the air, awaiting DOL clarification, although prudent employers may decide to pay it nonethless in the interim given the uncertainty.

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Has the Coronavirus Broken the Deadlock over Sick and Family Leave Benefit Expansion?

The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) bill was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives and sent to the Senate this week. The bill would allow for two weeks of fully paid sick leave and up to 10 weeks of partially paid leave (at two-thirds pay) for workers of small business employers meeting certain conditions. The leave would be financed by a tax credit.

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Timing is Everything: the Right to Recover the Increased Costs of a New CBA

When it comes to the timing of negotiating and implementing a Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”), the Service Contract Act (“SCA”) can be unforgiving. Contractors must give timely notice of a newly-minted CBA if they want a price adjustment for the increased costs of SCA compliance under the CBA. A recent decision from the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (“ASBCA”) reminds us that there is a vital prerequisite to this general rule: the Government has its own notice obligations.

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How Often Must You Pay the Piper: Payday Frequency Requirements

How frequently do employers have to pay their workers? The answer is it depends. Some of the variables it can depend on include wheher the employer is working on a government construction contract, what state the worker is performing labor in, what is the classification of the worker (exempt or nonexempt), and how much is the worker paid.

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When Is It Too Late to Submit a Service Contract Act ("SCA") Price Adjustment Proposal?

Under the FAR SCA Price Adjustment clause, notice must be furnished to the Government within 30 days of receipt of a new wage determination to be incorporated into a contract in the option or extended period of performance. But that notice proviso is not interpreted strictly and it should not be used to bar price adjustment claims as per se untimely after the 30 day window has past.

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