Contact Information: Contact: Lloyd Chapman President American Small Business League Email Contact (707) 789-9575
The Truth About H.R. 1873 -- The Small Business Fairness in Contracting Act According to the American Small Business League
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- May 15, 2007 -- The following is a statement by Lloyd Chapman,
President of the American Small Business League:
Calling H.R. 1873 the "Small Business Fairness in Contracting Act," would
be akin to Congress passing legislation to allow strip mining in every
national park in America and calling it the, "National Park Beautification
and Preservation Act."
On February 24, 2005, the Small Business Administration Office of Inspector
General issued Report 5-15, which stated, "One of the most important
challenges facing the Small Business Administration (SBA) and the entire
Federal Government today is that large businesses are receiving small
business procurement awards and agencies are receiving credit for these
awards." This will continue under H.R. 1873.
H.R. 1873 does not have an annual re-certification provision for all firms
with current Federal small business contracts that will stop large
corporations with existing Federal small business contracts from continuing
to receive billions of dollars in Federal small business contracts for
years to come.
The paltry handful of positive provisions in H.R. 1873 are nothing more
than window dressings and could in no way counter the staggering diversion
of billions of dollars in Federal small business contracts that H.R. 1873
will continue to ensure. A prime example of how ineffective H.R. 1873
really is can be seen in the provision to raise the Federal small business
contracting goal from 23 to 25 percent. As long as hundreds of the biggest
companies in the world are considered small businesses what difference does
it make? Congress could raise it to 100 percent and it would be
meaningless. Under H.R. 1873, Federal agencies and prime contractors can
reach a 23, 25 or 50 percent small business contracting levels and never
award contracts to a company that is not a Fortune 1000 firm.
The facts surrounding this issue are simple and irrefutable.
1. Fact: The United States government is counting billions of dollars in
awards to hundreds of the largest firms in America and Europe towards the
government's minimum 23 percent small business contracting goal. Every
year, legitimate small businesses are cheated out of billions of dollars in
Federal small business contracts because of intentional loopholes in the
regulation that allow this to happen. H.R. 1873 will allow this to continue
for years to come. There have now been over a dozen Federal investigations
and private studies that have found that the Federal government has
reported billions of dollars in contracts to hundreds of large businesses
as small business contracts. Firms like Boeing, Lockheed Martin,
Halliburton, Oracle, BAE, Hewlett-Packard, Raytheon, Titan Industries, L3
Communications and the multi-billion Euro Dutch firm Buhrmann NV have all
received billions of dollars in Federal small business contracts. Each one
of these firms will be allowed to keep their existing small business
contracts under H.R.1873.
The truth is that policies the SBA, General Services Administration, Office
of Management Budget and the FAR Council have created; intentionally divert
hundreds of billions in Federal small business contracts and subcontracts
from legitimate hard working small businesses in every state to big
business. It places legitimate small businesses in a position where they
must compete head-to-head with giant corporations for even the smallest
contracts for goods and services. Thousands of American small businesses
have been forced out of business as they unknowingly tried to compete with
Fortune 1000 firms for government small business contracts. H.R. 1873 will
allow this to continue.
2. Fact: After the first Congressional hearing on this issue in May of
2003, the SBA Inspector General recommended the annual re-certification of
all firms holding Federal small business contracts as the simplest solution
to this problem. The head of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy,
Angela Styles also agreed annual re-certification for all firms holding
Federal small business contracts was the solution. In 2006, the Senate
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship voted unanimously for
annual re-certification for all firms holding Federal small business
contracts as part of the SBA reauthorization bill. New SBA Inspector
General, Eric Thorson recommended annual re-certification for all firms in
his testimony before the Senate Committee on Small Business and
Entrepreneurship.
3. Fact: H.R. 1873 DOES NOT CONTAIN ANNUAL RE-CERTIFICATION FOR ALL FIRMS
CURRENTLY HOLDING FEDERAL SMALL BUSINESS CONTRACTS. It only requires firms
obtaining NEW Federal small business contracts to recertify their status as
small businesses. H.R. 1873 allows Fortune 1000 firms and their
subsidiaries to continue to rob legitimate small businesses out of billions
of dollars in Federal small business contracts for years to come.
You don't have to be a Washington insider to know that the real
beneficiaries of H.R. 1873 are corporate giants that have the most powerful
lobby in the nation. They are also the largest contributors to
Congressional campaigns.
The SBA Office of Advocacy reported that small businesses received around
$130 billion in Federal contracts and subcontracts. There is no telling how
much of that actually went to legitimate small businesses. The Bush
Administration has done everything possible to conceal the names of the
actual recipients of Federal small business contracts.
Based on the information I have been able to obtain I would estimate that
approximately $65 billion a year in so called small business contracts
actually go to the top two percent of firms in America. Firms in Holland,
France and England also receive U.S. small business contracts. This
wholesale diversion of Federal small business contracts to a, "Who's Who,"
of international corporate giants will only continue under H.R. 1873 in its
current form.
Any member of Congress that allows H.R. 1873 to become law without a
provision to remove hundreds of the largest firms in the world from
America's small business contracting programs is either an uninformed fool
or as deceitful and dishonest as the members of Congress that wrote this
bill and introduced it.