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here_2_help

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About here_2_help

  • Birthday 12/17/1960

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    No special interests, really. Kind of a jack-of-all-trades/master-of-none kind of person.

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  1. (Emphasis added; internal citations omitted.) Based on the above, I'm hard-pressed to imagine how one might evaluate offerors. I guess based on general AI expertise? It seems to me that CBP is looking to hire a guide or two to lead it down the path of implementing AI. Track 1 will augment existing agency resources to manage the contractor(s) who execute Track 2, I guess. But the nature of the awards means that work will be handled on an individual order basis. The Track 1 contractors will have difficulty establishing long-term partnerships with the CBP staff because of the nature of how the work is managed. The Track 2 contractors will have difficulty seeing the bigger picture because of the nature of how the work is awarded. Conclusion: The agency would have been better off awarding one long term Track 1 contract on a CPFF basis and one or more Track 2 contracts to selected AI experts with a proven track record of deploying AI. The Track 2 contracts should have specific requirements in mind. You could even go CPIF with the incentive fee tied to quantitative or qualitative performance enhancement in Track 2. BPAs with pools of contractors and individual orders was not the way to go, in my view.
  2. Wow. A lot of words to say, "Sure, the government made some mistakes in evaluation. But the mistakes weren't prejudicial. Denied."
  3. It is not mandatory to have a Forward Pricing Rate Agreement (FPRA). Oftentimes they are more trouble than they are worth. The contractor should propose its best estimate of future indirect rates to be incurred during contract performance and be prepared to support its estimate during a proposal fact-finding or audit just like any other estimate. That said, normally DCAA likes to see detailed budgets for the upcoming year with outyear adjustments based on known events/trends, such as award of large contracts. If you read 52.217-6, it is clear that the provisional billing rates should be the contractor's expected actual rates, and that the billing rates should be adjusted as necessary (either prospectively or retroactively) to prevent any significant under or over billings. In my experience, a NICRA covers audited, negotiated rates. It is the document that establishes final billing rates, not provisional or interim billing rates. To be clear, I'm not saying that a NICRA cannot be used to establish provisional billing rates; I just haven't experienced that scenario. There is another set of rates, which is what the contractor uses to establish contract costs during performance, prior to receiving audited/negotiated final rates. Those rates may be linked to an FPRA or a NICRA, or they can be the contractor's best estimate of actual indirect cost rates to be incurred during the current year. Note that these rates are not subject to government approval, but they are critical because they help establish contract Estimates at Completion and thus drive tracking of costs incurred against funds provided. So ... there can be overlap between actual rates, billing rates, and forward pricing rates--especially for the current or upcoming year. A contractor with cost-type contracts should understand where the sets of rates overlap and where they differ. That contractor should be monitoring variances and proposing adjustments to provisional billing rates as required by 52.216-7. That contractor should be updating its (internal) forward pricing rates based on what it sees in the future, especially if those same rates are also used to estimate fixed-priced contracts. Frankly--and without meaning to condescend--understanding the interaction of indirect rates between actual, provisional, final, and forward pricing is fundamental to managing cost-type work, regardless of whether you are on the contractor or government side. I'm frequently surprised how many people--especially those in contracts--don't understand the interplay. I strongly recommend a thorough read of 52.216-7 for any individual who wants to better understand billing rates. For forward pricing rates, see Table 15-2.
  4. I also own an S-Corp. I don't need any Form 1099's. They are not required for an S-Corp. If you do your bookkeeping, it is not hard to figure out your corporate income. For me, it is basically all funds I deposit into my business checking account. I have a spreadsheet that I update about every 60 days that helps me to track income and expenses. I don't even use accounting software. In summary, your clients aren't required to provide you with a 1099, nor should you need one to accurately report income and file tax returns.
  5. My first question is: have the parties reached price agreement? If so, how was the R&R cost treated in the agreed-upon price? If no agreement then I would then ask what the contractor's normal practices are for the cost. I assume the contractor will follow its policies consistently. If this is the first time occurrence and precedent is being established, then my opinion is that leave costs are leave costs and should be treated as the contractor's other leave costs are treated, which I assume would be indirect. (But not always.) You could argue that the R&R costs are distinguishable from other "normal" leave costs because of the circumstances. In normal TDY travel, the employee returns home, but not in this case. So, it depends. There is no bright line answer here that I can think of.
  6. Joel, with respect, I think you miss the thrust of the conversation. When the government enters the commercial marketplace to acquire commercial goods and services, it should be prepared to accept costs that are customary in relation to what is being acquired. That is why I worded my response the way I did. If the contractor's policies permit business class travel and business class travel is provided to all employees in similar circumstances--regardless of customer and/or contract type--then it is, almost by definition, reasonable.
  7. In other words, if the technician travels business class--and assuming the contractor's policies permit that--then that would be a reimbursable expense, since there is no applicable limitation.
  8. My superpower is to kill conversations, I guess
  9. I have unfortunate experience with these types of contracts. From what I've seen, they are proposed, priced, budgeted, managed, billed, and paid as if they are T&M contracts. But then the auditors come in and it turns out they are cost-type contracts. Painful. In this case, the parties seemed to have reached early agreement that the original labor rates would be used to price future Task Orders, and to establish the basis for the fixed fee in each new TO. Now the contractor is pointing out that the original labor rates are too low. The contractor wants to update the labor rates for more accurate pricing. The contractor's position makes some sense to me, notwithstanding the prior agreement. Use of labor rates--rates that both parties know are too low--to price future work seems incorrect. The program is obligating insufficient funds and it knows that. Not good, in my view. At a minimum, additional contract mods will be required to bring the funding up to where it needs to be once performance starts. With respect to the fixed fee, is there some reason that value can't be negotiated? From the government's point of view, the pre-negotiation objective would be based on the original labor rates. From the contractor's perspective, the fixed fee would be based on more current rates. This distance between the positions, it seems, could be negotiated.
  10. I'll add a word or two in support of Don's position. You have a project ETC and EAC now with the part(s) being purchased. The customer wants to provide the part(s) as CFM. Great. Now redo the ETC and EAC (excluding profit), assuming no purchase of the part(s). What's the difference? Don't forget to look at ripple effects that may offset the cost decrease. One I can think of is the labor cost associated with handling the CFP and preventing it from being commingled with other parts.
  11. My read of the OP is that the contract has not yet been awarded and the parties are negotiating price. If I'm correct, then I believe the contractor has a valid reason for trying to obtain a higher profit that the government initially established in the pre-negotiation objective. The tax costs are unallowable and the contract is going to pay them on behalf of its employees (similar to a relocation tax gross-up). The unallowable costs will come out of expected profit. Seems reasonable to me. Alternate approach: the contractor rotates staff to avoid paying taxes, which will require a larger staff from which to draw on. Further, the transitions between employees may cause inefficiencies. Suboptimal. So: pay the higher profit rate.
  12. Incisive article but not really telling us anything new. Essentially an example of just how bad things really are. The government (in general) doesn't like to acquire commercial services. Period.
  13. CFO, The FAR only applies if there is a contract term in your contract (or RFP) that invokes it. Are you asking whether the government is permitted by the FAR to reduce the contract price based on a contractor's failure to deliver (for whatever reason) the contractually required labor hours?
  14. No. The rates must be trued-up for all contracts but whether the customer sees the impact of the true-up depends on the individual contract terms
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