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comment_81137

I have a situation where a CO signed a base and two option year contract for $150K, but the CO only has a warrant for $100k. The base year is $50k and each option is $50k, for a total of $150k. The contract was recently signed and is still in the base year. Is it possible to avoid an unauthorized commitment is the CO does a mod to remove the last option year? Or is the UC has already occurred when the CO signed awarded the contract above his warrant level, even though the government hasn't made payments above his warrant level yet, as it's only committed to the base year thus far. If it is an unauthorized commitment, would it be for the full $150k or just the option years for a total of $100k? 

comment_81143

This has happened in a couple instances I’m aware of.  In both times it was documented as an administrative oversight.  A senior contracting official (HCO and HCA) remedied it. In one instance the CO warrant was revised to include the higher amount.  In the other instance, the contract was modified to designate another CO with the proper level.

A lot really depends on the exact language in the warrant.  Without knowing what the warrant says, we are just speculating. 

comment_81152
13 hours ago, Minnen said:

I have a situation where a CO signed a base and two option year contract for $150K, but the CO only has a warrant for $100k. The base year is $50k and each option is $50k, for a total of $150k. The contract was recently signed and is still in the base year. Is it possible to avoid an unauthorized commitment is the CO does a mod to remove the last option year? Or is the UC has already occurred when the CO signed awarded the contract above his warrant level, even though the government hasn't made payments above his warrant level yet, as it's only committed to the base year thus far. If it is an unauthorized commitment, would it be for the full $150k or just the option years for a total of $100k? 

How do you know that their warrant is limited to $100k per action including options? 

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