[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR19.305]

[Page 347-348]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
 
PART 19_SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
 Subpart 19.3_Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business 
                                Programs
 
Sec.  19.305  Protesting a representation of disadvantaged business status.

    (a) This section applies to protests of a small business concern's 
disadvantaged status as a prime contractor. Protests of a small business 
concern's disadvantaged status as a subcontractor are processed under 
19.703(a)(2). Protests of a concern's size as a prime contractor are 
processed under 19.302. Protests of a concern's size as a subcontractor 
are processed under 19.703(b). An offeror, the contracting officer, or 
the SBA may protest the apparently successful offeror's representation 
of disadvantaged status if the concern is eligible to receive a benefit 
based on its disadvantaged status (see Subpart 19.11 and 19.1202).
    (b) An offeror, excluding an offeror determined by the contracting 
officer to be non-responsive or outside the competitive range, or an 
offeror that SBA has previously found to be ineligible for the 
requirement at issue, may protest the apparently successful offeror's 
representation of disadvantaged status by filing a protest in writing 
with the contracting officer. SBA regulations concerning protests are 
contained in 13 CFR 124, Subpart B. The protest--
    (1) Must be filed within the times specified in 19.302(d)(1); and
    (2) Must contain specific facts or allegations supporting the basis 
of protest.
    (c) The contracting officer or the SBA may protest in writing a 
concern's

[[Page 348]]

representation of disadvantaged status at any time following bid opening 
or notification of intended award.
    (1) If a contracting officer's protest is based on information 
provided by a party ineligible to protest directly or ineligible to 
protest under the timeliness standard, the contracting officer must be 
persuaded by the evidence presented before adopting the grounds for 
protest as his or her own.
    (2) The SBA may protest a concern's representation of disadvantaged 
status by filing directly with its Assistant Administrator for Small 
Disadvantaged Business Certification and Eligibility and notifying the 
contracting officer.
    (d) The contracting officer shall return premature protests to the 
protestor. A protest is considered to be premature if it is submitted 
before bid opening or notification of intended award. SBA normally will 
not consider a postaward protest. SBA may consider a postaward protest 
in its discretion where it determines that an SDB determination after 
award is meaningful (e.g., where the contracting officer agrees to 
terminate the contract if the protest is sustained).
    (e) Upon receipt of a protest that is not premature, the contracting 
officer shall withhold award and forward the protest to Small Business 
Administration, Assistant Administrator for SDBCE, 409 Third Street, SW, 
Washington, DC 20416. The contracting officer shall send to SBA--
    (1) The written protest and any accompanying materials;
    (2) The date the protest was received;
    (3) A copy of the protested concern's representation as a small 
disadvantaged business, and the date of such representation; and
    (4) The date of bid opening or date on which notification of the 
apparently successful offeror was sent to unsuccessful offerors.
    (f) When the contracting officer makes a written determination that 
award must be made to protect the public interest, award may be made 
notwithstanding the protest.
    (g) The SBA Assistant Administrator for Small Disadvantaged Business 
Certification and Eligibility will notify the protestor and the 
contracting officer of the date the protest was received and whether it 
will be processed or dismissed for lack of timeliness or specificity. 
For protests that are not dismissed, the SBA will, within 15 working 
days after receipt of the protest, determine the disadvantaged status of 
the challenged offeror and will notify the contracting officer, the 
challenged offeror, and the protestor. Award may be made on the basis of 
that determination. The determination is final for purposes of the 
instant acquisition, unless it is appealed and--
    (1) The contracting officer receives the SBA's decision on the 
appeal before award; or
    (2) The contracting officer has agreed to terminate the contract, as 
appropriate, based on the outcome of the appeal (see 13 CFR 124, Subpart 
B).
    (h) If the contracting officer does not receive an SBA determination 
within 15 working days after the SBA's receipt of the protest, the 
contracting officer shall presume that the challenged offeror is 
disadvantaged and may award the contract, unless the SBA requests and 
the contracting officer grants an extension to the 15-day response 
period.
    (i) An SBA determination may be appealed by--
    (1) The party whose protest has been denied;
    (2) The concern whose status was protested; or
    (3) The contracting officer.
    (j) The appeal must be filed with the SBA's Administrator or 
designee within five working days after receipt of the determination. If 
the contracting officer receives the SBA's decision on the appeal before 
award, the decision shall apply to the instant acquisition. If the 
decision is received after award, it will not apply to the instant 
acquisition (but see paragraph (g)(2) of this section).

[63 FR 35722, June 30, 1998, as amended at 63 FR 36122, July 1, 1998]