[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 48, Volume 7]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 48CFR2937.103-70]



[Page 42-43]

 

            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM

 

                     CHAPTER 29--DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

 

PART 2937_SERVICE CONTRACTING--Table of Contents

 

                Subpart 2937.1_Service Contracts-General

 

Sec. 2937.103-70  Department of Labor checklist to aid analysis and review 

of requirements for service contracts.



    Contracting specialists and contracting officers must work in close 

collaboration with the beneficiaries of the services being purchased to 

ensure that contractor performance meets contract requirements and 

performance standards.

    (a) General. Following is a checklist to aid analysis and review of 

requirements for service contracts.

    (1) Is the statement of work complete, with a clear-cut division of 

responsibility between the contracting parties?

    (2) Is the statement of work discussed in terms the market can 

satisfy?

    (3) Does the statement of work encompass all commercially available 

services that can meet the actual functional need (eliminates any 

nonessential preferences that may thwart full and open competition)?

    (4) Is the statement of work performance-based to the maximum extent 

possible (i.e., is the acquisition structured around the purpose of the 

work to be performed, as opposed to either the manner by which the work 

is to be performed or a broad and imprecise statement of work)?

    (b) Cost effectiveness. If the response to any of the following 

questions is negative, the agency may not have a valid requirement or 

not be obtaining the requirement in the most cost effective manner.

    (1) Is the statement of work written so that it supports the need 

for a specific service?

    (2) Is the statement of work written so that it permits adequate 

evaluation of contractor versus in-house cost and performance?

    (3) Are the choices of contract type, quality assurance plan, 

competition strategy, or other related acquisition strategies and 

procedures in the acquisition plan appropriate to ensure good



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contractor performance to meet the user's needs?

    (4) If a cost reimbursement contract is contemplated, is the 

acquisition plan adequate to ensure that the contractor will have the 

incentive to control costs under the contract?

    (5) Is the acquisition plan adequate to address the cost 

effectiveness of using contractor support (either long-term or short-

term) versus in-house performance?

    (6) Is the cost estimate or other supporting cost information 

adequate to enable the contracting office to effectively determine 

whether costs are reasonable?

    (7) Is the statement of work adequate to describe the requirement in 

terms of ``what'' is to be performed as opposed to ``how'' the work is 

to be accomplished?

    (8) Is the acquisition plan adequate to ensure that there is proper 

consideration given to ``quality'' and ``best value?''

    (c) Control. If the response to any of the following questions is 

negative, there may be a control problem.

    (1) Are there sufficient resources to evaluate contractor 

performance when the statement of work requires the contractor to 

provide advice, analysis and evaluation, opinions, alternatives, or 

recommendations that could significantly influence agency policy 

development or decision-making?

    (2) Does the quality assurance plan provide for adequate monitoring 

of contractor performance?

    (3) Is the statement of work written so that it specifies a contract 

deliverable or requires progress reporting on contractor performance?

    (4) Is agency expertise adequate to independently evaluate the 

contractor's approach, methodology, results, options, conclusions or 

recommendations?

    (d) Conflicts of interest. If the response to any of the following 

questions is affirmative, there may be a conflict of interest.

    (1) Can the potential offeror perform under the contract to devise 

solutions or make recommendations that would influence the award of 

future contracts to that contractor?

    (2) If the requirement is for support services (such as system 

engineering or technical direction), were any of the potential offerors 

involved in developing the system design specifications or in the 

production of the system?

    (3) Has a potential offeror participated in earlier work involving 

the same program or activity that is the subject of the present 

contract, wherein the offeror had access to source selection or 

proprietary information not available to other offerors competing for 

the contract?

    (4) Will the contractor be evaluating a competitor's work?

    (5) Does the contract allow the contractor to accept its own 

products or activities on behalf of the Government?

    (6) Will the work under this contract put the contractor in a 

position to influence government decision-making, e.g., developing 

regulations that will affect the contractor's current or future 

business?

    (7) Will the work under this contract affect the interests of the 

contractor's other clients?

    (8) Are any of the potential offerors, or their personnel who will 

perform the contract, former agency officials who--while employed by the 

agency--personally and substantially participated in the development of 

the requirement for, or the procurement of, these services within the 

past two years?

    (e) Competition. If the response to any of the following questions 

is negative, competition may be unnecessarily limited.

    (1) Is the statement of work defined so as to avoid overly 

restrictive specifications or performance standards?

    (2) Is the contract formulated in such a way as to avoid creating a 

continuous and dependent arrangement with the same contractor?

    (3) Is the use of an indefinite quantity or term contract 

arrangement appropriate to obtain the required services?

    (4) Will the requirement be obtained through the use of full and 

open competition?



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