[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 13, Volume 1]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

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

[CITE: 13CFR125.3]



[Page 428-431]

 

                TITLE 13--BUSINESS CREDIT AND ASSISTANCE

 

                CHAPTER I--SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

 

PART 125_GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING PROGRAMS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 125.3  Subcontracting assistance.



    (a) General. The purpose of the subcontracting assistance program is 

to provide the maximum practicable subcontracting opportunities for 

small business concerns, including small business concerns owned and 

controlled by veterans, small business concerns owned and controlled by 

service-disabled veterans, certified HUBZone small business concerns, 

certified small business concerns owned and controlled by socially and 

economically disadvantaged individuals, and small business concerns 

owned and controlled by women. The subcontracting assistance program 

implements section 8(d) of the Small Business Act, which includes the 

requirement that, unless otherwise exempt, other-than-small business 

concerns awarded contracts that offer subcontracting possibilities by 

the Federal Government in excess of $500,000, or in excess of $1,000,000 

for construction of a public facility, must submit a subcontracting plan 

to the appropriate contracting agency. The Federal Acquisition 

Regulation sets forth the requirements for subcontracting plans in 48 

CFR 19.7, and the clause at 48 CFR 52.219-9.

    (b) Responsibilities of prime contractors. (1) Prime contractors 

(including small business prime contractors) selected to receive a 

Federal contract that exceeds the traditional simplified acquisition 

threshold of $100,000, that will not be performed entirely outside of 

any state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District 

of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and that is not for 

services which are personal in nature, are responsible for ensuring that 

small business concerns have the maximum practicable opportunity to 

participate in the performance of the contract, including subcontracts 

for subsystems, assemblies, components, and related services for major 

systems, consistent with the efficient performance of the contract.

    (2) A small business cannot be required to submit a formal 

subcontracting plan or be asked to submit a formal subcontracting plan, 

a small-business prime contractor is encouraged to provide maximum 

practicable opportunity to other small businesses to participate in the 

performance of the contract, consistent with the efficient performance 

of the contract.

    (3) Efforts to provide the maximum practicable subcontracting 

opportunities for small business concern may include, as appropriate for 

the procurement, one or more of the following actions:

    (i) Breaking out contract work items into economically feasible 

units, as appropriate, to facilitate small business participation;

    (ii) Conducting market research to identify small business 

subcontractors



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and suppliers through all reasonable means, such as performing on-line 

searches on the Central Contractor Registration (NCR), posting Notices 

of Sources Sought and/or Requests for Proposal on SBA's SUB-Net, 

participating in Business Matchmaking events, and attending pre-bid 

conferences;

    (iii) Soliciting small business concerns as early in the acquisition 

process as practicable to allow them sufficient time to submit a timely 

offer for the subcontract;

    (iv) Providing interested small businesses with adequate and timely 

information about the plans, specifications, and requirements for 

performance of the prime contract to assist them in submitting a timely 

offer for the subcontract;

    (v) Negotiating in good faith with interested small businesses;

    (vi) Directing small businesses that need additional assistance to 

SBA;

    (vii) Assisting interested small businesses in obtaining bonding, 

lines of credit, required insurance, necessary equipment, supplies, 

materials, or services;

    (viii) Utilizing the available services of small business 

associations; local, state, and Federal small business assistance 

offices; and other organizations; and

    (ix) Participating in a formal mentor-prot[eacute]g[eacute] program 

with one or more small-business prot[eacute]g[eacute]s that results in 

developmental assistance to the prot[eacute]g[eacute]s.

    (c) Additional responsibilities of large prime contractors. (1) In 

addition to the responsibilities provided in paragraph (b) of this 

section, a prime contractor selected for award of a contract or contract 

modification that exceeds $500,000, or $1,000,000 in the case of 

construction of a public facility, is responsible for:

    (i) Submitting and negotiating before award an acceptable 

subcontracting plan that reflects maximum practicable opportunities for 

small businesses in the performance of the contract as subcontractors or 

suppliers. A prime contractor may submit a commercial plan, described in 

paragraph (c)(2) of this section, instead of an individual 

subcontracting plan, when the product or service being furnished to the 

Government meets the definition of a commercial item under 48 CFR 2.101;

    (ii) Making a good-faith effort to achieve the dollar and percentage 

goals and other elements in its subcontracting plan;

    (iii) Submitting a timely, accurate, and complete SF-294, 

Subcontracting Report for Individual Contract, and SF-295, Summary 

Subcontract Report; or entering the same information into an electronic 

database approved by SBA;

    (iv) Cooperating in the reviews of subcontracting plan compliance, 

including providing requested information and supporting documentation 

reflecting actual achievements and good-faith efforts to meet the goals 

and other elements in the subcontracting plan;

    (v) Providing pre-award written notification to unsuccessful small 

business offerors on all subcontracts over $100,000 for which a small 

business concern received a preference. The written notification must 

include the name and location of the apparent successful offeror and if 

the successful offeror is a small business, veteran-owned small 

business, service-disabled veteran-owned small business, HUBZone small 

business, small disadvantaged business, or women-owned small business; 

and

    (vi) As a best practice, providing the pre-award written 

notification cited in paragraph (c)(1)(v) of this section to 

unsuccessful and small business offerors on subcontracts at or below 

$100,000 whenever it is practical to do so.

    (2) A commercial plan, also referred to as an annual plan or 

company-wide plan, is the preferred type of subcontracting plan for 

contractors furnishing commercial items. A commercial plan covers the 

offeror's fiscal year and applies to the entire production of commercial 

items sold by either the entire company or a portion thereof (e.g., 

division, plant, or product line). Once approved, the plan remains in 

effect during the contractor's fiscal year for all Federal government 

contracts in effect during that period. The contracting officer of the 

agency that originally approved the commercial plan will exercise the 

functions of the



[[Page 430]]



contracting officer on behalf of all agencies that award contracts 

covered by the plan.

    (3) The additional prime contractor responsibilities described in 

paragraph (c)(1) of this section do not apply if:

    (i) The prime contractor is a small business concern;

    (ii) The prime contract or contract modification is a personal 

services contract; or

    (iii) The prime contract or contract modification will be performed 

entirely outside of any state, territory, or possession of the United 

States, the District of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

    (d) Determination of good-faith efforts. Evidence that a large 

business prime contractor has made a good-faith effort to comply with 

its subcontracting plan or other subcontracting responsibilities 

includes supporting documentation that:

    (1) The contractor performed one or more of the actions described in 

paragraph (b) of this section, as appropriate for the procurement;

    (2) Although the contractor may have failed to achieve its goal in 

one socio-economic category, it over-achieved its goal by an equal or 

greater amount in one or more of the other categories; or

    (3) The contractor fulfilled all of the requirements of its 

subcontracting plan.

    (e) CMR Responsibilities. Commercial Market Representatives (CMRs) 

are SBA's subcontracting specialists. CMRs are responsible for:

    (1) Facilitating the matching of large prime contractors with small 

business concerns;

    (2) Counseling large prime contractors on their responsibilities to 

maximize subcontracting opportunities for small business concerns;

    (3) Instructing large prime contractors on identifying small 

business concerns by means of the CCR, SUB-Net, Business Matchmaking 

events, and other resources and tools;

    (4) Counseling small business concerns on how to market themselves 

to large prime contractors;

    (5) Maintaining a portfolio of large prime contractors and 

conducting Subcontracting Orientation and Assistance Reviews (SOARs). 

SOARs are conducted for the purpose of assisting prime contractors in 

understanding and complying with their small business subcontracting 

responsibilities, including developing subcontracting goals that reflect 

maximum practicable opportunity for small business; maintaining 

acceptable books and records; and periodically submitting reports to the 

Federal government; and

    (6) Conducting periodic reviews, including compliance reviews in 

accordance with paragraph (f) of this section.

    (f) Compliance reviews. A prime contractor's performance under its 

subcontracting plan is evaluated by means of on-site compliance reviews 

and follow-up reviews. A compliance review is a surveillance review that 

determines a contractor's achievements in meeting the goals and other 

elements in its subcontracting plan for both open contracts and 

contracts completed during the previous twelve months. A follow-up 

review is done after a compliance review, generally within six to eight 

months, to determine if the contractor has implemented SBA's 

recommendations.

    (2) All compliance reviews begin with a validation of the 

contractor's most recent SF-295, Summary Subcontract Report, and SF-294, 

Subcontracting Report for Individual Contracts, if applicable. The 

validation includes a review of the contractor's methodology for 

completing these reports and a sampling of specific documentation to 

substantiate small business status.

    (3) Upon completion of the review and evaluation of a contractor's 

performance and efforts to achieve the requirements in its 

subcontracting plans, the contractor's performance will be assigned one 

of the following ratings: Outstanding, Highly Successful, Acceptable, 

Marginal, or Unsatisfactory. The factors listed in paragraph (c) of this 

section will be taken into consideration, where applicable, in 

determining the contractor's rating. However, a contractor may be found 

Unsatisfactory, regardless of other factors, if it cannot substantiate 

the claimed achievements under its subcontracting plan.

    (4) Any contractor that receives a marginal or unsatisfactory rating 

must



[[Page 431]]



provide a written corrective action plan to SBA, or to both SBA and the 

agency that conducted the compliance review if the agency conducting the 

review has an agreement with SBA, within 30 days of its receipt of the 

official compliance report.

    (5) Any contractor that fails to comply with paragraph (f)(4) of 

this section, or any contractor that fails to demonstrate a good-faith 

effort, as set forth in paragraph (d) of this section, may be considered 

for liquidated damages under the procedures in 48 CFR 19.705-7 and the 

clause at 52.219-16. This action shall be considered by the contracting 

officer upon receipt of a written recommendation to that effect from the 

CMR. The CMR's recommendation must include a copy of the compliance 

report and any other relevant correspondence or supporting 

documentation.

    (6) Reviews and evaluations of contractors with commercial plans are 

identical to reviews and evaluations of other contractors, except that 

contractors with commercial subcontracting plans do not submit the SF-

294, Subcontracting Report for Individual Contracts. Instead, goal 

achievement is determined by comparing the goals in the approved 

commercial subcontracting plan against the cumulative achievements on 

the SF-295, Summary Subcontract Report, for the same period. The same 

ratings criteria set forth in paragraph (f)(3) of this section apply to 

contractors with commercial plans.

    (7) SBA is authorized to enter into agreements with other Federal 

agencies or entities to conduct compliance reviews and otherwise further 

the objectives of the subcontracting program. Copies of these agreements 

will be published on http://www.sba.gov/GC. SBA is the lead agency on 

all joint compliance reviews with other agencies.

    (g) Subcontracting consideration in source selection. When an 

ordering agency anticipates placing an order against a Federal Supply 

Schedule, government-wide acquisition contract (GWAC), or multi-agency 

contract (MAC), the ordering agency may evaluate subcontracting as a 

significant factor in its source selection process. In addition, the 

ordering agency may also evaluate subcontracting as a significant factor 

in source selection when entering into a blanket purchase agreement. At 

the time of contract award, the contracting officer must disclose to all 

competitors which one (or more) of these three elements will be 

evaluated as an important source selection evaluation factor in any 

subsequent procurement action. A small-business offeror automatically 

receives the maximum possible score or credit on this evaluation factor 

without having to submit a subcontracting plan and without having to 

demonstrate subcontracting past performance. The factors that may be 

evaluated, individually or in combination, are:

    (1) The subcontracting to be performed on the specific requirement;

    (2) The goals negotiated in previous subcontracting plans; and

    (3) The contractor's past performance in meeting the subcontracting 

goals contained in previous subcontracting plans.



[69 FR 75824, Dec. 20, 2004]