[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: 13CFR125.5]



[Page 432-435]

 

                TITLE 13--BUSINESS CREDIT AND ASSISTANCE

 

                CHAPTER I--SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

 

PART 125_GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING PROGRAMS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 125.5  Certificate of Competency Program.



    (a) General. (1) The Certificate of Competency (COC) Program is 

authorized under section 8(b)(7) of the Small Business Act. A COC is a 

written instrument issued by SBA to a Government contracting officer, 

certifying that one or more named small business concerns possess the 

responsibility to perform a specific Government procurement (or sale) 

contract. The COC Program is applicable to all Government procurement 

actions. For purposes of this Section, the term ``United States'' 

includes its territories, possessions, and the Commonwealth of Puerto 

Rico.

    (2) A contracting officer must, upon determining an apparent low 

small business offeror to be nonresponsible, refer that small business 

to SBA for a possible COC, even if the next low apparently responsible 

offeror is also a small business.

    (3) A small business offeror referred to SBA as nonresponsible may 

apply to SBA for a COC. Where the applicant is a non-manufacturing 

offeror on a supply contract, the COC applies to the responsibility of 

the non-manufacturer, not to that of the manufacturer.

    (b) COC Eligibility. (1) The offeror seeking a COC has the burden of 

proof to demonstrate its eligibility for COC review. To be eligible for 

the COC program, a firm must meet the following criteria:

    (i) It must qualify as a small business concern under the size 

standard applicable to the procurement. Where the solicitation fails to 

specify a size standard or Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) 

code, SBA will assign the appropriate size standard to determine COC 

eligibility. SBA determines size eligibility as of the date described in 

Sec. 121.404 of this chapter.

    (ii) A manufacturing, service, or construction concern must 

demonstrate that it will perform a significant portion of the proposed 

contract with its own facilities, equipment, and personnel. The contract 

must be performed or the end item manufactured within the United States.

    (iii) A non-manufacturer making an offer on a small business set-

aside contract for supplies must furnish end items that have been 

manufactured in the United States by a small business. A waiver of this 

requirement may be requested under Sec. Sec. 121.1301 through 121.1305 

of this chapter for either the type of product being procured or the 

specific contract at issue.

    (iv) A non-manufacturer making an offer on an unrestricted 

procurement or a procurement utilizing simplified acquisition threshold 

procedures with a cost that does not exceed $25,000 must furnish end 

items manufactured in the United States to be eligible for a COC.

    (v) An offeror intending to provide a kit consisting of finished 

components or other components provided for a special purpose, is 

eligible if:

    (A) It meets the Size Standard for the SIC code assigned to the 

procurement;

    (B) Each component comprising the kit was manufactured in the United 

States; and

    (C) In the case of a set-aside, each component comprising the kit 

was manufactured by a small business under the size standard applicable 

to the component provided. A waiver of this requirement may be requested 

under Sec. Sec. 121.1301 through 121.1305 of this chapter.

    (2) SBA will determine a concern ineligible for a COC if the 

concern, or any of its principals, appears in the ``Parties Excluded 

From Federal Procurement Programs'' section found in the U.S. General 

Services Administration Office of Acquisition Policy Publication: List 

of Parties Excluded From Federal Procurement or Nonprocurement Programs. 

If a principal is unable to presently control the applicant concern, and 

appears in the Procurement



[[Page 433]]



section of the list due to matters not directly related to the concern 

itself, responsibility will be determined in accordance with paragraph 

(f)(2) of this section.

    (3) An eligibility determination will be made on a case-by-case 

basis, where a concern or any of its principals appears in the 

Nonprocurement Section of the publication referred to in paragraph 

(b)(2) of this section.

    (c) Referral of nonresponsibility determination to SBA. (1) A 

contracting officer who determines that an apparently successful offeror 

that has certified itself to be a small business with respect to a 

specific Government procurement lacks any element of responsibility 

(including competency, capability, capacity, credit, integrity or 

tenacity or perseverance) must refer the matter in writing to the SBA 

Government Contracting Area Office (Area Office) serving the area in 

which the headquarters of the offeror is located. The referral must 

include a copy of the following:

    (i) Solicitation;

    (ii) Offer submitted by the concern whose responsibility is at issue 

for the procurement (its Best and Final Offer for a negotiated 

procurement);

    (iii) Abstract of Bids, where applicable, or the Contracting 

Officer's Price Negotiation Memorandum;

    (iv) Preaward survey, where applicable;

    (v) Contracting officer's written determination of 

nonresponsibility;

    (vi) Technical data package (including drawings, specifications, and 

Statement of Work); and

    (vii) Any other justification and documentation used to arrive at 

the nonresponsibility determination.

    (2) Contract award must be withheld by the contracting officer for a 

period of 15 working days (or longer if agreed to by SBA and the 

contracting officer) following receipt by the appropriate Area Office of 

a referral which includes all required documentation.

    (3) The COC referral must indicate that the offeror has been found 

responsive to the solicitation, and also identify the reasons for the 

nonresponsibility determination.

    (d) Application for COC. (1) Upon receipt of the contracting 

officer's referral, the Area Office will inform the concern of the 

contracting officer's negative responsibility determination, and offer 

it the opportunity to apply to SBA for a COC by a specified date.

    (2) The COC application must include all information and 

documentation requested by SBA and any additional information which the 

firm believes will demonstrate its ability to perform on the proposed 

contract. The application should be returned as soon as possible, but no 

later than the date specified by SBA.

    (3) Upon receipt of a complete and acceptable application, SBA may 

elect to visit the applicant's facility to review its responsibility. 

SBA personnel may obtain clarification or confirmation of information 

provided by the applicant by directly contacting suppliers, financial 

institutions, and other third parties upon whom the applicant's 

responsibility depends.

    (e) Incomplete applications. If an application for a COC is 

materially incomplete or is not submitted by the date specified by SBA, 

SBA will close the case without issuing a COC and will notify the 

contracting officer and the concern with a declination letter.

    (f) Reviewing an application. (1) The COC review process is not 

limited to the areas of nonresponsibility cited by the contracting 

officer. SBA may, at its discretion, independently evaluate the COC 

applicant for all elements of responsibility, but it may presume 

responsibility exists as to elements other than those cited as 

deficient. SBA may deny a COC for reasons of nonresponsibility not 

originally cited by the contracting officer.

    (2) A small business will be rebuttably presumed nonresponsible if 

any of the following circumstances are shown to exist:

    (i) Within three years before the application for a COC, the 

concern, or any of its principals, has been convicted of an offense or 

offenses that would constitute grounds for debarment or suspension under 

FAR subpart 9.4 (48 CFR part 9, subpart 9.4), and the matter is still 

under the jurisdiction of a court (e.g., the principals of a concern are 

incarcerated, on probation or parole, or under a suspended sentence); or



[[Page 434]]



    (ii) Within three years before the application for a COC, the 

concern or any of its principals has had a civil judgment entered 

against it or them for any reason that would constitute grounds for 

debarment or suspension under FAR subpart 9.4 (48 CFR part, subpart 

9.4).

    (g) Decision by Area Director (``Director''). After reviewing the 

information submitted by the applicant and the information gathered by 

SBA, the Area Director will make a determination, either final or 

recommended as set forth in the following chart:



------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                 SBA official or         Finality of

                                   office with        decision; options

     Contracting actions        authority to make      for contracting

                                    decision              agencies

------------------------------------------------------------------------

$100,000 or less, or in       Director may approve  Final. The Director

 accordance with Simplified    or deny.              will notify both

 Acquisition Threshold                               applicant and

 procedures.                                         contracting agency

                                                     in writing of the

                                                     decision.

Between $100,000 and $25      (1) Director may      (1) Final.

 million.                      deny.

                              (2) Director may      (2) Contracting

                               approve, subject to   agency may proceed

                               right of appeal and   under paragraph (h)

                               other options.        or paragraph (i) of

                                                     this section.

Exceeding $25 million.......  (1) Director may      (1) Final.

                               deny.

                              (2) Director must     (2) Contracting

                               refer to SBA          agency may proceed

                               Headquarters          under paragraph (j)

                               recommendation for    of this section.

                               approval.

------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (h) Notification of intent to issue on a contract with a value 

between $100,000 and $25 million. Where the Director determines that a 

COC is warranted, he or she will notify the contracting officer of the 

intent to issue a COC, and of the reasons for that decision, prior to 

issuing the COC. At the time of notification, the contracting officer 

has the following options:

    (1) Accept the Director's decision to issue the COC and award the 

contract to the concern. The COC issuance letter will then be sent, 

including as an attachment a detailed rationale of the decision; or

    (2) Ask the Director to suspend the case for one of the following 

purposes:

    (i) To forward a detailed rationale for the decision to the 

contracting officer for review within a specified period of time;

    (ii) To afford the contracting officer the opportunity to meet with 

the Area Office to review all documentation contained in the case file;

    (iii) To submit any information which the contracting officer 

believes SBA has not considered (at which time, SBA will establish a new 

suspense date mutually agreeable to the contracting officer and SBA); or

    (iv) To permit resolution of an appeal by the contracting agency to 

SBA Headquarters under paragraph (i) of this section.

    (i) Appeals of Area Director determinations. For COC actions with a 

value exceeding $100,000, contracting agencies may appeal a Director's 

decision to issue a COC to SBA Headquarters by filing an appeal with the 

Area Office processing the COC application. The Area Office must honor 

the request to appeal if the contracting officer agrees to withhold 

award until the appeal process is concluded. Without such an agreement 

from the contracting officer, the Director must issue the COC. When such 

an agreement has been obtained, the Area Office will immediately forward 

the case file to SBA Headquarters.

    (1) The intent of the appeal procedure is to allow the contracting 

agency the opportunity to submit to SBA Headquarters any documentation 

which the Area Office may not have considered.

    (2) SBA Headquarters will furnish written notice to the Director, 

Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU) at the 

secretariat level of the procuring agency (with a copy to the 

contracting officer), that the case file has been received and that an 

appeal decision may be requested by an authorized official at that 

level. If the contracting agency decides to file an appeal, it must 

notify SBA Headquarters through its Director, OSDBU, within 10 working 

days (or a time period agreed upon by both agencies) of its receipt of 

the notice under paragraph (h) of this section. The appeal and any 

supporting documentation must be filed within 10 working days



[[Page 435]]



(or a different time period agreed to by both agencies) after SBA 

receives the request for a formal appeal.

    (3) The SBA Associate Administrator for Government Contracting (AA/

GC) will make a final determination, in writing, to issue or to deny the 

COC.

    (j) Decision by SBA Headquarters where contract value exceeds $25 

million. (1) Prior to taking final action, SBA Headquarters will contact 

the contracting agency at the secretariat level or agency equivalent and 

afford it the following options:

    (i) Ask SBA Headquarters to suspend the case so that the agency can 

meet with Headquarters personnel and review all documentation contained 

in the case file; or

    (ii) Submit to SBA Headquarters for evaluation any information which 

the contracting agency believes has not been considered.

    (2) After reviewing all available information, the AA/GC will make a 

final decision to either issue or deny the COC. If the AA/GC's decision 

is to deny the COC, the applicant and contracting agency will be 

informed in writing by the Area Office. If the decision is to issue the 

COC, a letter certifying the responsibility of the firm will be sent to 

the contracting agency by Headquarters and the applicant will be 

informed of such issuance by the Area Office. Except as set forth in 

paragraph (l) of this section, there can be no further appeal or 

reconsideration of the decision of the AA/GC.

    (k) Notification of denial of COC. The notification to an 

unsuccessful applicant following either an Area Director or a 

Headquarters denial of a COC will briefly state all reasons for denial 

and inform the applicant that a meeting may be requested with 

appropriate SBA personnel to discuss the denial. Upon receipt of a 

request for such a meeting, the appropriate SBA personnel will confer 

with the applicant and explain the reasons for SBA's action. The meeting 

does not constitute an opportunity to rebut the merits of the SBA's 

decision to deny the COC, and is for the sole purpose of giving the 

applicant the opportunity to correct deficiencies so as to improve its 

ability to obtain future contracts either directly or, if necessary, 

through the issuance of a COC.

    (l) Reconsideration of COC after issuance. (1) An approved COC may 

be reconsidered and possibly rescinded, at the sole discretion of SBA, 

where an award of the contract has not occurred, and one of the 

following circumstances exists:

    (i) The COC applicant submitted false or omitted materially adverse 

information;

    (ii) New materially adverse information has been received relating 

to the current responsibility of the applicant concern; or

    (iii) The COC has been issued for more than 60 days (in which case 

SBA may investigate the firm's current circumstances).

    (2) Where SBA reconsiders and reaffirms the COC the procedures under 

paragraph (h) of this section do not apply.

    (m) Effect of a COC. By the terms of the Act, a COC is conclusive as 

to responsibility. Where SBA issues a COC on behalf of a small business 

with respect to a particular contract, contracting officers are required 

to award the contract without requiring the firm to meet any other 

requirement with respect to responsibility.

    (n) Effect of Denial of COC. Denial of a COC by SBA does not 

preclude a contracting officer from awarding a contract to the referred 

firm, nor does it prevent the concern from making an offer on any other 

procurement.

    (o) Monitoring performance. Once a COC has been issued and a 

contract awarded on that basis, SBA will monitor contractor performance.



[61 FR 3312, Jan. 31, 1996; 61 FR 7987, Mar. 1, 1996]