Identifying Subcontractors as an ODC
Started by LM_ABITWT · Mar 26, 2012 · 8 replies
- LOriginal post
LM_ABITWT
Mar 26, 2012 · 14y ago
I have a Time & Material IDIQ Contract with a list of specified "teammates" with rate tables (for each company) incorporated at the prime contract level. Within this IDIQ, we have task orders where we have needed to utilize a new subcontractor who did not have rates on contract so we were told by the Contracting Officer (at that time) to simply propose these subcontract costs under our ODC section of our cost proposal. Those proposals were evaluated and ultimately approved by the USG. Several years later, we have a new Contracting Officer who is questioning the allowability of Subcontractors as an Other Direct Cost.
During my conversation with the (new) Contracting Officer, I mentioned that his predecessors have condoned this practice and actually were the ones who recommended that we handle subcontractors in this manner.
A couple of questions:
Is anyone else familiar with Subcontractors being treated as a non-labor expense under ODCs?
Can the Contracting Officer simply undo what a prior CO allowed/authorized in the past?
Thanks!
- R
Retreadfed
Mar 26, 2012 · 14y ago
I have a Time & Material IDIQ Contract with a list of specified "teammates" with rate tables (for each company) incorporated at the prime contract level. Within this IDIQ, we have task orders where we have needed to utilize a new subcontractor who did not have rates on contract so we were told by the Contracting Officer (at that time) to simply propose these subcontract costs under our ODC section of our cost proposal. Those proposals were evaluated and ultimately approved by the USG. Several years later, we have a new Contracting Officer who is questioning the allowability of Subcontractors as an Other Direct Cost.
During my conversation with the (new) Contracting Officer, I mentioned that his predecessors have condoned this practice and actually were the ones who recommended that we handle subcontractors in this manner.
A couple of questions:
Is anyone else familiar with Subcontractors being treated as a non-labor expense under ODCs?
Can the Contracting Officer simply undo what a prior CO allowed/authorized in the past?
Thanks!
Does the contract contain the Feb. 2007 version of 52.232-7?
- h
here_2_help
Mar 26, 2012 · 14y ago
If you want the right answer you need to tell us what payment clause is in the contract.
- L
LM_ABITWT
Mar 26, 2012 · 14y ago
The Basic Contract includes the older version of the payments clause. Not Feb 2007. That supports my position that SubKs can be included as an ODC, no?
- c
contractor100
Mar 27, 2012 · 14y ago
See the third paragraph in this memo:
- R
Retreadfed
Mar 27, 2012 · 14y ago
See the third paragraph in this memo:
What authority does DCAA have to issue interpretative memos that are binding on anyone other than auditors?
- c
contractor100
Mar 27, 2012 · 14y ago
None. But quite a few COs adopted DCAA's interpretation before the rewrite came out in 2007. I know this from personal experience/industry exchanges. LM_ABITWT may be dealing with a CO that has done so. Verbum sapientis, is all.
- R
Retreadfed
Mar 27, 2012 · 14y ago
None. But quite a few COs adopted DCAA's interpretation before the rewrite came out in 2007. I know this from personal experience/industry exchanges. LM_ABITWT may be dealing with a CO that has done so. Verbum sapientis, is all.
Do you have access to the old version of the clause so that you can us point to language in it that contracting officers were interpreting in agreement with DCAA?
- c
contractor100
Mar 28, 2012 · 14y ago
Old version pasted below.
As readers of this board know, this and other clauses were not clear on how to treat subK labor on T&M contracts, as was recognized by all. (See, among others, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2006-12-12/html/06-9610.htm)
DCAA said all subcontract labor fell in b below. http://www.dcaa.mil/mmr/m04pac022.pdf
Note the markup on such labor is limited by (
(4)(iii).Others said subcontract labor fell in a. In other words, any subcontractor could bill at preapproved rates in the contract, even if those rates had been approved for another subcontractor, or the prime (absent a separate requirement to get approval for subcontract.
The controversy arose on GSA schedule contracts, because GSA was issuing T&M contracts on what was arguably NOT a commercial vehicle, which was forbidden before the SARA legislation in 2004 and because permission to subcontract had to be affirmatively required in a GSA task order. (And because GSA told everyone to bill their subs at prime’s GSA rates.)
Sounds as though the first CO on this contract went with DCAA’s interpretation. I guess the second CO either takes the non DCAA read, or isn’t aware that the new clause is not in the contract. You are sure that it was not added by modification?
If it was, then there should be other clauses that will outline requirements for bidding rates for prime v sub. Which of those new clauses is in the contract will vary depending on whether your contract is commercial and whether it was awarded noncompetively.
Final question - Can you actually fit your subcontractors in to labor rates you already have on your contract, or will you have to get a mod?
https://www.acquisition.gov/far/05-11/pdf/FAR.book.pdf
52.232-7 Payments under Time-and-Materials and
Labor-Hour Contracts.
As prescribed in 32.111(a)(7), insert the following clause:
PAYMENTS UNDER TIME-AND-MATERIALS AND LABORHOUR
CONTRACTS (AUG 2005)
The Government will pay the Contractor as follows upon
the submission of invoices or vouchers approved by the Contracting
Officer:
(a) Hourly rate. (1) The amounts shall be computed by
multiplying the appropriate hourly rates prescribed in the
Schedule by the number of direct labor hours performed. The
rates shall include wages, indirect costs, general and administrative
expense, and profit. Fractional parts of an hour shall
be payable on a prorated basis. Vouchers may be submitted
once each month (or at more frequent intervals, if approved by
the Contracting Officer), to the Contracting Officer or designee.
The Contractor shall substantiate vouchers by evidence
of actual payment and by individual daily job timecards, or
other substantiation approved by the Contracting Officer.
Promptly after receipt of each substantiated voucher, the Government
shall, except as otherwise provided in this contract,
and subject to the terms of (e) of this section, pay the voucher
as approved by the Contracting Officer.
(2) Unless otherwise prescribed in the Schedule, the
Contracting Officer may unilaterally issue a contract modification
requiring the Contractor to withhold amounts from its
billings until a reserve is set aside in an amount that the Contracting
Officer considers necessary to protect the Government's
interests. The Contracting Officer may require a
withhold of 5 percent of the amounts due under paragraph (a),
but the total amount withheld for the contract shall not exceed
$50,000. The amounts withheld shall be retained until the
Contractor executes and delivers the release required by paragraph
(f) of this clause.
(3) Unless the Schedule prescribes otherwise, the
hourly rates in the Schedule shall not be varied by virtue of the
Contractor having performed work on an overtime basis. If no
overtime rates are provided in the Schedule and overtime
work is approved in advance by the Contracting Officer, overtime
rates shall be negotiated. Failure to agree upon these
overtime rates shall be treated as a dispute under the Disputes
clause of this contract. If the Schedule provides rates for overtime,
the premium portion of those rates will be reimbursable
only to the extent the overtime is approved by the Contracting
Officer.
(
Materials and subcontracts. (1) The ContractingOfficer will determine allowable costs of direct materials in
accordance with Subpart 31.2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) in effect on the date of this contract. Direct
materials, as used in this clause, are those materials that enter
directly into the end product, or that are used or consumed
directly in connection with the furnishing of the end product.
(2) The Contractor may include reasonable and allocable
material handling costs in the charge for material to the
extent they are clearly excluded from the hourly rate. Material
handling costs are comprised of indirect costs, including,
when appropriate, general and administrative expense allocated
to direct materials in accordance with the Contractor’s
usual accounting practices consistent with Subpart 31.2 of the
FAR.
(3) The Government will reimburse the Contractor for
supplies and services purchased directly for the contract when
the Contractor—
(i) Has made payments of cash, checks, or other
forms of payment for these purchased supplies or services; or
(ii) Will make these payments determined due—
(A) In accordance with the terms and conditions
of a subcontract or invoice; and
(
Ordinarily within 30 days of the submissionof the Contractor’s payment request to the Government.
(4)(i) The Government will reimburse the Contractor
for costs of subcontracts that are authorized under the subcontracts
clause of this contract, provided that the costs are consistent
with paragraph (
(5) of this clause.(ii) The Government will limit reimbursable costs in
connection with subcontracts to the amounts paid for supplies
and services purchased directly for the contract when the Contractor
has made or will make payments determined due of
cash, checks, or other forms of payment to the
subcontractor—
(A) In accordance with the terms and conditions
of a subcontract or invoice; and
(
Ordinarily within 30 days of the submissionof the Contractor’s payment request to the Government.
(iii) The Government will not reimburse the Contractor
for any costs arising from the letting, administration,
or supervision of performance of the subcontract, if the costs
are included in the hourly rates payable under
paragraph (a)(1) of this clause.
(5) To the extent able, the Contractor shall—
(i) Obtain materials at the most advantageous prices
available with due regard to securing prompt delivery of satisfactory
materials; and
(ii) Take all cash and trade discounts, rebates, allowances,
credits, salvage, commissions, and other benefits.
When unable to take advantage of the benefits, the Contractor
shall promptly notify the Contracting Officer and give the reasons.
The Contractor shall give credit to the Government for
cash and trade discounts, rebates, scrap, commissions, and
other amounts that have accrued to the benefit of the Contractor,
or would have accrued except for the fault or neglect of
the Contractor. The Contractor shall not deduct from gross
costs the benefits lost without fault or neglect on the part of
the Contractor, or lost through fault of the Government.
©
Total cost. It is estimated that the total cost to the Government
for the performance of this contract shall not exceed
the ceiling price set forth in the Schedule and the Contractor
agrees to use its best efforts to perform the work specified in
the Schedule and all obligations under this contract within
such ceiling price. If at any time the Contractor has reason to
believe that the hourly rate payments and material costs that
will accrue in performing this contract in the next succeeding
30 days, if added to all other payments and costs previously
accrued, will exceed 85 percent of the ceiling price in the
Schedule, the Contractor shall notify the Contracting Officer
giving a revised estimate of the total price to the Government
for performing this contract with supporting reasons and documentation.
If at any time during performing this contract, the
Contractor has reason to believe that the total price to the Government
for performing this contract will be substantially
greater or less than the then stated ceiling price, the Contractor
shall so notify the Contracting Officer, giving a revised estimate
of the total price for performing this contract, with supporting
reasons and documentation. If at any time during
performing this contract, the Government has reason to
believe that the work to be required in performing this contract
will be substantially greater or less than the stated ceiling
price, the Contracting Officer will so advise the Contractor,
giving the then revised estimate of the total amount of effort
to be required under the contract.
(d)
Ceiling price. The Government shall not be obligated
to pay the Contractor any amount in excess of the ceiling price
in the Schedule, and the Contractor shall not be obligated to
continue performance if to do so would exceed the ceiling
price set forth in the Schedule, unless and until the Contracting
Officer shall have notified the Contractor in writing that
the ceiling price has been increased and shall have specified
in the notice a revised ceiling that shall constitute the ceiling
price for performance under this contract. When and to the
extent that the ceiling price set forth in the Schedule has been
increased, any hours expended and material costs incurred by
the Contractor in excess of the ceiling price before the
increase shall be allowable to the same extent as if the hours
expended and material costs had been incurred after the
increase in the ceiling price.
(e)
Audit. At any time before final payment under this contract
the Contracting Officer may request audit of the invoices
or vouchers and substantiating material. Each payment previously
made shall be subject to reduction to the extent of
amounts, on preceding invoices or vouchers, that are found by
the Contracting Officer not to have been properly payable and
shall also be subject to reduction for overpayments or to
increase for underpayments. Upon receipt and approval of the
voucher or invoice designated by the Contractor as the “completion
voucher” or “completion invoice” and substantiating
material, and upon compliance by the Contractor with all
terms of this contract (including, without limitation, terms
relating to patents and the terms of (f) and (g) of this section),
the Government shall promptly pay any balance due the Contractor.
The completion invoice or voucher, and substantiating
material, shall be submitted by the Contractor as promptly as
practicable following completion of the work under this contract,
but in no event later than 1 year (or such longer period
as the Contracting Officer may approve in writing) from the
date of completion.
(f)
Assignment. The Contractor, and each assignee under an
assignment entered into under this contract and in effect at the
time of final payment under this contract, shall execute and
deliver, at the time of and as a condition precedent to final payment
under this contract, a release discharging the Government,
its officers, agents, and employees of and from all
(FAC 2005–05)
S
UBPART 52.2—TEXT OF PROVISIONS AND CLAUSES 52.232-9
52.2-201
liabilities, obligations, and claims arising out of or under this
contract, subject only to the following exceptions:
(1) Specified claims in stated amounts, or in estimated
amounts if the amounts are not susceptible of exact statement
by the Contractor.
(2) Claims, together with reasonable incidental
expenses, based upon the liabilities of the Contractor to third
parties arising out of performing this contract, that are not
known to the Contractor on the date of the execution of the
release, and of which the Contractor gives notice in writing to
the Contracting Officer not more than 6 years after the date of
the release or the date of any notice to the Contractor that the
Government is prepared to make final payment, whichever is
earlier.
(3) Claims for reimbursement of costs (other than
expenses of the Contractor by reason of its indemnification of
the Government against patent liability), including reasonable
incidental expenses, incurred by the Contractor under the
terms of this contract relating to patents.
(g)
Refunds. The Contractor agrees that any refunds,
rebates, or credits (including any related interest) accruing to
or received by the Contractor or any assignee, that arise under
the materials portion of this contract and for which the Contractor
has received reimbursement, shall be paid by the Contractor
to the Government. The Contractor and each assignee,
under an assignment entered into under this contract and in
effect at the time of final payment under this contract, shall
execute and deliver, at the time of and as a condition precedent
to final payment under this contract, an assignment to the
Government of such refunds, rebates, or credits (including
any interest) in form and substance satisfactory to the Contracting
Officer.
(h)
Interim payments. (1) Interim payments made prior to
the final payment under the contract are contract financing
payments. Contract financing payments are not subject to the
interest penalty provisions of the Prompt Payment Act.
(2) The designated payment office will make interim
payments for contract financing on the ______________
[
Contracting Officer insert day as prescribed by agency head;
if not prescribed, insert "30th"
] day after the designated billing
office receives a proper payment request. In the event that
the Government requires an audit or other review of a specific
payment request to ensure compliance with the terms and conditions
of the contract, the designated payment office is not
compelled to make payment by the specified due date.
(End of clause)
Alternate I (Mar 2000)
. If the nature of the work to be performed
requires the Contractor to furnish material that the
Contractor regularly sells to the general public in the normal
course of business, and the price is under the limitations prescribed
in 16.601(
(3), add the following paragraph (6) toparagraph (
of the basic clause:(
(6) If the nature of the work to be performed requires theContractor to furnish material that the Contractor regularly sells
to the general public in the normal course of business, the price
to be paid for such material, notwithstanding the other requirements
of this paragraph (
, shall be on the basis of an establishedcatalog or list price, in effect when the material is
furnished, less all applicable discounts to the Government, provided
that in no event shall such price be in excess of the Contractor’s
sales price to its most favored customer for the same
item in like quantity, or the current market price, whichever is
lower.
Alternate II (Feb 2002)
. If a labor-hour contract is contemplated,
and if no specific reimbursement for materials furnished
is intended, the Contracting Officer may add the
following paragraph (i) to the basic clause:
(i) The terms of this clause that govern reimbursement for
materials furnished are considered to have been deleted.