How to close FFP with ODC & Travel

Started by DHSGUY · Apr 28, 2012 · 6 replies

  1. D

    DHSGUY

    Apr 28, 2012 · 14y ago

    Original post

    Hello All,

    I saw that there was a similar topic, but it didn't have to do with closeout. I have a $7million commercial FFP contract with a CLIN to reimburse travel costs as an NTE for $105K and an ODC (reimbursable costs) CLIN as an NTE for $250K. When it comes to closeout, am I bound by the FAR timeline for FFP (6months) or Cost (36 months) seeing that there are cost clins? I've been told that if there is anything to do with cost reimbursement you treat it like a cost type contract. Just seems like small money compared to the overall contract to keep it open for so long because we don't have rates settled for the year the costs were incurred.

    Thanks for the help.

  2. R

    Retreadfed

    Apr 28, 2012 · 14y ago

    Did you make the travel and ODC CLINs subject to the cost principles or merely state them as ceiling amounts similar to how these costs are treated in 52.212-4 ALT I?

  3. G

    Guest Vern Edwards

    Apr 28, 2012 · 14y ago

    Just seems like small money compared to the overall contract to keep it open for so long because we don't have rates settled for the year the costs were incurred.

    You're waiting for rates? Have you read FAR 42.708?

  4. w

    woops85

    Apr 30, 2012 · 14y ago

    Agree with Vern. I used to have folks tell me they could not close out their orders for same reason. They'd have $50K of travel on a $10M and want to wait 5 or 6 years for the vendor to get its audited rates. Had a lot of discussions about "unreconciled indirects"

  5. C

    Cajuncharlie

    May 1, 2012 · 14y ago

    Recently I have seen an increasing number of contracts with cost-only "pass-through" CLINs for travel and ODCs. Problem solved.

  6. R

    Retreadfed

    May 1, 2012 · 14y ago

    What do you mean by cost-only? The cost to the contractor is the direct cost of an expenditure plus any indirect costs attracted to a contract by that direct cost.

  7. C

    Cajuncharlie

    May 2, 2012 · 14y ago

    What do you mean by cost-only? The cost to the contractor is the direct cost of an expenditure plus any indirect costs attracted to a contract by that direct cost.

    I should have said direct cost-only to be perfectly clear. I made the same point you did in an offeror question and received the same kind of answer I wrote, when I should have known better. In that case, travel was just another ODC, and the "D" covered "direct," so cost-only ODCs by definition excluded indirect costs that would otherwise be allocable to those direct costs.

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