Title: CONTRACTORS IN THE FEDERAL WORKPLACE
1CONTRACTORS IN THE FEDERAL WORKPLACE
NATIONAL GUARD BUREAUOFFICE OF THE CHIEF COUNSEL
2INTRODUCTION
- Contract employees are not federal employees
- Safeguard proprietary, Privacy Act, and other
sensitive information - Resolve possible conflicts of interest
3INTRODUCTION
- Beware of gifts between contract employees and
federal employees - Post-government employment discussions need to be
carefully vetted - Dont let contractor/employee issues fester
4CONTRACTORS ARE NOT FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
- No employer-employee relationship between federal
and contractor employees. - Relationship is between govt and contractor not
govt and contract employees. - Only contracting officer can modify the contract.
- Do not direct any work, especially out-of-scope
work fine line between coordination and
direction.
5CONTRACTORS ARE NOT FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
- Federal employees do not supervise contract
employees. - Federal employees cannot approve contractor
employee leave, approve weather delays, and does
not give contractor employees appraisals or
awards. - Contracting Officer Representatives (CORs) will
communicate any issues to Contracting Officer
CORs must know the contract.
6CONTRACTORS ARE NOT FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
- Contractors cannot perform inherently
governmental functions. - Some examples are
- direct conduct of criminal investigations
- command of military forces
- direction and control of federal employees
- determining agency requirements and
- determining agency policy.
7CONTRACTORS ARE NOT FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
- Identify contractor employees.
- Be able to distinguish badges or other
identifier. - Govt employees should be aware of the different
status and identify contractors in
teleconferences and meetings.
8SAFEGUARD SENSITIVE INFORMATION
- Protect classified informationenough said.
- Procurement Integrity Act prohibits disclosure
and obtaining source selection information or bid
or proposal information. - Applies to present/former govt employees and
contractors. - Individuals face up to five years confinement,
fines up to 50,000 per violation, and adverse
personnel action.
9SAFEGUARD SENSITIVE INFORMATION
- Source selection information is
- Bid prices
- Proposed costs or prices
- Source selection plans
- Technical evaluation plans
- Technical evaluation of proposals
- Costs or price evaluations of proposals
10SAFEGUARD SENSITIVE INFORMATION
- Competitive range determinations
- Rankings of bids, proposals, or competitors
- Reports and evaluations of source selection
panels, boards, or advisory councils and - Other information marked as Source Selection
Information.
11SAFEGUARD SENSITIVE INFORMATION
- Privacy Act prohibits disclosure of Privacy Act
information. - Applies to govt employees.
- An individual faces conviction of a misdemeanor
and a fine up to 5K.
12SAFEGUARD SENSITIVE INFORMATION
- Trade Secrets Act, in part, prohibits the
disclosure and receipt of trade secrets. - Applies to everyone.
- Individuals face up to 500K in fines or up to
ten years confinement (harsher when benefitting
foreign govt or agent), and adverse personnel
action.
13RESOLVE POSSIBLE CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
- Prevent the existence of conflicting roles that
might bias a contractors judgment. - Prevent unfair competitive advantagewhen
contractor competing for award of a contract
possesses other contractors proprietary
information or source selection information
relevant to contract but not available to all
competitors that would assist contractor in
obtaining contract.
14CONFLICT OF INTERESTCONFLICTING ROLES
- Before an acquisition for information technology
- (IT) is conducted, Company A is awarded a
- contract to prepare data system specifications
and - equipment performance criteria to be used as the
- basis for the equipment competition.
- With regard to the equipment competition, does a
- possible conflict of interest exist?
15CONFLICT OF INTERESTCONFLICTING ROLES
- Since the specifications are the basis for
selection - of commercial hardware, a potential conflict of
- interest exists. Company A should be excluded
- from the initial follow-on IT hardware
acquisition
16RESOLVE POSSIBLE CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
- Resolve both real and appearances of conflicts of
interest, for example, - Close relationships between govt employees
- and contractor employees and
- Govt employee on source selection evaluation
team has financial interest in offeror
contractor. - Violation of any principle of the 14 Principles
of Ethical conduct is grounds for an adverse
personnel action.
17GIFT RULES
- Do not solicit or accept gifts from contractor
employees. - Exceptions
- Gifts (not cash) up to 20/occasion 50/year
- Based on personal relationship and
- Widely attended gathering there will be explicit
guidance when this can be used.
18Post-Govt Employment
- Dont begin post-government employment
- discussions with contractors until you talk to an
- Ethics Counselor at JA
- New DoD reqt for post-govt employment education
and certification. - Federal criminal statutes can apply to military
officers and civilians if they fail to follow the
rules. - Ask for advice early.
19Here comes the fun part
NATIONAL GUARD BUREAUOFFICE OF THE CHIEF COUNSEL
20NATIONAL GUARD BUREAUOFFICE OF THE CHIEF COUNSEL
21BACKGROUND
- NGBs Office of Miscellaneous Affairs (NGB-XYZ)
is re-competing its support service contract. - IDIQ, 5 Years, gt 100,000,000 per year.
- Supports virtually all NGB-XYZ functions.
- KNOWALL, Inc. is incumbent.
- WANNABE, Inc. wants the new contract.
22THE PHANTOM BRIEFER
- COL Hardcharger, PM for the support contract,
tasks KNOWALLs marketeer, Mr. Icandoit, to
brief General Getsued Daily on a concept plan to
increase NGB-XYZs mission (which will also
increase KNOWALLs support contract). - Mr. Icandoit conducts the briefing but does not
identify himself as a KNOWALL employee. - The briefing convinces General Daily to double
the size of the NGB-XYZ mission. - Has Mr. Icandoit violated any laws?
23THE PHANTOM BRIEFERTHE BOTTOM LINE
- Mr. Icandoit may brief NGB-XYZs plan to expand
its mission since the IDIQ contract is broadly
written to cover this activity. - Mr. Icandoit did not violate any laws, BUT...
- COL Hardcharger should have introduced Mr.
Icandoit as an KNOWALL employee to all attendees
at the outset of the briefing - Mr. Icandoit may not prepare or brief the
acquisition strategy for the ESS procurement
since such activity will result in an OCI problem
and an unfair competitive advantage.
24THE LEAK
- Mr. Gooddeal, a NGB-XYZ employee, and Mr. Wally
Street, a KNOWALL employee, were not involved in
the source selection process but overheard a
conversation between two SSEB members. - They heard that KNOWALL won the follow-on
contract which will not be publicly announced
until noon tomorrow. - They immediately called their brokers and
purchased 1000 shares of KNOWALL stock at 10 per
share. - After the award is announced the next day,
KNOWALLs stock jumps to 20 per share giving
both shrewd investors a tidy profit. - Is there anything wrong with this?
25THE LEAKTHE BOTTOM LINE
- The leak of sensitive information is a risk with
contractors in the Federal workplace. - Create an awareness of the need to safeguard
sensitive information. - Ensure that Government employees know who the
contractor employees are. - Keep co-location of Government and Contractor
personnel to a minimum, especially in areas where
sensitive information is present.
26NGB-XYZ EMPLOYEE PICNIC AND ORGANIZATION DAY
- It is that time of the year for the NGB-XYZ
Employee 1st Annual Picnic. - LTC John Doe recommends that the NGB-XYZ CG
invite all NGB-XYZ contractor employees to the
picnic. After all, they are part of the NGB-XYZ
family and should participate and enjoy the
work-day off with the NGB-XYZ employees. - Should the NGB-XYZ CG invite all contractor
employees to participate in the picnic and
organization day activities with the NGB-XYZ
employees?
27NGB-XYZ EMPLOYEE PICNIC THE BOTTOM LINE
- Although better to limit participation to NGB-XYZ
employees, it is okay to permit KNOWALLs
employees to attend the picnic, but - It is up to KNOWALL as to whether they get time
off and how - We dont pay for services not provided
- We dont solicit KNOWALL employees when
fundraising - We dont subsidize KNOWALL employees.
28THE LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
- Because of its incumbent status and because it
routinely overhears nonpublic information from
NGB-XYZ personnel, only KNOWALL fully understands
the complex work described vaguely in the RFP. - KNOWALL has five years of cost performance
reports that show trends for the future. - The NGB-XYZ CDR and her staff are totally
satisfied with KNOWALLs outstanding work. - WANNABE wants to unseat KNOWALL, but feels that
it is at a significant disadvantage. - Does KNOWALL have an unfair competitive advantage
in the upcoming re-competition?
29THE LEVEL PLAYING FIELDTHE BOTTOM LINE
- KNOWALLs advantages derived from its experience,
resources, or skills obtained in the performance
of its current NGB-XYZ contract are not unfair. - But advantages derived from an inequitable
release of information to KNOWALL or from an
ambiguous RFP are unfair, jeopardizing the
viability of the award and the integrity of the
Federal procurement system.
30ALL IN THE FAMILYDOES SPOUSAL EMPLOYMENT
MATTER?
- Susan, a KNOWALL technical expert, is assigned by
her employer to help SSEB members evaluate
proposals on a NGB-XYZ RFP for a new hi-tech
navigation system. - Someone knows her husband, and says that he works
for one of the offerors as their Vice-President
for Government Operations. - Do the conflicts of interest rules prevent Susan
from providing this technical assistance to the
SSEB?
31ALL IN THE FAMILY THE BOTTOM LINE
- Generally, conflict of interest laws and the
Joint Ethics Regulation do not apply to
contractor employees. - Support contract should require disclosure and
avoidance of potential conflicts. - Susan may help the SSEB if no organizational
conflict of interest and if she signs a
non-disclosure agreement. - But, Susan should not consult if her husband is
employed by one of the offerors.
32WHOS GUARDING THE CHICKEN COOP?
- KNOWALL is tasked to perform work requiring
access to the proprietary technical data package
(TDP) for the hi-energy navigation system (HENS). - All of NGB-XYZs TDPs are stored in an electronic
database. COL Hardcharger assigns KNOWALL a
password to enter the database. - COL Hardcharger, recognizing that the database
contains proprietary TDPs of numerous
contractors, orders the KNOWALL employees to
access only the HENS TDP and not reveal its
contents to anyone outside the Government. - Has COL Hardcharger adequately protected the
database (or has he let the fox into the chicken
coop)?
33WHOS GUARDING THE CHICKEN COOP?THE BOTTOM LINE
- Government may not give support contractors
access to proprietary information unless
proprietary owner consents. - Contractor and its employees should sign
nondisclosure agreements. - Access should be limited--no carte blanche
access.
34CONTRACTOR LARGESSE DIFFERENT RULES FOR
DIFFERENT FOLK
- About to retire, COL Hardcharger, PM for the
support contract, invites his employees to dinner
at his house. Mark, a KNOWALL employee, who
has no personal relationship with COL
Hardcharger, brings a 22 bottle of wine. - Mark invites COL Hardcharger and his wife for
drinks dinner at his favorite restaurant. - COL Hardchargers XO solicits contributions from
everyone for his retirement gift (a 250
briefcase). Mark contributes 25. - May COL Hardcharger accept Marks gifts?
35CONTRACTOR LARGESSE THE BOTTOM LINE
- COL Hardcharger may not accept the wine the
value exceeds 20 and no other exception applies. - COL Hardcharger may not accept the invitation
from Mark for dinner at his favorite restaurant. - XO may not solicit gifts or contributions to
gifts from outside sources, e.g., contractor
employees.
36THE OPPRESSIVE PM
- COL Hardcharger routinely directs KNOWALLs
design engineer, Mr. Meek, to perform tasks that
are beyond the scope of the contract. - Mr. Meek is afraid to object to the contracting
officer because COL Hardcharger has threatened to
give KNOWALL an adverse past performance report
(past performance will be a significant
evaluation factor in the follow-on competition). - COL Hardcharger required Mr. Meek to work
uncompensated overtime on slides for his wifes
save the whales presentation. - Is COL Hardchargers conduct improper?
37THE OPPRESSIVE PMTHE BOTTOM LINE
- Dont require performance outside the contract
scope -- keep CO in the loop. - Dont supervise contractor employees or risk
improper personal services. - Dont let contractor employees perform inherently
governmental functions. - Dont use government contractors for personal
benefit.
38THE DATING GAME
- LTC Megabyte is the new NGB-XYZ Information
Manager. - He is dating Jane Data, the KNOWALL employee
responsible for Information Management support. - The Information Management COTR works for LTC
Megabyte and is responsible for a number of
KNOWALL task orders, and the Information
Management part of the upcoming re-competition. - Must LTC Megabyte stop dating Jane Data?
39THE DATING GAME THE BOTTOM LINE
- No, but
- LTC Megabyte should not participate in any
contract issues, including the follow-on
contract. - LTC Megabyte should not rate COTR.
- LTC Megabyte should issue a written notice of
disqualification. - Commander might want to select someone else as
Information Manager.
40