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House introduces the “Reforming Federal Procurement of Information Technology Act”

By Alan Pemberton & Covington Team on August 18, 2014
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Rep. Anna G. Eshoo (D-Calif.) recently introduced the Reforming Federal Procurement of Information Technology (“RFP-IT”) Act. This Act is similar in many ways to earlier drafts of the FITARA bill on which we have previously reported, with a few notable differences. Among other things, the RFP-IT Act would:

  • significantly increase the Simplified Acquisition Threshold for the purchase of IT services from small business concerns to $500,000;
  • create a “Digital Service Pilot Program” which would “provide digital service experts to support executive agencies on high-priority Federal information technology projects”;
  • establish a new, high-level Digital Government Office to coordinate Federal IT policy and to partner with agencies to address high-risk or failing IT projects;
  • codify the Presidential Innovation Fellows program, with the goal of improving the quality of solicitations issued for IT procurements by “bridg[ing] the gap between the private sector and the public sector by bringing non-Government innovators into the Government to work collaboratively for a period of time with Government innovators in order to rapidly solve challenges of national importance”;
  • require that the Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”) be revised “to clarify that agency acquisition personnel are permitted and encouraged to engage in responsible and constructive exchanges with industry, so long as those exchanges are consistent with existing law and regulation and do not promote an unfair competitive advantage to particular firms”;
  • utilize controversial “commodity” language to describe some information technology; and
  • add the Small Business Administrator to the FAR Council, which sets federal procurement policy.

This bill follows the recent pattern of many Congressional iterations of legislation aimed at improving federal procurement policy, and, although the prospects of passage of this specific bill are unclear, it typifies some of the post-FITARA reform ideas that are gaining ground in Congress.

Photo of Alan Pemberton Alan Pemberton

Alan Pemberton has practiced in the government contracts area since 1982, and chaired or co-chaired Covington’s government contracts practice from 2000 to 2016. His practice includes the full range of government contracts matters, including bid protest and other procurement litigation before GAO, agency…

Alan Pemberton has practiced in the government contracts area since 1982, and chaired or co-chaired Covington’s government contracts practice from 2000 to 2016. His practice includes the full range of government contracts matters, including bid protest and other procurement litigation before GAO, agency boards, and federal and state courts and ADR tribunals. He advises large and small contractors and grantees about the full range of government proposal, performance, compliance, regulatory, suspension and debarment, transactional and legislative issues. He also directs the firm’s pro bono program as co-chair of the Public Service Committee.

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  • Posted in:
    Technology and AI
  • Blog:
    Inside Government Contracts
  • Organization:
    Covington & Burling LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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