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Suspension & Debarment:What You Need to Know. Maria Swaby Director, Suspension & Debarment Division GSA. Legal Authority. FAR Subpart 9.4 FAR 9.400-9.402 Scope, Applicability, and Policy FAR 9.403 Definitions FAR 9.404 Excluded Parties List System (EPLS) FAR 9.405 Effect of Listing
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Suspension & Debarment:What You Need to Know • Maria Swaby • Director, Suspension & Debarment Division • GSA
Legal Authority • FAR Subpart 9.4 • FAR 9.400-9.402 Scope, Applicability, and Policy • FAR 9.403 Definitions • FAR 9.404 Excluded Parties List System (EPLS) • FAR 9.405 Effect of Listing • FAR 9.406 Debarment • FAR 9.407 Suspension
Protection Not Punishment • Suspension and debarment (S&D) are key tools used to protect the Government from the risks associated with doing business with non-responsible contractors • S&D is not used to punish contractors for past misconduct
Tools in the Government’s Tool Box Proposed Debarment Suspension Debarment Show Cause Letter Request for Information Administrative Compliance Agreement
Requests for Information • Do not result in ineligibility • Not listed on EPLS • Information gathering tool • Ex. RFIs may be sent to a contractor that has made a mandatory disclosure in order to gain more information about the circumstances or the individual alleged to have engaged in misconduct
Show Cause Letters • Do not result in ineligibility • Not listed on EPLS • A tool used to ascertain the contractor’s position • Used where responsibility concerns exist, but exclusion is not deemed appropriate at that moment in time
Causes for Suspension & Debarment • Suspension and Debarment may be based on improper conduct reflecting negatively on a contractor’s responsibility • Criminal conduct • Unethical conduct indicating a lack of business integrity or business honesty • Willful violations of contract terms • History of a failure to perform • Anything of so serious or compelling a nature Judgments / Convictions are not necessary
Suspension and Debarment • Suspensions are initiated through notices of suspension • Debarment actions are initiated through notices of proposed debarment • Both result in immediate exclusion • Listing on EPLS
Suspension • Facts still being developed through an investigation or legal proceedings • No conviction or civil judgment exists • Adequate evidence is information sufficient to support the reasonable belief that a particular act or omission has occurred • Used where immediate action is necessary to protect Government’s interests
Length of Suspensions • Generally, suspensions may last 12 months before legal proceedings are initiated • Once legal proceedings are initiated, the suspension may stay in place until the proceedings conclude
Debarment • Investigation or legal proceeding has concluded resulting in conviction or civil judgment, or • In the absence of a conviction or civil judgment, preponderance of evidence exists of improper conduct • Evidence that leads to the conclusion that the fact is more probably true than not • Generally a debarment lasts 3 years—fact dependent, may be longer or shorter
Burdens • Government must find that sufficient evidence exists to support the action • Adequate evidence for suspension • Preponderance of the evidence for proposed debarment, debarment • Once sufficient evidence is established, the burden shifts to the contractor to show present responsibility and that suspension or debarment is unnecessary
Opportunity to Respond • Contractors are given 30 days to respond • Contractors may request a meeting to make an oral presentation in support of a written submission • Decisions are based on the Administrative Record, which is provided to the contractor upon request • Contractor is not entitled to discovery
Effects • Listed on the Excluded Parties List System (EPLS) • Ineligibility for new contracts, including task orders—May continue performing current contracts • Agencies may not exercise options under existing contracts, or issue modifications that add work or extend duration • May not perform subcontracts equal to or greater than $30K • May not act as a representative or agent of other contractors
Collateral Consequences • Potential termination of ongoing contracts • Reputational damage and loss of goodwill • Loss of revenue • Contraction of credit and/or denial of loans
Collateral Consequences, cont’d • Reduction in size of the business and/or delay/cancellation of future expansion plans • Reduction in employees and/or compensation • Loss of employees to competitors • Denial of commercial contracts, state/local contracts • Bankruptcy
Present Responsibility (PR) Explored • The PR assessment only comes after there is a common understanding of the underlying misconduct • We must first know what transpired in the past and why it occurred in order to assess whether it will reoccur • Despite prior misconduct, is the contractor presently responsible?
What Is Present Responsibility? • PR focuses on the perceived ability of a contractor to contract with the Government in a responsible manner on a going forward basis • In essence, can the contractor be trusted to perform in accordance with contract requirements, governing law, and, overall, to conduct themselves ethically?
Present Responsibility? • Focus is on the contractor’s: • Honesty • Integrity • Ethics • Competence • Other Case-Specific Factors
Standards of Conduct Voluntary Disclosure Internal Investigation Full Cooperation Paid Costs/Restitution Disciplined Employee Agreed to Implement Remedial Actions Ethics Training Adequate amount of time passed Management Recognition of Problem Overview of Factors Considered for Present Responsibility
Decision-making Does a cause for suspension/debarment exist? If yes ↓ Has contractor demonstrated present responsibility? ↓ ↓ ↓ Yes Maybe, but… No ↓ ↓ ↓ Terminate the Administrative Debarment Action Agreement
Administrative Agreements • Documents remedial measures taken to prevent reoccurrence • Often includes outside and independent reviews/audits by consultants/experts • Requires ethics and compliance program improvements • Overall, gives Government assurances and protection • Generally lasts 3 years
Administrative Agreements • Scheduled Reports to Suspension and Debarment Official (SDO) • Disclosure of: • Litigation and investigations • Ethics hotline calls • Internal investigations • Usually provides that violation of Administrative Agreement is a separate and independent basis for debarment
Benefits of Suspension & Debarment • Protects Government • Enables the Government to motivate positive behavior within organizations • To demonstrate present responsibility, contractors often must enhance their ethics and compliance programs • The process, alone, is an eye opener for contractors and often leads to positive-long lasting change
Lessons Learned • S&D practice at GSA teaches us that S&D is very effective in preventing non-responsible contractors from receiving Federal contracts • Of equal importance, S&D often results in positive, long lasting ethical behavior of contractors
Contact Information • Joseph Neurauter, Suspension & Debarment Official • Joseph.Neurauter@gsa.gov • (202) 219-3454 • Maria Swaby, Director, GSA Suspension & Debarment Division • Maria.Swaby@gsa.gov • (202) 208-0291