Appendix B to Part 1132 - Terms and Conditions for PROC Article II, “Procurement Standards for Institutions of Higher Education, Nonprofit Organizations, Local Governments, and Indian Tribes”  


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  • Appendix B to Part 1132 - Terms and Conditions for PROC Article II, “Procurement Standards for Institutions of Higher Education, Nonprofit Organizations, Local Governments, and Indian Tribes”

    With the exception of Sections G and I, which may be reserved as specified in §§ 1132.210 and 1132.220, a DoD Component's general terms and conditions must use the following wording for PROC Article II.

    PROC Article II. Procurement Standards for Institutions of Higher Education, Nonprofit Organizations, Local Governments, and Indian Tribes. (December 2014)

    Section A. General procurement standards.

    1. For procurement under this award, you must comply with the following paragraphs of OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.318:

    a. 200.318(a) concerning documented procurement procedures;

    b. 200.318(b) concerning oversight of contractors;

    c. 200.318(c) concerning standards of conduct and conflicts of interest;

    d. 2 CFR 200.318(d) concerning purchases of unnecessary or duplicative items;

    e. 200.318(e) concerning intergovernmental or inter-entity agreements;

    f. 200.318(g) concerning value engineering;

    g. 200.318(i) concerning procurement records;

    h. 200.318(j) concerning time and material type contracts; and

    i. 200.318(k) concerning settlement of issues arising out of procurements.

    2. You must do business only with responsible contractors who are able to perform, as described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.318(h). Related to that, you must comply with restrictions on awarding procurement transactions to excluded or disqualified parties and other requirements specified by OMB guidelines on nonprocurement debarment and suspension at 2 CFR part 180, as implemented by DoD at 2 CFR part 1125.

    Section B. Competition. You must award procurement transactions under this DoD award in accordance with the competition requirements described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.319.

    Section C. Procurement methods. You must award procurement transactions under this award using methods described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.320.

    Section D. Contracting with small and minority businesses, women's business enterprises, and labor surplus area firms. You must take the affirmative steps described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.321 when awarding procurement transactions under this award.

    Section E. Contract cost and price. When awarding a contract under this award, you must follow the procedures related to costs and price that are described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.323, using the applicable cost principles specified in FMS Article III.

    Section F. Contract provisions. You must include provisions in your procurement transactions under this award to require the contractors' compliance with the requirements of PROC Article III, as applicable.

    Section G. Procurement of recovered materials. If you are a political subdivision of a State, you must comply with the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act requirements described in OMB guidance in 2 CFR 200.322.

    Section H. Review of procurement documents. Upon our request, you must make available:

    1. Technical specifications on proposed procurements, as described in 2 CFR 200.324(a).

    2. Pre-procurement documents for our review, as described in 2 CFR 200.324(b) unless you are exempt from that requirement under 2 CFR 200.324(c).

    Section I. Bonding requirements. If you award a construction or facility improvement contract under this award with a value in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold, you must comply with at least the minimum requirements for bidders' bid guarantees and contractors' performance and payment bonds described in 2 CFR 200.325(a) through (c), unless a provision in the award-specific terms and conditions of this award excepts you from the requirement based on our determination that your bonding policy and requirements are adequate to protect Federal interests.