[Federal Register Volume 63, Number 216 (Monday, November 9, 1998)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 60256-60268]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 98-29838]
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
48 CFR Parts 801, 806, 812, 837, 852, and 873
RIN 2900-AI71
VA Acquisition Regulations: Simplified Acquisition Procedures for
Health Care Resources
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: This document proposes to amend the Department of Veterans
Affairs Acquisition Regulations (VAAR) to establish simplified
procedures for the competitive acquisition of health-care resources,
consisting of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space, pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153. Presently, the VAAR does not
contain simplified procedures. In the absence of such procedures, the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) follows the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) and the current VAAR. Public Law 104-262, the
Veterans' Health Care Eligibility Reform Act of 1996, authorized VA to
prescribe simplified procedures for the procurement of health-care
resources. This proposed rule prescribes those procedures.
DATES: Comments on the proposed rule should be submitted on or before
January 8, 1999, to be considered in the formulation of the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand-deliver written comments to: Director, Office
of Regulations Management (02D), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue, NW, Room 1154, Washington, DC 20420. Comments should
indicate that they are submitted in response to ``RIN 2900-AI71.'' All
written comments received will be available for public inspection at
the above address in the Office of Regulations Management, Room 1158,
between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday
(except holidays).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dennis Foley, (202) 273-9225, Office
of the General Counsel, Professional Staff Group V; or Don Kaliher,
(202) 273-8819, Acquisition Resources Service, Office of Acquisition
and Materiel Management, Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20420.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Currently, the acquisition of health-care
resources that consist of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space is governed by the Department of Veterans Affairs
Acquisition Regulations (VAAR) and the Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR). Statutory provisions at 38 U.S.C. 8153 (Pub. L. 104-262)
specifically authorize the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, after
consultation with the Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, to
establish simplified procedures for the competitive procurement of such
health-care resources. VA has consulted with the Administrator for
Federal Procurement Policy and VA proposes to establish simplified
procedures as set forth in this document.
Under the provisions of the law, procurements under the simplified
procedures may be conducted ``without regard to any law or regulation
that would otherwise require the use of competitive procedures.''
Accordingly, the competitive procedures of any laws and regulations
(including the competitive procedures of FAR and VAAR and their
underlying laws) would be superseded by the simplified
[[Page 60257]]
procedures. However, under the provisions of the law, with certain
exceptions, the simplified procedures are required to ``permit all
responsible sources, as appropriate, to submit a bid, proposal, or
quotation (as appropriate) for the resources to be procured and provide
for the consideration by the Department of bids, proposals, or
quotations so submitted.'' This allows VA to limit competition to the
extent it determines reasonable for the circumstances of each
particular acquisition. Consistent with the principles set forth above,
this document proposes to establish a new VAAR Part 873 setting forth
such simplified procedures.
Under the provisions of 38 U.S.C. 8153, health-care resources
consisting of commercial services, the use of medical equipment or
space, or research, acquired from an institution affiliated with VA in
accordance with 38 U.S.C. 7302, including medical practice groups and
other approved entities associated with affiliated institutions
(entities will be approved if determined legally to be associated with
affiliated institutions), blood banks, organ banks, or research
centers, may be procured without regard to any law or regulation that
would otherwise require the use of competitive procedures. The
provisions at new VAAR Part 873.104 contain a statement explaining this
sole source acquisition authority.
Proposed Sec. 873.101, Policy, would provide that the procedures
set forth in Part 873 would apply to the acquisition of health-care
resources consisting of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space. These procedures would be used in conjunction with
FAR, but VAAR Part 873 would take precedence over FAR and other Parts
of VAAR. Currently, VAAR implements and supplements FAR. However,
Public Law 104-262 grants VA authority to procure health-care resources
consisting of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space ``without regard to any other law or regulation that would
require the use of competitive procedures. * * *'' Therefore, it is
necessary to have Part 873 of VAAR take precedence over FAR and any
other part of VAAR.
Proposed Sec. 873.102 would add definitions for ``health-care
resource,'' ``commercial service,'' and ``health-care providers.''
These definitions restate provisions of 38 U.S.C. 8152 and 8153.
Previously, because of limitations under 38 U.S.C. 8153, procurements
of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space were
limited to ``specialized medical resources.'' Consistent with the new
definitions, the simplified procedures would govern procurements of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space.
FAR 8.001(a)(2) sets forth three levels of priority, above the base
level, for the acquisition of services. The base level is Federal
Prison Industries or commercial sources. Proposed Sec. 873.103 would
exempt VA from the provisions of FAR 8.001(a)(2) regarding two of these
levels of priority, mandatory and optional use Federal Supply Schedule
(FSS) contracts. FSS contracts ensure prices associated with volume
buying and should be used, if determined to provide best value, but
would not have a higher priority than any other source. It is not
proposed to affect the priority status for the acquisition of services
available from the Committee for Purchase from People Who Are Blind or
Severely Disabled, as required by the Javits-Wagner-O'Day (JWOD) Act.
JWOD Act programs offer a valuable source of services for VA and have
proved to be highly beneficial for both VA and program participants.
The JWOD Act programs support VA's and other Federal Government
agencies' procurement needs, and generate employment and training
opportunities for people who are blind or have other severe
disabilities. It is in the best interest of the Government to continue
to support these valuable programs.
Proposed Sec. 873.104, paragraphs (a) and (b), would restate the
authority provided in the Act to acquire commercial services or the use
of medical equipment or space from entities affiliated with VA, in
accordance with 38 U.S.C. 7302, or approved entities associated with an
affiliate (entities will be approved if determined legally to be
associated with affiliated institutions), on a sole source basis
without public notice and without further justification. Proposed
Sec. 873.104, paragraph (c), would provide that, on VA acquisitions of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space from other
sources, contracting officers would be required to seek competition to
the maximum extent practicable rather than using full and open
competition. This is consistent with provisions of the Act which
provide that procurements may be conducted without regard to any law or
regulation that would otherwise require use of competitive procedures.
Competition to the maximum extent practicable is required to ensure
that VA's acquisitions of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space are conducted in an efficient and expeditious
manner. Proposed Sec. 873.104, paragraph (d), restates the requirements
of the Act that sole source acquisitions from sources other than
affiliates or approved associates of affiliates (entities will be
approved if determined legally to be associated with affiliated
institutions) be justified and approved.
Proposed Sec. 873.105 would exempt VA acquisitions of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space from the acquisition
planning procedures in FAR Part 7. However, the section emphasizes the
indispensable importance of acquisition planning when acquiring health-
care resources and imposes a requirement to form a team to assure a
comprehensive plan. The proposed section also would impose a
requirement on the team to conduct market research. This proposed
section is necessary to simplify and streamline the acquisition
process.
Proposed Sec. 873.106 would exempt VA acquisitions of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space from the market
research requirements of FAR Part 10 but would provide optional market
research techniques tailored specifically for use in acquiring
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space. This
information is necessary to simplify market research while ensuring
that contracting officers have a full range of techniques available for
use in conducting market research when acquiring commercial services or
the use of medical equipment or space.
Proposed paragraph (a) of Sec. 873.107 would require acquisitions
of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space to be
set aside for small business concerns if, through market research, the
contracting officer determines that there is a reasonable expectation
that reasonably priced offers would be received from two or more
responsible small business concerns. This proposed section would also
provide additional authority, over and above that found at FAR 19.502,
for waiving the requirement for small business set-asides. FAR 19.502
currently provides that contracting officers can elect to not set aside
a procurement if, generally, the contracting officer determines that
there is not a reasonable expectation of obtaining offers from two or
more responsible small business concerns at fair market prices. Under
this proposed new section, in addition to that authority in FAR, the
Head of the Contracting Activity would have the authority to approve a
waiver from the requirement to set aside any procurement of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space
[[Page 60258]]
based on a determination that it is in the best interest of the
Government. Also, this proposed section provides that acquisitions of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space valued
between $2,500 and $100,000 would be exempt from the automatic
reservation of acquisitions for small business concerns. These
provisions are necessary to ensure that VA can procure commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space from the highest
quality sources while still supporting small business concerns to the
maximum practicable extent.
The rule would make certain changes to the administration of VA's
small business program as it applies to the acquisition of health-care
resources to reflect the fast-moving health-care market. For example,
proposed paragraph (b) of Sec. 873.107 would establish a streamlined
process for handling disagreements between VA and the Small Business
Administration regarding whether a procurement should be set aside for
small business. These streamlined procedures would not alter VA's
ongoing commitment to strong small business participation in its
acquisition of health-care resources. Nor would they affect efforts to
mitigate any potential negative impacts of contract consolidations on
small businesses' ability to secure work. VA's Office of Small and
Disadvantaged Business Utilization and Office of Acquisition and
Materiel Management would jointly monitor the impact of the new
procedures on small business participation to ensure opportunities are
available for competitive small businesses.
Paragraph (c) of Sec. 873.107 restates VA's intent to follow the
FAR regarding the SBA 8(a) program. Paragraph (d) provides that VA's
Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization and SBA's Office
of Industrial Assistance shall serve as ombudsmen to assist VA
contracting officers on any issues relating to Certificates of
Competency.
FAR 5.101 currently requires, with certain exceptions, that
acquisitions with values exceeding $25,000 be announced in the Commerce
Business Daily (CBD) for specified periods of time and states what must
be included in the announcement. Proposed Sec. 873.108 would exempt VA
acquisitions of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space below $100,000 from this requirement; would modify the
requirement for publication of acquisitions above $100,000 to only
require public announcement, utilizing a medium designed to obtain
competition to the maximum extent practicable; would set the time
requirements for announcement to be a ``reasonable time''; and would
modify what must be included in the announcement. The medium to be used
for announcements could be the CBD, the Internet, or any other means,
as appropriate, depending on the complexity of the acquisition. This
section also proposes, in accordance with authority provided in the
Act, to conduct procurements for commercial services or the use of
medical equipment or space without regard to any law or regulation that
would otherwise require the use of competitive procedures and to exempt
acquisitions from affiliates and entities associated with affiliates
and sole source acquisitions from other sources from the requirement
for publication of notice in the CBD. These provisions would streamline
and simplify VA's acquisitions of commercial services or the use of
medical equipment or space.
Proposed paragraphs (a) and (b) of Sec. 873.109 would emphasize
that the contracting officer (rather than the team) is the selecting
official and would provide simplified guidance to contracting officers
on statements of work and specifications. FAR requires certain
documentation in contract files. Proposed paragraph (c) would provide
simplified documentation requirements to be used in lieu of the FAR
requirements. FAR requires specific time frames for announcing
solicitations and procurement opportunities to the public and provides,
for commercial solicitations, that quotations, bids, or proposals
received late shall not be considered. Proposed paragraph (d)(1) would
replace FAR announcement time requirements with a ``reasonable'' time
requirement and paragraph (d)(2) would allow the contracting officer to
accept late quotations or proposals if late receipt is determined by
the contracting officer to be in the best interest of the Government.
Late bids received in response to an Invitation for Bid (IFB) would not
be considered. FAR provides certain minimum requirements that a
contracting officer must meet before a solicitation can be canceled.
Proposed paragraph (e) would exempt VA acquisitions of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space from those minimum
requirements and would provide that a contracting officer can cancel a
solicitation if cancellation is determined to be in the best interest
of the Government. All of these changes are proposed for the purpose of
streamlining and simplifying VA's acquisitions of commercial services
or the use of medical equipment or space.
Proposed Sec. 873.110, paragraphs (a) through (e), would provide
guidance to contracting officers on when to use the provisions and
clauses in Part 852 of VAAR in VA acquisitions for commercial services
or the use of medical equipment or space. Paragraph (f) would propose
to require use of FAR clause 52.207-3, Right of First Refusal, in a
solicitation in which current VA employees might be displaced as a
result of contract award. This FAR clause ensures that those employees
have a right of first refusal to any employment openings created with
the contractor as a result of the contract award. This requirement is
necessary to protect VA employees and to reduce the cost of contract
award by reducing or avoiding unemployment compensation costs.
FAR places certain restrictions on when each type of acquisition
procedure can be used. For instance, a request for quotation (RFQ) can
be used for non-commercial service acquisitions costing up to $100,000
or for commercial service acquisitions costing up to $5 million.
Proposed Sec. 873.111 would remove all such restrictions, allowing use
of the RFQ process for any acquisition of commercial services or the
use of medical equipment or space, regardless of dollar value. This
change is necessary to simplify VA's acquisition of commercial services
or the use of medical equipment or space and to provide maximum
flexibility to contracting officers.
For non-commercial service acquisitions exceeding the simplified
acquisition threshold (SAT) (currently $100,000) or for commercial
service acquisitions exceeding $5 million, FAR requires the use of full
and open competition unless other statutory authority exists to limit
competition. Paragraph (a)(1) of Sec. 873.111 would provide, for
acquisitions of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space using the RFQ process, regardless of the dollar value of the
acquisition, that competition to the maximum extent practicable may be
used in lieu of full and open competition. FAR provides, for
acquisitions below $25,000, that three quotations are considered
sufficient to promote competition to the maximum extent practicable.
Proposed paragraph (a)(2) would provide, for acquisitions of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space below the SAT, that
two quotations would be considered sufficient to promote competition to
the maximum extent practicable. Proposed paragraph (a)(2) would also
exempt VA acquisitions of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space from any dollar value restrictions in FAR on the
[[Page 60259]]
use of RFQs, allowing VA to use the RFQ process for all acquisitions of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space,
regardless of the dollar value of the procurement. These changes are
necessary to simplify and streamline VA's acquisition of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space by allowing use of
the RFQ process in any circumstance.
Proposed paragraph (b) of Sec. 873.111 would provide that the
procedures of FAR Part 14 would be used for VA sealed bid acquisitions
of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space.
Proposed paragraph (c) of Sec. 873.111 would provide that the
negotiation procedures of FAR Parts 12, 13, and 15 would be used for
negotiated acquisitions of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space, except as modified in VAAR Part 873. These two
paragraphs are informational only.
Proposed paragraph (d) of Sec. 873.111 would provide an alternative
negotiation procedure using a multiphase negotiation technique. This
will supersede current FAR provisions for an advisory multi-step
process that does not allow the Government to exclude offerors that are
unlikely to be viable competitors. Multiphase acquisitions may be
appropriate when the submission of full proposals at the beginning of
an acquisition would be burdensome for offerors to prepare and for
Government personnel to evaluate. Under a multiphase acquisition, VA
would seek limited information on vendors' first submissions, make one
or more down-selects based on the initial information, and request full
proposals from the offerors remaining. This technique would ensure that
only those firms most likely to receive awards would be required to
expend the time and effort to prepare a full proposal. It would
simplify and streamline the acquisition process and would save both
vendors and the Government time and money.
Proposed paragraph (e) of Sec. 873.111 would provide two additional
alternative negotiation techniques, neither of which are currently
provided for in FAR, for use by VA in acquiring commercial services or
the use of medical equipment or space. The first technique would allow
the contracting officer to indicate to all offerors, or to one or more
offerors, a price, contract term or condition, commercially available
feature, or other requirement that the offeror or offerors will have to
improve upon or meet, as appropriate, in order to remain competitive.
The second technique would allow contracting officers to post prices
received on offers electronically or otherwise, without disclosing the
identity of the offerors, and allow offerors to revise their prices
based on the posted information. These procedures are necessary to
assist contracting officers in procuring the highest quality health-
care services at best value prices.
Proposed Sec. 873.112 sets forth the evaluation requirements that
VA contracting officers must place in solicitations. Currently, FAR has
rigid requirements that evaluation factors and subfactors, as
appropriate, be spelled out in a solicitation. In particular, there is
a requirement, over certain dollar thresholds, to include vendor past
performance as an evaluation factor. The contracting officer must
document the reasons why past performance would not be included in an
evaluation. This proposed section relieves contracting officers from
these rigid requirements and allows them the flexibility to fashion
their own acquisition-specific evaluation scheme with whatever
information they deem to be in the best interest of the Government.
However, this proposed section retains the requirement from FAR that
price or cost to the Government still must be included in any
evaluation.
Proposed Sec. 873.113 sets forth a new standard for exchanges with
offerors in negotiated acquisitions. Currently, under FAR, any contact
with a vendor about the vendor's proposal that goes to the substance of
the offer constitutes ``discussions.'' This causes a set of rules to go
into effect, including a requirement that the Government hold
``discussions'' with every offeror, even if there is no need for
discussions with those other offerors. Less important contact is
referred to as ``clarification'' under existing rules. Moreover, there
is another category called ``communications'' which goes to
establishment of a competitive range. Under proposed Sec. 873.113, the
Government can have contact, called ``exchanges,'' at any time with any
vendor, as required. However, as with the current regulations, the
Government cannot improperly disclose information contained in another
offeror's proposal (except see proposed at Sec. 873.111(e), Alternative
negotiation techniques).
Proposed Sec. 873.114 sets forth a new concept of the ``best value
pool.'' This is the ``pool'' of offeror(s) that, after initial
evaluation, have the most highly rated proposals with the greatest
likelihood of award. Although this is similar in concept to the
``competitive range'' of current regulation, the differences are that
the contracting officer may limit the best value pool to a specific
number of offerors among which an efficient competition can be
conducted. Under the existing rules, the Government must consider every
offeror that is acceptable or capable of being made acceptable.
Therefore, the Government is forced to keep any number of marginal
proposals in the competition even though they may have little real
chance of securing an award. This proposed rule would eliminate this
requirement and simplify the procurement process for both VA and
vendors.
Proposed Sec. 873.115 sets forth new procedures governing proposal
revisions. Currently, once a ``competitive range'' has been developed,
all offerors therein must be given a chance to revise their proposals.
All revisions must be requested and received at the same time. Finally,
at the close of ``discussions,'' all offerors remaining in the
competition must be requested to submit a ``best and final offer.''
Under this proposed section, contracting officers may request proposal
revisions as often as needed during the acquisition process. There is
no need to have a common cutoff for submission of these revisions.
Moreover, there is no need for a requirement to request a ``best and
final offer'' from each and every offeror in every acquisition. The
proposed section ensures that proposal submissions will be safeguarded
against improper disclosures.
Proposed Sec. 873.116 would provide guidance to contracting
officers on source selection. FAR 15.308 contains specific requirements
for documenting the source selection decision. This proposed section
provides a less onerous procedure for documenting source selection than
is described in FAR at 15.308.
Proposed Sec. 873.117 would provide additional guidance to
contracting officers on contract award, over and above that contained
in FAR at 15.504, specifically on the differences between awarding RFQs
and requests for proposals.
FAR 15.505 currently requires the contracting officer to provide a
preaward debriefing if a written request for a debriefing is received
from the offeror no later than 3 days after receipt by the offeror of
notice of exclusion from the competitive range. Proposed Sec. 873.118
would make preaward debriefings optional on the part of the contracting
officer when determined to be in the best interest of the Government.
This is necessary to
[[Page 60260]]
simplify and streamline the acquisition process.
Miscellaneous Changes
Currently, VAAR 801.602-70(a)(4) provides that proposed contracts
for the mutual use or exchange of use of ``specialized medical
resources'' above specified dollar thresholds be submitted to VA
Central Office for review. This proposed rule would revise the term
``specialized medical resources'' to ``health-care resources'' pursuant
to 38 U.S.C. 8152. The review threshold levels specified in VAAR have
been changed by class deviation in accordance with 801.404. This
document proposes to incorporate that class deviation and to raise the
review thresholds. This is necessary to allow streamlined and expedited
processing of proposed contracts and to reduce the administrative
burden on contracting officers.
This proposed rule would make minor editorial changes to 801.602-71
and 801.601-72 to correspond with the new language used in this
proposed rule.
VAAR 806.302-5(b) currently provides that contracts for the mutual
use or exchange of use of specialized medical resources to be acquired
from health-care facilities are approved for other than full and open
competition, but requires justification and approval in accordance with
FAR 6.303 and VAAR 806.303. Section 301 of Public Law 104-262 revised
38 U.S.C. 8153(a)(3)(A), restricting and modifying this authority.
Under this new authority, only those acquisitions of health-care
resources consisting of commercial services, the use of medical
equipment or space, or research, to be acquired from institutions
affiliated with the Department in accordance with 38 U.S.C. 7302, from
medical practice groups and other approved entities associated with
affiliated institutions (entities will be approved if determined
legally to be associated with affiliated institutions), or from blood
banks, organ banks, or research centers, are approved for other than
full and open competition. However, justification and approval is not
required for contracts with these entities. This rule proposes to
revise 806.302-5, paragraph (b), to incorporate this new authority into
VAAR.
In addition, Sec. 301 of Public Law 104-262 revised 38 U.S.C.
8153(a)(3)(B)(i) to provide that contracts for the acquisition of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space, not
procured from affiliated institutions or approved entities associated
with affiliated institutions (entities will be approved if determined
legally to be associated with affiliated institutions), may be procured
without regard to any law or regulation that would otherwise require
the use of competitive procedures, provided the procurement is
conducted in accordance with the simplified procedures proposed in this
rule. Public Law 104-262 revised 38 U.S.C. 8153(a)(3)(B)(ii) to require
that such acquisitions permit all responsible sources, as appropriate,
to submit a bid, proposal, or quotation (as appropriate) and revised 38
U.S.C. 8153(a)(3)(D) to require that such acquisitions, if conducted on
a sole source basis, shall be justified and approved. This rule
proposes to renumber current 806.302-5, paragraph (c), as paragraph (d)
and to add new paragraph (c) to incorporate these new authorities into
VAAR.
Currently, VAAR Part 812 addresses the acquisition of commercial
services. This rule proposes to list the Part 52.273 clauses contained
herein in Part 812 for use in commercial service acquisitions, as
authorized by FAR 12.301(f). This action is necessary, and is proposed
based on the reasons set forth below, to permit use of these Part
52.873 clauses in VA's commercial service acquisitions.
This rule proposes to add VAAR clause 852.237-7, Indemnification
and Medical Liability Insurance, as shown below in full text, to
Sec. 812.302(f) for use in VA commercial service solicitations and
contracts issued under the authority of 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153. VAAR
clause 852.237-7 is currently set forth in 48 CFR Part 852. VA
acquisitions under the authority of 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153 are considered
to be for commercial services and clause 852.237-7 is necessary for use
in such acquisitions to ensure that VA contractors providing
nonpersonal health-care services have adequate medical liability
insurance. This insurance is required to protect both VA and veterans
from medical malpractice.
Indemnification and Medical Liability Insurance (Oct 1996)
(a) It is expressly agreed and understood that this is a
nonpersonal services contract, as defined in Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) 37.101, under which the professional services rendered
by the Contractor or its health-care providers are rendered in its
capacity as an independent contractor. The Government may evaluate the
quality of professional and administrative services provided but
retains no control over professional aspects of the services rendered,
including by example, the Contractor's or its health-care providers'
professional medical judgment, diagnosis, or specific medical
treatments. The Contractor and its health-care providers shall be
liable for their liability-producing acts or omissions. The Contractor
shall maintain or require all health-care providers performing under
this contract to maintain, during the term of this contract,
professional liability insurance issued by a responsible insurance
carrier of not less than the following amount(s) per specialty per
occurrence: [Contracting Officer insert the dollar amount value(s) of
standard coverage(s) prevailing within the local community as to the
specific medical specialty, or specialties, concerned, or such higher
amount as the Contracting Officer deems necessary to protect the
Government's interests].
However, if the Contractor is an entity or a subdivision of a State
that either provides for self-insurance or limits the liability or the
amount of insurance purchased by State entities, then the insurance
requirement of this contract shall be fulfilled by incorporating the
provisions of the applicable State law.
(b) An apparently successful offeror, upon request of the
Contracting Officer, shall, prior to contract award, furnish evidence
of the insurability of the offeror and/or of all health-care providers
who will perform under this contract. The submission shall provide
evidence of insurability concerning the medical liability insurance
required by paragraph (a) of this clause or the provisions of State law
as to self-insurance, or limitations on liability or insurance.
(c) The Contractor shall, prior to commencement of services under
the contract, provide to the Contracting Officer Certificates of
Insurance or insurance policies evidencing the required insurance
coverage and an endorsement stating that any cancellation or material
change adversely affecting the Government's interest shall not be
effective until 30 days after the insurer or the Contractor gives
written notice to the Contracting Officer. Certificates or policies
shall be provided for the Contractor and/or each health-care provider
who will perform under this contract.
(d) The Contractor shall notify the Contracting Officer if it, or
any of the health-care providers performing under this contract, change
insurance providers during the performance period of this contract. The
notification shall provide evidence that the Contractor and/or health-
care providers will meet all the requirements of this clause, including
those concerning liability insurance and endorsements. These
requirements may be met either
[[Page 60261]]
under the new policy, or a combination of old and new policies, if
applicable.
(e) The Contractor shall insert the substance of this clause,
including this paragraph (e), in all subcontracts for health-care
services under this contract. The Contractor shall be responsible for
compliance by any subcontractor or lower-tier subcontractor with the
provisions set forth in paragraph (a) of this clause.
(End of Clause)
VAAR 837.403 currently requires the use of the above clause
852.237-7, Indemnification and Medical Liability Insurance, in lieu of
FAR clause 52.237-7, in solicitations and contracts for nonpersonal
health-care services. This rule proposes to clarify at 837.403 that
this same VAAR clause must also be used in solicitations and contracts
for nonpersonal health-care services awarded under the authority of 38
U.S.C. 8151-8153 and VAAR Part 873. The clause is necessary for use in
VA solicitations and contracts to ensure that VA contractors providing
nonpersonal health-care services have adequate medical liability
insurance. This insurance is required to protect both VA and veterans
from medical malpractice.
VAAR Part 852 does not currently contain any provisions
specifically relating to the acquisition of commercial services under
the simplified acquisition authority of 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153. This rule
proposed to add four provisions to the VAAR, as set forth herein in
Part 852. The following is an explanation of these proposed provisions.
The proposed provision at 852.273-70, Late offers, would replace
paragraph (f) of FAR provision 52.212-1 in acquisitions for commercial
services conducted in accordance with VAAR Part 873. Paragraph (f) of
FAR provision 52.212-1 currently provides that offers or modifications
of offers received after the exact time specified in the solicitation
for receipt of offers will not be considered. VAAR provision 852.273-70
proposes to allow consideration of quotations, proposals, or
modifications of proposals received after the time set forth in the
request for quotations or request for proposals at the discretion of
the contracting officer, if determined to be in the best interest of
the Government. This will ensure that VA will be able to accept the
best offer submitted on a solicitation, even if that offer is received
after the time set forth in the solicitation.
Neither FAR nor VAAR currently contains provisions allowing
alternative negotiation techniques. The provision at 852.273-71,
Alternative negotiation techniques, proposes to allow the use of the
alternative negotiation techniques set forth at 873.111(e). The
techniques listed therein include (1) allowing the contracting officer
to indicate to an offeror how the offeror must improve its offer in
order to be considered for award and (2) allowing the contracting
officer to post prices and permit revisions of offers based on that
information. We believe these alternative negotiation techniques will
allow VA to conduct acquisitions on a basis more in line with
commercial practices and will result in the acquisition of improved
services at reduced prices.
The proposed provision at 852.273-72, Alternative evaluation, would
implement the provision at 852.273-71, Alternative negotiation
techniques, by advising offerors how prices would be posted and by
providing guidance to offerors on how to submit offers. In addition,
this proposed provision would advise offerors on how options would be
evaluated, i.e., by adding the total price of all options to the total
price for the basic requirement. It would also advise offerors that the
Government is not obligated to exercise the options. The ``options''
paragraph is included in this proposed provision because this provision
might be used alone, without a separate ``options'' provision.
The proposed provision at 852.273-73, Evaluation--health-care
resources, would replace FAR provision 52.212-2 in acquisitions for
commercial services conducted in accordance with VAAR Part 873. FAR
provision 52.212-2 provides guidance to offerors on what factors the
Government will use to evaluate offers and on how those factors are
weighted. Under proposed VAAR 873, VA would not be required to use
factors to evaluate offers. Rather, VA would include information in the
solicitation on how offers will be evaluated. In addition, VA would not
be required to state how the evaluation information is weighted. This
proposed provision is written to replace FAR 52.212-2 with these
authorities in mind. Also, paragraph (c) has been drafted to clarify
that notice of acceptance of an offer will create a binding contract if
the solicitation is a request for proposals. If the solicitation is a
request for quotations, that would not be the case, as notice of
acceptance would not create a binding contract.
Provision at 852.273-74, Award without exchanges, is proposed to be
added to VAAR to advise offerors that VA intends to evaluate proposals
and award a contract without exchanges with offerors. This provision is
necessary in order to avoid any misunderstanding regarding award and to
help ensure that offerors provide their best prices and terms with
their initial offer.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520),
collections of information are contained in clause 852.237-7,
Indemnification and Medical Liability Insurance, as set forth in the
Supplementary Information portion of this proposed rule. Although this
document proposes to add this clause for commercial item solicitations
and contracts, this Paperwork Reduction Act notice of this document
seeks approval for collections of information for both commercial and
non-commercial item and service contracts for this clause. The clause
can be used in both commercial and non-commercial item and service
solicitations and contracts. As required under Sec. 3507(d) of the Act,
VA has submitted a copy of this proposed rulemaking action to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for its review of the collection
of information.
OMB assigns control numbers to collections of information it
approves. VA may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
Comments on the collection of information should be submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the
Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Director, Office of
Regulations Management (02D), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20420. Comments should indicate that
they are submitted in response to ``RIN 2900-AI71.''
Title and Provision/Clause Number: Clause 852.237-7,
Indemnification and Medical Liability Insurance.
Summary of collection of information: This clause is used in
solicitations for nonpersonal health-care services in lieu of FAR
clause 52.237-7. It requires the apparent successful bidder/offeror,
prior to contract award, to furnish evidence that the firm possesses
the types and amounts of insurance required by the solicitation and to
notify the contracting officer if there are any changes in the firm's
insurance coverage during the contract period. Prior to award, this
evidence is in the form of a certificate from the firm's insurance
company. After award, it is in the form of a letter or other
correspondence, plus additional certificates.
[[Page 60262]]
Description of need for information and proposed use of
information: The information is required to protect VA by ensuring that
the firm to which award will be made possesses the types and amounts of
insurance required by the solicitation. It helps ensure that VA will
not be held liable for any negligent acts of the contractor and ensures
that VA beneficiaries and the public are protected by adequate
insurance coverage.
Description of likely respondents: Apparent successful bidders/
offerors on solicitations for nonpersonal health-care services.
Estimated number of respondents: 10,000.
Estimated frequency of responses: Once for each contract awarded,
plus once each time a contractor changes its insurance coverage.
Estimated average burden per collection: 30 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 5000
hours.
The Department considers comments by the public on proposed
collections of information in--
Evaluating whether the proposed collections of information
are necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the
Department, including whether the information will have practical
utility;
Evaluating the accuracy of the Department's estimate of
the burden of the proposed collections of information, including the
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimizing the burden of the collections of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the proposed
collection of information contained in this proposed rule between 30
and 60 days after publication of this document in the Federal Register.
Therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect
if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication. This does not affect
the deadline for the public to comment on the proposed regulation.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that the adoption of this proposed
rule would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities as they are defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612. This proposed rule would
establish simplified procedures for the acquisition of health-care
resources by VA. Costs, if any, to comply with the provisions of the
proposed rule would be minimal. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b),
this proposed rule is exempt from the initial and final regulatory
flexibility analysis requirements of Secs. 603 and 604.
List of Subjects
48 CFR Parts 801 and 852
Government Procurement, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
48 CFR Parts 806, 812, 837, and 873
Government Procurement.
Approved: November 2, 1998.
Togo D. West, Jr.,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 48 CFR chapter 8 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 801--VETERANS AFFAIRS ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
1. The authority citations for Part 801 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501 and 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
801.602-70 [Amended]
2. In Sec. 801.602-70, paragraphs (a)(4)(vi) and (a)(4)(vii) are
proposed to be revised to read as follows:
801.602-70 Legal/technical review requirements to be met prior to
contract execution.
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(vi) Except as specified in paragraph (a)(4)(vii), competitive
contracts exceeding $1.5 million and noncompetitive contracts exceeding
$500,000 for scarce medical specialist services negotiated under the
authority of 38 U.S.C. 7409 or for health-care resources acquired under
the authority of Part 873 and 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153.
(vii) Any contract or agreement negotiated under the authority of
38 U.S.C. 8151-8153 for VA to provide inpatient services,
administrative resources, the use of medical equipment or space,
prosthetics, supplies, or laundry services.
* * * * *
3. In Sec. 801.602-71, paragraph (b)(2) is proposed to be revised
to read as follows:
801.602-71 Processing contracts for legal/technical review.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Proposed contracts and agreements for scarce medical specialist
services or for the mutual use or exchange of use of health-care
resources, as specified in 801.602-70(a)(4)(vi) and (a)(4)(vii), will
be forwarded to Central Office in accordance with VHA Directive 97-015
and VA Manual M-1, Part 1, Chapter 34, for review and submission to the
Office of the General Counsel (025).
* * * * *
4. In Sec. 801.602-72, paragraph (b) is proposed to be revised to
read as follows:
801.602-72 Documents to be submitted for legal review.
* * * * *
(b) For proposed contracts and agreements for scarce medical
specialist services or for the mutual use or exchange of use of health-
care resources, as specified in 801.602-70(a)(4)(vi) and (a)(4)(vii),
the documents referred to in VA Manual M-1, Part 1, Chapter 34.
* * * * *
PART 806--COMPETITION REQUIREMENTS
5. The authority citations for Part 806 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501 and 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
6. In Sec. 806.302-5, paragraph (b) is proposed to be revised to
read as follows:
806.302-5 Authorized or required by statute.
* * * * *
(b) Contracts or agreements for the mutual use or exchange of use
of health-care resources, consisting of commercial services, the use of
medical equipment or space, or research, negotiated under the authority
of 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153, are approved for other than full and open
competition only when such contracts or agreements are with
institutions affiliated with the Department of Veterans Affairs,
pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 7302, with medical practice groups or other
approved entities associated with affiliated institutions (entities
will be approved if determined legally to be associated with affiliated
institutions), or with blood banks, organ banks, or research centers.
The justification and approval requirements of FAR 6.303 and VAAR
806.304 do not apply to such contracts or agreements.
* * * * *
[[Page 60263]]
7. In Sec. 806.302-5, paragraph (c) is proposed to be redesignated
as paragraph (d) and a new paragraph (c) is proposed to be added to
read as follows:
806.302-5 Authorized or required by statute.
* * * * *
(c) Contracts or agreements for the mutual use or exchange of use
of health-care resources, consisting of commercial services or the use
of medical equipment or space, negotiated under the authority of 38
U.S.C. 8151-8153, and not acquired under the authority of paragraph (b)
of this section, may be conducted without regard to any law or
regulation that would otherwise require the use of competitive
procedures for procuring resources, provided the procurement is
conducted in accordance with the simplified procedures contained in
part 873. The justification and approval requirements of FAR 6.303 and
VAAR 806.304 shall apply to such contracts or agreements conducted on a
sole source basis.
* * * * *
PART 812--ACQUISITION OF COMMERCIAL ITEMS
8. The authority citations for Part 812 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501 and 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
812.301 [Amended]
9. In Sec. 812.301, paragraph (g) is proposed to be added to read
as follows:
812.301 Solicitation provisions and contract clauses for the
acquisition of commercial items.
* * * * *
(g) When soliciting for commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space under the authority of part 873 and 38 U.S.C. 8151-
8153, the provisions and clauses in the following VAAR sections may be
used in accordance with the prescriptions contained in parts 837 and
873:
(1) 852.237-7, Indemnification and Medical Liability Insurance.
(2) 852.273-70, Late offers.
(3) 852.273-71, Alternative negotiation techniques.
(4) 852.273-72, Alternative evaluation.
(5) 852.273-73, Evaluation--health-care resources.
(6) 852.273-74, Award without exchanges.
PART 837--SERVICE CONTRACTING
10. The authority citations for Part 837 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501 and 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
837.403 [Amended]
11. Section 837.403 is proposed to be amended by adding, at the end
of the first sentence, ``, including solicitations and contracts for
nonpersonal health-care services awarded under the authority of 38
U.S.C. 8151-8153 and VAAR Part 873''.
PART 852--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
12. The authority citations for Part 852 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501 and 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
13. Section 852.273-70 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
852.273-70 Late offers.
As prescribed in 873.110(a), insert the following provision:
Late Offers (Date)
This provision replaces paragraph (f) of FAR Provision 52.212-1.
Offers or modifications of offers received after the time set forth
in a request for quotations or request for proposals may be
considered, at the discretion of the contracting officer, if
determined to be in the best interest of the Government. Late bids
submitted in response to an Invitation for Bid (IFB) will not be
considered.
(End of provision)
14. Section 852.273-71 is added to read as follows:
852.273-71 Alternative negotiation techniques.
As prescribed in 873.110(b), insert the following provision:
Alternative Negotiation Techniques (Date)
The contracting officer may elect to use the alternative
negotiation techniques described in section 873.111(e) in conducting
this procurement. If used, offerors may respond by maintaining
offers as originally submitted, revising offers, or submitting an
alternative offer. The Government may consider initial offers unless
revised or withdrawn, revised offers, and alternative offers in
making the award. Revising an offer does not guarantee an offeror an
award.
(End of provision)
15. Section 852.273-72 is added to read as follows:
852.273-72 Alternative evaluation.
As prescribed in 873.110(c), insert the following provision:
Alternative Evaluation (Date)
(a) The Government will award a contract resulting from this
solicitation to the responsible offeror submitting the lowest priced
offer that conforms to the solicitation. During the specified period
for receipt of offers, the amount of the lowest offer will be posted
and may be viewed by--[Contracting officer insert description of how
the information may be viewed electronically or otherwise]. Offerors
may revise offers anytime during the specified period. At the end of
the specified time period for receipt of offers, the responsible
offeror submitting the lowest priced offer will be in line for
award.
(b) Except when it is determined not to be in the Government's
best interest, the Government will evaluate offers for award
purposes by adding the total price for all options to the total
price for the basic requirement. The Government may determine that
an offer is unacceptable if the option prices are materially
unbalanced. Evaluation of options shall not obligate the Government
to exercise the option(s).
(End of provision)
16. Section 852.273-73 is added to read as follows:
852.273-73 Evaluation--health-care resources.
As prescribed in 873.110(d), in lieu of FAR provision 52.212-2, the
contracting officer may insert a provision substantially as follows:
Evaluation--Health-Care Resources (Date)
(a) The Government will award a contract resulting from this
solicitation to the responsible offeror whose offer, conforming to
the solicitation, will be most advantageous to the Government, price
and other factors considered. The following information or factors
shall be used to evaluate offers: [Contracting officer insert
evaluation information or factors, such as technical capability to
meet the Government's requirements, past performance, or such other
evaluation information or factors as the contracting officer deems
necessary to evaluate offers. Price shall be evaluated in every
acquisition. The contracting officer may include the evaluation
information or factors in their relative order of importance, such
as in descending order of importance.]
(b) Except when it is determined not to be in the Government's
best interest, the Government will evaluate offers for award
purposes by adding the total price for all options to the total
price for the basic requirement. The Government may determine that
an offer is unacceptable if the option prices are materially
unbalanced. Evaluation of options shall not obligate the Government
to exercise the option(s).
(c) If this solicitation is a Request for Proposals (RFP), a
written notice of award or acceptance of an offer, mailed or
otherwise furnished to the successful offeror within the time for
acceptance specified in the offer, shall result in a binding
contract without further action by either party. Before the offer's
specified expiration time, the Government may accept an offer (or
part of an offer), whether or not there are negotiations after its
receipt, unless a written notice of withdrawal is received before
award.
(End of Provision)
[[Page 60264]]
17. Section 852.273-74 is added to read as follows:
852.273-74 Award without exchanges.
As prescribed in 873.110(e), insert the following provision:
Award Without Exchanges (Date)
The Government intends to evaluate proposals and award a
contract without exchanges with offerors. Therefore, each initial
offer should contain the offeror's best terms from a cost or price
and technical standpoint. However, the Government reserves the right
to conduct exchanges if later determined by the contracting officer
to be necessary.
(End of provision)
18. Part 873 is added to read as follows:
PART 873--SIMPLIFIED ACQUISITION PROCEDURES FOR HEALTH-CARE
RESOURCES
Sec.
873.101 Policy.
873.102 Definitions.
873.103 Priority sources.
873.104 Competition requirements.
873.105 Acquisition planning.
873.106 Presolicitation exchanges with industry.
873.107 Socioeconomic programs.
873.108 Publicizing contract actions.
873.109 General requirements for acquisition of health-care
resources.
873.110 Solicitation provisions.
873.111 Acquisition strategies for health-care resources.
873.112 Evaluation information.
873.113 Exchanges with offerors.
873.114 Best value pool.
873.115 Proposal revisions.
873.116 Source selection decision.
873.117 Award to successful offeror.
873.118 Debriefings.
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153.
873.101 Policy.
The simplified acquisition procedures set forth in this VAAR part
apply to the acquisition of health-care resources consisting of
commercial services or the use of medical equipment or space. These
procedures shall be used in conjunction with the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR). However, when a policy or procedure in FAR or another
part of VAAR is inconsistent with the procedures contained in this
part, this part shall take precedence. These procedures contain more
flexibility than provided in FAR or elsewhere in VAAR.
873.102 Definitions.
Commercial service means a service, except construction exceeding
$2,000, that is offered and sold competitively in the commercial
marketplace, is performed under standard commercial terms and
conditions, and is procured using firm-fixed price contracts.
Health-care providers includes health-care plans and insurers and
any organizations, institutions, or other entities or individuals who
furnish health-care resources.
Health-care resource includes hospital care and medical services
(as those terms are defined in Sec. 1701 of title 38 United States Code
(U.S.C.)), any other health-care service, and any health-care support
or administrative resource, including the use of medical equipment or
space.
873.103 Priority sources.
Without regard to FAR 8.001(a)(2), except for the acquisition of
services available from the Committee for Purchase From People Who Are
Blind or Severely Disabled, pursuant to the Javits-Wagner-O'Day Act (41
U.S.C. 46-48c) and FAR Subpart 8.7, there are no priority sources for
the acquisition of health-care resources consisting of commercial
services or the use of medical equipment or space.
873.104 Competition requirements.
(a) Without regard to FAR Part 6, if the health-care resource
required is a commercial service, the use of medical equipment or
space, or research, and is to be acquired from an institution
affiliated with the Department in accordance with Sec. 7302 of title 38
U.S.C., including medical practice groups and other approved entities
associated with affiliated institutions (entities will be approved if
determined legally to be associated with affiliated institutions), or
from blood banks, organ banks, or research centers, the resource may be
acquired on a sole source basis.
(b) Acquisition of health-care resources identified in paragraph
(a) are not required to be publicized as otherwise required by
Sec. 873.108 or FAR 5.101. In addition, written justification, as
otherwise set forth in Sec. 303(f) of the Federal Property and
Administration Services Act of 1949 (41 U.S.C. 253(f)) and FAR Part 6,
is not required.
(c) Without regard to FAR 6.101, if the health-care resource
required is a commercial service or the use of medical equipment or
space, and is to be acquired from an entity not described in paragraph
(a) of this section, contracting officers shall seek competition to the
maximum extent practicable and shall permit all responsible sources, as
appropriate under the provisions of this part, to submit a bid,
proposal or quotation (as appropriate) for the resources to be procured
and provide for the consideration by the Department of bids, proposals,
or quotations so submitted.
(d) Without regard to FAR 5.101, acquisition of health-care
resources identified in paragraph (c) of this section shall be
publicized as otherwise required by Sec. 873.108. Moreover, for any
such acquisition described in paragraph (c) of this section to be
conducted on a sole source basis, the contracting officer must prepare
a justification that includes the information and is approved at the
levels prescribed in Sec. 303(f) of the Federal Property and
Administration Services Act of 1949 (41 U.S.C. 253(f)) and FAR Part 6.
873.105 Acquisition planning.
(a) This section shall be used in lieu of FAR Part 7. Acquisition
planning is an indispensable component of the total acquisition
process. Acquisition planning may involve identifying requirements,
available funding, and sources, and development of a statement or
description of work, a Government estimate, and/or evaluation
information.
(b) Within VA and for the acquisition of health-care resources
consisting of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space, an acquisition team shall be assembled. The team shall be
tailored by the contracting officer for each particular acquisition and
include the appropriate mix of contracting, fiscal, legal,
administrative, and technical personnel, the small business advocate
representing the contracting activity or a higher level designee, an
SBA Procurement Center Representative, if available, and such other
expertise to assure a comprehensive acquisition plan.
(c) Prior to determining whether a requirement is suitable for
acquisition using these simplified acquisition procedures, the
acquisition team shall conduct market research to identify interested
businesses. It is the responsibility of the contracting officer to
ensure the requirement is appropriately publicized and information
about the procurement opportunity is adequately disseminated as set
forth in Sec. 873.108.
873.106 Presolicitation exchanges with industry.
(a) This section shall be used in lieu of FAR Part 10. In
conducting market research, exchange of information by all interested
parties involved in an acquisition, from the earliest identification of
a requirement through release of the solicitation, is encouraged.
Interested parties include potential offerors, end users, Government
acquisition and support personnel, and
[[Page 60265]]
others involved in the conduct or outcome of the acquisition. The
nature and extent of presolicitation exchanges between the Government
and industry shall be a matter of the acquisition team's discretion, as
coordinated by the contracting officer.
(b) Techniques to promote early exchange of information include--
(1) Industry or small business conferences;
(2) Public hearings;
(3) Market research;
(4) One-on-one meetings with potential offerors;
(5) Presolicitation notices;
(6) Draft Requests for Proposals (RFPs);
(7) Requests for Information (RFIs);
(8) Presolicitation or preproposal conferences;
(9) Site visits;
(10) Electronic notices (e.g., Internet); and
(11) Use of the Procurement Marketing and Access Network (PRO-NET).
873.107 Socioeconomic programs.
(a) Implementation. This paragraph provides additional authority,
over and above that found at FAR 19.502, to waive small business set-
asides. If, through market research, there is reasonable expectation
that reasonably priced bids, proposals, or quotations will be received
from two or more responsible small businesses, a requirement for
health-care resources shall be reserved for small business
participation. The Head of the Contracting Activity may approve a
waiver from the requirement for any set-aside for small business
participation when it is determined to be in the best interest of the
Government. For acquisitions between $2,500 and $100,000, the automatic
reservation for small business concerns, as provided in FAR 19.502-
2(a), is not applicable.
(b) Rejecting Small Business Administration (SBA) Recommendations.
(1) HCA's shall consider and respond to a recommendation from an SBA
representative to set a procurement aside for small business within 5
working days. If the recommendation is rejected by the HCA and if SBA
intends to appeal that determination, SBA shall, within 1 working day
after receipt of the HCA's determination, notify the contracting
officer of SBA's intention to appeal.
(2) Upon receipt of the notification of SBA's intention to appeal
and pending issuance of a final appeal decision to SBA, the contracting
officer shall suspend action on the acquisition unless a determination
is made in writing by the contracting officer that proceeding to
contract award and performance is in the public interest. The
contracting officer shall promptly notify SBA of the determination to
proceed with the solicitation and/or contract award and shall provide a
copy of the written determination to SBA.
(3) SBA shall be allowed 10 working days after receiving the
rejection notice from the HCA for acquisitions not exceeding $5
million, or 15 working days after receiving the rejection notice for
acquisitions exceeding $5 million, to file an appeal. SBA shall notify
the contracting officer within this 10 or 15 day period whether an
appeal has, in fact, been taken. If notification is not received by the
contracting officer within the applicable period, it shall be deemed
that an appeal was not taken.
(4) SBA shall submit appeals to the Secretary. Decisions shall be
made by the Procurement Executive, whose decisions shall be final.
(c) Contracting with the Small Business Administration (the 8(a)
Program). The procedures of FAR Part 19.8 shall be followed where a
responsible 8(a) contractor has been identified.
(d) Determinations of Responsibility and Small Business. The
Director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization
(OSDBU), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and Director, Office of
Industrial Assistance, Small Business Administration (SBA) shall serve
as ombudsmen to assist VA contracting officers on any issues relating
to Certificates of Competency (COC). Copies of all COC referrals to SBA
shall be submitted to the Director, OSDBU.
873.108 Publicizing contract actions.
(a) Without regard to FAR 5.101, all acquisitions under this Part
873 for dollar amounts in excess of the simplified acquisition
threshold (SAT), as set forth in FAR Part 13, shall be publicly
announced utilizing a medium designed to obtain competition to the
maximum extent practicable and to permit all responsible sources, as
appropriate under the provisions of this Part, to submit a bid,
proposal, or quotation (as appropriate).
(1) The publication medium may include the Commerce Business Daily;
the Internet; and local, regional or national publications or journals,
as appropriate, at the discretion of the contracting officer, depending
on the complexity of the acquisition.
(2) Without regard to FAR 5.101 or 14.202-1, notice shall be
published for a reasonable time prior to issuance of a request for
quotations (RFQ) or a solicitation, depending on the complexity or
urgency of the acquisition, in order to afford potential offerors a
reasonable opportunity to respond. If the notice includes a complete
copy of the RFQ or solicitation, a prior notice is not required, and
the RFQ or solicitation shall be considered to be announced and issued
at the same time.
(3) The notice may include contractor qualification parameters,
such as time for delivery of service, credentialing or medical
certification requirements, small business or other socio-economic
preferences, the appropriate small business size standard, and such
other qualifications as the contracting officer deems necessary to meet
the needs of the Government.
(b) The requirement for public announcement does not apply to sole
source acquisitions, described in 873.104(a), from institutions
affiliated with the Department in accordance with Sec. 7302 of title 38
U.S.C., including medical practice groups and other approved entities
associated with affiliated institutions (entities will be approved if
determined legally to be associated with affiliated institutions), or
from blood banks, organ banks, or research centers, or to sole source
acquisitions of hospital care and medical services (as those terms are
defined in Sec. 1701 of title 38 U.S.C.) or any other health-care
services.
(c) For acquisitions below the SAT, a public announcement is
optional.
(d) Each solicitation issued under these procedures shall
prominently identify that the requirement is being solicited under the
authority of 38 U.S.C. 8153 and VAAR Part 873.
873.109 General requirements for acquisition of health-care resources.
(a) Source Selection Authority. Contracting officers shall be the
source selection authority for acquisitions of health-care resources,
consisting of commercial services or the use of medical equipment or
space, utilizing the guidance contained in this VAAR Part 873.
(b) Statement of work/Specifications. Statements of work or
specifications may define the requirement and include qualifications or
limitations such as time limits for delivery of service, medical
certification or credentialing restrictions, small business or other
socio-economic preferences, or any other such terms as the contracting
officer deems appropriate for each specific acquisition.
(c) Documentation. Without regard to FAR 13.106-3(b), 13.501(b), or
14.408-
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7(a) and (b), the contract file shall include:
(1) A brief written description of the procedures used in awarding
the contract;
(2) The market research, including the determination that the
acquisition involves health-care resources;
(3) The number of offers received; and
(4) An explanation, tailored to the size and complexity of the
acquisition, of the basis for the contract award decision.
(d) Time for receipt of quotations or offers. (1) Without regard
to FAR 5.203, contracting officers shall set a reasonable time for
receipt of quotations or proposals in requests for quotations (RFQs)
and solicitations.
(2) Without regard to FAR 15.208 or 52.212-1(f), quotations or
proposals received after the time set forth in a RFQ or request for
proposals (RFP) may be considered at the discretion of the contracting
officer if determined to be in the best interest of the Government.
Contracting officers shall document the rationale for accepting
quotations or proposals received after the time specified in the RFQ or
RFP. This paragraph (d)(2) shall not apply to RFQs or RFPs if
alternative evaluation techniques described in VAAR 873.111(e)(ii) are
used. This paragraph (d)(2) does not apply to invitations for bid
(IFBs).
(e) Cancellation of procurements. Any acquisition may be canceled
by the contracting officer at any time during the acquisition process
if cancellation is determined to be in the best interest of the
Government.
873.110 Solicitation provisions.
(a) As provided in 873.109(d), contracting officers shall insert
the provision at 852.273-70, Late offers, in all requests for
quotations (RFQs) and requests for proposals (RFPs) exceeding the
micro-purchase threshold.
(b) The contracting officer shall insert a provision in RFQs and
solicitations, substantially the same as the provision at 852.273-71,
Alternative negotiation techniques, when either of the alternative
negotiation techniques described in 873.111(e)(1) will be used.
(c) The contracting officer shall insert the provision at 852.273-
72, Alternative evaluation, in lieu of the provision at 52.212-2,
Evaluation--Commercial Items, when the alternative negotiation
technique described in 873.111(e)(1)(ii) will be used.
(d) When evaluation information, as described in 873.112, is to be
used to select a contractor under an RFQ or RFP for health-care
resources consisting of commercial services or the use of medical
equipment or space, the contracting officer may insert the provision at
852.273-73, Evaluation--health-care resources, in the RFQ or RFP in
lieu of FAR provision 52.212-2.
(e) As provided at 873.113(f), if award may be made without
exchange with vendors, the contracting officer shall include the
provision at 852.273-74, Award without exchanges, in the RFQ or RFP.
(f) The contracting officer shall insert the clauses at FAR 52.207-
3, Right of First Refusal of Employment, and at VAAR 852.207-70, Report
of employment under commercial activities, in all RFQs, solicitations,
and contracts issued under the authority of 38 U.S.C. 8151-8153 which
may result in a conversion, from in-house performance to contract
performance, of work currently being performed by Department of
Veterans Affairs employees.
873.111 Acquisition strategies for health-care resources.
Without regard to FAR 13.003 or 13.500(a), the following
acquisition processes and techniques may be used, singly or in
combination with others, as appropriate, to design acquisition
strategies suitable for the complexity of the requirement and the
amount of resources available to conduct the acquisition. These
strategies should be considered during acquisition planning. The
contracting officer shall select the process most appropriate to the
particular acquisition. There is no preference for sealed bid
acquisitions.
(a) Request for quotations. (1) Without regard to FAR 6.1 or 6.2,
contracting officers should solicit a sufficient number of sources to
promote competition to the maximum extent practicable and to ensure
that the purchase is advantageous to the Government, based, as
appropriate, on either price alone or price and other factors (e.g.,
past performance and quality). RFQs should notify vendors of the basis
upon which the award is to be made.
(2) Without regard to FAR 13.104(b), for acquisitions under the
simplified acquisition threshold (SAT), two quotes meet the requirement
for competition to the maximum extent practicable. For acquisitions in
excess of the SAT, procedures set forth in FAR Part 13 concerning RFQs
may be utilized without regard to the dollar thresholds contained
therein.
(b) Sealed bidding. FAR Part 14 provides procedures for sealed
bidding.
(c) Negotiated acquisitions. The procedures of FAR Parts 12, 13,
and 15 shall be used for negotiated acquisitions, except as modified in
this VAAR part.
(d) Multiphase acquisition technique--(1) General. Without regard
to FAR 15.202, multiphase acquisitions may be appropriate when the
submission of full proposals at the beginning of an acquisition would
be burdensome for offerors to prepare and for Government personnel to
evaluate. Using multiphase techniques, the Government may seek limited
information initially, make one or more down-selects, and request a
full proposal from an individual offeror or limited number of offerors.
Provided that the notice notifies offerors, the contracting officer may
limit the number of proposals during any phase to the number that will
permit an efficient competition among proposals offering the greatest
likelihood of award. The contracting officer may indicate in the notice
an estimate of the greatest number of proposals that will be included
in the down-select phase. The contracting officer may down-select to a
single offeror.
(2) First phase notice. In the first phase, the Government shall
publish a notice (see 873.108) that solicits responses and that may
provide, as appropriate, a general description of the scope or purpose
of the acquisition and the criteria that will be used to make the
initial down-select decision. The notice may also inform offerors of
the evaluation criteria or process that will be used in subsequent
down-select decisions. The notice shall contain sufficient information
to allow potential offerors to make an informed decision about whether
to participate in the acquisition. The notice shall advise offerors
that failure to participate in the first phase will make them
ineligible to participate in subsequent phases. The notice may be in
the form of a Commerce Business Daily notice or a narrative letter or
other appropriate method that contains the information required by this
paragraph.
(3) First phase responses. Offerors shall submit the information
requested in the notice described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
Information sought in the first phase may be limited to a statement of
qualifications and other appropriate information (e.g., proposed
technical concept, past performance information, limited pricing
information).
(4) First phase evaluation and down-select. The Government shall
evaluate all offerors' submissions in accordance with the notice and
make a down-select decision.
(5) Subsequent phases. Additional information shall be sought in
the
[[Page 60267]]
second phase so that a down-select can be performed or an award made
without exchanges, if necessary. The contracting officer may conduct
exchanges with remaining offeror(s), request proposal revisions, or
request best and final offers, as determined necessary by the
contracting officer, in order to make an award decision.
(6) Debriefing. Without regard to FAR 15.505, contracting officers
shall debrief offerors as required by 873.118 when they have been
excluded from the competition.
(e) Alternative negotiation techniques--(1) Contracting officers
may utilize alternative negotiation techniques for the acquisition of
health-care resources. Alternative negotiation techniques may be used
when award will be based on either price or price and other factors.
Alternative negotiation techniques include but are not limited to:
(i) Indicating to offerors a price, contract term or condition,
commercially available feature, and/or requirement (beyond any
requirement or target specified in the solicitation) that offerors will
have to improve upon or meet, as appropriate, in order to remain
competitive.
(ii) Posting offered prices electronically or otherwise (without
disclosing the identity of the offerors) and permitting revisions of
offers based on this information.
(2) Except as otherwise permitted by law, contracting officers
shall not conduct acquisitions under this section in a manner that
reveals the identities of offerors, releases proprietary information,
or otherwise gives any offeror a competitive advantage (see FAR 3.104).
873.112 Evaluation information.
(a) Without regard to FAR 15.304, the criteria, factors, or other
evaluation information that apply to an acquisition, and their relative
importance, are within the broad discretion of agency acquisition
officials as long as the evaluation information is determined to be in
the best interest of the Government.
(b) Price or cost to the Government shall be evaluated in every
source selection.
(c) The quality of the product or service may be addressed in
source selection through consideration of information such as past
performance, compliance with solicitation requirements, technical
excellence, management capability, personnel qualifications, and prior
experience. The information required from quoters, bidders, or offerors
shall be included in notices or solicitations, as appropriate.
(d) The relative importance of any evaluation information included
in a solicitation shall be set forth therein.
873.113 Exchanges with offerors.
(a) Without regard to FAR 15.201 or 15.306, negotiated acquisitions
generally involve exchanges between the Government and competing
offerors. Open exchanges support the goal of efficiency in Government
by providing the Government with relevant information (in addition to
that submitted in the offeror's initial proposal) needed to understand
and evaluate the offeror's proposal. The nature and extent of exchanges
between the Government and offerors is a matter of contracting officer
judgment. Clarifications, communications, and discussions, as provided
for in the FAR, are concepts not applicable to acquisitions under this
VAAR part 873.
(b) Exchanges with all potential offerors may take place throughout
the source selection process. Exchanges may start in the planning
stages and continue through contract award. Exchanges should occur most
often with offerors determined to be in the best value pool (see
873.114). The purpose of exchanges is to ensure there is mutual
understanding between the Government and the offerors on all aspects of
the acquisition, including offerors' submittals/proposals. Information
disclosed as a result of oral or written exchanges with an offeror may
be considered in the evaluation of an offeror's proposal.
(c) Exchanges may be conducted, in part, to obtain information that
explains or resolves ambiguities or other concerns (e.g., perceived
errors, perceived omissions, or perceived deficiencies) in an offeror's
proposal.
(d) Exchanges shall only be initiated if authorized by the
contracting officer and need not be conducted with all offerors.
(e) Improper exchanges. Except for acquisitions based on
alternative negotiation techniques contained in 873.111(e)(1), the
contracting officer and other Government personnel involved in the
acquisition shall not disclose information regarding one offeror's
proposal to other offerors without consent of the offeror in accordance
with FAR Parts 3 and 24.
(f) Award may be made on initial proposals without exchanges if the
solicitation states that the Government intends to evaluate proposals
and make award without exchanges, unless the contracting officer
determines that exchanges are considered necessary.
873.114 Best value pool.
(a) Without regard to FAR 15.306(c), the contracting officer may
determine the most highly rated proposals having the greatest
likelihood of award based on the information or factors and subfactors
in the solicitation. These vendors constitute the best value pool. This
determination is within the sole discretion of the contracting officer.
Competitive range determinations, as provided for in the FAR, are not
applicable to acquisitions under this VAAR part 873.
(b) In planning an acquisition, the contracting officer may
determine that the number of proposals that would otherwise be included
in the best value pool is expected to exceed the number at which an
efficient, timely, and economical competition can be conducted. In
reaching such a conclusion, the contracting officer may consider such
factors as the results of market research, historical data from
previous acquisitions for similar supplies and services, and the
resources available to conduct the source selection. Provided the
solicitation notifies offerors that the best value pool can be limited
for purposes of making an efficient, timely, and economical award, the
contracting officer may limit the number of proposals in the best value
pool to the greatest number that will permit an efficient competition
among the proposals offering the greatest likelihood of award. The
contracting officer may indicate in the solicitation the estimate of
the greatest number of proposals that will be included in the best
value pool. The contracting officer may limit the best value pool to a
single offeror.
(c) If the contracting officer determines that an offeror's
proposal is no longer in the best value pool, the proposal shall no
longer be considered for award. Written notice of this decision shall
be provided to unsuccessful offerors at the earliest practicable time.
873.115 Proposal revisions.
(a) Without regard to FAR 15.307, the contracting officer may
request proposal revisions as often as needed during the proposal
evaluation process at any time prior to award from vendors remaining in
the best value pool. Proposal revisions shall be submitted in writing.
The contracting officer may establish a common cutoff date for receipt
of proposal revisions. Contracting officers may request best and final
offers. In any case, contracting officers and acquisition team members
shall safeguard proposals, and revisions
[[Page 60268]]
thereto, to avoid unfair dissemination of an offeror's proposal.
(b) If an offeror initially included in the best value pool is no
longer considered to be among those most likely to receive award after
submission of proposal revisions and subsequent evaluation thereof, the
offeror may be eliminated from the best value pool without being
afforded an opportunity to submit further proposal revisions.
(c) Requesting and/or receiving proposal revisions do not
necessarily conclude exchanges. However, requests for proposal
revisions should advise offerors that the Government may make award
without obtaining further revisions.
873.116 Source select decision.
(a) An integrated comparative assessment of proposals should be
performed before source selection is made. The contracting officer
shall independently determine: which proposal(s) represents the best
value, consistent with the evaluation information or factors and
subfactors in the solicitation; and that the prices are fair and
reasonable. The contracting officer may determine that all proposals
should be rejected if it is in the best interest of the Government.
(b) The source selection team, or advisory boards or panels, may
conduct comparative analysis(es) of proposals and make award
recommendations, if the contracting officer requests such assistance.
(c) The basis for the source selection decision shall be documented
and shall reflect the rationale for any cost/technical tradeoffs.
Specific tradeoffs that cannot be reasonably quantified need not be
described in terms of cost/price impacts.
873.117 Award to successful offeror.
(a) The contracting officer shall award a contract to the
successful offeror by furnishing the contract or other notice of the
award to that offeror.
(b) If a request for proposal (RFP) process was used for the
solicitation and if award is to be made without exchanges, the
contracting officer may award a contract without obtaining the
offeror's signature a second time. The offeror's signature on the offer
constitutes the offeror's agreement to be bound by the offer. If a
request for quotation (RFQ) process was used for the solicitation, the
contracting officer must obtain the offeror's acceptance signature on
the contract to ensure formation of a binding contract.
(c) If the award document includes information that is different
than the latest signed offer, both the offeror and the contracting
officer shall sign the contract award.
(d) When an award is made to an offeror for less than all of the
items that may be awarded and additional items are being withheld for
subsequent award, each notice shall state that the Government may make
subsequent awards on those additional items within the offer acceptance
period.
873.118 Debriefings.
Offerors excluded from multiphase acquisitions or best value pools
may make a written request for a debriefing. Without regard to FAR
15.505, preaward debriefings will be conducted by the contracting
officer when determined to be in the best interest of the Government.
Post-award debriefings shall be conducted in accordance with FAR Part
15.506.
[FR Doc. 98-29838 Filed 11-6-98; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P