97-33200. Miscellaneous Amendments to Committee Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 244 (Friday, December 19, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 66527-66529]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-33200]
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR SEVERELY DISABLED
    
    41 CFR Parts 51-2, 51-4, and 51-6
    
    
    Miscellaneous Amendments to Committee Regulations
    
    AGENCY: Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely 
    Disabled.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Committee is changing five sections of its regulations to 
    clarify them and improve the efficiency of operation of the Committee's 
    Javits-Wagner-O'Day (JWOD) Program. The changes are necessary to 
    clarify and expand earlier regulation changes and to eliminate 
    unnecessary regulatory language.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 20, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely 
    Disabled, Crystal Gateway 3, Suite 310, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, 
    Arlington, Virginia 22202-4302.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: G. John Heyer (703) 603-0665. Copies 
    of this notice will be made available on request in computer diskette 
    format.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Committee is amending Sec. 51-2.4 of its 
    regulations to clarify further that its authorizing statute, the JWOD 
    Act, 41 U.S.C. 46--48c, treats addition of commodities and services to 
    the Procurement List and the establishment by the Committee of a fair 
    market price as two separate functions and applies the requirement for 
    notice and comment rulemaking only to the addition function. This area 
    was first addressed in 1994 (59 FR 59338, Nov. 16, 1994) with the 
    removal of fair market price from the list of suitability criteria for 
    Procurement List additions, in accordance with a 1992 court decision, 
    McGregor Printing Corporation v. Kemp, 802 F. Supp. 519, 527 (D.D.C), 
    rev'd on other grounds, 20 F.3d 1188 (D.C. Cir. 1994). The amendment 
    states that the Committee does not consider comments on proposed fair 
    market prices for commodities and services proposed for addition to the 
    Procurement List to be pertinent to a suitability determination. 
    Accordingly, they will not be addressed when the Committee makes an 
    addition decision. This amendment will not affect the ability of 
    Government and other appropriate parties to comment on proposed fair 
    market prices and price changes in connection with the Committee's fair 
    market pricing process. The Committee is also removing paragraph 51-
    2.4(a)(4)(C) of its regulations to eliminate one of two essentially 
    redundant statements in Sec. 51-2.4 to the effect that the Committee 
    considers pertinent comments when making its addition decisions.
        The Committee also amended paragraphs (b)(6) and (c)(1) of Sec. 51-
    4.3 of its regulations in 1994 (59 FR 59343) to allow the acceptance of 
    State certifications of blindness or other severe disabilities as 
    documentation of disability, in addition to reports by individual 
    health professionals. Many of these certifications, however, are done 
    by health professionals at local governmental bodies, such as public 
    schools. The new amendment to this section will allow acceptance of 
    these certifications.
        Paragraph (c) of Sec. 51-4.4 of the Committee's regulations permits 
    nonprofit agencies participating in the JWOD Program to subcontract a 
    portion of the process for providing a commodity on the Procurement 
    List. The amendment will extend this permission to services on the 
    Procurement List, and would specify how the Committee will oversee 
    routine subcontracting of a part of the production process.
        Paragraph (c) of Sec. 51-6.12 of the Committee's regulations 
    requires Government contracting activities to provide a 90-day notice 
    when changing the scope of work of a service on the Procurement List. 
    The amendment will make it clear that this notice requirement also 
    applies to situations where the contracting activity converts a service 
    to performance by Government personnel.
        Prior to the 1991 revision of the Committee's regulations (56 FR 
    48974, Sept. 26, 1991), the matters contained in current parts 51-5 and 
    51-6 were in a single part 51-5, which had a disputes provision 
    applicable to the entire part of the Committee's regulations. The 
    amendment clarifies the disputes provision, Sec. 51-6.14, to state its 
    applicability to both parts 51-5 and 51-6.
    
    Public Comments on the Proposed Rule
    
        The Committee published the proposed rule in the Federal Register 
    of September 26, 1997 (62 FR 50547). One comment was received, from 
    counsel for a manufacturer which is objecting to a recently proposed 
    addition to the Procurement List. The comment addressed only the 
    proposed changes to 41 CFR 51-2.4, which contains the Committee's 
    criteria for making additions to the Procurement List. No comments were 
    received on the other proposed regulatory changes announced by the 
    Committee at that time.
        As noted above, the changes to 41 CFR 51-2.4 were intended to 
    emphasize the Committee's conclusion that its authorizing statute 
    treats the Committee's addition of commodities and services to the 
    Procurement List and its establishment of fair market prices for these 
    commodities and services as two separate Committee functions. The 
    statutory requirement for notice and comment rulemaking, in the 
    Committee's view, applies only to the first of these functions.
        The commenter challenged the Committee's conclusion that the 
    holding cited from the 1992 McGregor decision in support of the 
    Committee's view was not reversed by the 1994 appeals court decision. 
    While unable to point to specific language in the later decision 
    reversing the lower court's holding, the commenter indicated that the 
    holding was reversed ``by implication'' because the later decision 
    discussed the Committee's shortcomings on its fair market price 
    determination in the rulemaking at issue. If the appeals court did not 
    intend to reverse the lower court's holding, the commenter argued, this 
    discussion would be a mere waste of space in the appeals court's 
    opinion.
        The McGregor appellate decision set aside the Committee's 
    rulemaking, and reversed the lower court, because the appellate court 
    concluded that the Committee's rulemaking record did not support the 
    Committee's conclusions and the Committee did not adequately explain 
    the basis for its conclusions. The regulation stating the Committee's 
    criteria for Procurement List additions which was in effect when the 
    contested rulemaking took place included fair market price among the 
    criteria. Accordingly, the discussion cited by the commenter from the 
    appellate court opinion noted the shortcomings in the Committee's 
    administrative record and Federal Register notice which pertained to 
    the Committee's explanation of its rationale for deciding that the 
    pricing criterion had been met, as a part of its longer discussion of 
    the Committee's
    
    [[Page 66528]]
    
    shortcomings in documenting and explaining its conclusions on all the 
    addition criteria. Because the regulation made fair market price an 
    addition criterion, and thus subject to the rulemaking requirement, the 
    appellate court did not have to address the lower court's holding that 
    pricing determinations are reserved to the Committee alone because the 
    JWOD Act makes price determinations a separate function from additions 
    to the Procurement List.
        The Committee's 1994 regulatory change (59 FR 59338, Nov. 16, 1994) 
    removed fair market price from the addition criteria to restore the 
    separation of functions established by the JWOD Act. The current 
    revisions to 41 CFR 51-2.4 merely make the separation clearer, in light 
    of subsequent failures by commenting parties, notably this commenter, 
    to see the distinction. The Committee does not believe that the current 
    revision to this regulation, and the 1994 revision, which the commenter 
    also challenged, are legally improper, as the commenter claimed.
        The commenter also objected to the Committee's reliance on the 
    lower court opinion in McGregor on the grounds that the McGregor 
    decisions did not address a situation in which a commenter made 
    specific allegations about information supporting proposed prices 
    submitted for Committee consideration by central nonprofit agencies. 
    Because McGregor did not address this situation, the commenter claims 
    that it cannot be used as a basis for excluding comments on a proposed 
    addition merely because they concern pricing issues.
        The Committee does not believe that the commenter's claim on this 
    point is relevant to the Committee's legal authority to revise 41 CFR 
    51-2.4 as it did in 1994 and is doing now. As noted below, the 
    Committee does not intend to ignore significant comments on its fair 
    market prices. It will consider them in connection with the process for 
    establishing a fair market price, not in connection with the rulemaking 
    process required for a Procurement List addition.
        The commenter also advanced several legal and policy arguments for 
    his position that comments on a fair market price must be addressed in 
    connection with a Procurement List addition. The commenter claimed that 
    a fair market price is set before the corresponding addition decision 
    is made, so if the price is incorrect, the addition would be legally 
    defective unless the price is corrected. The commenter also claimed 
    that a correct fair market price is the only restraint on addition to 
    the Procurement List of commodities and services on which little direct 
    labor is performed by people with severe disabilities, and that it 
    would do no good for a commenter to question a fair market price after 
    the decision is made, because the Government would contract for the 
    commodity or service and the price could not be corrected. The 
    commenter indicated that resolving these price questions at the time of 
    addition would not be unduly burdensome for the Committee staff.
        The Committee does not agree with the commenter's contention that a 
    fair market price is established before a commodity or service is added 
    to the Procurement List. While a proposed fair market price is 
    calculated in accordance with the Committee's pricing policies, and the 
    nonprofit agency agrees to produce at that price, before the proposal 
    is sent to the Committee for an addition decision, the Committee must 
    make the actual pricing decision once it has made its addition 
    decision. The Committee may exercise its discretion to reject the 
    proposed price and set another which falls within its pricing 
    guidelines. The addition decision function, including the rulemaking 
    requirement, precedes the pricing function in the JWOD Act, and the 
    Committee's decision format was revised in 1994 to be consistent with 
    the statute.
        The Committee also disagrees with the commenter's contention that a 
    fair market price ensures that sufficient qualifying direct labor is 
    being performed by the nonprofit agency. Direct labor was a separate 
    addition criterion from fair market price before the 1994 regulatory 
    revision, and the two had to be independently satisfied before a 
    commodity or service could be added to the Procurement List. Direct 
    labor remains an addition criterion since the removal of fair market 
    price from the criteria list.
        The commenter's contention that fair market price cannot be changed 
    after a Procurement List addition is made is not consistent with either 
    the Committee's pricing policy or its practice in the pricing area. The 
    Committee has a long history of making price changes as appropriate, 
    including changes made as a result of informed comments. The very 
    document in which the commenter made his comments on this rulemaking 
    also contains information submitted to demonstrate to the Committee 
    that some of its prices are not correct, and this document supplements 
    earlier and more detailed information on that same subject which the 
    Committee staff is analyzing with a view toward correcting the prices 
    at issue if appropriate.
        The burden on the Committee staff of reviewing comments on prices 
    as part of an addition would not greatly exceed the burden of 
    considering them as part of the pricing process. The Committee 
    believes, however, that it would not be appropriate to burden the 
    addition process with a matter more logically belonging to the pricing 
    process. As indicated above, there is now no statutory or regulatory 
    requirement to confuse these two processes as the commenter would have 
    the Committee do.
        Finally, the commenter claimed that the Committee must allow 
    comments on fair market price ``at some point in the process.'' That 
    point is the pricing process, which includes both the establishment of 
    an initial fair market price and changes in the price. As indicated 
    above, the Committee will entertain significant comments on specific 
    prices from affected parties in connection with that process. The 
    Committee will not, however, allow commenters to use the addition 
    process to raise issues not covered by the addition criteria, or to 
    delay the addition process with larger policy questions such as the 
    nature of a fair market price, as has occurred in the past.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        I certify that this revision of the Committee regulations will not 
    have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities because the revision clarifies program policies and does not 
    essentially change the impact of the regulations on small entities.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act does not apply to this rule because it 
    contains no new information collection or recordkeeping requirements as 
    defined in that Act and its regulations.
    
    Executive Order No. 12866
    
        The Committee has been exempted from the regulatory review 
    requirements of the Executive Order by the Office of Information and 
    Regulatory Affairs. Additionally, the rule is not a significant 
    regulatory action as defined in the Executive Order.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    41 CFR Part 51-2
    
        Organization and functions (Government agencies).
    
    [[Page 66529]]
    
    41 CFR Part 51-4
    
        Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    41 CFR Part 51-6
    
        Government procurement, Handicapped.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, Parts 51-2, 51-4, and 51-6 
    of Title 41, Chapter 51 of the Code of Federal Regulations are amended 
    as follows:
        1. The authority citation for Parts 51-2, 51-4, and 51-6 continues 
    to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 41 U.S.C. 46-48c.
    
    PART 51-2--COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR 
    SEVERELY DISABLED
    
        2. Section 51-2.4 is amended by removing paragraph (a)(4)(C) and 
    adding a sentence to paragraph (b), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51-2.4  Determination of suitability.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * * Because the Committee's authority to establish fair 
    market prices is separate from its authority to determine the 
    suitability of a commodity or service for addition to the Procurement 
    List, the Committee does not consider comments on proposed fair market 
    prices for commodities and services proposed for addition to the 
    Procurement List to be pertinent to a suitability determination.
    
    PART 51-4--NONPROFIT AGENCIES
    
        3. Section 51-4.3 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(6) and 
    (c)(1), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51-4.3  Maintaining qualification.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (6) Maintain a file for each blind individual performing direct 
    labor which contains a written report reflecting visual acuity and 
    field of vision of each eye, with best correction, signed by a person 
    licensed to make such an evaluation, or a certification of blindness by 
    a State or local governmental entity.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (1) A written report signed by a licensed physician, psychiatrist, 
    or qualified psychologist, reflecting the nature and extent of the 
    disability or disabilities that cause such person to qualify as a 
    person with a severe disability, or a certification of the disability 
    or disabilities by a State or local governmental entity.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 51-4.4 is amended by revising paragraph (c), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51-4.4  Subcontracting.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Nonprofit agencies may subcontract a portion of the process for 
    producing a commodity or providing a service on the Procurement List 
    provided that the portion of the process retained by the prime 
    nonprofit agency generates employment for persons who are blind or have 
    other severe disabilities. Subcontracting intended to be a routine part 
    of the production of a commodity or provision of a service shall be 
    identified to the Committee at the time the commodity or service is 
    proposed for addition to the Procurement List and any significant 
    changes in the extent of subcontracting must be approved in advance by 
    the Committee.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 51-6--PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES
    
        5. Section 51-6.12 is amended by revising paragraph (c), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51-6.12  Specification changes and similar actions.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) For services on the Procurement List, the contracting activity 
    shall notify the nonprofit agency furnishing the service and the 
    central nonprofit agency concerned at least 90 days prior to the date 
    that any changes in the statement of work or other conditions of 
    performance will be required, including assumption of performance of 
    the service by the contracting activity.
    * * * * *
        6. Section 51-6.14 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51-6.14  Disputes.
    
        Disputes between a nonprofit agency and a contracting activity 
    arising out of matters covered by parts 51-5 and 51-6 of this chapter 
    shall be resolved, where possible, by the contracting activity and the 
    nonprofit agency, with assistance from the appropriate central 
    nonprofit agency. Disputes which cannot be resolved by these parties 
    shall be referred to the Committee for resolution.
    
        Dated: December 16, 1997.
    Beverly L. Milkman,
    Executive Director.
    [FR Doc. 97-33200 Filed 12-18-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6353-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/20/1998
Published:
12/19/1997
Department:
Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-33200
Dates:
January 20, 1998.
Pages:
66527-66529 (3 pages)
PDF File:
97-33200.pdf
CFR: (5)
41 CFR 51-2.4
41 CFR 51-4.3
41 CFR 51-4.4
41 CFR 51-6.12
41 CFR 51-6.14