October 20, 2008
Linda Korbol
Assistant Administrator for Women’s Procurement
Office of Government Contracting
Small Business Administration
409 Third Street SW
Washington DC 20416
Docket ID SBA-2008-0006 Docket Title The Women-Owned Small Business
Federal
Contract Assistance Procedures Document ID SBA-2008-0006-0001 Document
Title
The Women-Owned Small Business Federal Contract Assistance Procedures
Comments on Proposed Rule
Women-Owned Small Business Federal Contract Assistance Procedures
Small Business Administration
Proposed rule
Request for comments
With this letter, I am formally responding to the SBA proposed rule in the
Federal Register (72 FR 73285) issued on December 27, 2007 and ask you to
withdraw it or amend it to facilitate the goals set forth by Public Law 106-554
of the year 2000, which allows contracting officers to award up to 5% of all
contracts to women owned businesses. The number of contracts received would
not
matter if the 5% goal is not obtained. In our opinion, the SBA is correct with
the best measure of underrepresentation by using a disparity ratio that measures
utilization by computing the contract dollars awarded to WOSB’s relative to the
total contract dollar awarded. It would only seem fair to use a dollar amount.
The SBA was charged with implementing a women-owned procurement program
that
would help increase the contracting percentage from 3% to the 5% goal. The
proposed rule is a drastic step backwards. Out of 140 NAICS, you intend to
single out 4 primary codes for restrictive competition to eligible WOSB’s for
certain federal contracts. .
The program proposed by SBA frustrates the purposes set forth by Congress by
narrowing its methodology and limiting the class of industries that can benefit
from the act. Furthermore in the study used by RAND and the non-public Survey
of Business Owners (SBO) data set from the Economic Census, there is either 0%
underrepresentation or 87% underrepresentation for WOSB.
I am awaiting response regarding my application into the 8(a) set-aside program.
It is not merely enough to simply register with CCR and ORCA, while attempting
to obtain certification for the 8(a) set-aside program designed to assist women
in small business, one must do a lot of research and fact finding. I would like
to commend the people that I have come into contact with at the SBA level. They
have all been very helpful in providing feedback and assistance in an expedient
manner.
Let us not forget how and why we came to be here. Our Forefathers left the old
world to break away from persecution of all types. When they got here they had
to build the seaports and harbors which would eventually bring world trade to
America. It is with this same pioneering spirit that I got into the Marine
construction business, classified under NAIC code 237, which encompasses a very
broad scope of Heavy and Civil Engineering construction. We do dredging and
recovery and all aspects of the water front. As a General Contractor we use
subs for aspects of the business that requires divers, welders, piledriver etc.,
as needed and we do not have employees. As per the definition of NAIC’s code
237 Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction; specialty trade activities are
classified in this subsection if skills and equipment present are specific to
heavy or civil engineering construction projects.
However, the SBO non- public Survey of Business Owners data set from the
Economic Census study used appears to only include numbers from
companies “with
employees” up to 500. Our company and field of endeavor would thus be under the
field of radar in these surveys and would not be included in the
underrepresented industries.
The RAND computed report points out 28 different calculations narrowing it down
to 4 specific NAICS codes in their opinion that are underrepresented. In the
non-public SBO data and the RAND, 31 of 140 NAICS codes were identified as
underrepresented. The closest measure under this survey for underrepresented
industries to our field was that of Residential Building Construction. In the
Residential Building Construction industry there are many specialty trades such
as plumbers, electricians, heating and cooling, etc. The Heavy and Civil
Engineering Construction subsector comprises establishments whose primary
activity is the construction of entire engineering projects. Establishments in
this subsector are classified based on the types of structures that they
construct. This classification reflects variations of the underlying production
processes. These different NAIC’s codes for these industries do no even come
close in comparison.
As in all studies or surveys most of the data is not accurate by comparison. In
our opinion 87% underrepresentation is more accurate.
I am a women owned business of 8 years with no reported employees, I pay taxes,
have paid all sub-contractors, while trying to compete in a male dominate
world, however, because of gender and ethnic background, I am held back socially
and economically due to competition. In 8 years I have not met another woman
owned business doing Marine construction nor am I aware of one.
From sea to shining sea, we in marine construction, build to maintain America’s
Harbors, Lakes, Rivers and Canals.
Sincerely,
Denise Knop
BC Marine, Inc.
Comment on FR Doc # E8-23139
This is comment on Proposed Rule
The Women-Owned Small Business Federal Contract Assistance Procedures
View Comment
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