How the feds maintain a solid industrial base
Full and open competition is important, but so is a solid industrial base. Given that, federal agencies can flow dollars to specific contractors to ensure access to fair-priced goods in the long term.
Protesting contractor: Outdoor Venture Corp., Sterns, Ky.
Protest issue: Whether DLA was fair in its award of a sole-source contract.
GAO decision, October 25, 2011: Denied.
Here’s the rationale: In order to maintain the ability to produce required items in times of emergency there must be an industrial capacity. What that means in practice is that those manufacturers identified are all given a little slice, but none ever get to take home the whole pie. The agency is required to publish justifications and approval when it determines that a sole-source award is necessary and — provided that the agency does not abuse its discretion — the Government Accountability Office will not sustain a protest.
That’s what happened in this case. OVC protested the sole source award for tents to Camel Manufacturing, arguing that it too was in need of the award to maintain its domestic capacity and therefore should have either been awarded the sole-source award or allowed to compete. But the DLA, which first justified sole-source awards for tents in 2007, due to the limited number of suppliers, determined that Camel was in greater need at the time of the award. GAO agreed.