Supporting Statement for Information Collection 9000-0167;
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act—Reporting Requirements - One Time Reporting for First-tier Subcontractors
A. Justification.
1. Administrative requirements. On February 17, 2009, the President signed Public Law 111-5, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (the “Recovery Act”), including a number of provisions to be implemented in Federal Government contracts. This interim rule implements section 1512, which is also known as the “Jobs Accountability Act.” Paragraph (c) of section 1512 requires contractors that receive awards (or modifications to existing awards) funded in whole or in part by the Recovery Act, to report quarterly on the use of the funds.
The FAR case adds a new subpart 4.15, and a new clause, 52.204-11 that require contractors to report on use of Recovery Act funds. Contracting officers must include the new clause in solicitations and contracts funded in whole or in part with Recovery Act funds, except classified solicitations and contracts. Commercial item contracts and Commercially Available Off-The-Shelf (COTS) item contracts will be covered, as well as actions under the simplified action threshold.
2. Use of information. The objective of the Recovery Act is to create jobs, restore economic growth, and strengthen America's middle class through measures that modernize the nation's infrastructure, enhance America's energy independence, expand educational opportunities, preserve and improve affordable health care, provide tax relief, protect those in greatest need, and provide for other purposes. This rule implements section 1512 of the Recovery Act which requires contractors, as a condition of receipt of funds, to report quarterly on their use of those funds. These reports will be made available to the public. Combined with the other provisions of the law, the Recovery Act is designed to provide unprecedented transparency to the American taxpayer.
3. Use of information technology. Contractors subject to the clause will be required report quarterly on their use of the Recovery Act funds, using the online reporting tool available at www.FederalReporting.gov.
4. Describe efforts to identify duplication. The rule includes the reporting requirements stipulated by FFATA in FAR Case 2008-039 FFATA flowdown and 2008-037 Financial Disclosure.
These cases are in process and as they are finalized, and to the extent possible (e.g., within the FAR Council’s ability to control), they will be amended to avoid duplication, overlap, or conflicts with the requirements of this interim rule.
5. If the collection of information impacts small businesses describe any methods used to minimize the burden.
The rule requires Federal prime contractors to respond to all of the reporting requirements, eliminating some of the reporting burden on first-tier subcontractors despite the fact that they will have to provide some information to the prime contractor. Also, all of the reporting elements applied to first-tier subcontractors, a significant percentage of which will be small businesses, are one-time collection burdens.
6. Describe the Consequences to Federal activities if the collection is not conducted or is conducted less frequently.
If the collection is not conducted or is conducted less frequently, a burden will be placed on agencies’ contracting officers to enforce the requirements of the rule, as the public will not have access to the Federal award data, as mandated by the Recovery Act.
A public outcry is likely to be heard if the collection requirements are not met, as the objective of the Recovery Act, to empower the American taxpayer with information on the use of Recovery Act funds.
7. Special circumstances for collection. No special circumstances for collections exist.
8. Efforts to consult with persons outside the agency.
Under the procedures established for development of the FAR, agency and public comments for FAR Case 2009-009 will be sought. Any substantive comments received from interested parties outside the agency will be considered in the formation of a final rule. In addition, comments are being sought via the Notice published in the Federal Register at 75 FR 58390, September 24, 2010.
9. Explanation of any decision to provide any payment or gift to respondents, other than reenumeration of contractors or guarantees. No such payments or gifts are contemplated.
10. Describe assurance of confidentiality provided to respondents. This information is disclosed only to the extent consistent with prudent business practices and current regulations.
11. Additional justification for questions of a sensitive nature. Integrity in contracting is of critical importance, and it is necessary for contractors to report on use of Recovery Act funds. Information of a classified nature is exempted from the reporting requirements.
12. Estimated total annual public hour burden. Any award funded by the Recovery Act will contain the clause at 52.204-11. This clause requires contractors to report on use of Recovery Act funds. The clause imposes public reporting burden on prime contractors and, in a more limited way, on their first-tier subcontractors. The Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS) indicates that there are 129,331 active and unique prime federal contractors as of February 2009. The estimate for the number of active and unique prime federal contractors that will participate in awards funded by the Recovery Act is 20,013. This is based on using a factor of .16 of 129,331, derived by dividing 129,331 by $517B in procurement obligations for fiscal year 2008 or by dividing estimated Recovery Act dollars for contracts (estimated between $60B - $80B, using $80B for calculation purposes) by $517B. Of the estimated 20,013 Recovery Act prime contractors, it is estimated that 20%, or 4,003, will be small businesses. It should be noted that this is 20% of prime contractors which is not to be confused with the 23% small business contracting goal which is based on dollars and that continues to apply to both Recovery Act spending as well as agencies ongoing procurement spending.
The number of first-tier subcontractors estimated to participate in Recovery Act awards is 60,039. This was derived by estimating three first-tier subcontractors for each prime contractor. Of these 60,039 Recovery Act first-tier subcontractors, it is estimated that 25%, or 15,010, will be small businesses.
Based on the above, the estimated total number of small businesses, prime and subcontractors, to which this rule will apply is 19,013 and the estimated total number of other than small businesses to which this rule will apply is 61,039.
Though Section 1512 requires that the reports be completed by the prime contractor for all data elements, for practical purposes, the prime contractor will have to obtain certain information from their first-tier subcontractors, hence the flow-down requirements of (d)(10) of the clause. Additionally, the information required on the prime contractor award varies from that required for the first-tier subcontract awards. For instance, the elements at paragraphs (d)(1)-(9) are collection burdens associated with the prime contract award while the elements in (d)(10)(i)-(ix) are associated with first-tier subcontracts.
Finally, the elements required by Section 1512 of the Recovery Act are a combination of those that will be updated in each quarterly report, such as jobs created and retained and progress and those that are one-time collection burdens, such as award number and date and all of the reporting requirements for first-tier subcontracts. The following analysis separately estimates the burden associated with one-time reporting elements for which the burden is imposed only on the first-tier subcontractor.
The parenthetical reference after each reporting element description refers to the FAR clause. The hours estimated per response include the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering the data, and completing the collection of information.
One-time reporting elements for which the burden is imposed only on the first-tier subcontractor include the following:
Unique identifier (DUNS Number) for the
subcontractor receiving the award and for the
subcontractor’s parent company, if the subcontractor
has a parent company ((d)(10)(i));
Subcontractor’s physical address including street
address, city, state, and country. Also include the
nine-digit zip code and congressional district if
applicable((d)(10)(ix)); and
Subcontract primary performance location including
street address, city, state, and country. Also
include the nine-digit zip code and congressional
district if applicable ((d)(10)(x)).
The Government expects that most first-tier subcontractors will have a DUNS number. However, if a company has never received nor anticipated a Government contract, it would be required to register for a DUNS number which is not an onerous process and can be done online or by phone using information a company would have on hand for business purposes.
We estimate the total annual public cost burden for these elements to be $1,275,816, based on the following:
Respondents: 60,039
Responses per respondent: 1.25 (reflects estimate that 25% of first-tier subcontractors will have
More than one Recovery Act funded award on which
to report)
Total annual responses: 75,049
Preparation hours per response: .25
Total response burden hours: 18,762
Average hourly wages ($50.00+36.35%overhead):$68.00
Estimated cost to the public: $1,275,816
13. Estimated total annual public cost burden. We estimate the total annual public cost burden to be the same as indicated above.
14. Estimated cost to the Government. The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board paid for the system development of FederalReporting.gov. The government will not be responsible for reporting data into the website other than to ensure timely reporting and indicate the status of its review. If a government reviewer (e.g., contracting officer) identifies something in the report that is inconsistent with the award or identifies a “significant error” or “material omission,” they are to provide comments to the reporter. Because the data elements in this collection are reported one-time by the subcontractor to the prime contractor and are administrative in nature, the contracting officer is not likely to have information on the subcontractor sufficient to comment (except at times when specific subcontractor information is required under the contract). Therefore, the time required for government review is based on the assumption that 1% of respondents may be notified of their failure to comply through the prime contractor. The cost of review is based on the average hourly wage salary of GS 13, plus 32.85% overhead.
Responses/yr 60,039
Reviewing time/hr ____X.01
Review time/yr 600
Average wages $33/hr. + 32.85% OH) X $44
Total Government cost $26,400
15. Explain reasons for program changes or adjustment reported in Item 13 or 14. Item 14 was adjusted to reflect policy decisions made regarding the system development and burden for FederalReporting.gov as well as the role of contracting officers. FederalReporting.gov is not based on eSRS.
16. Outline plans for published results of information collection. Results of this information collection will be published. The Public will be able to access the information through a Government hosted website.
17. Approval not to display expiration date. Not applicable.
18. Explanation of exception to certification statement. Not applicable.
B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods. Statistical methods are not used in this information collection.
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | SUPPORTING STATEMENT |
Author | GSA Seat Management |
Last Modified By | HadaNFlowers |
File Modified | 2010-10-04 |
File Created | 2010-10-04 |