Columbian Rope Company appeals from the grant of summary judgment rejecting its challenge to the Small Business Administration’s decision that a rival bidder was eligible under the Small Business Act for a government contract. Because the contract has been fully performed and its optiоns have expired, we dismiss the appeal as moot.
I.
The Small Business Act (“the Act”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 631-657 (1994), directs federal agencies to reserve some government contracts for small businesses, with “[t]he Government-wide goal for participation by small business concerns ... established at not less than 20 percent of the total value of all prime contract awards for each fiscal year.” Id. § 644(g)(1); see id. § 644(a). A business can qualify as a “small business concern” under the Act only if it is “independently owned and operated” and “not dominant in its field of operation.” Id. § 632(a)(1). The Small Business Administration (“SBA”) has аuthority to establish criteria to determine whether individual businesses qualify as small businesses and to apply those criteria in individual cases. See id. §§ 632(a)(2)(A), 637(b)(6).
One statutory rule and one regulatory rule regarding businesses’ eligibility under the Act are at issue. Both rules are designed to ensure that small businesses actually perform a significant part of the work required by government contracts that they win.
See, e.g., Size Appeal of Nuclear Research Corp.,
S.B.A. No. 2828 (1988);
cf. Iconco v. Jensen Construction Co.,
On June 9, 1994, the Department of the Army invited the submission of bids for a contract for rope assemblies to be used in connection with helicopter airlift operations. The Army reserved this contract for small business concеrns under the Act. Colum-bian Rope Company (“Columbian”) and Ocean Products Research (“Ocean Products”) submitted bids, and the Army awarded the contract to Ocean Products. Colum-bian formally protested the award of the contract, challenging both whether Ocean Products would dо a good job and its eligibility as a small business in light of its subcontracting of a significant portion of the work to a large company, American Manufacturing. The SBA Regional Office denied the protest and Columbian appealed to the SBA Office of Hearings and Appeals (“Hearings and Appeals”), which ruled that the protest was moot. However, after Columbian filed suit in the district court, the parties entered a stipulated order of dismissal, without prejudice, that Hearings and Appeals would decide the merits of Columbian’s protest.
On November 22, 1995, Hearings and Appеals adopted the Regional Office’s finding *1316 that Ocean Products “manufactures a substantial part of the end product” and thus satisfied the Manufacturer Rule. Because there was insufficient evidence in the record on the cost of manufacturing actually performed by Ocean Products relative to the cost of manufacturing subcontracted to American Manufacturing, Hearings and Appeals concluded that it could not determine whether Ocean Products met the 50% Rule and thus remanded that issue to the Regional Office for further investigation. On remand, after receiving additional information from Ocean Products on costs, the Regional Office reaffirmed that Ocean Products satisfied the 50% Rule. Columbian appealed again and, after reviewing the cost data that had been submitted, requested that Hearings and Appeals issuе a subpoena for additional cost information from Ocean Products and hold an evidentiary hearing. Hearings and Appeals did neither, and on June 6,1996, issued its second decision, this time upholding the Regional Office’s determination that Ocean Products satisfied the 50% Rule.
Having lost its administrative appeal, Co-lumbian filed a complaint in the district court asserting that the SBA decisions of November 22, 1995, and June 6, 1996, violated the Administrative Procedure Act. 2 Furthermore, Columbian maintained that SBA violated due process by ruling without conducting a hearing or issuing a subpoena for further cost data from Ocean Products. Columbian sought a permanent injunction enjoining the Army from ordering any more rope under the contract from Ocean Products and a declaratory judgment that Ocean Products is not a qualified small business manufacturer under the terms of the solicitatiоn, that the contract award was invalid and should be terminated for convenience, and that the SBA Regional Office’s and Hearings and Appeals’s decisions were arbitrary and capricious, violated due process, and were not in accordance with law. The district court granted summary judgment to the government on May 20, 1997, and Columbian filed an appeal on June 13, 1997. On October 11, 1997, all the options on the contract expired, and thus there can be no further performance under this particular contract.
II.
On appeal, Columbian contends that the record did not support SBA’s determination that Ocean met the 50% Rule, that SBA failed to follow its own regulations in concluding that Ocean satisfied the Manufacturer Rule, and that the procedures by which SBA denied Columbian’s protest violated due process. The threshold issue, however, is whether this court lacks jurisdiction because the appeal is moot.
Article III of the Constitution restricts federal court jurisdiction to “actual, ongoing controversies.”
Honig v. Doe,
The work under the contract at issue has been completed, and all the options to extend the contract have expired. Colum-bian would not receive any cognizable benefit if the court grаnted the requested relief: neither injunctive relief preventing the government from making any further orders on the contract nor declaratory relief on the legality of the contract would affect the parties in any meaningful way because the eon- *1317 tract has been fully рerformed. The sole possible exception is Columbian’s request for a declaratory judgment that “Ocean Products is not a qualified small business manufacturer under the terms of the solicitation, SBA’s regulations and applicable law.” As Colum-bian notes, the original Army solicitation upon which the contract was based still exists, and the Army or some other agency could rely upon it to issue another solicitation for bids. Columbian does not explain, however, how this court could possibly declare that Ocean Products will never qualify for a contract under the solicitаtion: even if Co-lumbian is right that SBA mistakenly determined on this record that Ocean Products satisfied the 50% Rule and the Manufacturer Rule, application of these rules depends on facts that change over time. Although the court could declare that the particular size determination in question was not supported by the record, that issue is moot. A judicial determination on this record of Ocean Products’s small business eligibility to bid on the rope assembly contract would not affect its ability to win either a future rope assembly contract on this solicitation or a contract based on a different solicitation. 3 The expiration of the contract has made Columbian’s requests for relief meaningless; thus, this court cannot address the merits of the appeal unless some exception to mootness applies.
The only possibly applicable exception is that for issues that are capable of repetition yet evading review,
see, e.g., Honig,
III.
When a case has become moot during the pendency of appeal “due to circumstances unattributable to any of the parties,” the standard practice is to vacate the decision of the district court.
U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership,
Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal as moot, vacate the judgment and order of the •district court, and remand the case to the district court with instructions to dismiss the complaint and vacate the SBA decisions of November 22,1995, and June 6,1996.
Notes
. At the time of the events in question, the Manufacturer Rule read:
The following factors are evaluated in determining whether a concern is the manufacturer for the procurement:
(i) The proportion of total value in the end item added by the efforts of the concern, excluding costs of overhead, testing, quality control, and profit; and
(ii) The importance of the elements added by the concern to the function of the end item, regardless of their relative value.
13 C.F.R. § 121.406(b)(2) (1995). SBA revised its regulations in January 1996; the Manufacturer Rule can be found in its current form at 13 C.F.R. § 121.406(b) (1997).
. Columbian sued the Secretary of the Army, the Army cоntracting officer, the Administrator of SBA, and the Acting Area Director of the SBA.
. The potential of declaratory relief alone cannot save an action from mootness if the object of the suit is not "some ongoing underlying policy, but ... an isolated agency action."
City of Houston v. Department of Housing & Urban Dev.,
. Columbian’s request for a remand for Colum-bian to introduce evidence regarding the likelihood of repetition is not appropriate. If the issues are capable of repetition, that very fact would counsel against any need for remand in order to allow this case to continue: if the issues recur, Columbian will have the opportunity then to develop the record as it pleases; if not, Colum-bian has no need for a remand.
. Columbian has not requested vacatur inasmuch as its position is that the appeal is not moot in light of the possible preclusive effects of the district court and SBA decisions. While the Supreme Court confirmed in
U.S. Bancorp
that vacatur is an equitable remedy,
see U.S. Bancorp,
Furthermore, Columbian errs when it contends that the court lacks authority to vacate the SBA decision.
See, e.g., Anderson v. Morgan,
