48 C.F.R. § 16.505
(a) General.
(4) The following requirements apply when procuring items peculiar to one manufacturer:
(iii)
(A) For an order in excess of $40,000, the contracting officer shall—
(1) Post the justification and supporting documentation on the agency Web site used (if any) to solicit offers for orders under the contract; or
(2) Provide the justification and supporting documentation along with the solicitation to all contract awardees.
(7) Orders placed under indefinite-delivery contracts must contain the following information:
(8) Orders placed under a task-order contract or delivery-order contract awarded by another agency (i.e., a Governmentwide acquisition contract, or multi-agency contract)—
(9) In accordance with section 1427(b) of Public Law 108-136 (40 U.S.C. 1103 note), orders placed under multi-agency contracts for services that substantially or to a dominant extent specify performance of architect-engineer services, as defined in 2.101, shall—
(10)
(i) No protest under subpart 33.1 is authorized in connection with the issuance or proposed issuance of an order under a task-order contract or delivery-order contract, except—
(B) (1) For agencies other than DoD, NASA, and the Coast Guard, a protest of an order valued in excess of $10 million (41 U.S.C. 4106(f)); or
(2) For DoD, NASA, or the Coast Guard, a protest of an order valued in excess of $25 million (10 U.S.C. 3406(f)).
(11) Publicize orders funded in whole or in part by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111-5) as follows:
(b) Orders under multiple-award contracts—(1) Fair opportunity.
(i) The contracting officer must provide each awardee a fair opportunity to be considered for each order exceeding the micro-purchase threshold issued under multiple delivery-order contracts or multiple task-order contracts, except—
(ii) The contracting officer may exercise broad discretion in developing appropriate order placement procedures. The contracting officer should keep submission requirements to a minimum. Contracting officers may use streamlined procedures, including oral presentations. If the order does not exceed the simplified acquisition threshold, the contracting officer need not contact each of the multiple awardees under the contract before selecting an order awardee if the contracting officer has information available to ensure that each awardee is provided a fair opportunity to be considered for each order. The competition requirements in part 6 and the policies in subpart 15.3 do not apply to the ordering process. However, the contracting officer shall—
(iii) Orders exceeding the simplified acquisition threshold.
(B) The contracting officer shall—
(1) Provide a fair notice of the intent to make a purchase, including a clear description of the supplies to be delivered or the services to be performed and the basis upon which the selection will be made to all contractors offering the required supplies or services under the multiple-award contract; and
(2) Afford all contractors responding to the notice a fair opportunity to submit an offer and have that offer fairly considered.
(iv) Orders exceeding $7.5 million. For task or delivery orders in excess of $7.5 million, the requirement to provide all awardees a fair opportunity to be considered for each order shall include, at a minimum—
(v) The contracting officer should consider the following when developing the procedures:
(A) (1) Past performance on earlier orders under the contract, including quality, timeliness and cost control.
(2) Potential impact on other orders placed with the contractor.
(3) Minimum order requirements.
(4) The amount of time contractors need to make informed business decisions on whether to respond to potential orders.
(5) Whether contractors could be encouraged to respond to potential orders by outreach efforts to promote exchanges of information, such as—
(i) Seeking comments from two or more contractors on draft statements of work; or
(ii) Using a multiphased approach when effort required to respond to a potential order may be resource intensive (e.g., requirements are complex or need continued development), where all contractors are initially considered on price considerations (e.g., rough estimates), and other considerations as appropriate (e.g., proposed conceptual approach, past performance). The contractors most likely to submit the highest value solutions are then selected for one-on-one sessions with the Government to increase their understanding of the requirements, provide suggestions for refining requirements, and discuss risk reduction measures.
(2) Exceptions to the fair opportunity process.
(i) The contracting officer shall give every awardee a fair opportunity to be considered for a delivery order or task order exceeding the micro-purchase threshold unless one of the following statutory exceptions applies:
(ii) The justification for an exception to fair opportunity shall be in writing as specified in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) or (B) of this section. No justification is needed for the exception described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(F) of this section.
(B) Orders exceeding the simplified acquisition threshold. As a minimum, each justification shall include the following information and be approved in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(C) of this section:
(1) Identification of the agency and the contracting activity, and specific identification of the document as a “Justification for an Exception to Fair Opportunity.”
(2) Nature and/or description of the action being approved.
(3) A description of the supplies or services required to meet the agency's needs (including the estimated value).
(4) Identification of the exception to fair opportunity (see 16.505(b)(2)) and the supporting rationale, including a demonstration that the proposed contractor's unique qualifications or the nature of the acquisition requires use of the exception cited. If the contracting officer uses the logical follow-on exception, the rationale shall describe why the relationship between the initial order and the follow-on is logical (e.g., in terms of scope, period of performance, or value).
(5) A determination by the contracting officer that the anticipated cost to the Government will be fair and reasonable.
(6) Any other facts supporting the justification.
(7) A statement of the actions, if any, the agency may take to remove or overcome any barriers that led to the exception to fair opportunity before any subsequent acquisition for the supplies or services is made.
(8) The contracting officer's certification that the justification is accurate and complete to the best of the contracting officer's knowledge and belief.
(9) Evidence that any supporting data that is the responsibility of technical or requirements personnel (e.g., verifying the Government's minimum needs or requirements or other rationale for an exception to fair opportunity) and which form a basis for the justification have been certified as complete and accurate by the technical or requirements personnel.
(10) A written determination by the approving official that one of the circumstances in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A) through (E) and (G) of this section applies to the order.
(C) Approval. (1) For proposed orders exceeding the simplified acquisition threshold, but not exceeding $900,000, the ordering activity contracting officer's certification that the justification is accurate and complete to the best of the ordering activity contracting officer's knowledge and belief will serve as approval, unless a higher approval level is established in accordance with agency procedures.
(2) For a proposed order exceeding $900,000, but not exceeding $20 million, the justification must be approved by the advocate for competition of the activity placing the order, or by an official named in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(C)(3) or (4) of this section. This authority is not delegable.
(3) For a proposed order exceeding $20 million, but not exceeding $90 million (or, for DoD, NASA, and the Coast Guard, not exceeding $150 million), the justification must be approved by—
(i) The head of the procuring activity placing the order;
(ii) A designee who—
(A) If a member of the armed forces, is a general or flag officer;
(B) If a civilian, is serving in a position in a grade above GS-15 under the General Schedule (or in a comparable or higher position under another schedule); or
(iii) An official named in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(C)(4) of this section.
(4) For a proposed order exceeding $90 million (or, for DoD, NASA, and the Coast Guard, over $150 million), the justification must be approved by the senior procurement executive of the agency placing the order. This authority is not delegable, except in the case of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, acting as the senior procurement executive for the Department of Defense.
(D) Posting. (1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(D)(5) of this section, within 14 days after placing an order exceeding the simplified acquisition threshold that does not provide for fair opportunity in accordance with 16.505(b), the contract officer shall—
(i) Publish a notice in accordance with 5.301; and
(ii) Make publicly available the justification required at paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(B) of this section.
(2) The justification shall be made publicly available—
(i) At the GPE https://www.sam.gov
(ii) On the Web site of the agency, which may provide access to the justifications by linking to the GPE; and
(iii) Must remain posted for a minimum of 30 days.
(3) In the case of an order permitted under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) of this section, the justification shall be posted within 30 days after award of the order.
(4) Contracting officers shall carefully screen all justifications for contractor proprietary data and remove all such data, and such references and citations as are necessary to protect the proprietary data, before making the justifications available for public inspection. Contracting officers shall also be guided by the exemptions to disclosure of information contained in the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and the prohibitions against disclosure in 24.202 in determining whether other data should be removed. Although the submitter notice process set out in Executive Order 12600 “Predisclosure Notification Procedures for Confidential Commercial Information” does not apply, if the justification appears to contain proprietary data, the contracting officer should provide the contractor that submitted the information an opportunity to review the justification for proprietary data before making the justification available for public inspection, redacted as necessary. This process must not prevent or delay the posting of the justification in accordance with the timeframes required in (paragraphs (b)(2)(ii)(D)(1) and (3) of this section).
(5) The posting requirement of this section does not apply—
(i) When disclosure would compromise the national security (e.g., would result in disclosure of classified information) or create other security risks; or
(ii) To a small business set-aside under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(F) of this section.
(6) Postaward notices and debriefing of awardees for orders exceeding $7.5 million. The contracting officer shall notify unsuccessful awardees when the total price of a task or delivery order exceeds $7.5 million.
(7) Decision documentation for orders.
(c) Limitation on ordering period for task-order contracts for advisory and assistance services.
(2) The 5-year limitation does not apply when—
(3) The contracting officer may extend the contract on a sole-source basis only once for a period not to exceed 6 months if the contracting officer, or other official designated by the head of the agency, determines that—
(ii) The extension is necessary to ensure continuity of services, pending the award of the follow-on contract.
Editorial Note:For Federal Register citations affecting section 16.505, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids section of the printed volume and at www.govinfo.gov.
[65 FR 24319, Apr. 25, 2000]