Contractors' conflicts of interest under
scrutiny.
by Moorhouse, Richard L.^Connolly, Sean M.
Contractors may soon be required to police their employees'
personal conflicts of interest. In March 2008, the Government
Accountability Office issued a report entitled, "Defense
Contracting, Additional Personal Conflict of Interest Safeguards Needed
for Certain Department of Defense Contractor Employees,"
recommending new department-wide safeguards and policies to limit
personal conflicts of interest involving contractor employees working
alongside government employees.
At the request of the chairman and ranking member of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, GAO conducted a 15-month study of defense
contractor employees working in Defense Department operations, the type
of work the contractor employees were performing and the safeguards
currently in place to prevent personal conflicts of interest from
arising. GAO found that while the department has significantly increased
its reliance on contractors, there are few safeguards in place to
identify and mitigate personal conflicts of interest for such defense
contractor employees.
The GAO review defined "personal" conflict of interest
(PCI) differently from an "organizational" conflict of
interest (OCI).
An OCI exists whenever a government contractor could take unfair
competitive advantage because of access to proprietary or source
selection information or by having conflicting contract roles that
biases its judgment. For example, under the Federal Acquisition
Regulation, a company awarded a contract to prepare specifications and
performance criteria as the basis for equipment competition would be
excluded from competing for the equipment acquisition.
In contrast, a PCI applies to individual employees "in a
position to materially influence Defense Department recommendations
and/or decisions," who could lack objectivity because of his or her
personal activities, relationships or financial interests. For example,
a contractor employee who exercises influence over acquisition decisions
may lack objectivity where a spouse's company or stock portfolio
stand to benefit from a procurement decision.
GAO's recommendations will require contractors to implement
written codes of business ethics and conduct that would bar contractor
employees from participating in a government contract in which they have
a personal conflict of interest. They would require the contractor to
review and address any personal conflicts of interest its employees
might have before assigning them to deliver contracted services, and
would bar contractor employees from later using non-public government
information obtained during performance under a contract. The codes also
would limit contractors from accepting gifts in connection with
contracted duties.
The Defense Department already has established a panel to review
and respond to GAO's recommendations. GAO also cited government
officials who were concerned that the current rules failed to govern
adequately contractor employees having personal conflicts of interest.
While GAO's review focused on defense contractors, other federal
agencies have the same issues.
GAO reviewed 21 Defense offices and found large percentages of
their workforces consisting of contractor employees. In 15 offices,
contractor employees were 88 percent of the workforce. As a result, the
need to subject contractor employees to the same ethics laws and
policies as their federal employee counterparts is obvious. The Defense
Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement for years has required defense
contractors to implement ethics and compliance programs, and the Federal
Acquisition Regulation was revised in December 2007 to require the same
for most procurements greater than $5 million, whether serving as a
prime contractor or as a subcontractor.
In addition, many of the offices reviewed by GAO have adopted
safeguards, including contract clauses requiring contract employees to
be free from personal conflicts of interest. As yet, no government-wide
or even defense-wide requirements for contractors make the avoidance or
mitigation of employee personal conflicts of interest part of their
ethics programs. Other than a federal law barring bribes, kickbacks, and
other forms of graft, which applies to both federal employees and
contractor employees, there are no other restrictions on federal
employees as yet applicable to contractor employees--such as giving or
accepting gifts or gratuities, or filing financial disclosures.
Consequently, there is little or no assurance to the government that the
contractor employees' "advice and assistance" is free
from actual or potential personal conflicts of interest.
Ethics program requirements inevitably will continue to be expanded
to cover contractor employees.
Richard L. Moorhouse is a shareholder (moorhouser@gtlaw.com) and
Sean M. Connolly (connollys@gtlaw.com) is a senior associate with the
international law firm of Greenberg Traurig LLP, as members of the
government contracts practice group. The views expressed are solely
those of the authors.
NDIA ETHICS COMMITTEE
Joe Reeder, Chairman
Attorney, Greenberg Traurig LLP
Thomas Culligan
Tofie M. Owen, Jr.
Senior Vice President for Corporate Development, SAIC
John D. Illgen
Vice President, Northrop Grumman Simulation Technologies
Corporation
Lawrence Skantze
Gen., USAF (Ret.)
W. John Stoddart
Executive Vice President and President Defense, Oshkosh Truck
Corporation
James McAleese
Principal, McAleese & Associates
Dr. Vincent J. Ciccone
President & CEO, RASco Inc.
Steven Talkovsky
Siemens Government Services, Inc.
Richard D. McConn
President, M International Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2008 National Defense Industrial
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