DHS procurement office considers contract hybrids

Published 4 December 2009

Government agencies are supposed to be using performance-based contracting as much as possible, but this approach is not suitable for all procurements; DHS says it will begin to hybrid contracts which would blend different approaches

DHS’s Office of Procurement Operations is considering using hybrid contracts that include some performance-based provisions as a way to reduce high-risk acquisitions, according to a senior DHS procurement official.

In July, the Office of Management and Budget issued a memo that states that agencies should try to reduce by at least 10 percent the money they spend in fiscal 2010 — this fiscal year — on noncompetitive, cost-reimbursement, time-and-materials, and labor-hour contracts.

FCW’s Ben Bain writes that although agencies are supposed to be using performance-based contracting as much as possible, that approach is not suitable for all procurements, said Soraya Correa, director of DHS’s Office of Procurement Operations. Speaking at a breakfast on 2 December hosted by the American Council for Technology and the Industry Advisory Council, Correa said her office is looking at hybrid contracts as a solution.

“A lot of our contracts that you’re going to see going forward are going to be hybrid contracts where there will be line items that are performance based, hopefully moving toward 100 percent performance based down the pike, but recognizing that not everything is ready for performance based,” she said.

Correa said she agreed with the initiative to reduce high-risk contracts and called it a smart move. She said, however, that it needs to be done in an efficient way that does not hurt the acquisition community — both contractors and agencies.

Meanwhile, Correa said any contract that is not managed effectively is high risk, and her office is reviewing its inventory of contracts to identify contracts that are high risk and methods to curtail that risk.

In addition, Correa said DHS plans to issue a draft solicitation for the follow-on to its Enterprise Acquisition Gateway for Leading Edge Solutions contract. The agency plans to issue the draft request for proposals for the EAGLE II procurementby the end of March, and the two final RFPs — one for small businesses and one that is unrestricted — are planned for the third quarter of fiscal 2010.

Correa said that after gathering feedback from industry and from EAGLE’s government users, officials are meeting to determine a strategy for EAGLE II. She said they have not yet made a decision on what the draft RFP will include, and DHS hasn’t started writing it yet.