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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Audit: Small businesses lose out on federal contracts

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

WASHINGTON — Small businesses lose out on hundreds of millions of dollars in Energy Department contracts each year because the government often gives no-bid work to large firms on flimsy grounds, congressional auditors say.

A report by the Government Accountability Office, obtained Thursday, looks at small business contracting practices at the department, whose $22.8 billion in annual awards for research, nuclear weapons maintenance and environmental cleanup make it the largest civilian contracting agency.

The report says the agency failed to meet small business contracting goals of 5.5 percent or lower in four of the last five years due to lack of controls, poor planning and questionable assumptions that smaller firms couldn’t handle the jobs.

The Energy Department “is clearly constrained by the department’s traditional reliance on a limited group of large firms and universities to manage high-cost projects in which public safety and national security are important concerns,” says the 39-page report, scheduled to be released next month.

The audit comes amid increased scrutiny of federal contracting, particularly in the Hurricane Katrina response and rebuilding effort. Earlier this month, the GAO found the government wasted millions of dollars on 13 major Katrina contracts — most of which were awarded based on limited bids — that went to large firms with extensive government ties.

“This administration gives big businesses all the breaks and gives small businesses the shaft,” said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., the top Democrat on the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, when asked about the report.

“We need to break down big contracts so small businesses can get a piece of the federal pie,” he said. “This is evidence of a systematic failure by the Bush administration to look out for small businesses, let alone level the playing field.”

Craig Stevens, an Energy Department spokesman, said the agency has been working hard to consider small businesses for contracts to the extent it can. In some areas, such as laboratory and research contracts, the work “just isn’t conducive to small business,” he said.

“We believe we are taking significant strides in encouraging and retaining small business owners in the work of the department,” Stevens said.

According to the GAO report, Energy officials gave small firms work mostly in dwindling, noncore areas such as legal services and construction, rather than research and waste cleanup, where most of the contract dollars lie.

Small firms also were typically given subcontracts, which are labor-intensive but much less profitable because of the cuts taken by the large prime contractors.

As a result, the agency missed contracting goals in four of the last five years, leading to missed opportunities for small businesses totaling more than $970 million, auditors said.