In Washington,
Contractors Take On
Biggest Role Ever
February 4, 2007
By
SCOTT SHANE and RON NIXON
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 — In June, short
of people to process cases of
incompetence and fraud by federal
contractors, officials at the
General Services Administration
responded with what has become the
government’s reflexive answer to almost
every problem.
They hired another contractor.
It did not matter that the company
they chose, CACI International, had
itself recently avoided a suspension
from federal contracting; or that the
work, delving into investigative files
on other contractors, appeared to pose a
conflict of interest; or that each
person supplied by the company would
cost taxpayers $104 an hour. Six CACI
workers soon joined hundreds of other
private-sector workers at the G.S.A.,
the government’s management agency.
Without a public debate or formal
policy decision, contractors have become
a virtual fourth branch of government.
On the rise for decades, spending on
federal contracts has soared during the
Bush administration, to about $400
billion last year from $207 billion in
2000, fueled by the war in Iraq,
domestic security and Hurricane Katrina,
but also by a philosophy that encourages
outsourcing almost everything government
does.
Contractors still build ships and
satellites, but they also collect income
taxes and work up agency budgets, fly
pilotless spy aircraft and take the
minutes at policy meetings on the war.
They sit next to federal employees at
nearly every agency; far more people
work under contracts than are directly
employed by the government. Even the
government’s online database for
tracking contracts, the Federal
Procurement Data System, has been
outsourced (and is famously difficult to
use).
The contracting explosion raises
questions about propriety, cost and
accountability that have long troubled
watchdog groups and are coming under
scrutiny from the Democratic majority in
Congress. While flagrant cases of fraud
and waste make headlines, concerns go
beyond outright wrongdoing. Among them:
¶Competition, intended to produce
savings, appears to have sharply eroded.
An analysis by The New York Times shows
that fewer than half of all “contract
actions” — new contracts and payments
against existing contracts — are now
subject to full and open competition.
Just 48 percent were competitive in
2005, down from 79 percent in 2001.
¶The most secret and politically
delicate government jobs, like
intelligence collection and budget
preparation, are increasingly contracted
out, despite regulations forbidding the
outsourcing of “inherently governmental”
work. Scott Amey, general counsel at the
Project on Government Oversight, a
watchdog group, said allowing CACI
workers to review other contractors
captured in microcosm “a government
that’s run by corporations.”
¶Agencies are crippled in their
ability to seek low prices, supervise
contractors and intervene when work goes
off course because the number of
government workers overseeing contracts
has remained level as spending has shot
up. One federal contractor explained
candidly in a conference call with
industry analysts last May that “one of
the side benefits of the contracting
officers being so overwhelmed” was that
existing contracts were extended rather
than put up for new competitive bidding.
¶The most successful contractors are
not necessarily those doing the best
work, but those who have mastered the
special skill of selling to Uncle Sam.
The top 20 service contractors have
spent nearly $300 million since 2000 on
lobbying and have donated $23 million to
political campaigns. “We’ve created huge
behemoths that are doing 90 or 95
percent of their business with the
government,” said Peter W. Singer, who
wrote a book on military outsourcing.
“They’re not really companies, they’re
quasi agencies.” Indeed, the biggest
federal contractor, Lockheed Martin,
which has spent $53 million on lobbying
and $6 million on donations since 2000,
gets more federal money each year than
the Departments of Justice or Energy.
¶Contracting almost always leads to
less public scrutiny, as government
programs are hidden behind closed
corporate doors. Companies, unlike
agencies, are not subject to the Freedom
of Information Act. Members of Congress
have sought unsuccessfully for two years
to get the Army to explain the contracts
for Blackwater USA security officers in
Iraq, which involved several costly
layers of subcontractors.
Weighing the
Limits
The
contracting surge has raised bipartisan
alarms. A just-completed study by
experts appointed by the White House and
Congress, the Acquisition Advisory
Panel, found that the trend “poses a
threat to the government’s long-term
ability to perform its mission” and
could “undermine the integrity of the
government’s decision making.”
The House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform, whose new Democratic
chairman,
Representative Henry A. Waxman of
California, added the word “oversight”
to signal his intentions, begins a
series of investigative hearings on
Tuesday focusing on contracts in Iraq
and at the
Department of Homeland Security.
“Billions of dollars are being
squandered, and the taxpayer is being
taken to the cleaners,” said Mr. Waxman,
who got an “F” rating last year from the
Contract Services Association, an
industry coalition. The chairman he
succeeded, Representative Thomas M.
Davis III, Republican of Virginia,
earned an “A.”
David M. Walker, who as comptroller
general of the United States leads the
Government Accountability Office,
has urged Congress to take a hard look
at the proper limits of contracting. Mr.
Walker has not taken a stand against
contractors — his agency is also
dependent on them, he admits — but he
says they often fail to deliver the
promised efficiency and savings. Private
companies cannot be expected to look out
for taxpayers’ interests, he said.
“There’s something civil servants
have that the private sector doesn’t,”
Mr. Walker said in an interview. “And
that is the duty of loyalty to the
greater good — the duty of loyalty to
the collective best interest of all
rather than the interest of a few.
Companies have duties of loyalty to
their shareholders, not to the country.”
Even the most outspoken critics
acknowledge that the government cannot
operate without contractors, which
provide the surge capacity to handle
crises without expanding the permanent
bureaucracy. Contractors provide
specialized skills the government does
not have. And it is no secret that some
government executives favor contractors
because they find the federal
bureaucracy slow, inflexible or
incompetent.
Stan Soloway, president of the
Professional Services Council, which
represents government contractors,
acknowledged occasional chicanery by
contractors and too little competition
in some areas. But Mr. Soloway asserted
that critics had exaggerated the
contracting problems.
“I don’t happen to think the system
is fundamentally broken,” he said. “It’s
remarkable how well it works, given the
dollar volume.”
Blurring the Lines
Wariness of government contracting
dates at least to 1941, when
Harry S. Truman, then a senator,
declared, “I have never yet found a
contractor who, if not watched, would
not leave the government holding the
bag.”
But the recent contracting boom had
its origins in the “reinventing
government” effort of the Clinton
administration, which slashed the
federal work force to the lowest level
since 1960 and streamlined outsourcing.
Limits on what is “inherently
governmental” and therefore off-limits
to contractors have grown fuzzy, as the
General Services Administration’s use of
CACI International personnel shows.
“Hi Heinz,” Renee Ballard, a G.S.A.
official, wrote in an e-mail message to
Heinz Ruppmann, a CACI official, last
June 12, asking for six “contract
specialists” to help with a backlog of
226 cases that could lead to companies
being suspended or barred from federal
contracting. The CACI workers would
review files and prepare “proposed
responses for review and signature,” she
wrote.
Mr. Amey, of the Project on
Government Oversight, which obtained the
contract documents under the Freedom of
Information Act, said such work was
clearly inherently governmental and
called it “outrageous” to involve
contractors in judging the misdeeds of
potential competitors. CACI had itself
been reviewed in 2004 for possible
suspension in connection with supplying
interrogators to the Abu Ghraib prison
in Iraq. The company was ultimately
cleared, though the G.S.A. found that
CACI employees had improperly written
parts of the “statements of work” for
its own Iraq contract.
The price of $104 an hour — well over
$200,000 per person annually — was
roughly double the cost of pay and
benefits of a comparable federal worker,
Mr. Amey said.
Asked for comment, the G.S.A. said
decisions on punishments for erring
contractors “is indeed inherently
governmental.” But the agency said that
while the CACI workers assisted for
three months, “all suspension/debarment
decisions were made by federal
employees.” A CACI spokeswoman made the
same point.
The G.S.A., like other agencies, said
it did not track the number or total
cost of its contract workers. The agency
administrator, Lurita Doan, who
previously ran a Virginia contracting
firm, has actively pushed contracting.
Ms. Doan recently clashed with her
agency’s inspector general over her
proposal to remove the job of auditing
contractors’ proposed prices from his
office and to hire contractors to do it
instead.
On some of the biggest government
projects, Bush administration officials
have sought to shift some decision
making to contractors. When Michael P.
Jackson, deputy secretary of the
Department of Homeland Security,
addressed potential bidders on the huge
Secure Border Initiative last year, he
explained the new approach.
“This is an unusual invitation,” said
Mr. Jackson, a contracting executive
before joining the agency. “We’re asking
you to come back and tell us how to do
our business.”
Boeing, which won the $80 million
first phase of the estimated $2 billion
project, is assigned not only to develop
technology but also to propose how to
use it, which includes assigning roles
to different government agencies and
contractors. Homeland Security officials
insist that they will make all final
decisions, but the department’s
inspector general, Richard L. Skinner,
reported bluntly in November that “the
department does not have the capacity
needed to effectively plan, oversee and
execute the SBInet program.”
A ‘Blended Work
Force’
If the government is exporting some
traditional functions to contractors, it
is also inviting contractors into
agencies to perform delicate tasks. The
State Department, for instance, pays
more than $2 million a year to
BearingPoint, the consulting giant, to
provide support for Iraq policy making,
running software, preparing meeting
agendas and keeping minutes.
State Department officials insist
that the company’s workers, who hold
security clearances, merely relieve
diplomats of administrative tasks and
never influence policy. But the presence
of contractors inside closed discussions
on war strategy is a notable example of
what officials call the “blended work
force.”
That blending is taking place in
virtually every agency. When Polly
Endreny, 29, sought work last year with
the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration, she was
surprised to discover that most openings
were with contractors.
“The younger generation is coming in
on contracts,” said Ms. Endreny, who
likes the arrangement. Today, only the
“Oak Management” on her ID badge
distinguishes her from federal employees
at the agency’s headquarters.
She said her pay was “a little
higher” than that of comparable federal
workers, and she gets dental coverage
they do not. Such disparities can cause
trouble. A recent study of one NOAA
program where two-thirds of the work
force were contractors found that
differences in salary and benefits could
“ substantially undermine staff
relations and morale.”
The shift away from open competition
affects more than morale. One example
among many: with troops short in Iraq,
Congress in 2003 waived a ban on the use
of private security guards to protect
military bases in the United States. The
results for the first $733 million were
dismal, investigators at the Government
Accountability Office found.
The Army spent 25 percent more than
it had to because it used sole-source
contracts at 46 of 57 sites, the
investigators concluded. And screening
of guards was so lax that at one base,
61 guards were hired despite criminal
records, auditors reported. Yet the Army
gave the contractors more than $18
million in incentive payments intended
to reward good performance. (The Army
did not contest G.A.O.’s findings and
has changed its methods.)
A Coalition for
Contracting
Mr. Soloway, of the contracting
industry group, argues that the
contracting boom has resulted from the
collision of a high-technology economy
with an aging government work force —
twice as many employees are over 55 as
under 30. To function, Mr. Soloway said,
the government must now turn to younger,
skilled personnel in the private sector,
a phenomenon likely to grow when what
demographers call a “retirement tsunami”
occurs over the next decade.
“This is the new face of government,”
Mr. Soloway said. “This isn’t companies
gouging the government. This is the
marketplace.”
But Paul C. Light of
New York University, who has long
tracked the hidden contractor work force
to assess what he calls the “true size
of government,” says the shift to
contractors is driven in part by federal
personnel ceilings. He calls such
ceilings a “sleight of hand” intended to
allow successive administrations to brag
about cutting the federal work force.
Yet Mr. Light said the government had
made no effort to count contractors and
no assessment of the true costs and
benefits. “We have no data to show that
contractors are actually more efficient
than the government,” he said.
Meanwhile, he said, a potent
coalition keeps contracting growing: the
companies, their lobbyists and
supporters in Congress and many
government managers, who do not mind
building ties to contractors who may
hire them someday. “All the players with
any power like it,” he said.
That is evident wherever in
Washington contractors gather to scout
new opportunities. There is no target
richer than the Homeland Security
Department, whose Web site, in a section
called “Open for Business,” displays
hundreds of open contracts, including
“working with selected cities to develop
and exercise their catastrophic plans”
($500,000 to $1 million) and “Conduct
studies and analyses, systems
engineering, or provide laboratory
services to various organizations to
support the DHS mission” ($20 to $50
million).
One crisp morning in an office
building with a spectacular view of the
Capitol, Alfonso Martinez-Fonts Jr., the
agency’s assistant secretary for the
private sector, addressed a breakfast
seminar on “The Business of Homeland
Security.” The session drew a
standing-room crowd.
Mr. Martinez-Fonts, a banker before
joining the government, said he could
not personally hand out contracts but
could offer “tips, hints and directions”
to companies on the hunt.
Joe Haddock, a Sikorsky Helicopters
executive, summed up the tone of the
session. “To us contractors,” Mr.
Haddock said, “money is always a good
thing.”
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