CODE OF
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
TITLE 1--GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
III--ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED
STATES
PART
305--RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED STATES
1 C.F.R. s 305.89-2
s 305.89-2 Contracting
Officers' Management of Disputes (Recommendation
89-2).
An increasing number of
problems in the management of government contracts
are now referred to lawyers, accountants, and
judges for resolution. This accelerating trend has
tended to deemphasize the responsibility of the
agency contracting officers, who (in most agencies)
have traditionally played a key role in the
procurement process, including dispute handling.
[FN1] Many contracting officers ("COs")
today are subject to restrictive regulations and
close oversight that can inhibit their willingness
to negotiate settlements. For this and other
reasons, many cases proceed to needless litigation
that are in fact susceptible to prompt, direct
resolution by COs at an early stage when parties
are often less entrenched and more cognizant of
program interests. [FN2]
[FN1] Conference
Recommendation 87-11, Alternatives for Resolving
Government Contract Disputes, 1 CFR s 306.87-11,
describes one aspect:
"The dispute handling
system established by the Contract Disputes Act
begins with the contracting officer ("CO"), an
agency official whose function is to enter into and
administer government contracts. Any claim arising
out of a contract is to be presented to the CO. The
CO has a dual role: to represent the government as
a party to the contract, but also to make initial
decisions on claims subject to certain procedural
safeguards. If the dispute is not amicably
resolved, the CDA requires the CO to issue a brief
written decision stating his or her reasons. A
contractor dissatisfied with a CO's decision may
appeal either to an agency board of contract
appeals or directly to the U.S. Claims Court, where
proceedings become considerably more formal."
[FN2] This report
addresses only dispute resolution during contract
performance; it does not extend to controversies
which arise during the contract formation
process.
Several Conference studies
have demonstrated opportunities for improving
agencies' resolution of contract disputes consonant
with the Contract Disputes Act's [FN3] goal
of expeditious resolution without disrupting
performance. [FN4] While a few agencies
have experimented with alternative means of dispute
resolution at the appeal level, these methods are
even more likely to be useful prior to issuance of
a contracting officer decision. This potential has
been neglected. Current training for COs does not
address ADR and gives minimal attention to
negotiation skills. These methods [FN5]
serve the agency by helping to expedite dispute
handling. They serve the parties by keeping
outcomes in the control of the contracting parties,
preserving cooperative business relations, avoiding
litigation (and the concomitant loss of control as
to results), and--most important--allowing the
parties to return to concentrating on productive
work rather than conflict.
[FN3] 41 U.S. Code
601-613; 5 U.S.C. 5108(c)(3); 28 U.S.C. 1346(a)(2),
149(a)(2), 2401(a), 2414, 2510, 2517, 31 U.S.C.
1304(a)(3)(C) (1982); enacted November 1, 1978 by
Pub. L. No. 95-563, 92 Stat. 2383.
[FN4] Section
33.204 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation, which
guides agency procurement practices, includes the
following possible inducement to ADR:
"In appropriate
circumstances, the contracting officer, before
issuing a decision on a claim, should consider the
use of informal discussions between the parties by
individuals who have not participated substantially
in the matter in dispute, to aid in resolving the
differences."
This suggestion for a
"fresh look" at the issues recognizes the potential
usefulness of an objective evaluation.
[FN5] They include
arbitration, mediation, minitrial, factfinding,
convening, facilitation and negotiation. These are
defined in the Appendix to Conference
Recommendation 86-3, Agencies' Use of Alternative
Means of Dispute Resolution, 1 CFR 306.86-3.
This recommendation builds
on an earlier one (87-11), in which the Conference
focused primarily on possible uses for consensual
means of resolving contract disputes at the appeal
level. It identified the decreased authority of COs
as a major factor contributing to the inefficiency
and cost of resolving many conflicts.
Recommendation 87-11 (in pertinent part) calls for
(1) legislation, an executive order, by the Office
of Federal Procurement Policy, policy statement,
and Federal Acquisition Regulation changes to
encourage COs, before issuing a decision likely to
be unacceptable to a claimant, to explore use of
ADR to resolve their differences; (2) agency
adoption of policies encouraging ADR and regular
use of rules or notices to alert COs and other
parties to ADR availability; (3) agency designation
of an employee to serve as an ADR specialist in
connection with contract disputes; and (4) agency
attention to the need to offer training in
negotiation and other ADR skills to COs and others
involved in contract disputes.
The instant recommendation
seeks to go further to enhance the CO's ability and
authority in the resolution of contract disputes.
Calling for CO training in negotiation and dispute
handling, as well as increased use of ADR
techniques as part of a CO's decisionmaking
process, it supplements the prior recommendation by
focusing on the integration of consensual dispute
resolution into already existing dispute and
training systems at the CO level, overcoming
obstacles to ADR use, and practical guidance in
improving CO-level dispute resolution.
Recommendation
1. Agencies with
significant acquisition activity, acting in
consultation with expert groups, should encourage
COs, and other key personnel involved in the
resolution of contract disputes, to make greater
efforts routinely to consider and utilize ADR to
help resolve claims. Since dispute resolution at
the CO level is very much a shared activity, these
persons may include program and project managers,
attorneys, auditors, engineers, specialists in
pricing, packaging, production, maintenance and
quality control, and other technical experts or
contracting officials. These agencies should
undertake comprehensive programs of promotion ADR
at the CO level. The programs should include
application of ADR techniques in specific test
cases, conduct of training, case screening, and
information and guidance for personnel and
contractors.
2. Agency heads should
direct senior officials within the acquisition
hierarchy to act as proponents for dispute
resolution, with the specific mission of developing
more effective contact dispute resolution
practices. Agencies with extensive acquisition
activity should designate a senior official within
the acquisition hierarchy with the specific mission
of developing more effective contract disputes
resolution practices. This official's mission would
include challenging barriers to wider ADR use,
educating disputants in industry and government,
and improving understanding and use of ADR
procedures at the CO level.
3. The Federal Acquisition
Regulation should be amended to describe
specifically the full range of dispute resolution
methods available for consideration by the parties
at or before the time a claim is presented to the
CO for resolution under the Contract Disputes
Act.
4. COs involved in the
disputes process should be specifically evaluated,
as part of the annual performance evaluation cycle,
on their effectiveness in managing contract
disputes.
5. In addition to those
techniques set forth in Recommendation 87-11,
agencies should be encouraged to use the following
specific methods in CO-level disputes:
(1) Employing factfinding
to offer an advisory decision, or designating a CO
who was not involved in the disputed issues, or a
particular distinguished government official or
other knowledgeable person, to make an advisory
decision;
(b) Employing minitrial or
other processes to permit a structured presentation
of facts and arguments to the CO or other
government officer with authority to settle;
(c) Agreeing in advance
that disputes arising under a particular contract
will be voluntarily submitted to an expert or panel
for nonbinding opinion as soon as a disagreement
occurs; and
(d) Encouraging agency COs
to employ the services of mediators or other
neutrals to enhance negotiations to settle contract
disputes.
6. Board of Contract
Appeals judges should take greater advantage of
opportunities to suggest returning to the CO cases
which evidently should be pursued more vigorously
for settlement.
7. ADR training programs,
for both industry and government personnel, should
be integrated into existing management training
programs, as follows:
(a) Training should focus
on the use of these techniques as tools to improve
the contract formation and contract administration
process, so as to abate conditions which later lead
to disputes, and to expedite decisionmaking under
the Contract Disputes Act.
(b) Training should
reflect the fact that negotiation is a key dispute
resolution method, and that most COs would become
more effective professionals by devoting increased
training and attention to these methods. The
Federal Acquisition Institute and other government
entities specializing in acquisition training
should devote increased attention to listening and
communications skills, use of "interest" and
"principled" rather than "positional" bargaining,
and systematic attention to negotiation techniques.
The training should also enable a CO to engage in
meaningful discussion with a contractor by first
working as a "team builder" to develop a coherent
intraagency position that takes into account the
views and needs of attorneys, auditors, program
managers, engineers and others within the agency.
Consistent with best management practice and the
Packard Commission Report for greater efficiency in
procurement, [FN6] the training should
encourage the CO, even without the assistance of a
third-party neutral, to avert appeals by reducing
the number of situations where disputes, encumbered
by internal disagreements or incoherent positions,
are passed on to boards of contract appeals.
[FN6] A Quest for
Excellence, Final Report by the President's Blue
Ribbon Commission on Defense Management (June
1986).
(c) Professional
organizations concerned with the public contract
disputes process, such as the American Bar
Association, Federal Bar Association, and National
Contract Management Association, should develop and
encourage increased learning opportunities in
effective dispute resolution techniques for
representatives of the government and private
sector.
[54 FR 28967, July 10,
1989]
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
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