Subject: Implementation of the Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-270) ("FAIR Act")
Agency: Office of Management and Budget, Executive Office of the President
Action: OMB issues final guidance on the Implementation of the FAIR Act.
Summary: The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) hereby issues guidance to implement the "Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998".
To facilitate and ensure agency implementation of the "Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998" (Public Law 105-270) ("FAIR Act"), OMB is revising its existing guidance on the management of commercial activities through revisions to OMB Circular A-76, "Performance of Commercial Activities," and to its Supplemental Handbook. These revisions inform agencies of the FAIR Act's requirements; implement the statutory requirements of the FAIR Act; avoid duplication and confusion by conforming guidance to the FAIR Act, and place the FAIR Act's requirements in the context of the Federal Government's larger reinvention, competition and privatization efforts.
Dates: This guidance is effective upon publication in the Federal Register.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. David Childs, Office of Management and Budget, NEOB Room 6002, 725 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20503, telephone: (202) 395-6104, FAX: (202) 395-7230
Availability: Copies of the updated versions of OMB Circular A-76, its Revised Supplemental Handbook and this Transmittal Memorandum 20 are available from OMB on the Internet at: /OMB/circulars/index-procure.html
Supplementary Information:
I. The Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act.
II. Implementation of the FAIR Act.
III. Executive Branch Management of Commercial Activities Generally
___________________________
Jacob J. Lew
Director
Circular No. A-76 (Revised)
Transmittal Memorandum No. 20
June 14, 1999
TO THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES
SUBJECT: Implementing the Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act Through Conforming Changes to OMB Circular No. A-76 and its March 1996 Revised Supplemental Handbook
___________________________
Jacob J. Lew
Director
Attachments
Attachment 1
Revisions to the OMB Circular A-76 March 1996 Revised Supplemental Handbook
1. The Introduction to the Supplemental Handbook (p. iii) is revised to reflect the fact that challenges to the activities listed in the Commercial Activities Inventory are permitted under the FAIR Act, by adding to the end of the last sentence on page iii the following:
"...and as set forth in Appendix 2, Paragraph G, consistent with Section 3 of the Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998 (FAIR Act, P.L. 105-270)."
2. Part I, Chapter 1, paragraphs A, B.1 and F, of the Supplemental Handbook (pp. 3,5) are revised to reflect the requirements of the FAIR Act. As revised, paragraphs A, B.1 and F read as follows:
"A. General
This Part sets forth the principles and procedures for managing the Government's acquisition of recurring commercial support activities, implementing the "Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998" ("The FAIR Act"), P.L. 105-270, and Circular A-76. Exhibit 1 summarizes the conditions that permit conversion to or from in-house, contract or Inter-Service Support Agreement (ISSA) performance. The requirements of the FAIR Act apply to the following executive agencies: (1) an executive department named in 5 USC 101, (2) a military department named in 5 USC 102, and (3) an independent establishment as defined in 5 USC 104. The requirements of the FAIR Act do not apply to: (1) the General Accounting Office, (2) a Government corporation or a Government controlled corporation as defined in 5 USC 103, (3) a non-appropriated funds instrumentality if all of its employees are referred to in 5 USC 2105(c), or (4) Depot-level maintenance and repair of the Department of Defense as defined in 10 USC 2460." "B. Inherently Governmental Activities
1. Inherently Governmental activities are not subject to the FAIR Act, Circular A-76 or this Supplemental Handbook. As a matter of policy, an inherently Governmental activity is one that is so intimately related to the exercise of the public interest as to mandate performance by Federal employees. The Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP) Policy Letter 92-1, dated September 23, 1992 (Federal Register, September 30, 1992, page 45096), provides guidance on the identification of inherently Governmental activities (see Appendix 5). This guidance conforms to the definition provided at Section 5, paragraph 2, of the FAIR Act."
"F. Commercial Activities Inventory
As required by the FAIR Act, Circular A-76 and this Supplemental Handbook, each agency will maintain a detailed inventory of all in-house commercial activities performed by its Government employees. This inventory, as described at Appendix 2 of this Supplement, and any supplemental information requested by OMB, will be submitted not later than June 30 of each year. Agencies should, as appropriate, permit employee involvement in the development of this Commercial Activities Inventory."
3. Part II, Chapter 1, Paragraph A.1 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 17) is revised by adding a reference to the FAIR Act. As revised, Paragraph A.1 reads as follows:
1. Part II provides generic and streamlined cost comparison guidance to comply with the provisions of the FAIR Act and Circular A-76. This includes guidance for developing in-house costs based upon the Government's Most Efficient Organization (MEO) and other adjustments to the contract and inter-service support agreement (ISSA) price. It also sets out the principles for development of cost-based performance standards or other measures that are comparable to those used by commercial sources. Appendices 6 and 7 provide sector-specific cost comparison guidance."
4. The title of Appendix 2 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 38) and the corresponding entry in the Table of Contents are revised from "OMB Circular No. A-76 Inventory" to "Commercial Activities Inventory." Portions of this inventory are now required by the FAIR Act, as a matter or law.
5. Paragraph A of Appendix 2 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 38) is revised in several ways. The introductory sentences now refer to the FAIR Act's requirements for a Commercial Activities Inventory and incorporate its due date (June 30th) for submission to OMB of each agency's inventory. Two data elements are added to the inventory's description of an activity. These additional data elements (g and h, below) correspond to the new data elements required under Section 2(a)(1) and (3) of the FAIR Act. In addition, the existing data element for "Location / organization unit" is being separated into two elements ("Location" and "Organization Unit"). Finally, a concluding sentence is added to clarify that agencies have the flexibility to automate and structure the inventory so long as all the listed data elements are included. As revised, Paragraph A reads as follows:
"A. Annual Inventory Submission
In accordance with the FAIR Act, Circular A-76 and this Handbook, each agency must submit to OMB, by June 30 of each year, a detailed Commercial Activities Inventory of all commercial activities performed by in-house employees, including, at a minimum, the following:
- Organization unit.
- State(s).
- Location(s).
- FTE.
- Activity function code.
- Reason code.
- Year the activity first appeared on FAIR Act Commercial Activities Inventory (initial value will be 1999).
- Name of a Federal employee responsible for the activity or contact person from whom additional information about the activity may be obtained.
- Year of cost comparison or conversion (if applicable).
- CIV/FTE savings (if applicable).
- Estimated annualized Cost Comparison dollar savings (if applicable).
- Date of completed Post-MEO Performance Review (if applicable).
Agencies have the discretion to automate and to structure the initial submission of the detailed inventory as they believe most appropriate, so long as the inventory includes each of these data elements. Agencies must transmit an electronic version of the inventory to OMB as well as two paper copies. The electronic version should be in a commonly used software format (commercial off-the-shelf spreadsheet, database or word processing format). OMB anticipates issuing additional guidance on the structure and format of future inventory submissions, based on the experience gained from the first annual review and consultation process."
6. To reflect the FAIR Act's requirement that information on full time employees (or its equivalent) be included, paragraph C of Appendix 2 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 38) has been revised as follows:
"C. FTE
Enter the number of authorized full-time employees or FTE (as applicable) in the commercial activity function or functions as of the date of the inventory. Employees performing inherently Governmental activities are not reported in the Commercial Activities Inventory."
7. Paragraph E "A-76 Reason Codes" of Appendix 2 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 38) is retitled "Reason Codes." The phrase "agency A-76 inventories" is changed to "Commercial Activities Inventory" and "Reason code E" is revised and a new reason code "I" is added as follows:
- Indicates that the function is retained in-house as a result of a cost comparison.
- Indicates the function is being performed in-house as a result of a cost comparison resulting from a decision to convert from contract to in-house performance.
8. Appendix 2 of the Supplemental Handbook (p. 38) is further revised by adding three new paragraphs. New paragraph "G" describes the review and publication of the detailed agency Commercial Activities Inventory and the challenge-and-appeals process pertaining to its content, as required by the FAIR Act. The new paragraph "H" includes the FAIR Act's requirements that agencies review the commercial activities in their inventories and use a competitive process or established cost comparison procedures each time an agency considers contracting with a private-sector source for the performance of an activity on the inventory. New paragraph "I" alerts agencies to the requirement for an annual Report on Agency Management of Commercial Activities. The new paragraphs read as follows:
"G. & Inventory Review and Publication; Challenges and Appeals.
1. Review and Publication: In accordance with Section 2 of the FAIR Act, OMB will review the agency's Commercial Activities Inventory and consult with the agency regarding its content. After this review is completed, OMB will publish a notice in the Federal Register stating that the inventory is are available to the public. Once the notice is published, the agency will transmit a copy of the detailed Commercial Activities Inventory to Congress and make the materials available to the public through its Washington, D.C. or headquarters offices. 2. Challenges and Appeals: Under Section 3 of the FAIR Act, an agency's decision to include or exclude a particular activity from the Commercial Activities Inventory is subject to administrative challenge and, then, possible appeal by an "interested party." Section 3(b) of the FAIR Act defines "interested party" as: a. A private sector source that (A) is an actual or prospective offeror for any contract or other form of agreement to perform the activity; and (B) has a direct economic interest in performing the activity that would be adversely affected by a determination not to procure the performance of the activity from a private sector source. b. A representative of any business or professional association that includes within its membership private sector sources referred to in a. above. c. An officer or employee of an organization within an executive agency that is an actual or prospective offeror to perform the activity. d. The head of any labor organization referred to in section 7103(a) (4) of title 5, United States Code that includes within its membership officers or employees of an organization referred to in c. above. 3. An interested party may submit to an executive agency an initial challenge to the inclusion or exclusion of an activity within 30 calendar days after publication of OMB's Federal Register notice stating that the inventory is available. The challenge must set forth the activity being challenged with as much specificity as possible, and the reasons for the interested party's belief that the particular activity should be reclassified as inherently Governmental (and therefore be deleted from the inventory) or as commercial (and therefore be added to the inventory) in accordance with OFPP Policy Letter 92-1 on inherently Governmental functions (see Appendix 5) or as established by precedent (such as when other agencies have contracted for the activity or undergone competitions for this or similar activities). 4. The agency head may delegate the responsibility to designate the appropriate official(s) to receive and decide the initial challenges. As mandated by the FAIR Act, the deciding official must decide the initial challenge and transmit to the interested party a written notification of the decision within 28 calendar days of receiving the challenge. The notification must include a discussion of the rationale for the decision and, if the decision is adverse, an explanation of the party's right to file an appeal. 5. An interested party may appeal an adverse decision to an initial challenge within 10 working days after receiving the written notification of the decision. The agency head may delegate the responsibility to receive and decide appeals to the official identified in paragraph 9.a of the Circular (or an equivalent senior policy official), without further delegation. Within 10 working days of receipt of the appeal, the official must decide the appeal and transmit to the interested party a written notification of the decision together with a discussion of the rationale for the decision. The agency must also transmit to OMB and the Congress a copy of any changes to the inventory that result from this process, make the changes available to the public and publish a notice of public availability in the Federal Register." "H. Agency Review and Use of Inventory.
Section 2(d) of the FAIR Act requires that each agency, within a reasonable time after the publication of the notice that its inventories are publicly available, review the activities on the detailed commercial activities inventory. Agencies will report to OMB on this process as part of the Report on Agency Management of Commercial Activities required under Paragraph I, below. In addition, Section 2(d)-(e) of the FAIR Act provides that, each time the head of the executive agency considers contracting with a private-sector source for the performance of an activity included on the inventory, the agency must use a competitive process to select the source and must ensure that, when a cost comparison is used or otherwise required for the comparison of costs, all costs are considered and the costs considered are realistic and fair. In carrying out these requirements, agencies must rely on the guidance contained in Circular A-76 and this Supplemental Handbook to determine if cost comparisons are required and what competitive method is appropriate. All competitive costs of in-house and contract performance are included in the cost comparison, when such comparison is required, including the costs of quality assurance, technical monitoring, liability insurance, retirement benefits, disability benefits and overhead that may be allocated to the function under study or may otherwise be expected to change as a result of changing the method of performance." "I. Annual Report on Agency Management of Commercial Activities.
As part of ongoing agency responsibility to manage their performance of commercial activities and ongoing OMB oversight, OMB will require agencies to report annually on such management. The content of the reports is likely to vary depending upon the progress made by each agency in reviewing their inventory and on the experience OMB gains from the first round of inventory submissions, review, challenges and appeals mandated by the FAIR Act. OMB anticipates issuing subsequent guidance if it determines that supplemental reports or other information is needed for future inventory submissions to assure that agencies have correctly implemented all of the provisions of the FAIR Act and taken advantage of the management information inherent in the detailed Commercial Activities Inventory."
Attachment 2
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
WASHINGTON. D.C. 20503
CIRCULAR NO. A-76 (REVISED 1999)
August 4, 1983
TO THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND ESTABLISHMENTS
SUBJECT: Performance of Commercial Activities
- (1) The act of governing; i.e., the discretionary exercise of Government authority. Examples include criminal investigations, prosecutions and other judicial functions; management of Government programs requiring value judgments, as in direction of the national defense; management and direction of the Armed Services; activities performed exclusively by military personnel who are subject to deployment in a combat, combat support or combat service support role; conduct of foreign relations; selection of program priorities; direction of Federal employees; regulation of the use of space, oceans, navigable rivers and other natural resources; direction of intelligence and counter-intelligence operations; and regulation of industry and commerce, including food and drugs.
- (2) Monetary transactions and entitlements, such as tax collection and revenue disbursements; control of the Treasury accounts and money supply; and the administration of public trusts.
- (1) A private sector source that (A) is an actual or prospective offeror for any contract or other form of agreement to perform the activity; and (B) has a direct economic interest in performing the activity that would be adversely affected by a determination not to procure the performance of the activity from a private sector source.
- (2) A representative of any business or professional association that includes within its membership private sector sources referred to in (1) above.
- (3) An officer or employee of an organization within an executive agency that is an actual or prospective offeror to perform the activity.
- (4) The head of any labor organization referred to in section 7103(a) (4) of Title 5, United States Code that includes within its membership officers or employees of an organization referred to in (3) above.
- (1) If the finding is that no commercial source is capable of providing the needed product or service, the efforts made to find commercial sources must be documented and made available to the public upon request. These efforts shall include, in addition to consideration of preferential procurement programs (see Part I, Chapter 1, paragraph C of the Supplement) at least three notices describing the requirement in the Commerce Business Daily over a 90-day period or, in cases of bona fide urgency, two notices over a 30-day period. Specifications and requirements in the solicitation shall not be unduly restrictive and shall not exceed those required of in-house Government personnel or operations.
- (2) If the finding is that a commercial source would cause unacceptable delay or disruption of an agency program, a written explanation, approved by the assistant secretary or designee in paragraph 9.a. of the Circular, must show the specific impact on an agency mission in terms of cost and performance. Urgency alone is not adequate reason to continue in-house operation of a commercial activity. Temporary disruption resulting from conversion to contract is not sufficient support for such a finding, nor is the possibility of a strike by contract employees. If the commercial activity has ever been performed by contract, an explanation of how the instant circumstances differ must be documented. These decisions must be made available to the public upon request.
- (3) Activities may not be justified for in-house performance solely on the basis that the activity involves or supports a classified program or the activity is required to perform an agency's basic mission.
- (1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish criteria for determining when Government performance of a commercial activity is required for national defense reasons. Such criteria shall be furnished to OMB, upon request.
- (2) Only the Secretary of Defense or his designee has the authority to exempt commercial activities for national defense reasons.
Attachment A
OMB Circular No. A-76
Appendix
Summary of Comments Received
1. The Development and Submission of the Commercial Activities Inventory
Response: This data element is specifically required by Section 2(a)(3) of the FAIR Act itself.
Response: The cost-comparison process under Circular A-76 provides a level playing field for agencies to determine whether savings would result from a conversion of work, whether that conversion is from in-house to contract performance or from contract to in-house performance. Moreover, the cost-comparison process can result in savings even if no conversion occurs. The commercial activity data element for "CIV/FTE Savings" reflects the number of civilian FTE saved as a result of conducting a cost comparison, whether the function is retained in-house or converted to contract. This data element, therefore, is not meant to suggest that savings can only occur through outsourcing.
With respect to the request for additional information on savings that result from conversions from contract to in-house performance, the inventories will include an additional data element (a "reason code") to identify those commercial activities that are "being performed in-house as a result of a cost comparison resulting in a decision to convert from contract to in-house performance" (new reason code "I"). A corresponding change has been made to limit reason code "E" to functions retained in-house as a result of a cost comparison. The request for information on the aggregate number of agency contractor employees is beyond the scope of the FAIR Act, which is limited to performance of commercial activities by Federal employees.
Response: The inclusion of a function on the agency's inventory of commercial activities does not mean that the agency is required to compete the function for outsourcing. Rather, the FAIR Act in Section 2(d) requires each agency to review its inventory of commercial activities. Presumably, this review would include consideration of outsourcing, consolidation, privatization, other reinvention alternatives or maintaining the status quo. Not all commercial activities performed by Federal employees should be performed by the private sector, though all such activities should be inventoried under the provisions of the FAIR Act and Circular A-76. The decision as to which commercial functions represent "core capabilities," and thus should be retained in-house, remains with the agency head. Accordingly, a specific reason code for "core capability" was not added to the inventory.
Response: The FAIR Act requires agencies to develop an inventory of the agency activities that "are not inherently Governmental functions." The FAIR Act does not request any information on inherently Governmental activities; its focus is limited to commercial activities.
As part of its pre-FAIR Act oversight function to evaluate how agencies determine what functions performed by Federal employees are classified as commercial, OMB requested summary information from agencies that also included functions they classified as not commercial (i.e., inherently Governmental functions). When OMB conducts its FAIR Act review and consultation on the Commercial Activities Inventory submissions, it will do so in light of the information gained from its review of the agencies' responses to OMB's Memorandum M-98-10.
Response: Under the FAIR Act, the agency head makes the determination of which activities are to be excluded from the Commercial Activities Inventory because they are "inherently Governmental", as defined by the Act and existing guidance. Part of OMB's review of the agencies' submissions will be to review these judgments, and to consult with the agencies on them.
Response: All activities of the Federal Government that "are not inherently Governmental" are to be inventoried under the FAIR Act. This requirement is not limited to civilian employees. Accordingly, military personnel performing commercial activities are subject to the FAIR Act and must be inventoried. For clarity, the data element FTE described in Appendix 2, paragraph "C" has been clarified to include "authorized full-time employees or FTE (as applicable)."
Response: Executive Order 12871 does apply. Agencies should seek employee input in the development of the Commercial Activities Inventory, as appropriate, and the guidance has been revised to say so. It remains up to the agency head to make the determination whether a function is commercial or inherently Governmental in nature. The FAIR Act also provides that Federal employees and their representatives are "interested parties" who may challenge the contents of the inventory.
2. OMB's Review of the Commercial Activities Inventory and the Availability of the Inventories to the Public
Response: OMB intends to complete its review and consultation in a timely manner. Since this is a new process, OMB cannot set a firm timetable at this time. However, it is anticipated that the review and consultation should take about 60 days after OMB receives the agency inventory and any requested supplemental information. The notice of the inventory's public availability would be published within a few days thereafter.
Response: In accordance with Section 2(c) of the FAIR Act, OMB will publish a notice in the Federal Register when the inventories are available to the public (after the completion of OMB's review-and-consultation). The FAIR Act and the revised Handbook require each agency to make its inventory available to the public, which, of course, includes its employees and their representatives.
3. "Competition" and "Cost Comparison" Provisions
Response: The FAIR Act does not provide a definition of the phrase "reasonable time." OMB believes that agencies should conduct such review in conjunction with their larger ongoing review of all functions for possible re-engineering, privatization, consolidation or other reinvention under the NPR and the Government Performance and Results Act. As part of its ongoing oversight of agency management of commercial activities performance, OMB will now require agencies to provide annual reports to OMB on the FAIR Act process, including their review and use of the Commercial Activities Inventory.
Response: The FAIR Act inventory provides information that can assist the agency in considering a wide variety of options for how to satisfy its commercial activity needs that are performed by Federal employees. These options include both the possibility of the private sector fulfilling the need (through such actions as direct conversion, competition, and privatization), as well as continued agency reliance on Federal employees (with, perhaps, improvements that can flow from process changes suggested in the competition).
Response: The FAIR Act envisions the use of competition to select a source when an agency considers contracting with a private sector source for performance of an activity on the list, but the law did not modify existing policies regarding the conduct of competitions. Existing guidance provides guidelines for determining when cost comparisons are required and, if required, how they are conducted.
Response: The FAIR Act addresses only inventories of commercial activities that are performed by Federal employees. It does not address commercial activities that are performed through contract and, therefore, does not address the conversion of contract work to in-house performance.
Response: Existing guidance already requires agencies, in conducting cost comparisons, to consider all the fair and reasonable costs addressed in Section 2(e) of the FAIR Act. (See 64 FR 10032). The Supplemental Handbook requires consideration of all costs to the taxpayer that could be expected to change as a result of a conversion to or from performance by in-house or contract employees.
Response: Existing guidance is not limited to "cost-only competitions." It also allows for best value tradeoffs between cost and other factors. The competitive-source selection process outlined at Part 1, Chapter 3, paragraph H of the Supplemental Handbook permits use of the best value source selection approach in the context of public-private competition.
4. The FAIR Act "Challenge" Process
Response: The requested procedures would go far beyond the FAIR Act. In addition, since Section 3 provides the agency head with 10 days to decide an appeal, there is not sufficient time for the agency to solicit, receive, and consider public comments.
5. Implementing the FAIR Act Via Revisions to A-76 & the Supplemental Handbook
Comment: A number of commenters suggested that OMB use an alternative vehicle to implement the FAIR Act guidance, such as issuing regulations or a separate circular, rather than making changes to the existing guidance on the performance of commercial activities contained in OMB Circular A-76 and its Supplemental Handbook.
Response: Circulars are a well-established vehicle for directing agencies on management of their activities. Circular A-76 already establishes the broad principles and the Revised Supplemental Handbook provides the specific definitions and direction on management of commercial activities, including the inventory and other activities that are codified by the FAIR Act. For this reason, it makes much more sense to revise the existing guidance than to develop a new circular. More importantly, however, OMB wanted to provide the agencies with prompt and clear guidance on how to implement the Act within the short time frame available and without confusion or wasted effort on the part of the agencies. Without revising the Handbook to conform to the FAIR Act, repetitive and competing guidance would exist in a number of areas. For example, the Handbook already requires agencies to develop an annual inventory of their commercial activities and specifies what information (data elements) is to be included. It also contains guidance for when and how agencies are to conduct cost comparisons and what costs should be included. These are all specific areas addressed by the FAIR Act. Ironically, the confusion that could result from issuing a new circular might slow agencies down rather than speeding them up.
Revising the Circular and Supplemental Handbook so that they conform to the FAIR Act is the best way to provide agencies with clear and prompt guidance on how to implement the Act.
The Budget Legislative Information Management Reform/GPRA Grants Management Financial Management Procurement Policy Information & Regulatory Policy Contact the White House Web Master