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HR 4089 97th Congress House Government Operations and Politics Civil service compensation Civil service employment Conflict of interests Congress and Congressmen Congressional oversight Economics and Public Finance Federal employees and officials Freedom of information Government consultants Government contractors Government procurement Government publicity Government records, documents, and information Government service contracts Information services Public Contracts, Procurement, and Property Public records Rating of employees Rating of executives

Consulting Reform and Disclosure Act of 1981

Introduced: July 9, 1981 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 11 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
May 11, 1982
Subcommittee Hearings Held.
May 6, 1982
Subcommittee Hearings Held.
Mar 30, 1982
Unfavorable Executive Comment Received From OPM.
Sep 21, 1981
Favorable Executive Comment Received From GAO.
Aug 11, 1981
Executive Comment Requested from DOD, GAO, OMB, OPM.
Jul 23, 1981
Referred to Subcommittee on Human Resources.
Jul 21, 1981
Referred to Subcommittee on Legislation and National Security.
Jul 21, 1981
Executive Comment Requested from OMB, GSA, OPM, Commerce, DOE, DOT, EPA, GAO, DOD, Education, HHS.
Jul 9, 1981
Referred to House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service.
Jul 9, 1981
Referred to House Committee on Government Operations.
Jul 9, 1981
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Consulting Reform and Disclosure Act of 1981 - Title I: Appointments - Permits the head of a Federal agency (excluding the General Accounting Office) to appoint and fix the compensation of experts or consultants for temporary or intermittent services, rather than to procure such services by contract.

Establishes the pay rate for GS-18 as the maximum pay rate for experts and consultants for all agencies.

Directs the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to prescribe regulations governing the employment of experts and consultants by Federal agencies. Requires each agency: (1) to report periodically to OPM the number of days each consultant or expert is employed and the amount each individual is paid; and (2) to count such individuals as fractions of persons (depending on the number of hours they are employed) in administering any personnel ceiling. Prohibits an agency from initiating any action to obtain consultant or expert services by contract unless it has been certified that all reasonable steps have been taken to obtain such services by appointment.

Title II: Contracts - Requires each Federal agency to transmit: (1) to the Secretary of Commerce for publication in the "Commerce Business Daily" a notice describing any proposed contract for consulting services, management and professional services, or a special study or analysis (service contract) expected to result in an award exceeding $10,000; and (2) to the agency Inspector General a notice describing and justifying any contract modification which increases the cost by $25,000 or more.

Requires that any report prepared pursuant to a service contract and any agency report derived from such report disclose specified information concerning the contract and contractor.

Directs each agency to prepare and maintain in its files an evaluation of the performance of the contractor for each service contract exceeding $50,000.

Requires any contractor and any consultant or subcontractor thereof to include with any service contract proposal or modification submitted to the Department of Energy, the Department of Transportation, or the Environmental Protection Agency within three years after enactment of this Act or to any agency thereafter a statement disclosing any past, present, or future work-related interest of the contractor which may bias the contractor's judgement or provide the contractor an unfair competitive advantage. Directs the head of each such agency to designate an office to evaluate such statements.

Declares that if the office determines that a conflict of interest exists, the agency head shall: (1) disqualify the contractor of the consultant or subcontractor from eligibility for award of the proposed contract; (2) modify the proposed contract to eliminate such conflict; (3) include in the agency records and transmit to Congress a statement concerning such conflict if the contract services can be obtained from no other person; (4) terminate the existing contract; or (5) modify the existing contract to mitigate the conflict and report to Congress if termination is not in the best interest of the Government.

Directs each agency to include with its request for appropriations each year a statement identifying amounts requested for: (1) the procurement of consulting and professional services and special studies; (2) the procurement of other services; and (3) all other procurement activities. Requires the annual budget transmitted by the President to Congress to include such requests for each agency, each agency's estimated outlays for such procurement, and a statement justifying such requests and outlays.

Directs the Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy to establish a data system for the collection of information regarding all contracts of each agency. Requires the Administrator to make quarterly and annual reports to Congress on the information in the system on each agency.

Requires each agency to: (1) compile quarterly a list of all contracts entered into by the agency in the last year and a list of all uncompleted contracts; (2) maintain a written justification of the need of each service contract; and (3) make such lists and statements available to the public.

Declares that all contracts, excluding classified contracts, shall be considered public information.

Directs an agency to consider an employee's compliance with agency rules and procedures applicable to contracting functions when: (1) evaluating the performance of a member of the Senior Executive Service; and (2) determining any pay increase for a supervisor or manager under the merit pay system.

What's happening now May 11, 1982

Subcommittee Hearings Held.

 Committees of jurisdiction 4