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Current as of October 02, 2022 | Updated by FindLaw Staff
Within 15 business days (or a longer period agreed to by the SBA and the contracting agency) after receiving a notice that a small business concern lacks certain elements of responsibility, the SBA Area Office will take the following actions:
(a) Inform the small business concern of the contracting officer's determination and offer it an opportunity to apply to the SBA for a COC. (A concern wishing to apply for a COC should notify the SBA Area Office serving the geographical area in which the headquarters of the offeror is located.)
(b) Upon timely receipt of a complete and acceptable application, elect to visit the applicant's facility to review its responsibility.
(1) The COC review process is not limited to the areas of nonresponsibility cited by the contracting officer.
(2) The SBA may, at its discretion, independently evaluate the COC applicant for all elements of responsibility, but may presume responsibility exists as to elements other than those cited as deficient.
(c) Consider denying a COC for reasons of nonresponsibility not originally cited by the contracting officer.
(d) When the Area Director determines that a COC is warranted (for contracts valued at $25,000,000 or less), notify the contracting officer and provide the following options:
(1) Accept the Area Director's decision to issue a COC and award the contract to the concern. The COC issuance letter will then be sent, including as an attachment a detailed rationale for the decision; or
(2) Ask the Area Director to suspend the case for one or more of the following purposes:
(i) To permit the SBA to forward a detailed rationale for the decision to the contracting officer for review within a specified period of time.
(ii) To afford the contracting officer the opportunity to meet with the Area Office to review all documentation contained in the case file and to attempt to resolve any issues.
(iii) To submit any information to the SBA Area Office that the contracting officer believes the SBA did not consider (at which time the SBA Area Office will establish a new suspense date mutually agreeable to the contracting officer and the SBA).
(iv) To permit resolution of an appeal by the contracting agency to SBA Headquarters under 19.602–3. However, there is no contracting officer's appeal when the Area Office proposes to issue a COC valued at $100,000 or less.
(e) At the completion of the process, notify the concern and the contracting officer that the COC is denied or is being issued.
(f) Refer recommendations for issuing a COC on contracts greater than $25,000,000 to SBA Headquarters.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Code of Federal Regulations Title 48. Federal Acquisition Regulations System 48.19.602-2 Issuing or denying a Certificate of Competency (COC) - last updated October 02, 2022 | https://codes.findlaw.com/cfr/title-48-federal-acquisition-regulations-system/cfr-48-19-602-2/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature or via Westlaw before relying on it for your legal needs.
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