Government Acquisition in COVID-19 Crisis

4 Steps Acquisitions Leaders Can Take to Support their Agency and their Workforce

As the Federal government moves into its “new normal” of responding to and rebuilding from COVID-19, the acquisition workforce will be in more demand than ever. Agency programs will need their acquisition colleagues to rapidly solicit and award innovative new contracts while ensuring contracts for the sustainment of program missions are recompeted. This will all need to be done while most professionals work from home.

As acquisition leaders plan their organizational strategy to address these challenges, Censeo recommends focusing on four priorities.

1. Expand Supply Base for Critical Products and Services

As the Federal government ramps up its response and recovery efforts, it will need to find new and innovative vendors to supply medical devices and personal protective equipment (PPE). We are advising our clients to:

2. Ensure the Integrity of the Existing Supply Base

40% of Federal discretional budget (over $900B per year) goes to contractors. The majority of money is spent on highly skilled professionals and companies that specialize in meeting the unique needs of the Federal government. It takes years, if not decades, to build this expertise, and if these individuals and organizations exit the market they will not be easy to replace. Therefore, its essential agencies support their current contractors to ensure their goods and services are available throughout, and after, the crisis. Specifically, we recommend that agencies:

3. Maintain Strong Management of Current Contracts

Most Federal contracts can be executed during the COVID-19 crisis, albeit with some disruptions. For example, much of the $70B agencies spend on professional services can be delivered using a remote / work from home model. it is incumbent on Federal personnel to continue providing oversight of those contracts.

Federal acquisition leaders should issue guidance to their agencies on how performance management can be modified in the current work environment. For example, professional services contractors are often managed via a weekly status meeting. If this is no longer feasible due to telework arrangements or shifted work schedules, those contracts could be managed through formal written status updates.

Additionally, in a typical year more than 30% of contract recompetitions happen in the fiscal 4th quarter. Agencies should triage these planned recompetitions and identify which contracts could be extended to the first quarter of FY21. Contracts for the provision of commodity products or low-complexity administrative support services are prime candidates for extensions. These contracts, while important for sustaining agency operations, are well suited for bridge extensions as agencies typically have robust mechanisms in place to ensure cost and quality control. Putting these bridges in place now will help ensure the contracting workforce can focus on COVID-19 related contracts without negatively impacting other aspect of agency operations.

4. Establish Procedures to Address Long-Term Telework of the Acquisition Workforce

Leaders should put tools and procedures in place to support the acquisition workforce with the assumption that social distancing and telework guidelines will remain in place through the busy summer contracting season. Specifically, acquisition organizations should develop strategies for:

By quickly establishing long-term teleworking policies for the acquisition workforce, agencies can enable their staff to quickly acquire urgent supplies for the COVID-19 crisis – time sensitive and critical acquisition of ventilators, PPE, and medical supplies. Once the health crisis is being dealt with, acquisition professionals have a variety of options when it comes to helping contractors manage the economic fallout from coronavirus, including making modifications to current on-site delivery work that can be reasonably performed in teleworking delivery models, allowing for flexible delivery timelines, and extending contracts for commodity goods and services. By doing so, the acquisition workforce can prepare itself to not only respond to the new demands and challenges of COVID-19 but be well-positioned as a large percentage of contract recompetitions and new requirements increase in the federal 4th fiscal quarter.