SDVOB: Why Fraud Makes Good Business Sense
Amidst the discoveries of fraud in the government procurement program for disabled vets, we ask ourselves…why? Why do companies lie about their qualifications to gain government contracts?
When there are no penalties for defrauding the American public, it makes sense to pretend your company deserves the SDVOB set-asides.
Here’s the thinking:
IF we win the contract (and we have as good a chance if not better than deserving SDVOB), we proceed as normal with the contract terms. IF we submit false credentials and our lies are somehow uncovered, there are NO consequences! – and we can:
(1) keep the contract we scalped from SDVOB. We know that government procurement is a busy, frantic process. Under deadline pressure, contracting officers want bids and awards to go smoothly — so contracting officers would rather do it quickly than fully investigate bidders.
(2) we can still bid on future government contracts.
(3) we can still bid on set-asides we really aren’t eligible for.
What’s the deal here? Businesses that win SDVOB contracts through fraud are doing the right thing for their business. Let’s face it. Business involves risk.
Calculated risk, and safe risk is good risk.
So why not falsify? Why not say you were injured in the military? It gives an edge—the battleaxe of business is the edge you have—or the edge you can get. It’s pure Machiavellian – “the end justifies the means.” Or the Vince Lombardi axiom: “Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.”
Not a bad thing, eh? The government won’t find out unless a protest is filed. And struggling SDVOB don’t have time to protest—they’re gunning for other contracts. And if it couldn’t get any better for those who lie—it does…no one gets charged with anything—no perjury, no nothing. The absolute ONLY way fraud is discovered is if the contract award is protested, ..and that ain’t gonna happen. Not bad for scamming businesses, eh?”
The only punishment for doing this involves CVE—the office within the VA that certifies SDVOB. But CVE only applies to businesses that do business with the VA. CVE will ‘debar’ a company that is caught falsifying credentials. This means CVE will take the fraudulent business out of the VA’s database of SDVOB. That’s the beauty of self-certification. So what if a company is ‘debarred from as an SVDOB within the VA? They can still bid on other government contracts, and they probably will get consideration for SDVOB set-aside awards.
A shady company is smart to bid with false credentials because self-certification is toothless. There are simply no consequences for lying.
In the SDVOB set-aside self-certification program, there is never a fine—ever.
It’s a wise business risk to falsify, not so much for SDVOB.~~
Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=28227
Posted by Hardy Stone on Apr 23 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Business. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Veterans Today. Veterans Today said: Veterans Today: SDVOB: Why Fraud Makes Good Business Sense http://bit.ly/ck8oy1 [...]
Hardy,
I commend your efforts to promote the creation of ‘consequences’ for misrepresentation of size or status to get reserved contracts. What is also needed is to create ‘consequences’ for the Agencies who misreport their contracting results to appear as if they are meeting their statutory and socio-economic goals.
We urge you to publicize similar efforts as detailed below on the link:
http://bit.ly/contracting_transparency_needed
Our Think Tank at UNF is recommending the elimination of the procurement barriers that have created a ‘dysfunctional procurement culture’ to prevent SDB from accessing contracts. Here’s more:
http://bit.ly/dysfunctional_culture
Keep up the good work,
Raul Espinosa, Founder
Fairness in Procurement Alliance (FPA)
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