Buying in urgent or emergency situations – procurement laws and regulations allow for it. But risk averse agencies and contracting officers are often stuck at times like these. For some advice on how the Stafford Act and related declarations can help, Federal Drive with Tom Temin turned to Smith Pachter McWhorter member attorney Edmund Amorosi.
Courts, Boards, & GAO
Trending Now
Who Needs Privity? Subcontractor Survives Jurisdictional Challenge Through Prime Sponsorship of Its Claim • GAO Reaffirms that Proposals Without a Realistic Chance of Award Do Not Belong in the Competitive Range • Protests are Starting to Test the Limits of Procurement Speed • A Judge Ruled that SBA Mishandled the ATI Case. But the Company Remains Suspended. • Anthropic and Iran – the Government Contracting State of Play
Procurement Rules Can Trip Up Agencies in Emergencies, But Permissions Exist
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