Another Voice in the Wilderness

Monday, 13 August 2012 00:00 Nick Sanders
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He said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Isaiah.” – John 1:23, King James 2000 Translation

Well, we were lucky enough to make the acquaintance of the owner of a small business who not only has had significant “lessons learned” about dealing with DCAA and DCMA, but has blogged about the company’s travails. The blog is called “Small Business Government Contracting: Adventures in Dealing with DCMA, DCAA, and Other Government Bureaucrats.” From the first post, we were hooked: it’s a must-read.

We had never heard of Quimba Software before we received an e-mail from a company executive, but maybe we should have—these Quimba folks are no strangers to disputes with the Department of Defense. This ASBCA decision sheds some light on why the Quimba folks are so passionate in their contempt for the DOD bureaucracy that, in their view, has wronged them.

It’s a short and to-the-point decision. Quimba received a Contracting Officer’s Final Decision (CoFD) disallowing certain deferred executive compensation costs. Quimba filed an appeal, but did so on the 91st day after receipt of the CoFD. Unfortunately for Quimba, the ASBCA Judges strictly enforced its 90-day appeal period, and dismissed Quimba’s appeal without hearing any arguments on the merits. End of discussion.

It may sound harsh, but that’s the way the government contracting game is played. What seems unfair to one party (Quimba) seems perfectly fair to the other party (the United States). The United States, the Sovereign, consents to be sued, but only within strictly enforced circumstances. If you fail to follow the playbook, you lose the game.

Now, we could take off on a rant here ourselves. We could rail that treating the US Federal government as “sovereign” is a hold-over from English jurisprudence. The English had a Sovereign, but we fought a revolution in order to rid ourselves of that concept of governance. Treating the Federal government as a “sovereign” perpetuates an anachronistic system that has no place in freedom-loving America. But that kind of ranting does no good in this context, since Quimba (and all other government contractors) consent to this treatment when they execute their contracts and accept the government’s money.

Sure the game is rigged, but if you don’t bet you can’t win.

So with that background, let’s start quoting some of Quimba’s “lessons learned”—clearly published with the intent of warning other small businesses about the landmines that Quimba tripped in its dealings with the Department of Defense.

About DCAA:

About DCMA:

Well, we here at Apogee Consulting, Inc. feel Quimba’s pain. The Quimba folks are expressing the frustration that many of us feel, all too often. Let’s keep in mind that Quimba was awarded an SBIR Phase 2 contract, so it (theoretically) had something that the DOD was interested in obtaining. But no that’s not going to be happening.

So in this story, there are no winners—only losers. Quimba is (quite possibly) out lots of money—and, even if the company ultimately prevails at the Court of Federal Claims, they are out quite a lot of attorney fees. The Defense Department loses out on some promising software. And we, the taxpayers, lose out because our taxes are going to a contract dispute that should be easily solved—if anybody cared to negotiate.