HOME PAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS, Print Editions, Newsletter PRODUCTS READ THE PETROLEUM NEWS ARCHIVE! ADVERTISING INFORMATION EVENTS PETROLEUM NEWS BAKKEN MINING NEWS

Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry
June 2010

Vol. 15, No. 26 Week of June 27, 2010

Rules tighten for Native corp. contracting

Alaska Native corporations are bracing for changes in rules for federal contracts that fueled their growth.

The Anchorage Daily News reports one change in Defense Department spending restricts no-bid contracts above $20 million.

Sarah Lukin of the Native American Contractors Association in Washington, D.C., says that change is already having a chilling effect.

Some of Alaska’s largest Native corporations — NANA Development, Arctic Slope Regional, Chugach Alaska and Chenega — are defense contractors.

The Small Business Administration also is tightening rules for minority contracts to respond to critics who say they are bad deals for taxpayers. One proposed change would require Native-owned companies to report each year how the federal contracts are benefiting their shareholders.

Oversight tightening

Native-owned firms would still be able to win federal contracts without competition. In an interview June 22, SBA administrator Karen Mills said that the Obama administration supports the minority contracting program but is tightening oversight.

One of the major critics of the program, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, runs a Senate oversight committee that has been investigating Alaska Native corporation participation in the SBA program. McCaskill has said that she believes that a number of Native corporations are too big to qualify as small businesses.

McCaskill was responsible for the change in Defense Department contracting, which came in an amendment to a spending bill.

“This (amendment) came through at the 11th hour,” said Clyde Gooden, vice president for business development at NANA Development Corp., the business arm of Kotzebue-based NANA Regional Corp.

Gooden remains unsure about the amendment’s impact. The Defense Department has agreed to host tribal consultations before drafting new regulations.

—The Associated Press





Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistrubuted.

Petroleum News - Phone: 1-907 522-9469 - Fax: 1-907 522-9583
[email protected] --- http://www.petroleumnews.com ---
S U B S C R I B E

Copyright Petroleum Newspapers of Alaska, LLC (Petroleum News)(PNA)©2013 All rights reserved. The content of this article and web site may not be copied, replaced, distributed, published, displayed or transferred in any form or by any means except with the prior written permission of Petroleum Newspapers of Alaska, LLC (Petroleum News)(PNA). Copyright infringement is a violation of federal law subject to criminal and civil penalties.