First of all, thank you for inviting me to participate. It's really an honour and a privilege to be able to discuss small business procurement and what we're doing here and how we've looked at things from inception to where we are now. I only want to give some brief opening remarks with a little bit of history and also how we approach small business procurements. So thank you again.
I am Joseph Jordan. I'm the associate administrator, government contracting and business development, here at the U.S. Small Business Administration.
As spending across the U.S. government has increased over the past several years, the dollars going to small businesses have also risen. In fiscal year 2000, small businesses received $44 billion in contracts out of the $200 billion in total federal government contracts. In fiscal year 2007, that number has grown to $88 billion out of the $400 billion total. The SBA is working very hard to see that number increase even more in the future.
One note before we go further is that your invitation had mentioned both small and medium-sized entities. The U.S. government doesn't recognize specifically medium-sized firms. We create size thresholds for small businesses, but consider every other entity to be other than small. That's one small point I wanted to clarify up front.
To quickly outline and explain the history of the SBA, I want to talk a little bit about our goals and objectives and how things are structured.
The SBA was established in the 1950s to shore up the U.S. industrial base for both national security and economic reasons. One of the key methods was to ensure that small businesses were given a fair share of access to government contracts. Over the last five decades, as government spending has increased dramatically, small business participation in government contracting and ensuring their participation is even more crucial.
In the area of procurement, having a single government entity devoted to small business is extremely important. The government has a single source for policies relating to defining the size of small businesses, what fair participation is, and certifying that certain firms in socio-economic categories do in fact belong in those categories.
The SBA has the standing to talk directly to other federal agencies about their procurement practices, and the ability to get White House involvement if there are any disagreements. The policy of the U.S. government is that small businesses should have the maximum practicable opportunity for government contracts. It is SBA's mission to foster that environment and ensure that small businesses are receiving their fair share of government contracts.
The SBA office of government contracting works to achieve those goals in five ways: first, working with other federal agencies to ensure that their policies and procedures take small business concerns into account; second, working directly with small businesses on education and training to increase their marketability as government contractors; third, educating small business and government agencies on how best to work together; fourth, utilizing technology to foster and streamline these relationships; and fifth, promoting transparency within our programs and our data.
A few of the areas I mentioned overlap, and I want to quickly detail them in my following comments.
There are several ways in which we work with the other federal agencies. First of all, in terms of creating goals for small business participation in federal contracting, the federal government has statutory goals for small business participation: achievements measured in the percentage of dollars spent by the government. The government-wide goal for small business dollars is 23%, with several sub-goals for certain socio-economic categories. The Small Business Administration is responsible for negotiating these individual goals with each agency, keeping the statutory government-wide goals in mind. Results of each agency's small business spending are reported every year in the Small Business Goaling Report, which is released to Congress and the public.
We also have a score card. The SBA produces an annual small business procurement score card, based on the government's small business achievement. Each agency is assigned a score, such as red, yellow, green, or a numerical score based on whether or not they met their individual small business and socio-economic goals. Agencies are also assigned a progress goal and given some credit for improving their achievement, even if they didn't fully achieve the ultimate goal.
SBA is also the single authority within the government for determining size standards for small businesses. There is a staff within the office of government contracting solely dedicated to monitoring and analyzing industry trends to determine the proper threshold for a small business in each of the North American industry classification system, or NAICS, codes.
This is the only entity within the U.S. federal government that defines the size of a company. There is no designation, as I said, for medium or large firms. A company is either small or other than small.
We also have procurement centre representatives, or PCRs as we call them. These procurement centre representatives are individuals who are placed within buying activities and are responsible for reviewing procurements to ensure that unjustified contract bundling is not happening, and that small businesses have maximum opportunities for contracts, both prime contracts and subcontracts.
The SBA handles company protests and determines whether a particular business qualifies as a small business or as a service-disabled veteran-owned small business, under the existing standards set forth in the Code of Federal Regulations, when an interested party protests the size status of a business responding to a government solicitation that's either a small business set-aside or a service-disabled veteran-owned set-aside. And I can go into the different socio-economic programs more, at your request later.
We also have a natural resources sales assistance program. The U.S. federal government sells large quantities of natural resources and surplus real and personal property authorized for sale in accordance with public law. The SBA cooperates with other federal agencies to channel a fair share of this property and these resources to small businesses.
The SBA also works directly with small businesses to make sure they are aware of contract opportunities and they are ready to compete for them. Through SBA's vast network of field offices and resource partners, we are able to educate numerous small businesses about the opportunities in federal procurement. Many small businesses outside of the national capital region are not as aware of how much the government is spending and that they could sell their products or services to the government.
Through that same network, SBA is also able to conduct training sessions for small businesses on topics ranging from how to market yourself to the government to how to find procurements in your industry or how to win additional work. Commercial marketing representatives, or CMRs, are SBA individuals who work with the largest prime contractors to assist them in achieving the various small business goals in their subcontracting plans. They also work with small businesses to match the small businesses' capabilities with the prime contractors' needs to create these subcontracting plans.
We also heavily utilize technology to achieve our small business objectives. The integrated acquisition environment, or IAE, is a network of several IT systems related to procurement. The government puts nearly all procurement information online now through a collection of these inter-agency systems. Everything from the original bid solicitation to vendor information to the details of the actual award is online and searchable, and the SBA is an active participant in the governance and maintenance of all these systems.
All solicitations are posted to the Federal Business Opportunities website, and any vendor is able to search by agency or type of work or other criteria to see what contracts are out there they should be competing for.
All vendors must be registered in the central contractor registry to obtain federal procurements. This system includes SBA's dynamic small business search and has all the relevant socio-economic and size standard information so the agencies can find the small businesses that can provide the goods and services they need. We also report out the information through the federal procurement data system once a procurement award is made.
Transparency is another issue that's very important. All the systems I mentioned above are available free of charge to the public, and they're all searchable, though some require pre-registration.
There has been heightened attention to procurement integrity in recent years, particularly due to the increased access to all the information in the systems I mentioned above. The press and the public have vastly more information about federal spending than they ever did before, and many more questions are being asked and more accountability demanded as a result. Increased transparency and accountability is good news for small businesses, as most of the public agrees that small businesses should get a fair share of federal spending.
Increased transparency has also increased vendors' ability to do business with the government. Vendors are able to constantly view solicitations and awards occurring in their industry, the press is able to review trends or spot inconsistencies in practices, and the public is able to see how taxpayer dollars are being spent. If a vendor does not win an award, they can seek a debriefing with the agency and have the selection committee go through their proposal with them, pointing to areas that can be strengthened or where a mark was missed.
Anecdotally, we've heard from small businesses that this process, while perhaps not pleasant, is very useful in learning how to do better next time.
I know that was a lot of information. That does conclude my opening remarks. I want to thank you again for the opportunity to speak before you all today, and I welcome any questions you may have.