This subpart prescribes uniform reporting requirements for the Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS).
4.601 Record requirements.
(a) Each executive agency shall establish and maintain for a period of 5 years a computer file, by fiscal year, containing unclassified records of all procurements exceeding $25,000.
(b) With respect to each procurement carried out using competitive procedures, agencies shall be able to access from the computer file, as a minimum, the following information:
(1) The date of contract award.
(2) Information identifying the source to whom the contract was awarded.
(3) The property or services obtained by the Government under the procurement.
(4) The total cost of the procurement.
(5) Those procurements which result in the submission of a single bid or proposal so that they can be separately categorized and designated noncompetitive procurements using competitive procedures.
(c) In addition to paragraph (b) of this section with respect to each procurement carried out using procedures other than competitive procedures, agencies shall be able to access from the computer file-
(1) The reason under Subpart 6.3 for the use of such procedures; and
(2) The identity of the organization or activity which conducted the procurement.
(d) In addition to the information described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, for procurements in excess of $25,000, agencies shall be able to access information on the following from the computer file:
(1) Awards to small disadvantaged businesses using either set-asides or full and open competition.
(2) Awards to business concerns owned and controlled by women.
(3) The number of offers received in response to a solicitation.
(4) Task or delivery order contracts.
(5) Contracts for the acquisition of commercial items.
(e) In addition to the information described in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section, agencies must be able to access information from the computer file to identify bundled contracts with a total contract value, including all options, exceeding $5,000,000.
(f) Agencies must transmit this information to the Federal Procurement Data System in accordance with its procedures.
4.602 Federal Procurement Data System.
(a) The FPDS provides a comprehensive mechanism for assembling, organizing, and presenting contract placement data for the Federal Government. Federal agencies report data to the Federal Procurement Data Center (FPDC), which collects, processes, and disseminates official statistical data on Federal contracting. The data provide-
(1) A basis for recurring and special reports to the President, the Congress, the General Accounting Office, Federal executive agencies, and the general public;
(2) A means of measuring and assessing the impact of Federal contracting on the Nation's economy and the extent to which small, veteran-owned small, service-disabled veteran-owned small, HUBZone small, small disadvantaged, and women-owned small business concerns are sharing in Federal contracts; and
(3) Data for other policy and management control purposes.
(b) The FPDS Reporting Manual provides a complete list of reporting and nonreporting agencies and organizations. This manual (available at no charge from the-
General Services Administration Federal Procurement Data Center 7th & D Streets, SW Room 5652 Washington, DC 20407 Telephone (202) 401-1529 FAX (202) 401-1546)
provides the necessary instruction to the data collection point in each agency as to what data are required and how often to provide the data.
(c) Data collection points in each agency report data on SF 279, Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS)- Individual Contract Action Report, and SF 281, Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS)-Summary Contract Action Report ($25,000 or Less), or computer-generated equivalent. Although the SF 279 and SF 281 are not mandatory for use by the agencies, they do provide the mandatory format for submitting data to the FPDS.
(d) The contracting officer must report a Contractor Identification Number for each successful offeror. A Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number, which is a nine-digit number assigned by Dun and Bradstreet Information Services to an establishment, is the Contractor Identification Number for Federal contractors. The DUNS number reported must identify the successful offeror's name and address exactly as stated in the offer and resultant contract. The contracting officer must ask the offeror to provide its DUNS number by using the provision prescribed at 4.603(a). If the successful offeror does not provide its number, the contracting officer must contact the offeror and obtain the DUNS number.
4.603 Solicitation provisions.
(a)(1) The contracting officer shall insert the provision at 52.204-6, Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) Number, in solicitations that are expected to result in a requirement for the generation of an SF 279, Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS)-Individual Contract Action Report (see 4.602(c)), or a similar agency form.
(2) For offerors located outside the United States, the contracting officer may modify paragraph (c) of the provision at 52.204-6 to provide the correct phone numbers for the Dun & Bradstreet offices in the areas from which offerors are anticipated to respond.
(b) The contracting officer shall insert the provision at 52.204-5, Women-Owned Business (Other Than Small Business), in all solicitations that are not set aside for small business concerns and that exceed the simplified acquisition threshold, if the contract is to be performed inside the United States, its territories or possessions, Puerto Rico, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, or the District of Columbia.