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Statement for the Record Hearing on H.R. 3534, the Security in Bonding Act of 2011 March 5, 2012 before Subcommittee on Courts, Commercial and Administrative Law Committee on the Judiciary U.S. House of Representatives AMERICAN SUBCONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION, INC. 1004 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3588 Phone: (703) 684-3450 Fax: (703) 836-3482 E-mail: ASAOffice@asa-hq.com Web: www.asaonline.com

Chairman Coble, Ranking Member Cohen, and Members of the Subcommittee, the American Subcontractors Association, Inc. (ASA) expresses its strong support for H.R. 3534, the Security in Bonding Act of 2011. ASA is a national trade association representing subcontractors, specialty trade contractors, and suppliers in the construction industry. ASA members work in virtually all of the construction trades and on virtually every type of horizontal and vertical construction. ASA members frequently contract directly with the Federal Government. More often, they serve as subcontractors dealing with the Federal Government through a prime contractor. More than 60 percent of ASA members are small businesses. Congressional action with regard to specifying surety bonds on Federal construction contracts is not new. The first statute was enacted by Congress in 1894. The current statute, the Miller Act, was first enacted in 1935. The statement on behalf of the National Association of Surety Bond Producers (NASBP) provides the historical context of the Miller Act and a full explanation of the types and purposes of the surety bonds required by the Miller Act. The required bid bond and performance bond protect the Government, as steward of the taxpayers money. The required payment bond provides payment protection, of last resort, for the subcontractors and suppliers who have performed their obligations in furtherance of a Federal construction contract. ASA s Statement for the Record focuses exclusively on the importance of the payment bond and how payment bonds provided by individual sureties are essentially worthless, unless the pledged assets are real, adequate in amount, and readily available to meet the legitimate payment claims of the myriad subcontractors and suppliers performing on a typical modern Federal construction contract. The statement of Bob Little provides the Subcommittee a comprehensive overview of the participation of individual sureties in Federal construction since the 1980s and the practical challenges faced by Federal contracting officers under the existing regulatory framework. Mr. Little speaks with great authority as a renowned contracting professional who spent his career in public service, most notably his many years with Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC), a major buyer of construction within the Department of Defense. ASA participated actively in the various regulatory efforts to assure that the payment bonds furnished by individual sureties actually provide the real payment protections for subcontractors and suppliers intended by the statutory mandate of the Miller Act. The use, and abuse, of individual sureties have tended to be episodic in nature. Unfortunately, the construction industry, and especially small subcontractors and suppliers, are currently facing another sustained episode. The potential for inadequate or worthless payment bonds to be furnished by individual sureties has been exacerbated by the advent of increasingly convoluted forms of financial instruments and 1

the sustained overload of responsibilities that currently are being required of a deeply understaffed corps of Federal contracting officers and supporting acquisition professionals. The current coverage of the Government-wide Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Subpart 28.2 (Sureties and Other Security for Bonds) provides the contracting officer very solid guidance, but implementation can be compromised by severe challenges, especially if the individual surety is determined and skilled in gaming the system. The core challenge for the contracting officer relates to assessing the assets being pledged by the individual surety in support of the surety bonds being furnished to the Government. Do the assets being pledged actually exist? What is the real value of the pledged assets? Can the pledged asset, although real and properly valued, be readily liquidated? Claims against a payment bond under the Miller Act are generally paid in cash, not, for example, timber available to be harvested for milling. By training and experience, even the most seasoned contracting officer in the acquisition of construction is likely at a distinct disadvantage in making these determinations with regard to the broad array of assets acceptable under FAR Part 28.203-2. The challenge is presented not only with regard to real property and raw commodities, often in locations remote from the contracting officer s location, but also by increasingly opaque forms of secure financial instruments. The determined individual surety has the ability to mount a focused and lengthy effort to get the contracting officer to accept the proffered assets. Today, the typical contracting officer has too many contract award and contract administration actions on-going simultaneously and too few supporting staff resources. To get forward motion on the award of a particular construction contract for the benefit of the ultimate Federal user, the contracting officer may be willing to acquiesce, especially if the exposure to the Government is relatively small due to the small likely contract award value of the contract, especially in this era of contracts valued in hundreds of millions of dollars, if not billions. A payment bond from an individual surety providing only illusory protection can, however, easily result in a catastrophic loss to a small subcontractor or supplier on that small contract. Given the Government s responsibility as steward of the taxpayers money, as well as the practical limitations of the current FAR-based system for the protection of subcontractors and suppliers, ASA believes that Congress needs to enact remedial legislation to deter those individual sureties who succumb to the temptation to misrepresent the assets being pledged in support of the surety bonds that they are furnishing. H.R. 3435, the Security in Bonding Act of 2011, is such a targeted Congressional intervention. It simply applies to individual sureties the same standards currently 2

permitted by the Miller Act (31 U.S.C. 9303) for a prime contractor choosing to furnish eligible obligations rather than a surety bond. When H.R. 3435 becomes law, Federal contracting officers will be able to have certainty that the assets pledged by an individual surety are real, sufficient in amount, and readily available should any payment claims arise. For ASA, construction subcontractors and suppliers will be able to have confidence that the bonds furnished by the individual surety will provide the payment protection of last resort intended by the Miller Act. In conclusion, ASA would like to offer its observations on the testimony of another witness who asserted that restrictions on surety bonds provided by individual sureties will be detrimental to emerging small business concerns seeking to grow by becoming prime contractors on Federal construction opportunities. She emphasized that small business concerns, owned and controlled by minorities, women, Service-Disabled Veterans and other Veterans will be among the hardest hit. ASA believes that the hard data suggest that small business concerns of all types are more likely to perform as subcontractors and suppliers on today s typical large-scale Federal construction projects. To these small subcontractors and suppliers, at every tier, it is paramount that the Miller Act payment bond required for their protection is actually backed by assets that are real, adequate in amount, and sufficiently liquid to be available to pay a claim for payment of the amounts due to them for the work that they have fully performed. In addition, ASA remains a strong supporter of the programs operated by the Small Business Administration (SBA) to facilitate access to surety bonds issued by corporate sureties that have been vetted and approved by the Department of the Treasury. SBA s Surety Bond Guarantee Program has helped many small business concerns to obtain the surety bonds that they needed to compete for Federal prime contract opportunities in construction. ASA was a major participant in the coalition that supported the legislation sponsored by former Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia that provided a statutory basis for the SBA s Preferred Surety Bond Guarantee Program. The Preferred Surety Bond Guarantee Program substantially broadened the pool of corporate sureties willing to participate in the SBA program assisting yet additional numbers of small business concerns. As noted by another witness, the effectiveness of these SBA Surety Bond Guarantee programs has been diminished by the maximum dollar value of an eligible construction contract. The steady increase in the size of Federal construction contracts and the steady decrease in the overall number of prime contract opportunities have further contributed to the reduced utility of these valuable SBA programs. Unfortunately, in ASA s opinion, since the mid-1990s, these programs have not been accorded the appropriate financial resources in the fierce annual competition for increasingly scarce Federal budgetary resources. Addressing both of these limitations would have diminished the current resurgence in demand for surety bonds from bonding sources of last resort, individual sureties, especially those willing to furnish bonds backed by 3

inadequate or simply mythical assets. Unfortunately, neither of these enhancements to the SBA s Surety Bond Guarantee Programs is within the jurisdiction of the Committee on the Judiciary. Chairman Coble, thank you for so promptly scheduling this legislative hearing. ASA urges equally prompt, and favorable, action by the Full Committee on the Judiciary, under the leadership of Chairman Smith. 4