Working around OASIS' lack of BPAs
Federal customers can't use a blanket purchase agreement with OASIS, but they can use task orders to accomplish the same thing.
The General Services Administration has told federal buyers they can't use blanket purchase agreements for its One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services (OASIS) contract, but the contract's manager said there is an alternative technique for accomplishing BPA-like tasks under the $6 billion procurement vehicle.
Last May, GSA made 225 awards to 74 vendors under its multiple-award professional services contract. Through OASIS and its sister contract, OASIS Small Business, federal agencies can shop for management consulting, program management, financial management, engineering and scientific services. The contracts are broken up into pools of providers. OASIS SB's 123 small businesses are divided into eight groups according to their size and annual revenue, and the main OASIS vehicle has 74 companies spread across six pools, divided by service type.
In a Jan. 7 post on the OASIS Interact Community website, Program Director Jim Ghiloni offered advice on what he said is one of the most common questions he gets about the contract -- whether federal customers can write a BPA against OASIS.
"One reason customers set up BPAs is that there is uncertainty about some aspect of their requirement: delivery date, quantity, funds availability, etc.," he wrote. "The BPA construct allows the customer flexibility in when they place specific orders. These types of uncertainties can be accommodated on an OASIS task order using a combination of optional tasks and incremental funding."
Technically, he noted that federal customers can't use a BPA under OASIS. However, they can use an OASIS task order to accomplish the same thing, he said.
"These types of uncertainties can be accommodated on an OASIS task order using a combination of optional tasks and incremental funding," he said. "The key to task order competition is to provide potential offerors with enough information to make a reasonable estimate as to what is required of them, so that they can devise a realistic proposal."
Ghiloni said task orders written to include mandatory and optional tasks give OASIS contractors a better understanding of what is definitely funded and required, as well as other tasks that might come up during the period of performance. Providing additional information about the likelihood of optional tasks and the potential time frames involved will also help the contractors prepare realistic proposals, he added.
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