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HHS Failure to Screen Obamacare Contract Recipients Cost Taxpayers $400M
Inexcusable, sloppy incompetence that will never be righted!
Excerpt:“It is imperative that CMS conduct comprehensive reviews of companies’ past performance to ensure that it contracts with reliable companies,” the inspector general concluded.
And had they known about that history, CMS might have done a better job of writing the contract to ensure contractors like CGI Federal would pay for cost overruns.
************************* Audit: HHS Failure to Screen Obamacare Contract Recipients Cost Taxpayers $400M by Eric Boehm
An internal investigation into how the federal government awarded contracts for developing and building the Affordable Care Act’s most important public element — the online exchanges that were to be used by millions of Americans to purchase health insurance — has found the process was flawed.
The investigation showed that The Department of Health and Human Services failed to conduct background checks on prior work by companies awarded many of the Obamacare contracts and failed to require those same companies to be accountable for cost overruns, leaving taxpayers on the hook instead. The report published Thursday by the Office of the Inspector General for HHS concludes those mistakes cost taxpayers more than $400 million in unexpected costs — essentially doubling the expected cost of building the exchanges in the first place.
The inspector general examined 60 contracts signed by CMS for the online health insurance site and conducted interviews with “high level” staff at CMS and HHS about the contracting process.
“It is imperative that CMS conduct comprehensive reviews of companies’ past performance to ensure that it contracts with reliable companies,” the inspector general concluded.
And had they known about that history, CMS might have done a better job of writing the contract to ensure contractors like CGI Federal would pay for cost overruns.
Instead, five of six “key contracts” handed out by the department were written on a so-called “cost reimbursement” basis, meaning the government — ultimately, taxpayers — would cover any unexpected expenses.
“CMS’s choice of contract type for certain key contracts resulted in the government shouldering the risk for cost increases,” the inspector general concluded.
Those six contracts were initially supposed to cost $464 million. By early 2014, when the inspector general began his review, the cost had ballooned to more than $820 million.
The contract with CGI Federal tripled during that period, from $58 million to $207 million, the inspector general reported. Only two of those six “key contracts” were reviewed by CMS’ Contract Review Board before they were awarded.
“Although the Federal Marketplace was an unprecedented project with unique challenges, the experience of contracting for the Federal Marketplace has broader implications for Federal contracting,” the inspector general wrote. “The issues raised in this report demonstrate the need for HHS and CMS to make changes to strengthen their contracting processes.”
Ellen Murray, assistant secretary for financial resources for CMS, wrote that both HHS and CMS were working to implement changes based on the inspector general’s findings.
“CMS is enforcing a strict governance structure for contracts and is training a strong acquisition workforce,” Murray wrote. “These efforts are yielding positive results.”
Eric Boehm@Watchdogorg Eric Boehm is a reporter for Watchdog.org, a national network of investigative reporters covering waste, fraud and abuse in government. Watchdog.org is a project of the nonprofit Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity. source
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