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VOB108.org 9-Sept 2010 Teaming Meeting Annuncement

by William Brownsberger on September 2, 2010

VOB108.org  Guest Speaker on  9-Sept 2010 is Deborah Gross of DGross Consulting

Meeting Location:
3155 Research Blvd, Dayton, OH 45420, the EMTEC/PTAC Bldg.
Located in the Miami Valley Research Park campus.  2nd floor
conference room.
Seating is limited, early registration is suggested

Meeting Time:
12:00 Noon to 2:00 PM

Registration: Via email to XO@vob108.org,  This is a lunch meeting, so bring your’s
or purchase pizza from The Pizza Factory at the meeting, $5 per person.
Indicate that you want to purchase pizza at the meeting in your email.

Registration Deadline:
COB on Wednesday, 8-Sept 2010

Presentation Topic: Doing Biz with WPAFB through regional partnerships.
Ms. Gross has 25 years experience dealing with government contracting.  She
is currently Executive Director of the Dayton Area Defense Contractors Assn.,
DADCA,  (www.daytondefense.org).  Ms. Gross has received numerous awards,
both locally and nationally, for her business and community leadership.  This will be
an ideal opportunity to gain a better understanding of the opportunities that are on
the very near horizon at WPAFB and the huge base expansion now underway.

Bio Attached

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Columbus, OH Supplier Conference

by William Brownsberger on August 4, 2010

Subject: Conference Notice

Please join us at the Defense Logistics Agency Enterprise Supplier

Conference in Columbus, OH on Aug 23-25, 10.  You may register at

http://www.ndia.org/meetings/0780/Pages/default.aspx.  DLA is actively

seeking small businesses, HUBZone businesses, Small Disadvantaged

Businesses, 8a, Woman-Owned Small Businesses and SERVICE-DISABLED,

VETERAN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESSES for contract opportunities.  Small business

representatives from DLA HQ and DLA centers will be on hand to discuss your

capabilities and DLA requirements with the objective of finding a match.

Thank you for your service.

Joan R. Turrisi

Associate Director, Office of Small Business Programs DLA Energy

Tel:  703-767-9465

Fax:  703-767-9446

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VOB108.org gains 501(c)6 Tax Exempt Status

by William Brownsberger on August 4, 2010


4 AUG 2010

VETERANS BUSINESS GROUP GAINS TAX EXEMPT STATUS

DAYTON: VOB108.org, a Dayton, OH based Veteran Owned Business (VOB) and Service Disabled Veteran Owned Business (SDVOB) organization has been granted Tax Exempt status by the IRS under Section 501c(6) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The group hopes to be able to expand its influence and advocacy to create opportunities for Veterans, especially from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.  VOB108 also is the local chapter of NaVOBA, the National Veteran Owned Business Association, representing SW Ohio. NaVOBA has been working on legislation in all 50 States to bring veteran friendly status to State and local government purchasing processes.

VOB108 meets the second Thursday of every month for a 2 hour “teaming meeting” starting at noon in the 2nd floor conference room at the EMTEC/PTAC Building, in the Miami Valley Research Park, 3155 Research Blvd.  The meetings are free, and open to all, however membership is restricted to Honorably Discharged Veterans with a DD-214.

More information can be found at VOB108.org

The next meeting is Thursday Aug 12. For those interested in attending, please RSVP by email to: XO@vob108.org.  Pre-registration is required.

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Teaming Meeting, Thursday, June 10, 2010

by William Brownsberger on June 1, 2010

Meeting Announcement, Thursday, June 10, 2010

VOB108.org will feature Mr. Nick Lair, VP Purchasing, Premier Health Partners.
Presentation will focus on PHP Diversity Supplier Program as it pertains to VOB/SDVOB companies.  The second half of the meeting will deal with plans and information concerning the “veteran lead” CAPS 2 solicitation at WPAFB in 2011.
Location: EMTEC Building, 3155 Research Blvd, 2nd floor conference room,
Noon to 2:00 PM, Thursday, June 10, 2010.   Seating is limited.
Registration suggested.  Email: Name, Company Name w/ phone number to
XO@vob108.org.
This is a working lunch meeting.  Pizza Factory pizza available @ $5/person, if indicated on the your email registration.
Registrations due by COB on Wednesday, June 9th.

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VOB108 Teaming Meeting Moved to 20-May 2010

by William Brownsberger on May 10, 2010

The normal 2nd Thursday VOB108 Teaming Meeting for May has been moved to
20-May 2010. The time and location remain Noon to 1400 Hrs, the 2nd floor
conference room in the EMTEC/PTAC Building, 3155 Research Blvd., Dayton
45420.  Speaker for this meeting is LTC Matthew Stevens, Cmdr, 88th ABW,
Contracting Squadron, WPAFB.  LTC Stevens will be addressing contracting
opportunities that are specific to the 88th ABW.  The presentation is tailored to
target small business opportunities that VOB/SDVOB companies should find within
their individual NAICS code(s) and capabilities.  This is an excellent opportunity for
you to gain an insight into the “goods & services” purchased by the 88th ABW, Con-
tracting Squadron, that are used within the fence line of WPAFB.  The squadron
does not buy aircraft or weapons systems
, but they do buy most every
other item or service used within the fence line.

Registration: Email Attendee’s Name, Company Name & Phone # to XO@VOB108.org.
Indicate in the email if you desire pizza from The Pizza Factory @ $5.00.  Or,
bring your own brown bag lunch.  Seating is limited and registration will be closed
on Wednesday, 19-May 2010 or sooner if the limit of 30 attendees is reached before
the deadline.

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Big businesses winning contracts meant for Small Biz

by William Brownsberger on April 13, 2010

Source:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/11/AR2010041103341.html

Big businesses winning contracts meant for small ones, groups charge

By V. Dion Haynes

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 12, 2010

A new skirmish is emerging in an ugly, ongoing dispute between small business advocates and the federal government over its past — and perhaps continuing — practice of awarding small business contracts to Fortune 500 companies.

The American Small Business League in a lawsuit is accusing the General Services Administration of destroying information in a database that could help advocates trace the violations, and the league has asked a federal court in Northern California to force the government to restore the data, which spans 10 years, and to make the information public. A federal judge is set to decide on the request for a preliminary injunction by the end of April.

For years, the Petaluma, Calif.-based organization, which represents 100,000 businesses seeking federal contracts, has tried to hold the government accountable for federal regulations that require 23 percent of its contracts to be set aside for small businesses. The government has never met that goal, small business advocates say. Instead, many contracts have been awarded to companies such as Falls Church-based General Dynamics, Xerox and General Electric, advocates say, withholding billions of dollars annually from small businesses.

“I believe $10 billion a month in federal contracts that by law should be going to small businesses are actually going to Fortune 500 firms and to some of the biggest companies around the world,” said Lloyd Chapman, president of the ASBL.

“It’s devastating to small businesses,” Chapman said, adding that he’s talked with several that have closed because they couldn’t get contracts.

A spokeswoman for the GSA said her agency could not comment on the lawsuit.

At issue is whether large businesses deliberately defrauded the government and should be punished, as the advocates argue. The Small Business Administration denied that the contracts went to large companies intentionally. A spokesman said the awards resulted from a number of problems: companies mistakenly applying for contracts because they were unaware of the complex guidelines of what constitutes a small business; data entry errors; and agencies failing to update records after large companies, including General Dynamics, bought small businesses that earlier had received contracts.

“In nearly all the cases, it’s a data integrity issue, not awarding the contract falsely,” said SBA spokesman Jonathan Swain. “The integrity of this data is a top priority” for SBA Administrator Karen Mills.

The dispute centers on the government’s move last month to drop a field from its database that captured companies that identified themselves as small businesses. Advocates say they used that field to determine whether large companies had illegally misidentified themselves as small businesses to get the contracts. Companies that falsely represent themselves are subject to fines of up to $500,000 or a prison term of up to 10 years, though the government has rarely if ever imposed the penalties, advocates say.

A study issued by the SBA’s inspector general in February said 11 of 36 contracts it sampled were awarded to businesses reported “as small, but the contract file reflected that they were other than small.”

“We really don’t know how much business we’re looking at” that was lost, said Fred Valerino Sr., director and founder of Pevco, a 70-employee Baltimore company that sells pneumatic tubes, similar to the devices used in drive-through bank windows, that allow government hospitals to send items from one end of their building to another.

Valerino said government audits show that his competitor, a Swiss multinational corporation, received 147 sole-source contracts from the government that were destined for small businesses. “All we’re looking for is a fair share of the industry,” he added.

Last year, the SBA reported that the government had set a record in 2008 awarding federal contracts to small businesses. However, it said only 21.5 percent of the contracts went to these firms, still below the 23 percent requirement. Advocacy groups such as the National Association of Small Business Contractors said the shortfall represented $30 billion in lost revenue to the firms.

Swain of the SBA in part faulted an overwhelming crush of contracting transactions — 8 million — that government officials oversee each year. He said the government is training contracting officers to look for errors and increase quality control.

“We are periodically running anomaly reports to identify any contracts that are coded as having gone to a small business that might look questionable,” Swain said. “We’re sending those reports to the procurement officer in the agency that specifically awarded the contract to reconfirm the data.”

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VOB108.org 8-April 2010 Meeting Announcement

by William Brownsberger on March 29, 2010

VOB108 Presentation

General Informational Session 08-April-2010

Location: EMTEC/PTAC Building, 3155 Research Blvd, Dayton, OH 45420, second floor conference room. 
Time:
Noon, 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM

Veterans Teaming for CAPS-II (Consolidated Acquisition of Professional Services)

As follow-on to CAPS-1, the Aeronautical Systems Center, Air Force
Material Command, is expected to award a set of five, one year,
small business-led contracts with a combined ceiling of 3 billion
dollars. CAPS-I has been used for wide-range professional services
and support at Wright Patterson AFB. So what does that mean to you,
the veteran?  That will be the subject of our next regular meeting
of VOB108. If you’ve been involved in work that will transition to
CAPS, if you’ve been watching CAPS and wondered how you could engage,
or if you just want to gain first-hand experience with the process of
building teams and executing the competitive mission for this type
large scope procurement, then this is the session for you. We will
review the CAPS-I history and expectations for CAPS-II future.
We will also introduce a teaming opportunity for veteran-owned (VOB),
service-disabled veteran-owned (SDVOB) or just veteran-friendly companies.
While not essential for the discussion, it may be of help review the
published draft documents (work statements, labor categories, etc) at
the following PIXS webpage:
https://pixs.wpafb.af.mil/pixs_solicitation.asp?id=6441

Be part of the mission now to create pathways to performance.

Email the following registration information to XO@VOB108.org :
Name, Company Name, Phone #, Pizza Factory pizza ($5/ person, Yes/No),
before COB Wednesday, 7-Apr ’10.
Note, this meeting is a working lunch meeting and seating is limited.

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11-Feb 2010 Teaming Meeting POSTPONED

by William Brownsberger on January 27, 2010

Feb 10, 2010- due to weather we’ve postponed this meeting till March.

Thank you

Attention VOB & SDVOB Companies

VOB108.org feature speaker for the 11-Feb 2010 meeting will be Mr. Carl D. Hayden, Academic Dean for the Defense Acquisition University (DAU), Midwest Region.  Dean Hayden’s presentation will explain the mission and purpose of DAU.  He will also speak about Federal Procurement Certification, along with what procurement classes and instructions are available through DAU.  DAU offers not only formal classroom instruction, but Internet instruction as well.  All of which are available to government employees and government contractors throughout the Region.  Please come to the meeting to find out how to get this valuable information to your people!

The meeting will be held in the second floor conference room of the EMTEC/PTAC Building, 3155 Research Blvd, Dayton, OH 45420, from 12:00 Noon to 2:00 PM, Thursday, 11-Feb 2010Seating is limited and registration is required.  Please email your registration to XO@VOB108.org.  This is a Working Lunch meeting.  Pizza is available at $5/ person or bring a brown bag lunch.  Registration Deadline: COB, Wednesday, 10-Feb  2010.  Additional information on www.vob108.org website.

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VOB108.org GSA Workshop, 14-Jan 2010

by William Brownsberger on January 6, 2010

Attention VOB/SDVOB Business Owners

On Thursday, January 14, 2010, from 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM, VOB108.org will sponsor a Vendor Workshop that will assist you in understanding and locating Federal Bid opportunities specific to your individual company NAICS codes.  The workshop will take place at The Sinclair CC Learning Center offices located at 1900 Research Dr., in the Miami Valley Research Park, Rm #112, lower floor, use the parking lot located on the NE end of the building.  Registration is Free, but REQUIRED. Register via email to:  XO@VOB108.org.

Registration & Seating is limited. Workshop speaker is Mr. Paul Adams, Customer Service Director, Great Lakes Region, GSA Federal Acquisition Service.  The goal and scope of the workshop is to present to current GSA Schedule holders and potential schedule holders an in-depth look at the GSA structure and Bid process.  Internet Bid opportunities and websites will be explored to increase your bid opportunities that match your NAICS codes.  A personnel wireless laptop pc is recommended for this portion of the workshop, but not required.  The workshop is structured so that both first time users and experienced users will increase their BoK concerning the General Services Administration.  Register early to take advantage of this unique opportunity.

Google Map Link:  1900 Founders Dr., Dayton, OH 45420

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=1900+Founders+Drive,+Suite+100+kettering+ohio&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=35.357014,59.765625&ie=UTF8&ll=39.721283,-84.109848&spn=0.008384,0.014591&z=16&iwloc=add

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Small businesses owned by veterans have jumped to the front of the line for Veterans Affairs Department contracts.

VA published a final rule in the Federal Register on Dec. 8 creating a set-aside contracting program for veteran-owned and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses.

The rule, which has been in development for more than three years, requires VA contracting officers to set aside procurements between $100,000 and $5 million if they expect two or more eligible veteran-owned or service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses to submit a fair and reasonable offer. VA contracting officers also will be allowed to let sole-source contracts to these firms, for awards from $3,000 to $5 million.

“Only a small percentage of veterans own small businesses,” the rule states. “With this new procurement authority, additional businesses may be opened by veterans seeking to participate in the sole-source or set-aside procurement actions. More likely, [veteran-owned small businesses] not currently in the federal market may be expected to explore selling to VA.”

To participate, companies must register with the VetBiz.gov Vendor Information Pages database to verify that they meet all eligibility requirements. Any company that misrepresents itself in the database could face debarment for up to five years.

Previously vendors could self-certify the accuracy of the information provided. But now, officials with the VA Center for Veterans Enterprise must verify the data as part of the VetBiz application process. There are nearly 16,000 veteran-owned small businesses in the VetBiz database, including about 9,000 service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses.

The Federal Register notice also requires VA to give small businesses owned and controlled by veterans priority over all other socioeconomic groups, such as firms in historically underutilized business zones and small disadvantaged businesses. Prime contractors that propose using veteran-owned firms as subcontractors also must receive preference.

Congress has not yet authorized a similar procurement program governmentwide.

“This VA-specific rule is a logical extension of VA’s mission to care for and assist veterans in returning to private life,” the notice states. “It provides VA with the new contracting flexibilities to assist veterans in doing business with VA.”

The rule builds off a 2004 executive order by President George W. Bush that mandated increased contracting and subcontracting opportunities for veteran-owned and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses. In 2006, Congress passed the Veterans Benefits, Health Care and Information Technology Act, which authorized VA to set aside and award sole-source contracts to service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses.

VA received 97 comments on its proposed rule, although many were form letters that included identical responses, according to the notice. Officials did not make any significant changes from the August 2008 interim rule.

Among the other policy changes in the final rule, VA contracting officers will not need a waiver to purchase supplies and services from veteran-owned and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses rather than Federal Prison Industries Inc., the mandatory supplier for agencies purchasing specified products.

The rule also creates a mentor-protégé program at VA in which larger firms tutor, train and guide smaller businesses in exchange for preference in prime contract awards. The mentor firms are encouraged to help service-disabled veteran-owned and veteran-owned small businesses obtain bonds.

In addition, the rule proposes that the Small Business Administration hear protests regarding the size and eligibility of companies winning VA set-aside contracts. VA will accept comments on the proposal through Jan. 7, 2010.

VA awarded 35 percent of its fiscal 2008 contract dollars to small businesses, including 15 percent to veteran-owned small businesses and 12 percent to service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses. In contrast, the government as a whole awarded 3 percent of contract dollars to veteran-owned firms and just 1.5 percent to small companies owned by service-disabled veterans. The governmentwide goal in both categories is 3 percent.

Federal Register

Federal Register

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