EXECUTIVE ORDER 12352 ON FEDERAL PROCUREMENT REFORMS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85B01152R001001340003-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 9, 2008
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 1, 1983
Content Type: 
MEMO
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PDF icon CIA-RDP85B01152R001001340003-8.pdf196.15 KB
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Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85BO1152RO01001340003-8 0 8 z : -I ~-I .-I .-I NI NI NI Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85BO1152RO01001340003-8 Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85B01152RO01001340003-8 T_X9' ? ve ; ~ys;:y EXATIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDOT OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET December 1, 1983 MEMORANDUM TO THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND ESTABLISHMENTS FROM: JOSEPH R. WRIGHT, JR., DEPUTY DIRECTOR DD/A Registry SUBJECT: Executive Order 12352 on Federal Procurements eforms Executive Order 12352 on Federal Procurement Reforms, March 17, 1982 tasked each executive agency and department to initiate specific reforms to insure effective and efficient spending of public funds. It also requires the Office of Management and Budget through its Office of Federal Procurement Policy to work with the agencies to provide broad policy guidance and overall leadership. As a result, a Government-wide group, the Executive Committee on Procurement Reform, was formed. The Executive Committee tasked its individual members to formulate guidelines on specific procurement issues through which increased cost effectiveness could be realized. The latest of these reform initiatives to be approved by the Executive Committee are: o Guidelines for establishing clear lines of contracting authority and responsibility - To recognize contracting authority as a distinct and separate function, authority should flow through a dearly defined path or paths in each agency, separate from the program mission of the agency. These guidelines provide a framework for an appropriate organizational structure. o Multiyear procurement guide - When used appropriately, multiyear procurement (MYP) can lower the costs of goods and services and decrease Government and administrative costs of placing and administering contracts. Only three Federal agencies use this technique: the Departments of Defense, Energy, and Transportation. This guide will assist agency heads in establishing a MYP program to realize savings on their own requirements. o Customer assistance guide - This guide provides criteria for establishing a customer assistance program to reduce administrative costs and burdens by better communication and increased understanding between procurement offices and organizations for which they buy. o Price analyst staffing guide - This guide recommends, where warranted, the establishment of an agency headquarters pricing function and the use of price analysts at field buying offices to provide a unique expertise in essential pricing tasks that cannot be attained - by procurement professionals who must cover many functions. The guide also includes a model pricing manual to assist agency personnel in pricing less complex procurements. Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85BOl 152RO01 001340003-8 Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85B0l152R001001340003-8 is . o Contract admnistration guidelines - This pamphlet provides a framework for establishing or improving a contract administration program and identifies 22 functions which an effective program should perform. o Review procedures for post-award actions - This guide recommends improvements to the review procedures for post-award contractual actions to provide an overall cost savings in terms of better products at reasonable prices. o Information exchange - This recommendation is to establish a source for identification of procurement management studies and related information for the entire Federal contracting community. Such a service exists within the Department of Defense (DOD), the Defense Logistics Studies Information Exchange (DLSIE). The Office of Federal Procurement Policy plans to accept DOD's offer to expand DLSIE's data base to include professional information from the entire Federal contracting community. DOD will provide implementation procedures through the procurement Executives in the civilian agencies. These initiatives are attached and should be reviewed carefully and applied, where appropriate, within your respective agencies and departments. Many of the changes proposed by the initiatives can be implemented (either wholly or partially) by administrative action. Those changes that require regulatory amendments before they can be implemented will be referred to the three major regulatory agencies (DOD, GSA, and NASA). Procurement reform is an essential element of the Administration's Reform 88 effort. Your assistance is requested in assuring full and timely implementation of Executive Order 12352. 7 Attachments Approved For Release 2008/01/09: CIA-RDP85B0l152R001001340003-8