S-1592-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Sponsored by Pete Ricketts (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would require the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to evaluate how federal agencies use the "lowest price technically acceptable" (LPTA) procurement process — a method that awards contracts to the cheapest qualifying bidder. OMB would assess whether LPTA rules in the Federal Acquisition Regulation have created national security risks and would report its findings to Congress.
Who benefits
Defense and national security contractors who compete on quality rather than price, and who may currently lose bids to lower-cost competitors. Federal agencies that rely on high-quality goods and services for sensitive operations. Domestic manufacturers who argue they are undercut by cheaper foreign suppliers. Taxpayers, if the review leads to procurement changes that reduce security vulnerabilities or long-term costs from low-quality purchases.
Who is hurt
Vendors and suppliers who currently win federal contracts by offering the lowest price, and who could lose business if LPTA rules are tightened. Small businesses that compete primarily on price and may be disadvantaged if procurement shifts toward quality-weighted criteria. Agencies with tight budgets that rely on LPTA to stretch limited appropriations. Taxpayers, if any resulting procurement changes increase contract costs without proportional security benefits.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the LPTA process, while cost-efficient on paper, can expose the federal government to serious security vulnerabilities by incentivizing the purchase of the cheapest available goods — including from foreign or unreliable suppliers — rather than the most secure or reliable ones. They contend that a formal OMB review is a prudent, low-cost step toward identifying gaps before they become exploitable weaknesses, and that Congress needs independent data to make informed decisions about acquisition policy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the LPTA process already includes a "technically acceptable" threshold that filters out inadequate vendors, and that adding another layer of review creates bureaucratic overhead without guaranteeing meaningful change. They contend that existing oversight mechanisms — including the Government Accountability Office, agency inspectors general, and the Federal Acquisition Regulation revision process — already provide avenues to address procurement security concerns, making a separate OMB study duplicative and unlikely to produce actionable results.