Congressional Record: May 1, 2003 (Extensions)
Page E825-E826
ENSURE TRANSPARENCY IN IRAQ RECONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS
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HON. GERALD D. KLECZKA
of wisconsin
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, April 30, 2003
Mr. KLECZKA. Mr. Speaker, earlier this month it came to light that a
limited number of
[[Page E826]]
companies were invited to bid on post-war reconstruction contracts in
Iraq. Most prominently, Bechtel, an engineering and construction firm,
was awarded an initial contract of $34.6 million that could potentially
grow to $680 million over the next year and a half. It is critical that
openness and transparency are the hallmarks of the reconstruction
process, and for that reason, I am introducing the ``Sunshine in Iraq
Reconstruction Contracting Act.''
Although legal, the bidding process thus far leaves much to be
desired. Left unanswered are questions about why open competition was
not allowed, and the size and scope of the reconstruction contracts
awarded. We should all be able to agree that the U.S. government's
reconstruction bidding process should be as open to disclosure as
possible to ensure that there is no question of political favoritism or
backroom deal making. After all, these contracts are spending hard-
earned taxpayer dollars, and our constituents deserve to know to whom
their money is going and why.
My legislation, which mirrors a bipartisan Senate measure, simply
requires federal agencies that award contracts for Iraqi reconstruction
activities to publicly disclose how a non-competitive contract was
awarded, and the justification for foregoing an open-bid process.
These details, along with a brief description of the contract's cost
and scope, would have to be published in the Federal Register within 30
days of the date the contract was awarded. Any classified information
would only be provided to the chairmen and ranking members of the House
and Senate Government Reform Committees, as well as whichever committee
has jurisdiction over an agency that awards a non-competitive contract.
It only makes it more difficult for the United States to hold
ourselves up as a model for a future Iraqi government if the contracts
the federal government awards are done with little or no competition
and without adequate public disclosure. The Iraq reconstruction process
should be as open as possible. This is not a partisan issue, but one
that concerns the public interest and American credibility. I urge my
colleagues to cosponsor this measure.
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