Skip to main content
Sign in
Cart
Create Account
linkedin
twitter
Toggle search
Keyword search
Toggle navigation
Keyword search
Welcome to the Member Portal
False Claims Act Update for Government Contractors
June 22, 2024
MORE DETAILS
Joint Ventures on the GSA Schedule
April 24, 2024
Estimating Systems - A Foundation for Compliance and Success
March 20, 2024
The Latest Alliant 3 Draft RFP: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
February 22, 2024
Previous
Next
Supply Chain Risk Management (SCRM) Plans
August 14, 2024
The Coalition hosted Baker Tilly’s Leo Alvarez, Principal, and Molly Menoni, Senior Consultant, for a webinar on Supply Chain Risk Management Plans. During the webinar, they discuss:
Regulatory activity related to supply chain risk;
Recent supply chain-related security breaches;
Biden’s cyber and supply chain Executive Order;
Federal contract clause requirements related to supply chain oversight;
The use of Supply Chain Risk Management (SCRM) Plans in Key Federal Acquisitions;
How an organization should evaluate its SCRM practices;
The use of all-source intelligence platforms (“Supply Chain Illumination”); and
Practical guidance on SCRM Plan preparation and structure.
In recent years, Federal contractors have been challenged to adapt their legal and compliance strategy to a growing regulatory focus on securing the Federal supply chain. In particular, technology bans and restrictions have been used to mitigate data security and surveillance concerns associated with foreign information and communications technology (ICT) – imposing significant new due diligence measures over extended third-party ecosystems. These kind of strict, targeted prohibitions are expected to play a role in how the Federal Government manages supply chain risk moving forward.
Furthermore, recent bellwether Federal procurements (GSA OASIS+, GSA Alliant 3, NASA SEWP VI, ASTRO, Polaris, 8(a) STARS III, and DISA DES, to name just a few) have required offerors to disclose measures taken to assess and limit supply chain risk as part of contract award – providing a glimpse into the importance of SCRM as a contract award discriminator.
Federal agencies and the government contractors that serve them will increasingly be obligated to know exactly where products, components, software and services are being sourced, throughout all levels of an increasingly complex and global supply chain. Contractors can expect new standards and acquisition policies for SCRM programs in an effort to improve SCRM capabilities for the government and industry as a whole.
Discounted member price:
50.00
Your price:
95.00
Must be between 0 and 1000000.
You could save:
47.4%
Quantity:
Quantity is required.
Quantity must be a positive whole number.
Similar products
Domestic Sourcing Requirements – The Old and the...
Public Law Season Is Fast Approaching – What Do I ...
The FSS Contract – 5 Key Issues
Don't Mistake an AMP for a WAMP
The BIOSECURE Act’s Potential Impact...
False Claims Act Update for Government Contractors
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##