32 CFR 37.915 - What requirement for access to a for-profit participant's records do I include in a TIA?

Code of Federal Regulations - Title 32: National Defense (December 2005)


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TITLE 32 - NATIONAL DEFENSE

SUBTITLE A - DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

CHAPTER I - OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE

SUBCHAPTER C - DOD GRANT AND AGREEMENT REGULATIONS

PART 37 - TECHNOLOGY INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS

subpart g - AWARD TERMS RELATED TO OTHER ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS

37.915 - What requirement for access to a for - profit participant's records do I include in a TIA?

  (a) If a for-profit participant currently grants access to its records to the DCAA or other Federal Government auditors, your TIA must include for that participant the standard access-to-records requirements at 32 CFR 34.42(e). If the agreement is a fixed-support TIA, the language in 32 CFR 34.42(e) may be modified to provide access to records concerning the recipient's technical performance, without requiring access to the recipient's financial or other records. Note that any need to address access to technical records in this way is in addition to, not in lieu of, the need to address rights in data (see 37.845).

  (b) For other for-profit participants that do not currently give the Federal Government direct access to their records and are not willing to grant full access to records pertinent to the award, there is no set requirement to include a provision in your TIA for Government access to records. If the audit provision of an expenditure-based TIA gives an IPA access to the recipient's financial records for audit purposes, the Federal Government must have access to the IPA's reports and working papers and you need not include a provision requiring direct Government access to the recipient's financial records. For both fixed-support and expenditure-based TIAs, you may wish to negotiate Government access to recipient records concerning technical performance. Should you negotiate a provision giving access only to specific Government officials (e.g., the agreements officer), rather than a provision giving Government access generally, it is important to let participants know that the OIG, DoD, has a statutory right of access to records and other materials to which other DoD Component officials have access.

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