Input: States unsure of Schedule 70
States will continue to make most of their large purchases through the competitive purchasing process rather than the GSA Schedule 70, according to a new report.
States will continue to make most of their large purchases through the competitive purchasing process rather than use the General Services Administration's Schedule 70, according to a new report from the market research firm Input Inc., Reston, Va.
The report, "Schedule 70 and Cooperative Purchasing: A Slow Start to IT Spending," finds that state purchases through the GSA schedule currently represent less than 1 percent of total state and local IT spending.
State and local governments purchased just $33 million in goods and services through IT schedule contracts from October to February, according to the report.
"While some states are slowly beginning to use cooperative purchasing for small IT purchases, many are experiencing challenges and find more favorable pricing by competitively bidding projects," said Marcus Fedeli, Input's manager of state and local opportunity products.
The shortcomings of Schedule 70 for state and local governments are:
- A failure to provide best value when compared to the competitive bidding process
- A lack of communications between parties that makes buyers unaware of the benefits of cooperative purchasing
- A disparity between state laws and cooperative purchasing
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