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This part prescribes policies and procedures for providing Government property to contractors, contractors’ use and management of Government property, and reporting, redistributing, and disposing of contractor inventory. It does not apply to providing property under any statutory leasing authority, except as to non-Government use of plant equipment under 45.407; to property to which the Government has acquired a lien or title solely because of partial, advance, or progress payments; or to disposal of real property.
(a) “Contractor-acquired property,” as used in this part, means property acquired or otherwise provided by the contractor for performing a contract and to which the Government has title.
“Government-furnished property,” as used in this part, means property in the possession of, or directly acquired by, the Government and subsequently made available to the contractor.
“Government property,” means all property owned by or leased to the Government or acquired by the Government under the terms of the contract. It includes both Government-furnished property and contractor-acquired property as defined in this section.
“Plant equipment,” as used in this part, means personal property of a capital nature (including equipment, machine tools, test equipment, furniture, vehicles, and accessory and auxiliary items) for use in manufacturing supplies, in performing services, or for any administrative or general plant purpose. It does not include special tooling or special test equipment.
“Property,” as used in this part, means all property, both real and personal. It includes facilities, material, special tooling, special test equipment, and agency-peculiar property.
“Real property,” as used in this part, means land and rights in land, ground improvements, utility distribution systems, and buildings and other structures. It does not include foundations and other work necessary for installing special tooling, special test equipment, or plant equipment.
“Special test equipment,” as used in this part, means either single or multipurpose integrated test units engineered, designed, fabricated, or modified to accomplish special purpose testing in performing a contract. It consists of items or assemblies of equipment including standard or general purpose items or components that are interconnected and interdependent so as to become a new functional entity for special testing purposes. It does not include material, special tooling, facilities (except foundations and similar improvements necessary for installing special test equipment), and plant equipment items used for general plant testing purposes.
“Special tooling,” as used in this part, means jigs, dies, fixtures, molds, patterns, taps, gauges, other equipment and manufacturing aids, all components of these items, and replacement of these items, which are of such a specialized nature that without substantial modification or alteration their use is limited to the development or production of particular supplies or parts thereof or to the performance of particular services. It does not include material, special test equipment, facilities (except foundations and similar improvements necessary for installing special tooling), general or special machine tools, or similar capital items.
(b) Additional definitions also applying throughout this part appear in those subparts where the terms are most frequently used.
Contractors are ordinarily required to furnish all property necessary to perform Government contracts. However, if contractors possess Government property, agencies shall—
(a) Eliminate to the maximum practical extent any competitive advantage that might arise from using such property;
(b) Require contractors to use Government property to the maximum practical extent in performing Government contracts;
(c) Permit the property to be used only when authorized;
(d) Charge appropriate rentals when the property is authorized for use on other than a rent-free basis;
(e) Require contractors to be responsible and accountable for, and keep the Government’s official records of Government property in their possession or control (but see 45.105);
(f) Require contractors to review and provide justification for retaining Government property not currently in use; and
(g) Ensure maximum practical reutilization of Government property (see 45.602) within the Government.
(a) Contractors are responsible and liable for Government property in their possession, unless otherwise provided by the contract.
(b) Generally, Government contracts do not hold contractors liable for loss of or damage to Government property when the property is provided under—
(1) Negotiated fixed-price contracts for which the contract price is not based upon an exception at 15.403-1;
(2) Cost-reimbursement contracts;
(3) Facilities contracts; or
(4) Negotiated or sealed bid service contracts performed on a Government installation where the contracting officer determines that the contractor has little direct control over the Government property because it is located on a Government installation and is subject to accessibility by personnel other than the contractor’s employees and that by placing the risk on the contractor, the cost of the contract would be substantially increased.
(c) When justified by the circumstances, the contract may require the contractor to assume greater liability for loss of or damage to Government property than that contemplated by the Government property clauses or the clause at 52.245-8, Liability for the Facilities. For example, this may be the case when the contractor is using Government property primarily for commercial work rather than Government work.
(d) If the Government provides Government property directly to a subcontractor, the terms of paragraph (b) of this section shall apply to the subcontractor.
(e) Subcontractors are liable for loss of or damage to Government property furnished through a prime contractor. However, if the prime contract is of a type listed in paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this section, the prime contractor may, after obtaining the contracting officer’s consent, reduce the subcontractor’s liability by including in the subcontract a clause similar to paragraph (g), Limited risk of loss, as provided in Alternate I of the clause at 52.245-2, Government Property (Fixed-Price Contracts), (for fixed-price contracts) or similar to the same paragraph of the clause at 52.245-5, Government Property (Cost-Reimbursement, Time-and-Material, or Labor-Hour Contracts) (for cost-reimbursement contracts). Before consenting to a clause that reduces the subcontractor’s liability, the contracting officer should ensure that the Government’s interests are sufficiently protected.
(f) A prime contractor that provides Government property to a subcontractor shall not be relieved of any responsibility to the Government that the prime contractor may have under the terms of the prime contract.
(a) The review and approval of a contractor’s property control system shall be accomplished by the agency responsible for contract administration at a contractor’s plant or installation. The review and approval of a contractor’s property control system by one agency shall be binding on all other departments and agencies based on interagency agreements.
(b) The contracting officer or the representative assigned the responsibility as property administrator shall review contractors’ property control systems to ensure compliance with the Government property clauses of the contract.
(c) The property administrator shall notify the contractor in writing when its property control system does not comply with Subpart 45.5 or other contract requirements and shall request prompt correction of deficiencies. If the contractor does not correct the deficiencies within a reasonable period, the property administrator shall request action by the contracting officer administering the contract. The contracting officer shall—
(1) Notify the contractor in writing of any required corrections and establish a schedule for completion of actions;
(2) Caution the contractor that failure to take the required corrective actions within the time specified will result in withholding or withdrawing system approval; and
(3) Advise the contractor that its liability for loss of or damage to Government property may increase if approval is withheld or withdrawn.
(a) Contractor records of Government property established and maintained under the terms of the contract are the Government’s official Government property records. Duplicate official records shall not be furnished to or maintained by Government personnel, except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Contracts may provide for the contracting office to maintain the Government’s official Government property records when the contracting office retains contract administration and Government property is furnished to a contractor—
(1) For repair or servicing and return to the shipping organization;
(2) For use on a Government installation;
(3) Under a local support service contract;
(4) Under a contract with a short performance period; or
(5) When otherwise determined by the contracting officer to be in the Government’s interest.
This section prescribes the principal Government property clauses. Other clauses pertaining to Government property are prescribed in Subpart 45.3.
(a) The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.245-1, Property Records, in solicitations and contracts when the conditions in 45.105(b) exist and the Government maintains the Government’s official Government property records.
(b)(1) The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.245-2, Government Property (Fixed-Price Contracts), in solicitations and contracts when a fixed-price contract is contemplated, except as provided in paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section.
(2) If the contract is—
(i) A negotiated fixed-price contract for which prices are not based on an exception at 15.403-1; or
(ii) A fixed-price service contract which is performed primarily on a Government installation, provided the contracting officer determines it to be in the best interest of the Government (see 45.103(b)(4)), the contracting officer shall use the clause with its Alternate I.
(3) If the contract is for the conduct of basic or applied research at nonprofit institutions of higher education or at nonprofit organizations whose primary purpose is the conduct of scientific research (see 35.014), the contracting officer shall use the clause with its Alternate II.
(c) The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.245-3, Identification of Government-Furnished Property, in addition to the clause at 52.245-2, Government Property (Fixed-Price Contracts), in solicitations and contracts when a fixed-price construction contract is contemplated under which the Government is to furnish Government property f.o.b. railroad cars at a specified destination or f.o.b. truck at the project site. The contract Schedule shall specify the point of delivery and may include special terms and conditions covering installation, preparation for operation, or equipment testing by the Government or by another contractor.
(d) The contracting officer may insert the clause at 52.245-4, Government-Furnished Property (Short Form), in solicitations and contracts when a fixed-price, time-and-material, or labor-hour contract is contemplated and the acquisition cost of all Government-furnished property to be involved in the contract is $100,000 or less; unless a contract with an educational or nonprofit organization is contemplated.
(e) When the cost of the item to be repaired does not exceed the simplified acquisition threshold, purchase orders for property repair need not include a Government property clause.
(f)(1) The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.245-5, Government Property (Cost-Reimbursement, Time-and-Material, or Labor-Hour Contracts), in solicitations and contracts when a cost-reimbursement, time-and-material, or labor-hour contract is contemplated, except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) If the contract is for the conduct of basic or applied research at nonprofit institutions of higher education or at nonprofit organizations whose primary purpose is the conduct of scientific research (see 35.014), the contracting officer shall use the clause with its Alternate I.
(g) The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.245-6, Liability for Government Property (Demolition Services Contracts), in addition to the clauses prescribed at 37.304, in solicitations and contracts for dismantling, demolition, or removal of improvements.
(h)
(1) Insert the clause at 52.245-9, Use and Charges—
(i) In fixed-price or labor-hour solicitations and contracts under which the Government will furnish property for performance of the contract;
(ii) In all cost-reimbursement and time-and-materials solicitations and contracts; and
(iii) In solicitations and contracts when a consolidated facilities contract or a facilities use contract is contemplated.
(2) The contracting officer may modify the clause if an alternative rental methodology is used in accordance with 45.403.
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