Word: gao
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Teeth. Last week the House Military Affairs Committee listened while Lindsay Warren recited a long list of reasons why his General Accounting Office should have the final say on a most difficult postwar problem that is already here: what to pay war contractors when their war contracts are terminated. GAO, he said, had already found 270 "extraordinary" items among the charges allowed by the War Department in its cost-plus-fixed-fee contracts. Among the most extraordinary...
Promptly the War Department challenged his figures: GAO, said Under Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson, "had actually disallowed less than 10? per $1,000" on Army contracts (or $100,000 per billion dollars). He said that 90% of Lindsay Warren's 270 items had either been detected and disallowed by the Army itself or subsequently approved by GAO. The false teeth, said Mr. Patterson, were due to a Navy-not Army-order that a contractor's technicians take an extra pair along to Russia (together with extra glasses) because such medical minutiae are unobtainable there. "While...
...false teeth were merely the first public flicker of an intergovernmental fire that has smoldered underground for months. The Army-speaking for all Administration contracting agencies-has fought to establish its absolute right to terminate war contracts once & for all on its own terms, precisely because it fears that GAO's meticulous audits would "go on ad infinitum." Already in this war $5.9 billion in contracts have been cancelled, as military needs changed. Come peace, some $75 billion, 100,000 prime contractors and more than 1,000,000 subcontractors will be involved...
Apparently many men were working on the assumption that if you send everything in with your returns you will inevitably have the necessary payroll vouchers. It is a good system but somehow we do not think its merits would be fully appreciated by either Sand A or the GAO...