Self-Expiring ID Cards for Temporary Employees
The brief article below regarding contractor ID cards not being turned in is a good illustration of why it is advisable to enable an automatic expiration date on temporary workers such as contractors. Doing so would either require the contractor to periodically renew their badges should the project take longer and/or eliminate the seriousness of having them turned in as they would expire automatically and no longer allow access through any doors or gates previously used during the project.
Article was originally published on May 21, 2010 by Alice Lipowicz in the Washington Weekly
Feds warn contractors to turn in IDs or lose cash
Contracting officer might delay final payment unless requirements met
The federal acquisition councils are preparing to tighten rules on return of federal contractor employees’ government-issued identification cards once the job is done.
The councils today released a proposed rule that would amend the Federal Acquisition Regulation to strengthen requirements about collecting the ID cards from contractors once the cards are no longer needed for work-site access.
Under the rule, the cards must be returned at the earliest of the following events: when no longer needed for contract performance, on completion of employment, or on completion or termination of a contract.
A contracting officer might delay final payment if those requirements are not met, the proposed rule states.
The rule was prompted by an audit of Defense Department Common Access Cards granted to contractors that showed that the cards were not adequately accounted for once the contract was finished, the notice states.
The rule will be published in the Federal Register on May 24, and comments are due within 60 days of publication.
The rule would apply to all forms of government identification cards given to contractor employees.