Zach Parker
Analyst · Noble Capital Markets. Please go ahead
Yes, That's a great question again. We've kept the community abreast with the VA's attention for some time. And just for a recap, our current contracts ended in 2016, November of 2016. And since then, the VA has been having, three or four attempts to try to get them awarded and competing and then revising the competition strategy or acquisition strategy and revising it again. And, of course, we're at the current state, which we shared with you, where most of the bids that have been submitted were submitted in the early part of '23. And of those eight bids, only one, the Chelmsford one, the smaller of all of them, has been awarded to date. We haven't said that. It has morphed about every other year since then and that's why we wanted to give some color. What the VA did in May timeframe, maybe even spilled over into June, as they came up with a modification again that reopened the competition to any new bidder, service-disabled, veteran-owned small businesses. So it's like a restart of all except Chelmsford. Those proposals, none of those proposals have been submitted by any of the competitors yet. The best estimate is that by the end of August, maybe the first part of September, the government will have received all of those proposals. And we have pivoted as the government's modifications have pivoted with regard to our approach. And for those in which we are still engaged with a small business partner, we do have a good probability of win. But I do want to be clear that they have moved the nature of the work with their solicitations, with the most recent modifications, to clearly signaling what they're looking for is the equivalent of a temporary staffing company, right, small, and in this case limiting to SDVOSBs. Where we have built the business both in terms of organically winning 17 of those contracts, as well as executing tremendous performance excellence, up to including J.D. Powell awards for the VA for 10 consecutive years, it was when their solicitation and their contracts had us focus on performance, not just staffing. And those performance metrics involved solutions and analytics, involved Lean Six Sigma standards for quality, involved exacting standards for productivity, and we invested a lot to maintain that degree of service for the VA. In the last two years, their modifications, as well as you see in our discussions every quarter, they stopped giving even the one-year bridges, right, which says you can't invest a year's worth of tools, et cetera. And they continue to signal moving the work to where it was back prior to 2012, and that's kind of what we call the butts-in-seats contract. So our appetite for the current versions that I'll just share with you is not the same, right? It doesn't allow you to differentiate. When you move to that kind of environment, it becomes almost a low-cost shootout, and so I won't go into any details because this is still competition sensitive. But that transition that the new contracting folks in the last couple of years at the VA have made makes it a different type of acquisition. So we'll leave it at that, but obviously we're not excited about that, but we do have, strong qualifications that we think differentiate us in particular areas, in particular sites and locations, and we're leaning into those.