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36 Procurement Law. 1 (2000-2001)

handle is hein.journals/procurlw36 and id is 1 raw text is: 

















   t:l  iqO! PUBLIC CONTRACT LAW , AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION VOLUMU 36, NUMIUR; I * FUL 200


Barriers to Federal Procurement: Patent Rights

By RICHARD N. KUVATH


                          Most of today's leading-edge
                          technology is being devel-
                          oied in commercial compa-
                          nies, imile tile defense
                          Itlustry is shrinking and
                          becoming isolated fronm tlt
                          broader national industrial
                          base.' Asa result, Under
                          Secretary of Defense for
                          Acquisition and Technology
                          Jacques Gansler has stated it
is vital to both U.S. national security and international
competitiveness interests to attract more commercial
companies to do business with the Department of
Defense (DoD).1
   The present government R&D bttdget comprises a
much smaller percentage of the total U.S. investment in
R&D than it did in the 1980s. It is eytimated the govern-
ment will fund only about 25 percent of the $266 billion
in R&D forecasted to be performed in the U.S. in calen-
dar year 2000. This is in contrast to 1980, when the gov-
ernment funded about 50 percent of all R&D performed
in the U.S.'
   DoD no longer drives technology development as it did
in tie past. Many large commercial firms, which invest
billions of dollars each year in internal R&D, refuse to do
business with the government.4 Yet new national security
threats will require the government to do business with
commercial companies that are not part of its traditional
R&D base. Examples include pharmaceutical and biotech-
nology companies that are needed to develop a defense
against biological and chemical warfare threats.5
   A recent study compared DoD research, development,
test, and evaluation (RDT&E) contract awards with the

Richard N. Ktiyath is counsel in the Office of General Counsel of Min-
nesora Mining anti Manufacturing Cmapany (3M). He gratefully
acknuwledges die assistance provided for dtis artick by CaTrl L. Vacheta,
painter, Piper Marbtory Rudnick & Wolfe LLP. The views expressed
here are his on and do not necesiarily reflect the pition of 3M.


Business Week R&D scorecard and the Fortune 500 Indus-
trials. This study found that more than 92 percent of the
industry leaders that invested the greatest percentage of
their sales in R&D received Insignificant or no DoD
RDT&E awards. These firms were usually the leaders in
their ichsitry in technology development.
   In 1998, the iop five defense cmtractors received a
total of 579 U.S. patents. In contrast, the top three inte-
grated dual-use companies (IDGC)-IBM, Motorola,
and Kodak-received a total of 5,187.' This is an exam-
ple of the fact that the majority of research is now being
conducted in commercial firms.
   To attract commercial companies to do government
business, recent procurement reforms have attempted to
eliminate many of the barriers that discourage such com-
panies from doing business with the government. To
st reamtline the federal procurement process, changes have
been made to the Truth in Negotiations Act, the Cost
Accounting Standards, and many other laws and regula-
tions. However, one significant barrier has been left
largely tntouched-intellectual property rights.
   The rigid and complex stattes and regulations govern.
ing government intellectual property rights under tradi.
tional federal procurement contracts, grants, and
cooperative agreements prevent many commercial com-
panies (or business units thereof) from performing govern-
ment-funded R&D. This article addresses some of the
                                (cuntinued on page 12)




   Chair's Column                                2
   2000 Model Procurement Code                   4
   News from the Committees                      7
   Construction Low Perspective                 10
   Letter from the Editor                      26

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