summary
Introduced
02/10/2015
02/10/2015
In Committee
03/16/2015
03/16/2015
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/03/2017
01/03/2017
Introduced Session
114th Congress
Bill Summary
Security in Bonding Act of 2015 Revises requirements related to assets pledged by a surety and to surety bond guarantees subject to the Small Business Investment Act of 1958. (A surety bond is a three-party instrument between a surety who agrees to be responsible for the debt or obligation of another, a contractor, and a project owner.) Declares that if another applicable law or regulation permits the acceptance of a bond from a surety that is not subject to specified federal law, and is based on a pledge of assets by the surety, the assets pledged by such surety shall: (1) consist of eligible obligations given as security instead of surety bonds; and (2) be submitted to the government official required to approve or accept the bond, who shall deposit the assets with a depository (the Secretary of the Treasury, a federal reserve bank, or a depository designated by the Secretary). Amends the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 to increase from 70% to 90% of the loss incurred and paid by a surety authorized to issue bonds (subject to Small Business Administration [SBA] guarantee) the SBA's guarantee of surety bonds. The SBA is required, under the guarantee, to indemnify a surety, under the Small Business Investment Program, against loss from a breach of the terms of a bid bond, payment bond, performance bond, or ancillary bonds, by a principal on any total work order or contract amount at the time of bond execution that does not exceed $6.5 million, as adjusted for inflation. Requires the Comptroller General (GAO) to study: all instances during the 10-year period before enactment of the Act in which a surety bond proposed or issued by a surety in connection with a federal project was: (1) rejected by a federal contracting officer; or (2) accepted by one, but was later found to have been backed by insufficient collateral or to be otherwise deficient or with respect to which the surety did not perform; the consequences to the federal government, subcontractors, and suppliers of the instances; and the percentages of all federal contracts that were awarded to new startup businesses (including new startups that are small disadvantaged businesses or disadvantaged business enterprises), small disadvantaged businesses, and disadvantaged business enterprises as prime contractors in the two-year period before and the two-year period after enactment of this Act, together with an assessment of the impact of this Act and its amendments upon such percentages.
AI Summary
This bill, the Security in Bonding Act of 2015, revises rules for surety bonds, which are financial guarantees from a surety company to cover a contractor's obligations on a project. It clarifies that when a surety's assets are pledged as security instead of a traditional surety bond, those assets must be "eligible obligations" and deposited with a designated government depository. Additionally, the bill amends the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 to increase the Small Business Administration's (SBA) guarantee of surety bonds from 70% to 90% of a surety's losses, providing greater protection for sureties issuing bonds on contracts up to $6.5 million. Finally, the Comptroller General is required to study past issues with surety bonds on federal projects, their consequences, and to assess the impact of this Act on contracts awarded to new startup businesses, small disadvantaged businesses, and disadvantaged business enterprises.
Committee Categories
Justice
Sponsors (6)
Richard Hanna (R)*,
Rick Allen (R),
Steve Chabot (R),
Stephen Knight (R),
Grace Meng (D),
Kathleen Rice (D),
Last Action
Referred to the Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial And Antitrust Law. (on 03/16/2015)
Official Document
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