The Small Business Administration has suspended ATI Government Solutions and several executives amid a widening inquiry into alleged abuse of the 8(a) program for socially and economically disadvantaged small businesses. The Treasury Department separately ordered a department‑wide audit of preference‑based contracting, while Sen. Joni Ernst called for additional oversight following undercover videos that prompted swift action, according to agency notices and industry reports.
For decades, the SBA’s 8(a) Business Development Program has been used to steer contracting opportunities to “socially and economically disadvantaged” small businesses, including firms owned by federally recognized tribes and Alaska Native Corporations. Entity‑owned firms can receive sole‑source awards above normal thresholds with written justification, a feature critics say is susceptible to abuse if oversight is weak. (law.cornell.edu)
A recent flashpoint is ATI Government Solutions, a tribally owned contractor majority‑owned by the Susanville Indian Rancheria. Following undercover videos published by O’Keefe Media Group alleging “pass‑through” arrangements, SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler announced in late October that ATI and three senior executives were suspended from new federal business pending investigation, an unusually fast action confirmed by federal acquisition trade outlets and a SAM.gov notice. (federalnewsnetwork.com)
In the undercover recordings, an ATI senior director is shown describing a near‑$100 million award in which ATI would keep roughly 65% while a subcontractor performed much of the work; a contracts official is recorded saying the firm performed about 20% of the work. These specific statements come from O’Keefe Media Group’s videos and have not been independently authenticated by mainstream outlets. (okeefemediagroup.com)
The Treasury Department has moved in parallel. On Nov. 6, Treasury ordered a department‑wide audit of preference‑based contracting—about $9 billion in awards across its bureaus—after suspending and terminating ATI‑related awards, citing allegations tied to more than $253 million in contracts. (home.treasury.gov)
Sen. Joni Ernst (R‑Iowa), who chairs the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee, has pressed for intensified oversight of the 8(a) program. In an Oct. 30 letter obtained by the Daily Wire, she urged the SBA inspector general to investigate ATI, its tribal owner, and affiliates and sought records on recent disciplinary actions and how subcontracting violations are handled. Those specific letter details have not been posted on Ernst’s official site and could not be independently verified. (dailywire.com)
The Daily Wire also reported that Administrator Loeffler said SBA had suspended seven additional companies connected to ATI’s CEO, with their names referred to law enforcement. SBA has publicly confirmed only the suspension of ATI and three executives; the agency has not released a list of other firms, and outside confirmation of broader suspensions was not available at press time. (dailywire.com)
Program rules are central to the controversy. Under federal limitations on subcontracting, an 8(a) prime generally must perform at least 50% of the contract (by certain cost metrics) for services, with different thresholds for supplies and construction. GAO and regulatory guidance note that tribally owned and ANC‑owned firms may receive sole‑source awards above standard thresholds with required justification. (law.cornell.edu)
Broader scrutiny of set‑aside contracting has intensified this year following a Justice Department case unrelated to ATI. On June 12, DOJ announced guilty pleas by a USAID contracting officer and three executives in a bribery scheme involving more than $550 million in contracts, and deferred prosecution agreements with two companies, Vistant (formerly PM Consulting Group) and Apprio. DOJ said the scheme exploited 8(a) pathways and involved steering awards in exchange for bribes. (justice.gov)
Despite that resolution, a joint venture between CollaborateUp and Vistant holds a spot on USAID’s Central America Regional Support Services IDIQ, a contract vehicle with an $800 million ceiling—an arrangement highlighted in earlier reporting and confirmed on CollaborateUp’s site. An IDIQ ceiling represents potential, not guaranteed, task‑order awards. (collaborateup.com)
The Biden administration previously set a goal of raising governmentwide contracting with small disadvantaged businesses to 15% by FY2025, up from the long‑standing 5% statutory goal for that category. SBA’s own summaries of FY2023–FY2024 performance show SDB awards surpassing 12% of eligible dollars, though categories vary by agency. (bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov)
SBA under Administrator Loeffler has also launched a full‑scale audit of the 8(a) program, with findings to be referred to the inspector general and DOJ, and later rescinded USAID’s independent 8(a) contracting authority after the DOJ bribery case. Industry coverage and agency releases indicate GSA and Treasury have followed SBA’s ATI suspension with their own reviews. (sba.gov)
What happens next will hinge on the SBA investigation, potential debarment proceedings, and any criminal referrals. For now, ATI and the named executives remain suspended from receiving new federal business while the probe proceeds. (tribalbusinessnews.com)