Title 38 › Part PART I— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - GENERAL › § 114
Allows the Secretary to sign a multiyear contract for supplies or services when several things are true. The Secretary must have enough money for the payments needed in the fiscal year the contract starts, plus any likely cancellation charge. The contract must save money or make things work better, such as lowering costs, simplifying administration, improving quality, or helping competition. There must be a continuing need for the supplies or services, no big chance the amount or delivery rate will change a lot, and the specifications should stay mostly the same. The contractor must not be too risky, and small businesses must still have a fair chance to compete. For a drug whose patent expired less than four years before offers are requested, the Secretary must find that generics are not likely to appear and increase competition during the contract. If full-term funds are not available when the contract is signed, the contract must say future-year payments depend on Congress providing money and must allow payment of reasonable one-time cancellation costs if the contract is ended for lack of funds. If later a year has not enough funds, the Secretary may cancel and must pay cancellation charges from the original appropriations or other funds for the same purpose. The Secretary can still use other laws to end a contract for convenience and must write rules to carry out these rules. Definitions: "Appropriations" — meaning in section 1511 of title 31. "Multiyear contract" — lasts past the fiscal year it is signed but not beyond the end of the fourth fiscal year after that; excludes construction and real property leases. "Nonrecurring, unrecovered costs" — reasonable one-time costs the contractor incurred and did not recover.
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Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 114
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73