Title 41 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Federal Procurement Policy › Chapter CHAPTER 47— - MISCELLANEOUS › § 4712
Protects workers for contractors, subcontractors, grantees, subgrantees, and personal services contractors from being fired, demoted, or punished for reporting certain problems about a Federal contract or grant. The reports must be about things the worker reasonably believes show big mismanagement, large waste of Federal money, abuse of authority tied to a contract or grant, a clear danger to public health or safety, or a law or rule being broken in connection with a contract or grant (including during competition or negotiation). Workers can report to people like a Member of Congress or a congressional committee staffer, an Inspector General, the Government Accountability Office, a federal official who manages the contract or grant, a law enforcement or Department of Justice official, a court or grand jury, or a responsible manager inside the contractor’s organization. Reporting as part of a court or administrative case counts the same. A reprisal is also banned even if done at the request of an executive branch official, unless that request was a mandatory order within the official’s authority. If a worker thinks they were retaliated against, they can file a complaint with the relevant Inspector General. The Inspector General must investigate and report unless the complaint is frivolous or already decided. The IG must act within 180 days, but can extend up to 180 more days if the worker agrees. A complaint must be filed within 3 years of the reprisal. The agency head has 30 days after the IG report to decide and may order fixes such as stopping the reprisal, reinstatement with back pay and benefits, payment of costs (including attorney fees), or discipline of agency officials. If the agency denies relief or delays past 210 days (or 30 days after any agreed extension), the worker can sue in federal district court within 2 years after administrative remedies are exhausted; jury trial is allowed. Orders can be enforced in court with injunctive relief, damages, and fees. Appeals of agency orders go to the court of appeals within 60 days. The law says the legal proof rules in section 1221(e) of title 5 apply, employees’ rights can’t be waived, agencies must inform employees in the workforce’s main language, it does not apply to elements of the intelligence community, and it does not create rights to disclose classified information. Definitions: - Abuse of authority: arbitrary or unreasonable use of power that hurts the agency’s mission or contract performance. - Inspector General: an Inspector General appointed under chapter 4 of title 5 or an IG who funds or oversees contracts or grants for the agency.
Full Legal Text
Public Contracts — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
41 U.S.C. § 4712
Title 41 — Public Contracts
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73