Blind-Made Knives for Combat: Uncle Sam's Sharp Social Good Procurement
Published Date: 2/12/2026
Notice
Summary
The government plans to add two types of combat knives made by a nonprofit that employs people who are blind or severely disabled, while removing some punch head replacements from the list. These changes mainly affect the Department of Defense and aim to support good causes without extra costs. If you want to share your thoughts, you’ve got until March 14, 2026!
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
DoD to Buy Two Combat Knives
The Committee proposes adding two combat knives (NSNs 1095-01-619-0636 and 1095-01-609-1271) to the Procurement List to be produced by DePaul Industries, a nonprofit that employs persons who are blind or have severe disabilities. If added, these products would be mandatory for the Department of Defense (DLA Land and Maritime) and may not be available through the U.S. AbilityOne Commission's Commercial Distribution Program.
Removal of Punch Head Replacements
The Committee proposes deleting four punch head replacement items from the Procurement List (NSNs 7520-01-431-6243, 7520-01-431-6245, 7520-01-431-6248, and 7520-01-431-6250). These items were previously furnished by nonprofit agencies that employ persons who are blind or have other severe disabilities and had been mandatory for the Total Government Requirement under GSA.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-05869 — Procurement List; Additions and Deletions
Starting April 25, 2026, new products and services will be added to the government’s must-buy list from nonprofit groups that employ people who are blind or have severe disabilities. At the same time, some services will be removed from this list. This change helps support these nonprofits while making sure the government gets what it needs on time and without extra hassle.
2026-05868 — Procurement List; Proposed Additions and Deletions
The government plans to add new base operations and maintenance services at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska to be done by a nonprofit that helps people with severe disabilities. At the same time, some webbing strap products supplied by another nonprofit will be removed from the list. Comments on these changes are open until April 25, 2026, so interested folks can weigh in before the final decision.
2026-05368 — Procurement List; Proposed Additions and Deletions
The Committee is updating its Procurement List by adding a new custodial service for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Guam, provided by a nonprofit that employs people who are blind or severely disabled. At the same time, several safety lighting kits and a helicopter landing zone kit are being removed from the list. Comments on these changes are open until April 18, 2026, so stakeholders have time to weigh in before the updates take effect.
2026-05367 — Procurement List; Deletions
The government is removing some punch head replacements from the list of products it buys from nonprofit groups that employ people who are blind or severely disabled. This change takes effect on April 19, 2026, and means these products won’t be required to be bought from the usual supplier anymore. It won’t cause extra costs or paperwork for small businesses and might even open up new opportunities for others.
2026-05431 — Public Meeting
The Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled is hosting a virtual public meeting on April 22, 2026, to share updates and discuss new ideas for making AbilityOne products more innovative and made in the USA. This affects people with disabilities who get jobs through federal contracts and anyone interested in supporting domestic manufacturing. If you want to speak or comment, register by mid-April—this is your chance to shape future products and jobs!
2026-04815 — Procurement List; Deletions
The government is removing some products from the special Procurement List that supports people who are blind or severely disabled. Starting April 12, 2026, these items—like wooden coaster sets and combat ID panels—won't be bought through this program anymore. This change won’t cause extra costs or paperwork and might open doors for new suppliers to step in.
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