Sec. 2. Findings
266 words·~1 min read·
/bill/117/s/3890/is/section-2·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Congress finds the following: It remains the policy of the United States Government to rely on the private sector enterprise system to provide services reasonably and quickly through ordinary business channels. However, over the past half century, the substantial investment in unique, scalable, purposeful, and well-functioning government products and services, including those reliant on the private sector for support, has grown substantially and contributed to the successful delivery of important benefits, services, and programs to taxpayers while reducing waste, fraud, and abuse.
While the United States remains, as it always shall, a Federal system, when Congress makes sustained and significant investments in inherently governmental functions, Congress must seek to ensure that arbitrary restrictions are not in place that encourage other instances of waste, fraud, and abuse by allowing government agencies at all levels to create bespoke, independent systems, studies, and development projects in an independent and uncoordinated manner. In respecting the leadership and ingenuity of the private sector, Congress must not allow agencies at various levels of government to operate in completely independent silos, especially when Federal benefits and programs are being administered at the State, local, territorial, and Tribal levels, which, in doing so, requires far greater taxpayer resources to be spent developing and maintaining systems, programs, projects, and other services that can be better delivered and managed cooperatively between jurisdictions.
State, local, territorial, and Tribal entities should have the option, without being coerced or required, to adopt and use important information, infrastructure, capabilities, and services from the Federal Government if such offerings are made to benefit taxpayers and the constituents served by those offerings.