[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 49, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 49CFR26.71]

[Page 287-289]
 
                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION
 
          SUBTITLE A--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION
 
PART 26--PARTICIPATION BY DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS ENTERPRISES IN DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
                   Subpart D--Certification Standards
 
Sec. 26.71  What rules govern determinations concerning control?

    (a) In determining whether socially and economically disadvantaged 
owners control a firm, you must consider all the facts in the record, 
viewed as a whole.
    (b) Only an independent business may be certified as a DBE. An 
independent business is one the viability of which does not depend on 
its relationship with another firm or firms.
    (1) In determining whether a potential DBE is an independent 
business, you must scrutinize relationships with non-DBE firms, in such 
areas as personnel, facilities, equipment, financial and/or bonding 
support, and other resources.
    (2) You must consider whether present or recent employer/employee 
relationships between the disadvantaged owner(s) of the potential DBE 
and non-DBE firms or persons associated with non-DBE firms compromise 
the independence of the potential DBE firm.
    (3) You must examine the firm's relationships with prime contractors 
to determine whether a pattern of exclusive or primary dealings with a 
prime contractor compromises the independence of the potential DBE firm.
    (4) In considering factors related to the independence of a 
potential DBE firm, you must consider the consistency of relationships 
between the potential DBE and non-DBE firms with normal industry 
practice.
    (c) A DBE firm must not be subject to any formal or informal 
restrictions which limit the customary discretion of the socially and 
economically disadvantaged owners. There can be no restrictions through 
corporate charter provisions, by-law provisions, contracts or any other 
formal or informal devices (e.g., cumulative voting rights, voting 
powers attached to different classes of stock, employment contracts, 
requirements for concurrence by non-disadvantaged partners, conditions 
precedent or subsequent, executory agreements, voting trusts, 
restrictions on or assignments of voting rights) that prevent the 
socially and economically disadvantaged owners, without the cooperation 
or vote of any non-disadvantaged individual, from making any business 
decision of the firm. This paragraph does not preclude a spousal co-
signature on documents as provided for in Sec. 26.69(j)(2).
    (d) The socially and economically disadvantaged owners must possess 
the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and 
policies of the firm and to make day-to-day as well as long-term 
decisions on matters of management, policy and operations.
    (1) A disadvantaged owner must hold the highest officer position in 
the company (e.g., chief executive officer or president).
    (2) In a corporation, disadvantaged owners must control the board of 
directors.
    (3) In a partnership, one or more disadvantaged owners must serve as 
general partners, with control over all partnership decisions.
    (e) Individuals who are not socially and economically disadvantaged 
may be involved in a DBE firm as owners, managers, employees, 
stockholders, officers, and/or directors. Such individuals must not, 
however, possess or exercise the power to control the firm, or be 
disproportionately responsible for the operation of the firm.
    (f) The socially and economically disadvantaged owners of the firm 
may delegate various areas of the management, policymaking, or daily 
operations of the firm to other participants in the firm, regardless of 
whether these participants are socially and economically disadvantaged 
individuals. Such delegations of authority must be revocable, and the 
socially and economically disadvantaged owners must retain the power to 
hire and fire any person to whom such authority is delegated. The 
managerial role of the socially and economically disadvantaged owners in 
the firm's overall affairs must be such that the recipient can 
reasonably conclude that the socially and economically disadvantaged 
owners actually exercise control over the firm's operations, management, 
and policy.
    (g) The socially and economically disadvantaged owners must have an 
overall understanding of, and managerial and technical competence and 
experience directly related to, the type of business in which the firm 
is engaged

[[Page 288]]

and the firm's operations. The socially and economically disadvantaged 
owners are not required to have experience or expertise in every 
critical area of the firm's operations, or to have greater experience or 
expertise in a given field than managers or key employees. The socially 
and economically disadvantaged owners must have the ability to 
intelligently and critically evaluate information presented by other 
participants in the firm's activities and to use this information to 
make independent decisions concerning the firm's daily operations, 
management, and policymaking. Generally, expertise limited to office 
management, administration, or bookkeeping functions unrelated to the 
principal business activities of the firm is insufficient to demonstrate 
control.
    (h) If state or local law requires the persons to have a particular 
license or other credential in order to own and/or control a certain 
type of firm, then the socially and economically disadvantaged persons 
who own and control a potential DBE firm of that type must possess the 
required license or credential. If state or local law does not require 
such a person to have such a license or credential to own and/or control 
a firm, you must not deny certification solely on the ground that the 
person lacks the license or credential. However, you may take into 
account the absence of the license or credential as one factor in 
determining whether the socially and economically disadvantaged owners 
actually control the firm.
    (i)(1) You may consider differences in remuneration between the 
socially and economically disadvantaged owners and other participants in 
the firm in determining whether to certify a firm as a DBE. Such 
consideration shall be in the context of the duties of the persons 
involved, normal industry practices, the firm's policy and practice 
concerning reinvestment of income, and any other explanations for the 
differences proffered by the firm. You may determine that a firm is 
controlled by its socially and economically disadvantaged owner although 
that owner's remuneration is lower than that of some other participants 
in the firm.
    (2) In a case where a non-disadvantaged individual formerly 
controlled the firm, and a socially and economically disadvantaged 
individual now controls it, you may consider a difference between the 
remuneration of the former and current controller of the firm as a 
factor in determining who controls the firm, particularly when the non-
disadvantaged individual remains involved with the firm and continues to 
receive greater compensation than the disadvantaged individual.
    (j) In order to be viewed as controlling a firm, a socially and 
economically disadvantaged owner cannot engage in outside employment or 
other business interests that conflict with the management of the firm 
or prevent the individual from devoting sufficient time and attention to 
the affairs of the firm to control its activities. For example, absentee 
ownership of a business and part-time work in a full-time firm are not 
viewed as constituting control. However, an individual could be viewed 
as controlling a part-time business that operates only on evenings and/
or weekends, if the individual controls it all the time it is operating.
    (k)(1) A socially and economically disadvantaged individual may 
control a firm even though one or more of the individual's immediate 
family members (who themselves are not socially and economically 
disadvantaged individuals) participate in the firm as a manager, 
employee, owner, or in another capacity. Except as otherwise provided in 
this paragraph, you must make a judgment about the control the socially 
and economically disadvantaged owner exercises vis-a-vis other persons 
involved in the business as you do in other situations, without regard 
to whether or not the other persons are immediate family members.
    (2) If you cannot determine that the socially and economically 
disadvantaged owners--as distinct from the family as a whole--control 
the firm, then the socially and economically disadvantaged owners have 
failed to carry their burden of proof concerning control, even though 
they may participate significantly in the firm's activities.

[[Page 289]]

    (l) Where a firm was formerly owned and/or controlled by a non-
disadvantaged individual (whether or not an immediate family member), 
ownership and/or control were transferred to a socially and economically 
disadvantaged individual, and the non-disadvantaged individual remains 
involved with the firm in any capacity, the disadvantaged individual now 
owning the firm must demonstrate to you, by clear and convincing 
evidence, that:
    (1) The transfer of ownership and/or control to the disadvantaged 
individual was made for reasons other than obtaining certification as a 
DBE; and
    (2) The disadvantaged individual actually controls the management, 
policy, and operations of the firm, notwithstanding the continuing 
participation of a non-disadvantaged individual who formerly owned and/
or controlled the firm.
    (m) In determining whether a firm is controlled by its socially and 
economically disadvantaged owners, you may consider whether the firm 
owns equipment necessary to perform its work. However, you must not 
determine that a firm is not controlled by socially and economically 
disadvantaged individuals solely because the firm leases, rather than 
owns, such equipment, where leasing equipment is a normal industry 
practice and the lease does not involve a relationship with a prime 
contractor or other party that compromises the independence of the firm.
    (n) You must grant certification to a firm only for specific types 
of work in which the socially and economically disadvantaged owners have 
the ability to control the firm. To become certified in an additional 
type of work, the firm need demonstrate to you only that its socially 
and economically disadvantaged owners are able to control the firm with 
respect to that type of work. You may not, in this situation, require 
that the firm be recertified or submit a new application for 
certification, but you must verify the disadvantaged owner's control of 
the firm in the additional type of work.
    (o) A business operating under a franchise or license agreement may 
be certified if it meets the standards in this subpart and the 
franchiser or licenser is not affiliated with the franchisee or 
licensee. In determining whether affiliation exists, you should 
generally not consider the restraints relating to standardized quality, 
advertising, accounting format, and other provisions imposed on the 
franchisee or licensee by the franchise agreement or license, provided 
that the franchisee or licensee has the right to profit from its efforts 
and bears the risk of loss commensurate with ownership. Alternatively, 
even though a franchisee or licensee may not be controlled by virtue of 
such provisions in the franchise agreement or license, affiliation could 
arise through other means, such as common management or excessive 
restrictions on the sale or transfer of the franchise interest or 
license.
    (p) In order for a partnership to be controlled by socially and 
economically disadvantaged individuals, any non-disadvantaged partners 
must not have the power, without the specific written concurrence of the 
socially and economically disadvantaged partner(s), to contractually 
bind the partnership or subject the partnership to contract or tort 
liability.
    (q) The socially and economically disadvantaged individuals 
controlling a firm may use an employee leasing company. The use of such 
a company does not preclude the socially and economically disadvantaged 
individuals from controlling their firm if they continue to maintain an 
employer-employee relationship with the leased employees. This includes 
being responsible for hiring, firing, training, assigning, and otherwise 
controlling the on-the-job activities of the employees, as well as 
ultimate responsibility for wage and tax obligations related to the 
employees.