Laws and Regulations

    

[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 13, Volume 1]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 13CFR121]

[Page 286-341]

TITLE 13--BUSINESS CREDIT AND ASSISTANCE

CHAPTER I--SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

PART 121_SMALL BUSINESS SIZE REGULATIONS

Subpart A_Size Eligibility Provisions and Standards

Provisions of General Applicability

Sec.

121.101 What are SBA size standards?

121.102 How does SBA establish size standards?

121.103 How does SBA determine affiliation?

121.104 How does SBA calculate annual receipts?

121.105 How does SBA define ``business concern or concern''?

121.106 How does SBA calculate number of employees?

121.107 How does SBA determine a concern's ``primary industry''?

121.108 What are the penalties for misrepresentation of size status?

Size Standards Used to Define Small Business Concerns

121.201 What size standards has SBA identified by North American

Industry Classification System codes?

Size Eligibility Requirements for SBA Financial Assistance

121.301 What size standards are applicable to financial assistance

programs?

121.302 When does SBA determine the size status of an applicant?

121.303 What size procedures are used by SBA before it makes a formal

size determination?

121.304 What are the size requirements for refinancing an existing SBA

loan?

121.305 What size eligibility requirements exist for obtaining financial

assistance relating to particular procurements?

Size Eligibility Requirements for Government Procurement

121.401 What procurement programs are subject to size determinations?

[[Page 287]]

121.402 What size standards are applicable to Federal Government

Contracting programs?

121.403 Are SBA size determinations and NAICS code designations binding

on parties?

121.404 When does SBA determine the size status of a business concern?

121.405 May a business concern self-certify its small business size

status?

121.406 How does a small business concern qualify to provide

manufactured products under small business set-aside or 8(a)

contracts?

121.407 What are the size procedures for multiple item procurements?

121.408 What are the size procedures for SBA's Certificate of Competency

Program?

121.409 What size standard applies in an unrestricted procurement for

Certificate of Competency purposes?

121.410 What are the size standards for SBA's Section 8(d)

Subcontracting Program?

121.411 What are the size procedures for SBA's Section 8(d)

Subcontracting Program?

121.412 What are the size procedures for partial small business set-

asides?

121.413 [Reserved]

Size Eligibility Requirements for Sales or Lease of Government Property

121.501 What programs for sales or leases of Government property are

subject to size determinations?

121.502 What size standards are applicable to programs for sales or

leases of Government property?

121.503 Are SBA size determinations binding on parties?

121.504 When does SBA determine the size status of a business concern?

121.505 What is the effect of a self-certification?

121.506 What definitions are important for sales or leases of

Government-owned timber?

121.507 What are the size standards and other requirements for the

purchase of Government-owned timber (other than Special

Salvage Timber)?

121.508 What are the size standards and other requirements for the

purchase of Government-owned Special Salvage Timber?

121.509 What is the size standard for leasing of Government land for

coal mining?

121.510 What is the size standard for leasing of Government land for

uranium mining?

121.511 What is the size standard for buying Government-owned petroleum?

121.512 What is the size standard for stockpile purchases?

Size Eligibility Requirements for the 8(a) Business Development Program

121.601 What is a small business for purposes of admission to SBA's 8(a)

Business Development program?

121.602 At what point in time must a 8(a) BD applicant be small?

121.603 How does SBA determine whether a Participant is small for a

particular 8(a) BD subcontract?

121.604 Are 8(a) BD Participants considered small for purposes of other

SBA assistance?

Size Eligibility Requirements for the Small Business Innovation Research

(SBIR) Program

121.701 What SBIR programs are subject to size determinations?

121.702 What size standards are applicable to the SBIR program?

121.703 Are formal size determinations binding on parties?

121.704 When does SBA determine the size status of a business concern?

121.705 Must a business concern self-certify its size status?

Size Eligibility Requirements for Paying Reduced Patent Fees

121.801 May patent fees be reduced if a concern is small?

121.802 What size standards are applicable to reduced patent fees

programs?

121.803 Are formal size determinations binding on parties?

121.804 When does SBA determine the size status of a business concern?

121.805 May a business concern self-certify its size status?

Size Eligibility Requirements for Compliance With Programs of Other

Agencies

121.901 Can other Government agencies obtain SBA size determinations?

121.902 What size standards are applicable to programs of other

agencies?

121.903 How may an agency use size standards for its programs that are

different than those established by SBA?

121.904 When does SBA determine the size status of a business concern?

Procedures for Size Protests and Requests for Formal Size Determinations

121.1001 Who may initiate a size protest or a request for formal size

determination?

121.1002 Who makes a formal size determination?

121.1003 Where should a size protest be filed?

121.1004 What time limits apply to size protests?

121.1005 How must a protest be filed with the contracting officer?

[[Page 288]]

121.1006 When will a size protest be referred to an SBA Government

Contracting Area Office?

121.1007 Must a protest of size status relate to a particular

procurement and be specific?

121.1008 What occurs after SBA receives a size protest or request for a

formal size determination?

121.1009 What are the procedures for making the size determination?

121.1010 How does a concern become recertified as a small business?

Appeals of Size Determinations and NAICS Code Designations

121.1101 Are formal size determinations subject to appeal?

121.1102 Are NAICS code designations subject to appeal?

121.1103 What are the procedures for appealing an NAICS code

designation?

Subpart B_Other Applicable Provisions

Waivers of the Nonmanufacturer Rule for Classes of Products and

Individual Contracts

121.1201 What is the Nonmanufacturer Rule?

121.1202 When will a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule be granted for a

class of products?

121.1203 When will a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule be granted for

an individual contract?

121.1204 What are the procedures for requesting and granting waivers?

121.1205 How is a list of previously granted class waivers obtained?

Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 636(b), 637(a), 644, and

662(5); and Pub. L. 105-135, sec. 401 et seq., 111 Stat. 2592.

Source: 61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, unless otherwise noted.

Subpart A_Size Eligibility Provisions and Standards

Provisions of General Applicability

Sec. 121.101 What are SBA size standards?

(a) SBA's size standards define whether a business entity is small

and, thus, eligible for Government programs and preferences reserved for

``small business'' concerns. Size standards have been established for

types of economic activity, or industry, generally under the North

American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

(b) NAICS is described in the North American Industry Classification

Manual--United States, which is available from the National Technical

Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161; by

calling 1(800) 553-6847 or 1(703) 605-6000; or via the Internet at

http://www.ntis.gov/yellowbk/1nty205.htm. The manual includes

definitions for each industry, tables showing relationships between 1997

NAICS and 1987 SICs, and a comprehensive index. NAICS assigns codes to

all economic activity within twenty broad sectors. Section 121.201

provides a full table of small business size standards matched to the

U.S. NAICS industry codes. A full table matching a size standard with

each NAICS Industry or U.S. Industry code is also published annually by

SBA in the Federal Register.

[65 FR 30840, May 15, 2000, as amended at 67 FR 52602, Aug. 13, 2002]

Sec. 121.102 How does SBA establish size standards?

(a) SBA considers economic characteristics comprising the structure

of an industry, including degree of competition, average firm size,

start-up costs and entry barriers, and distribution of firms by size. It

also considers technological changes, competition from other industries,

growth trends, historical activity within an industry, unique factors

occurring in the industry which may distinguish small firms from other

firms, and the objectives of its programs and the impact on those

programs of different size standard levels.

(b) As part of its review of a size standard, SBA will investigate

if any concern at or below a particular standard would be dominant in

the industry. SBA will take into consideration market share of a concern

and other appropriate factors which may allow a concern to exercise a

major controlling influence on a national basis in which a number of

business concerns are engaged. Size standards seek to ensure that a

concern that meets a specific size standard is not dominant in its field

of operation.

(c) As part of its review of size standards, SBA's Office of Size

Standards will examine the impact of inflation on monetary-based size

standards (e.g., receipts, net income, assets) at least once every five

years and submit a report to

[[Page 289]]

the Administrator or designee. If SBA finds that inflation has

significantly eroded the value of the monetary-based size standards, it

will issue a proposed rule to increase size standards.

(d) Please address any requests to change existing size standards or

establish new ones for emerging industries to the Assistant

Administrator for Size Standards, Small Business Administration, 409 3rd

Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 67 FR 3045, Jan. 23, 2002]

Sec. 121.103 How does SBA determine affiliation?

(a) General Principles of Affiliation. (1) Concerns and entities are

affiliates of each other when one controls or has the power to control

the other, or a third party or parties controls or has the power to

control both. It does not matter whether control is exercised, so long

as the power to control exists.

(2) SBA considers factors such as ownership, management, previous

relationships with or ties to another concern, and contractual

relationships, in determining whether affiliation exists.

(3) Control may be affirmative or negative. Negative control

includes, but is not limited to, instances where a minority shareholder

has the ability, under the concern's charter, by-laws, or shareholder's

agreement, to prevent a quorum or otherwise block action by the board of

directors or shareholders.

(4) Affiliation may be found where an individual, concern, or entity

exercises control indirectly through a third party.

(5) In determining whether affiliation exists, SBA will consider the

totality of the circumstances, and may find affiliation even though no

single factor is sufficient to constitute affiliation.

(6) In determining the concern's size, SBA counts the receipts,

employees, or other measure of size of the concern whose size is at

issue and all of its domestic and foreign affiliates, regardless of

whether the affiliates are organized for profit.

(b) Exceptions to affiliation coverage. (1) Business concerns owned

in whole or substantial part by investment companies licensed, or

development companies qualifying, under the Small Business Investment

Act of 1958, as amended, are not considered affiliates of such

investment companies or development companies.

(2)(i) Business concerns owned and controlled by Indian Tribes,

Alaska Native Corporations (ANCs) organized pursuant to the Alaska

Native Claims Settlement Act (43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.), Native Hawaiian

Organizations (NHOs), Community Development Corporations (CDCs)

authorized by 42 U.S.C. 9805, or wholly-owned entities of Indian Tribes,

ANCs, NHOs, or CDCs are not considered affiliates of such entities.

(ii) Business concerns owned and controlled by Indian Tribes, ANCs,

NHOs, CDCs, or wholly-owned entities of Indian Tribes, ANCs, NHOs, or

CDCs are not considered to be affiliated with other concerns owned by

these entities because of their common ownership or common management.

In addition, affiliation will not be found based upon the performance of

common administrative services, such as bookkeeping and payroll, so long

as adequate payment is provided for those services. Affiliation may be

found for other reasons.

(3) Business concerns which are part of an SBA approved pool of

concerns for a joint program of research and development as authorized

by the Small Business Act are not affiliates of one another because of

the pool.

(4) Business concerns which lease employees from concerns primarily

engaged in leasing employees to other businesses or which enter into a

co-employer arrangement with a Professional Employer Organization (PEO)

are not affiliated with the leasing company or PEO solely on the basis

of a leasing agreement.

(5) For financial, management or technical assistance under the

Small Business Investment Act of 1958, as amended, (an applicant is not

affiliated with the investors listed in paragraphs (b)(5) (i) through

(vi) of this section.

(i) Venture capital operating companies, as defined in the U.S.

Department of Labor regulations found at 29 CFR 2510.3-101(d);

(ii) Employee benefit or pension plans established and maintained by

the Federal government or any state, or their political subdivisions, or

any

[[Page 290]]

agency or instrumentality thereof, for the benefit of employees;

(iii) Employee benefit or pension plans within the meaning of the

Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (29 U.S.C.

1001, et seq.);

(iv) Charitable trusts, foundations, endowments, or similar

organizations exempt from Federal income taxation under section 501(c)

of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (26 U.S.C. 501(c));

(v) Investment companies registered under the Investment Company Act

of 1940, as amended (1940 Act) (15 U.S.C. 80a-1, et seq.); and

(vi) Investment companies, as defined under the 1940 Act, which are

not registered under the 1940 Act because they are beneficially owned by

less than 100 persons, if the company's sales literature or

organizational documents indicate that its principal purpose is

investment in securities rather than the operation of commercial

enterprises.

(6) A protege firm is not an affiliate of a mentor firm solely

because the protege firm receives assistance from the mentor firm under

Federal Mentor-Protege programs. Affiliation may be found for other

reasons.

(7) The member shareholders of a small agricultural cooperative, as

defined in the Agricultural Marketing Act (12 U.S.C. 1141j), are not

considered affiliated with the cooperative by virtue of their membership

in the cooperative.

(c) Affiliation based on stock ownership. (1) A person (including

any individual, concern or other entity) that owns, or has the power to

control, 50 percent or more of a concern's voting stock, or a block of

voting stock which is large compared to other outstanding blocks of

voting stock, controls or has the power to control the concern.

(2) If two or more persons (including any individual, concern or

other entity) each owns, controls, or has the power to control less than

50 percent of a concern's voting stock, and such minority holdings are

equal or approximately equal in size, and the aggregate of these

minority holdings is large as compared with any other stock holding, SBA

presumes that each such person controls or has the power to control the

concern whose size is at issue. This presumption may be rebutted by a

showing that such control or power to control does not in fact exist.

(3) If a concern's voting stock is widely held and no single block

of stock is large as compared with all other stock holdings, the

concern's Board of Directors and CEO or President will be deemed to have

the power to control the concern in the absence of evidence to the

contrary.

(d) Affiliation arising under stock options, convertible securities,

and agreements to merge. (1) In determining size, SBA considers stock

options, convertible securities, and agreements to merge (including

agreements in principle) to have a present effect on the power to

control a concern. SBA treats such options, convertible securities, and

agreements as though the rights granted have been exercised.

(2) Agreements to open or continue negotiations towards the

possibility of a merger or a sale of stock at some later date are not

considered ``agreements in principle'' and are thus not given present

effect.

(3) Options, convertible securities, and agreements that are subject

to conditions precedent which are incapable of fulfillment, speculative,

conjectural, or unenforceable under state or Federal law, or where the

probability of the transaction (or exercise of the rights) occurring is

shown to be extremely remote, are not given present effect.

(4) An individual, concern or other entity that controls one or more

other concerns cannot use options, convertible securities, or agreements

to appear to terminate such control before actually doing so. SBA will

not give present effect to individuals', concerns' or other entities'

ability to divest all or part of their ownership interest in order to

avoid a finding of affiliation.

(e) Affiliation based on common management. Affiliation arises where

one or more officers, directors, managing members, or partners who

control the board of directors and/or management of one concern also

control the board of directors or management of one or more other

concerns.

[[Page 291]]

(f) Affiliation based on identity of interest. Affiliation may arise

among two or more persons with an identity of interest. Individuals or

firms that have identical or substantially identical business or

economic interests (such as family members, individuals or firms with

common investments, or firms that are economically dependent through

contractual or other relationships) may be treated as one party with

such interests aggregated. Where SBA determines that such interests

should be aggregated, an individual or firm may rebut that determination

with evidence showing that the interests deemed to be one are in fact

separate.

(g) Affiliation based on the newly organized concern rule.

Affiliation may arise where former officers, directors, principal

stockholders, managing members, or key employees of one concern organize

a new concern in the same or related industry or field of operation, and

serve as the new concern's officers, directors, principal stockholders,

managing members, or key employees, and the one concern is furnishing or

will furnish the new concern with contracts, financial or technical

assistance, indemnification on bid or performance bonds, and/or other

facilities, whether for a fee or otherwise. A concern may rebut such an

affiliation determination by demonstrating a clear line of fracture

between the two concerns. A ``key employee'' is an employee who, because

of his/her position in the concern, has a critical influence in or

substantive control over the operations or management of the concern.

(h) Affiliation based on joint ventures. A joint venture is an

association of individuals and/or concerns with interests in any degree

or proportion by way of contract, express or implied, consorting to

engage in and carry out no more than three specific or limited-purpose

business ventures for joint profit over a two year period, for which

purpose they combine their efforts, property, money, skill, or

knowledge, but not on a continuing or permanent basis for conducting

business generally. This means that the joint venture entity cannot

submit more than three offers over a two year period, starting from the

date of the submission of the first offer. A joint venture may or may

not be in the form of a separate legal entity. The joint venture is

viewed as a business entity in determining power to control its

management. SBA may also determine that the relationship between a prime

contractor and its subcontractor is a joint venture, and that

affiliation between the two exists, pursuant to paragraph (h)(4) of this

section.

(1) Parties to a joint venture are affiliates if any one of them

seeks SBA financial assistance for use in connection with the joint

venture.

(2) Except as provided in paragraph (h)(3) of this section, concerns

submitting offers on a particular procurement or property sale as joint

venturers are affiliated with each other with regard to the performance

of that contract.

(3) Exception to affiliation for certain joint ventures. (i) A joint

venture of two or more business concerns may submit an offer as a small

business for a Federal procurement without regard to affiliation under

paragraph (h) of this section so long as each concern is small under the

size standard corresponding to the NAICS code assigned to the contract,

provided:

(A) The procurement qualifies as a ``bundled'' requirement, at any

dollar value, within the meaning of Sec. 125.2(d)(1)(i) of this

chapter; or

(B) The procurement is other than a ``bundled'' requirement within

the meaning of Sec. 125.2(d)(1)(i) of this chapter, and:

(1) For a procurement having a receipts based size standard, the

dollar value of the procurement, including options, exceeds half the

size standard corresponding to the NAICS code assigned to the contract;

or

(2) For a procurement having an employee-based size standard, the

dollar value of the procurement, including options, exceeds $10 million.

(ii) A joint venture of at least one 8(a) Participant and one or

more other business concerns may submit an offer for a competitive 8(a)

procurement without regard to affiliation under paragraph (h) of this

section so long as the requirements of Sec. 124.513(b)(1) of this

chapter are met.

(iii) Two firms approved by SBA to be a mentor and

prot[eacute]g[eacute] under 13 CFR 124.520 may joint venture as a small

[[Page 292]]

business for any Federal Government procurement, provided the

prot[eacute]g[eacute] qualifies as small for the size standard

corresponding to the NAICS code assigned to the procurement and, for

purposes of 8(a) sole source requirements, has not reached the dollar

limit set forth in 13 CFR 124.519.

(4) A contractor and its ostensible subcontractor are treated as

joint venturers, and therefore affiliates, for size determination

purposes. An ostensible subcontractor is a subcontractor that performs

primary and vital requirements of a contract, or of an order under a

multiple award schedule contract, or a subcontractor upon which the

prime contractor is unusually reliant. All aspects of the relationship

between the prime and subcontractor are considered, including, but not

limited to, the terms of the proposal (such as contract management,

technical responsibilities, and the percentage of subcontracted work),

agreements between the prime and subcontractor (such as bonding

assistance or the teaming agreement), and whether the subcontractor is

the incumbent contractor and is ineligible to submit a proposal because

it exceeds the applicable size standard for that solicitation.

(5) For size purposes, a concern must include in its receipts its

proportionate share of joint venture receipts, and in its total number

of employees its proportionate share of joint venture employees.

(i) Affiliation based on franchise and license agreements. The

restraints imposed on a franchisee or licensee by its franchise or

license agreement relating to standardized quality, advertising,

accounting format and other similar provisions, generally will not be

considered in determining whether the franchisor or licensor is

affiliated with the franchisee or licensee provided the franchisee or

licensee has the right to profit from its efforts and bears the risk of

loss commensurate with ownership. Affiliation may arise, however,

through other means, such as common ownership, common management or

excessive restrictions upon the sale of the franchise interest.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 62 FR 26381, May 14, 1997; 63

FR 35738, June 30, 1998; 64 FR 57370, Oct. 25, 1999; 65 FR 30840, May

15, 2000; 65 FR 35812, June 6, 2000; 65 FR 45833, July 26, 2000; 69 FR

29201, May 21, 2004; 70 FR 51248, Aug. 30, 2005]

Sec. 121.104 How does SBA calculate annual receipts?

(a) Receipts means ``total income'' (or in the case of a sole

proprietorship, ``gross income'') plus ``cost of goods sold'' as these

terms are defined and reported on Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax

return forms (such as Form 1120 for corporations; Form 1120S and

Schedule K for S corporations; Form 1120, Form 1065 or Form 1040 for

LLCs; Form 1065 and Schedule K for partnerships; Form 1040, Schedule F

for farms; Form 1040, Schedule C for other sole proprietorships).

Receipts do not include net capital gains or losses; taxes collected for

and remitted to a taxing authority if included in gross or total income,

such as sales or other taxes collected from customers and excluding

taxes levied on the concern or its employees; proceeds from transactions

between a concern and its domestic or foreign affiliates; and amounts

collected for another by a travel agent, real estate agent, advertising

agent, conference management service provider, freight forwarder or

customs broker. For size determination purposes, the only exclusions

from receipts are those specifically provided for in this paragraph. All

other items, such as subcontractor costs, reimbursements for purchases a

contractor makes at a customer's request, and employee-based costs such

as payroll taxes, may not be excluded from receipts.

(1) The Federal income tax return and any amendments filed with the

IRS on or before the date of self-certification must be used to

determine the size status of a concern. SBA will not use tax returns or

amendments filed with the IRS after the initiation of a size

determination.

(2) When a concern has not filed a Federal income tax return with

the IRS for a fiscal year which must be included in the period of

measurement,

[[Page 293]]

SBA will calculate the concern's annual receipts for that year using any

other available information, such as the concern's regular books of

account, audited financial statements, or information contained in an

affidavit by a person with personal knowledge of the facts.

(b) Completed fiscal year means a taxable year including any short

year. ``Taxable year'' and ``short year'' have the meanings attributed

to them by the IRS.

(c) Period of measurement. (1) Annual receipts of a concern that has

been in business for three or more completed fiscal years means the

total receipts of the concern over its most recently completed three

fiscal years divided by three.

(2) Annual receipts of a concern which has been in business for less

than three complete fiscal years means the total receipts for the period

the concern has been in business divided by the number of weeks in

business, multiplied by 52.

(3) Where a concern has been in business three or more complete

fiscal years but has a short year as one of the years within its period

of measurement, annual receipts means the total receipts for the short

year and the two full fiscal years divided by the total number of weeks

in the short year and the two full fiscal years, multiplied by 52.

(d) Annual receipts of affiliates. (1) The average annual receipts

size of a business concern with affiliates is calculated by adding the

average annual receipts of the business concern with the average annual

receipts of each affiliate.

(2) If a concern has acquired an affiliate or been acquired as an

affiliate during the applicable period of measurement or before the date

on which it self-certified as small, the annual receipts used in

determining size status includes the receipts of the acquired or

acquiring concern. Furthermore, this aggregation applies for the entire

period of measurement, not just the period after the affiliation arose.

(3) If the business concern or an affiliate has been in business for

a period of less than three years, the receipts for the fiscal year with

less than a 12 month period are annualized in accordance with paragraph

(c)(2) of this section. Receipts are determined for the concern and its

affiliates in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section even though

this may result in using a different period of measurement to calculate

an affiliate's annual receipts.

(4) The annual receipts of a former affiliate are not included if

affiliation ceased before the date used for determining size. This

exclusion of annual receipts of a former affiliate applies during the

entire period of measurement, rather than only for the period after

which affiliation ceased.

(e) Unless otherwise defined in this section, all terms shall have

the meaning attributed to them by the IRS.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 48604, Aug. 9, 2000; 69

FR 29203, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.105 How does SBA define ``business concern or concern''?

(a)(1) Except for small agricultural cooperatives, a business

concern eligible for assistance from SBA as a small business is a

business entity organized for profit, with a place of business located

in the United States, and which operates primarily within the United

States or which makes a significant contribution to the U.S. economy

through payment of taxes or use of American products, materials or

labor.

(2) A small agricultural cooperative is an association (corporate or

otherwise) acting pursuant to the provisions of the Agricultural

Marketing Act (12 U.S.C.A. 1141j) whose size does not exceed the size

standard established by SBA for other similar agricultural small

business concerns. A small agricultural cooperative's member

shareholders are not considered to be affiliates of the cooperative by

virtue of their membership in the cooperative. However, a business

concern or cooperative that does not qualify as small under this part

may not be a member of a small agricultural cooperative.

(b) A business concern may be in the legal form of an individual

proprietorship, partnership, limited liability company, corporation,

joint venture,

[[Page 294]]

association, trust or cooperative, except that where the form is a joint

venture there can be no more than 49 percent participation by foreign

business entities in the joint venture.

(c) A firm will not be treated as a separate business concern if a

substantial portion of its assets and/or liabilities are the same as

those of a predecessor entity. In such a case, the annual receipts and

employees of the predecessor will be taken into account in determining

size.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 70 FR 51248, Aug. 30, 2005]

Sec. 121.106 How does SBA calculate number of employees?

(a) In determining a concern's number of employees, SBA counts all

individuals employed on a full-time, part-time, or other basis. This

includes employees obtained from a temporary employee agency,

professional employee organization or leasing concern. SBA will consider

the totality of the circumstances, including criteria used by the IRS

for Federal income tax purposes, in determining whether individuals are

employees of a concern. Volunteers (i.e., individuals who receive no

compensation, including no in-kind compensation, for work performed) are

not considered employees.

(b) Where the size standard is number of employees, the method for

determining a concern's size includes the following principles:

(1) The average number of employees of the concern is used

(including the employees of its domestic and foreign affiliates) based

upon numbers of employees for each of the pay periods for the preceding

completed 12 calendar months.

(2) Part-time and temporary employees are counted the same as full-

time employees.

(3) If a concern has not been in business for 12 months, the average

number of employees is used for each of the pay periods during which it

has been in business.

(4)(i) The average number of employees of a business concern with

affiliates is calculated by adding the average number of employees of

the business concern with the average number of employees of each

affiliate. If a concern has acquired an affiliate or been acquired as an

affiliate during the applicable period of measurement or before the date

on which it self-certified as small, the employees counted in

determining size status include the employees of the acquired or

acquiring concern. Furthermore, this aggregation applies for the entire

period of measurement, not just the period after the affiliation arose.

(ii) The employees of a former affiliate are not counted if

affiliation ceased before the date used for determining size. This

exclusion of employees of a former affiliate applies during the entire

period of measurement, rather than only for the period after which

affiliation ceased.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29203, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.107 How does SBA determine a concern's ``primary industry''?

In determining the primary industry in which a concern or a concern

combined with its affiliates is engaged, SBA considers the distribution

of receipts, employees and costs of doing business among the different

industries in which business operations occurred for the most recently

completed fiscal year. SBA may also consider other factors, such as the

distribution of patents, contract awards, and assets.

Sec. 121.108 What are the penalties for misrepresentation of size

status?

In addition to other laws which may be applicable, section 16(d) of

the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 645(d), provides severe criminal

penalties for knowingly misrepresenting the small business size status

of a concern in connection with procurement programs. Section 16(a) of

the Act also provides, in part, for criminal penalties for knowingly

making false statements or misrepresentations to SBA for the purpose of

influencing in any way the actions of the Agency.

[[Page 295]]

Size Standards Used To Define Small Business Concerns

Sec. 121.201 What size standards has SBA identified by North American

Industry Classification System codes?

The size standards described in this section apply to all SBA

programs unless otherwise specified in this part. The size standards

themselves are expressed either in number of employees or annual

receipts in millions of dollars, unless otherwise specified. The number

of employees or annual receipts indicates the maximum allowed for a

concern and its affiliates to be considered small.

Small Business Size Standards by NAICS Industry

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Size standards Size standards

NAICS codes NAICS U.S. industry title in millions of in number of

dollars employees

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 11--Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 111--Crop Production

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

111110................................. Soybean Farming........................ $0.75 ..............

111120................................. Oilseed (except Soybean) Farming....... $0.75 ..............

111130................................. Dry Pea and Bean Farming............... $0.75 ..............

111140................................. Wheat Farming.......................... $0.75 ..............

111150................................. Corn Farming........................... $0.75 ..............

111160................................. Rice Farming........................... $0.75 ..............

111191................................. Oilseed and Grain Combination Farming.. $0.75 ..............

111199................................. All Other Grain Farming................ $0.75 ..............

111211................................. Potato Farming......................... $0.75 ..............

111219................................. Other Vegetable (except Potato) and $0.75 ..............

Melon Farming.

111310................................. Orange Groves.......................... $0.75 ..............

111320................................. Citrus (except Orange) Groves.......... $0.75 ..............

111331................................. Apple Orchards......................... $0.75 ..............

111332................................. Grape Vineyards........................ $0.75 ..............

111333................................. Strawberry Farming..................... $0.75 ..............

111334................................. Berry (except Strawberry) Farming...... $0.75 ..............

111335................................. Tree Nut Farming....................... $0.75 ..............

111336................................. Fruit and Tree Nut Combination Farming. $0.75 ..............

111339................................. Other Noncitrus Fruit Farming.......... $0.75 ..............

111411................................. Mushroom Production.................... $0.75 ..............

111419................................. Other Food Crops Grown Under Cover..... $0.75 ..............

111421................................. Nursery and Tree Production............ $0.75 ..............

111422................................. Floriculture Production................ $0.75 ..............

111910................................. Tobacco Farming........................ $0.75 ..............

111920................................. Cotton Farming......................... $0.75 ..............

111930................................. Sugarcane Farming...................... $0.75 ..............

111940................................. Hay Farming............................ $0.75 ..............

111991................................. Sugar Beet Farming..................... $0.75 ..............

111992................................. Peanut Farming......................... $0.75 ..............

111998................................. All Other Miscellaneous Crop Farming... $0.75 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 112--Animal Production

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

112111................................. Beef Cattle Ranching and Farming....... $0.75 ..............

112112................................. Cattle Feedlots........................ $2.00 ..............

112120................................. Dairy Cattle and Milk Production....... $0.75 ..............

112210................................. Hog and Pig Farming.................... $0.75 ..............

112310................................. Chicken Egg Production................. $11.5 ..............

112320................................. Broilers and Other Meat Type Chicken $0.75 ..............

Production.

112330................................. Turkey Production...................... $0.75 ..............

112340................................. Poultry Hatcheries..................... $0.75 ..............

112390................................. Other Poultry Production............... $0.75 ..............

112410................................. Sheep Farming.......................... $0.75 ..............

112420................................. Goat Farming........................... $0.75 ..............

112511................................. Finfish Farming and Fish Hatcheries.... $0.75 ..............

112512................................. Shellfish Farming...................... $0.75 ..............

112519................................. Other Animal Aquaculture............... $0.75 ..............

112910................................. Apiculture............................. $0.75 ..............

112920................................. Horse and Other Equine Production...... $0.75 ..............

112930................................. Fur-Bearing Animal and Rabbit $0.75 ..............

Production.

112990................................. All Other Animal Production............ $0.75 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 113--Forestry and Logging

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

113110................................. Timber Tract Operations................ $6.5 ..............

[[Page 296]]

113210................................. Forest Nurseries and Gathering of $6.5 ..............

Forest Products.

113310................................. Logging................................ .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 114--Fishing, Hunting and Trapping

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

114111................................. Finfish Fishing........................ $4.0 ..............

114112................................. Shellfish Fishing...................... $4.0 ..............

114119................................. Other Marine Fishing................... $4.0 ..............

114210................................. Hunting and Trapping................... $4.0 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 115--Support Activities for Agriculture and Forestry

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

115111................................. Cotton Ginning......................... $6.5 ..............

115112................................. Soil Preparation, Planting, and $6.5 ..............

Cultivating.

115113................................. Crop Harvesting, Primarily by Machine.. $6.5 ..............

115114................................. Postharvest Crop Activities (except $6.5 ..............

Cotton Ginning).

115115................................. Farm Labor Contractors and Crew Leaders $6.5 ..............

115116................................. Farm Management Services............... $6.5 ..............

115210................................. Support Activities for Animal $6.5 ..............

Production.

115310................................. Support Activities for Forestry........ $6.5 ..............

EXCEPT Forest Fire Suppression \17\........... \17\ 16.5 ..............

EXCEPT Fuels Management Services \17\......... \17\ 16.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 21--Mining

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 211--Oil and Gas Extraction

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

211111................................. Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas .............. 500

Extraction.

211112................................. Natural Gas Liquid Extraction.......... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 212--Mining (except Oil and Gas)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

212111................................. Bituminous Coal and Lignite Surface .............. 500

Mining.

212112................................. Bituminous Coal Underground Mining..... .............. 500

212113................................. Anthracite Mining...................... .............. 500

212210................................. Iron Ore Mining........................ .............. 500

212221................................. Gold Ore Mining........................ .............. 500

212222................................. Silver Ore Mining...................... .............. 500

212231................................. Lead Ore and Zinc Ore Mining........... .............. 500

212234................................. Copper Ore and Nickel Ore Mining....... .............. 500

212291................................. Uranium-Radium-Vanadium Ore Mining..... .............. 500

212299................................. All Other Metal Ore Mining............. .............. 500

212311................................. Dimension Stone Mining and Quarrying... .............. 500

212312................................. Crushed and Broken Limestone Mining and .............. 500

Quarrying.

212313................................. Crushed and Broken Granite Mining and .............. 500

Quarrying.

212319................................. Other Crushed and Broken Stone Mining .............. 500

and Quarrying.

212321................................. Construction Sand and Gravel Mining.... .............. 500

212322................................. Industrial Sand Mining................. .............. 500

212324................................. Kaolin and Ball Clay Mining............ .............. 500

212325................................. Clay and Ceramic and Refractory .............. 500

Minerals Mining.

212391................................. Potash, Soda, and Borate Mineral Mining .............. 500

212392................................. Phosphate Rock Mining.................. .............. 500

212393................................. Other Chemical and Fertilizer Mineral .............. 500

Mining.

212399................................. All Other Nonmetallic Mineral Mining... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 213--Support Activities for Mining

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

213111................................. Drilling Oil and Gas Wells............. .............. 500

213112................................. Support Activities for Oil and Gas $6.5 ..............

Operations.

213113................................. Support Activities for Coal Mining..... $6.5 ..............

213114................................. Support Activities for Metal Mining.... $6.5 ..............

213115................................. Support Activities for Nonmetallic $6.5 ..............

Minerals (except Fuels).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 22--Utilities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 221--Utilities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

221111................................. Hydroelectric Power Generation......... See footnote 1 ..............

221112................................. Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation.. See footnote 1 ..............

221113................................. Nuclear Electric Power Generation...... See footnote 1 ..............

221119................................. Other Electric Power Generation........ See footnote 1 ..............

[[Page 297]]

221121................................. Electric Bulk Power Transmission and See footnote 1

Control.

221122................................. Electric Power Distribution............ See footnote 1 ..............

221210................................. Natural Gas Distribution............... .............. 500

221310................................. Water Supply and Irrigation Systems.... $6.5 ..............

221320................................. Sewage Treatment Facilities............ $6.5 ..............

221330................................. Steam and Air-Conditioning Supply...... $11.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 23--Construction

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 236--Construction of Buildings

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

236115................................. New Single-Family Housing Construction $31.0 ..............

(except Operative Builders).

236116................................. New Multifamily Housing Construction $31.0 ..............

(except Operative Builders).

236117................................. New Housing Operative Builders......... $31.0 ..............

236118................................. Residential Remodelers................. $31.0 ..............

236210................................. Industrial Building Construction....... $31.0 ..............

236220................................. Commercial and Institutional Building $31.0 ..............

Construction.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 237--Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

237110................................. Water and Sewer Line and Related $31.0 ..............

Structures Construction.

237120................................. Oil and Gas Pipeline and Related $31.0 ..............

Structures Construction.

237130................................. Power and Communication Line and $31.0 ..............

Related Structures Construction.

237210................................. Land Subdivision....................... $6.5 ..............

237310................................. Highway, Street, and Bridge $31.0 ..............

Construction.

237990................................. Other Heavy and Civil Engineering $31.0 ..............

Construction.

EXCEPT, Dredging and Surface Cleanup Activities \2\ $18.5 ..............

\2\.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 238--Specialty Trade Contractors

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

238110................................. Poured Concrete Foundation and $13.0 ..............

Structure Contractors.

238120................................. Structural Steel and Precast Concrete $13.0 ..............

Contractors.

238130................................. Framing Contractors.................... $13.0 ..............

238140................................. Masonry Contractors.................... $13.0 ..............

238150................................. Glass and Glazing Contractors.......... $13.0 ..............

238160................................. Roofing Contractors.................... $13.0 ..............

238170................................. Siding Contractors..................... $13.0 ..............

238190................................. Other Foundation, Structure, and $13.0 ..............

Building Exterior Contractors.

238210................................. Electrical Contractors................. $13.0 ..............

238220................................. Plumbing, Heating, and Air-Conditioning $13.0 ..............

Contractors.

238290................................. Other Building Equipment Contractors... $13.0 ..............

238310................................. Drywall and Insulation Contractors..... $13.0 ..............

238320................................. Painting and Wall Covering Contractors. $13.0 ..............

238330................................. Flooring Contractors................... $13.0 ..............

238340................................. Tile and Terrazzo Contractors.......... $13.0 ..............

238350................................. Finish Carpentry Contractors........... $13.0 ..............

238390................................. Other Building Finishing Contractors... $13.0 ..............

238910................................. Site Preparation Contractors........... $13.0 ..............

238990................................. All Other Specialty Trade Contractors \13\ $13.0 ..............

\13\.

238990................................. Building and Property Specialty Trade \13\ $13.0 ..............

Services \13\.

EXCEPT, Building and Property Specialty Trade \13\ $12.0 ..............

Services \13\.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sectors 31-33--Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 311--Food Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

311111................................. Dog and Cat Food Manufacturing......... .............. 500

311119................................. Other Animal Food Manufacturing........ .............. 500

311211................................. Flour Milling.......................... .............. 500

311212................................. Rice Milling........................... .............. 500

311213................................. Malt Manufacturing..................... .............. 500

311221................................. Wet Corn Milling....................... .............. 750

311222................................. Soybean Processing..................... .............. 500

311223................................. Other Oilseed Processing............... .............. 1,000

311225................................. Fats and Oils Refining and Blending.... .............. 1,000

311230................................. Breakfast Cereal Manufacturing......... .............. 1,000

311311................................. Sugarcane Mills........................ .............. 500

311312................................. Cane Sugar Refining.................... .............. 750

311313................................. Beet Sugar Manufacturing............... .............. 750

311320................................. Chocolate and Confectionery .............. 500

Manufacturing from Cacao Beans.

311330................................. Confectionery Manufacturing from .............. 500

Purchased Chocolate.

[[Page 298]]

311340................................. Non-Chocolate Confectionery .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311411................................. Frozen Fruit, Juice and Vegetable .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311412................................. Frozen Specialty Food Manufacturing.... .............. 500

311421................................. Fruit and Vegetable Canning \3\........ .............. \3\ 500

311422................................. Specialty Canning...................... .............. 1,000

311423................................. Dried and Dehydrated Food Manufacturing .............. 500

311511................................. Fluid Milk Manufacturing............... .............. 500

311512................................. Creamery Butter Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

311513................................. Cheese Manufacturing................... .............. 500

311514................................. Dry, Condensed, and Evaporated Dairy .............. 500

Product Manufacturing.

311520................................. Ice Cream and Frozen Dessert .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311611................................. Animal (except Poultry) Slaughtering... .............. 500

311612................................. Meat Processed from Carcasses.......... .............. 500

311613................................. Rendering and Meat By-product .............. 500

Processing.

311615................................. Poultry Processing..................... .............. 500

311711................................. Seafood Canning........................ .............. 500

311712................................. Fresh and Frozen Seafood Processing.... .............. 500

311811................................. Retail Bakeries........................ .............. 500

311812................................. Commercial Bakeries.................... .............. 500

311813................................. Frozen Cakes, Pies, and Other Pastries .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311821................................. Cookie and Cracker Manufacturing....... .............. 750

311822................................. Flour Mixes and Dough Manufacturing .............. 500

from Purchased Flour.

311823................................. Dry Pasta Manufacturing................ .............. 500

311830................................. Tortilla Manufacturing................. .............. 500

311911................................. Roasted Nuts and Peanut Butter .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311919................................. Other Snack Food Manufacturing......... .............. 500

311920................................. Coffee and Tea Manufacturing........... .............. 500

311930................................. Flavoring Syrup and Concentrate .............. 500

Manufacturing.

311941................................. Mayonnaise, Dressing and Other Prepared .............. 500

Sauce Manufacturing.

311942................................. Spice and Extract Manufacturing........ .............. 500

311991................................. Perishable Prepared Food Manufacturing. .............. 500

311999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Food .............. 500

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 312--Beverage and Tobacco Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

312111................................. Soft Drink Manufacturing............... .............. 500

312112................................. Bottled Water Manufacturing............ .............. 500

312113................................. Ice Manufacturing...................... .............. 500

312120................................. Breweries.............................. .............. 500

312130................................. Wineries............................... .............. 500

312140................................. Distilleries........................... .............. 750

312210................................. Tobacco Stemming and Redrying.......... .............. 500

312221................................. Cigarette Manufacturing................ .............. 1,000

312229................................. Other Tobacco Product Manufacturing.... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 313--Textile Mills

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

313111................................. Yarn Spinning Mills.................... .............. 500

313112................................. Yarn Texturizing, Throwing and Twisting .............. 500

Mills.

313113................................. Thread Mills........................... .............. 500

313210................................. Broadwoven Fabric Mills................ .............. 1,000

313221................................. Narrow Fabric Mills.................... .............. 500

313222................................. Schiffli Machine Embroidery............ .............. 500

313230................................. Nonwoven Fabric Mills.................. .............. 500

313241................................. Weft Knit Fabric Mills................. .............. 500

313249................................. Other Knit Fabric and Lace Mills....... .............. 500

313311................................. Broadwoven Fabric Finishing Mills...... .............. 1,000

313312................................. Textile and Fabric Finishing (except .............. 500

Broadwoven Fabric) Mills.

313320................................. Fabric Coating Mills................... .............. 1,000

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 314--Textile Product Mills

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

314110................................. Carpet and Rug Mills................... .............. 500

314121................................. Curtain and Drapery Mills.............. .............. 500

314129................................. Other Household Textile Product Mills.. .............. 500

314911................................. Textile Bag Mills...................... .............. 500

314912................................. Canvas and Related Product Mills....... .............. 500

314991................................. Rope, Cordage and Twine Mills.......... .............. 500

314992................................. Tire Cord and Tire Fabric Mills........ .............. 1,000

314999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Textile Product .............. 500

Mills.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 299]]

Subsector 315--Apparel Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

315111................................. Sheer Hosiery Mills.................... .............. 500

315119................................. Other Hosiery and Sock Mills........... .............. 500

315191................................. Outerwear Knitting Mills............... .............. 500

315192................................. Underwear and Nightwear Knitting Mills. .............. 500

315211................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Apparel .............. 500

Contractors.

315212................................. Women's, Girls', and Infants' Cut and .............. 500

Sew Apparel Contractors.

315221................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Underwear .............. 500

and Nightwear Manufacturing.

315222................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Suit, Coat .............. 500

and Overcoat Manufacturing.

315223................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Shirt .............. 500

(except Work Shirt) Manufacturing.

315224................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Trouser, .............. 500

Slack and Jean Manufacturing.

315225................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Work .............. 500

Clothing Manufacturing.

315228................................. Men's and Boys' Cut and Sew Other .............. 500

Outerwear Manufacturing.

315231................................. Women's and Girls' Cut and Sew .............. 500

Lingerie, Loungewear and Nightwear

Manufacturing.

315232................................. Women's and Girls' Cut and Sew Blouse .............. 500

and Shirt Manufacturing.

315233................................. Women's and Girls' Cut and Sew Dress .............. 500

Manufacturing.

315234................................. Women's and Girls' Cut and Sew Suit, .............. 500

Coat, Tailored Jacket and Skirt

Manufacturing.

315239................................. Women's and Girls' Cut and Sew Other .............. 500

Outerwear Manufacturing.

315291................................. Infants' Cut and Sew Apparel .............. 500

Manufacturing.

315292................................. Fur and Leather Apparel Manufacturing.. .............. 500

315299................................. All Other Cut and Sew Apparel .............. 500

Manufacturing.

315991................................. Hat, Cap and Millinery Manufacturing... .............. 500

315992................................. Glove and Mitten Manufacturing......... .............. 500

315993................................. Men's and Boys' Neckwear Manufacturing. .............. 500

315999................................. Other Apparel Accessories and Other .............. 500

Apparel Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 316--Leather and Allied Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

316110................................. Leather and Hide Tanning and Finishing. .............. 500

316211................................. Rubber and Plastics Footwear .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

316212................................. House Slipper Manufacturing............ .............. 500

316213................................. Men's Footwear (except Athletic) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

316214................................. Women's Footwear (except Athletic) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

316219................................. Other Footwear Manufacturing........... .............. 500

316991................................. Luggage Manufacturing.................. .............. 500

316992................................. Women's Handbag and Purse Manufacturing .............. 500

316993................................. Personal Leather Good (except Women's .............. 500

Handbag and Purse) Manufacturing.

316999................................. All Other Leather Good Manufacturing... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 321--Wood Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

321113................................. Sawmills............................... .............. 500

321114................................. Wood Preservation...................... .............. 500

321211................................. Hardwood Veneer and Plywood .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321212................................. Softwood Veneer and Plywood .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321213................................. Engineered Wood Member (except Truss) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321214................................. Truss Manufacturing.................... .............. 500

321219................................. Reconstituted Wood Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321911................................. Wood Window and Door Manufacturing..... .............. 500

321912................................. Cut Stock, Resawing Lumber, and Planing .............. 500

321918................................. Other Millwork (including Flooring).... .............. 500

321920................................. Wood Container and Pallet Manufacturing .............. 500

321991................................. Manufactured Home (Mobile Home) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321992................................. Prefabricated Wood Building .............. 500

Manufacturing.

321999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Wood Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 322--Paper Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

322110................................. Pulp Mills............................. .............. 750

322121................................. Paper (except Newsprint) Mills......... .............. 750

322122................................. Newsprint Mills........................ .............. 750

322130................................. Paperboard Mills....................... .............. 750

322211................................. Corrugated and Solid Fiber Box .............. 500

Manufacturing.

[[Page 300]]

322212................................. Folding Paperboard Box Manufacturing... .............. 750

322213................................. Setup Paperboard Box Manufacturing..... .............. 500

322214................................. Fiber Can, Tube, Drum, and Similar .............. 500

Products Manufacturing.

322215................................. Non-Folding Sanitary Food Container .............. 750

Manufacturing.

322221................................. Coated and Laminated Packaging Paper .............. 500

and Plastics Film Manufacturing.

322222................................. Coated and Laminated Paper .............. 500

Manufacturing.

322223................................. Plastics, Foil, and Coated Paper Bag .............. 500

Manufacturing.

322224................................. Uncoated Paper and Multiwall Bag .............. 500

Manufacturing.

322225................................. Laminated Aluminum Foil Manufacturing .............. 500

for Flexible Packaging Uses.

322226................................. Surface-Coated Paperboard Manufacturing .............. 500

322231................................. Die-Cut Paper and Paperboard Office .............. 500

Supplies Manufacturing.

322232................................. Envelope Manufacturing................. .............. 500

322233................................. Stationery, Tablet, and Related Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

322291................................. Sanitary Paper Product Manufacturing... .............. 500

322299................................. All Other Converted Paper Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 323--Printing and Related Support Activities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

323110................................. Commercial Lithographic Printing....... .............. 500

323111................................. Commercial Gravure Printing............ .............. 500

323112................................. Commercial Flexographic Printing....... .............. 500

323113................................. Commercial Screen Printing............. .............. 500

323114................................. Quick Printing......................... .............. 500

323115................................. Digital Printing....................... .............. 500

323116................................. Manifold Business Forms Printing....... .............. 500

323117................................. Books Printing......................... .............. 500

323118................................. Blankbook, Loose-leaf Binder and Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

323119................................. Other Commercial Printing.............. .............. 500

323121................................. Tradebinding and Related Work.......... .............. 500

323122................................. Prepress Services...................... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 324--Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

324110................................. Petroleum Refineries\4\................ .............. \4\ 1,500

324121................................. Asphalt Paving Mixture and Block .............. 500

Manufacturing.

324122................................. Asphalt Shingle and Coating Materials .............. 750

Manufacturing.

324191................................. Petroleum Lubricating Oil and Grease .............. 500

Manufacturing.

324199................................. All Other Petroleum and Coal Products .............. 500

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 325--Chemical Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

325110................................. Petrochemical Manufacturing............ .............. 1,000

325120................................. Industrial Gas Manufacturing........... .............. 1,000

325131................................. Inorganic Dye and Pigment Manufacturing .............. 1,000

325132................................. Synthetic Organic Dye and Pigment .............. 750

Manufacturing.

325181................................. Alkalies and Chlorine Manufacturing.... .............. 1,000

325182................................. Carbon Black Manufacturing............. .............. 500

325188................................. All Other Basic Inorganic Chemical .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

325191................................. Gum and Wood Chemical Manufacturing.... .............. 500

325192................................. Cyclic Crude and Intermediate .............. 750

Manufacturing.

325193................................. Ethyl Alcohol Manufacturing............ .............. 1,000

325199................................. All Other Basic Organic Chemical .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

325211................................. Plastics Material and Resin .............. 750

Manufacturing.

325212................................. Synthetic Rubber Manufacturing......... .............. 1,000

325221................................. Cellulosic Organic Fiber Manufacturing. .............. 1,000

325222................................. Noncellulosic Organic Fiber .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

325311................................. Nitrogenous Fertilizer Manufacturing... .............. 1,000

325312................................. Phosphatic Fertilizer Manufacturing.... .............. 500

325314................................. Fertilizer (Mixing Only) Manufacturing. .............. 500

325320................................. Pesticide and Other Agricultural .............. 500

Chemical Manufacturing.

325411................................. Medicinal and Botanical Manufacturing.. .............. 750

325412................................. Pharmaceutical Preparation .............. 750

Manufacturing.

325413................................. In-Vitro Diagnostic Substance .............. 500

Manufacturing.

325414................................. Biological Product (except Diagnostic) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

325510................................. Paint and Coating Manufacturing........ .............. 500

325520................................. Adhesive Manufacturing................. .............. 500

325611................................. Soap and Other Detergent Manufacturing. .............. 750

325612................................. Polish and Other Sanitation Good .............. 500

Manufacturing.

325613................................. Surface Active Agent Manufacturing..... .............. 500

325620................................. Toilet Preparation Manufacturing....... .............. 500

[[Page 301]]

325910................................. Printing Ink Manufacturing............. .............. 500

325920................................. Explosives Manufacturing............... .............. 750

325991................................. Custom Compounding of Purchased Resins. .............. 500

325992................................. Photographic Film, Paper, Plate and .............. 500

Chemical Manufacturing.

325998................................. All Other Miscellaneous Chemical .............. 500

Product and Preparation Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 326--Plastics and Rubber Products Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

326111................................. Unsupported Plastics Bag Manufacturing. .............. 500

326112................................. Unsupported Plastics Packaging Film and .............. 500

Sheet Manufacturing.

326113................................. Unsupported Plastics Film and Sheet .............. 500

(except Packaging) Manufacturing.

326121................................. Unsupported Plastics Profile Shapes .............. 500

Manufacturing.

326122................................. Plastics Pipe and Pipe Fitting .............. 500

Manufacturing.

326130................................. Laminated Plastics Plate, Sheet and .............. 500

Shape Manufacturing.

326140................................. Polystyrene Foam Product Manufacturing. .............. 500

326150................................. Urethane and Other Foam Product (except .............. 500

Polystyrene) Manufacturing.

326160................................. Plastics Bottle Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

326191................................. Plastics Plumbing Fixture Manufacturing .............. 500

326192................................. Resilient Floor Covering Manufacturing. .............. 750

326199................................. All Other Plastics Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

326211................................. Tire Manufacturing (except .............. \5\ 1,000

Retreading)\5\.

326212................................. Tire Retreading........................ .............. 500

326220................................. Rubber and Plastics Hoses and Belting .............. 500

Manufacturing.

326291................................. Rubber Product Manufacturing for .............. 500

Mechanical Use.

326299................................. All Other Rubber Product Manufacturing. .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 327--Nonmetallic Mineral Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

327111................................. Vitreous China Plumbing Fixture and .............. 750

China and Earthenware Bathroom

Accessories Manufacturing.

327112................................. Vitreous China, Fine Earthenware and .............. 500

Other Pottery Product Manufacturing.

327113................................. Porcelain Electrical Supply .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327121................................. Brick and Structural Clay Tile .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327122................................. Ceramic Wall and Floor Tile .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327123................................. Other Structural Clay Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327124................................. Clay Refractory Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

327125................................. Nonclay Refractory Manufacturing....... .............. 750

327211................................. Flat Glass Manufacturing............... .............. 1,000

327212................................. Other Pressed and Blown Glass and .............. 750

Glassware Manufacturing.

327213................................. Glass Container Manufacturing.......... .............. 750

327215................................. Glass Product Manufacturing Made of .............. 500

Purchased Glass.

327310................................. Cement Manufacturing................... .............. 750

327320................................. Ready-Mix Concrete Manufacturing....... .............. 500

327331................................. Concrete Block and Brick Manufacturing. .............. 500

327332................................. Concrete Pipe Manufacturing............ .............. 500

327390................................. Other Concrete Product Manufacturing... .............. 500

327410................................. Lime Manufacturing..................... .............. 500

327420................................. Gypsum Product Manufacturing........... .............. 1,000

327910................................. Abrasive Product Manufacturing......... .............. 500

327991................................. Cut Stone and Stone Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327992................................. Ground or Treated Mineral and Earth .............. 500

Manufacturing.

327993................................. Mineral Wool Manufacturing............. .............. 750

327999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Nonmetallic .............. 500

Mineral Product Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 331--Primary Metal Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

331111................................. Iron and Steel Mills................... .............. 1,000

331112................................. Electrometallurgical Ferroalloy Product .............. 750

Manufacturing.

331210................................. Iron and Steel Pipe and Tube .............. 1,000

Manufacturing from Purchased Steel.

331221................................. Cold-Rolled Steel Shape Manufacturing.. .............. 1,000

331222................................. Steel Wire Drawing..................... .............. 1,000

331311................................. Alumina Refining....................... .............. 1,000

331312................................. Primary Aluminum Production............ .............. 1,000

331314................................. Secondary Smelting and Alloying of .............. 750

Aluminum.

331315................................. Aluminum Sheet, Plate and Foil .............. 750

Manufacturing.

331316................................. Aluminum Extruded Product Manufacturing .............. 750

331319................................. Other Aluminum Rolling and Drawing..... .............. 750

[[Page 302]]

331411................................. Primary Smelting and Refining of Copper .............. 1,000

331419................................. Primary Smelting and Refining of .............. 750

Nonferrous Metal (except Copper and

Aluminum).

331421................................. Copper Rolling, Drawing and Extruding.. .............. 750

331422................................. Copper Wire (except Mechanical) Drawing .............. 1,000

331423................................. Secondary Smelting, Refining, and .............. 750

Alloying of Copper.

331491................................. Nonferrous Metal (except Copper and .............. 750

Aluminum) Rolling, Drawing and

Extruding.

331492................................. Secondary Smelting, Refining, and .............. 750

Alloying of Nonferrous Metal (except

Copper and Aluminum).

331511................................. Iron Foundries......................... .............. 500

331512................................. Steel Investment Foundries............. .............. 500

331513................................. Steel Foundries (except Investment).... .............. 500

331521................................. Aluminum Die-Casting Foundries......... .............. 500

331522................................. Nonferrous (except Aluminum) Die- .............. 500

Casting Foundries.

331524................................. Aluminum Foundries (except Die-Casting) .............. 500

331525................................. Copper Foundries (except Die-Casting).. .............. 500

331528................................. Other Nonferrous Foundries (except Die- .............. 500

Casting).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 332--Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

332111................................. Iron and Steel Forging................. .............. 500

332112................................. Nonferrous Forging..................... .............. 500

332114................................. Custom Roll Forming.................... .............. 500

332115................................. Crown and Closure Manufacturing........ .............. 500

332116................................. Metal Stamping......................... .............. 500

332117................................. Powder Metallurgy Part Manufacturing... .............. 500

332211................................. Cutlery and Flatware (except Precious) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332212................................. Hand and Edge Tool Manufacturing....... .............. 500

332213................................. Saw Blade and Handsaw Manufacturing.... .............. 500

332214................................. Kitchen Utensil, Pot and Pan .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332311................................. Prefabricated Metal Building and .............. 500

Component Manufacturing.

332312................................. Fabricated Structural Metal .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332313................................. Plate Work Manufacturing............... .............. 500

332321................................. Metal Window and Door Manufacturing.... .............. 500

332322................................. Sheet Metal Work Manufacturing......... .............. 500

332323................................. Ornamental and Architectural Metal Work .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332410................................. Power Boiler and Heat Exchanger .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332420................................. Metal Tank (Heavy Gauge) Manufacturing. .............. 500

332431................................. Metal Can Manufacturing................ .............. 1,000

332439................................. Other Metal Container Manufacturing.... .............. 500

332510................................. Hardware Manufacturing................. .............. 500

332611................................. Spring (Heavy Gauge) Manufacturing..... .............. 500

332612................................. Spring (Light Gauge) Manufacturing..... .............. 500

332618................................. Other Fabricated Wire Product .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332710................................. Machine Shops.......................... .............. 500

332721................................. Precision Turned Product Manufacturing. .............. 500

332722................................. Bolt, Nut, Screw, Rivet and Washer .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332811................................. Metal Heat Treating.................... .............. 750

332812................................. Metal Coating, Engraving (except .............. 500

Jewelry and Silverware), and Allied

Services to Manufacturers.

332813................................. Electroplating, Plating, Polishing, .............. 500

Anodizing and Coloring.

332911................................. Industrial Valve Manufacturing......... .............. 500

332912................................. Fluid Power Valve and Hose Fitting .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332913................................. Plumbing Fixture Fitting and Trim .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332919................................. Other Metal Valve and Pipe Fitting .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332991................................. Ball and Roller Bearing Manufacturing.. .............. 750

332992................................. Small Arms Ammunition Manufacturing.... .............. 1,000

332993................................. Ammunition (except Small Arms) .............. 1,500

Manufacturing.

332994................................. Small Arms Manufacturing............... .............. 1,000

332995................................. Other Ordnance and Accessories .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332996................................. Fabricated Pipe and Pipe Fitting .............. 500

Manufacturing.

332997................................. Industrial Pattern Manufacturing....... .............. 500

332998................................. Enameled Iron and Metal Sanitary Ware .............. 750

Manufacturing.

332999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Fabricated .............. 500

Metal Product Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 333--Machinery Manufacturing \6\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

333111................................. Farm Machinery and Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333112................................. Lawn and Garden Tractor and Home Lawn .............. 500

and Garden Equipment Manufacturing.

[[Page 303]]

333120................................. Construction Machinery Manufacturing... .............. 750

333131................................. Mining Machinery and Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333132................................. Oil and Gas Field Machinery and .............. 500

Equipment Manufacturing.

333210................................. Sawmill and Woodworking Machinery .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333220................................. Plastics and Rubber Industry Machinery .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333291................................. Paper Industry Machinery Manufacturing. .............. 500

333292................................. Textile Machinery Manufacturing........ .............. 500

333293................................. Printing Machinery and Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333294................................. Food Product Machinery Manufacturing... .............. 500

333295................................. Semiconductor Machinery Manufacturing.. .............. 500

333298................................. All Other Industrial Machinery .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333311................................. Automatic Vending Machine Manufacturing .............. 500

333312................................. Commercial Laundry, Drycleaning and .............. 500

Pressing Machine Manufacturing.

333313................................. Office Machinery Manufacturing......... .............. 1,000

333314................................. Optical Instrument and Lens .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333315................................. Photographic and Photocopying Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333319................................. Other Commercial and Service Industry .............. 500

Machinery Manufacturing.

333411................................. Air Purification Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333412................................. Industrial and Commercial Fan and .............. 500

Blower Manufacturing.

333414................................. Heating Equipment (except Warm Air .............. 500

Furnaces) Manufacturing.

333415................................. Air-Conditioning and Warm Air Heating .............. 750

Equipment and Commercial and

Industrial Refrigeration Equipment

Manufacturing.

333511................................. Industrial Mold Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

333512................................. Machine Tool (Metal Cutting Types) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333513................................. Machine Tool (Metal Forming Types) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333514................................. Special Die and Tool, Die Set, Jig and .............. 500

Fixture Manufacturing.

333515................................. Cutting Tool and Machine Tool Accessory .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333516................................. Rolling Mill Machinery and Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333518................................. Other Metalworking Machinery .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333611................................. Turbine and Turbine Generator Set Unit .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

333612................................. Speed Changer, Industrial High- Speed .............. 500

Drive and Gear Manufacturing.

333613................................. Mechanical Power Transmission Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333618................................. Other Engine Equipment Manufacturing... .............. 1,000

333911................................. Pump and Pumping Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333912................................. Air and Gas Compressor Manufacturing... .............. 500

333913................................. Measuring and Dispensing Pump .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333921................................. Elevator and Moving Stairway .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333922................................. Conveyor and Conveying Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333923................................. Overhead Traveling Crane, Hoist and .............. 500

Monorail System Manufacturing.

333924................................. Industrial Truck, Tractor, Trailer and .............. 750

Stacker Machinery Manufacturing.

333991................................. Power-Driven Hand Tool Manufacturing... .............. 500

333992................................. Welding and Soldering Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333993................................. Packaging Machinery Manufacturing...... .............. 500

333994................................. Industrial Process Furnace and Oven .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333995................................. Fluid Power Cylinder and Actuator .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333996................................. Fluid Power Pump and Motor .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333997................................. Scale and Balance (except Laboratory) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

333999................................. All Other Miscellaneous General Purpose .............. 500

Machinery Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 334--Computer and Electronic Product Manufacturing \6\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

334111................................. Electronic Computer Manufacturing...... .............. 1,000

334112................................. Computer Storage Device Manufacturing.. .............. 1,000

334113................................. Computer Terminal Manufacturing........ .............. 1,000

334119................................. Other Computer Peripheral Equipment .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

334210................................. Telephone Apparatus Manufacturing...... .............. 1,000

334220................................. Radio and Television Broadcasting and .............. 750

Wireless Communications Equipment

Manufacturing.

334290................................. Other Communications Equipment .............. 750

Manufacturing.

334310................................. Audio and Video Equipment Manufacturing .............. 750

334411................................. Electron Tube Manufacturing............ .............. 750

334412................................. Bare Printed Circuit Board .............. 500

Manufacturing.

334413................................. Semiconductor and Related Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

334414................................. Electronic Capacitor Manufacturing..... .............. 500

334415................................. Electronic Resistor Manufacturing...... .............. 500

334416................................. Electronic Coil, Transformer, and Other .............. 500

Inductor Manufacturing.

[[Page 304]]

334417................................. Electronic Connector Manufacturing..... .............. 500

334418................................. Printed Circuit Assembly (Electronic .............. 500

Assembly) Manufacturing.

334419................................. Other Electronic Component .............. 500

Manufacturing.

334510................................. Electromedical and Electrotherapeutic .............. 500

Apparatus Manufacturing.

334511................................. Search, Detection, Navigation, .............. 750

Guidance, Aeronautical, and Nautical

System and Instrument Manufacturing.

334512................................. Automatic Environmental Control .............. 500

Manufacturing for Residential,

Commercial and Appliance Use.

334513................................. Instruments and Related Products .............. 500

Manufacturing for Measuring,

Displaying, and Controlling Industrial

Process Variables.

334514................................. Totalizing Fluid Meter and Counting .............. 500

Device Manufacturing.

334515................................. Instrument Manufacturing for Measuring .............. 500

and Testing Electricity and Electrical

Signals.

334516................................. Analytical Laboratory Instrument .............. 500

Manufacturing.

334517................................. Irradiation Apparatus Manufacturing.... .............. 500

334518................................. Watch, Clock, and Part Manufacturing... .............. 500

334519................................. Other Measuring and Controlling Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

334611................................. Software Reproducing................... .............. 500

334612................................. Prerecorded Compact Disc (except .............. 750

Software), Tape, and Record

Reproducing.

334613................................. Magnetic and Optical Recording Media .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 335--Electrical Equipment, Appliance and Component Manufacturing \6\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

335110................................. Electric Lamp Bulb and Part .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

335121................................. Residential Electric Lighting Fixture .............. 500

Manufacturing.

335122................................. Commercial, Industrial and .............. 500

Institutional Electric Lighting

Fixture Manufacturing.

335129................................. Other Lighting Equipment Manufacturing. .............. 500

335211................................. Electric Housewares and Household Fan .............. 750

Manufacturing.

335212................................. Household Vacuum Cleaner Manufacturing. .............. 750

335221................................. Household Cooking Appliance .............. 750

Manufacturing.

335222................................. Household Refrigerator and Home Freezer .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

335224................................. Household Laundry Equipment .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

335228................................. Other Major Household Appliance .............. 500

Manufacturing.

335311................................. Power, Distribution and Specialty .............. 750

Transformer Manufacturing.

335312................................. Motor and Generator Manufacturing...... .............. 1,000

335313................................. Switchgear and Switchboard Apparatus .............. 750

Manufacturing.

335314................................. Relay and Industrial Control .............. 750

Manufacturing.

335911................................. Storage Battery Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

335912................................. Primary Battery Manufacturing.......... .............. 1,000

335921................................. Fiber Optic Cable Manufacturing........ .............. 1,000

335929................................. Other Communication and Energy Wire .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

335931................................. Current-Carrying Wiring Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

335932................................. Noncurrent-Carrying Wiring Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

335991................................. Carbon and Graphite Product .............. 750

Manufacturing.

335999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Electrical .............. 500

Equipment and Component Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 336--Transportation Equipment Manufacturing \6\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

336111................................. Automobile Manufacturing............... .............. 1,000

336112................................. Light Truck and Utility Vehicle .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

336120................................. Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing......... .............. 1,000

336211................................. Motor Vehicle Body Manufacturing....... .............. 1,000

336212................................. Truck Trailer Manufacturing............ .............. 500

336213................................. Motor Home Manufacturing............... .............. 1,000

336214................................. Travel Trailer and Camper Manufacturing .............. 500

336311................................. Carburetor, Piston, Piston Ring and .............. 500

Valve Manufacturing.

336312................................. Gasoline Engine and Engine Parts .............. 750

Manufacturing.

336321................................. Vehicular Lighting Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

336322................................. Other Motor Vehicle Electrical and .............. 750

Electronic Equipment Manufacturing.

336330................................. Motor Vehicle Steering and Suspension .............. 750

Components (except Spring)

Manufacturing.

336340................................. Motor Vehicle Brake System .............. 750

Manufacturing.

336350................................. Motor Vehicle Transmission and Power .............. 750

Train Parts Manufacturing.

336360................................. Motor Vehicle Seating and Interior Trim .............. 500

Manufacturing.

336370................................. Motor Vehicle Metal Stamping........... .............. 500

336391................................. Motor Vehicle Air-Conditioning .............. 750

Manufacturing.

336399................................. All Other Motor Vehicle Parts .............. 750

Manufacturing.

[[Page 305]]

336411................................. Aircraft Manufacturing................. .............. 1,500

336412................................. Aircraft Engine and Engine Parts .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

336413................................. Other Aircraft Part and Auxiliary .............. \7\ 1,000

Equipment Manufacturing \7\.

336414................................. Guided Missile and Space Vehicle .............. 1,000

Manufacturing.

336415................................. Guided Missile and Space Vehicle .............. 1,000

Propulsion Unit and Propulsion Unit

Parts Manufacturing.

336419................................. Other Guided Missile and Space Vehicle .............. 1,000

Parts and Auxiliary Equipment

Manufacturing.

336510................................. Railroad Rolling Stock Manufacturing... .............. 1,000

336611................................. Ship Building and Repairing............ .............. 1,000

336612................................. Boat Building.......................... .............. 500

336991................................. Motorcycle, Bicycle and Parts .............. 500

Manufacturing.

336992................................. Military Armored Vehicle, Tank and Tank .............. 1,000

Component Manufacturing.

336999................................. All Other Transportation Equipment .............. 500

Manufacturing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 337--Furniture and Related Product Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

337110................................. Wood Kitchen Cabinet and Counter Top .............. 500

Manufacturing.

337121................................. Upholstered Household Furniture .............. 500

Manufacturing.

337122................................. Nonupholstered Wood Household Furniture .............. 500

Manufacturing.

337124................................. Metal Household Furniture Manufacturing .............. 500

337125................................. Household Furniture (except Wood and .............. 500

Metal) Manufacturing.

337127................................. Institutional Furniture Manufacturing.. .............. 500

337129................................. Wood Television, Radio, and Sewing .............. 500

Machine Cabinet Manufacturing.

337211................................. Wood Office Furniture Manufacturing.... .............. 500

337212................................. Custom Architectural Woodwork and .............. 500

Millwork Manufacturing.

337214................................. Office Furniture (Except Wood) .............. 500

Manufacturing.

337215................................. Showcase, Partition, Shelving, and .............. 500

Locker Manufacturing.

337910................................. Mattress Manufacturing................. .............. 500

337920................................. Blind and Shade Manufacturing.......... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 339--Miscellaneous Manufacturing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

339111................................. Laboratory Apparatus and Furniture .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339112................................. Surgical and Medical Instrument .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339113................................. Surgical Appliance and Supplies .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339114................................. Dental Equipment and Supplies .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339115................................. Ophthalmic Goods Manufacturing......... .............. 500

339116................................. Dental Laboratories.................... .............. 500

339911................................. Jewelry (except Costume) Manufacturing. .............. 500

339912................................. Silverware and Hollowware Manufacturing .............. 500

339913................................. Jewelers' Material and Lapidary Work .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339914................................. Costume Jewelry and Novelty .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339920................................. Sporting and Athletic Goods .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339931................................. Doll and Stuffed Toy Manufacturing..... .............. 500

339932................................. Game, Toy, and Children's Vehicle .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339941................................. Pen and Mechanical Pencil Manufacturing .............. 500

339942................................. Lead Pencil and Art Good Manufacturing. .............. 500

339943................................. Marking Device Manufacturing........... .............. 500

339944................................. Carbon Paper and Inked Ribbon .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339950................................. Sign Manufacturing..................... .............. 500

339991................................. Gasket, Packing, and Sealing Device .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339992................................. Musical Instrument Manufacturing....... .............. 500

339993................................. Fastener, Button, Needle and Pin .............. 500

Manufacturing.

339994................................. Broom, Brush and Mop Manufacturing..... .............. 500

339995................................. Burial Casket Manufacturing............ .............. 500

339999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing.. .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 42--Wholesale Trade

(Not applicable to Government procurement of supplies. The nonmanufacturer size standard of 500 employees shall

be used for purposes of Government procurement of supplies.)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 423--Merchant Wholesalers, Durable Goods

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

423110................................. Automobile and Other Motor Vehicle .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423120................................. Motor Vehicle Supplies and New Parts .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423130................................. Tire and Tube Merchant Wholesalers..... .............. 100

423140................................. Motor Vehicle Parts (Used) Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423210................................. Furniture Merchant Wholesalers......... .............. 100

423220................................. Home Furnishing Merchant Wholesalers... .............. 100

[[Page 306]]

423310................................. Lumber, Plywood, Millwork, and Wood .............. 100

Panel Merchant Wholesalers.

423320................................. Brick, Stone, and Related Construction .............. 100

Material Merchant Wholesalers.

423330................................. Roofing, Siding, and Insulation .............. 100

Material Merchant Wholesalers.

423390................................. Other Construction Material Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423410................................. Photographic Equipment and Supplies .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423420................................. Office Equipment Merchant Wholesalers.. .............. 100

423430................................. Computer and Computer Peripheral .............. 100

Equipment and Software Merchant

Wholesalers.

423440................................. Other Commercial Equipment Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423450................................. Medical, Dental, and Hospital Equipment .............. 100

and Supplies Merchant Wholesalers.

423460................................. Ophthalmic Goods Merchant Wholesalers.. .............. 100

423490................................. Other Professional Equipment and .............. 100

Supplies Merchant Wholesalers.

423510................................. Metal Service Centers and Other Metal .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423520................................. Coal and Other Mineral and Ore Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423610................................. Electrical Apparatus and Equipment, .............. 100

Wiring Supplies, and Related Equipment

Merchant Wholesalers.

423620................................. Electrical and Electronic Appliance, .............. 100

Television, and Radio Set Merchant

Wholesalers.

423690................................. Other Electronic Parts and Equipment .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423710................................. Hardware Merchant Wholesalers.......... .............. 100

423720................................. Plumbing and Heating Equipment and .............. 100

Supplies (Hydronics) Merchant

Wholesalers.

423730................................. Warm Air Heating and Air-Conditioning .............. 100

Equipment and Supplies Merchant

Wholesalers.

423740................................. Refrigeration Equipment and Supplies .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423810................................. Construction and Mining (except Oil .............. 100

Well) Machinery and Equipment Merchant

Wholesalers.

423820................................. Farm and Garden Machinery and Equipment .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423830................................. Industrial Machinery and Equipment .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423840................................. Industrial Supplies Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423850................................. Service Establishment Equipment and .............. 100

Supplies Merchant Wholesalers.

423860................................. Transportation Equipment and Supplies .............. 100

(except Motor Vehicle) Merchant

Wholesalers.

423910................................. Sporting and Recreational Goods and .............. 100

Supplies Merchant Wholesalers.

423920................................. Toy and Hobby Goods and Supplies .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

423930................................. Recyclable Material Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

423940................................. Jewelry, Watch, Precious Stone, and .............. 100

Precious Metal Merchant Wholesalers.

423990................................. Other Miscellaneous Durable Goods .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 424--Merchant Wholesalers, Nondurable Goods

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

424110................................. Printing and Writing Paper Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424120................................. Stationary and Office Supplies Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424130................................. Industrial and Personal Service Paper .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424210................................. Drugs and Druggists' Sundries Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424310................................. Piece Goods, Notions, and Other Dry .............. 100

Goods Merchant Wholesalers.

424320................................. Men's and Boys' Clothing and .............. 100

Furnishings Merchant Wholesalers.

424330................................. Women's, Children's, and Infants' .............. 100

Clothing and Accessories Merchant

Wholesalers.

424340................................. Footwear Merchant Wholesalers.......... .............. 100

424410................................. General Line Grocery Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424420................................. Packaged Frozen Food Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424430................................. Dairy Product (except Dried or Canned) .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424440................................. Poultry and Poultry Product Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424450................................. Confectionery Merchant Wholesalers..... .............. 100

424460................................. Fish and Seafood Merchant Wholesalers.. .............. 100

424470................................. Meat and Meat Product Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424480................................. Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424490................................. Other Grocery and Related Products .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424510................................. Grain and Field Bean Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424520................................. Livestock Merchant Wholesalers......... .............. 100

424590................................. Other Farm Product Raw Material .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424610................................. Plastics Materials and Basic Forms and .............. 100

Shapes Merchant Wholesalers.

424690................................. Other Chemical and Allied Products .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

[[Page 307]]

424710................................. Petroleum Bulk Stations and Terminals.. .............. 100

424720................................. Petroleum and Petroleum Products .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers (except Bulk

Stations and Terminals).

424810................................. Beer and Ale Merchant Wholesalers...... .............. 100

424820................................. Wine and Distilled Alcoholic Beverage .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424910................................. Farm Supplies Merchant Wholesalers..... .............. 100

424920................................. Book, Periodical, and Newspaper .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

424930................................. Flower, Nursery Stock, and Florists' .............. 100

Supplies Merchant Wholesalers.

424940................................. Tobacco and Tobacco Product Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424950................................. Paint, Varnish, and Supplies Merchant .............. 100

Wholesalers.

424990................................. Other Miscellaneous Nondurable Goods .............. 100

Merchant Wholesalers.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 425--Wholesale Electronic Markets and Agents and Brokers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

425110................................. Business to Business Electronic Markets .............. 100

425120................................. Wholesale Trade Agents and Brokers..... .............. 100

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sectors 44-45--Retail Trade

(Not applicable to Government procurement of supplies. The nonmanufacturer size standard of 500 employees shall

be used for purposes of Government procurement of supplies.)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 441--Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

441110................................. New Car Dealers........................ $26.5 ..............

441120................................. Used Car Dealers....................... $21.0 ..............

441210................................. Recreational Vehicle Dealers........... $6.5 ..............

441221................................. Motorcycle Dealers..................... $6.5 ..............

441222................................. Boat Dealers........................... $6.5 ..............

441229................................. All Other Motor Vehicle Dealers........ $6.5 ..............

Except, Aircraft Dealers, Retail............... $9.0 ..............

441310................................. Automotive Parts and Accessories Stores $6.5 ..............

441320................................. Tire Dealers........................... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 442--Furniture and Home Furnishings Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

442110................................. Furniture Stores....................... $6.5 ..............

442210................................. Floor Covering Stores.................. $6.5 ..............

442291................................. Window Treatment Stores................ $6.5 ..............

442299................................. All Other Home Furnishings Stores...... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 443--Electronics and Appliance Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

443111................................. Household Appliance Stores............. $8.0 ..............

443112................................. Radio, Television and Other Electronics $8.0 ..............

Stores.

443120................................. Computer and Software Stores........... $8.0 ..............

443130................................. Camera and Photographic Supplies Stores $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 444--Building Material and Garden Equipment and Supplies Dealers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

444110................................. Home Centers........................... $6.5 ..............

444120................................. Paint and Wallpaper Stores............. $6.5 ..............

444130................................. Hardware Stores........................ $6.5 ..............

444190................................. Other Building Material Dealers........ $6.5 ..............

444210................................. Outdoor Power Equipment Stores......... $6.5 ..............

444220................................. Nursery and Garden Centers............. $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 445--Food and Beverage Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

445110................................. Supermarkets and Other Grocery (except $25.0 ..............

Convenience) Stores.

445120................................. Convenience Stores..................... $25.0 ..............

445210................................. Meat Markets........................... $6.5 ..............

445220................................. Fish and Seafood Markets............... $6.5 ..............

445230................................. Fruit and Vegetable Markets............ $6.5 ..............

445291................................. Baked Goods Stores..................... $6.5 ..............

445292................................. Confectionery and Nut Stores........... $6.5 ..............

445299................................. All Other Specialty Food Stores........ $6.5 ..............

445310................................. Beer, Wine and Liquor Stores........... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 446--Health and Personal Care Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

446110................................. Pharmacies and Drug Stores............. $6.5 ..............

[[Page 308]]

446120................................. Cosmetics, Beauty Supplies and Perfume $6.5 ..............

Stores.

446130................................. Optical Goods Stores................... $6.5 ..............

446191................................. Food (Health) Supplement Stores........ $6.5 ..............

446199................................. All Other Health and Personal Care $6.5 ..............

Stores.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 447--Gasoline Stations

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

447110................................. Gasoline Stations with Convenience $25.0 ..............

Stores.

447190................................. Other Gasoline Stations................ $8.0 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 448--Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

448110................................. Men's Clothing Stores.................. $8.0 ..............

448120................................. Women's Clothing Stores................ $8.0 ..............

448130................................. Children's and Infants' Clothing Stores $6.5 ..............

448140................................. Family Clothing Stores................. $8.0 ..............

448150................................. Clothing Accessories Stores............ $6.5 ..............

448190................................. Other Clothing Stores.................. $6.5 ..............

448210................................. Shoe Stores............................ $8.0 ..............

448310................................. Jewelry Stores......................... $6.5 ..............

448320................................. Luggage and Leather Goods Stores....... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 451--Sporting Good, Hobby, Book and Music Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

451110................................. Sporting Goods Stores.................. $6.5 ..............

451120................................. Hobby, Toy and Game Stores............. $6.5 ..............

451130................................. Sewing, Needlework and Piece Goods $6.5 ..............

Stores.

451140................................. Musical Instrument and Supplies Stores. $6.5 ..............

451211................................. Book Stores............................ $6.5 ..............

451212................................. News Dealers and Newsstands............ $6.5 ..............

451220................................. Prerecorded Tape, Compact Disc and $6.5 ..............

Record Stores.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 452--General Merchandise Stores

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

452111................................. Department Stores (except Discount $25.0 ..............

Department Stores).

452112................................. Discount Department Stores............. $25.0 ..............

452910................................. Warehouse Clubs and Superstores........ $25.0 ..............

452990................................. All Other General Merchandise Stores... $10.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 453--Miscellaneous Store Retailers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

453110................................. Florists............................... $6.5 ..............

453210................................. Office Supplies and Stationery Stores.. $6.5 ..............

453220................................. Gift, Novelty and Souvenir Stores...... $6.5 ..............

453310................................. Used Merchandise Stores................ $6.5 ..............

453910................................. Pet and Pet Supplies Stores............ $6.5 ..............

453920................................. Art Dealers............................ $6.5 ..............

453930................................. Manufactured (Mobile) Home Dealers..... $12.0 ..............

453991................................. Tobacco Stores......................... $6.5 ..............

453998................................. All Other Miscellaneous Store Retailers $6.5 ..............

(except Tobacco Stores).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 454--Nonstore Retailers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

454111................................. Electronic Shopping.................... $23.0 ..............

454112................................. Electronic Auctions.................... $23.0 ..............

454113................................. Mail-Order Houses...................... $23.0 ..............

454210................................. Vending Machine Operators.............. $6.5 ..............

454311................................. Heating Oil Dealers.................... $11.5 ..............

454312................................. Liquefied Petroleum Gas (Bottled Gas) $6.5 ..............

Dealers.

454319................................. Other Fuel Dealers..................... $6.5 ..............

454390................................. Other Direct Selling Establishments.... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sectors 48-49--Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 481--Air Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

481111................................. Scheduled Passenger Air Transportation. .............. 1,500

481112................................. Scheduled Freight Air Transportation... .............. 1,500

481211................................. Nonscheduled Chartered Passenger Air .............. 1,500

Transportation.

Except, Offshore Marine Air Transportation $25.5 ..............

Services.

481212................................. Nonscheduled Chartered Freight Air .............. 1,500

Transportation.

[[Page 309]]

Except, Offshore Marine Air Transportation $25.5 ..............

Services.

481219................................. Other Nonscheduled Air Transportation.. $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 482--Rail Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

482111................................. Line-Haul Railroads.................... .............. 1,500

482112................................. Short Line Railroads................... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 483--Water Transportation \15\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

483111................................. Deep Sea Freight Transportation........ .............. 500

483112................................. Deep Sea Passenger Transportation...... .............. 500

483113................................. Coastal and Great Lakes Freight .............. 500

Transportation.

483114................................. Coastal and Great Lakes Passenger .............. 500

Transportation.

483211................................. Inland Water Freight Transportation.... .............. 500

483212................................. Inland Water Passenger Transportation.. .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 484--Truck Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

484110................................. General Freight Trucking, Local........ $23.5 ..............

484121................................. General Freight Trucking, Long- $23.5 ..............

Distance, Truckload.

484122................................. General Freight Trucking, Long- $23.5 ..............

Distance, Less Than Truckload.

484210................................. Used Household and Office Goods Moving. $23.5 ..............

484220................................. Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) $23.5 ..............

Trucking, Local.

484230................................. Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) $23.5 ..............

Trucking, Long-Distance.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 485--Transit and Ground Passenger Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

485111................................. Mixed Mode Transit Systems............. $6.5 ..............

485112................................. Commuter Rail Systems.................. $6.5 ..............

485113................................. Bus and Motor Vehicle Transit Systems.. $6.5 ..............

485119................................. Other Urban Transit Systems............ $6.5 ..............

485210................................. Interurban and Rural Bus Transportation $6.5 ..............

485310................................. Taxi Service........................... $6.5 ..............

485320................................. Limousine Service...................... $6.5 ..............

485410................................. School and Employee Bus Transportation. $6.5 ..............

485510................................. Charter Bus Industry................... $6.5 ..............

485991................................. Special Needs Transportation........... $6.5 ..............

485999................................. All Other Transit and Ground Passenger $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 486--Pipeline Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

486110................................. Pipeline Transportation of Crude Oil... .............. 1,500

486210................................. Pipeline Transportation of Natural Gas. $6.5 ..............

486910................................. Pipeline Transportation of Refined .............. 1,500

Petroleum Products.

486990................................. All Other Pipeline Transportation...... $31.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 487--Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

487110................................. Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, $6.5 ..............

Land.

487210................................. Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, $6.5 ..............

Water.

487990................................. Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, $6.5 ..............

Other.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 488--Support Activities for Transportation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

488111................................. Air Traffic Control.................... $6.5 ..............

488119................................. Other Airport Operations............... $6.5 ..............

488190................................. Other Support Activities for Air $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

488210................................. Support Activities for Rail $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

488310................................. Port and Harbor Operations............. $23.5 ..............

488320................................. Marine Cargo Handling.................. $23.5 ..............

488330................................. Navigational Services to Shipping...... $6.5 ..............

488390................................. Other Support Activities for Water $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

488410................................. Motor Vehicle Towing................... $6.5 ..............

488490................................. Other Support Activities for Road $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

488510................................. Freight Transportation Arrangement \10\ \10\ $6.5 ..............

Except, Non-Vessel Owning Common Carriers and $23.5 ..............

Household Goods Forwarders.

488991................................. Packing and Crating.................... $23.5 ..............

488999................................. All Other Support Activities for $6.5 ..............

Transportation.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 310]]

Subsector 491--Postal Service

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

491110................................. Postal Service......................... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 492--Couriers and Messengers

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

492110................................. Couriers............................... .............. 1,500

492210................................. Local Messengers and Local Delivery.... $23.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 493--Warehousing and Storage

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

493110................................. General Warehousing and Storage........ $23.5 ..............

493120................................. Refrigerated Warehousing and Storage... $23.5 ..............

493130................................. Farm Product Warehousing and Storage... $23.5 ..............

493190................................. Other Warehousing and Storage.......... $23.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 51--Information

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 511--Publishing Industries (except Internet)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

511110................................. Newspaper Publishers................... .............. 500

511120................................. Periodical Publishers.................. .............. 500

511130................................. Book Publishers........................ .............. 500

511140................................. Directory and Mailing List Publishers.. .............. 500

511191................................. Greeting Card Publishers............... .............. 500

511199................................. All Other Publishers................... .............. 500

511210................................. Software Publishers.................... $23.0 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 512--Motion Picture and Sound Recording Industries

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

512110................................. Motion Picture and Video Production.... $27.0 ..............

512120................................. Motion Picture and Video Distribution.. $27.0 ..............

512131................................. Motion Picture Theaters (except Drive- $6.5 ..............

Ins).

512132................................. Drive-In Motion Picture Theaters....... $6.5 ..............

512191................................. Teleproduction and Other Postproduction $27.0 ..............

Services.

512199................................. Other Motion Picture and Video $6.5 ..............

Industries.

512210................................. Record Production...................... $6.5 ..............

512220................................. Integrated Record Production/ .............. 750

Distribution.

512230................................. Music Publishers....................... .............. 500

512240................................. Sound Recording Studios................ $6.5 ..............

512290................................. Other Sound Recording Industries....... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 515--Broadcasting (except Internet)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

515111................................. Radio Networks......................... $6.5 ..............

515112................................. Radio Stations......................... $6.5 ..............

515120................................. Television Broadcasting................ $13.0 ..............

515210................................. Cable and Other Subscription $13.5 ..............

Programming.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 516--Internet Publishing and Broadcasting

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

516110................................. Internet Publishing and Broadcasting... .............. 500

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 517--Telecommunications

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

517110................................. Wired Telecommunications Carriers...... .............. 1,500

517211................................. Paging................................. .............. 1,500

517212................................. Cellular and Other Wireless .............. 1,500

Telecommunications.

517310................................. Telecommunications Resellers........... .............. 1,500

517410................................. Satellite Telecommunications........... $13.5 ..............

517510................................. Cable and Other Program Distribution... $13.5 ..............

517910................................. Other Telecommunications............... $13.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 518--Internet Service Providers, Web Search Portals, and Data Processing Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

518111................................. Internet Service Providers............. $23.0 ..............

518112................................. Web Search Portals..................... $6.5 ..............

518210................................. Data Processing, Hosting, and Related $23.0 ..............

Services.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 519--Other Information Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

519110................................. News Syndicates........................ $6.5 ..............

[[Page 311]]

519120................................. Libraries and Archives................. $6.5 ..............

519190................................. All Other Information Services......... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 52--Finance and Insurance

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 522--Credit Intermediation and Related Activities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

522110................................. Commercial Banking \8\................. \8\ $165 ..............

million in

assets

522120................................. Savings Institutions \8\............... \8\ $165 ..............

million in

assets

522130................................. Credit Unions \8\...................... \8\ $165 ..............

million in

assets

522190................................. Other Depository Credit Intermediation \8\ $165 ..............

\8\. million in

assets

522210................................. Credit Card Issuing \8\................ \8\ $165 ..............

million in

assets

522220................................. Sales Financing........................ $6.5 ..............

522291................................. Consumer Lending....................... $6.5 ..............

522292................................. Real Estate Credit..................... $6.5 ..............

522293................................. International Trade Financing \8\...... \8\ $165 ..............

million in

assets

522294................................. Secondary Market Financing............. $6.5 ..............

522298................................. All Other Non-Depository Credit $6.5 ..............

Intermediation.

522310................................. Mortgage and Nonmortgage Loan Brokers.. $6.5 ..............

522320................................. Financial Transactions Processing, $6.5 ..............

Reserve, and Clearing House Activities.

522390................................. Other Activities Related to Credit $6.5 ..............

Intermediation.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 523--Financial Investments and Related Activities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

523110................................. Investment Banking and Securities $6.5 ..............

Dealing.

523120................................. Securities Brokerage................... $6.5 ..............

523130................................. Commodity Contracts Dealing............ $6.5 ..............

523140................................. Commodity Contracts Brokerage.......... $6.5 ..............

523210................................. Securities and Commodity Exchanges..... $6.5 ..............

523910................................. Miscellaneous Intermediation........... $6.5 ..............

523920................................. Portfolio Management................... $6.5 ..............

523930................................. Investment Advice...................... $6.5 ..............

523991................................. Trust, Fiduciary and Custody Activities $6.5 ..............

523999................................. Miscellaneous Financial Investment $6.5 ..............

Activities.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 524--Insurance Carriers and Related Activities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

524113................................. Direct Life Insurance Carriers......... $6.5 ..............

524114................................. Direct Health and Medical Insurance $6.5 ..............

Carriers.

524126................................. Direct Property and Casualty Insurance .............. 1,500

Carriers.

524127................................. Direct Title Insurance Carriers........ $6.5 ..............

524128................................. Other Direct Insurance (except Life, $6.5 ..............

Health and Medical) Carriers.

524130................................. Reinsurance Carriers................... $6.5 ..............

524210................................. Insurance Agencies and Brokerages...... $6.5 ..............

524291................................. Claims Adjusting....................... $6.5 ..............

524292................................. Third Party Administration of Insurance $6.5 ..............

and Pension Funds.

524298................................. All Other Insurance Related Activities. $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 525--Funds, Trusts and Other Financial Vehicles

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

525110................................. Pension Funds.......................... $6.5 ..............

525120................................. Health and Welfare Funds............... $6.5 ..............

525190................................. Other Insurance Funds.................. $6.5 ..............

525910................................. Open-End Investment Funds.............. $6.5 ..............

525920................................. Trusts, Estates, and Agency Accounts... $6.5 ..............

525930................................. Real Estate Investment Trusts.......... $6.5 ..............

525990................................. Other Financial Vehicles............... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 53--Real Estate and Rental and Leasing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 531--Real Estate

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

531110................................. Lessors of Residential Buildings and $6.5 ..............

Dwellings.

531120................................. Lessors of Nonresidential Buildings $6.5 ..............

(except Miniwarehouses).

[[Page 312]]

531130................................. Lessors of Miniwarehouses and Self $23.5 ..............

Storage Units.

531190................................. Lessors of Other Real Estate Property.. $6.5 ..............

Except, Leasing of Building Space to Federal \9\ $19.0 ..............

Government by Owners \9\.

531210................................. Offices of Real Estate Agents and \10\ $2.0 ..............

Brokers \10\.

531311................................. Residential Property Managers.......... $2.0 ..............

531312................................. Nonresidential Property Managers....... $2.0 ..............

531320................................. Offices of Real Estate Appraisers...... $2.0 ..............

531390................................. Other Activities Related to Real Estate $2.0 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 532--Rental and Leasing Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

532111................................. Passenger Car Rental................... $23.5 ..............

532112................................. Passenger Car Leasing.................. $23.5 ..............

532120................................. Truck, Utility Trailer, and RV $23.5 ..............

(Recreational Vehicle) Rental and

Leasing.

532210................................. Consumer Electronics and Appliances $6.5 ..............

Rental.

532220................................. Formal Wear and Costume Rental......... $6.5 ..............

532230................................. Video Tape and Disc Rental............. $6.5 ..............

532291................................. Home Health Equipment Rental........... $6.5 ..............

532292................................. Recreational Goods Rental.............. $6.5 ..............

532299................................. All Other Consumer Goods Rental........ $6.5 ..............

532310................................. General Rental Centers................. $6.5 ..............

532411................................. Commercial Air, Rail, and Water $6.5 ..............

Transportation Equipment Rental and

Leasing.

532412................................. Construction, Mining and Forestry $6.5 ..............

Machinery and Equipment Rental and

Leasing.

532420................................. Office Machinery and Equipment Rental $23.0 ..............

and Leasing.

532490................................. Other Commercial and Industrial $6.5 ..............

Machinery and Equipment Rental and

Leasing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 533--Lessors of Nonfinancial Intangible Assets (except Copyrighted Works)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

533110................................. Lessors of Nonfinancial Intangible $6.5 ..............

Assets (except Copyrighted Works).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 54--Professional, Scientific and Technical Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 541--Professional, Scientific and Technical Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

541110................................. Offices of Lawyers..................... $6.5 ..............

541191................................. Title Abstract and Settlement Offices.. $6.5 ..............

541199................................. All Other Legal Services............... $6.5 ..............

541211................................. Offices of Certified Public Accountants $7.5 ..............

541213................................. Tax Preparation Services............... $6.5 ..............

541214................................. Payroll Services....................... $7.5 ..............

541219................................. Other Accounting Services.............. $7.5 ..............

541310................................. Architectural Services................. $4.5 ..............

541320................................. Landscape Architectural Services....... $6.5 ..............

541330................................. Engineering Services................... $4.5 ..............

Except, Military and Aerospace Equipment and $25.0 ..............

Military Weapons.

Except, Contracts and Subcontracts for $25.0 ..............

Engineering Services Awarded Under the

National Energy Policy Act of 1992.

Except, Marine Engineering and Naval $17.0 ..............

Architecture.

541340................................. Drafting Services...................... $6.5 ..............

Except, Map Drafting........................... $4.5 ..............

541350................................. Building Inspection Services........... $6.5 ..............

541360................................. Geophysical Surveying and Mapping $4.5 ..............

Services.

541370................................. Surveying and Mapping (except $4.5 ..............

Geophysical) Services.

541380................................. Testing Laboratories................... $11.0 ..............

541410................................. Interior Design Services............... $6.5 ..............

541420................................. Industrial Design Services............. $6.5 ..............

541430................................. Graphic Design Services................ $6.5 ..............

541490................................. Other Specialized Design Services...... $6.5 ..............

541511................................. Custom Computer Programming Services... $23.0 ..............

541512................................. Computer Systems Design Services....... $23.0 ..............

541513................................. Computer Facilities Management Services $23.0 ..............

541519................................. Other Computer Related Services........ $23.0 ..............

Except, Information Technology Value Added .............. \18\ 150

Resellers \18\.

541611................................. Administrative Management and General $6.5 ..............

Management Consulting Services.

541612................................. Human Resources and Executive Search $6.5 ..............

Consulting Services.

[[Page 313]]

541613................................. Marketing Consulting Services.......... $6.5 ..............

541614................................. Process, Physical Distribution and $6.5 ..............

Logistics Consulting Services.

541618................................. Other Management Consulting Services... $6.5 ..............

541620................................. Environmental Consulting Services...... $6.5 ..............

541690................................. Other Scientific and Technical $6.5 ..............

Consulting Services.

541710................................. Research and Development in the .............. \11\ 500

Physical, Engineering, and Life

Sciences\11\.

EXCEPT, Aircraft............................... .............. 1,500

EXCEPT, Aircraft Parts, and Auxiliary .............. 1,000

Equipment, and Aircraft Engine Parts.

EXCEPT, Space Vehicles and Guided Missiles, .............. 1,000

their Propulsion Units, their

Propulsion Units Parts, and their

Auxiliary Equipment and Parts.

541720................................. Research and Development in the Social $6.5 ..............

Sciences and Humanities.

541810................................. Advertising Agencies \10\.............. \10\ $6.5 ..............

541820................................. Public Relations Agencies.............. $6.5 ..............

541830................................. Media Buying Agencies.................. $6.5 ..............

541840................................. Media Representatives.................. $6.5 ..............

541850................................. Display Advertising.................... $6.5 ..............

541860................................. Direct Mail Advertising................ $6.5 ..............

541870................................. Advertising Material Distribution $6.5 ..............

Services.

541890................................. Other Services Related to Advertising.. $6.5 ..............

541910................................. Marketing Research and Public Opinion $6.5 ..............

Polling.

541921................................. Photography Studios, Portrait.......... $6.5 ..............

541922................................. Commercial Photography................. $6.5 ..............

541930................................. Translation and Interpretation Services $6.5 ..............

541940................................. Veterinary Services.................... $6.5 ..............

541990................................. All Other Professional, Scientific and $6.5 ..............

Technical Services.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 55--Management of Companies and Enterprises

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 551--Management of Companies and Enterprises

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

551111................................. Offices of Bank Holding Companies...... $6.5 ..............

551112................................. Offices of Other Holding Companies..... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 56--Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 561--Administrative and Support Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

561110................................. Office Administrative Services......... $6.5 ..............

561210................................. Facilities Support Services \12\....... \12\ $32.5 ..............

561310................................. Employment Placement Agencies.......... $6.5 ..............

561320................................. Temporary Help Services................ $12.5 ..............

561330................................. Employee Leasing Services.............. $12.5 ..............

561410................................. Document Preparation Services.......... $6.5 ..............

561421................................. Telephone Answering Services........... $6.5 ..............

561422................................. Telemarketing Bureaus.................. $6.5 ..............

561431................................. Private Mail Centers................... $6.5 ..............

561439................................. Other Business Service Centers $6.5 ..............

(including Copy Shops).

561440................................. Collection Agencies.................... $6.5 ..............

561450................................. Credit Bureaus......................... $6.5 ..............

561491................................. Repossession Services.................. $6.5 ..............

561492................................. Court Reporting and Stenotype Services. $6.5 ..............

561499................................. All Other Business Support Services.... $6.5 ..............

561510................................. Travel Agencies \10\................... \10\ $3.510 ..............

561520................................. Tour Operators \10\.................... \10\ $6.5 ..............

561591................................. Convention and Visitors Bureaus........ $6.5 ..............

561599................................. All Other Travel Arrangement and $6.5 ..............

Reservation Services.

561611................................. Investigation Services................. $11.5 ..............

561612................................. Security Guards and Patrol Services.... $11.5 ..............

561613................................. Armored Car Services................... $11.5 ..............

561621................................. Security Systems Services (except $11.5 ..............

Locksmiths).

561622................................. Locksmiths............................. $6.5 ..............

561710................................. Exterminating and Pest Control Services $6.5 ..............

561720................................. Janitorial Services.................... $15.0 ..............

561730................................. Landscaping Services................... $6.5 ..............

561740................................. Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning Services $4.5 ..............

561790................................. Other Services to Buildings and $6.5 ..............

Dwellings.

561910................................. Packaging and Labeling Services........ $6.5 ..............

561920................................. Convention and Trade Show Organizers \10\ $6.5 ..............

\10\.

561990................................. All Other Support Services............. $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 314]]

Subsector 562--Waste Management and Remediation Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

562111................................. Solid Waste Collection................. $11.5 ..............

562112................................. Hazardous Waste Collection............. $11.5 ..............

562119................................. Other Waste Collection................. $11.5 ..............

562211................................. Hazardous Waste Treatment and Disposal. $11.5 ..............

562212................................. Solid Waste Landfill................... $11.5 ..............

562213................................. Solid Waste Combustors and Incinerators $11.5 ..............

562219................................. Other Nonhazardous Waste Treatment and $11.5 ..............

Disposal.

562910................................. Remediation Services................... $13.0 ..............

Except, Environmental Remediation Services \14\ .............. \14\ 500

562920................................. Materials Recovery Facilities.......... $11.5 ..............

562991................................. Septic Tank and Related Services....... $6.5 ..............

562998................................. All Other Miscellaneous Waste $6.5 ..............

Management Services.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 61--Educational Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 611--Educational Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

611110................................. Elementary and Secondary Schools....... $6.5 ..............

611210................................. Junior Colleges........................ $6.5 ..............

611310................................. Colleges, Universities and Professional $6.5 ..............

Schools.

611410................................. Business and Secretarial Schools....... $6.5 ..............

611420................................. Computer Training...................... $6.5 ..............

611430................................. Professional and Management Development $6.5 ..............

Training.

611511................................. Cosmetology and Barber Schools......... $6.5 ..............

611512................................. Flight Training........................ $23.5 ..............

611513................................. Apprenticeship Training................ $6.5 ..............

611519................................. Other Technical and Trade Schools...... $6.5 ..............

Except, Job Corps Centers \16\................. \16\ $32.5 ..............

611610................................. Fine Arts Schools...................... $6.5 ..............

611620................................. Sports and Recreation Instruction...... $6.5 ..............

611630................................. Language Schools....................... $6.5 ..............

611691................................. Exam Preparation and Tutoring.......... $6.5 ..............

611692................................. Automobile Driving Schools............. $6.5 ..............

611699................................. All Other Miscellaneous Schools and $6.5 ..............

Instruction.

611710................................. Educational Support Services........... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 62--Health Care and Social Assistance

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 621--Ambulatory Health Care Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

621111................................. Offices of Physicians (except Mental $9.0 ..............

Health Specialists).

621112................................. Offices of Physicians, Mental Health $9.0 ..............

Specialists.

621210................................. Offices of Dentists.................... $6.5 ..............

621310................................. Offices of Chiropractors............... $6.5 ..............

621320................................. Offices of Optometrists................ $6.5 ..............

621330................................. Offices of Mental Health Practitioners $6.5 ..............

(except Physicians).

621340................................. Offices of Physical, Occupational and $6.5 ..............

Speech Therapists and Audiologists.

621391................................. Offices of Podiatrists................. $6.5 ..............

621399................................. Offices of All Other Miscellaneous $6.5 ..............

Health Practitioners.

621410................................. Family Planning Centers................ $9.0 ..............

621420................................. Outpatient Mental Health and Substance $9.0 ..............

Abuse Centers.

621491................................. HMO Medical Centers.................... $9.0 ..............

621492................................. Kidney Dialysis Centers................ $31.5 ..............

621493................................. Freestanding Ambulatory Surgical and $9.0 ..............

Emergency Centers.

621498................................. All Other Outpatient Care Centers...... $9.0 ..............

621511................................. Medical Laboratories................... $12.5 ..............

621512................................. Diagnostic Imaging Centers............. $12.5 ..............

621610................................. Home Health Care Services.............. $12.5 ..............

621910................................. Ambulance Services..................... $6.5 ..............

621991................................. Blood and Organ Banks.................. $9.0 ..............

621999................................. All Other Miscellaneous Ambulatory $9.0 ..............

Health Care Services.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 622--Hospitals

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

622110................................. General Medical and Surgical Hospitals. $31.5 ..............

622210................................. Psychiatric and Substance Abuse $31.5 ..............

Hospitals.

622310................................. Specialty (except Psychiatric and $31.5 ..............

Substance Abuse) Hospitals.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 315]]

Subsector 623--Nursing and Residential Care Facilities

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

623110................................. Nursing Care Facilities................ $12.5 ..............

623210................................. Residential Mental Retardation $9.0 ..............

Facilities.

623220................................. Residential Mental Health and Substance $6.5 ..............

Abuse Facilities.

623311................................. Continuing Care Retirement Communities. $12.5 ..............

623312................................. Homes for the Elderly.................. $6.5 ..............

623990................................. Other Residential Care Facilities...... $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 624--Social Assistance

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

624110................................. Child and Youth Services............... $6.5 ..............

624120................................. Services for the Elderly and Persons $6.5 ..............

with Disabilities.

624190................................. Other Individual and Family Services... $6.5 ..............

624210................................. Community Food Services................ $6.5 ..............

624221................................. Temporary Shelters..................... $6.5 ..............

624229................................. Other Community Housing Services....... $6.5 ..............

624230................................. Emergency and Other Relief Services.... $6.5 ..............

624310................................. Vocational Rehabilitation Services..... $6.5 ..............

624410................................. Child Day Care Services................ $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 71--Arts, Entertainment and Recreation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 71--Arts, Entertainment and Recreation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 711--Performing Arts, Spectator Sports and Related Industries

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

711110................................. Theater Companies and Dinner Theaters.. $6.5 ..............

711120................................. Dance Companies........................ $6.5 ..............

711130................................. Musical Groups and Artists............. $6.5 ..............

711190................................. Other Performing Arts Companies........ $6.5 ..............

711211................................. Sports Teams and Clubs................. $6.5 ..............

711212................................. Race Tracks............................ $6.5 ..............

711219................................. Other Spectator Sports................. $6.5 ..............

711310................................. Promoters of Performing Arts, Sports $6.5 ..............

and Similar Events with Facilities.

711320................................. Promoters of Performing Arts, Sports $6.5 ..............

and Similar Events without Facilities.

711410................................. Agents and Managers for Artists, $6.5 ..............

Athletes, Entertainers and Other

Public Figures.

711510................................. Independent Artists, Writers, and $6.5 ..............

Performers.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 712--Museums, Historical Sites and Similar Institutions

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

712110................................. Museums................................ $6.5 ..............

712120................................. Historical Sites....................... $6.5 ..............

712130................................. Zoos and Botanical Gardens............. $6.5 ..............

712190................................. Nature Parks and Other Similar $6.5 ..............

Institutions.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 713--Amusement, Gambling and Recreation Industries

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

713110................................. Amusement and Theme Parks.............. $6.5 ..............

713120................................. Amusement Arcades...................... $6.5 ..............

713210................................. Casinos (except Casino Hotels)......... $6.5 ..............

713290................................. Other Gambling Industries.............. $6.5 ..............

713910................................. Golf Courses and Country Clubs......... $6.5 ..............

713920................................. Skiing Facilities...................... $6.5 ..............

713930................................. Marinas................................ $6.5 ..............

713940................................. Fitness and Recreational Sports Centers $6.5 ..............

713950................................. Bowling Centers........................ $6.5 ..............

713990................................. All Other Amusement and Recreation $6.5 ..............

Industries.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 72--Accommodation and Food Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 721--Accommodation

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

721110................................. Hotels (except Casino Hotels) and $6.5 ..............

Motels.

721120................................. Casino Hotels.......................... $6.5 ..............

721191................................. Bed and Breakfast Inns................. $6.5 ..............

721199................................. All Other Traveler Accommodation....... $6.5 ..............

721211................................. RV (Recreational Vehicle) Parks and $6.5 ..............

Campgrounds.

[[Page 316]]

721214................................. Recreational and Vacation Camps (except $6.5 ..............

Campgrounds).

721310................................. Rooming and Boarding Houses............ $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 722--Food Services and Drinking Places

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

722110................................. Full-Service Restaurants............... $6.5 ..............

722211................................. Limited-Service Restaurants............ $6.5 ..............

722212................................. Cafeterias............................. $6.5 ..............

722213................................. Snack and Nonalcoholic Beverage Bars... $6.5 ..............

722310................................. Food Service Contractors............... $19.0 ..............

722320................................. Caterers............................... $6.5 ..............

722330................................. Mobile Food Services................... $6.5 ..............

722410................................. Drinking Places (Alcoholic Beverages).. $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 81--Other Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 811--Repair and Maintenance

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

811111................................. General Automotive Repair.............. $6.5 ..............

811112................................. Automotive Exhaust System Repair....... $6.5 ..............

811113................................. Automotive Transmission Repair......... $6.5 ..............

811118................................. Other Automotive Mechanical and $6.5 ..............

Electrical Repair and Maintenance.

811121................................. Automotive Body, Paint and Interior $6.5 ..............

Repair and Maintenance.

811122................................. Automotive Glass Replacement Shops..... $6.5 ..............

811191................................. Automotive Oil Change and Lubrication $6.5 ..............

Shops.

811192................................. Car Washes............................. $6.5 ..............

811198................................. All Other Automotive Repair and $6.5 ..............

Maintenance.

811211................................. Consumer Electronics Repair and $6.5 ..............

Maintenance.

811212................................. Computer and Office Machine Repair and $23.0 ..............

Maintenance.

811213................................. Communication Equipment Repair and $6.5 ..............

Maintenance.

811219................................. Other Electronic and Precision $6.5 ..............

Equipment Repair and Maintenance.

811310................................. Commercial and Industrial Machinery and $6.5 ..............

Equipment (except Automotive and

Electronic) Repair and Maintenance.

811411................................. Home and Garden Equipment Repair and $6.5 ..............

Maintenance.

811412................................. Appliance Repair and Maintenance....... $6.5 ..............

811420................................. Reupholstery and Furniture Repair...... $6.5 ..............

811430................................. Footwear and Leather Goods Repair...... $6.5 ..............

811490................................. Other Personal and Household Goods $6.5 ..............

Repair and Maintenance.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 812--Personal and Laundry Services

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

812111................................. Barber Shops........................... $6.5 ..............

812112................................. Beauty Salons.......................... $6.5 ..............

812113................................. Nail Salons............................ $6.5 ..............

812191................................. Diet and Weight Reducing Centers....... $6.5 ..............

812199................................. Other Personal Care Services........... $6.5 ..............

812210................................. Funeral Homes and Funeral Services..... $6.5 ..............

812220................................. Cemeteries and Crematories............. $6.5 ..............

812310................................. Coin-Operated Laundries and Drycleaners $6.5 ..............

812320................................. Drycleaning and Laundry Services $4.5 ..............

(except Coin-Operated).

812331................................. Linen Supply........................... $13.0 ..............

812332................................. Industrial Launderers.................. $13.0 ..............

812910................................. Pet Care (except Veterinary) Services.. $6.5 ..............

812921................................. Photo Finishing Laboratories (except $6.5 ..............

One-Hour).

812922................................. One-Hour Photo Finishing............... $6.5 ..............

812930................................. Parking Lots and Garages............... $6.5 ..............

812990................................. All Other Personal Services............ $6.5 ..............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subsector 813--Religious, Grantmaking, Civic, Professional and Similar Organizations

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

813110................................. Religious Organizations................ $6.5 ..............

813211................................. Grantmaking Foundations................ $6.5 ..............

813212................................. Voluntary Health Organizations......... $6.5 ..............

813219................................. Other Grantmaking and Giving Services.. $6.5 ..............

813311................................. Human Rights Organizations............. $6.5 ..............

813312................................. Environment, Conservation and Wildlife $6.5 ..............

Organizations.

813319................................. Other Social Advocacy Organizations.... $6.5 ..............

813410................................. Civic and Social Organizations......... $6.5 ..............

813910................................. Business Associations.................. $6.5 ..............

813920................................. Professional Organizations............. $6.5 ..............

813930................................. Labor Unions and Similar Labor $6.5 ..............

Organizations.

[[Page 317]]

813940................................. Political Organizations................ $6.5 ..............

813990................................. Other Similar Organizations (except $6.5 ..............

Business, Professional, Labor, and

Political Organizations).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sector 92--Public Administration \19\

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Small business size standards are not established for this sector. Establishments in the Public Administration

sector are Federal, state, and local government agencies which administer and oversee government programs and

activities that are not performed by private establishments.)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Footnotes

1. NAICS codes 221111, 221112, 221113, 221119, 221121, and 221122--A

firm is small if, including its affiliates, it is primarily engaged in

the generation, transmission, and/or distribution of electric energy for

sale and its total electric output for the preceding fiscal year did not

exceed 4 million megawatt hours.

2. NAICS code 237990--Dredging: To be considered small for purposes

of Government procurement, a firm must perform at least 40 percent of

the volume dredged with its own equipment or equipment owned by another

small dredging concern.

3. NAICS code 311421--For purposes of Government procurement for

food canning and preserving, the standard of 500 employees excludes

agricultural labor as defined in 3306(k) of the Internal Revenue Code,

26 U.S.C. 3306(k).

4. NAICS code 324110--For purposes of Government procurement, the

petroleum refiner must be a concern that has no more than 1,500

employees nor more than 125,000 barrels per calendar day total Operable

Atmospheric Crude Oil Distillation capacity. Capacity includes owned or

leased facilities as well as facilities under a processing agreement or

an arrangement such as an exchange agreement or a throughput. The total

product to be delivered under the contract must be at least 90 percent

refined by the successful bidder from either crude oil or bona fide

feedstocks.

5. NAICS code 326211--For Government procurement, a firm is small

for bidding on a contract for pneumatic tires within Census

Classification codes 30111 and 30112, provided that:

(a) The value of tires within Census Classification codes 30111 and

30112 which it manufactured in the United States during the previous

calendar year is more than 50 percent of the value of its total

worldwide manufacture,

(b) The value of pneumatic tires within Census Classification codes

30111 and 30112 comprising its total worldwide manufacture during the

preceding calendar year was less than 5 percent of the value of all such

tires manufactured in the United States during that period, and

(c) The value of the principal product which it manufactured or

otherwise produced, or sold worldwide during the preceding calendar year

is less than 10 percent of the total value of such products manufactured

or otherwise produced or sold in the United States during that period.

6. NAICS Subsectors 333, 334, 335 and 336--For rebuilding machinery

or equipment on a factory basis, or equivalent, use the NAICS code for a

newly manufactured product. Concerns performing major rebuilding or

overhaul activities do not necessarily have to meet the criteria for

being a ``manufacturer'' although the activities may be classified under

a manufacturing NAICS code. Ordinary repair services or preservation are

not considered rebuilding.

7. NAICS code 336413--Contracts for the rebuilding or overhaul of

aircraft ground support equipment on a contract basis are classified

under NAICS code 336413.

8. NAICS Codes 522110, 522120, 522130, 522190, 522210 and 522293--A

financial institution's assets are determined by averaging the assets

reported on its four quarterly financial statements for the preceding

year. ``Assets'' for the purposes of this size standard means the assets

defined according to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination

Council 034 call report form.

9. NAICS code 531190--Leasing of building space to the Federal

Government by Owners: For Government procurement, a size standard of

$19.0 million in gross receipts applies to the owners of building space

leased to the Federal Government. The standard does not apply to an

agent.

10. NAICS codes 488510 (part) 531210, 541810, 561510, 561520, and

561920--As measured by total revenues, but excluding funds received in

trust for an unaffiliated third party, such as bookings or sales subject

to commissions. The commissions received are included as revenues.

11. NAICS code 541710--For research and development contracts

requiring the delivery of a manufactured product, the appropriate

[[Page 318]]

size standard is that of the manufacturing industry.

(a) ``Research and Development'' means laboratory or other physical

research and development. It does not include economic, educational,

engineering, operations, systems, or other nonphysical research; or

computer programming, data processing, commercial and/or medical

laboratory testing.

(b) For purposes of the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)

program only, a different definition has been established by law. See

Sec. 121.701 of these regulations.

(c) ``Research and Development'' for guided missiles and space

vehicles includes evaluations and simulation, and other services

requiring thorough knowledge of complete missiles and spacecraft.

12. NAICS code 561210--Facilities Support Services:

(a) If one or more activities of Facilities Support Services as

defined in paragraph (b) (below in this footnote) can be identified with

a specific industry and that industry accounts for 50% or more of the

value of an entire procurement, then the proper classification of the

procurement is that of the specific industry, not Facilities Support

Services.

(b) ``Facilities Support Services'' requires the performance of

three or more separate activities in the areas of services or specialty

trade contractors industries. If services are performed, these service

activities must each be in a separate NAICS industry. If the procurement

requires the use of specialty trade contractors (plumbing, painting,

plastering, carpentry, etc.), all such specialty trade contractors

activities are considered a single activity and classified as ``Building

and Property Specialty Trade Services.'' Since ``Building and Property

Specialty Trade Services'' is only one activity, two additional

activities of separate NAICS industries are required for a procurement

to be classified as ``Facilities Support Services.''

13. NAICS code 238990--Building and Property Specialty Trade

Services: If a procurement requires the use of multiple specialty trade

contractors (i.e., plumbing, painting, plastering, carpentry, etc.), and

no specialty trade accounts for 50% or more of the value of the

procurement, all such specialty trade contractors activities are

considered a single activity and classified as Building and Property

Specialty Trade Services.

14. NAICS 562910--Environmental Remediation Services:

(a) For SBA assistance as a small business concern in the industry

of Environmental Remediation Services, other than for Government

procurement, a concern must be engaged primarily in furnishing a range

of services for the remediation of a contaminated environment to an

acceptable condition including, but not limited to, preliminary

assessment, site inspection, testing, remedial investigation,

feasibility studies, remedial design, containment, remedial action,

removal of contaminated materials, storage of contaminated materials and

security and site closeouts. If one of such activities accounts for 50

percent or more of a concern's total revenues, employees, or other

related factors, the concern's primary industry is that of the

particular industry and not the Environmental Remediation Services

Industry.

(b) For purposes of classifying a Government procurement as

Environmental Remediation Services, the general purpose of the

procurement must be to restore or directly support the restoration of a

contaminated environment (such as, preliminary assessment, site

inspection, testing, remedial investigation, feasibility studies,

remedial design, remediation services, containment, removal of

contaminated materials, storage of contaminated materials or security

and site closeouts), although the general purpose of the procurement

need not necessarily include remedial actions. Also, the procurement

must be composed of activities in three or more separate industries with

separate NAICS codes or, in some instances (e.g., engineering), smaller

sub-components of NAICS codes with separate, distinct size standards.

These activities may include, but are not limited to, separate

activities in industries such as: Heavy Construction; Specialty Trade

Contractors; Engineering Services; Architectural Services; Management

Consulting Services; Hazardous and Other Waste Collection; Remediation

Services, Testing Laboratories; and Research and Development in the

Physical, Engineering and Life Sciences. If any activity in the

procurement can be identified with a separate NAICS code, or component

of a code with a separate distinct size standard, and that industry

accounts for 50 percent or more of the value of the entire procurement,

then the proper size standard is the one for that particular industry,

and not the Environmental Remediation Service size standard.

15. Subsector 483--Water Transportation--Offshore Marine Services:

The applicable size standard shall be $25.5 million for firms furnishing

specific transportation services to concerns engaged in offshore oil

and/or natural gas exploration, drilling production, or marine research;

such services encompass passenger and freight transportation, anchor

handling, and related logistical services to and from the work site or

at sea.

16. NAICS codes 611519--Job Corps Centers. For classifying a Federal

procurement, the purpose of the solicitation must be for the management

and operation of a U.S. Department of Labor Job Corps Center. The

activities involved include admissions activities, life skills training,

educational activities, comprehensive career preparation activities,

[[Page 319]]

career development activities, career transition activities, as well as

the management and support functions and services needed to operate and

maintain the facility. For SBA assistance as a small business concern,

other than for Federal Government procurements, a concern must be

primarily engaged in providing the services to operate and maintain

Federal Job Corps Centers.

17. NAICS code 115310 (Support Activities for Forestry)--Forest Fire

Suppression and Fuels Management Services are two components of Support

Activities for Forestry. Forest Fire Suppression includes establishments

which provide services to fight forest fires. These firms usually have

fire-fighting crews and equipment. Fuels Management Services firms

provide services to clear land of hazardous materials that would fuel

forest fires. The treatments used by these firms may include prescribed

fire, mechanical removal, establishing fuel breaks, thinning, pruning,

and piling.

18. NAICS code 541519--An Information Technology Value Added

Reseller provides a total solution to information technology

acquisitions by providing multi-vendor hardware and software along with

significant services. Significant value added services consist of, but

are not limited to, configuration consulting and design, systems

integration, installation of multi-vendor computer equipment,

customization of hardware or software, training, product technical

support, maintenance, and end user support. For purposes of Government

procurement, an information technology procurement classified under this

industry category must consist of at least 15% and not more than 50% of

value added services as measured by the total price less the cost of

information technology hardware, computer software, and profit. If the

contract consists of less than 15% of value added services, then it must

be classified under a NAICS manufacturing industry. If the contract

consists of more than 50% of value added services, then it must be

classified under the NAICS industry that best describes the predominate

service of the procurement. To qualify as an Information Technology

Value Added Reseller for purposes of SBA assistance, other than for

Government procurement, a concern must be primarily engaged in providing

information technology equipment and computer software and provide value

added services which account for at least 15% of its receipts but not

more than 50% of its receipts.

19. NAICS Sector 92--Small business size standards are not

established for this sector. Establishments in the Public Administration

sector are Federal, State, and local government agencies which

administer and oversee government programs and activities that are not

performed by private establishments. Concerns performing operational

services for the administration of a government program are classified

under the NAICS private sector industry based on the activities

performed. Similarly, procurements for these types of services are

classified under the NAICS private sector industry that best describes

the activities to be performed. For example, if a government agency

issues a procurement for law enforcement services, the requirement would

be classified using one of the NAICS industry codes under 56161,

Investigation, Guard, and Armored Car Services.

[65 FR 30840, May 15, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 53535, Sept. 5, 2000; 65

FR 60343, Oct. 11, 2000; 65 FR 69438, Nov. 17, 2000; 65 FR 70637, Nov.

24, 2000; 66 FR 30647, June 7, 2001; 66 FR 32416, June 14, 2001; 67 FR

3045, Jan. 23, 2002; 67 FR 11880, Mar. 15, 2002; 67 FR 19637, Apr. 23,

2002; 67 FR 38191, May 31, 2002; 67 FR 56906, Sept. 6, 2002; 67 FR

62292, Oct. 4, 2002; 67 FR 67103, 67253, Nov. 4, 2002; 68 FR 13811, Mar.

21, 2003; 68 FR 15050, Mar. 28, 2003; 68 FR 16408, Apr. 4, 2003; 68 FR

33354, June 4, 2003; 68 FR 59314, Oct. 15, 2003; 68 FR 74841, 74842,

74847, Dec. 29, 2003; 69 FR 29203, May 21, 2004; 70 FR 72583, Dec. 6,

2005]

Size Eligibility Requirements For SBA Financial Assistance

Sec. 121.301 What size standards are applicable to financial

assistance programs?

(a) For Business Loans and Disaster Loans (other than physical

disaster loans), an applicant business concern must satisfy two

criteria:

(1) The size of the applicant alone (without affiliates) must not

exceed the size standard designated for the industry in which the

applicant is primarily engaged; and

(2) The size of the applicant combined with its affiliates must not

exceed the size standard designated for either the primary industry of

the applicant alone or the primary industry of the applicant and its

affiliates, whichever is higher. These size standards are set forth in

Sec. 121.201.

(b) For Development Company programs, an applicant must meet one of

the following standards:

(1) The same standards applicable under paragraph (a) of this

section; or

(2) Including its affiliates, tangible net worth not in excess of

$7.5 million, and average net income after Federal income taxes

(excluding any carry-over losses) for the preceding two completed fiscal

years not in excess of $2.5 million. If the applicant is not required by

law to pay Federal income taxes at the

[[Page 320]]

enterprise level, but is required to pass income through to its

shareholders, partners, beneficiaries, or other equitable owners, the

applicant's ``net income after Federal income taxes'' will be its net

income reduced by an amount computed as follows:

(i) If the applicant is not required by law to pay State (and local,

if any) income taxes at the enterprise level, multiply its net income by

the marginal State income tax rate (or by the combined State and local

income tax rates, as applicable) that would have applied if it were a

taxable corporation.

(ii) Multiply the applicant's net income, less any deduction for

State and local income taxes calculated under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of

this section, by the marginal Federal income tax rate that would have

applied if the applicant were a taxable corporation.

(iii) Sum the results obtained in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and

(b)(2)(ii) of this section.

(c) For the Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program, an

applicant must meet one of the following standards:

(1) The same standards applicable under paragraph (a) of this

section; or

(2) Including its affiliates, tangible net worth not in excess of

$18 million, and average net income after Federal income taxes

(excluding any carry-over losses) for the preceding two completed fiscal

years not in excess of $6 million. If the applicant is not required by

law to pay Federal income taxes at the enterprise level, but is required

to pass income through to its shareholders, partners, beneficiaries, or

other equitable owners, the applicant's ``net income after Federal

income taxes'' will be its net income reduced by an amount computed as

follows:

(i) If the applicant is not required by law to pay State (and local,

if any) income taxes at the enterprise level, multiply its net income by

the marginal State income tax rate (or by the combined State and local

income tax rates, as applicable) that would have applied if it were a

taxable corporation.

(ii) Multiply the applicant's net income, less any deduction for

State and local income taxes calculated under paragraph (c)(2)(i) of

this section, by the marginal Federal income tax rate that would have

applied if the applicant were a taxable corporation.

(iii) Add the results obtained in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and

(c)(2)(ii) of this section.

(d) For Surety Bond Guarantee assistance--

(1) Any construction (general or special trade) concern or concern

performing a contract for services is small if, together with its

affiliates, its average annual receipts does not exceed $6.5 million.

(2) Any concern not specified in paragraph (d)(1) of this section

must meet the size standard for the primary industry in which it,

combined with its affiliates, is engaged.

(3) For any contract or subcontract, public or private, to be

performed in the Presidentially-declared disaster areas resulting from

the 2005 Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, or Wilma, the construction (general

or special trade) concern or concern performing a contract for services

is small if it meets the size standard for the primary industry in which

it, together with its affiliates, is engaged, or if it meets the size

standard set forth in paragraph (d)(1), whichever is higher.

(e) The applicable size standards for purposes of SBA's financial

assistance programs, excluding the Surety Bond Guarantee assistance

program, are increased by 25% whenever the applicant agrees to use all

of the financial assistance within a labor surplus area. Labor surplus

areas are listed monthly in the Department of Labor publication ``Area

Trends in Employment and Unemployment.''

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 66 FR 30648, June 7, 2001; 67

FR 3056, Jan. 23, 2002; 69 FR 29204, May 21, 2004; 70 FR 69047, 69052,

Nov. 14, 2005; 70 FR 72594, Dec. 6, 2005]

Sec. 121.302 When does SBA determine the size status of an applicant?

(a) The size status of an applicant for SBA financial assistance is

determined as of the date the application for financial assistance is

accepted for processing by SBA, except for applications under the

Preferred Lenders Program (PLP), the Disaster Loan program, the

[[Page 321]]

SBIC program, and the New Markets Venture Capital (NMCV) program.

(b) For the Preferred Lenders program, size is determined as of the

date of approval of the loan by the Preferred Lender.

(c) For disaster loan assistance (other than physical disaster

loans), size status is determined as of the date the disaster commenced,

as set forth in the Disaster Declaration. For economic injury disaster

loan assistance under disaster declarations for Hurricanes Katrina,

Rita, and Wilma, size status is determined as of the date SBA accepts

the application for processing, and for applications submitted before

December 6, 2005, whether denied because of size status or pending, such

applications shall be deemed resubmitted on December 6, 2005. For pre-

disaster mitigation loans, size status is determined as of the date SBA

accepts a complete Pre-Disaster Mitigation Small Business Loan

Application for processing. Refer to Sec. 123.408 of this chapter to

find out what SBA considers to be a complete Pre-Disaster Mitigation

Small Business Loan Application.

(d) For financial assistance from an SBIC licensee or an NMVC

company, size is determined as of the date a concern's application is

accepted for processing by the SBIC or the NMVC company.

(e) Changes in size after the applicable date when size is

determined will not disqualify an applicant for assistance.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 48276, Sept. 3, 1999; 67

FR 11880, Mar. 15, 2002; 67 FR 62337, Oct. 7, 2002; 69 FR 29204, May 21,

2004; 70 FR 72594, Dec. 6, 2005]

Sec. 121.303 What size procedures are used by SBA before it makes a

formal size determination?

(a) A concern that submits an application for financial assistance

is deemed to have certified that it is small under the applicable size

standard. SBA may question the concern's status based on information

supplied in the application or from any other source.

(b) A small business investment company, a development company, a

surety bond company, or a preferred lender may accept as true the size

information provided by an applicant, unless credible evidence to the

contrary is apparent.

(c) Size is initially considered by the individual with final

financial assistance authority. This is not a formal size determination.

A formal determination may be requested prior to a denial of eligibility

based on size.

(d) An applicant may request a formal size determination when

assistance has been denied for size ineligibility. Except for disaster

loan eligibility, a request for a formal size determination must be made

to the Government Contracting Area Director serving the area in which

the headquarters of the applicant is located, regardless of the location

of the parent company or affiliates. For disaster loan assistance, the

request for a size determination must be made to the Area Director for

the Disaster Area Office which denied the assistance.

(e) There are no time limitations for making a formal size

determination for purposes of financial assistance. The official making

the formal size determination must provide a copy of the determination

to the applicant, to the requesting SBA official, and to other

interested SBA program officials.

Sec. 121.304 What are the size requirements for refinancing an

existing SBA loan?

(a) A concern that applies to refinance an existing SBA loan or

guarantee will be considered small for the refinancing even though its

size has increased since the date of the original financing to exceed

its applicable size standard, provided that:

(1) The increase in size is due to natural growth (as distinguished

from merger, acquisition or similar management action); and

(2) SBA determines that refinancing is necessary to protect the

Government's financial interest.

(b) If a concern's size has increased other than by natural growth,

the concern and its affiliates must be small at the time the application

for refinancing is accepted for processing by SBA.

[[Page 322]]

Sec. 121.305 What size eligibility requirements exist for obtaining

financial assistance relating to particular procurements?

A concern qualified as small for a particular procurement, including

an 8(a) subcontract, is small for financial assistance directly and

primarily relating to the performance of the particular procurement.

Size Eligibility Requirements for Government Procurement

Sec. 121.401 What procurement programs are subject to size

determinations?

The rules set forth in Sec. Sec. 121.401 through 121.413 apply to

all Federal procurement programs for which status as a small business is

required or advantageous, including the small business set-aside

program, SBA's Certificate of Competency program, SBA's 8(a) Business

Development program, SBA's HUBZone program, SBA's Service-Disabled

Veteran-Owned Small Business program, the Small Business Subcontracting

program, and the Federal Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) program.

[70 FR 56814, Sept. 29, 2005]

Sec. 121.402 What size standards are applicable to Federal Government

Contracting programs?

(a) A concern must not exceed the size standard for the NAICS code

specified in the solicitation. The contracting officer must specify the

size standard in effect on the date the solicitation is issued. If SBA

amends the size standard and it becomes effective before the date

initial offers (including price) are due, the contracting officer may

amend the solicitation and use the new size standard.

(b) The procuring agency contracting officer, or authorized

representative, designates the proper NAICS code and size standard in a

solicitation, selecting the NAICS code which best describes the

principal purpose of the product or service being acquired. Primary

consideration is given to the industry descriptions in the NAICS United

States Manual, the product or service description in the solicitation

and any attachments to it, the relative value and importance of the

components of the procurement making up the end item being procured, and

the function of the goods or services being purchased. Other factors

considered include previous Government procurement classifications of

the same or similar products or services, and the classification which

would best serve the purposes of the Small Business Act. A procurement

is usually classified according to the component which accounts for the

greatest percentage of contract value. Procurements for supplies must be

classified under the appropriate manufacturing NAICS code, not under the

wholesale trade NAICS code.

(c) The NAICS code assigned to a procurement and its corresponding

size standard is final unless timely appealed to SBA's Office of

Hearings and Appeals (OHA), or unless SBA assigns an NAICS code or size

standard as provided in paragraph (d) of this section.

(d) An unclear, incomplete or missing NAICS code designation or size

standard in the solicitation may be clarified, completed or supplied by

SBA in connection with a formal size determination or size appeal.

(e) Any offeror or other interested party adversely affected by an

NAICS code designation or size standard designation may appeal the

designations to OHA under part 134 of this chapter.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000; 69

FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.403 Are SBA size determinations and NAICS code designations

binding on parties?

Formal size determinations and NAICS code designations made by

authorized SBA officials are binding upon the parties. Opinions

otherwise provided by SBA officials to contracting officers or others

are advisory in nature, and are not binding or appealable.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000]

Sec. 121.404 When does SBA determine the size status of a business

concern?

(a) SBA determines the size status of a concern, including its

affiliates, as of the date the concern submits a written self-

certification that it is small to the

[[Page 323]]

procuring activity as part of its initial offer (or other formal

response to a solicitation) which includes price. Where an agency

modifies a solicitation so that initial offers are no longer responsive

to the solicitation, a concern must recertify that it is a small

business at the time it submits a responsive offer, which includes

price, to the modified solicitation.

(b) A concern applying to be certified as a Participant in SBA's

8(a) Business Development program (under part 124, subpart A, of this

chapter), as a small disadvantaged business (under part 124, subpart B,

of this chapter), or as a HUBZone small business (under part 126 of this

chapter) must qualify as a small business for its primary industry

classification as of the date of its application and the date of

certification by SBA.

(c) The size status of an applicant for a Certificate of Competency

(COC) relating to an unrestricted procurement is determined as of the

date of the concern's application for the COC.

(d) Size status for purposes of compliance with the nonmanufacturer

rule set forth in Sec. 121.406(b)(1) and the ostensible subcontractor

rule set forth in Sec. 121.103(h)(4) is determined as of the date of

the final proposal revision for negotiated acquisitions and final bid

for sealed bidding.

(e) For subcontracting purposes, a concern must qualify as small as

of the date that it certifies that it is small for the subcontract. The

applicable size standard is that which is set forth in Sec. 121.410 and

which is in effect at the time the concern self-certifies that it is

small for the subcontract.

(f) For purposes of two-step sealed bidding under subpart 14.5 of

the FAR, 48 CFR, a concern must qualify as small as of the date that it

certifies that it is small as part of its step one proposal.

(g) A concern that qualified as a small business at the time it

receives a contract is considered a small business throughout the life

of that contract. Where a concern grows to be other than small, the

procuring agency may exercise options and still count the award as an

award to a small business.

(h) A follow-on or renewal contract is a new contracting action. As

such, size is determined as of the date the concern submits a written

self-certification that it is small to the procuring agency as part of

its initial offer including price for the follow-on or renewal contract.

(i) At the time a novation or change-of-name agreement has been

executed pursuant to FAR subpart 42.12, the new entity must submit a

written self-certification that it is small to the procuring agency so

that the agency can count the award, options, or orders issued pursuant

to the contract towards its small business goals.

[69 FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.405 May a business concern self-certify its small business

size status?

(a) A concern must self-certify it is small under the size standard

specified in the solicitation, or as clarified, completed or supplied by

SBA pursuant to Sec. 121.402(d).

(b) A contracting officer may accept a concern's self-certification

as true for the particular procurement involved in the absence of a

written protest by other offerors or other credible information which

causes the contracting officer or SBA to question the size of the

concern.

(c) Procedures for protesting the self-certification of an offeror

are set forth in Sec. Sec. 121.1001 through 121.1009.

Sec. 121.406 How does a small business concern qualify to provide

manufactured products under small business set-aside or 8(a)

contracts?

(a) General. In order to qualify as a small business concern for a

small business set-aside or 8(a) contract to provide manufactured

products, an offeror must either:

(1) Be the manufacturer of the end item being procured (and the end

item must be manufactured or produced in the United States); or

(2) Comply with the requirements of paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of

this section as a nonmanufacturer, a kit assembler or a supplier under

Simplified Acquisition Procedures.

(b) Nonmanufacturers. (1) A concern may qualify for a requirement to

provide manufactured products as a nonmanufacturer if it:

[[Page 324]]

(i) Does not exceed 500 employees;

(ii) Is primarily engaged in the retail or wholesale trade and

normally sells the type of item being supplied; and

(iii) Will supply the end item of a small business manufacturer or

processor made in the United States, or obtains a waiver of such

requirement pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section.

(2) For size purposes, there can be only one manufacturer of the end

item being acquired. The manufacturer is the concern which, with its own

facilities, performs the primary activities in transforming inorganic or

organic substances, including the assembly of parts and components, into

the end item being acquired. The end item must possess characteristics

which, as a result of mechanical, chemical or human action, it did not

possess before the original substances, parts or components were

assembled or transformed. The end item may be finished and ready for

utilization or consumption, or it may be semifinished as a raw material

to be used in further manufacturing. Firms which perform only minimal

operations upon the item being procured do not qualify as manufacturers

of the end item. Firms that add substances, parts, or components to an

existing end item to modify its performance will not be considered the

end item manufacturer where those identical modifications can be

performed by and are available from the manufacturer of the existing end

item:

(i) SBA will evaluate the following factors in determining whether a

concern is the manufacturer of the end item:

(A) The proportion of total value in the end item added by the

efforts of the concern, excluding costs of overhead, testing, quality

control, and profit;

(B) The importance of the elements added by the concern to the

function of the end item, regardless of their relative value; and

(C) The concern's technical capabilities; plant, facilities and

equipment; production or assembly line processes; packaging and boxing

operations; labeling of products; and product warranties.

(ii) Firms that provide computer and other information technology

equipment primarily consisting of component parts (such as motherboards,

video cards, network cards, memory, power supplies, storage devices, and

similar items) who install components totaling less than 50% of the

value of the end item are generally not considered the manufacturer of

the end item.

(3) The Administrator or designee may waive the requirement set

forth in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section under the following two

circumstances:

(i) The contracting officer has determined that no small business

manufacturer or processor reasonably can be expected to offer a product

meeting the specifications (including period for performance) required

by a particular solicitation and SBA reviews and accepts that

determination; or

(ii) SBA determines that no small business manufacturer or processor

of the product or class of products is available to participate in the

Federal procurement market.

(4) The two waiver possibilities identified in paragraph (b)(3) of

this section are called ``individual'' and ``class'' waivers

respectively, and the procedures for them are contained in Sec.

121.1204 .

(5) Any SBA waiver of the nonmanufacturer rule has no effect on

requirements external to the Small Business Act which involve domestic

sources of supply, such as the Buy American Act.

(c) Kit assemblers. (1) Where the manufactured item being acquired

is a kit of supplies or other goods provided by an offeror for a special

purpose, the offeror cannot exceed 500 employees, and 50 percent of the

total value of the components of the kit must be manufactured by

business concerns in the United States which are small under the size

standards for the NAICS codes of the components being assembled. The

offeror need not itself be the manufacturer of any of the items

assembled.

(2) Where the Government has specified an item for the kit which is

not produced by U.S. small business concerns, such item shall be

excluded from the calculation of total value in paragraph (c)(1) of this

section.

[[Page 325]]

(d) Simplified Acquisition Procedures. Where the procurement of a

manufactured item is processed under Simplified Acquisition Procedures,

as defined in Sec. 13.101 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)

(48 CFR 13.101), and where the anticipated cost of the procurement will

not exceed $25,000, the offeror need not supply the end product of a

small business concern as long as the product acquired is manufactured

or produced in the United States, and the offeror does not exceed 500

employees. The offeror need not itself be the manufacturer of any of the

items acquired.

(e) These requirements do not apply to small business concern

subcontractors.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996; 61 FR 7986, Mar. 1, 1996, as amended at 65

FR 30863, May 15, 2000; 69 FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.407 What are the size procedures for multiple item

procurements?

If a procurement calls for two or more specific end items or types

of services with different size standards and the offeror may submit an

offer on any or all end items or types of services, the offeror must

meet the size standard for each end item or service item for which it

submits an offer. If the procurement calls for more than one specific

end item or type of service and an offeror is required to submit an

offer on all items, the offeror may qualify as a small business for the

procurement if it meets the size standard of the item which accounts for

the greatest percentage of the total contract value.

Sec. 121.408 What are the size procedures for SBA's Certificate of

Competency Program?

(a) A firm which applies for a COC must file an ``Application for

Small Business Size Determination'' (SBA Form 355). If the initial

review of SBA Form 355 indicates the applicant, including its

affiliates, is small for purposes of the COC program, SBA will process

the application for COC. If the review indicates the applicant,

including its affiliates, is other than small, SBA will initiate a

formal size determination as set forth in Sec. 121.1009. In such a

case, SBA will not further process the COC application until a formal

size determination is made.

(b) A concern is ineligible for a COC if a formal SBA size

determination finds the concern other than small.

Sec. 121.409 What size standard applies in an unrestricted procurement

for Certificate of Competency purposes?

For the purpose of receiving a Certificate of Competency in an

unrestricted procurement, the applicable size standard is that

corresponding to the NAICS code set forth in the solicitation. For a

manufactured product, a concern must also furnish a domestically

produced or manufactured product, regardless of the size status of the

product manufacturer. The offeror need not be the manufacturer of any of

the items acquired.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000]

Sec. 121.410 What are the size standards for SBA's Section 8(d)

Subcontracting Program?

For subcontracting purposes pursuant to sections 8(d) of the Small

Business Act, a concern is small for subcontracts which relate to

Government procurements if it does not exceed the size standard for the

NAICS code that the prime contractor believes best describes the product

or service being acquired by the subcontract. However, subcontracts for

engineering services awarded under the National Energy Policy Act of

1992 have the same size standard as Military and Aerospace Equipment and

Military Weapons under NAICS 541213.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000; 69

FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.411 What are the size procedures for SBA's Section 8(d)

Subcontracting Program?

(a) Prime contractors may rely on the information contained in the

Central Contractor Registration (CCR), or equivalent data base

maintained or sanctioned by SBA, as an accurate representation of a

concern's size and ownership characteristics for purposes of maintaining

a small business source list. Even though a concern is on a

[[Page 326]]

small business source list, it must still qualify and self-certify as a

small business at the time it submits its offer as a section 8(d)

subcontractor.

(b) Upon determination of the successful subcontract offeror for a

competitive subcontract, but prior to award, the prime contractor must

inform each unsuccessful subcontract offeror in writing of the name and

location of the apparent successful offeror.

(c) The self-certification of a concern subcontracting or proposing

to subcontract under section 8(d) of the Small Business Act may be

protested by the contracting officer, the prime contractor, the

appropriate SBA official or any other interested party.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.412 What are the size procedures for partial small business

set-asides?

A firm is required to meet size standard requirements only for the

small business set-aside portion of a procurement, and is not required

to qualify as a small business for the unrestricted portion.

Sec. 121.413 [Reserved]

Size Eligibility Requirements for Sales or Lease of Government Property

Sec. 121.501 What programs for sales or leases of Government property

are subject to size determinations?

Sections 121.501 through 121.512 apply to small business size

determinations for the purpose of the sale or lease of Government

property, including the Timber Sales Program, the Special Salvage Timber

Sales Program, and the sale of Government petroleum, coal and uranium.

Sec. 121.502 What size standards are applicable to programs for sales

or leases of Government property?

(a) Unless otherwise specified in this part--

(1) A concern primarily engaged in manufacturing is small for sales

or leases of Government property if it does not exceed 500 employees;

(2) A concern not primarily engaged in manufacturing is small for

sales or leases of Government property if it has annual receipts not

exceeding $6.5 million.

(b) Size status for such sales and leases is determined by the

primary industry of the applicant business concern.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 67 FR 3056, Jan. 23, 2002; 70

FR 72594, Dec. 6, 2005]

Sec. 121.503 Are SBA size determinations binding on parties?

Formal size determinations based upon a specific Government sale or

lease, or made in response to a request from another Government agency

under Sec. 121.901, are binding upon the parties. Other SBA opinions

provided to contracting officers or others are only advisory, and are

not binding or appealable.

Sec. 121.504 When does SBA determine the size status of a business

concern?

SBA determines the size status of a concern (including its

affiliates) as of the date the concern submits a written self-

certification that it is small to the Government as part of its initial

offer including price where there is a specific sale or lease at issue,

or as set forth in Sec. 121.903 if made in response to a request of

another Government agency.

Sec. 121.505 What is the effect of a self-certification?

(a) A contracting officer may accept a concern's self-certification

as true for the particular sale or lease involved, in the absence of a

written protest by other offerors or other credible information which

would cause the contracting officer or SBA to question the size of the

concern.

(b) Procedures for protesting the self-certification of an offeror

are set forth in Sec. Sec. 121.1001 through 121.1009.

Sec. 121.506 What definitions are important for sales or leases of

Government-owned timber?

(a) Forest product industry means logging, wood preserving, and the

manufacture of lumber and wood related products such as veneer, plywood,

hardboard, particle board, or wood

[[Page 327]]

pulp, and of products of which lumber or wood related products are the

principal raw materials.

(b) Logging of timber means felling and bucking, yarding, and/or

loading. It does not mean hauling.

(c) Manufacture of logs means, at a minimum, breaking down logs into

rough cuts of the finished product.

(d) Sell means, in addition to its usual and customary meaning, the

exchange of sawlogs for sawlogs on a product-for-product basis with or

without monetary adjustment, and an indirect transfer, such as the sale

of the assets of a concern after it has been awarded one or more set-

aside sales of timber.

(e) Significant logging of timber means that a concern uses its own

employees to perform at least two of the following: felling and bucking,

yarding, and loading.

Sec. 121.507 What are the size standards and other requirements for

the purchase of Government-owned timber (other than Special

Salvage Timber)?

(a) To be small for purposes of the sale of Government-owned timber

(other than Special Salvage Timber) a concern must:

(1) Be primarily engaged in the logging or forest products industry;

(2) Not exceed 500 employees, taking into account its affiliates;

and

(3) If it does not intend at the time of the offer to resell the

timber--

(i) Agree that it will manufacture the logs with its own facilities

or those of another business which meets the requirements of paragraphs

(a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section;

(ii) Agree that if it eventually resells the timber, it will resell

no more than 30% of the sawtimber volume to other businesses which do

not meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this

section; and

(iii) Agree that if it becomes acquired or controlled by a business

which does not meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of

this section, it will require as a condition of the acquisition or

change of control that the acquiring or controlling business resell at

least 70% of the sawtimber volume to businesses which do meet the

requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section; or

(4) If it intends at the time of offer to resell the timber--

(i) Agree that it will not sell more than 30% of such timber (50% of

such timber if the concern is an Alaskan business) to a business which

does not meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this

section; and

(ii) Agree that if it becomes acquired or controlled by a business

which does not meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of

this section, it will require as a condition of the acquisition or

change of control that the acquiring or controlling business resell at

least 70% of the sawtimber volume (or at least 50% of the sawtimber

volume, if it is an Alaskan business) to businesses which meet the

requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section.

(b) For a period of three years following the date upon which a

concern purchases timber under a small business set-aside (other than

through the Special Salvage Timber Sale program), it must maintain a

record of:

(1) The name, address and size status of every concern to which it

sells the timber or sawlogs; and

(2) The species, grades and volumes of sawlogs sold.

(c) For a period of three years following the date upon which a

concern purchases timber, it must by contract require all small business

repurchasers of the sawlogs or timber it purchased under the small

business set-aside to maintain the records described in paragraph (b) of

this section.

Sec. 121.508 What are the size standards and other requirements for

the purchase of Government-owned Special Salvage Timber?

(a) In order to purchase Government-owned Special Salvage Timber

from the United States Forest Service or the Bureau of Land Management

as a small business, a concern must:

(1) Be primarily engaged in the logging or forest product industry;

(2) Have, together with its affiliates, no more than twenty-five

employees during any pay period for the last twelve months; and

(3) If it does not intend at the time of offer to resell the

timber--

[[Page 328]]

(i) Agree that it will manufacture a significant portion of the logs

with its own employees; and

(ii) Agree that it will log the timber only with its own employees

or with employees of another business which is eligible for award of a

Special Salvage Timber sales contract; or

(4) If it intends at the time of offer to resell the timber, agree

that it will perform a significant portion of timber logging with its

own employees and that it will subcontract the remainder of the timber

logging to a concern which is eligible for award of a Special Salvage

Timber sales contract.

Sec. 121.509 What is the size standard for leasing of Government land

for coal mining?

A concern is small for this purpose if it:

(a) Together with its affiliates, does not have more than 250

employees;

(b) Maintains management and control of the actual mining operations

of the tract; and

(c) Agrees that if it subleases the Government land, it will be to

another small business, and that it will require its sublessors to agree

to the same.

Sec. 121.510 What is the size standard for leasing of Government land

for uranium mining?

A concern is small for this purpose if it, together with its

affiliates, does not have more than 100 employees.

Sec. 121.511 What is the size standard for buying Government-owned

petroleum?

A concern is small for this purpose if it is primarily engaged in

petroleum refining and meets the size standard for a petroleum refining

business.

Sec. 121.512 What is the size standard for stockpile purchases?

A concern is small for this purpose if:

(a) It is primarily engaged in the purchase of materials which are

not domestic products; and

(b) Its annual receipts, together with its affiliates, do not exceed

$51.5 million.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 67 FR 3056, Jan. 23, 2002; 70

FR 72594, Dec. 6, 2005]

Size Eligibility Requirements for the 8(a) Business Development Program

Sec. 121.601 What is a small business for purposes of admission to

SBA's 8(a) Business Development program?

An applicant must not exceed the size standard corresponding to its

primary industry classification in order to qualify for admission to

SBA's 8(a) Business Development Program.

[69 FR 29205, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.602 At what point in time must a 8(a) BD applicant be small?

A 8(a) BD applicant must be small for its primary industry at the

time SBA certifies it for admission into the program.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.603 How does SBA determine whether a Participant is small for

a particular 8(a) BD subcontract?

(a) Self certification by Participant. A 8(a) BD Participant must

certify that it qualifies as a small business under the NAICS code

assigned to a particular 8(a) BD subcontract as part of its initial

offer including price to the procuring agency. The Participant also must

submit a copy of its offer, including its self-certification as to size,

to the appropriate SBA district office at the same time it submits the

offer to the procuring agency. See Sec. 121.404 for the time at which

size is determined for, and Sec. 121.406 for the applicability of the

nonmanufacturer rule to, 8(a) BD procurements.

(b) Verification of size by SBA. Within 30 days of its receipt of a

Participant's size self-certification for a particular 8(a) BD

subcontract, the SBA district office serving the geographic area in

which the Participant's principal office is located will review the

Participant's self-certification and determine if it is small for

purposes of that subcontract. The SBA district office will review the

Participant's most recent financial statements and other relevant data

and then notify the Participant of its decision.

(c) Changes in size between date of self-certification and date of

award. (1) Where

[[Page 329]]

SBA verifies that the selected Participant is small for a particular

procurement, subsequent changes in size up to the date of award, except

those due to merger with or acquisition by another business concern,

will not affect the firm's size status for that procurement.

(2) Where a Participant has merged with or been acquired by another

business concern between the date of its self-certification and the date

of award, the concern must recertify its size status, and SBA must

verify the new certification before award can occur.

(d) Finding Participant to be other than small. (1) A Participant

may request a formal size determination (pursuant to Sec. Sec. 121.1001

through 121.1009) with the SBA Government Contracting Area Office

serving the geographic area in which the principal office of the

Participant is located within 5 working days of its receipt of notice

from the SBA district office that it is not small for a particular 8(a)

BD subcontract.

(2) Where the Participant does not timely request a formal size

determination, SBA may accept the procurement in support of another

Participant, or may rescind its acceptance of the offer for the 8(a) BD

program, as appropriate.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000; 69

FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.604 Are 8(a) BD Participants considered small for purposes of

other SBA assistance?

A concern which SBA determines to be a small business for the award

of a 8(a) BD subcontract will be considered to have met applicable size

eligibility requirements of other SBA programs where that assistance

directly and primarily relates to the performance of the 8(a) BD

subcontract in question.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Size Eligibility Requirements for the Small Business Innovation Research

(SBIR) Program

Sec. 121.701 What SBIR programs are subject to size determinations?

(a) These sections apply to size status for award of a funding

agreement pursuant to the Small Business Innovation Development Act of

1982 (Pub. L. 97-219, 15 U.S.C. 638(e) through (k)).

(b) Funding agreement officer means a contracting officer, a grants

officer, or a cooperative agreement officer.

(c) Funding agreement means any contract, grant or cooperative

agreement entered into between any Federal agency and any small business

for the performance of experimental, developmental, or research work

funded in whole or in part by the Federal Government. Such work

includes:

(1) A systematic, intensive study directed toward greater knowledge

or understanding of the subject studied;

(2) A systematic study directed specifically toward applying new

knowledge to meet a recognized need; or

(3) A systematic application of knowledge toward the production of

useful materials, devices, and systems or methods, including design,

development, and improvement of prototypes and new processes to meet

specific requirements.

Sec. 121.702 What size standards are applicable to the SBIR program?

To be eligible for award of funding agreements in the SBA's Small

Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, a business concern must

meet the requirements of paragraphs (a) and (b) below:

(a) Ownership and control. (1) An SBIR awardee must (i) be a concern

which is at least 51% owned and controlled by one or more individuals

who are citizens of the United States, or permanent resident aliens in

the United States; or

(ii) Be a concern which is at least 51% owned and controlled by

another business concern that is itself at least 51% owned and

controlled by individuals who are citizens of, or permanent resident

aliens in the United States; or

(iii) Be a joint venture in which each entity to the venture must

meet the requirements set forth in either paragraphs (a)(1)(i) or

(a)(1)(ii) of this section.

(2) If an Employee Stock Option Plan owns all or part of the

concern, SBA considers each stock trustee and plan member to be an

owner.

[[Page 330]]

(3) If a trust owns all or part of the concern, SBA considers each

trustee and trust beneficiary to be an owner.

(b) Size. An SBIR awardee, together with its affiliates, not have

more than 500 employees.

[69 FR 70185, Dec. 3, 2004]

Sec. 121.703 Are formal size determinations binding on parties?

Size determinations by authorized SBA officials are formal actions

based upon a specific funding agreement, and are binding upon the

parties. Other SBA opinions provided to funding agreement officers or

others, are only advisory, and are not binding or appealable.

Sec. 121.704 When does SBA determine the size status of a business

concern?

The size status of a concern for the purpose of a funding agreement

under the SBIR program is determined as of the date of the award for

both Phase I and Phase II SBIR awards or on the date of the request for

a size determination, if an award is pending.

[69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.705 Must a business concern self-certify its size status?

(a) A firm must self-certify that it currently meets the eligibility

requirements set forth in Sec. 121.702 of this title or will meet those

eligibility requirements on the date of award of a funding agreement for

a Phase I or Phase II SBIR award.

(b) A funding agreement officer may accept a concern's self-

certification as true for the particular funding agreement involved in

the absence of a written protest by other offerors or other credible

information which would cause the funding agreement officer or SBA to

question the size of the concern.

(c) Procedures for protesting an offeror's self-certification are

set forth in Sec. Sec. 121.1001 through 121.1009.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Size Eligibility Requirements for Paying Reduced Patent Fees

Sec. 121.801 May patent fees be reduced if a concern is small?

These sections apply to size status for the purpose of paying

reduced patent fees authorized by Pub. L. 97-247, 96 Stat. 317. The

eligibility requirements for independent inventors and nonprofit

organizations for the purpose of paying reduced patent fees are set

forth in regulations of the Patent and Trademark Office of the

Department of Commerce, 37 CFR 1.9, 1.27, 1.28.

Sec. 121.802 What size standards are applicable to reduced patent fees

programs?

A concern eligible for reduced patent fees is one:

(a) Whose number of employees, including affiliates, does not exceed

500 persons; and

(b) Which has not assigned, granted, conveyed, or licensed (and is

under no obligation to do so) any rights in the invention to any person

who made it and could not be classified as an independent inventor, or

to any concern which would not qualify as a non-profit organization or a

small business concern under this section.

Sec. 121.803 Are formal size determinations binding on parties?

Size determinations by authorized SBA officials are formal actions,

based upon a specific patent application pursuant to the rules of the

Patent and Trademark Office, Department of Commerce, and are binding

upon the parties. Other SBA opinions provided to patent applicants or

others are only advisory, and are not binding or appealable.

Sec. 121.804 When does SBA determine the size status of a business

concern?

Size status is determined as of the date of the patent applicant's

written verification of size.

Sec. 121.805 May a business concern self-certify its size status?

(a) A concern verifies its size status with its submission of its

patent application.

[[Page 331]]

(b) Any attempt to establish small size status improperly

(fraudulently, through gross negligence, or otherwise) may result in

remedial action by the Patent and Trademark Office.

(c) In the absence of credible information indicating otherwise, the

Patent and Trademark Office may accept the verification by the concern

as a small business as true.

(d) Questions concerning the size verification are resolved

initially by the Patent and Trademark Office. If not verified as small,

the applicant may request a formal SBA size determination.

Size Eligibility Requirements for Compliance With Programs of Other

Agencies

Sec. 121.901 Can other Government agencies obtain SBA size

determinations?

Upon request by another Government agency, SBA will provide a size

determination, under SBA rules, standards and procedures, for its use in

determining compliance with small business requirements of its statutes,

regulations or programs.

Sec. 121.902 What size standards are applicable to programs of other

agencies?

SBA size standards. The size standards for compliance with programs

of other agencies are those for SBA programs which are most comparable

to the programs of such other agencies, unless the agency and SBA agree

otherwise.

[67 FR 13716, Mar. 26, 2002]

Sec. 121.903 How may an agency use size standards for its programs

that are different than those established by SBA?

(a) Federal agencies or departments promulgating regulations

relating to small businesses usually use SBA size criteria. In limited

circumstances, if they decide the SBA size standard is not suitable for

their programs, then agency heads may establish a more appropriate small

business definition for the exclusive use in such programs, but only

when:

(1) The size standard will determine:

(i) The size of a manufacturing concern by its average number of

employees based on the preceding twelve calendar months, determined

according to Sec. 121.106;

(ii) The size of a services concern by its average annual receipts

over a period of at least three years, determined according to Sec.

121.104;

(iii) The size of other concerns on data over a period of at least

three years; or,

(iv) Other factors approved by SBA;

(2) The agency has consulted in writing with SBA's Assistant

Administrator for Size Standards at least fourteen (14) calendar days

before publishing the proposed rule which is part of the rulemaking

process. The written consultation will include:

(i) What size standard the agency contemplates using;

(ii) To what agency program it will apply;

(iii) How the agency arrived at this particular size standard for

this program; and,

(iv) Why SBA's existing size standards do not satisfy the program

requirements;

(3) The agency proposes the size standard for public comment

pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553;

(4) The agency provides a copy of the proposed rule, when it

publishes it for public comment as part of the rulemaking process, to

SBA's Assistant Administrator for Size Standards; and

(5) SBA's Administrator approves the size standard before the agency

adopts a final rule or otherwise prescribes the size standard for its

use. The agency's request for the SBA Administrator's approval must

include:

(i) Copies of all comments on the proposed size standard received in

response to the proposed rule;

(ii) A separate written justification for the intended size

standard;

(iii) A copy of the intended final rule if available at that time,

or a copy of the intended final rule and preamble prior to its

publication; and

(iv) Other information SBA may request in connection with the

request.

(b) When approving any size standard established pursuant to this

section, SBA's Administrator will ensure that

[[Page 332]]

the size standard varies from industry to industry to the extent

necessary to reflect the differing characteristics of the various

industries, and consider other relevant factors.

(c) Where the agency head is developing a size standard for the sole

purpose of performing a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis pursuant to

section 601(3) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the department or

agency may, after consultation with the SBA Office of Advocacy,

establish a size standard different from SBA's which is more appropriate

for such analysis.

[67 FR 13716, Mar. 26, 2002]

Sec. 121.904 When does SBA determine the size status of a business

concern?

For compliance with programs of other agencies, SBA will base its

size determination on the size of the concern as of the date set forth

in the request of the other agency.

[67 FR 13716, Mar. 26, 2002]

Procedures for Size Protests and Requests for Formal Size Determinations

Sec. 121.1001 Who may initiate a size protest or request a formal size

determination?

(a) Size Status Protests. (1) For SBA's Small Business Set-Aside

Program, including the Property Sales Program, or any instance in which

a procurement or order has been restricted to or reserved for small

business or a particular group of small business, the following entities

may file a size protest in connection with a particular procurement,

sale or order:

(i) Any offeror whom the contracting officer has not eliminated for

reasons unrelated to size;

(ii) The contracting officer;

(iii) The SBA Government Contracting Area Director having

responsibility for the area in which the headquarters of the protested

offeror is located, regardless of the location of a parent company or

affiliates, or the Associate Administrator for Government Contracting;

and

(iv) Other interested parties. Other interested parties include

large businesses where only one concern submitted an offer for the

specific procurement in question. A concern found to be other than small

in connection with the procurement is not an interested party unless

there is only one remaining offeror after the concern is found to be

other than small.

(2) For competitive 8(a) contracts, the following entities may

protest:

(i) Any offeror whom the contracting officer has not eliminated for

reasons unrelated to size;

(ii) The contracting officer; or

(iii) The SBA District Director, or designee, in either the district

office serving the geographical area in which the procuring activity is

located or the district office that services the apparent successful

offeror, or the Associate Administrator for 8(a) Business Development.

(3) For SBA's Subcontracting Program, the following entities may

protest:

(i) The prime contractor;

(ii) The contracting officer;

(iii) Other potential subcontractors;

(iv) The responsible SBA Government Contracting Area Director or the

Associate Administrator for Government Contracting; and

(v) Other interested parties.

(4) For SBA's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, the

following entities may protest:

(i) A prospective offeror;

(ii) The funding agreement officer;

(iii) The responsible SBA Government Contracting Area Director or

the Assistant Administrator for Technology; and

(iv) Other interested parties.

(5) For the Department of Defense's Small Disadvantaged Business

(SDB) Program, and any other similar program of another Federal agency,

the following entities may file a protest in connection with a

particular SDB procurement:

(i) Any offeror for the specific SDB requirement whom the

contracting officer has not eliminated for reasons unrelated to size;

(ii) The contracting officer; and

(iii) The responsible SBA Area Director for Government Contracting,

the

[[Page 333]]

SBA Associate Administrator for Government Contracting, or the SBA

Associate Administrator for 8(a) Business Development;

(6) For SBA's HUBZone program, the following entities may protest in

connection with a particular HUBZone procurement:

(i) Any concern that submits an offer for a specific HUBZone set-

aside procurement that the contracting officer has not eliminated for

reasons unrelated to size;

(ii) Any concern that submitted an offer in full and open

competition and its opportunity for award will be affected by a price

evaluation preference given a qualified HUBZone SBC;

(iii) The contracting officer; and

(iv) The SBA Associate Administrator for the HUBZone Program, or

designee.

(7) For any unrestricted Government procurement in which a business

concern has represented itself as a small business concern, the

following entities may protest in connection with a particular

procurement:

(i) Any offeror;

(ii) The contracting officer; and

(iii) The responsible SBA Government Contracting Area Director, the

Associate Administrator for Government Contracting, or the Associate

Administrator for MED.

(8) For SBA's Service Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business Concern

program, the following entities may protest in connection with a

particular service-disabled veteran-owned procurement:

(i) Any concern that submits an offer for a specific service-

disabled veteran-owned small business set-aside contract;

(ii) The contracting officer;

(iii) The SBA Government Contracting Area Director; and

(iv) The Associate Administrator for Government Contracting, or

designee.

(b) Request for Size Determinations. (1) For SBA's Financial

Assistance Programs, the following entities may request a formal size

determination:

(i) The applicant for assistance; and

(ii) The SBA official with authority to take final action on the

assistance requested. That official may also request the appropriate

Government Contracting Area Office to determine whether affiliation

exists between an applicant for financial assistance and one or more

other entities for purposes of determining whether the applicant would

exceed the loan limit amount imposed by Sec. 120.151 of this chapter.

(iii) The SBA Associate Administrator for Investment or designee may

request a formal size determination for any purpose relating to the SBIC

program (see part 107 of this chapter) or the NMVC program (see part 108

of this chapter). A formal size determination includes a request to

determine whether or not affiliation exists between two or more entities

for any purpose relating to the SBIC program.

(2) For SBA's 8(a) BD program:

(i) Concerning initial or continued 8(a) BD eligibility, the

following entities may request a formal size determination:

(A) The 8(a) BD applicant concern or Participant; or

(B) The Assistant Administrator of the Division of Program

Certification and Eligibility or the Associate Administrator for 8(a)BD.

(ii) Concerning individual sole source 8(a) contract awards, the

following entities may request a formal size determination:

(A) The Participant nominated for award of the particular sole

source contract;

(B) The SBA program official with authority to execute the 8(a)

contract or, where applicable, the procuring activity contracting

officer who has been delegated SBA's 8(a) contract execution functions;

or

(C) The SBA District Director in the district office that services

the Participant, or the Associate Administrator for 8(a)BD.

(3) For SBA's Certificate of Competency Program, the following

entities may request a formal size determination:

(i) The offeror who has applied for a COC; and

(ii) The responsible SBA Government Contracting Area Director or the

Associate Administrator for Government Contracting.

(4) For SBA's sale or lease of government property, the following

entities

[[Page 334]]

may request a formal size determination:

(i) The responsible SBA Government Contracting Area Director or the

Associate Administrator for Government Contracting; and

(ii) Authorized officials of other Federal agencies administering a

property sales program.

(5) For eligibility to pay reduced patent fees, the following

entities may request a formal size determination:

(i) The applicant for the reduced patent fees; and

(ii) The Patent and Trademark Office.

(6) For purposes of determining compliance with small business

requirements of another Government agency program not otherwise

specified in this section, an official with authority to administer the

program involved may request a formal size determination.

(7) In connection with initial or continued eligibility for the

Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) program, the following may request a

formal size determination:

(i) The applicant or SDB concern; or

(ii) The Assistant Administrator of the Division of Program

Certification and Eligibility or the Associate Administrator for 8(a)BD.

(8) In connection with initial or continued eligibility for the

HUBZone program, the following may request a formal size determination:

(i) The applicant or qualified HUBZone business concern; or

(ii) The Associate Administrator for the HUBZone program, or

designee.

(9) For purposes of validating that firms listed in the Central

Contractor Registration database are small, the Government Contracting

Area Director or the Associate Administrator for Government Contracting

may initiate a formal size determination when sufficient information

exists that calls into question a firm's small business status. The

current date will be used to determine size, and SBA will initiate the

process to remove from the database the small business designation of

any firm found to be other than small.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 63 FR 31907, June 11, 1998; 63

FR 35739, June 30, 1998; 69 FR 25266, May 5, 2004; 69 FR 29206, May 21,

2004; 69 FR 29420, May 24, 2004; 69 FR 44461, July 26, 2004]

Sec. 121.1002 Who makes a formal size determination?

The responsible Government Contracting Area Director or designee

makes all formal size determinations in response to either a size

protest or a request for a formal size determination, with the exception

of size determinations for purposes of the Disaster Loan Program, which

will be made by the Disaster Area Office Director or designee

responsible for the area in which the disaster occurred.

Sec. 121.1003 Where should a size protest be filed?

A protest involving a government procurement or sale must be filed

with the contracting officer for the procurement or sale, who must

forward the protest to the SBA Government Contracting Area Office

serving the area in which the headquarters of the protested concern is

located, regardless of the location of any parent company or affiliates.

Sec. 121.1004 What time limits apply to size protests?

(a) Protests by entities other than contracting officers or SBA--(1)

Non-negotiated procurement or sale. A protest must be received by the

contracting officer prior to the close of business on the 5th day,

exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after bid or

proposal opening.

(2) Negotiated procurement. A protest must be received by the

contracting officer prior to the close of business on the 5th day,

exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after the

contracting officer has notified the protestor of the identity of the

prospective awardee.

(3) Multiple award schedule. On a multiple award schedule

procurement set aside for small business, protests will be considered

timely if received by

[[Page 335]]

SBA at any time prior to the expiration of the contract period

(including renewals).

(4) Electronic notification of award. Where notification of award is

made electronically, such as posting on the Internet under Simplified

Acquisition Procedures, a protest must be received by the contracting

officer before close of business on the fifth day, exclusive of

Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after the electronic posting.

(5) No notice of award. Where there is no requirement for written

pre-award notice or notice of award, or where the contracting officer

has failed to provide written notification of award, the 5-day protest

period will commence upon oral notification by the contracting officer

or authorized representative or another means (such as public

announcements or other oral communications) of the identity of the

apparent successful offeror.

(b) Protests by contracting officers or SBA. The time limitations in

paragraph (a) of this section do not apply to contracting officers or

SBA, and they may file protests before or after awards, except to the

extent set forth in paragraph (e) of this section. Notwithstanding

paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR program the contracting officer

and SBA may file a protest in anticipation of award.

(c) Effect of contract award. A timely filed protest applies to the

procurement in question even though a contracting officer awarded the

contract prior to receipt of the protest.

(d) Untimely protests. A protest received after the allotted time

limits must still be forwarded to SBA. SBA will dismiss untimely

protests.

(e) Premature protests. A protest filed by any party, including the

contracting officer, before bid opening or notification to offerors of

the selection of the apparent successful offer will be dismissed as

premature.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.1005 How must a protest be filed with the contracting

officer?

A protest must be delivered to the contracting officer by hand,

telegram, mail, facsimile, Federal Express or other overnight delivery

service, e-mail, or telephone. If a protest is made by telephone, the

contracting officer must later receive a confirming letter either within

the 5-day period in Sec. 121.1004(a)(1) or postmarked no later than one

day after the date of the telephone protest.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.1006 When will a size protest be referred to an SBA

Government Contracting Area Office?

(a) A contracting officer who receives a protest (other than from

SBA) must forward the protest promptly to the SBA Government Contracting

Area Office serving the area in which the headquarters of the offeror is

located.

(b) A contracting officer's referral must contain the following

information:

(1) The protest and any accompanying materials;

(2) A copy of the self-certification as to size;

(3) Identification of the applicable size standard;

(4) A copy of the solicitation;

(5) Identification of the date of bid opening or notification

provided to unsuccessful offerors;

(6) The date on which the protest was received; and

(7) A complete address and point of contact for the protested

concern.

Sec. 121.1007 Must a protest of size status relate to a particular

procurement and be specific?

(a) Particular procurement. A protest challenging the size of a

concern which does not pertain to a particular procurement or sale will

not be acted on by SBA.

(b) A protest must include specific facts. A protest must be

sufficiently specific to provide reasonable notice as to the grounds

upon which the protested concern's size is questioned. Some basis for

the belief or allegation stated in the protest must be given. A protest

merely alleging that the protested concern is not small or is affiliated

with unnamed other concerns does not specify adequate grounds for the

protest. No particular form is prescribed

[[Page 336]]

for a protest. Where materials supporting the protest are available,

they should be submitted with the protest.

(c) Non-specific protests will be dismissed. Protests which do not

contain sufficient specificity will be dismissed by SBA. The following

are examples of allegation specificity:

Example 1: An allegation that concern X is large because it employs

more than 500 employees (where 500 employees is the applicable size

standard) without setting forth a basis for the allegation is non-

specific.

Example 2: An allegation that concern X is large because it exceeds

the 500 employee size standard (where 500 employees is the applicable

size standard) because a higher employment figure was published in

publication Y is sufficiently specific.

Example 3: An allegation that concern X is affiliated with concern Y

without setting forth any basis for the allegation is non-specific.

Example 4: An allegation that concern X is affiliated with concern Y

because Mr. A is the majority shareholder in both concerns is

sufficiently specific.

Example 5: An allegation that concern X has revenues in excess of $5

million (where $5 million is the applicable size standard) without

setting forth a basis for the allegation is non-specific.

Example 6: An allegation that concern X exceeds the size standard

(where the applicable size standard is $5 million) because it received

Government contracts in excess of $5 million last year is sufficiently

specific.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 69 FR 29206, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.1008 What occurs after SBA receives a size protest or request

for a formal size determination?

(a) When SBA receives a size protest, the SBA Area Director for

Government Contracting, or designee, will notify the contracting

officer, the protested concern, and the protestor that the protest has

been received. If the protest pertains to a requirement involving SBA's

HUBZone program, the Area Director will also notify the AA/HUB of the

protest. If the protest pertains to a requirement involving SBA's SBIR

Program, the Area Director will also notify the Assistant Administrator

for Technology. If the protest involves the size status of a concern

that SBA has certified as a small disadvantaged business (SDB) (see part

124, subpart B of this chapter) the Area Director will notify SBA's AA/

8(a) BD. If the protest pertains to a requirement that has been reserved

for competition among eligible 8(a) BD program participants, the Area

Director will notify the SBA district office servicing the 8(a) concern

whose size status has been protested. SBA will provide a copy of the

protest to the protested concern together with SBA Form 355, Application

for Small Business Size Determination, by certified mail, return receipt

requested, or by any overnight delivery service that provides proof of

receipt. SBA will ask the protested concern to complete the form and

respond to the allegations in the protest.

(b) When SBA receives a request for a formal size determination in

accord with Sec. 121.1001(b), SBA will provide a blank copy of SBA Form

355 to the concern whose size is at issue.

(c) The protested concern or concern whose size is at issue must

return the completed SBA Form 355 and all other requested information to

SBA within 3 working days from the date of receipt of the blank form

from SBA. SBA has discretion to grant an extension of time to file the

form. The firm must attach to the completed SBA Form 355 its answers to

the allegations contained in the protest, where applicable, together

with any supporting material.

(d) If a concern whose size status is at issue fails to submit a

completed SBA Form 355, responses to the allegations of the protest, or

other requested information within the time allowed by SBA, or if it

submits incomplete information, SBA may presume that disclosure of the

information required by the form or other missing information would

demonstrate that the concern is other than a small business. A concern

whose size status is at issue must furnish information about its alleged

affiliates to SBA, despite any third party claims of privacy or

confidentiality, because SBA will not disclose information obtained in

the course of a size determination except as permitted by Federal law.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 63 FR 31908, June 11, 1998; 69

FR 29207, May 21, 2004]

[[Page 337]]

Sec. 121.1009 What are the procedures for making the size

determination?

(a) Time frame for making size determination. After receipt of a

protest or a request for a formal size determination, SBA will make a

formal size determination within 10 working days, if possible.

(b) Basis for determination. The size determination will be based

primarily on the information supplied by the protestor or the entity

requesting the size determination and that provided by the concern whose

size status is at issue. The determination, however, may also be based

on grounds not raised in the protest or request for size determination.

SBA may use other information and may make requests for additional

information to the protestor, the concern whose size status is at issue

and any alleged affiliates, or other parties.

(c) Burden of persuasion. The concern whose size is under

consideration has the burden of establishing its small business size.

(d) Weight of evidence. SBA will give greater weight to specific,

signed, factual evidence than to general, unsupported allegations or

opinions. In the case of refusal or failure to furnish requested

information within a required time period, SBA may assume that

disclosure would be contrary to the interests of the party failing to

make disclosure.

(e) Formal size determination. The SBA will base its formal size

determination upon the record, including reasonable inferences from the

record, and will state in writing the basis for its findings and

conclusions.

(f) Notification of determination. SBA will promptly notify the

contracting officer, the protestor, and the protested offeror, as well

as each affiliate or alleged affiliate, of the size determination. The

notification will be by certified mail, return receipt requested, or by

any overnight delivery service that provides proof of receipt.

(g) Results of an SBA Size Determination. (1) A formal size

determination becomes effective immediately and remains in full force

and effect unless and until reversed by OHA.

(2) A contracting officer may award a contract based on SBA's formal

size determination.

(3) If the formal size determination is appealed to OHA, the OHA

decision on appeal will apply to the pending procurement or sale if the

decision is received before award. OHA decisions received after contract

award will not apply to that procurement or sale, but will have future

effect, unless the contracting officer agrees to apply the OHA decision

to the procurement or sale.

(4) Once SBA has determined that a concern is other than small for

purposes of a particular procurement, the concern cannot later become

eligible for the procurement by reducing its size.

(5) A concern determined to be other than small under a particular

size standard is ineligible for any procurement or any assistance

authorized by the Small Business Act or the Small Business Investment

Act of 1958 which requires the same or a lower size standard, unless SBA

recertifies the concern to be small pursuant to Sec. 121.1010 or OHA

reverses the adverse size determination. After an adverse size

determination, a concern cannot self-certify as small under the same or

lower size standard unless it is first recertified as small by SBA. If a

concern does so, it may be in violation of criminal laws, including

section 16(d) of the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 645(d). If the

concern has already certified itself as small on a pending procurement

or on an application for SBA assistance, the concern must immediately

inform the officials responsible for the pending procurement or

requested assistance of the adverse size determination.

(h) Limited reopening of size determinations. In cases where the

size determination contains clear administrative error or a clear

mistake of fact, SBA may, in its sole discretion, reopen the size

determination to correct the error or mistake, provided no appeal has

been filed with OHA.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 67 FR 47245, July 18, 2002; 69

FR 29207, May 21, 2004]

[[Page 338]]

Sec. 121.1010 How does a concern become recertified as a small

business?

(a) A concern may request SBA to recertify it as small at any time

by filing an application for recertification with the Government

Contracting Area Office responsible for the area in which the

headquarters of the applicant is located, regardless of the location of

parent companies or affiliates. No particular form is prescribed for the

application; however, the request for recertification must be

accompanied by a current completed SBA Form 355 and any other

information sufficient to show a significant change in its ownership,

management, or other factors bearing on its status as a small concern.

(b) Recertification will not be required nor will the prohibition

against future self-certification apply if the adverse SBA size

determination is based solely on a finding of affiliation due to a joint

venture (e.g., ostensible subcontracting) limited to a particular

Government procurement or property sale, or is based on an ineligible

manufacturer where the eligible small business bidder or offeror is a

nonmanufacturer on a particular Government procurement.

(c) A denial of an application for recertification is a formal size

determination and may be reviewed by OHA at the discretion of that

office.

(d) The granting of an application for recertification has future

effect only. While it is a formal size determination, notice of

recertification is required to be given only to the applicant.

Appeals of Size Determinations and NAICS Code Designations

Sec. 121.1101 Are formal size determinations subject to appeal?

(a) Appeals from formal size determinations may be made to OHA.

Unless an appeal is made to OHA, the size determination made by a SBA

Government Contracting Area Office or Disaster Area Office is the final

decision of the agency. The procedures for appealing a formal size

determination to OHA are set forth in part 134 of this chapter. The OHA

appeal is an administrative remedy that must be exhausted before

judicial review of a formal size determination may be sought in a court.

(b) OHA will not review a formal size determination where the

contract has been awarded and the issue(s) raised in a petition for

review are contract specific, such as compliance with the

nonmanufacturer rule (see Sec. 121.406(b)), or joint venture or

ostensible subcontractor rule (see Sec. 121.103(h)).

[69 FR 29207, May 21, 2004]

Sec. 121.1102 Are NAICS code designations subject to appeal?

A NAICS code designation made by a procuring activity contracting

officer may be appealed to OHA. The procedures governing OHA appeals are

set forth in part 134 of this chapter. The OHA appeal is an

administrative remedy that must be exhausted before judicial review of a

NAICS code designation may be sought in a court.

[67 FR 47245, July 18, 2002]

Sec. 121.1103 What are the procedures for appealing a NAICS code

designation?

(a) Any interested party adversely affected by a NAICS code

designation may appeal the designation to OHA. The only exception is

that, for a sole source contract reserved under SBA's 8(a) Business

Development program (see part 124 of this chapter), only SBA's Associate

Administrator for 8(a) Business Development may appeal the NAICS code

designation.

(b) The contracting officer's determination of the applicable NAICS

code is final unless appealed as follows:

(1) An appeal from a contracting officer's NAICS code designation

and applicable size standard must be served and filed within 10 calendar

days after the issuance of the initial solicitation. OHA will summarily

dismiss an untimely NAICS code appeal.

(2)(i) The appeal petition must be in writing and must be sent to

the Office of Hearings & Appeals, U.S. Small Business Administration,

409 3rd Street, SW., Suite 5900, Washington, DC 20416.

(ii) There is no required format for a NAICS code appeal, but an

appeal must include the following information: the solicitation or

contract number; the

[[Page 339]]

name, address, and telephone number of the contracting officer; a full

and specific statement as to why the NAICS code designation is

erroneous, and argument in support thereof; and the name, address and

telephone number of the appellant or its attorney.

(3) The appellant must serve the appeal petition upon the

contracting officer who assigned the NAICS code to the acquisition and

SBA's Office of General Counsel, Associate General Counsel for

Procurement Law, 409 3rd Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416.

(4) Upon receipt of a NAICS code appeal, OHA will notify the

contracting officer by notice and order of the date OHA received the

appeal, the docket number, and the Judge assigned to the case. The

contracting officer's response to the appeal must include argument and

supporting evidence (see part 134, subpart C, of this chapter) and must

be received by OHA within 10 calendar days from the date of the

docketing notice and order, unless otherwise specified by the Judge.

Upon receipt of OHA's docketing notice and order, the contracting

officer must immediately send to OHA a copy of the solicitation relating

to the NAICS code appeal.

(5) After close of the record, OHA will issue a decision and inform

all interested parties, including the appellant and contracting officer.

If OHA's decision is received by the contracting officer before the date

offers are due, the solicitation must be amended if the contracting

officer's designation of the NAICS code is reversed. If OHA's decision

is received by the contracting officer after the due date of initial

offers, the decision will not apply to the pending procurement, but will

apply to future solicitations for the same products or services.

[69 FR 29207, May 21, 2004]

Subpart B_Other Applicable Provisions

Waivers of the Nonmanufacturer Rule for Classes of Products and

Individual Contracts

Sec. 121.1201 What is the Nonmanufacturer Rule?

The Nonmanufacturer Rule is set forth in Sec. 121.406(b).

Sec. 121.1202 When will a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule be

granted for a class of products?

(a) A waiver for a class of products (class waiver) will be granted

when there are no small business manufacturers or processors available

to participate in the Federal market for that class of products.

(b) Federal market means acquisitions by the Federal Government from

offerors located in the United States, or such smaller area as SBA

designates if it concludes that the class of products is not supplied on

a national basis.

(1) When considering the appropriate market area for a product, SBA

presumes that the entire United States is the relevant Federal market,

unless it is clearly demonstrated that a class of products cannot be

procured on a national basis. This presumption may be particularly

difficult to overcome in the case of manufactured products, since such

items typically have a market area encompassing the entire United

States.

(2) When considering geographic segmentation of a Federal market,

SBA will not necessarily use market definitions dependent on airline

radius, political, or SBA regional boundaries. Market areas typically

follow established transportation routes rather than jurisdictional

borders. SBA examines the following factors, among others, in cases

where geographic segmentation for a class of products is urged:

(i) Whether perishability affects the area in which the product can

practically be sold;

(ii) Whether transportation costs are high as a proportion of the

total value of the product so as to limit the economic distribution of

the product;

(iii) Whether there are legal barriers to transportation of the

item;

(iv) Whether a fixed, well-delineated boundary exists for the

purported market area and whether this boundary has been stable over

time; and

(v) Whether a small business, not currently selling in the defined

market area, could potentially enter the market from another area and

supply the market at a reasonable price.

(c) Available to participate in the context of the Federal market

means that

[[Page 340]]

contractors exist that have been awarded or have performed a contract to

supply a specific class of products to the Federal Government within 24

months from the date of the request for waiver, either directly or

through a dealer, or who have submitted an offer on a solicitation for

that class of products within that time frame.

(d) Class of products is an individual subdivision within an NAICS

Industry Number as established by the Office of Management and Budget in

the NAICS Manual.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000]

Sec. 121.1203 When will a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule be

granted for an individual contract?

An individual waiver for a product in a specific solicitation will

be approved when the SBA Associate Administrator for Government

Contracting reviews and accepts a contracting officer's determination

that no small business manufacturer or processor can reasonably be

expected to offer a product meeting the specifications of a

solicitation, including the period of performance.

Sec. 121.1204 What are the procedures for requesting and granting

waivers?

(a) Waivers for classes of products. (1) SBA may, at its own

initiative, examine a class of products for possible waiver of the

Nonmanufacturer Rule.

(2) Any interested person, business, association, or Federal agency

may submit a request for a waiver for a particular class of products.

Requests should be addressed or hand-carried to the Associate

Administrator of Government Contracting, Small Business Administration,

409 3rd Street SW., Washington, DC 20416.

(3) Requests for a waiver of a class of products need not be in any

particular form, but should include a statement of the class of products

to be waived, the applicable NAICS code, and detailed information on the

efforts made to identify small business manufacturers or processors for

the class.

(4) If SBA decides that there are small business manufacturers or

processors in the Federal procurement market, it will deny the request

for waiver, issue notice of the denial, and provide the names,

addresses, and telephone numbers of the sources found. If SBA does not

initially confirm the existence of small business manufacturers or

processors in the Federal market, it will:

(i) Publish notices in the Commerce Business Daily and the Federal

Register seeking information on small business manufacturers or

processors, announcing a notice of intent to waive the Nonmanufacturer

Rule for that class of products and affording the public a 15-day

comment period; and

(ii) If no small business sources are identified, publish a notice

in the Federal Register stating that no small business sources were

found and that a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule for that class of

products has been granted.

(5) An expedited procedure for issuing a class waiver may be used

for emergency situations, but only if the contracting officer provides a

determination to the Associate Administrator for Government Contracting

that the procurement is proceeding under the authority of FAR Sec.

6.302-2 (48 CFR 6.302-2) for ``unusual and compelling urgency,'' or

provides a determination materially the same as one of unusual and

compelling urgency. Under the expedited procedure, if a small business

manufacturer or processor is not identified by a PASS search, the SBA

will grant the waiver for the class of products and then publish a

notice in the Federal Register. The notice will state that a waiver has

been granted, and solicit public comment for future procurements.

(6) The decision by the Associate Administrator for Government

Contracting to grant or deny a waiver is the final decision by the

Agency.

(7) A waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule for classes of products has

no specific time limitation. SBA will, however, periodically review

existing class waivers to the Nonmanufacturer Rule to determine if small

business manufacturers or processors have become available to

participate in the Federal market for the waived classes of products and

the waiver should be terminated.

[[Page 341]]

(i) Upon SBA's receipt of evidence that a small business

manufacturer or processor exists in the Federal market for a waived

class of products, the waiver will be terminated by the Associate

Administrator for Government Contracting. This evidence may be

discovered by SBA during a periodic review of existing waivers or may be

brought to SBA's attention by other sources.

(ii) SBA will announce its intent to terminate a waiver for a class

of products through the publication of a notice in the Federal Register,

asking for comments regarding the proposed termination.

(iii) Unless public comment reveals that no small business

manufacturer or processor in fact exists for the class of products in

question, SBA will publish a final Notice of Termination in the Federal

Register.

(b) Individual waivers for specific solicitations. (1) A contracting

officer's request for a waiver of the Nonmanufacturer Rule for specific

solicitations need not be in any particular form, but must, at a

minimum, include:

(i) A definitive statement of the specific item to be waived and

justification as to why the specific item is required;

(ii) The solicitation number, NAICS code, dollar amount of the

procurement, and a brief statement of the procurement history;

(iii) A determination by the contracting officer that there are no

known small business manufacturers or processors for the requested items

(the determination must contain a narrative statement of the contracting

officer's efforts to search for small business manufacturers or

processors of the item and the results of those efforts, and a statement

by the contracting officer that there are no known small business

manufacturers for the items and that no small business manufacturer or

processor can reasonably be expected to offer the required items); and

(iv) For contracts expected to exceed $500,000, a copy of the

Statement of Work.

(2) Requests should be addressed to the Associate Administrator for

Government Contracting, Small Business Administration, 409 3rd Street,

SW., Washington, DC 20416.

(3) SBA will examine the contracting officer's determination and any

other information it deems necessary to make an informed decision on the

individual waiver request. If SBA's research verifies that no small

business manufacturers or processors exist for the item, the Associate

Administrator for Government Contracting will grant an individual, one-

time waiver. If a small business manufacturer or processor is found for

the product in question, the Associate Administrator will deny the

request. Either decision represents a final decision by SBA.

[61 FR 3286, Jan. 31, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 30863, May 15, 2000]

Sec. 121.1205 How is a list of previously granted class waivers

obtained?

A list of classes of products for which waivers of the

Nonmanufacturer Rule have been granted is maintained in SBA's Web site

at www.sba.gov/GC/approved.html. A list of such waivers may also be

obtained by contacting the Office of Government Contracting, U.S. Small

Business Administration, 409 3rd Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416, or

the nearest SBA Government Contracting Area Office.

[69 FR 29208, May 21, 2004]