DHS cancels policy requiring secretary to review contracts over $100,000

DHS cancels policy requiring secretary to review contracts over $100,000

By Jasper Ward

Reuters

WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin on Wednesday rescinded a policy ‌requiring the secretary to approve contracts over $100,000, the ‌Department of Homeland Security said.

The news followed a re-evaluation of the ​department's contract process, DHS said, while adding that Mullin wanted to make sure the department is serving American taxpayers efficiently.

Mullin's cancellation of the policy came less than a week ‌after he was sworn ⁠in to succeed former DHS chief Kristi Noem.

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Congressional Democrats, who welcomed the decision, had written to Noem earlier ⁠this month, asking that she cancel the policy they said had "resulted in widespread delays in funding and mismanagement."

"Today, the ​Secretary rescinded ​the $100,000 contract review memo," ​the department said. "This will ‌streamline the contract process and empower components to carry out their mission to protect the homeland and make America safe again."

Contracts worth more than $25 million would still need to be reviewed by the secretary, CBS News reported on ‌Wednesday, citing a homeland security official. ​Reuters was not able to ​independently confirm this reporting.

"To ​ensure that DHS effectively performs its critical ‌national security functions on behalf ​of the American ​people, we call on DHS to rescind the $100,000 approval policy and return to the prior approval threshold, ​given the clear ‌risk of mismanagement, confusion, and self-dealing," Democrats wrote ​in the March 18 letter.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward ​in WashingtonEditing by Shri Navaratnam)

 

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