Filed: Nov. 08, 1989
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: The procurem ent priority a ccorded to products o f the Federal Prison Industries under 18, U.S.C § 4124 d o e s not include services. § 4122(b)(1) (FPI to operate prison workshops so no one pri-, vate industry bears an undue burden o f competition from the workshops, products);
Scope of Procurement Priority Accorded
to the Federal Prison Industries
under 18 U.S.C. § 4124
The procurem ent priority a ccorded to “products” o f the Federal Prison Industries under 18
U.S.C § 4124 d o e s not include services.
November 8, 1989
M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n for the G e n eral C oun sel
G e n e r a l S e r v ic e s A d m in is t r a t io n
This memorandum responds to your request for our opinion whether
the procurement priority accorded to “products” o f the Federal Prison
Industries (“FPI”) under 18 U.S.C. § 4124 for sale to federal agencies
includes services as well as commodities.1 The General Services
Administration (“GSA”) maintains that “products” under section 4124
refers solely to commodities and not to services.2 FPI contends that
“products” includes services.3 For the reasons set forth below, we con
clude that “products” does not include services under the statute.
This dispute over the meaning o f section 4124 began in 1986, when
the GSA proposed to amend the Federal Acquisition Regulations
(“FAR”) to deny FPI priority consideration over commercial suppliers
in the acquisition o f services by federal agencies. 51 Fed. Reg. 21,496 (to
be codified at 48 C.F.R. pt. 8) (proposed June 12, 1986). Currently, the
FAR provide that FPI has a priority over commercial sources with
respect to services as well as commodities. 48 C.F.R. § 8.603(a)(2). GSA
proposed the change to make the regulations consistent with section
4124, on which the regulations are based. FPI challenged this proposal,
arguing that the word “products” in section 4124 must be understood to
1 Letter for Douglas W Kmiec, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, from Robert C.
MacKichan, Jr., General Counsel, General Services Administration (Jan 4, 1989) ( “GSA Letter”), attach
ing GSA Position on Procurement of Services From Federal Prison Industries ( “GSA Memorandum”).
2GSA Letter at 1-2; GSA Memorandum at 1-5
3 Letter for William P. Barr, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, from J Michael
Quinlan, Director, Federal Bureau o f Prisons (June 19, 1989) ( “FPI Letter”), enclosing Letter for GSA/FAR
Secretariat, from Harry H. Flickinger, Acting Assistant Attorney General for Administration, Department
o f Justice (Oct. 16, 1986) (UJMD Letter”), Letter for General Counsel, GSA, from Eugene N Barkin,
General Counsel, Bureau o f Prisons (July 31, 1973)
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include services and that priority over commercial sources is therefore
mandated.4
Section 4124 requires federal agencies and institutions to purchase
“such products o f the industries authorized by this chapter as meet their
requirements and may be available.”5 Neither section 4124 nor related
sections contains a definition o f “products.” See 18 U.S.C. §§ 4121-4128.
The natural meaning o f the word suggests, however, that it means a com
modity,6 rather than the provision o f labor that constitutes the usual
meaning o f the word “service.”7 This interpretation o f “products” in sec
tion 4124 is confirmed by section 4122(a), which provides that FPI was
created to determine what operations shall be conducted in federal penal
institutions “for the production of commodities.”8 18 U.S.C. § 4122(a);
accord
id. § 4122(b)(1) (FPI to operate prison workshops so no one pri
vate industry bears an undue burden o f competition from the workshops’
“products”);
id. § 4122(b)(2) (FPI to concentrate on providing to federal
agencies “only those products” that maximize inmate employment);
id. §
4122(b)(3) (FPI to diversify its products);
id. § 4122(b)(4) (FPI decision
to introduce a new product or expand production o f a product to be
made by board o f directors).
FPI argues that it is dangerous to impose today’s “plain meaning” on
the words o f a statute written half a century ago.9Both the statute and the
4 FPI does not challenge the pnonty the FAR currently give to services provided by the blind or other
severely handicapped under 41 U.S.C. § 48. See FPI Letter at 2 (“[W]e strongly urge that the proposed
amendment to the FAR not be adopted and that the current version, establishing a priority for FPI for
services between the blind and commercial sources, be continued.”) (emphasis added); JMD Letter at 6
n.7 ( “Continued priority for FPI in the provision o f services would not effect [sic] the priority, over FPI,
in the provision o f services that exists for the Workshop for the Blind and Other Severely Handicapped
(B O S H )" The GSA is thus o ff point with its warning that “[a] determination by the Office o f Legal
Counsel that 18 U.S.C. § 4124 does afford FPI priority status in Government contracting in the service
area could have a severe impact on the mandatory source program for workshops for the blind and hand
icapped administered by the Committee for Purchase from the Blind and Other Severely Handicapped.”
GSA Letter at 2.
5Section 4124 provides in relevant part as follows
The several Federal departments and agencies and all other Government institutions o f the
United States shall purchase at not to exceed current market prices, such products o f the
industries authorized by this chapter as meet their requirements and may be available
6 Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1810 (1986) ( “Webster’s”) defines “product” as “the
result o f work or thought” (emphasis added). It defines “commodity” as “an econom ic good . . a prod
uct o f agriculture, mining, or sometimes manufacture as distinguished from s e r v ic e s Id . at 458
(emphasis added)
We are not persuaded by FPI’s argument that the word “product” necessarily includes services simply
because the term “Gross National Product” has been defined to include both goods and services. That
phrase is a term o f art imported from a different context and, thus, cannot be dispositive o f the issue
7 Webster’s defines “service” as “useful labor that does not produce a tangible commodity "
Id. at 2075
(emphasis added)
8As originally enacted, this section referred to “articles and com m odities” Act o f May 27,1930, ch. 340,
§ 3, 46 Stat. 391 (1930). The words “articles and” were deleted in 1948 during a recodification that was not
intended to have any substantive effect. Legislative History o f Title 18, United States Code at 2649 (1948).
9 "One simply cannot apply today’s precise definitions o f terms, such as services, to the same words
used fifty years earlier in a far looser context.” JMD Letter at 4.
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legislative history, however, lead us to conclude that the Congress that
initially passed this statute in the 1930’s understood the distinction
between “products” and “commodities,” on the one hand, and “services”
on the other. The very chapter under consideration permits the Attorney
General to make “the services o f United States prisoners” available to
federal agencies for use on public works projects, 18 U.S.C. § 4125(a), yet
“services” is not mentioned in section 4124. Clearly, the Congress o f that
period was familiar with the word “services” and understood it to have a
meaning distinct from “products.”10
FPI argues that since federal prisoners had in fact performed services
since at least the early years o f this century, “products” as used in the
statute should be understood to include services. FPI points out that, at
various times, federal prisoners have been engaged in laundry services,
tire recapping, furniture refinishing, and typewriter repair.11 FPI argues
that such services “must be presumed to have been sanctioned by that
legislation” — and therefore that “products” must include “services” —
“in the absence of a clear legislative mandate to the contrary.”12 We dis
agree. The issue before us is not whether federal prisoners may perform
services; it is whether 18 U.S.C. § 4124 grants the FPI a procurement pri
ority for such services. We think the plain meaning o f that statute shows
that services are not covered.
The legislative history of section 4124 confirms our conclusion. With one
exception, the examples o f prisoner activities discussed at the time o f the
statute’s enactment all involved the manufacture of commodities, and that
example was omitted from the version finally enacted.13Subsequent amend-
10 Our conclusion is reinforced by the language o f the Robinson-Patman Price Discnmination Act
passed in 1936. 15 U S.C § 13. This Act makes it unlawful for persons engaged in commerce “to dis
criminate in pnce between different purchasers o f commodities o f like grade and quality.” Id (emphasis
added) Over the past half-century, courts have firmly established that the word “commodity” in this con
text refers to “a product as distinguished from a service ” Baum v. Investor's Diversified Servs , Inc.,
409
F.2d 872, 874 (7th Cir. 1969) (emphasis added), see also May Dep’t Store v. Graphic Process Co ,
637 F.2d
1211, 1214-16 (9th Cir 1980). We hesitate, therefore, to declare that Congress in the 1930’s failed to grasp
the distinction between commodities and services.
11JMD Letter at 1
12Id at 2
13Dunng the floor debate, reference was made to a jo b that would qualify as a service 72 Cong. Rec.
2146 (1930). Fearing that the new and expanding prison industries would displace federal civilian work
ers, especially hundreds of employees who repaired mail bags, Representative LaGuardia offered the fol
lowing amendment
Provided further, That no class o f articles or commodities shall be produced for sale to or
use o f departments o f independent establishments o f the Federal Government in United
States penal or correctional institutions which at present are being produced by civilian
employees at the navy yards, arsenals, mail bag repair shop, or other Government owned
and operated industnal establishments, or such articles as these Government owned and
operated establishments are equipped to produce
72 Cong. Rec. at 2147 (emphasis added). He viewed this amendment as necessary because “[ijt [was] con
templated in the course o f this prison reform to have the mail bag repair work conducted in jails.” Id
(statement o f Rep LaGuardia). The final version o f the statute, however, dropped the reference to mail
Continued)
347
merits to the statute also fail to indicate any intent to include services
among priority items. In fact, subsequent congressional action in the pro
curement preference area indicates that Congress understood FPI’s priority
to apply only to goods and not services. In 1971, Congress amended the
Javits-Wagner-O’Day Act of 1938, which created a procurement preference
for commodities made by the blind that was subordinate to the existing pri
ority for FPI products. 41 U.S.C. §§ 46-48c. One of the principal objectives
o f the 1971 amendment was to grant to the Committee on Purchase from
the Blind and Other Severely Handicapped (“CPBOSH”) a preference for
services in addition to its existing preference for commodities. See H.R.
Rep. No. 228, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. 2 (1971), reprinted in 1971 U.S.C.C.A.N.
1079. The fact that Congress believed this amendment necessary only
underscores the distinction between “commodities” and “services.”
Furthermore, the 1971 Act expressly considered the relationship
between the preference accorded to CPBOSH and the existing prefer
ence for FPI products. It provides a preference to “any commodity or ser
vice” on a list prepared by CPBOSH, subject to the availability o f such
“commodity or service." 41 U.S.C. § 48 (emphasis added). The section
goes on, however, to note that it does not apply “to the procurement o f
any commodity which is available for procurement from [FPI], and
which, under section 4124 ... is required to be procured from such
industry.”
Id. (emphasis added). The omission o f any reference to ser
vices in this exception indicates that Congress did not believe that FPI
was entitled under section 4124 to any preference for services.
We are not persuaded by FPI’s argument that the legislative history of
a 1988 amendment to the FPI statute “shows congressional awareness
and approval o f FPI providing services.” See FPI Letter at 1. This history
asserts that “[i]n addition to establishing UNICOR [another name for FPI]
as a wholly owned Government corporation, the enabling legislation also
provides that other Federal Government agencies are required to pur
chase from UNICOR those goods and services that UNICOR produces
when they can do so at fair market prices.” H.R. Rep. No. 864, 100th
Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1988) (emphasis added). This offhand assertion is enti
tled to minimal weight because the procurement preference provisions
were not under consideration at the time — the purpose o f the amend
ments was to authorize FPI to borrow funds. It is hardly probative o f con
gressional consideration of the procurement preference issue.14 In sum,
13 ( . continued)
bag repair. Act o f May 27,1930, ch. 340, § 346, 46 Stat 391 (1930). We cannot infer from this failed propos
al that Congress intended “products" to include “services." Indeed, the elimination o f this explicit reference
to a service only strengthens our conclusion that Congress did not give FPI any priority over services.
14 That same report also lists FPI's operations, noting that it is engaged in “date [sic] and graphics
including printing services to government agencies, signs, graphics products, and keyboard data entry
systems.”
Id. at 4. The undisputed fact that FPI carries out such activities, however, is not material to the
issue o f whether it is entitled to a procurement priority for such activities.
348
we find nothing in the legislative history of section 4124 or related
statutes that suggests FPI’s interpretation o f that section is correct.15
FPI asserts that failure to construe “products” to include services is
contrary to the spirit o f the statute and would undermine related provi
sions that require FPI to train inmates to perform skills they can use
when they are released, 18 U.S.C. § 4123, and to diversify prison industri
al operations,
id. § 4122(b). Although interpreting section 4124 to reach
services as well as products would no doubt enhance FPI’s ability to
achieve the directives of sections 4122 and 4123, we find no indication in
the statute or legislative history that Congress believed a priority for
services was necessary to achieve that result.16 Where, as here, the statu
tory language is clear, FPI’s contrary interpretation of its own enabling
legislation need not be controlling. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council Inc.,
467 U.S. 837, 842 (1984).
LYNDA GUILD SIMPSON
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Office o f Legal Counsel
15FPI also relies upon an Executive Order issued by President Roosevelt in 1934 setting up FPI This
Order provided:
The heads o f the several executive departments, independent establishments and Govern
ment owned and Government controlled corporations shall cooperate with the corporation in
carrying out its duties and shall purchase, at not to exceed current market prices, the prod
ucts or services o f said industries, to the extent required or permitted by law.
Exec Order No 6917, § 9 (1934) (emphasis added). This Order pointedly avoids imposing any require
ment above and beyond the terms o f the statute; that is the point o f the phrase “to the extent required or
permitted by law ” Thus, since section 4124 provides only a preference for “products,” the Order cannot
be said to extend further. In fact, the Order’s reference to “products or services” only confirms the inap
propriateness o f reading the statute’s word “products” to include services
16We also disagree with FPI’s assertion that our interpretation is contrary to the spirit of the statute’s
general goals o f training prisoners and preventing them from sitting idle. See JMD Letter at 5. We are not
persuaded that our interpretation prevents the FPI from fulfilling those goals These and other policy
arguments can be presented to Congress with a request to amend section 4124.
349