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- From: amon@elegabalus.cs.qub.ac.uk
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: ACRV/Soyuz P # of Passengers
- Message-ID: <Bt6oE0.KA1.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: 18 Aug 92 14:26:46 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cs.Bt6oE0.KA1.1
- Sender: news+@cs.cmu.edu
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: [via International Space University]
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- X-Added: Forwarded by Space Digest
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-
- > The problem with this scenario is *the service isn't provided*.
- That
- > can't be tolerated when there are crews up there. So the government
- > *will* pay, and the contractor knows it. When salaries in the CIS
-
- >
-
-
- Not true at all if it is indeed run under normal business contracting
- practice. I spent nearly the entire decade of the '70's as a senior
- systems design person in a company delivering large turnkey systems
- to private and government agencies, from Bethesda Naval Hospital to
- San Diego County to Johns Mansville. I had to insure every last spec
- and deliverable was ticked off in my department (and I was the lead
- programmer as well). When we were late, there was no extra money. But
- we still had to work over time and deliver even if it meant losing
- money. Every contract had clauses to deal with overruns, delays and
- nonperformance. You can write liquidated damage clauses that will
- make the bidder very, very honest. If they aren't, then by the time
- the contract is closed out, you own THEM. (Or rather your companies
- law firm does, because they are the ones who really make the bucks.
- You haven't seen plush until you've been in the meeting room of a
- major corporate law firm. Louis XIV would feel at home...)
-
- There is nothing unusual or special about any of these sorts of
- contract clauses. They're all biolerplate. Everyone uses them for
- large procurements: often with even the same wording because they
- come from the same standard reference books. (Or a because former
- employees ripped it off when starting their own high tech company and
- spread it in ever widening circles...)
-