Halliburton gets $72 mln bonus for work in Iraq

By Sue Pleming 
Tue May 10, 6:57 PM ET 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Army said on Tuesday it had awarded
$72 million in bonuses to Halliburton Co. for logistics work in Iraq
but had not decided whether to give the Texas company bonuses for
disputed dining services to troops.

Army Field Support Command in Rock Island, Illinois, said in a
statement it had given Halliburton unit Kellogg Brown & Root ratings
from "excellent" to "very good" for six task orders for work
supporting U.S. troops in Iraq.

The Army said its Award Fee Board in Iraq had met in March and had
agreed to pay KBR bonuses for work it did in support of U.S. forces there.

The Army said in a statement later that while it had given the company
an additional $72 million, it had denied KBR $10.1 million in bonuses
and not paid the maximum allowed on any of the task orders.

"We have protected the taxpayer FIRST," said the Army in a statement
released later, pointing out this paragraph had been "inadvertently
left off" the original news release.

The Army said dining facility costs questioned by auditors from the
Defense Contract Audit Agency had not yet been considered by the
military's Award Fee Board. No details were available as to when this
dining fee bonus would be resolved.

Much of Halliburton's work for the U.S. military, ranging from
building bases to delivering mail, is on a cost-plus basis, which
means the company can earn up to 2 percent extra depending on its
performance.

Bonuses are awarded based on, among other factors, how efficient and
responsible the company is to requests from the Army and is an
indicator of how the Army views KBR's performance in the field.

New Jersey Democratic Sen. Frank Lautenberg (news, bio, voting
record), a vocal critic of Halliburton's performance in Iraq, said
Halliburton did not deserve a bonus.

"It is outrageous that the Bush Administration would give Halliburton
a bonus after we have seen its overcharges, sloppy accounting and
kick-back schemes in Iraq," Lautenberg said. "Giving Halliburton a
bonus is like giving your worst employee a raise."

KBR's logistics deal with the U.S. military has been in the spotlight
from the outset in Iraq, with allegations by auditors that they
overcharged for some work, including dining services.

In addition, investigators are looking into whether the Texas-based
firm charged too much to supply fuel to Iraqi civilians, a claim the
firm says is not justified.

Halliburton, which was run by Vice President Dick Cheney until he
joined the 2000 race for the White House, has earned more than $7
billion under its 2001 logistics contract with the U.S. military.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20050510/pl_nm/iraq_halliburton_dc_9




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