Computer clause shuts U.S. firms out of bidding - 0 views
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Karl Wabst on 04 Sep 09Even as the Canadian government is fighting against "Buy American" policies that discriminate against Canadian firms, the federal government appears to be quietly continuing with policies that effectively block U.S. firms from winning some kinds of federal contracts. Case in point: a contract worth $150 million to help relocate nearly more than 18,000 public servants every year was awarded to the only Canadian bidder in mid-August. American firms were interested in the contract but say they were essentially blocked from the bidding because of a provision that personal information about Canadians cannot be stored on computerized databases outside of Canada. Canada Post, a Crown corporation, is about to award its own multimillion-dollar relocation services contract and it, too, has effectively blocked U.S. companies from bidding with a requirement that personal information be stored only on computers in Canada.