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H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026. The movement signals a potential policy change in federal IT procurement that could affect federal IT and technology market segments across multiple agencies and…
Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026. The movement signals a potential policy change in federal IT procurement that could affect federal IT and technology market segments across multiple agencies and…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026. The bill is described as a high‑severity event because it is likely to drive cross‑government IT procurement reform: possible new procurement procedures, expanded…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026. The bill is positioned to influence federal IT procurement and modernization practices, which means contractors who supply IT services, hardware, software, and…
Read full report →H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026. The movement signals a potential policy change in federal IT procurement that could affect federal IT and technology market segments across multiple agencies and contract vehicles named in Cabrillo Club segmentation. Contractors in IT services, enterprise IT, software, hardware, cloud, and related supply chains should treat this as a high-priority policy posture change and accelerate monitoring and capture posture reviews. Immediate implications: reassess active pursuits on affected vehicles, refresh bid/no‑bid decisions, and prepare compliance and messaging updates tied to FIT-related themes. Use Cabrillo Signals to detect follow-on solicitations, and route urgent capture and proposal tasks through Proposal Studio and the Workflow Tracker.
Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles pending source review.
(Note: Segmentation identifies likely affected NAICS, agencies, contract vehicles, market segments, and compliance surfaces. Use these lists to prioritize monitoring and capture activities.)
Pending source review. The Summary states only that H.R. 4123, the FIT Procurement Act, was ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 4, 2026.
Prioritize agencies and vehicles listed in the Segmentation: GSA, DOD, DHS, VA, DOJ, DOE, HHS, DOT, Treasury, DOI; and vehicles including SEWP, NITAAC CIO‑SP4, OASIS+, GSA Schedule 70, GSA MAS IT, ITES‑SW2, CHESS. Use Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub saved searches to alert on solicitations and amendments.
Review compliance posture relative to the compliance surfaces named in Segmentation (FAR Part 39, Section 508, FITARA, TBM, OMB Circular A-130). Specific compliance actions tied to H.R. 4123’s provisions are Pending source review.
Leverage:
Notify:
First 48-hour Playbook
Relevant guidance and controls: