EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
The centerpiece of this dispute is a dual energy linear accelerator, a sophisticated radiation therapy device used on cancer patients. Two hospitals in Rapides Parish, Louisiana — one private, the other operated by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) — entered into a “sharing agreement” for the acquisition and joint use of such an accelerator. Under the agreement, the Alexandria Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) would procure the accelerator, with nearby St. Frances Cabrini Hospital (Cabrini) donating one-half the cost of the machine to the VAMC.
The VAMC-
owned accelerator would then be housed at Cabrini and available for use by both institutions. Shortly before negotiations over the sharing agreements had been completed, neighboring Rapides Regional Medical Center (Rapides) got wind of the deal and sought to block it. Rapides, which operates two linear accelerators of its own, and which currently provides accelerator and related services to the VAMC,
charged that the sharing agreement violated the Competition in Contracting Act of 1984 (CICA), 41 U.S.C. § 251
et seq.,
because it was never subjected to public bidding. After an administrative appeal dismissed as untimely by the Comptroller General,
Rap-ides won a permanent injunction against the sharing agreement in district court.
Rapides Regional Medical Center v. Derwinski,
783 F.Supp. 1006 (W.D.La.1991). Both the VA and Cabrini, which had intervened in those proceedings, appealed the district court’s decision, and we granted expedited review.
I.
STATUTORY BACKGROUND
Before discussing the merits of this case, it may be helpful to trace its statutory contours. Rapides asserts that the Competition in Contracting Act governs this action. Appellee alleges, and the district court agreed, that the VAMC-Cabrini sharing agreement violates CICA’s general requirement that federal procurement contracts be awarded competitively.
CICA responded to Congressional findings that many federal procurement contracts were awarded on a sole-source basis, resulting in widespread inefficiencies and wasteful government spending. According to its drafters, the Act’s objectives were “to establish a statutory preference for the use of competitive procedures in awarding federal contracts for property or services, to impose restrictions on the awarding of noncompetitive contracts, and to permit federal agencies to use the competitive method most conducive to the conditions of the contract.” S.Rep. No. 50, 98th Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 697, 2174.
The YA does not contend that its sharing agreement with Cabrini falls within any of the seven enumerated exceptions to CICA
that permit sole-source procurement.
However, both Cabrini and the VA would find refuge in the savings clause to § 253(a)(1), which exempts from CICA “procurement procedures otherwise expressly authorized by statute.” As asserted proof of this authority, appellants cite 38 U.S.C. § 8153, empowering the VA to enter into sharing agreements for the acquisition and joint use of advanced medical technology.
Congress initially authorized the sharing program set forth in § 8153 “for the exchange of use (or under certain conditions the mutual use) of specialized medical facilities between Veterans’ Administration hospitals and other public and private hospitals or medical schools in a medical community.” S.Rep. No. 1727, 89th Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
1966 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 4210, 4219-20. In 1985, after CICA’s enactment, Congress expanded the sharing program to other medical facilities, appropriating up to $10 million for a pilot program in which VA facilities would purchase advanced medical equipment so long as non-federal sources agreed to finance at least fifty percent (50%) of the acquisition costs. Conf.Rep. No. 363, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 22 (Nov. 8, 1985). According to the Senate Appropriations Committee:
The purpose of this funding is to help the VA to acquire costly, advanced state-of-the-art medical equipment more easily and to provide a means of using that equipment to maximum effectiveness by encouraging long-term sharing with community institutions.... The Committee recognizes that there are limits to what medical communities and the Federal Government can individually accomplish, but believes that this proposed arrangement will provide VA beneficiaries and the VA medical centers and community medical institutions with access to prohibitively expensive major medical equipment which would otherwise not be available to either.
S.Rep. No. 99-129, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 82, 88-89 (Aug. 28, 1985).
Shortly after Congress began funding the sharing program, the Veterans Administration (predecessor to the Department of Veterans Affairs) promulgated, interim rules to implement CICA.
See
51 Fed.Reg. 23065-73 (June 25, 1986). Significantly, the VA stipulated that “[s]haring contracts negotiated under 38 U.S.C. § 5053 are approved for other than full and open competition.”
Id.
at 23066.
The VA explained that its “Qj]ustification and approval procedures for proposed noncompetitive acquisitions ... are critical in effectively implementing the CICA and will provide the basis for compiling the VA annual report to Congress.”
Id.
at 23065. The VA’s interim rules were finalized and implemented in 1987.
See
52 Fed.Reg. 28559, 28560 (July 31, 1987).
To summarize: Congress first adopted the VA Sharing program in 1966. The program as enacted did not address competitive procurement procedures. Congress enacted CICA in 1984, creating a statutory presumption in favor of competition “except in the case of procurement procedures ... expressly authorized by statute.” The following year, Congress expanded the sharing program by appropriating funds to finance the acquisition and joint use of advanced medical equipment along the lines of the VAMC-Cabrini agreement. In response, the VA in 1987 implemented regulations providing that despite CICA’s enactment, the sharing program did not require full and open competition. . Finally, Congress amended the sharing program in 1990 at what is now § 8153, expanding the existing program substantially but making no mention of CICA.
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EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
The centerpiece of this dispute is a dual energy linear accelerator, a sophisticated radiation therapy device used on cancer patients. Two hospitals in Rapides Parish, Louisiana — one private, the other operated by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) — entered into a “sharing agreement” for the acquisition and joint use of such an accelerator. Under the agreement, the Alexandria Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) would procure the accelerator, with nearby St. Frances Cabrini Hospital (Cabrini) donating one-half the cost of the machine to the VAMC.
The VAMC-
owned accelerator would then be housed at Cabrini and available for use by both institutions. Shortly before negotiations over the sharing agreements had been completed, neighboring Rapides Regional Medical Center (Rapides) got wind of the deal and sought to block it. Rapides, which operates two linear accelerators of its own, and which currently provides accelerator and related services to the VAMC,
charged that the sharing agreement violated the Competition in Contracting Act of 1984 (CICA), 41 U.S.C. § 251
et seq.,
because it was never subjected to public bidding. After an administrative appeal dismissed as untimely by the Comptroller General,
Rap-ides won a permanent injunction against the sharing agreement in district court.
Rapides Regional Medical Center v. Derwinski,
783 F.Supp. 1006 (W.D.La.1991). Both the VA and Cabrini, which had intervened in those proceedings, appealed the district court’s decision, and we granted expedited review.
I.
STATUTORY BACKGROUND
Before discussing the merits of this case, it may be helpful to trace its statutory contours. Rapides asserts that the Competition in Contracting Act governs this action. Appellee alleges, and the district court agreed, that the VAMC-Cabrini sharing agreement violates CICA’s general requirement that federal procurement contracts be awarded competitively.
CICA responded to Congressional findings that many federal procurement contracts were awarded on a sole-source basis, resulting in widespread inefficiencies and wasteful government spending. According to its drafters, the Act’s objectives were “to establish a statutory preference for the use of competitive procedures in awarding federal contracts for property or services, to impose restrictions on the awarding of noncompetitive contracts, and to permit federal agencies to use the competitive method most conducive to the conditions of the contract.” S.Rep. No. 50, 98th Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 697, 2174.
The YA does not contend that its sharing agreement with Cabrini falls within any of the seven enumerated exceptions to CICA
that permit sole-source procurement.
However, both Cabrini and the VA would find refuge in the savings clause to § 253(a)(1), which exempts from CICA “procurement procedures otherwise expressly authorized by statute.” As asserted proof of this authority, appellants cite 38 U.S.C. § 8153, empowering the VA to enter into sharing agreements for the acquisition and joint use of advanced medical technology.
Congress initially authorized the sharing program set forth in § 8153 “for the exchange of use (or under certain conditions the mutual use) of specialized medical facilities between Veterans’ Administration hospitals and other public and private hospitals or medical schools in a medical community.” S.Rep. No. 1727, 89th Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
1966 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 4210, 4219-20. In 1985, after CICA’s enactment, Congress expanded the sharing program to other medical facilities, appropriating up to $10 million for a pilot program in which VA facilities would purchase advanced medical equipment so long as non-federal sources agreed to finance at least fifty percent (50%) of the acquisition costs. Conf.Rep. No. 363, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 22 (Nov. 8, 1985). According to the Senate Appropriations Committee:
The purpose of this funding is to help the VA to acquire costly, advanced state-of-the-art medical equipment more easily and to provide a means of using that equipment to maximum effectiveness by encouraging long-term sharing with community institutions.... The Committee recognizes that there are limits to what medical communities and the Federal Government can individually accomplish, but believes that this proposed arrangement will provide VA beneficiaries and the VA medical centers and community medical institutions with access to prohibitively expensive major medical equipment which would otherwise not be available to either.
S.Rep. No. 99-129, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 82, 88-89 (Aug. 28, 1985).
Shortly after Congress began funding the sharing program, the Veterans Administration (predecessor to the Department of Veterans Affairs) promulgated, interim rules to implement CICA.
See
51 Fed.Reg. 23065-73 (June 25, 1986). Significantly, the VA stipulated that “[s]haring contracts negotiated under 38 U.S.C. § 5053 are approved for other than full and open competition.”
Id.
at 23066.
The VA explained that its “Qj]ustification and approval procedures for proposed noncompetitive acquisitions ... are critical in effectively implementing the CICA and will provide the basis for compiling the VA annual report to Congress.”
Id.
at 23065. The VA’s interim rules were finalized and implemented in 1987.
See
52 Fed.Reg. 28559, 28560 (July 31, 1987).
To summarize: Congress first adopted the VA Sharing program in 1966. The program as enacted did not address competitive procurement procedures. Congress enacted CICA in 1984, creating a statutory presumption in favor of competition “except in the case of procurement procedures ... expressly authorized by statute.” The following year, Congress expanded the sharing program by appropriating funds to finance the acquisition and joint use of advanced medical equipment along the lines of the VAMC-Cabrini agreement. In response, the VA in 1987 implemented regulations providing that despite CICA’s enactment, the sharing program did not require full and open competition. . Finally, Congress amended the sharing program in 1990 at what is now § 8153, expanding the existing program substantially but making no mention of CICA.
Against this statutory backdrop, the district court permanently enjoined the VAMC-Cabrini agreement after holding that Congress did not explicitly exempt the sharing program from CICA when it amended § 8153 in 1990. While acknowledging the VA regulation set forth at 48 C.F.R. 806.302-5(b), which exempts the sharing program from CICA, the court noted:
48 C.F.R. 806.302-5(b) ... antedates [sic] the rather precise statutory language of “otherwise expressly authorized by statute” as founded in 41 U.S.C. § 253(a). Congress said that the public bid law can be circumvented by express language contained in a statute. The regulation from the Veterans Administration is not a statute. Congress created the measuring stick and retained the power to delete public bid law requirements from contracts for goods and services. The VA is powerless to change the clear procedure set by Congress.
783 F.Supp. at 1008. The district court did not address the pre-CICA legislative history of § 8153, nor did it review the 1985 appropriations legislation expanding the existing sharing program to private hospitals.
Cabrini and the VA argue that Congress never intended the Competition in Contracting Act to apply to a sharing program that has been on the books since 1966. The program is either exempted from the Act by § 8153, they contend, or falls outside CICA because sharing agreements do not involve the “procurement” of equipment. Appellants also challenge Rapides’ standing to sue. We address these arguments in reverse order.
II.
STANDING
Cabrini and the VA first contend that the district court erred in failing to
enter a specific finding that Rapides has standing to bring this lawsuit. They insist on a remand or, in the alternative, a ruling that as a matter of law Rapides lacks standing to sue. Appellants acknowledge that disappointed bidders have prudential standing under the Administrative Procedure Act to challenge agency violations of federal procurement requirements.
See Scanwell Laboratories, Inc. v. Shaffer,
424 F.2d 859, 873 (D.C.Cir.1970);
Hayes International Corp. v. McLucas,
509 F.2d 247, 257 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
423 U.S. 864, 96 S.Ct. 123, 46 L.Ed.2d 92 (1975) (adopting
Scanwell).
They maintain, however, that Rapides lacks standing because it is neither an actual nor a prospective bidder on the VA’s plan to acquire a linear accelerator.
Establishing prudential standing to challenge a government contracting decision requires: (1) an allegation of injury in fact; (2) a claim that CICA was “arguably” intended to prevent the agency’s action; and (3) the absence of Congressional intent to withhold judicial review.
Contractors Engineers International, Inc. v. Dept. of Veterans Affairs,
947 F.2d 1298, 1300 n. 9 (5th Cir.1991);
Gull Airborne Instruments, Inc. v. Weinberger,
694 F.2d 838 (D.C.Cir.1982) (citing
Control Data Corp. v.
Baldridge,
655 F.2d 283, 288-89 (D.C.Cir.),
cert. denied,
454 U.S. 881, 102 S.Ct. 363, 70 L.Ed.2d 190 (1981)). We are convinced that “[sjatisfaction of the first factor is clear from the preceding discussion, and there is no clear and convincing Congressional intent to withhold judicial review.”
Abel Converting, Inc. v. United States,
679 F.Supp. 1133, 1137 (D.D.C.1988). As for the second requirement, assuming that the sharing agreement was covered by CICA, that statute supplies its own answer:
‘Interested party’, with respect to a contract or proposed contract ... means an
actual or prospective bidder or offeror
whose direct economic interest would be affected by the award of the contract or by failure to award the contract[.]
31 U.S.C. § 3551(2) (emphasis added).
Thus, to object to the award of a contract allegedly covered by CICA, Rap-ides must demonstrate that it was an actual or prospective bidder or offeror on the sharing agreement. Because Rapides was not an actual bidder, the prudential standing issue turns on its claimed status as a prospective bidder. Appellants insist that the district court never addressed this issue, asserting that Rapides would not have bid on the sharing agreement had it been given the opportunity to do so. This is unpersuasive. , Implicit in the district court's holding that Rapides was denied the opportunity to participate in the sharing agreement is the recognition that Rapides would have done so if given the chance. There is sufficient evidence in the record that Rapides stood ready and willing to participate in the sharing program had it been offered the opportunity to do so. In suggesting otherwise, appellants ignore not only the specific allegations in Rapides’ verified complaint, but the affidavit of its president, James T. Montgomery, who stated that “[h]ad Rapides Regional been given the opportunity, Rapides Regional would
have submitted a proposal to VAMC in connection with consideration of submissions under the 1990 Advanced Medical Equipment Share Acquisition Program....”
While appellants point to some evidence that might be interpreted as disproving Rapides’ intent to participate in the sharing agreement with the VAMC if offered the chance, the district court’s implied factfinding is not clearly erroneous.
Anderson v. Bessemer City,
470 U.S. 564, 573, 105 S.Ct. 1504, 1511, 84 L.Ed.2d 518 (1985). Had the district court been convinced that Rapides’ real motive was to block the VA-Cabrini deal rather than to make a competing offer, it would have had to deny standing, because Rapides would not then be an actual or prospective bidder. This conclusion was not compelled by the evidence, and we decline to overturn the court’s finding.
III.
PROCUREMENT
Appellants next confront CICA directly by arguing that the shared acquisition of specialized medical resources
for mutual use under § 8153 is not a “procurement” within the meaning of CICA,
but more closely resembles a lease or sale of government property. The VA cites several decisions of the Comptroller General to this effect.
In particular, the VA directs this
court’s attention to
Surface Alloys Corp.,
B-222703, 86-2 C.P.D. ¶ 7 (June 25, 1986). That case involved a controversy not unlike this one. The U.S. Navy purchased a complicated piece of equipment known as an ion implanter and leased it to a private company that was performing research and development under a Navy contract. Another company protested this action, arguing that it gave the Navy’s contractor an unfair competitive advantage. The Comptroller General dismissed the protest, holding that the lease was not a procurement under CICA.
While the district court in this case did not define “procurement” for purposes of CICA, its holding rests on the tacit assumption that a procurement has taken place. The question thus remains: Did the VA “procure” goods or services from Cabrini and in so doing run afoul of CICA?
For the answer, one must first examine the Memorandum of Understanding between Cabrini and the VAMC. It outlines several stages for the acquisition and mutual use of the linear accelerator: (1) the actual purchase of the accelerator by the VA from the manufacturer; (2) a financing arrangement whereby Cabrini will donate one-half of the accelerator’s cost to the VA;
and (3) the joint use of the machine by the VA and Cabrini under the terms of the sharing agreement to be negotiated at a later date.
The VA emphasizes that the accelerator was purchased from the manufacturer using competitive procurement procedures, whereas the financing and shared use of the VA-owned accelerator is akin to a lease or sale of government property.
For its part, Rapides argues that the transaction must be viewed as an integrated whole: the shared acquisition of property (the linear accelerator) as well as services (including Cabrini’s facilities, personnel and other specialized medical services). To bolster its argument, Rapides cites
Motor Coach Industries, Inc. v. Dole,
725 F.2d 958 (4th Cir.1984) and
Yosemite Park v. United States,
582 F.2d 552, 217 Ct.Cl. 360 (1978).
In
Motor Coach Industries,
the Fourth Circuit held that a trust formed by the Federal Aviation Administration to fund ground transportation improvements at Dulles International Airport was public in character, so that CICA applied to all such improvements financed by that trust. To fund the trust, the FAA agreed to waive air carrier fees at Dulles provided that the airlines deposited equivalent funds in the trust. After analyzing the trust’s purpose, the court declared it to be a disguised “purchasing agent” created to circumvent normal appropriation channels and the federal procurement process.
Id.
at 968. While Rapides insists that the VA-Cabrini sharing agreement is also an “end-run” around the procurement requirements of CICA,
id., Motor Coach Industries
is plainly distinguishable. Unlike the FAA trust, the circumstances surrounding the sharing program do not suggest any attempt to evade statutory purchase requirements. The-
question here is whether the sharing agreement expressly permitted by § 8153 was for that reason not required to comply with CICA. Further, the VAMC-Cabrini agreement does not resemble the concession contract at issue in
Yosemite Park.
The National Park Service contracted directly for transportation equipment and services under the guise of a “concession” agreement conferring federal tax breaks on the contractor. In holding that the contractor was bound by federal procurement laws, the court rejected the NPS’s efforts to evade those requirements by labeling what was in fact “the purchase of services” as a “concession.” 582 F.2d at 558-59. The common thread in both cases, absent here, is an arrangement by the federal government to pay money or confer other benefits in exchange for goods and services. Under the MOU, and under § 8153, the VA received a donation of money from Cabrini in exchange for the shared use of a linear accelerator purchased and owned by the VAMC.
Rapides nonetheless insists that the definition of “procurement” under CICA is broad enough to encompass the VAMCCabrini sharing agreement. What is at stake here, Rapides insists, is no less than “a sole-source joint purchase and shared use agreement that falls squarely within the statutory definition of procurement.” And there lies the rub: Rapides pins its hopes on a statutory definition of “procurement” that is
inapplicable
to CICA. Specifically, Rapides cites 41 U.S.C. § 403, which provides in relevant part:
As used in this
chapter—
(2) the term “procurement” includes all stages of the process of acquiring property or services, beginning with the process of determining a need for property or services and ending with contract completion and closeout[.]
(Emphasis added.) The crucial phrase in this passage, “As used in this chapter,” means that § 403(2) applies
exclusively
to Chapter 7 of Title 41. Chapter 7, The Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act, 41 U.S.C. § 401
et seq.,
establishes the Office of Federal Procurement Policy within the Office of Management and Budget “to provide overall direction of procurement policies, regulations, procedures, and forms for executive agencies in accordance with applicable laws.” 41 U.S.C. § 402(b). In contrast, the full and open procurement requirements of CICA § 253(a) are set forth in Chapter 4. It stands to reason that the definition of procurement for purposes of Chapter 7, which establishes an agency in the executive branch whose mission is to oversee federal procurement policy, is considerably broader than the definition of procurement subject to the particularized bidding and negotiation requirements specified by CICA. Indeed, had Congress wanted the definition of procurement articulated in Chapter 7 to apply to Chapter 4, it could have done so in express terms.
If anything, Congress’ efforts to define “procurement” for purposes of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act suggest that the meaning of this term differs elsewhere in Title 41. CICA itself does not define procurement. Nor, for that matter, does the Federal Acquisition Regulations System (FAR), of which 48 C.F.R. 806.302-5(b) — the VA’s rules exempting the sharing program from CICA — is a part.
However, there can be little doubt that the word procurement is widely understood, by lawyers and laymen alike, to denote the process by which the government pays money or confers other benefits in order to obtain goods and services from the private sector. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “procurement contract” as “[a] government contract with a manufacturer or sup
plier of goods or machinery or services under the terms of which a sale or service is made to the government.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1208 (6th ed. 1991). Rapides does not dispute that the VA
procured,
the linear accelerator from a private manufacturer, in a procurement process that complied with CICA. What Rapides fails to explain is why an agreement over future
access
to government-owned property, albeit property purchased partly with a private donation from Cabrini, justifies expanding the definition of “procurement” beyond its generally understood meaning. Rapides tries to sidestep the issue by asserting that it would have given a larger donation to the VAMC to purchase the accelerator, although the district court made no findings on this point. But this does not change the fact that the VA never intended to procure the accelerator from either Cabrini or Rapides. To repeat, the classic procurement involves the government’s paying money or conferring other benefits in return for the acquisition or use of private property or services. This is decidedly unlike the agreement at issue here in which the VA has received money from a private hospital and used it to purchase a linear accelerator from the manufacturer, in exchange for letting that hospital share its use.
IV.
EXPRESS AUTHORIZATION
Finally, even assuming that the VAMC-Cabrini sharing agreement is a “procurement” for purposes of CICA, we are persuaded that 38 U.S.C. § 8153, which authorizes the VA to enter into such arrangements, is a procurement procedure “expressly authorized by statute” within the meaning of CICA § 253(a)(1) and therefore is not subject to the Act’s full and open competition requirements.
As has been already noted, Congress originally enacted what is now § 8153 in 1966, nearly two decades before the passage of the Competition in Contracting Act. In 1985, the year
after
CICA’s enactment, Congress expanded the sharing program by appropriating up to $10 million for a pilot program to facilitate sharing agreements like the one later negotiated between Cabrini and the VAMC. Congress evidently saw no reason to revisit § 8153 after CICA’s enactment because the sharing program had historically been operated on a sole-source basis.
Moreover, the language of § 8153 is inconsistent with the district court’s conclusion that the VA's sharing arrangements must be achieved competitively. For instance, § 8153(b) provides that reimbursement for the shared use of equipment must be based “on a methodology that provides appropriate flexibility to the heads of the facilities concerned," taking into account “local conditions and needs and the actual cost to the providing facility of the resource involved.” This bears little resemblance to competitive bidding procedures in which the participating government agency attempts to ensure a steady supply and minimize its costs without taking into account added considerations affecting private contractors. Further, § 8153(e) directs the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to notify Congress annually “on the activities carried out under this section.” The reporting requirement, which permits Congress to monitor sharing arrangements such as that between Rapides and the VAMC, would suggest that Congress sought to ensure fairness and efficiency in such unique arrangements by means other than competitive bidding.
We also disagree with the district court as to the proper role of 48 C.F.R. 806.302-5(b), which provides that “[sjharing contracts negotiated under [§ 8153] are approved for other than full and open competition.” Admittedly, this regulation, which was implemented after CICA’s enactment, “is not a statute.” 783 F.Supp. at 1008. But while the district court correctly ob
served that this regulation was promulgated after the enactment of CICA, the court erred by implying that the VA was attempting to circumvent Congressional intent by exempting the sharing program from § 253(a)(1). On the contrary, the VA regulation was implementing Congress’ post-CICA appropriations legislation that expanded funding for the sharing program so long as non-federal sources agreed to finance at least 50 percent of the cost of acquiring advanced medical equipment.
We therefore can discern no valid reason why 806.302-5(b) should not be controlling.
Rapides is certainly correct that “[t]he VA cannot unilaterally exempt itself from the Congressional mandate of the CICA,” but such is not the case here. That Congress did not specifically exempt the sharing program from CICA in 1990, when it amended what was then § 5053, is not especially surprising given that Congress had created and maintained that program by means other than full and open procurement. Congress retained for itself the “measuring stick,” 783 F.Supp. at 1008, by which to evaluate the success of the sharing program now recodified at § 8153: annual reports from the VA tracking activities under the program. Section 8153(e), which reflects Congress’ willingness to exercise its oversight function, belies the district court’s claim that the VA was attempting to circumvent Congressional priorities by promulgating 806.302-5(b).
In view of the plain language of § 8153, its pre-CICA legislative history, and the 1985 appropriations legislation expanding the existing sharing program (and which 48 C.F.R. 806.302-5(b) was intended to implement), it must be concluded that the VA’s sharing program is expressly authorized by statute within the meaning of CICA § 253(a)(1) and therefore does not trigger the Act’s full and open competition requirements.
V.
CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s decision. The permanent injunction barring the VAMC-Cabrini Memorandum of Understanding is VACATED.