In the United States Court of Federal Claims
No. 15-1403C
(Filed Under Seal: February 23, 2016)
(Reissued for Publication: March 11, 2016)*
*************************************
PHOENIX MANAGEMENT, INC., *
* Bid Protest; Motion to Supplement the
Plaintiff, * Administrative Record; Motion to Dismiss;
* Waiver; Blue & Gold Fleet; COMINT
v. * Systems; Effect of Postaward Corrective
* Action in Which Competition Was
THE UNITED STATES, * Reopened but Solicitation Not Amended
*
Defendant. *
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John C. Dulske, San Antonio, TX, for plaintiff.
David D’Alessandris, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.
OPINION AND ORDER
SWEENEY, Judge
In this bid protest, plaintiff Phoenix Management, Inc. contends that the solicitation at
issue is defective because it does not include information required by offerors to prepare
competitive proposals, does not reflect that certain costs would be evaluated, and does not
provide for an evaluation of the offerors’ past performance. Defendant moves to dismiss
plaintiff’s protest, arguing that plaintiff waived any challenge to the terms of the solicitation, and
both parties move for judgment on the administrative record. In addition, plaintiff moves to
supplement the administrative record with documents related to the procurement, as well as with
documents from other procurements and the declaration of one of its employees. For the reasons
set forth below, the court grants in part and denies in part plaintiff’s motion to supplement the
administrative record, and grants defendant’s motion to dismiss.
*
This reissued Opinion and Order incorporates the agreed-to redactions proposed by the
parties on March 10, 2016. The redactions are indicated with bracketed ellipses (“[. . .]”).
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Solicitation
On February 18, 2015, Headquarters Air Force Reserve Command (“Air Force”) issued
solicitation FA-6606-15-R-0001 for the acquisition of Base Operating Services at Westover Air
Reserve Base (“ARB”) in Chicopee, Massachusetts.1 AR 27-28. The successful offeror was to
provide “all personnel, supervision, equipment, tools, materials, supplies, test equipment, and
other items and services necessary” to perform the following functions: Operation of the Base
Supply System, Vehicle Operations and Maintenance, Traffic Management, Transient Aircraft
Services, Real Property Maintenance, Fuels Management, and Airfield Management. Id. at 566;
accord id. at 28-118, 562-841. The Air Force contemplated awarding a firm-fixed-price contract
with cost-reimbursable and labor-hour contract line items. Id. at 28-118, 189. The contract
would have an initial term of ten months and four one-year option periods, id. at 28-118, and was
set aside for a service-disabled, veteran-owned small business (“SDVOSB”) concern, id. at 136
(incorporating Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”) 52.219-27).
1. The Work to Be Performed
The Performance Work Statement appended to the solicitation provided a comprehensive
description of each of the seven functional areas for which the successful offeror would be
responsible. Id. at 562-841. Specifically, the Air Force provided a description of the services to
be provided, extensive workload estimates, and information that could be used by offerors to
develop their own workload estimates (such as itemized lists of equipment requiring servicing).
Id. at 591-841. Moreover, for the Vehicle Operations and Maintenance functional area, the Air
Force provided estimated costs for parts needed to repair designated equipment, id. at 621, and
for the Traffic Management functional area, the Air Force provided estimated costs for certain
billing and shipping transactions, id. at 642.
In section B of the solicitation, the Air Force enumerated the specific contract line items
for which it was seeking proposals. Id. at 28-118. The items were divided into several
categories. Id. One category–Monthly Service–contained firm-fixed-price items for the
functions described in the Performance Work Statement; these items encompassed “all labor and
materials” necessary to perform those functions. Id. (setting forth contract line item numbers
(“CLINs”) *002-*0132); accord id. at 566 (“All services, labor, supplies, materials, and parts are
1
The court derives the facts in this section from the administrative record filed by
defendant (“AR”) and, as explained in more detail below, from portions of the supplemental
administrative record submitted by plaintiff (“SAR”).
2
The contract line items for the base contract term, and the final three digits of the
CLINs associated with those items, are repeated for each of the four option periods. AR 28-118.
The only digit of the CLINs that varies is the first digit; CLINs for the base contract term begin
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included in the Firm Fixed Price unless otherwise specified in the contract.”). Two additional,
identically titled categories–Labor for Service Calls–contained labor-hour items for nonrecurring
real property maintenance and services; these items were separate and distinct from the firm-
fixed-price items. Id. at 28-118 (setting forth CLINs *014-*018, which concerned Service
Contract Act labor categories, and CLIN *019, which concerned Davis Bacon Act labor
categories). A fourth category–Reimbursable Items–contained cost-reimbursable items for the
direct parts and materials associated with the performance of nonrecurring real property
maintenance and services. Id. (setting forth CLINs *020-*024). And, a fifth category–Over and
Above Work–contained labor-hour items for labor categories not covered by the Service Contract
Act or the Davis Bacon Act; these items were separate and distinct from the firm-fixed-price
items. Id. at 28-118 (setting forth CLINs *025-*031), 204-06 (listing the labor categories).
2. Proposal Requirements
Pursuant to section L of the solicitation, as amended, offerors were to submit their
proposals in three volumes: a volume containing administrative/contract documentation, a
volume containing the offeror’s technical proposal, and a volume containing the offeror’s price
proposal. Id. at 929-30, 932-35. The technical proposal was to include transition, quality
control, and staffing plans, as well as information supporting the offeror’s technical capabilities
in each functional area. Id. at 933-34. The submission of past performance information was not
required. Id. The price proposal was to include a completed Pricing Matrix containing the
offeror’s proposed prices for the firm-fixed-price CLINs, as well as fully loaded labor rates for
the Service Contract Act, Davis Bacon Act, and Over and Above labor categories. Id. at 935,
1059-67; accord id. 204-06.
3. Evaluation Criteria
The Air Force, in section M of the solicitation, provided that it intended to award the
contract on a lowest-price, technically acceptable basis. Id. at 201. It advised prospective
offerors:
The Government will select the offeror based on an integrated assessment of the
offeror[’]s technical proposal and proposed price information. The first step of
the evaluation process is to determine if the technical proposals are acceptable or
unacceptable in accordance with the evaluation criteria. Among the proposals that
have been determined acceptable in technical capabilities, a price analysis will be
accomplished and all offerors will be ranked from lowest to highest evaluated
price. . . . The Government will award to the offeror who is determined to have
the lowest evaluated price among offerors who were determined to be acceptable
in technical capabilities.
with “0,” while the four option period CLINs begin with “1” through “4,” respectively. Id. The
asterisk represents this varying initial digit.
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Id. Of import in this protest is the manner in which the Air Force intended to evaluate the
offerors’ price proposals. It explained:
4. PRICE EVALUATION:
The offeror’s Price proposal will be evaluated for reasonableness and balance. . . .
Total Evaluated Price . . . will be calculated . . . .
(a) Reasonableness: The existence of adequate price competition is
expected to support a determination of reasonableness. Price analysis
techniques may be used to further validate price reasonableness. If
adequate price competition is not obtained or if price reasonableness
cannot be determined using price analysis of Government obtained
information, additional information in accordance with FAR 15.4 may be
required to support the proposed price.
(b) Balance: Offerors are cautioned against submitting an offer that
contains unbalanced pricing. Unbalanced pricing exists when, despite an
acceptable total evaluated price, the price of one or more contract line
items is significantly overstated or understated as indicated by the
application of proposal analysis techniques. The Government shall
analyze offers to determine whether there are unbalanced separately priced
line items or sub-line items. Prices submitted will be compared and
evaluated to assure that a logical progression exists as related to price and
quantity changes within each offeror’s response to the pricing structure in
Section B. Offers that are determined to be unbalanced may be rejected if
the lack of balance poses an unacceptable risk to the Government.
(c) Total Evaluated Price: A Total Evaluated Price . . . will be used for
evaluation purposes only and will be calculated as follows:
(1) The extended prices (unit price x quantity) for all of the firm,
fixed price CLINs *001 - *013, *035 . . . will be totaled.
(2) The “Service Contract Act Labor” applicable to CLINs *014 -
*018 will be evaluated as follows: The proposed fully-loaded
labor rates set forth in the “SCA Labor Rates” worksheet in [the
Pricing Matrix] shall be multiplied by a predetermined amount of
estimated hours . . . for each labor category . . . . These extended
amounts will be totaled for each contract period. These estimated
hours apply to all contract periods and are for evaluation purposes
only.
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....
(3) The “Davis Bacon Act Labor” applicable to CLIN *019 will be
evaluated as follows: The proposed fully-loaded labor rates set
forth in the “DBA Labor Rates” worksheet in [the Pricing Matrix]
shall be multiplied by a predetermined amount of estimated hours
. . . for each labor category listed below in all years. These
extended amounts will be totaled for each contract period. These
estimated hours apply to all contract periods and are for evaluation
purposes only.
....
(4) The “Over & Above Labor” applicable to CLINs *025 - *031
will be evaluated as follows: The proposed fully-loaded labor rates
set forth in the “O&A Labor Rates” worksheet in [the Pricing
Matrix] shall be multiplied by a predetermined amount of
estimated hours . . . for each labor category listed below in all
years. These extended amounts will be totaled for each contract
period. These estimated hours apply to all contract periods and are
for evaluation purposes only.
....
(5) For evaluation purposes only, a lump sum dollar amount of
$750,000 per performance period for reimbursable parts and
materials will be used to determine the material-handling fee. . . .
(6) The sums derived from Paragraphs (1), (2), (3)[,] (4), and (5)
above will be added together to develop each offeror’s “total
evaluated price”.
Id. at 203-06. The Air Force did not include the “predetermined amount of estimated hours” in
the solicitation. Id.; see also id. at 1046 (noting, in response to a question from a prospective
offeror, that “[e]stimated hours used to evaluate[] labor hour rates as part of the lowest price
amount will not be provided to help prevent unbalanced bids”). Indeed, in the Pricing Matrix,
the Air Force listed a quantity of one hour for each labor category. Id. at 1060-64.
In addition, the Air Force did not indicate that it intended to separately evaluate the
offerors’ other direct costs (“ODCs”) as part of its price evaluation. Id. at 203-06. It provided
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the following question-and-answer exchanges to prospective offerors on this topic, presumably in
advance of the deadline for proposals:3
Question B106
. . . . There [is a] significant amount of vehicles, shop equipment, parts, supplies,
vendor services, and consumable materials . . . required under the Firm Fixed
Price portion of this effort. Some are rather large capital expenses for any size
business, especially for many SDVOSB companies who may or may not have
experience operating a [Base Operating Services] contract. As such, how will the
government analyze and evaluate the items ([ODCs]) that an offeror places in
their pricing to ensure the offeror has proposed the minimum amount of items to
successfully operate the contract?
Answer B106–Proposals will be evaluated in accordance with section M of the
[Request for Proposals]. An ODC cost breakdown is not asked for in section L
and [ODCs] will not be evaluated costs.
Question B107
. . . . There [is a] significant amount of vehicles, shop equipment, parts, supplies,
vendor services, and consumable materials . . . required under the Firm Fixed
Price portion of this effort. Will cost realism be conducted, to cover both
proposed labor and all [ODCs] such as the aforementioned items? If so, how will
cost realism be conducted under this [lowest-price, technically acceptable]
procurement?
Answer B107–Proposals will be evaluated in accordance with section M of the
[Request for Proposals]. Offeror’s bid will be evaluated for reasonableness.
Id. at 1048.
3
These questions and answers are included in an undated document titled “Westover
ARB, MA Questions & Answers #2.” AR 1032, 1048. In compiling the administrative record,
defendant included this document with Amendment 2 to the solicitation, which was issued on
March 18, 2015. See id. at 1005-56. However, defendant included a clarification to one of its
answers from this document–which would necessarily have to postdate the document–with
Amendment 1 to the solicitation, which was issued one day earlier on March 17, 2015. See id. at
926, 999. Although the issuance date of these questions and answers is uncertain, given the
usual practice of procuring agencies, the court presumes that the undated document was provided
to offerors in advance of the deadline for proposals.
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Also of import in this protest is the Air Force’s decision not to evaluate the offerors’ past
performance. In a January 30, 2015 Determination and Findings document, the contracting
officer for the procurement concluded that the evaluation of past performance was not necessary
to determine the successful offeror. Id. at 1-2. As the basis for his conclusion, he found:
3. Department of Defense Source Selection Procedures . . . outline[] the
evaluation criteria for past performance in a [lowest-price, technically acceptable]
source selection process as follows:
A.2. 1.2. Past Performance. Past performance shall be used as an
evaluation factor within the [lowest-price, technically acceptable] process,
unless waived by the [procuring contracting officer] in accordance with
FAR 15.101-2(b). It shall be evaluated in accordance with FAR 15.305
and [Department of Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement]
215.305. However, the comparative assessment in FAR 15.305(a)(2)(i)
does not apply. Therefore, past performance will be rated on an
“acceptable” or “unacceptable” basis . . . .
....
Note: In the case of an offeror without a record of relevant past
performance or for whom information on past performance is not available
or so sparse that no meaningful past performance rating can be reasonably
assigned, the offeror may not be evaluated favorably or unfavorably on
past performance (see FAR 15.305(a)(2)(iv)). Therefore, the offeror shall
be determined to have unknown past performance. In the context of
acceptability/unacceptability, “unknown” shall be considered “acceptable.”
4. Based on the note regarding the lack of past performance information on a
particular offeror that would result in an acceptable rating there would not be any
method of eliminating an offeror based upon a lack of previous experience in the
functional areas that are included in our [Base Operating Services] requirements.
5. During the source selection process for [Base Operating Services] at
Homestead ARB [. . .] filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office
[(“GAO”)] over its elimination for further consideration based on a failure to meet
the established minimum qualification as established in the Request for Proposal .
. . for that acquisition. The GAO contacted the Small Business Administration
[(“SBA”)] and based on the response from the SBA stating that a Certificate of
Competency [(“COC”)] should have been requested for [. . .] since the minimum
qualification review was essentially a past performance evaluation [sic]. As a
result of this decision from the SBA it has been decided that the Minimum
Qualifications Requirement that had historically been incorporated into the [Base
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Operating Services] source selection across the command [was] no longer an
effective evaluation tool and would not be incorporated into future [Base
Operating Services] source selection in [Air Force Reserve Command].
6. During the four most recent [Base Operating Services] acquisitions at March
ARB, Homestead ARB, Dobbins ARB, and Niagara Falls [Air Reserve Station
(“ARS”)] the source selection team conducted a thorough and detailed evaluation
of all offerors in the competitive range. The results of those evaluation[s]
revealed none of the small businesses in the competitive range had any past
performance information that would have had a negative impact upon their
consideration for award.
Id. The contracting officer therefore determined that, in accordance with FAR 15.304(c)(3)(iii),
“the inclusion of a past performance evaluation factor for Westover ARB [Base Operating
Services] source selections [would] not provide any significant information that would affect the
decision . . . as to which offerors will be ultimately selected for the awards.” Id. at 2.
B. Contract Award and Debriefing
Offerors were to submit their proposals to the Air Force by April 1, 2015. Id. at 1005.
Plaintiff and ten other offerors submitted proposals. Id. at 1068-69. On June 24, 2015, the Air
Force notified plaintiff that another company, Veteran Facility Services LLC (“VFS”), was the
“apparent successful offeror.” Id. at 1068. Subsequently, on August 6, 2015, the Air Force sent
plaintiff a Notice of Award indicating that it had awarded the contract to VFS. Id. at 1069. The
Air Force also advised plaintiff that plaintiff’s total evaluated price was [. . .], approximately
[. . .] more than VFS’s total evaluated price of $40,756,816.92. Id.
On August 10, 2015, plaintiff requested a debriefing from the Air Force, which the Air
Force provided, in writing, the following day. Id. at 1070-72. As part of this written debriefing,
the Air Force provided plaintiff with a copy of plaintiff’s completed Price Matrix that included
the Air Force’s “predetermined amount of estimated hours” for each labor category. Id. at 1071,
1073-81.
C. Protests Before the GAO and Corrective Action
Plaintiff lodged a protest with the GAO on August 13, 2015, challenging the Air Force’s
evaluation of VFS’s technical proposal and the Air Force’s evaluation of price proposals. Id. at
1082-105. Eight days later, plaintiff lodged a supplemental protest with the GAO objecting to
the Air Force’s failure to provide offerors with its “predetermined amount of estimated hours”
for each labor category. Id. at 1106-12.
While plaintiff’s protest was pending before the GAO, the contracting officer concluded
that certain communications with offerors may have been erroneously classified as clarifications.
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Id. at 1126. He therefore determined that corrective action was necessary. Id. The corrective
action would include (1) reviewing the nine technically acceptable proposals, (2) issuing
evaluation notices if discussions were warranted, (3) requesting final proposal revisions, and (4)
making a new award decision. Id. On September 11, 2015, the Air Force notified the GAO of its
intent to take corrective action, stating:
The Agency has decided to open discussions, request final proposal
revisions and make a new award decision. If an offeror other than the current
awardee is found to have the lowest priced, technically acceptable proposal, the
Air Force will terminate the current contract and award a new contract. In the
meantime, the Air Force will stay performance on the current contract during
corrective action. The Air Force may also undertake any additional actions it
deems appropriate.
Id. at 1127. The Air Force requested that the GAO dismiss plaintiff’s original and supplemental
protests as moot. Id. The GAO did so on September 15, 2015. Id. at 1129-30.
The Air Force sent evaluation notices to plaintiff on September 29, 2015. Id. at 1131-36.
Plaintiff responded to the notices. Id. at 1132-42. In addition, on October 1, 2015, plaintiff sent
a letter to the Air Force raising two objections to the solicitation:
(1) [Phoenix Management, Inc. (“PMI”)] notes that the Solicitation does
not include past performance as an evaluation criteria. PMI understands that past
performance must be submitted and evaluated before award. FAR §
15.304(c)(3)(i). Therefore, PMI objects and does not waive any right to challenge
this solicitation defect in the event PMI is not awarded the contract.
(2) PMI notes that the Solicitation does not include a proper evaluation of
[ODCs] in the proposed price evaluation. The ODCs for contract performance are
substantial. Without a proper breakdown or evaluation (for realism and
reasonableness) [of] an offeror’s ODCs, the agency is not effectively evaluating
price as required by the FAR. PMI understands that price must be submitted and
evaluated before award. FAR § 15.304(c)(1). Therefore, PMI objects to the price
evaluation set forth in the Solicitation and does not waive any right to challenge
this solicitation defect in the event PMI is not awarded the contract.
SAR 1143. The Air Force responded to plaintiff’s letter on October 5, 2015. Id. at 1144-45.
With respect to the plaintiff’s first objection, the Air Force advised plaintiff that, pursuant to
FAR 15.304(c)(iii) and Air Force Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement 15.101-2(b)(1), “a
Determination and Findings [was] in the file explaining why past performance was not included
in the solicitation.” Id. at 1144. It also noted, in response to plaintiff’s reference to “minimum
qualifications” during a separate telephone conversation, the following:
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Minimum qualifications were included in the Homestead [Base Operating
Services] solicitation. When a small business was excluded for not having
minimum qualifications, they protested and [SBA] [sic]. The ruling was that the
offeror should have been referred to SBA for a [COC]. Since SBA can and will
issue COCs to anyone that doesn’t meet the minimum qualifications, minimum
qualification have [been] removed from our solicitation.
Id. With respect to plaintiff’s second objection, the Air Force wrote:
FAR 15.403(c)(1) states that adequate price competition is an exception to
certified cost or pricing data. FAR 15.404-1(a)(2) states that price analysis shall
be used when certified cost or pricing data are not required. FAR 15.404-1(b)(1)
describes price analysis as the process of examining and evaluating a proposed
price without evaluating its separate cost elements and proposed profit. FAR
15.404-1(b)(2)(i) states that comparison of proposed prices received in response
to the solicitation is a price analysis technique and normally adequate price
competition establishes a fair and reasonable price. Based on these FAR
references, this office cannot ask for and evaluate a breakdown of [ODCs].
Id. at 1145.
In a November 18, 2015 letter, the Air Force requested that plaintiff submit its final
proposal revision by November 20, 2015, specifically indicating that plaintiff could revise its
price proposal. Id. at 1146-47. Plaintiff, in a November 20, 2015 letter, advised the Air Force
that its price proposal stood as originally submitted and that its technical proposal stood with the
revisions submitted in response to the evaluation notices. Id. at 1148.
D. The Present Protest
One day before its final proposal revision was due, plaintiff filed the instant protest. It
sets forth three claims for relief in its complaint. First, it objects to “the proposed price
evaluation and the government’s decision not to provide offerors the ‘predetermined amount of
estimated hours’ for each labor classification used in evaluating CLINs *014-*018, *019, and
*025-*031.” Compl. ¶ 8; accord id. ¶¶ 26-33. Second, it objects to “the Solicitation’s proposed
price evaluation and the decision not to meaningfully evaluate offeror[s’ ODCs] before
determining whether the proposed price is reasonable and balanced.” Id. ¶ 8; accord id. ¶¶ 34-40.
Third, it objects to “the government’s decision not to include a past performance evaluation in
violation of procurement statute and regulations.” Id. ¶ 8; accord id. ¶¶ 41-45. Plaintiff requests
appropriate declaratory and injunctive relief. Id. at 18.
Defendant moves to dismiss plaintiff’s protest, and the parties cross-move for judgment
on the administrative record. In addition, plaintiff moves to supplement the administrative
record with documents related to the procurement, as well as with documents from other
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procurements and the declaration of one of its employees. The court heard argument on February
22, 2015.
II. PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT THE ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD
The court first addresses plaintiff’s motion to supplement the administrative record.
Generally, “the focal point for judicial review should be the administrative record already in
existence, not some new record made initially in the reviewing court.” Camp v. Pitts, 411 U.S.
138, 142 (1973). An administrative record typically contains the materials developed and
considered by an agency in making a decision subject to judicial review. See id. at 142-43
(remarking that an agency’s finding must be “sustainable on the administrative record made” by
the agency at the time of its decision); Cubic Applications, Inc. v. United States, 37 Fed. Cl. 345,
349-50 (1997) (“[T]he primary focus of the court’s review should be the materials that were
before the agency when it made its final decision.”). The administrative record “should be
supplemented only if the existing record is insufficient to permit meaningful review consistent
with the [Administrative Procedure Act].” Axiom Res. Mgmt., Inc. v. United States, 564 F.3d
1374, 1381 (Fed. Cir. 2009); accord id. at 1380 (“[S]upplementation of the record should be
limited to cases in which the ‘omission of extra-record evidence precludes effective judicial
review.’” (quoting Murakami v. United States, 46 Fed. Cl. 731, 735 (2000), aff’d, 398 F.3d 1342
(Fed. Cir. 2005))).
In its motion, plaintiff requests that the administrative record be supplemented with (1)
documents related to the Westover ARB Base Operating Services procurement (designated as
Supplemental Administrative Record Tabs 48 to 51), (2) documents related to other Base
Operating Services procurements (designated as Supplemental Administrative Record Tabs 52 to
54), and (3) the declaration of plaintiff’s Vice President of Marketing and Business
Development, Gary J. Giarratano (“Giarratano Declaration”). Defendant does not object to the
supplementation of the record with the documents related to the Westover ARB Base Operating
Services procurement because it mistakenly omitted those documents from the administrative
record. Nor does defendant object to the court’s consideration of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 11, and 12
of the Giarratano Declaration as they pertain to plaintiff’s allegations of harm. However,
defendant does object to the supplementation of the administrative record with the documents
related to other procurements, the Giarratano Declaration generally, and the two exhibits attached
to the Giarratano Declaration. Moreover, in its briefs in support of its cross-motion for judgment
on the administrative record, defendant moves to strike all references to these latter
materials–with the exception of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, and 12 of the Giarratano Declaration–from
plaintiff’s briefs.4
4
In its briefs in support of its cross-motion for judgment on the administrative record,
defendant specifically moves to strike references to paragraph 11 of the Giarratano Declaration.
However, defendant’s position regarding paragraph 11 is less clear in its response to plaintiff’s
motion to supplement the administrative record. Compare Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Mot. to
Supplement the Admin. R. 2 (“We do not oppose consideration of paragraphs one through three
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The first three documents to which defendant objects are (1) a Notice of Partial
Corrective Action related to the procurement of Base Operating Services at Youngstown ARS
that was issued by the Air Force on December 8, 2015, SAR 1150-51; (2) a protest that plaintiff
lodged with the GAO on July 31, 2015, with respect to the procurement of Base Operating
Services at Dobbins ARB, id. at 1152-65; and (3) an August 28, 2015 Notice of Corrective
Action related to an unspecified procurement that was issued in response to a GAO protest
lodged by plaintiff,5 id. at 1166-67. As plaintiff acknowledges, none of these documents
concerns the Westover ARB Base Operating Services procurement. Rather, plaintiff offers the
documents to establish that “in two virtually identical procurements this same contracting agency
found it necessary to correct the very solicitation defect now challenged in this protest in Count
No. 1.” Pl.’s Reply to Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Mot. to Supplement the Admin. R. (“Pl.’s Reply
Supplement”) 4. The court declines to supplement the administrative record with cherry-picked
documents from other procurements, even if the procuring agency and the services to be procured
are alleged to be identical. Moreover, as discussed below, the three documents offered by
plaintiff are unnecessary for the court’s disposition of this protest. The court therefore denies
plaintiff’s motion with respect to these documents.
The other documents to which defendant objects are the Giarratano Declaration and
attached exhibits. Paragraphs 1 through 3 of the declaration generally pertain to Mr. Giarratano’s
position and qualifications, and paragraphs 11 and 12 concern the prejudice and harm that
plaintiff would purportedly suffer in the absence of injunctive relief. The remainder of the
declaration contains assertions regarding the preparation of plaintiff’s price proposal, and the
exhibits include an excerpt from the incumbent contract (designated as exhibit B-1) and a table
prepared by plaintiff setting forth ODCs and reimbursable costs for the incumbent contract
(designated as exhibit B-2). Plaintiff contends that the declaration and attached exhibits must be
included in the administrative record to facilitate meaningful judicial review of the merits of its
protest, as well as to establish its entitlement to injunctive relief. With respect to the former
contention, however, plaintiff does not explain in its motion how the declaration and attached
exhibits would allow for meaningful judicial review. Moreover, in its reply brief, plaintiff only
attempts to justify the necessity of paragraph 9 of the declaration and one of the attached
and eleven and twelve in support of Plaintiff’s allegations of harm.”), with id. at 6 (characterizing
paragraph 11 as containing Mr. Giarratano’s “opinion on how the Air Force should have
evaluated the past performance of bidders.”). Contrary to defendant’s characterization,
paragraph 11 of the Giarratano Declaration concerns the prejudice and harm purportedly suffered
by plaintiff as a result of the Air Force’s decision not to evaluate the offerors’ past performance.
Accordingly, the court will consider paragraph 11 as one of the paragraphs of the Giarratano
Declaration to which defendant does not object (along with paragraphs 1, 2, 3, and 12).
5
The GAO’s online docket reflects that the protest from which the August 28, 2015
Notice of Corrective Action arose concerned solicitation FA6703-15-R-0004, which is the same
solicitation at issue in the protest lodged by plaintiff on July 31, 2015. See GAO, U.S. GAO -
Bid Protests, http://www.gao.gov/legal/bid-protests/search (last visited Feb. 11, 2016).
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exhibits, explaining:
[P]aragraph 9 of Mr. Giarratano’s declaration and Exhibit B-2 present historical
cost data relating to reimbursable costs incurred by PMI on the incumbent contract.
Thus, the information contained in these two documents confirms that the
government possessed this historical cost data prior to issuing the subject
Solicitation. Moreover, this is critical cost information the government should have
shared with all offerors prior to submission of final proposal revisions on
November 20, 2015. Importantly, the government does not challenge the veracity
of the historical cost data presented in Paragraph 9 of Mr. Giarratano’s declaration
and Exhibit B-2.
Pl.’s Reply Supplement 4. This explanation is insufficient to establish that the portion of the
Giarratano Declaration addressing the preparation of plaintiff’s price proposal and the attached
exhibits are necessary for meaningful judicial review. First, although it can be reasonably
concluded from paragraph 9 and exhibit B-2 that plaintiff and the Air Force possessed historical
cost data for the incumbent contract, neither paragraph 9 nor exhibit B-2 contains information
necessary to establish that the historical cost data should have been provided to offerors prior to
the deadline for final proposal revisions. Whether the Air Force was required to provide
prospective offerors with the historical cost data in its possession is purely a question of law.
Second, the justification plaintiff provides in support of supplementing the administrative record
with paragraph 9 and exhibit B-2 cannot be used as a justification to supplement the
administrative record with the remainder of the Giarratano Declaration or the other attached
exhibit. Finally, as discussed below, the contents of the Giarratano Declaration and attached
exhibits are unnecessary for the court’s disposition of this protest. The court therefore denies
plaintiff’s motion with respect to these documents.
In sum, the court grants plaintiff’s motion to supplement the administrative record with
the documents related to the Westover ARB Base Operating Services procurement (designated as
Supplemental Administrative Record Tabs 48 to 51). The court denies plaintiff’s motion with
respect to the documents related to other Base Operating Services procurements (designated as
Supplemental Administrative Record Tabs 52 to 54), the Giarratano Declaration, and the exhibits
attached to the Giarratano Declaration. In conjunction with this latter ruling–and defendant’s
motion to strike–the court will disregard all references to, and arguments based on, these
documents–with the exception of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 11, and 12 of the Giarratano
Declaration–that are contained in plaintiff’s briefs in support of its motion for judgment on the
administrative record.
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III. DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
A. Standard of Review
The court next addresses defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s protest. Defendant
brings its motion pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal
Claims (“RCFC”), contending that because plaintiff has waived any challenges to the terms of
the solicitation, it fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.6 To survive such a
motion, a plaintiff must include in its complaint “enough facts to state a claim to relief that is
plausible on its face.” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007). In other words, a
plaintiff must “plead[] factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that
the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009)
(citing Bell Atl., 550 U.S. at 556).
B. Waiver
In Blue & Gold Fleet, L.P. v. United States, 492 F.3d 1308 (Fed. Cir. 2007), the United
States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”) affirmed the conclusion of the
Court of Federal Claims that the protestor’s challenge to the terms of the solicitation, which was
not raised until after the deadline for the submission of proposals, was untimely. Id. at 1312-16.
In doing so, the Federal Circuit recognized, for the first time, a waiver rule for bid protests,
holding that
a party who has the opportunity to object to the terms of a government solicitation
containing a patent error and fails to do so prior to the close of the bidding process
waives its ability to raise the same objection subsequently in a bid protest action
in the Court of Federal Claims.
Id. at 1313; accord id. at 1315; Bannum, Inc. v. United States, 779 F.3d 1376, 1380 (Fed. Cir.
2015). It found support for such a waiver rule in (1) the statutory mandate of 28 U.S.C.
§ 1491(b)(3) that courts are to “give due regard to . . . the need for expeditious resolution of” bid
protests, (2) the fairness rationale underlying the doctrine of patent ambiguity, (3) the GAO’s rule
6
Although defendant mentions RCFC 12(b)(1) in its motion to dismiss, it does not rely
on that rule in seeking the dismissal of plaintiff’s protest. See Def.’s Cross-Mot. 7 (“Phoenix
fails to offer a proper basis upon which this Court can entertain its claims. Accordingly, this
Court should dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be
granted.”), 10 (“Phoenix has waived the arguments contained in each count of its complaint . . .
and its complaint must be dismissed pursuant to RCFC 12(b)(6).”). Moreover, the United States
Court of Federal Claims (“Court of Federal Claims”) has concluded that the waiver rule invoked
by defendant in this case “creates an equitable, rather than jurisdictional, bar to a disappointed
offeror’s untimely challenge to the terms of a government solicitation.” Linc Gov’t Servs., LLC
v. United States, 96 Fed. Cl. 672, 698 (2010).
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that challenges to the terms of a solicitation must be brought prior to the deadline for submitting
bids or proposals, and (4) the analogous doctrines of laches and equitable estoppel in the patent
context. Blue & Gold Fleet, 492 F.3d at 1313-15. Of these rationales for the recognition of a
waiver rule, the Federal Circuit placed particular emphasis on fairness and the expeditious
resolution of bid protests:
In the absence of a waiver rule, a contractor with knowledge of a solicitation
defect could choose to stay silent when submitting its first proposal. If its first
proposal loses to another bidder, the contractor could then come forward with the
defect to restart the bidding process, perhaps with increased knowledge of its
competitors. A waiver rule thus prevents contractors from taking advantage of the
government and other bidders, and avoids costly after-the-fact litigation.
Id. at 1314; see also id. at 1315 (“[T]he statutory mandate of [28 U.S.C.] § 1491(b)(3) for courts
to ‘give due regard to . . . the need for expeditious resolution of the action’ and the rationale
underlying the patent ambiguity doctrine favor recognition of a waiver rule.”); DGR Assocs., Inc.
v. United States, 690 F.3d 1335, 1343 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (“[I]f there is a patent, i.e., clear, error in
a solicitation known to the bidder, the bidder cannot lie in the weeds hoping to get the contract,
and then if it does not, blindside the agency about the error in a court suit.”).
The Federal Circuit revisited the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule in COMINT Systems
Corp. & EyeIT.com, Inc., Joint Venture v. United States, 700 F.3d 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2012). In that
case, the procuring agency amended the solicitation four months after the proposal submission
deadline. Id. at 1380. More than two months later, it awarded three contracts pursuant to the
amended solicitation. Id. The protestor objected to the terms of the amendment, but did not
lodge a protest until after the procuring agency awarded the contracts. Id. at 1380-81.
Specifically, the protestor lodged a protest with the GAO almost two weeks after the contracts
were awarded, and then, two months later, after the GAO denied its protest, filed a complaint
with the Court of Federal Claims. Id. at 1380.
On review, the Federal Circuit agreed with the government that the protestor failed to
preserve its challenge to the terms of the solicitation amendment by not raising it prior to the
award of the contracts. Id. at 1381. Although it recognized that the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver
rule was not directly applicable to the circumstances before it because the solicitation was
amended after the proposal submission deadline, the Federal Circuit concluded that the reasoning
of Blue & Gold Fleet “applie[d] to all situations in which the protesting party had the opportunity
to challenge a solicitation before the award and failed to do so.” Id. at 1382; see also id.
(remarking that the policy behind the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule supported the extension of
the rule “to all pre-award situations”). Accordingly, it held that “assuming that there is adequate
time in which to do so, a disappointed bidder must bring a challenge to a solicitation containing a
patent error or ambiguity prior to the award of the contract.” Id.; accord id. (“[W]here bringing
the challenge prior to the award is not practicable, it may be brought thereafter.”); see also
Bannum, 779 F.3d at 1381 (holding that the protestor had waived its “solicitation challenge by
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not properly raising it before the close of bidding” and noting that the protestor had not argued
that such a challenge would be “impractical” or that its failure to raise such a challenge was
excusable for good cause).
C. Plaintiff Waived Its Challenges to the Terms of the Solicitation
The facts relevant to defendant’s waiver argument are straightforward: (1) the Air Force
issued the solicitation on February 18, 2015; (2) the proposal deadline was April 1, 2015; (3) in
advance of the proposal deadline, the Air Force specifically addressed the absence of its
“predetermined amount of estimated hours” and any mention of ODCs from the solicitation in
response to questions from prospective offerors; (4) in advance of timely submitting its proposal,
plaintiff did not object–formally or informally–to the terms of the solicitation; (5) the Air Force
awarded the contract to VFS on August 6, 2015; (6) plaintiff lodged a protest with the GAO on
August 13, 2015, challenging the contract award; (7) plaintiff lodged a supplemental protest with
the GAO on August 21, 2015, objecting to the Air Force’s failure to provide offerors with its
“predetermined amount of estimated hours” for each labor category; (8) the Air Force notified
the GAO of its intent to take corrective action on September 11, 2016; (9) the GAO dismissed
plaintiff’s protests on September 15, 2015; (10) the Air Force proceeded with its corrective
action, which consisted of opening discussions, requesting final proposal revisions, and making a
new award decision; (11) the corrective action did not include any amendments to the
solicitation; (12) during discussions, plaintiff advised the Air Force that it objected to two
purported solicitation defects–the absence of past performance as an evaluation factor and the
absence of ODCs from the price evaluation–and indicated that it did not “waive any right to
challenge [these] solicitation defect[s] in the event [it] is not awarded the contract”; (13) final
proposal revisions were due on November 20, 2015; (14) plaintiff filed this protest on November
19, 2015, challenging the terms of the solicitation; and (15) plaintiff advised the Air Force on
November 20, 2015, that the materials it had already submitted constituted its final proposal
revision.
Defendant argues that under the waiver rule set forth in Blue & Gold Fleet, plaintiff
should have protested the terms of the solicitation prior to the April 1, 2015 proposal submission
deadline–“the close of the bidding process”–because all of the defects currently alleged by
plaintiff were apparent at the time that the Air Force issued the solicitation. Defendant further
contends that the Air Force’s decision to take corrective action did not extend the deadline for
plaintiff to protest the terms of the solicitation because the Air Force did not amend the
solicitation as part of its corrective action; in other words, the purported solicitation defects that
plaintiff is challenging in this post-corrective-action protest are the same purported solicitation
defects that existed when the Air Force first issued the solicitation. Because plaintiff did not file
this protest before the original deadline for filing proposals, defendant argues, it waived its
challenges to the unchanged terms of the solicitation.
In arguing that it has not waived its challenges to the terms of the solicitation, plaintiff
relies on a hypertechnical reading of the language used by the Federal Circuit in Blue & Gold
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Fleet and COMINT Systems. In Blue & Gold Fleet, the Federal Circuit held that an objection to
a patent solicitation error must be raised “prior to the close of the bidding process,” 492 F.3d at
1313, and in COMINT Systems, the Federal Circuit held that an objection to a patent solicitation
error must be raised “prior to the award of the contract,” 700 F.3d at 1382. Plaintiff remarks that
as a result of the Air Force’s decision to take corrective action, the Air Force reopened the
competition, allowed for the submission of final proposal revisions, and planned to make a new
award decision. These actions, plaintiff contends, constituted a reopening of the bidding process.
Because it filed this protest before the deadline for submitting final proposal revisions (and,
consequently, before the Air Force made a new award decision), plaintiff argues that it filed its
protest before “the close of the bidding process” and before “the award of the contract.”
In light of the rationale underlying the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule, plaintiff’s
hypertechnical construction of the rule is untenable. The Federal Circuit explained in Blue &
Gold Fleet that the purpose of the waiver rule was to prevent an offeror with knowledge of a
solicitation defect from sitting on that knowledge until after the procuring agency awarded the
contract and then, if unsuccessful in securing the contract, using that knowledge–along with any
knowledge gleaned during the competition and from the debriefing–as the basis for a protest in a
second attempt to secure the contract. 492 F.3d at 1314. As the Federal Circuit noted, to allow
an offeror two bites at the apple would be unfair to, and costly for, the procuring agency and the
other offerors. Id. In fact, it explained in COMINT Systems that the policy underlying the Blue
& Gold Fleet waiver rule supported the extension of the rule “to all pre-award situations.” 700
F.3d at 1382.
Here, the purported solicitation defects identified by plaintiff existed when the Air Force
issued the solicitation on February 18, 2015. As a consequence, plaintiff had ample opportunity
to challenge these purported defects prior to the April 1, 2015 proposal submission deadline,
either through an agency-level protest, by lodging a protest at the GAO, or by filing a protest in
this court. Indeed, plaintiff does not argue that raising such a challenge was impractical or that
its failure to do so was excusable for good cause. It was not until the Air Force awarded the
contract to another offeror that plaintiff, in a supplemental GAO protest, objected to the terms of
the solicitation. Binding precedent makes clear that this objection was untimely.7 See Blue &
Gold Fleet, 492 F.3d at 1314 (noting that under GAO protest regulations, challenges to
solicitation improprieties that are apparent prior to the deadline for the receipt of initial proposals
must be raised prior to that deadline). The Air Force’s subsequent decision to take corrective
action did not transform plaintiff’s untimely challenge into a timely one. Because the Air Force’s
decision to take corrective action was based on a perceived defect in its evaluation of proposals,
and not with any defect in the solicitation, it did not amend the solicitation.8 Thus, any defects
7
Moreover, had plaintiff raised that challenge in a protest in this court, the court would
have been obligated to dismiss it pursuant to the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule.
8
Because the Air Force’s corrective action did not include any changes to the
solicitation, plaintiff’s reliance on the Federal Circuit’s holding in COMINT Systems that an
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that existed in the solicitation during the Air Force’s corrective action were present in the
solicitation when the Air Force originally issued it. Consequently, a previously unsuccessful
offeror attempting to object to the terms of the solicitation during the corrective action would be
running afoul of the underlying purpose of the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule–preventing
offerors from withholding knowledge to get a second chance to secure a contract, to the
detriment of the procuring agency and the other offerors. Postaward corrective action that does
not include the issuing of a new or amended solicitation–such as the corrective action involved in
this protest–does not resurrect the ability of an unsuccessful offeror to object to the terms of a
solicitation.
In short, by not objecting to the terms of the solicitation prior to the April 1, 2015
proposal submission deadline, plaintiff waived those objections. The court must therefore grant
defendant’s motion to dismiss.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court GRANTS plaintiff’s motion to supplement the
administrative record with the documents related to the Westover ARB Base Operating Services
procurement (designated as Supplemental Administrative Record Tabs 48 to 51). The court
DENIES plaintiff’s motion to supplement the administrative record with the documents related
to other Base Operating Services procurements (designated as Supplemental Administrative
Record Tabs 52 to 54), the Giarratano Declaration, and the exhibits attached to the Giarratano
Declaration. The court disregards all references to, and arguments based on, these latter
documents–with the exception of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 11, and 12 of the Giarratano
Declaration–that are contained in plaintiff’s briefs in support of its motion for judgment on the
administrative record. Further, the court GRANTS defendant’s motion to dismiss and
DISMISSES plaintiff’s protest with prejudice. No costs. The clerk is directed to enter judgment
accordingly.
objection to a patent solicitation error must be raised “prior to the award of the contract,” 700
F.3d at 1382, is unfounded. In COMINT Systems, the procuring agency amended the solicitation
after the proposal submission deadline but before contract award. Id. at 1380. The Federal
Circuit concluded that any challenge to the amendment should have been made prior to contract
award to avoid invocation of the Blue & Gold Fleet waiver rule. Id. at 1382; see also Ne.
Constr., Inc. v. United States, 119 Fed. Cl. 596, 610 (2015) (“[T]he waiver rule articulated in
COMINT Systems is limited to situations where the solicitation was amended after the proposal
due date, and does not render timely every challenge to the terms of a solicitation lodged prior to
contract award.”). In this case, the Air Force did not amend the solicitation anytime after the
initial proposal submission deadline of April 1, 2015. Accordingly, the relevant deadline in this
case is “the close of the bidding process,” as described in Blue & Gold Fleet, 492 F.3d at 1313,
and not “the award of the contract,” as described in COMINT Systems, 700 F.3d at 1382.
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The court has filed this ruling under seal. The parties shall confer to determine agreed-to
proposed redactions. Then, by no later than Tuesday, March 15, 2016, the parties shall file a
joint status report indicating their agreement with the proposed redactions, attaching a copy of
those pages of the court’s ruling containing proposed redactions, with all proposed
redactions clearly indicated.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
s/ Margaret M. Sweeney
MARGARET M. SWEENEY
Judge
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