Acesfed, LLC v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 17, 2022
Docket21-1014
StatusPublished

This text of Acesfed, LLC v. United States (Acesfed, LLC v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acesfed, LLC v. United States, (uscfc 2022).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 21-1014C

(E-Filed: March 17, 2022) 1

) ACESFED, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) THE UNITED STATES, ) ) Defendant, ) Post-Award Bid Protest; Motion for ) Judgment on the Administrative Record; and ) RCFC 52.1; Standing; Prejudice. ) APTIVE RESOURCES, LLC, ) ) and ) ) DECISIVE POINT CONSULTING ) GROUP, LLC, ) ) Intervenor-defendants. ) )

Alexander B. Ginsberg, McLean, VA, for plaintiff. Meghan D. Doherty, Kevin Massoudi, and Robert Starling, of counsel.

Sonia M. Orfield, Trial Attorney, with whom were Brian M. Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Martin F. Hockey, Jr., Acting Director, and Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant. Frank V. DiNicola, Desiree A.

1 This opinion is filed under seal on March 1, 2022. See ECF No. 79. The parties were invited to identify source selection, propriety, or confidential material subject to deletion on the basis that the material is protective/privileged. No redactions were proposed by the parties. See ECF No. 81 (notice). Thus, the sealed and the public versions of this opinion are identical, except for the publication date and this footnote. DiCorcia, Tara T. Nash, and Christopher Murphy, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Eatontown, NJ, of counsel.

John R. Prairie, Washington, DC, for intervenor-defendant Aptive Resources, LLC. Cara L. Lasley and Jennifer Eve Retener, of counsel.

Jonathan D. Shaffer, Tysons Corner, VA, for intervenor-defendant Decisive Point Consulting Group, LLC.

OPINION

CAMPBELL-SMITH, Judge.

Plaintiff filed this bid protest challenging the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) decision to exclude plaintiff from the competitive range in a procurement for information technology (IT) services. See ECF No. 24 (amended complaint). Plaintiff filed a motion for judgment on the administrative record (AR) in this case, ECF No. 55; and defendant and intervenor-defendants each filed cross-motions for judgment on the AR, ECF No. 57; ECF No. 59; ECF No. 61. After the initial briefing was complete, the court ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefs on the issue of standing, see ECF No. 73, and the parties did so, see ECF No. 74; ECF No. 75; ECF No. 76; ECF No. 77.

In ruling on the motions, the court has considered: (1) the AR, ECF No. 21; 2 (2) plaintiff’s amended complaint, ECF No. 24; (3) plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the AR, ECF No. 55; (4) intervenor-defendant Decisive Point Consulting Group, LLC’s cross-motion for judgment on the AR and response to plaintiff’s motion, ECF No. 57; (5) intervenor-defendant Aptive Resources, LLC’s cross-motion for judgment on the AR and response to plaintiff’s motion, ECF No. 59; (6) defendant’s cross-motion for judgment on the AR and response to plaintiff’s motion, ECF No. 61; (7) plaintiff’s reply in support of its motion and response to the cross-motions, ECF No. 63; (8) intervenor-defendant Aptive’s reply in support of its cross-motion, ECF No. 65; (9) intervenor-defendant Decisive Point’s reply in support of its cross-motion, ECF No. 67; (10) defendant’s reply in support of its cross-motion, ECF No. 69; (11) plaintiff’s sur-reply in support of its motion, ECF No. 71; (12) intervenor-defendant Aptive’s supplemental brief, ECF No. 74; (13) intervenor-defendant Decisive Point’s supplemental brief, ECF No. 75; (14)

2 When defendant initially filed the administrative record (AR) on March 15, 2021, see ECF No. 18, it “inadvertently omitted information,” and therefore moved to complete the AR on March 17, 2021, ECF No. 19 at 1 (defendant’s motion to complete the AR). The court granted the motion and directed defendant to file the completed AR. See ECF No. 20 (order). Defendant filed the completed AR on March 19, 2021, superseding its original AR. See ECF No. 21.

2 defendant’s supplemental brief, ECF No. 76; and (15) plaintiff’s supplemental brief, ECF No. 77.

The motion is now fully briefed, and ripe for decision. The parties did not request oral argument, and the court deems such argument unnecessary. The court has considered all of the parties’ arguments and addresses the issues that are pertinent to the court’s ruling in this opinion. For the following reasons, plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the AR is DENIED, and defendant’s and intervenor-defendants’ cross-motions for judgment on the AR are GRANTED.

I. Background 3

A. The Solicitation

On November 12, 2019, the VA issued solicitation number 36C10B19R0046, for IT services as part of the Transformation Twenty-One Total Technology Next Generation (T4NG) contract on-ramp program (the solicitation). 4 See ECF No. 21-2 at 300-436 (solicitation). The procurement provides for a five-year contract base period and one five-year option period, with a maximum value of $22.3 billion. See id. at 315. The solicitation explained the scope of the procurement as follows:

The Contractor shall provide total IT services solutions including the following functional areas: program management, strategy, enterprise architecture and planning; systems/software engineering; software technology demonstration and transition; test and evaluation; independent verification and validation; enterprise network; enterprise management framework; operations and maintenance; cybersecurity; training; IT facilities; and other solutions encompassing the entire range of IT and Health IT requirements, to include software and hardware incidental to the solution. Accordingly, Task Orders may include acquisitions of software and IT products . . . . These services, as well as related IT products, may encompass the entire life-cycle of a system. Moreover, services and related products covered under this contract shall be global in reach and the Contractors must be prepared to provide services and deliverables worldwide.

3 This case involves considerable detail. For purposes of deciding these motions the court will relate only those details that are necessary to the instant analysis. 4 The copy of the solicitation included in the AR is not dated, but the index filed by defendant, see ECF No. 21-1 at 3, and presentation slides from the Source Selection Advisory Council’s May 27, 2020 initial evaluation briefing, see ECF No. 21-5 at 64, indicate that the solicitation was issued on November 12, 2019. 3 Id. at 311.

The solicitation was intended to “replenish the pool of [service-disabled veteran- owned small businesses (SDVOSBs)],” “anticipating that a large number of the current SDVOSB contract-holders would no longer qualify as a SDVOSB at the end of the initial five-year [contract] period.” ECF No. 61 at 14 (citing ECF No. 21-2 at 262). The solicitation also explained that “[t]his competition is being conducted pursuant to the on- ramp clause of the T4NG basic contract. The Government intends to award seven (7) contracts to verified [SDVOSBs].” ECF No. 21-2 at 431. The VA, however, reserved the right to adjust that number in its discretion. See id. Awards were to be made on a best-value basis, considering five evaluation factors, including “Technical, Past Performance, Veterans Employment, Small Business Participation Commitment Factor (SBPC), and Price.” Id. Those factors were valued as follows:

The Technical Factor is significantly more important than the Past Performance Factor, which is slightly more important than the Veterans Employment Factor which is slightly more important than the SBPC Factor, which is slightly more important that the Price Factor. The Technical Factor has two (2) Sub-factors: Sample Task Sub-Factor and Management Sub- factor. Within the Sample Task Sub-factor, Sample Task 1 and Sample Task 2 are equally important.

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