Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJune 13, 2023
Docket23-253
StatusPublished

This text of Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. v. United States (Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. 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
Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. v. United States, (uscfc 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF FEDERAL CLAIMS ______________________________________ ) ASPIRE THERAPY SERVICES & ) CONSULTANTS, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) No. 23-253 ) v. ) Filed: May 30, 2023 ) THE UNITED STATES, ) Re-issued: June 13, 2023 ) Defendant. ) ______________________________________ )

OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff, Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. (“Aspire”), filed this pre-award bid

protest challenging the Defense Commissary Agency’s (“DeCA”) decision to eliminate its

proposal from further consideration in a procurement of shelf stocking, receiving/storage/holding

area, custodial, and related services at the Dover Air Force Base Commissary. The basis for

rejection was that Aspire’s number of direct labor hours reflected in two different spreadsheets

submitted with its proposal did not match. Aspire contends DeCA abused its discretion by failing

to allow it to resolve the error through clarification. Before the Court are the parties’ Cross-

Motions for Judgment on the Administrative Record. For the reasons discussed below, the Court

GRANTS Aspire’s Motion for Judgment and DENIES the Government’s Cross-Motion.

 The Court issued this opinion under seal on May 30, 2023, and directed the parties to file any proposed redactions by June 6, 2023. The opinion issued today incorporates the proposed redactions filed by the parties. Upon review, the Court finds that the material identified warrants protection from public disclosure, as provided in the applicable Protective Order (ECF No. 10). Redacted material in charts is blacked out, and redacted material in the body of the opinion is represented by bracketed ellipses “[. . .].” I. BACKGROUND

A. The Solicitation

DeCA issued Solicitation No. HQC00822R0023 on October 5, 2022, seeking proposals for

the award of a negotiated firm-fixed price contract for loading, stocking, and custodial work at the

Dover Air Force Base Commissary. Admin. R. 3, 87 (hereinafter “AR”).1 Commissaries are stores

similar to commercial supermarkets that sell food and other items to authorized patrons at military

bases. AR 100. To support DeCA’s commissary services, the procurement at issue requires the

selected contractor to “furnish all personnel, supervision, supplies, equipment, tools, materials and

other items and services as necessary to perform shelf stocking, receiving/storage/holding area

(RSHA), and custodial tasks . . . at the Dover Air Force Base . . . .” AR 100.

Per the solicitation, DeCA intends to use three factors to evaluate proposals: Factor 1 –

Performance Capability; Factor 2 – Past Performance; and Factor 3 – Price. AR 90–91. The

Performance Capability and Past Performance factors combined are deemed relatively equal in

importance to the Price factor. AR 91. To evaluate the Price factor, DeCA intends to use a price

realism analysis, wherein proposals will be evaluated “to determine whether offered prices are

realistic in relation to the work to be performed, reflect a clear understanding of the requirements,

and are consistent with other portions of the offeror’s proposal.” AR 92.

The solicitation required offerors to submit their proposals in three volumes through the

Procurement Integrated Enterprise Environment (“PIEE”) system. AR 86. Volume I required

offerors to break down their proposed services and prices and submit a Cost Breakout spreadsheet

1 For ease of reference, citations to the administrative record refer to the bates-labeled page numbers rather than the ECF page numbers. Citations to the native versions of certain Excel spreadsheets refer to the relevant tab number, as these files are not available on ECF. See Def.’s Notice, ECF No. 24. 2 via Microsoft Excel. AR 86. Volume II required offerors to provide a Technical Capability and

Personnel Proposal via PDF and a Direct and Indirect Labor Summary via Microsoft Excel. AR

87. Volume III required offerors to provide past performance information via PDF. AR 87. The

Volume I Cost Breakout spreadsheet and the Volume II Direct and Indirect Labor Summary

spreadsheet both included formulas that automatically generated various computations. AR 86.

To allow offerors to complete the computations, “the necessary inputs [were] ‘unprotected’ and

[could] be changed as needed to adequately reflect [an offeror’s] proposal.” AR 86. The

solicitation warned that “[t]he offeror is ultimately responsible for the accuracy of all calculations.”

AR 86.

The solicitation also informed offerors that they “may have to present the same

information, in the same or different format, in more than one volume.” AR 86. As such, DeCA

instructed offerors to “[e]nsure information and statements on similar topics (e.g., number of work

hours and productivity rates) are consistent throughout the proposal.” AR 86. Twice more the

solicitation instructed offerors to ensure data entries agreed across different parts of the offeror’s

proposal. AR 87 (“When completing the [Direct and Indirect Labor Summary], enter all of the

data requested, ensuring your data entries agree with the information provided in other parts of

your proposal and computations are correct.”); AR 242 (direct productive hours proposed in the

Direct and Indirect Labor Summary “should match exactly the direct productive hours shown in

your cost worksheets”). And the solicitation warned offerors twice that “[p]roposals that fail to

comply with the content or format requirements may be rejected without further evaluation.” AR

85; see AR 90 (“Proposals that fail to comply with content or format requirements specified in

Section L of this solicitation may be rejected without further evaluation.”).

3 B. Aspire’s Proposal

Aspire submitted its proposal on October 15, 2022. AR 348. On January 6, 2023, DeCA

informed Aspire that it was rejecting its proposal without further consideration. AR 1106. DeCA

explained:

Your proposal failed to comply with the requirements of Section L, Provision 52.215-4509 Proposal Submission (Format and Content) (APR 2004) identified in the solicitation and is being rejected without further evaluation due to the hours proposed in the Volume I, Cost Breakout did not correlate with the hours in the Volume II, Direct Labor Summary.

AR 1106.

In its Volume II Direct and Indirect Labor Summary spreadsheet, Aspire provided the

following information involving Receiving/Storage/Holding Area (“RSHA”) Direct Labor:

4 AR Tab 4.b.1. (Native Excel). The original spreadsheet provided by DeCA to offerors included

the anticipated “Cases per Year” under each labor subcategory (e.g., Offload Trucks, Transport

Merchandise, etc.) in Column B, and offerors were required to input their “Productivity Rate” for

each labor subcategory in Column C. AR Tab 2.e.1. (Native Excel). The spreadsheet

automatically populated the “Direct Productive Hrs Required” in Column D by dividing cases per

year by the offeror’s provided productivity rate for each labor subcategory except “RSHA

Coverage for Contractor Work Schedule” in cell D32. AR Tab 2.e.1. For cell D32, offerors

directly entered their “Direct Productive Hrs Required,” and Aspire entered the number “81” using

the formula “=2366-2285”. AR Tab 4.b.1. The spreadsheet then automatically populated the total

“Direct Productive Hrs Required” in cell D34 for the RSHA labor category by adding the “Direct

Productive Hrs Required” for each subcategory. AR Tab 2.e.1. Based on Aspire’s inputs, its total

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Aspire Therapy Services & Consultants, Inc. v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aspire-therapy-services-consultants-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2023.