Business Integra, Inc. v. United States

116 Fed. Cl. 328, 2014 WL 2507393
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJune 4, 2014
Docket1:14-cv-00210
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 116 Fed. Cl. 328 (Business Integra, 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
Business Integra, Inc. v. United States, 116 Fed. Cl. 328, 2014 WL 2507393 (uscfc 2014).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER 1

LETTOW, Judge.

This post-award bid protest concerns a procurement by the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS” or “the government”) of information technology (“IT”) services. In issuing the pertinent solicitation, DHS sought proposals by offerors responding in one of two different tracks, small business and unrestricted. DHS anticipated making multiple awards of indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (“ID/IQ”) contracts for each track. The procurement was subject to the Federal Acquisition Regulations (“FAR”), 48 C.F.R. Part 15. This case focuses on the *330 small business track. Business Integra submitted a timely offer under that track but was not awarded a contract because it had omitted some pricing information. It filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) and, after GAO denied its protest, brought suit in this court. Now pending before the court is Business Integra’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record (“Pl.’s Mot.”), ECP No. 18, as well as the government’s Cross-Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record (“Def.’s Cross-Mot.”), ECF No. 19. Business Integra contends that its omission of certain pricing information was de minimis and should have been waived or corrected by the government. The government contends that rejection of Business Integra’s proposal was within DHS’s discretion because the missing pricing information was material to evaluation of Business Integra’s offer.

FACTS 2

A. The Solicitation

On November 1, 2010, DHS, acting through the Information Technology Acquisition Center within its Office of Procurement Operations, issued request for proposal no. HSHQDC-1 l-R-10001 for the “Enterprise Acquisition Gateway for Leading Edge Solutions II (EAGLE II) program.” AR 1-6. 3 The EAGLE II solicitation sought IT solutions for a full range of the agency’s needs over a five-year base period with a two-year option period, as an enhancement of the original EAGLE program. AR 1-13, -21. DHS anticipated awarding multiple ID/IQ contracts, where awardees would bid on future task orders to provide services. See AR 1-13, -38. Besides the two tracks, DHS specified three functional categories of particular services sought: Service Delivery (FC1), Program Support (FC2), and Verification and Validation (FC3). AR l-l. 4 Of particular interest is Functional Category 1, which sought “a full range of services and products in support of developing, implementing, and maintaining technology to support the DHS mission and business functions across the entire lifecycle of a program.” AR 1-22. For proposals in FC1, the small business track was divided into four groups, “8(a),” “HUB Zone,” “SDVOSB,” and “Ml SB,” depending on the classification of the business. AR 1-1. The 8(a) group was designated for businesses certified as 8(a) by the Small Business Administration or falling within specified codes of the North American Industry Classification System. AR 1-104. Proposals under the FC1, 8(a) group were evaluated against other offerors within that track and group, separately and distinctly from the other groups within the small business track. AR 1-116 to -17.

The solicitation explained that the government would award contracts to proposals representing the best value, i.e., those which, in the government’s estimation, will “provide[] the greatest overall benefit in response to the requirement.” AR 1-116 (quoting the definition of “best value” found *331 in FAR § 2.101). Each proposal would be evaluated on six factors, five of which were non-price factors. AR 1-117 to -18. In descending order of importance, the factors were corporate experience, past performance, program management, staffing, small business participation approach (unrestricted track only), and price. Id. Combined, the non-price factors were “significantly more important than price.” AR 1-118. DHS stated that price proposals would be evaluated for accuracy, completeness, and reasonableness, but not assigned a rating. AR 1-119.

DHS required that offerors provide rates for all 36 labor categories for the base and option years. See AR 1-120, -128 to -33. DHS emphasized that failure to provide complete pricing information would render a proposal ineligible for an award:

Note: Failure to offer ceiling rates for all labor categories and all contract periods will result in offer ineligibility. This means that the omission of a rate for just a single category will result in a material non-conformity in the proposed junctional category.

AR 1-120 (all emphasis in original). Elsewhere in the solicitation, in the section providing instructions to offerors for cost and price proposal information, the agency mandated that:

[e]aeh [o]fferor shall provide a completed Attachment L-l, Pricing Templates, including all of the information described below. The [o]fferor shall propose fully burdened ceiling labor rates for ALL labor categories inclusive of all contract periods. The fully-burdened labor rates include all direct labor and indirect costs applicable to that direct labor ... and profit.

AR 1-112 (emphasis in original). This instruction was repeated in an amendment issued on January 18, 2011, in response to vendors’ questions. See AR 4-244, -250. There, the agency confirmed that “all offerors should bid all labor categories” and that “offerors that do not bid all categories will not be in compliance with the [solicitation].” AR 4-250, ref. no. 118.

To encourage uniformity in proposals, the agency provided spreadsheets for offerors to use in submitting labor rates with their bids. AR 1-112 to -13. The agency supplied separate spreadsheets to be completed based on where the work would be performed, namely, government sites or contractor sites. AR 1-113. For each spreadsheet, rows represented labor categories and columns represented years of the contract. See AR 2-173 to -82. DHS included “evaluation hours,” i.e., estimated annual hours, for each labor category. Id. Each year (“YR1,” “YR2,” etc.) had a column for the labor rates per hour (“Pricing”) and a column for total cost (“Total Value”). A default value of $0.00 was set for cells under the “Total Value” column for each year, and the pricing columns were blank. See id.; see also Def.’s Cross-Mot. at 6. When offerors placed their labor rates in the “Pricing” columns, the “Total Value” columns would automatically calculate the total price based on the provided hours. See Def.’s Cross-Mot. at 6. If no “Pricing” value was specified, the “Total Value” for that year would remain $0.00. See Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s [Cross-]Mot. for Judgment upon the Administrative Record (“Pl.’s Resp.”) at 2.

B. Business Integra’s Proposal

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 Fed. Cl. 328, 2014 WL 2507393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/business-integra-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2014.