Centerra Group, LLC v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJanuary 18, 2018
Docket17-1348
StatusPublished

This text of Centerra Group, LLC v. United States (Centerra Group, 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
Centerra Group, LLC v. United States, (uscfc 2018).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 17-1348C (Filed Under Seal: December 14, 2017) (Reissued for Publication: January 18, 2018)*

************************************* CENTERRA GROUP, LLC, * * Plaintiff, * * v. * * Postaward Bid Protest; Cross-Motions for THE UNITED STATES, * Judgment on the Administrative Record; * Standing; Evaluation of Technical and Price Defendant, * Proposals; Tradeoff Analysis * and * * SOC LLC, * * Defendant-Intervenor. * *************************************

Richard J. Webber, Washington, DC, for plaintiff.

Eric E. Laufgraben, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.

James J. McCullough, Washington, DC, for defendant-intervenor.

OPINION AND ORDER

SWEENEY, Judge

In this postaward bid protest, plaintiff Centerra Group, LLC (“Centerra”) contends that the National Nuclear Security Administration (“NNSA”) improperly awarded a contract for protective force services to defendant-intervenor SOC LLC (“SOC”). Specifically, Centerra

* In a January 12, 2018 joint status report, the parties proposed redactions to this decision. They agreed on most of the proposed redactions. However, plaintiff and defendant did not agree with defendant-intervenor’s proposal to redact the term “Corporate Governance Board.” Because that term is not “protected information” under the protective order, the court concludes that it should not be redacted. Redactions are indicated with a bracketed ellipsis (“[. . .]”). alleges that the NNSA’s evaluation of proposals and subsequent tradeoff decision were flawed. Before the court are the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record. As explained below, the court denies Centerra’s motion, grants defendant’s motion, and grants in part and denies in part SOC’s motion.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Solicitation and Submission of Proposals

The NNSA issued solicitation DE-SOL-0009373 on December 1, 2016, to acquire force protection services for its Nevada Field Office (“NFO”). Administrative R. (“AR”) 900-01, 959. According to the solicitation’s Performance Work Statement (“PWS”):

The primary missions of NNSA/NFO are to support the Stockpile Stewardship, Nonproliferation, Counter Terrorism, Strategic Partnership . . . , Radioactive Waste Management, and National Emergency Response programs while providing a venue for other national security activities. . . .

NNSA/NFO is responsible for implementing operational safety and security program requirements associated with meeting mission requirements. The NNSA/NFO provides a denial strategy to prevent access to nuclear explosive devices or prevent removal of Category I special nuclear material but ensures that recapture/recovery capabilities continue to exist in the event that a denial strategy fails. NNSA/NFO has developed management and operating plans to provide adequate protective force protection and physical security systems and barriers commensurate with threat guidance documents.

Id. at 959. In furtherance of these requirements, the successful offeror would be required to perform tasks in five areas: General Management, Protective Force, Technical Security Systems, Force-on-Force Exercises, and Reports and Deliverables. Id. at 960-74. Of relevance in this protest, General Management tasks would be performed on a firm-fixed-price basis, and Protective Force tasks would be performed on a time-and-materials basis.1 Id. at 960, 970. The NNSA contemplated awarding a contract with an initial term of one year and four one-year option periods. Id. at 903.

Pursuant to section L of the solicitation, offerors were to submit separate technical and price proposals. Id. at 1244. The technical proposal was to contain sections describing the offeror’s (1) approach and staffing plan, (2) past performance, and (3) small business participation plan. Id. at 1250-52. The first section of the technical proposal was to include the following information:

1 In a number of the documents included in the administrative record, “firm-fixed price” is abbreviated as “FFP” and “time and materials” is abbreviated as “T&M.”

-2- (A) Approach: The Offeror shall describe its proposed technical approach for accomplishing . . . the PWS. As part of the proposed approach, address any technical risks associated with performing these requirements and the proposed approach to avoid or minimize those technical risks.

....

(B) Staffing Plan: The Offeror shall describe the labor categories and job duties of all proposed labor categories to perform the work required by the entire PWS. The plan shall also identify the estimated quantity of proposed full-time equivalent [(“FTE”) employees] allocated to each labor category for the basic period and for each option period as well as in a Staffing Plan Summary (see Attachment 11). Additionally, the Offeror shall describe its proposed approach for ensuring sufficiency of staffing pool resources to respond promptly to problems or program changes. The Offeror shall provide written resumes for the personnel who will perform as Key personnel . . . for accomplishing the requirements of the PWS.

Id. at 1250. As reflected in the questions and answers incorporated into the solicitation, offerors were to propose a staffing plan based on the information provided in the solicitation and their proposed technical approach; the NNSA expressly declined to provide offerors with information regarding existing staffing beyond what was included in the solicitation. Id. at 1300, 1313, 1315.

The price proposal, in turn, was to include detailed information concerning labor costs for the contract’s base period and the four option years. Id. at 1252, 1254. Under the heading “Overview and General Requirements,” the NNSA provided:

The Offeror shall identify its proposed prices by completing and submitting the Cost Model . . . (see Attachment 23), which accommodates both the FFP and T&M requirements. The Offeror shall propose fully-burdened (except for profit as discussed above), fixed[] labor rates for all years for the T&M effort as well as firm fixed prices, depending on the item number and PWS area. The Cost Model includes Government baselined travel and legacy defined benefit pension amounts that all offerors shall use in their proposed prices and these are considered “material” under the T&M effort. For evaluation purposes, assume the Government baselined [Other Direct Cost (“ODC”)] amounts in the Cost Model include all direct and indirect costs that shall not be further burdened by Offerors. . . . Exclude the Government baselined legacy defined benefit pension plan costs from the fringe pool and include them in ODCs.

Id. at 1252; accord id. at 1310 (indicating, in the questions and answers incorporated into the solicitation, that “[a]ll legacy defined benefit pensions and related costs shall be in ODCs and

-3- shall not be included in the FFP or the T&M rates”); see also id. at 1274-92 (containing Attachment 23, the Cost Model). In addition, the NNSA cautioned:

[U]nreasonably low or high proposed costs or prices may be grounds for eliminating a proposal from consideration on the basis that the Offeror does not understand the requirements, has made a mistake, or has made an unreasonable offer. If estimated costs/prices to perform the proposed effort have been decreased due to efficiencies or management decision, provide complete rationale for the reduction. The burden of proof for credibility of proposed costs/prices rests with the Offeror.

Id. at 1253.

Then, under the heading “Specific Cost/Price Requirements,” the NNSA provided the following pertinent instructions:

(2) Offerors shall propose prices based on the PWS . . .

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