ECC CENTCOM Constructors, LLC

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedSeptember 4, 2018
DocketASBCA No. 60647
StatusPublished

This text of ECC CENTCOM Constructors, LLC (ECC CENTCOM Constructors, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ECC CENTCOM Constructors, LLC, (asbca 2018).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of -- ) ) ECC CENTCOM Constructors, LLC ) ASBCA No. 60647 ) Under Contract No. W912ER-l l-D-00IO )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Dirk D. Haire, Esq. Jessica Haire, Esq. P. Sean Milani-nia, Esq. Ronni Two, Esq. Fox Rothschild LLP Washington, DC

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Daniel B. McConnell, Esq. Rebecca L. Bockmann, Esq. Sarah L. Hinkle, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorneys U.S. Army Engineer District, Middle East Winchester, VA

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE O'CONNELL

This appeal arises from a contract to construct two buildings for the Navy in Manama, Bahrain. Appellant, ECC CENT COM Constructors, LLC (ECC), challenges the contracting officer's termination of the contract for default. The Board conducted a hearing from 10-14 July 2017. We deny the appeal.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Project Background

1. On 16 June 2011, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps or USACE) awarded ECC an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity, multiple award task order contract (MATOC) through which the Corps could award finn-fixed-price task orders for design-build and construction projects in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. The MATOC had an estimated value of $1.52 billion. (R4, tab 11 at 1-2)

2. On 19 February 2013, ECC submitted a proposal for MATOC task order 6 (R4, tab 27). Budget constraints resulting from sequestration significantly delayed the award, see National Federation of Federal Employees, local 1442 v. Department of the Army, 810 F.3d 1272, 1275 n.1 (Fed. Cir. 2015), but ECC agreed to extend the validity of its offer until 17 September 2013 (R4, tabs 56-57, 238). The contracting officer awarded the contract to ECC on 11 September 2013 (R4, tab 28), but a bid protest delayed issuance of the notice to proceed until 2 January 2014 (R4, tab 62).

3. At award, the contract had a value of $40,301,215.55 and required ECC to design and build two structures (R4, tab 29 at 2-7). The first was a transient enlisted quarters that would provide housing for sailors and other government personnel for up to a few weeks; contracting officer's representative (COR) Greg Walgate described this structure as a simple barracks (tr. 1/47-48). The second structure, a dining facility for officers and enlisted personnel was, in Mr. Walgate's view, a more complicated structure (tr. 1/48; R4, tab 29 at 408).

4. The contract required completion of the work within 710 days of receipt of the notice to proceed, which resulted in an initial completion date of 13 December 2015 (R4, tab 29 at 14, tab 62 at 1). On 14 April 2016, the contracting officer issued Modification No. 20, which changed the completion date slightly to 16 December 2015, where it would remain through termination (R4, tab 49 at 2).

5. The contract contained various standard clauses including Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.249-10, DEFAULT (FIXED-PRICE CONSTRUCTION) (APR 1984) (R4, tab 11 at 14 ); and FAR 52.211-12, LIQUIDATED DAMAGES-CONSTRUCTION (SEP 2000) (R4, tab 29 at 14). The latter clause set liquidated damages at $2,397 per calendar day of delay.

Events Leading Up to Termination

A. The Show Cause Notice and ECC's Response

6. On 12 December 2015 (one day before the initial completion date), contracting officer Peter DeMattei (CO DeMattei) notified ECC of his intent to assess liquidated damages for late completion (R4, tab 194 ).

7. On 30 December 2015, two weeks beyond the modified completion date, CO DeMattei issued a show cause letter, citing ECC's untimely performance (R4, tab 197). Among other things, he stated that ECC 's most recent pay request (Progress Payment Request No. 14), approved on 22 November 2015, indicated that ECC had completed only 3 7 percent of the work. This pay request was for the month of September 2015 but was the most recent because ECC did not submit pay request No. 15 until 18 January 2016 (R4, tab 228). CO DeMattei had followed ECC's progress by reviewing daily reports and talking to USACE field personnel (tr. 3/37-38).

l 8. CO DeMattei further observed in the show cause letter that ECC's most recent schedule showed a completion date of 31 August 2016 (more than eight months late), but he expressed skepticism that ECC could achieve that date (R4, tab 197 at 2). He directed ECC in its show cause response to provide a schedule that was "realistic and acceptable" (id. at 3).

9. On 9 January 2016, ECC submitted a response to the show cause notice (R4, tab 198). ECC admitted that that the project was only 51. 94°/o complete, but alleged that it had suffered, among other things, mobilization delays, weather delays, security gate delays, material shortages, and manpower shortages. ECC calculated that it had been delayed 262 days. (Id. at 1-3, 6) However, ECC did not state that its response was a claim or that it was seeking a final decision from the contracting officer, nor did it seek a sum certain. In fact, the letter suggested a claim would be forthcoming because for each alleged delay it listed the "No. of Days Direct Impact to be Claimed.'' (Id. at 6)

10. ECC attached to its show cause response a schedule that showed a 31 August 2016 completion date (R4, tab 198 at 21, 62). ECC subsequently submitted a schedule dated 31 January 2016 showing completion on 7 September 2016 (R4, tab 967 at 1, 35).

11. During the course of the project, ECC had a history of submitting schedules that it failed to meet (see, e.g., R4, tabs 155, 661, 667, 673, 686, 707, 723 at 2). The most striking example of this involved two schedules submitted in 2015. Under a schedule recovery plan ECC submitted on 11 May 2015, ECC stated that it would complete the project by 17 April 2016, more than four months late (R4, tab 160 at 4 ). ECC did not make the progress detailed in this schedule. It subsequently submitted a 31 August 2015 schedule that changed the completion date to 31 August 2016 (R4, tab 759 at 16-17). Thus, in the 112 days between 11 May and 31 August 2015, ECC fell a further 136 days behind schedule.

12. Against this backdrop, on 17 February 2016, CO DeMattei met with ECC program director Keith Pushaw. CO DeMattei informed Mr. Pushaw that he did not consider the 7 September 2016 completion date to be realistic (tr. 2/188). ECC responded by submitting another schedule on 4 March 2016, referred to as T62I. This schedule further pushed the completion date back to 30 November 2016. (R4, tab 205 at 4)

13. At the end of February 2016, ECC calculated that it had completed 59 percent of the contract work (R4, tab 205 at 5, tab 230 at I; ex. A-7 at 6). To complete the project in nine months as specified in the T62I schedule, ECC would have needed to average about 4.5 percent completion per month for the next nine months, with some months higher (and some months lower) than this average. Thus, the T62I

t schedule projected completion of 5 .19 percent in March and 5. 94 percent in April 2016. (R4, tab 205 at 5)

14. CO DeMattei tasked a USACE scheduler, Ramon Sundquist, with reviewing the T62I schedule. Mr. Sundquist wrote a memo to CO DeMattei dated 16 March 2016 in which he provided his analysis (R4, tab 1032). Mr. Sundquist had some critical and some positive comments on the schedule. He stated:

I don't like that so many changes have been made to original durations, this essentially destroys the as-built from baseline schedule, or at a minimum makes it very difficult to make comparisons of actual performance vs. originally intended. For this reason alone, I would not recommend that this schedule be approved.

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