Fcn, Inc. v. United States

115 Fed. Cl. 335, 2014 WL 1352882
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedApril 4, 2014
Docket1:13-cv-00616
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 115 Fed. Cl. 335 (Fcn, 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
Fcn, Inc. v. United States, 115 Fed. Cl. 335, 2014 WL 1352882 (uscfc 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

HORN, J.

The protestor, FCN, Inc. (FCN), filed a post-award bid protest in this court challenging the Ar National Guard’s award of a contract for a “Mass Notification System/Net-Centric Aerting System” (Mass Notification System) to Reliable Government *339 Solutions, Inc. (RGS) 2 pursuant to Solicitation W9133L-13-R-0015 (the Solicitation). Before filing suit in this court, FCN filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office (the GAO), which was denied. In this court, the protestor states: “The FCN proposal received the highest ranking for all non-price factors outlined in the RFP [Request for Proposal].” Therefore, the protestor alleges that the Air National Guard contracting officer awarded the contract to RGS in violation of the Federal Acquisitions Regulations (FAR) by: (1) “accepting a proposal that relied on RGS’s offer to utilize Government Furnished Equipment (GFE),” (2) “accepting RGS’s offer to submit a ‘no cost’ licensing fee and ‘no-cost’ telephony communications previously provided to the U.S. Air Force under a previous contract,” (3) “failing to perform a proper price realism analysis on the proposal of RGS and its subcontractor AtHoc,” and (4) “allowing the RGS proposal to violate the stated proposal instructions by including pricing information in its technical proposal.” To the extent the current Solicitation violates the applicable procurement regulations, the protestor asks the court to enjoin implementation of contract W9133L-13-P-0034, awarded to RGS under the Solicitation, and order the government to re-evaluate the existing proposals. 3 The protestor also seeks any other relief the court deems appropriate, including, but not limited to, attorney’s fees and the costs of maintaining the protest. The parties fully briefed cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record and oral argument was held.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Pre-Solicitation History

On September 22, 2012, the Air National Guard issued solicitation W9133L-12-R-0073 (the subsequently cancelled solicitation), under the work statement “Desktop Alert (DTA) Build-out.” (emphasis in original). The subsequently cancelled solicitation’s due date was listed as September 26, 2012. The parties stipulated that the subsequently can-celled solicitation was for the procurement of “hardware and software to expand the ANG’s [Air National Guard’s] Desktop Alert (DTA) environment.” The parties have stipulated that “Desktop Alert is a Mass Notification System/Net+Centrie Alerting System (MNS/NCAS) created and sold by Desktop Alert, Inc.” On September 28, 2012, Ly Tran, Vice President of AtHoc, Inc. (AtHoc), a competitor of Desktop Alert, sent an e-mail to contracting specialist Willie L. Holmes objecting to the subsequently cancelled solicitation’s requirement to use Desktop Alert, and alleging that it was a waste of taxpayer funds and encouraged unfair competition. Mr. Tran stated in his e-mail: “We vehemently protest the Solicitation W9133L-12-R-0073 for the fielding and sustainment of Desktop Alerts across the Air National Guard.” Mr. Tran claimed in the e-mail that “the Government needs to open up this soni-cation [sic] to new competition for new vendors such as AtHoc.” He listed some of the purported advantages of using AtHoe’s software, including that “AtHoc is already deployed across 120+ U.S. Air Force bases,” and that the “US Air Force already purchased licenses for ALL USAF [United States Air Force] INCLUDING ANG (!).” (capitalization and punctuation in original). Mr. Tran also asserted in his e-mail that:

Furthermore the USAF negotiated an UNLIMITED USAGE for its alerting capability including no cost for any phone call or text message or email or desktop alert sent. Last USAF [sic] already purchased a pool of lines to be available for *340 ALL USAF (including ANG) of over [redacted] lines. By not providing AtHoc the ability to complete [sic] for this solicitation, ANG will not benefit from all that the USAF ALREADY PAID FOR!

(capitalization in original).

On October 8, 2012, Clayton S. Marsh, counsel to AtHoc, submitted a supplement to the AtHoc objections to the subsequently cancelled solicitation (W9133L-12-R-0073). Mr. Marsh offered a number of additional arguments as to why the subsequently can-celled solicitation was flawed. Mr. Marsh stated that the synopsis of the announcement was incorrect, claiming that “[t]he FBO [Federal Business Opportunities] announcement described this procurement as ‘DESKTOP ALERT SUSTAINMENT AND SUPPORT’ .... In truth, the Solicitation is for a massive build-out of a new hardware and software implementation of Desktop Alert.” (capitalization in original). Mr. Marsh also stated that the “FBO announcement allowed only one day to respond. It was posted September 27, at 10:06 a.m., and required offers by noon on September 28.” 4 Mr. Marsh continued that “[t]here are no ‘[factors and significant subfactors that will be used to evaluate the proposal and their relative importance’ as minimally required by FAR [Federal Acquisition Regulation] 15.203(a)(4).” Mr. Marsh also stated that “the specific materials needed to fully respond are indicated (repeatedly) to be in the ‘attached LOM’ [list of materials] — which is not attached.’ ” Additionally, Mr. Marsh claimed that there was a potential conflict of interest due to unequal access to information, and that the National Guard Bureau had already purchased a “DTA [Desktop Alert] software alert system, covering ‘all personnel in the Guard at the Air and Army Guard HQs ’ ” (emphasis in original). 5 Mr. Marsh further commented on the availability of AtHoc’s system throughout the United States Air Force and stated, “the existing Air Force purchase and installation of AtHoc’s system for desktop, telephony, email, and text alerting includes [redacted] Telephone Alerting lines available to Air National Guard. Through more than 20 different contracts, the Air Force has purchased licenses from AtHoc totaling 700,000 users.” In the Marsh e-mail were copies of e-mails and sections of Air Force — AtHoc contracts in support of AtHoc’s position.

On October 11, 2012, Anthony Mara of the National Guard Bureau sent an e-mail asking Air Force Colonel Rigel Hinckley for comments regarding AtHoc’s allegations. Colonel Hinckley responded, as follows:

The truth has been stretched to the point where it can no longer be discerned from wild promises or innuendos. We currently do not have a license agreement that allows existing AtHoc licenses to be used wherever we want. DTA 4.x and 5.x are both currently going through certification and will not be turned off.
The unfair competition should be used against AtHoc for their attempt to acquire the Enterprise contract without competing for it. The EIS [Enterprise Information System] PMO [Program Management Office] continues to work through the Enterprise contract award.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 Fed. Cl. 335, 2014 WL 1352882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fcn-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2014.