Global Dynamics, LLC v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJanuary 25, 2017
Docket16-1311
StatusPublished

This text of Global Dynamics, LLC v. United States (Global Dynamics, 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
Global Dynamics, LLC v. United States, (uscfc 2017).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 16-1311C (Originally filed: December 16, 2016) (Reissued: January 25, 2017)1

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GLOBAL DYNAMICS, LLC,

Plaintiff,

v. Post-award bid protest; Price analysis; Price realism; waiver.

THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant,

LOYAL SOURCE GOVERNMENT SERVICES, LLC.,

Intervenor.

Edward J. Tolchin, Washington, DC, with whom was Revee M. Walters, for plaintiff.

Jana Moses, United States Department of Justice, Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, with whom were Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, Debroah A. Bynum, Assistant Director, Washington, DC, for defendant. Julie Glascott, U.S. Army Legal Services Agency, of counsel.

Michelle E. Littken, Washington, DC, for intervenor.

1 This opinion was originally issued under seal in order to afford the parties an opportunity to agree upon protected material to be redacted. Those redactions are indicated by brackets. OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

This is a post-award bid protest of the Army’s decision not to award one of several contracts for nursing, medical, and ancillary services in Hawaii and Guam to the plaintiff, Global Dynamics, LLC (“Global”). Oral argument on the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record was held on December 9, 2016. As stated at the conclusion of the argument, because plaintiff waived its right to protest the substance of the Army’s discussions with it and because plaintiff has not otherwise established irrationality on the part of the agency, we deny plaintiff’s motion and grant defendant’s and intervenor’s cross-motions.

BACKGROUND

The Army issued request for proposals No. W81K04-14-R-001 (“the RFP”) on April 22, 2014. It solicited offers for medical and ancillary services staffing at military medical facilities in Hawaii and Guam. The solicitation was set aside entirely for small businesses. It anticipated award to a minimum of five offerors per labor specialty for an indefinite delivery and indefinite quantity of service provided under each contract. Offerors could bid on only one labor specialty or any combination of them: physician, traveling physician, nursing, traveling nursing, ancillary medical, and traveling ancillary medical services. Each specialty was further subdivided into multiple labor categories. Services were to be ordered by the issuance of task orders for which the contract holders would further compete. The task orders thereafter were to be on a fixed-price basis.

The solicitation called for a best value procurement based on three factors. They were technical quality, performance risk (past and present performance), and price. The first two were of equal importance and, when combined, of significantly more importance than price. Offerors were required to submit one volume for each factor. The RFP stated that the agency would make a trade off determination between price and the technical factors to determine the best value and most advantageous contract for the government. See Administrative Record (“AR”) 272.

The first two factors, technical quality and performance risk, were rated adjectively, and price was ranked based on a total evaluated price calculated

2 for the entire proposal based on a matrix of labor rates for each labor category multiplied by the government’s estimate of hours needed for each category. The contract has an anticipated four-year life. The offerors’ proposed rates were in effect ceiling prices because each task order issued under the contract would be further competed among the contract holders.

In order to be considered for an award, offerors had to be rated at least “acceptable” for technical quality and “satisfactory” for performance risk. Id. The solicitation stated that price would be evaluated for reasonableness “based on adequate competition.” AR 276. This was not further defined in the RFP nor did it list any other evaluative criteria for price.

The Army received 45 offers, and the Source Selection Evaluation Board (“SSEB”) met and reviewed the technical volumes of the proposals, and the Performance Risk Assessment Group met and reviewed the performance risk submissions. They assigned adjectival ratings for reach offeror. The Contracting Officer (“CO”) adjusted six of the SSEB’s technical ratings after reviewing all of the results. AR 1286. The CO also performed the price calculation to come up with each offeror’s total evaluated price. The Source Selection Authority (“SSA”) reviewed all of these ratings and selected 18 offerors to comprise the competitive range.2 Not all of the offerors in the competitive range met the criteria for award eligibility initially, but this was allowed because of the SSA’s determination to hold discussions as part of a negotiated procurement under Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”) part 15. The SSA determined that the problems presented by each of the proposals in the competitive range could potentially be improved through discussions and could thus result in an award. See AR 1290.

Of the 18 offerors in the competitive range, Global Dynamics had the lowest evaluated price at [ ]. The highest offeror’s price was over [ ] dollars. The Army’s internal estimate for the four-year life of the contract was $51,895,298.88.

Plaintiff was presented with eight written discussion items in the first round of negotiations, two of which are relevant to its protest. They concerned Global’s proposed prices. The agency informed plaintiff that its “total proposed price . . . appear[ed] low when compared to all other offerors in the

2 For this procurement, the SSA and CO were not the same individual.

3 competitive range.” AR 1386. That was followed directly by a request to “review your total proposed price.” Id. The next discussion item listed 29 labor category prices that the agency determined to “appear low when compared to all other offerors in the competitive range.” Id. That was followed by a similar request for Global to “review your proposed hourly rates for the specialities listed.” Id.

A review of the discussion items sent to the other 17 offerors in the competitive range reveals that all of them received discussion items regarding their proposed prices. Four offerors were informed that their total evaluated price appeared high in comparison to the other offerors, and three offerors, including Global, were told that their total prices appeared low as compared to the other offerors. The agency “request[ed]” all seven of them to “review [their] total proposed price[s].” E.g., AR 1448. All 18 of the competitive range offerors were informed that some number of their proposed prices for one or more labor specialties were high, low, or both as compared to all other admitted offerors. The agency asked all of them to review these proposed prices. Eight offerors were told that their price proposals contained rounding errors. The Army asked these offerors to “correct [their] proposed rates to comply with solicitation requirements.” E.g., AR 1443. One offeror was informed that it had not listed a price for one labor specialty, and the agency requested that the offeror supply that price. All 18 offerors were invited to make proposal revisions and submit revised proposals to the agency by June 2, 2015.

The Administrative Record reveals that the agency’s price analysis was comprised of calculating the mean of every offeror’s price for each labor specialty and the mean of all of the offeror’s total evaluated prices and then comparing that mean against each individual offeror’s prices (both for each specialty and the overall price). Any price found to be at least one standard deviation above or below the mean was flagged as a discussion item. See AR 1292-93.

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