GSI Pacific, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 2025
Docket63520
StatusPublished

This text of GSI Pacific, Inc. (GSI Pacific, Inc.) 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
GSI Pacific, Inc., (asbca 2025).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of - ) ) GSI Pacific, Inc. ) ASBCA No. 63520 ) Under Contract No. W9128A-17-C-0004 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Marisa M. Bavand, Esq. Emily A. Yoshiwara, Esq. Dorsey & Whitney LLP Seattle, WA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Jonathan A. Swanson, Esq. Jacob N. Haddad, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorneys U.S. Army Engineer District, Honolulu

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE O’CONNELL ON THE PARTIES’ CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

The parties have cross moved for summary judgment in this dispute concerning the scope of work required by a contract to remove and dispose of munitions and explosives left on a site on the Big Island of Hawaii. The Board grants the motions in part and denies them in part.

STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTIONS

The following facts are undisputed or uncontroverted, except as noted.

1. This appeal involves a site referred to as the Area M Munitions Response Site, which consists of 5,074 acres on the northwest side of the island of Hawaii. Area M is located south of the former Lalamilo Firing Range and contained military munitions. (R4, tab C-001 at 009 (hereinafter “C-1 at 9”), tab C-2 at 6)

2. The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) previously awarded contracts for the removal of munitions in Area M starting in the northern portion and moving south. These contracts cleared just over half the site, or 2,635.7 acres. During those removals the contractors removed a variety of munitions from the ground surface and subsurface. (R4, tab C-1 at 13-14, tab C-2 at 6) 3. USACE conducted a Feasibility Study to evaluate remedial alternatives for the remaining portion of Area M and issued a report in September 2015. The Feasibility Study resulted in the identification of four remediation alternatives. (USACE resp. to app. statement of undisputed material facts (ASUMF) ¶¶ 9, 12; app. supp. R4, tab 6).

4. On March 16, 2017, after a public comment period, USACE issued a Decision Document which described the four alternatives from the Feasibility Study, including Alternative 3, which was entitled “Surface and Subsurface Munitions Removal (Uninvestigated Areas-Unobstructed) and Land Use Controls (Entire MRS [Munitions Response Site])” (R4, tab C-1 at 32-33, 35-36). The Decision Document stated that USACE had selected Alternative 3 (id. at 38).

5. USACE had contemplated awarding a contract to clear all remaining areas in Area M. However, due to funding limitations, USACE proceeded with the remediation of 850 acres. The contract described the location of the 850 acres as a “sliver along the western boundary of Area M,” and an area extending from the southern border of the previously cleared area. (R4, tab C-2 at 7, 26)

6. USACE awarded the above-captioned contract to appellant, GSI Pacific, Inc. (GSI) for $4,596,660.98, on July 17, 2017 (R4, tab C-2 at 1). The contract stated that the objective was to remove and dispose of munitions and explosives of concern in the 850 acre-site to reduce the risk to human health and the environment (id. at 5).

7. On September 28, 2019, the parties entered a bilateral modification with no change in price to reduce the acres cleared to “650 acres by analog method and approximately 50 acres by Digital Geophysical Methods” (R4, tab C-5 at 1, 4). Analog remediation means that the contractor uses a metal detector (compl. ¶ 19; R4, tab D-9 at 2). 1

Facts Related to Whether the Contract Required Removal in Both the Surface and Subsurface Areas

8. Section 4.5, Task 5, of the contract (Perform MEC [munitions and explosives of concern] Remedial Action at Area M-Project 7 (850 acres)), described the work as follows:

1 Although not necessary to decide the pending motions, we note that the government represented to the Board at a February 28, 2025, status conference that Digital Geophysical Methods refers to what is essentially a more sophisticated metal detector (Bd. memo. of conf. call dtd. February 28, 2025). 2 The Contractor shall supply all personnel, tools, equipment, communications, transportation, materials, and supervision to integrate, manage, and safely execute the destruction and/or disposal of MEC and MD [munitions debris] at portions of Area M as specified in section 3.1.3 of this PWS. Subsurface removal shall be to a depth of detection of the instrument . . . .

(R4, tab C-2 at 13)

9. Section 3, Background and History, stated at section 3.1.3 that USACE had conducted a “Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study (RI/FS)” and that the “RI/FS effort resulted in a Decision Document” (id. at 6-7).

10. Section 3.1.3.1 described the approved alternative 3 in the Decision Document as: “Surface and subsurface munitions removal at 2,438.3 acres . . .” (id. at 7).

11. Section 4.5.4, MEC Accountability, provided “[t]he Contractor shall maintain a detailed accounting of all MEC and MEC components encountered . . . to include . . . location and depth of MEC. . .” (id. at 14).

12. GSI contends that the contract required subsurface removal in less than 10 acres of the site. The contract does not state this, but GSI relies upon the Decision Document and the Feasibility Study for its contention (e.g., ASUMF ¶¶ 34-35 (disputed by USACE)).

13. The contract references both the Feasibility Study and the Decision Document but treats them somewhat differently. With respect to the former, the contract merely states in the “Background and History” section, that USACE conducted a “Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study” that “resulted in a Decision Document” (R4, tab C-2 at 6-7).

14. With respect to the Decision Document, the Section 1 of the contract affirmatively states that the “work is to be performed in accordance with” the Decision Document (id. at 5).

3 The Decision Document

15. GSI calls our attention to a statement in the Decision Document that describes the selected Alternative 3:

Under Alternative 3, a remedial action to cleanup surface and subsurface munitions would be performed in Uninvestigated Areas that are not obstructed by pavement or structures (2,436.3 acres). In areas where the rugged ‘a‘a lava is present with minimal cover soil, this alternative would primarily be a surface removal. However, various cracks and crevices are present in the ‘a‘a lava’s areas. It is possible for MEC to be present in deeper cracks and crevices, which may be beyond the depth of detection of the instrument.

(R4, tab C-1 at 32) (emphasis added)

16. The Decision Document also contains information about the geology of Area M as follows:

The northern areas of Area M are comprised of the Hāpuna-Waikui-Lālāmilo complex, a very cobbly medial silt loam formed in volcanic ash with 20-in to 40-in thick deposits typically overlaying fragmented ‘a‘a lava. The soil types in the southern portions of Area M where the relatively recent ‘a‘a lava flows are present are classified as lava flow or extremely cobbly sand. Slopes range from 2 to 20%. The southern areas of Area M are classified as very stony lands, consisting of very scattered patches (less than 1%) of shallow soil material and a high proportion of a`a lava outcrops which result in a very rugged terrain. In most areas, there is no soil cover and the outcrops are bare of vegetation, except for mosses, lichens, ferns, and a few small ohia trees.

(Id. at 25) (emphasis added)

4 17. USACE draws our attention to the Decision Document’s repeated characterization of the work as surface and subsurface remediation. Some examples include:

 “The selected remedy for the Area M MRS is Surface and Subsurface Munitions Removal (Uninvestigated Areas - Unobstructed) and Land Use Controls for the entire MRS acreage” (R4, tab C-1 at 10) (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
GSI Pacific, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gsi-pacific-inc-asbca-2025.