McConnell Jones Lanier & Murphy, LLP v. United States

128 Fed. Cl. 218, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1379, 2016 WL 5335796
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedSeptember 8, 2016
Docket15-1351C
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 128 Fed. Cl. 218 (McConnell Jones Lanier & Murphy, LLP 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
McConnell Jones Lanier & Murphy, LLP v. United States, 128 Fed. Cl. 218, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1379, 2016 WL 5335796 (uscfc 2016).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

KAPLAN, Judge.

This post-award bid protest concerns a contract with the Department of Labor (DOL) to provide comprehensive support services for the Shriver Job Corps Center. After DOL awarded the contract to Alternative Perspective, Inc. (API), Plaintiff McConnell Jones Lanier & Murphy, LLP (MJLM), a disappointed offeror, filed this action. MJLM asserts that the agency improperly evaluated the technical aspects of the proposals, that it failed to conduct a proper cost realism analysis, and that its best value determination was unreasonable.

Pending before the Court are the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record, as well as MJLM’s Motion to Supplement the Administrative Record and the government’s Motion to Strike. For the reasons set forth below, MJLM’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record is DENIED, and the government’s cross-motion is GRANTED. In addition, the government’s Motion to Strike is DENIED and *223 MJLM’s Motion to Supplement the Administrative Record is GRANTED for limited purposes, as set forth below.

BACKGROUND

I. The Solicitation

A. The Request for Proposals

DOL administers the Job Corps program to help “young people learn a career, earn a high school diploma or GED, and find and keep a good job.” See DOL, Job Corps, www. jobcorps.gov (last visited September 8, 2016). The program operates 126 centers nationwide and serves over 60,000 students. DOL, Find a Job Corps Center, www.jobcorps.gov/ centers.aspx (last visited September 8, 2016). Each center works to address barriers to employment by providing students with career development services that include “academic, career technical, career success and independent living skills, career readiness training, and support services.” Administrative Record (AR) Tab 6 at 46.

On December 14, 2012, DOL issued a request for proposals (RFP) DOL12QA20003, which solicited proposals to operate the Shri-ver Job Corps Center (Shriver), located in Boston, Massachusetts. Id. at 42. The RFP was a small business set-aside that contemplated the award of a cost-plus-incentive-fee contract for a two-year base period with three one-year options. Id. at 63.

According to the Statement of Work contained in the solicitation, the contractor would “provide material, services, and all necessary personnel” to operate Shriver and serve approximately 272 residential students and 28 nonresidential students. Id. at 46-47. Specifically, the contractor would do the following:

(1) Provide academic, career technical, career success, employability, and independent living skills training.
(2) Provide health care, counseling, and other support services as needed.
(3) Conduct program operations in a setting that is clean, well maintained, and • safe.
(4) Assist youth in obtaining employment, additional education or training, or entry into the Armed Forces.
(5) Provide support that prepares graduates to maintain long-term attachment to the labor market or further educational opportunities.
(6) Integrate center operations with the local workforce development systems, employers, the business community, and community-based organizations.

Id.

Offerors were instructed to submit a technical proposal, past performance information, a business management proposal, and a management capability review. Id. at 154-69. As relevant to this bid protest, the technical proposal was broken into two parts, a technical approach proposal and a staff resources proposal. Id. at 154,157.

Pursuant to the RFP, an offeror’s technical approach proposal would include the following, among other things: 1) methods for conducting outreach and establishing community partnerships; 2) admissions - procedures; 3) strategies and methods for providing instruction and meeting the needs of students during the Career Preparation and Career Development Periods; 4) strategies to assist students in developing healthy lifestyles and to ensure a safe and healthy living and learning environment for students; and 5) methods/strategies for managing the Career Transition Period, to assist students in securing placement in their chosen fields. Id. at 154-57. Offerors were advised that in addressing these matters, they were to “demonstrate [their] understanding of the work and how [their] approach will meet the required outcomes and quality indicators specified in the [solicitation].” Id. at 154.

The staff resources proposal would consist of specified information such as organizational charts, staff schedules, position descriptions, resumes, identification of key personnel, an explanation of corporate services and support, a narrative detailing how staff would be developed, retained, and rewarded, and a transition/phase-out plan. Id. at 157-59. The RFP did not specify any particular number of staff (or “FTE”) the contractor would be required to assign to the Center.

*224 B. The RFP’s Evaluation Criteria

Under the solicitation, the agency would consider four factors in its evaluation of the offerors’ proposals, which were, in descending order of importance: 1) technical approach; 2) staff resources; 3) past performance; and 4) costs. This protest concerns the agency’s evaluation of the first, second, and fourth evaluation factors. The third factor— past performance—is not at issue.

The RFP provided that both the technical approach and staff resources factors would be evaluated by a panel, which would assign to each of the factors either an exceptional, very good, satisfactory, marginal, or unsatisfactory rating. Id. at 172-73. The RFP specified that “all ratings are considered advisory only, and are not binding on the source selection official.” Id. at 172.

The technical approach factor contained six subfactors,' listed as follows in descending order of importance: 1) career development period; 2) career transition services; 3) career preparation period; 4) admissions; 5) outreach; and 6) administrative and management support services. Id. Tab 6b at 323.1-23.3. For each .subfactor, the RFP provided that the agency’s evaluation would be based upon: 1) the extent to which the proposal demonstrated an “understanding of the work to be accomplished” and how that work will be performed in accordance with the Job Corps program’s mission and policies; 2) how effectively the proposal recognized and tailored the programs “to operate in the context of the State’s eligible population, and the local and regional labor market;” and 3) how effective the proposal was “in offering feasible strategies and methods to ensure the achievement of Job Corps’ specified outcomes and quality indicators.” Id.

The staffing resources factor contained the following six subfactors, which are also listed in descending order of importance: 1) adequacy of staffing; 2) corporate oversight and support; 3) proposed center director; 4) key personnel; 5) staff development and incentives; and 6) transition/phase out plan. Id. Tab 6b at 323.3-23.4.

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128 Fed. Cl. 218, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1379, 2016 WL 5335796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-jones-lanier-murphy-llp-v-united-states-uscfc-2016.