Northeast Construction, Inc. v. United States

119 Fed. Cl. 596, 2015 WL 870100
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedFebruary 27, 2015
Docket14-1076C
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 119 Fed. Cl. 596 (Northeast Construction, 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
Northeast Construction, Inc. v. United States, 119 Fed. Cl. 596, 2015 WL 870100 (uscfc 2015).

Opinion

Bid Protest; Motion to Dismiss; Cross-Motions for Judgment on the Administrative Record; One Technically Acceptable Proposal; Solicitation Amendment Issued to Offerors Previously Excluded From the Competition; Challenge to Terms of Solicitation Amendment; Waiver; Blue & Gold Fleet; COMINT Systems; Existence of an Enforceable Contract; Contract Required to Be in Writing

OPINION AND ORDER

SWEENEY, Judge

In this bid protest, plaintiff Northeast Construction, Inc. asserts that the procuring agency improperly cancelled the contract it awarded to plaintiff, and alternatively that the procuring agency improperly amended the solicitation and reopened the competition. Defendant moves for the dismissal of the latter claim, arguing that plaintiff waived that claim by failing to raise it in a timely maimer. Additionally, the parties cross-move for judgment on the administrative record with respect to both claims. As explained in more detail below, plaintiff waived its claim regarding the amendment of the solicitation, and has not established that it had an enforceable contract with the government. Consequently, the court grants defendant’s motion to dismiss and, with respect to plaintiffs remaining claim, grants defendant’s motion for judgment on the administrative record.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Solicitation

On April 22, 2013, the Garrison Contracting Division of the United States Army Contracting Command — Aberdeen Proving *599 Ground (“Army”) issued solicitation W91ZLK012-R-0007-0006 for the repair and maintenance of roofing systems throughout the Aberdeen Proving Ground. 1 AR 82. The Army contemplated awarding a firm-fixed-price requirements contract with an initial term of one year and four one-year option periods. Id. It expected, as reflected in its source selection plan, that the source selection process would be brief — lasting just under two-and-one-half months. Id. at 942.

Pursuant to the solicitation — as amended through June 25, 2013 — offerors were to submit their proposals in two binders: one that contained a technical proposal and past performance information, and another that contained a price proposal. Id. at 106. The technical proposal was to include evidence of the offeror’s bonding capacity; a discussion of the offeror’s quality control, health and safety, and environmental control plans; and a discussion of the offeror’s plan for contract management. Id. at 108-10.

The Army intended to award a contract to the offeror with the lowest-priee, technically acceptable proposal. Id. at 122. To accomplish this goal, the Army would evaluate the offerors’ proposals on three factors: .Technical, Past Performance, and Price. Id. at 112. The Technical factor was further divided into five subfaetors: Bonding Capacity, Quality Control Plan, Health and Safety Plan, Environmental Plan, and Contract Management Plan. Id. The Army would first evaluate the offerors’ proposals for technical acceptability; a technically unacceptable proposal would “be eliminated from further consideration for award.” Id. A proposal would be considered technically acceptable if the offeror “addressed] all elements of the subfaetors.” Id. at 113. The Army warned that “[f|ailure to address all elements of the subfactors or failure to provide any required document [would] render the offeror technically unacceptable for that element,” and that one unacceptable rating would render the entire proposal technically unacceptable. Id.; accord id. at 123. Moreover, the Army reserved the right to “reject any or all proposals if such action was in [its] best interest.” Id. at 126.

The Army indicated how it would evaluate each proposal by describing the elements of each factor and subfactor that it expected the offerors to address. Id. at 113-22. Of the Technical subfactors, two are of particular importance in this protest: Quality Control Plan, and Health and Safety Plan, To be deemed technically acceptable under the Quality Control Plan subfactor, the Army required the following:

Provide a discussion of planned Quality Control (QC) activities to meet the requirements of the .contract. This discussion should be broad enough to address all aspects of QC including[,] as a minimum, responsibility for surveillance of work, acceptance, rejection, documentation and resolution of deficiencies, trends analysis, corrective actions, QC processes and interface with Government inspector and contract closeout procedures.
The Offeror shall provide written documentation that the corporate Quality Control Plan has been written, reviewed and/or administered by a Registered Roof Consultant (RRC) who is either on staff or retained as a consultant to the offeror.
The offeror shall appoint a Quality Control (QC) manager in writing.
The offeror’s plan shall describe control procedures of non-compliance for preventing problems, minimizing the reoccurrence and ensuring deficiencies are corrected. Identify who is responsible and has the authority for identifying, stopping work from continuing, documenting, recording, directing replacement of corrections and ensuring resolution.
The offeror shall describe the process for the identification, documentation and timely correction of punch list items as well as the final inspection and government acceptance of work.

The Quality Control (QC) Plan shall include the following:

(a) The offeror shall provide the number [of] years of experience and types of licenses as well as documentation that the *600 qualifications for the Quality Control (QCM) Manager and Quality Control Inspectors (QCI’s) meet or exceed the requirements of the specifications.
(c) The offeror shall identify in their proposal the name of the inspection company that will perform the eight month [Infrared] Inspection of the new roof systems installed on post as a result of any subsequent award.
(d) The offeror shall be able to provide a No-Dollar-Limit Warranty on applicable roofing systems. The offeror shall provide a statement from the roofing system manufacturer(s) they intend to use attesting that the offeror can meet this requirement.

Id. at 113-14. And, to be deemed technically acceptable under the Health and Safety Plan subfactor, the Army required the following:

Discuss overall health and safety program, including training and documentation. Demonstrate familiarity with and adherence to the standard Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) safety requirements for all proposals. Describe steps taken that promoted safety during contract performance within the last three (3) years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 Fed. Cl. 596, 2015 WL 870100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeast-construction-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2015.