Pennsylvania Industries for the Blind & Handicapped v. Department of General Services

865 A.2d 266, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 40
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 10, 2004
StatusPublished

This text of 865 A.2d 266 (Pennsylvania Industries for the Blind & Handicapped v. Department of General Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Industries for the Blind & Handicapped v. Department of General Services, 865 A.2d 266, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 40 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

[268]*268OPINION BY

Judge COHN JUBELIRER.

The Pennsylvania Industries for the Blind and Handicapped, on behalf of its member organization, North Central Sight Services (collectively referred to as Petitioners), appeal a decision by the Department of General Services (DGS) through its Deputy Secretary for Procurement, which granted in part and denied in part a protest filed pursuant to the Commonwealth Procurement Code, 62 Pa.C.S. §§ 101-4509 (1998) (Procurement Code). Petitioners, for a period of approximately four years, had supplied Commonwealth agencies with its Compact Disc (CD) duplication service through a Master Agreement for Procurement of Handicapped-made Products, State Contract No. 9980-02 (State Contract), and pursuant to-.the no-bid provisions of the Procurement Code. In October 2003, Petitioners’ attempted to add its supply of “computer media” (i.e., blank CDs) to the State Contract. After the submission of this request, DGS not only denied Petitioners request to add the supply of blank CDs to the State Contract, but also informed Petitioners that it intended to remove Petitioners’ CD duplication service from the State Contract. Petitioners protested both facets of the decision. Upon reconsideration, DGS granted Petitioners’ protest of the removal of their CD duplication service from the State Contract, and denied their protest of DGS's refusal to add blank CDs to the State Contract. This appeal centers on DGS’s refusal to add Petitioners’ supply of blank CDs to -the State Contract, pursuant to the no-bid provisions of the Procurement Code.

The relevant’facts in this matter are not disputed. Pursuant to Petitioners’ request, in June 1999, DGS agreed to add Petitioners’ Compact Disc Duplication service1 to the PIBH Catalog2 (Catalog), pursuant to the no-bid provisions for goods and services provided by persons with disabilities found in Section 520 of the Procurement Code. (O.R. at 43a.) The Catalog contains a list of products that Petitioners, through the labor of its handicapped employees, supply to Commonwealth agencies. Petitioners’ Compact Disc Duplication service appeared in the Catalog from 2000 through to the present time.

In October 2003, Petitioners requested that DGS add its blank CDs to the State Contract and catalog the computer media at a fair market price pursuant to the no-bid provisions of the Procurement Code. (O.R. at 61a.) These blank CDs come packaged in both CD jewel cases and on CD spindles.

DGS denied this request by letter dated November 10, 2003,. and, in addition, informed Petitioners that the previous contract to provide Compact Disc Duplication Services would be discontinued as of December 31, 2003. (O.R. at 67a.) The basis for both the denial and discontinuance was that disabled employees were not making an “appreciable contribution in manufac-[269]*269taring the intended supply to be procured,” (O.R. at 67a) pursuant to Section 520 of the Procurement Code. Petitioners filed a protest to both facets of this decision.

Upon review commenced after the protest, the Chief Procurement Officer of DGS recommended that DGS not discontinue the CD duplication service from the Contract, but affirmed DGS’s decision not to add blank CDs to the Catalog. (O.R. at 71a.) The Chief Procurement Officer opined that placing blank computer media in intermediate packaging containers does not constitute “manufacturing,” but was a Section 520(h) “service” that a manufacturer would normally provide as part of its manufacturing and distribution process. (O.R. at 72a.) The Deputy Secretary agreed and Petitioners now appeal DGS’s refusal to add the provision of blank CDs to the Catalog to this Court.3

The central issue in this case is whether assembling jewel boxes or spindles from component parts, and then inserting blank CDs into them, constitutes either “manufacturing” or a “service” covered by the Procurement Code. To come within the ambit of Section 520 as either “manufacturing” or a “service,” Petitioners’ activities must constitute a process of combining two separate supplies and packaging it for delivery.4

Section 520(a)(1) provides the general rule for the procurement of goods and services from agencies employing persons with disabilities:

(a)(1) Contracts for supplies manufactured by and services performed by persons with disabilities shall be entered into in accordance with this section without the requirement for competitive bidding. Persons with disabilities must make an appreciable contribution in manufacturing an item or performing a service.

62 Pa.C.S. § 520(a)(l)(emphasis added). Section 520(h) defines “appreciable contribution” as:

(1) In addition to paragraph (2), the department shall determine whether the contribution by individuals with disabilities is appreciable. Persons with disabilities must make an appreciable contribution in manufacturing a supply or performiny a service.
(2) At least 75% of the personnel either engaged in the direct labor of manufacturing of a supply or engaged in the direct labor in performing a service in this Commonwealth must be visually impaired, mentally retarded or physically disabled. In addition, at least 75% of the amount paid by the Commonwealth agency for the supply or the service shall be remitted to the agency for persons with disabilities to cover payment of wages and salaries to persons with disabilities and to cover other actual manufacturing costs incurred by the agency for persons with disabilities in manufacturing of a supply.

62 Pa.C.S. § 520(h)(l)(2)(emphasis added).

In determining that Petitioners’ involvement in selling blank CDs did not eonsti-[270]*270tute manufacturing, DGS viewed the following steps as simply “intermediate packaging”:

1) Assembly of jewel cases from plastic parts;
2) Assembly of trays and jewel cases;
3) Assembly of boxes;
4) Placement of blank CDs and jewel cases into the assembled boxes;
5) Transfer of items to a shrink-wrapping station;
6) Shrink-wrapping of the packages;
7) Labeling of shrink-wrapped products with proper bar codes;
8) Assembly of shipping cartons;
9) Packing the shipping carton with specified case sizes;
10) Transfer of finished to shipping area; and
11) Application of proper shipping labels. •

(O.R. at 79a; FOF, Request to Add Computer Media to State Contract ¶ 5.)

DGS concluded that the packaging of blank CDs did not come within the definition of “manufacturing,” based on its definition as provided in Section 520(h)(2):

The transformation of raw materials or the assembly of essential component parts or a combination of both in the production of a supply which is different in form, composition or character from the raw materials or the essential component parts. This definition applies only to the assembly of a supply.

62 Pa.C.S. 520(h)(2)(emphasis added).

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865 A.2d 266, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-industries-for-the-blind-handicapped-v-department-of-pacommwct-2004.