Powercorp Alaska, LLC v. State, Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority, Alaska Energy Authority

171 P.3d 159, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2007 WL 3317926
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 2007
DocketS-12176
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 171 P.3d 159 (Powercorp Alaska, LLC v. State, Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority, Alaska Energy Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powercorp Alaska, LLC v. State, Alaska Industrial Development & Export Authority, Alaska Energy Authority, 171 P.3d 159, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2007 WL 3317926 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal arises from a 2004 invitation to bid issued by the Alaska Emergy Authority for switchgear systems to be installed in eight remote Alaskan villages. Appellant Powereorp Alaska, LLC alleges that the agency unduly restricted competition in the bidding process by requiring bidders to use a particular operating system that Powercorp does not use. At issue is whether the agency violated its authority in issuing a specification that exeluded Powereorp from competing for the contract. We affirm the agency's determination that no violation occurred.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Hundreds of Alaskan villages are located off the electrical grid system and must rely on locally owned and operated power generation and distribution operations to meet their energy needs. Larger villages are served by well-established energy cooperatives, but roughly 120 of the smaller and less organized communities are not. The Alaska Energy Authority ("Energy Authority" or "agency") is a public corporation of the State of Alaska that provides technical and administrative support to the energy operations in these smaller communities. In recent years, the Energy Authority has implemented a Rural Power System Upgrade (RPSTU) program to achieve a reliable, sustainable rural electrical *162 system in the face of decreasing federal funding. One aspiration of this program is to upgrade the utilities in these villages with automatic paralleling switchgear, which maximizes fuel-efficient power generation by "matehiing] power generation with demand on a continuous, automatic basis." 1

A key component of the switchgear system is the master (or supervisory) control-the "brain" that collects data from remote sensors and turns generators on or off as necessary based on preset parameters. The industry standard for this device in the United States is a programmable logic controller (PLC). 2 The Energy Authority has extensive experience with PLCs and finds them to be "reliable." In particular, the Energy Authority regards Allen-Bradley brand PLCs to be "widely distributed, commonly available from multiple distributors, frequently installed, and familiar to experienced operators." 3 Powercorp, an Alaska subsidiary of an Australian company, manufactures an alternative to the PLC that runs off a personal computer (PC). The PC-based system reputedly "provides additional programming flexibility and adaptability, ... the ability to incorporate multiple power generation sources ... [and] a greater degree of remote control than is possible with a PLC system," but the Energy Authority has very little experience with this relatively new system. 4

In 2008 the Denali Commission (a federal-state partnership that supports infrastructure development in rural Alaskan communities) awarded two grants to the Energy Authority for demonstration projects that would allow the agency to design, install, and evaluate different switchgear systems and ultimately to "determine which one best meets the community's needs." 5 After obtaining the necessary competitive-bid waiver, the Energy Authority awarded sole-source contracts to both Controlled Power, Inc., and Powercorp to install systems in Stevens Village and Golovin, respectively. While Controlled Power intended to install PLC switchgear, Powercorp would showcase its PC-based system, which would be the first of its kind in the United States.

On May 28, 2004-before it had completed its evaluation of the relative merits of the PLC and PC-based systems at the demonstration sites-the Energy Authority invited bids for a contract to install automatic switchgear systems in eight other villages. The invitation to bid (ITB) specified that the "Programmable Logic Controller" of the switchgear system was to be "Allen-Bradley. No Substitutes." Powercorp, which uses PC-based systems exelusively, did not bid. Two companies submitted bids; the contract was awarded to Controlled Power.

B. Proceedings

Powercorp filed a timely protest of the ITB, asserting that the specifications "excluded it from bidding." Powereorp urged the agency to postpone the ITB until an objective evaluation of its PC system could be completed and also to review the bid specifications for "any unnecessary exclusions." The protest was denied, and Power-corp appealed to the executive director of the Energy Authority, who delegated the matter to an independent hearing officer.

In the proceedings before the hearing officer, Powereorp asserted that "the specifications were written to favor Controlled Power as the only company able to submit a responsive bid." More specifically, the hearing officer viewed Powercorp as alleging that (1) the Energy Authority abused its discretion in issuing the ITB before completing an evaluation of alternative switchgear systems; (2) Controlled Power had an undue influence in the preparation of design specifications; (8) the ITB omitted information necessary for prospective bidders to design a competitive system; and (4) the specification of an Allen-Bradley supervisory controller was unduly *163 restrictive. 6

After conducting an extensive hearing, the hearing officer issued a recommended deci-gion concluding that the Energy Authority acted within its discretion in all relevant respects. The hearing officer found that, because the Energy Authority "had no experience with either PC-based systems in general or the Powercorp system in particular," the ageney had "reasonable grounds for not accepting a PC-based alternative at this time." 7 The hearing officer further found that pre-existing construction schedules dictated the timing of the ITB and that the Energy Authority did not abuse its discretion by issuing the ITB before completing its evaluation of the PC system. Finding no evidence that Controlled Power had exerted any influence on the agency's choice to require bids proposing PLC systems, the hearing officer also concluded that it was appropriate for the agency to ask Controlled Power for technical information concerning the system it built for its demonstration project so that this information could be used to develop the new bid specifications. 8 Last, the hearing officer declined to address whether the brand-name specification was unduly restrictive, concluding that, because Powercorp had no intention of submitting a bid for a PLC system, "the brand name specification was, from Powercorp's perspective, immaterial." 9

The Energy Authority's executive director adopted the hearing officer's recommended decision as the agency's final administrative decision of the protest. Powercorp appealed to the superior court, which affirmed the agency's decision.

Powereorp appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
171 P.3d 159, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2007 WL 3317926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powercorp-alaska-llc-v-state-alaska-industrial-development-export-alaska-2007.