Shoreline Foundation, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 2024
Docket62876, 63616
StatusPublished

This text of Shoreline Foundation, Inc. (Shoreline Foundation, 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
Shoreline Foundation, Inc., (asbca 2024).

Opinion

DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeals of - ) ) Shoreline Foundation, Inc. ) ASBCA Nos. 62876, 63616 ) Under Contract No. W912EP-16-C-0027 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Robert G. Barbour, Esq. Matthew D. Baker, Esq. Watt, Tieder, Hoffar & Fitzgerald L.L.P. McLean, VA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Amber R. Jackson, Esq. Bruce E. Groover, Esq. Susan E. Symanski, Esq. Kristin M. Bigham, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorneys U.S. Army Engineer District, Jacksonville

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE O’CONNELL ON RESPONDENT’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Respondent, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), has filed a motion for partial summary judgment in No. 62876. The Board held oral argument on the motion and grants the motion with respect to appellant’s defective specifications theory but denies it with respect to superior knowledge. The Board issued a previous decision striking allegations of impacts and/or delays regarding a 2016 bid protest from the complaint filed in ASBCA No. 63616. Shoreline Foundation, Inc., ASBCA Nos. 62876, 63616, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,468. Familiarity with that decision is presumed.

STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION

In support of its motion USACE has filed a statement of undisputed material facts (GSUMF). Appellant has filed a statement of genuine issues precluding summary judgment (ASGI). The following facts are undisputed or uncontroverted. DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

A Brief Summary of Contract Requirements

1. USACE issued the solicitation for the above-captioned contract (Hurricane and Storm Damage Reduction Project, Brevard County, Florida, Mid-Reach Segment - Mitigation Feature) on August 9, 2016. Bids were due on September 26, 2016. (R4, tab 1 at 1-2, 745 1) USACE held a pre-bid site visit on August 18, 2016, that appellant, Shoreline Foundation, Inc. (SFI), attended (R4, tab 1 at 635 2).

2. On September 29, 2016, USACE awarded the contract to SFI, which is based in Florida (compl. ¶¶ 1, 15). The original value of the contract was $13,236,255.08 (R4, tab 55 at 2, 4). The contract required completion within 730 days after issuance of the notice to proceed (R4, tab 1 at 73).

3. The contract required SFI to manufacture, transport, and install concrete mats with coquina rock surfaces to establish a 4.8-acre artificial reef off the coast of Brevard County, Florida, in water depths of 14 to 16 feet, 1,000 feet from shore, in an area referred to as the Mid-Reach (R4, tab 1 at 208-09). The primary component of the contract price was a lump sum of $7,650 per reef mat (R4, tab 55 at 4).

4. A reef block, per the contract, is an individual 2.6 feet by 2.6 feet by 1-foot- high piece of concrete/coquina. A reef mat is 18 reef blocks connected by lateral and longitudinal cables in a three by six block pattern. A reef set is 45 reef mats. The project included 36 reef sets with three to four reef sets placed in proximity to one another at 10 reef sites. (R4, tab 1 at 208-09).

5. An SFI supplier manufactured the mats and SFI brought them to the site by barge (ASGI 3 ¶¶ 11, 45, 117). The contract required SFI to lower the reef mats to the bottom and place them in the specified position no more than 12 inches from adjacent reef mats. The contract prohibited dropping the reef mats through the water or pushing or pulling them after they were in contact with the floor or geotextile. (R4, tab 1 at 440, 445).

6. SFI alleges that it bid the project based upon its belief that it would be able to work at the project site in wave heights up to four feet (app. opp’n at 4).

1 R4, tab 1 is the solicitation, to which we will cite in this opinion. Tab 55 is the contract signed by the contracting officer. The contract incorporated the solicitation (R4, tab 55 at 2). 2 R4 cites are to the .pdf page number of the electronic file. 3 Citations to ASGI mean that the government in its reply brief did not dispute the cited fact. 2 DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

USACE Knowledge Concerning Site Conditions

7. Prior to issuing the solicitation, USACE studied the feasibility of the project and had accumulated years of research related to conditions at the project site (ASGI ¶ 3). As described below, SFI contends that conditions at the site were more difficult than it expected and that the season in which it could place the mats was shorter than the contract indicated. One of the key issues in dispute is the significance of information that USACE possessed but did not disclose in the solicitation.

8. USACE prepared a design document report (DDR) dated September 11, 2015 (ASGI ¶ 35; ASGI, ex. B). The DDR stated that it had been prepared by the Engineering Team Lead to provide “a technical record for the mitigation reef feature for Brevard County . . .” (ASGI, ex. B at 11). The DDR stated that Brevard County was the sponsor of the project and that both the County and its coastal engineering consultant, Dr. Kevin Bodge of Olsen and Associates, Inc. (Olsen), were actively involved with USACE in the project development team (ASGI, ex. B at 8). Olsen is a coastal engineering firm that “specializes in the study, design, permitting, and management of projects located in coastal and estuarine environments . . .” (ASGI ¶ 38).

9. The DDR cited three reports attributed to Olsen issued in 2005, 2007, and 2016, and three reports attributed to Dr. Bodge dated between 2013 and 2015 (ASGI, ex. B at 22). These reports included a document prepared by the Olsen firm in 2007 entitled “Practical Consideration of Depth for the Construction of Nearshore Mitigation along the Mid Reach Coastline of Brevard County, Florida” (id.) (Olsen 2007). The DDR repeatedly cited Olsen 2007 (ASGI, ex. B at 9, 22-23, 29-31, 33). Among other things, the DDR stated that Olsen 2007 “provided the principal physical characteristics at the reef placement sites” (id. at 23).

10. Olsen 2007 stated that “[t]he wave climate along the Mid Reach was considered through fifty years of six-hour hindcast wave data (July 1954-June 2004), developed in water depth of about -20 ft (NGVD), offshore of about R-106, as prepared for the Corps of Engineers” (ASGI, ex. H at 392 (footnote omitted)). Olsen purchased at least some of the data used to perform the analysis from Dr. William Dally (the “Dally Data”) for $1,600 in 2006 4 (ASGI, ex. K at 2-3). Olsen completed its report over 10 months after it received the Dally Data (ASGI ¶ 44).

4 During oral argument, the Board asked for clarification of the term “six-hour hindcast wave data.” SFI filed a supplemental brief, but the explication is too complicated to restate here. Basically, SFI contends that Dr. Dally took a wave model developed by USACE and improved it. Dr. Dally used his improved version of the model to take data from a deepwater area to project conditions in the nearshore area where the 3 DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

11. The Olsen 2007 report contains several statements that indicate difficult site conditions. Among other things, Olsen 2007 described the site as having “chronically limited, near-zero underwater visibility” (ASGI, ex. H at 391).

12.

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