Tactical Public Safety, LLC v. PA DGS

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 5, 2023
Docket1090 C.D. 2022
StatusPublished

This text of Tactical Public Safety, LLC v. PA DGS (Tactical Public Safety, LLC v. PA DGS) 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
Tactical Public Safety, LLC v. PA DGS, (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Tactical Public Safety, LLC, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1090 C.D. 2022 : Pennsylvania Department of : General Services, : Respondent : Submitted: May 8, 2023

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: June 5, 2023

Tactical Public Safety, LLC (TPS) petitions for review of the September 26, 2022 final decision of the Pennsylvania Department of General Services (DGS), which denied TPS’s bid protest on the grounds that the protest was untimely and lacked merit. We affirm.

Background For several years, TPS had been an approved vendor in the Commonwealth’s cooperative purchasing program, commonly known as COSTARS, for the sale of two-way radio equipment and services. Pet. for Rev. ¶ 4. TPS’s most recent COSTARS contract for two-way radio equipment and services was set to expire at the end of 2022. Id. ¶ 5. Due to the impending expiration of TPS’s COSTARS contract, on June 20, 2022, DGS issued Invitation for Bid Number 6100055625 (IFB) seeking bids for two-way radio equipment and services from January 1, 2023, through December 31, 2023. Id. ¶ 6; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 41a. The deadline for the submission of all bids was 1:00 p.m. on July 19, 2022 (Bid Deadline). Pet. for Rev. ¶ 7. The IFB provided that all “[b]ids must be submitted electronically” via the Pennsylvania Supplier Portal website (Portal) on or before the specified due date and that “[a]ny bid submitted to the Issuing Office in hardcopy format will be rejected.” R.R. at 42a; see id. at 56a.1 The IFB also provided that to be eligible for selection, a bid must be both timely received and properly signed by the bidder. Id. at 65a. In the IFB, DGS “reserve[d] the right to reject any and all [b]ids, to waive technical defects or any informality in [b]ids, and to accept or reject any part of any [b]id if the best interests of the Commonwealth are thereby served.” Id. at 62a. Between 8:30 a.m. and 12:43 p.m. on July 19, 2022, TPS logged into, or attempted to log into, the Portal 11 times. Pet. for Rev. ¶ 14; see R.R. at 7a-16a. TPS uploaded its bid documents to the Portal at approximately 11:30 a.m., 90 minutes before the Bid Deadline. Pet. for Rev. ¶ 8. However, to fully complete a bid submission, the Portal also required TPS to answer two bid-related questions via digital drop-down boxes. Id. ¶ 9; see R.R. at 18a, 20a. After uploading its bid documents, TPS discovered that one of the required questions did not appear on TPS’s computer screen. TPS attempted to resolve the issue by contacting the Portal’s help desk by phone and by email. At 11:51 a.m., TPS called and spoke with a help desk associate, Randy Miller, but Mr. Miller was unable to resolve TPS’s issue. With the Bid Deadline quickly approaching, TPS’s representative sent an email to the IFB’s Issuing Officer, Raeden Hosler, at 12:03 p.m. on July 19, 2022, in which he stated:

1 The IFB actually set the Bid Deadline as 12:00 p.m. on July 19, 2022, not 1:00 p.m. See R.R. at 41a. However, other record documents, including screenshots of the Portal on the day of the Bid Deadline, indicate that the Bid Deadline was 1:00 p.m., see id. at 5a, 23a, and 26a, and the parties do not dispute that the Bid Deadline was 1:00 p.m. on July 19, 2022, see TPS Br. at 6 n.1.

2 I have uploaded all of my files to the . . . Portal but I am unable to submit because Question #1 is not showing. I have reached out to Randy Miller for support (copied).

I don’t want to miss the deadline because of a glitch.

I have attached a screen[]shot of the problem.

R.R. at 25a. However, at the time TPS sent the email, Mr. Hosler was unavailable because he was on a scheduled lunch break. At 12:49 p.m., TPS sent another email to both Mr. Hosler and Mr. Miller, stating that TPS was responding “Yes” to both questions on the Portal and that TPS had uploaded all of its documents. Pet. for Rev. ¶ 24; R.R. at 28a.2 TPS further stated: “Please consider this as a submitted bid response to [the] IFB.” R.R. at 28a. The IFB closed on July 19, 2022, at 1:00 p.m. DGS did not receive a completed electronic bid via the Portal from TPS. Multiple other bidders successfully submitted bids in response to the IFB through the Portal before the Bid Deadline. See id. at 36a; DGS Br. at 5. The IFB set the bid opening time as 1:01 p.m. on July 19, 2022 (Bid Opening Time). See R.R. at 5a, 23a, and 26a. At 9:38 a.m. on July 20, 2022, Mr. Hosler replied to TPS’s email from the prior day regarding its technical issue with the Portal, stating: “Apparently the field was inadvertently hidden due to the mouse function you performed. Below is the response I got from [the Integrated Enterprise System Department]. It appears that until you go to the same screen and perform the same function, you will continue to have this problem until the field is unhidden.” Id. at 30a (emphasis added). Mr.

2 In its July 19, 2022 email to Mr. Hosler and Mr. Miller, TPS stated that it replied “Yes” to both bid-related questions on the Portal, R.R. at 28a, even though only one question was visible on its computer screen during its attempted bid submission, id. at 26a.

3 Hosler also informed TPS: “I have been told there is nothing we can do about the [bid] submission at this point.” Id. On July 26, 2022, TPS submitted its protest to DGS, challenging DGS’s refusal to consider its bid. TPS asserted that its “inability to respond to the first question [on the Portal] after uploading its bid documents . . . was due to nothing more than a programming quirk” and that “[t]he sole irregularity with TPS’s bid is that TPS provided answers to the questions via email due to issues with the [Portal].” Id. at 2a. TPS argued that, as a result, any variance in its bid submission was “at most di minimis [sic] and should be waived by DGS.” Id. It further argued that waiver of its bid defect would be “harmless to the other successful bidders,” as it “would not deprive any other successful bidder of its award under the [IFB], but instead merely add to [DGS’s] approved vendor list.” Id. at 3a. Thus, TPS requested that “its bid . . . be considered responsive and that DGS award TPS a cooperative purchasing contract pursuant to the [IFB].” Id. On August 3, 2022, DGS’s Contracting Officer recommended to DGS’s Deputy Secretary of Procurement (Deputy Secretary) that DGS deny TPS’s protest. Based on her review of the record, the Contracting Officer determined:

Since TPS’[s] bid was never electronically submitted in [the Portal], meaning that the full electronic process was not completed thereby allowing the electronic bid to be submitted and recorded in [the Portal], TPS is a prospective bidder and not a bidder. As a prospective bidder, TPS was obligated to submit a bid protest prior to the Bid Opening Time in order for such bid protest to be considered timely received. TPS, as a prospective bidder, did not submit a bid protest prior to the Bid Opening Time. Because TPS is not a bidder, the bid protest is untimely and therefore should be disregarded.

....

4 In addition to untimeliness, this bid protest should also be denied as clearly without merit.

Contrary to TPS’[s] . . . assertion, [DGS] does dispute that TPS submitted all the requisite bid documents and provided answers in the affirmative to both of the requisite questions prior to the Bid Opening Time. All bid documents must be submitted through [the Portal], not merely uploaded, in order to be officially received. The documents are not officially received by [the Portal] or able to be reviewed by [DGS] until the bidder submits them.

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Tactical Public Safety, LLC v. PA DGS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tactical-public-safety-llc-v-pa-dgs-pacommwct-2023.