Jackson Kelly PLLC

Government Contracts Monitor

Evaluation and Award

Don’t Let Creativity Prevent You from Delivering the Mail

Creative solutions are often rewarded in Government procurement. However, offerors need to be careful not to let their creativity prevent them from submitting well-crafted proposals that fulfill the requirements of the RFP. Last month’s decision of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in Viatech, Inc., B-411388 (July 21, 2015) brought home this lesson with “extreme prejudice”.

The case…

Starry Starry Night - Successful Protest of Evaluation

Starry Associates, Inc. (Starry) successfully protested a task order issued to Intellizant, LLC, arguing that the agency unreasonably evaluated Intellizant’s quote under the RFQ’s technical acceptability factor because Intellizant lacks qualified personnel necessary to perform the PWS tasks and because Intellizant failed to demonstrate how it would provide the staff necessary to perform the…

How Low Can You Go? Doing the Limbo on Price

Last week the Government Accountability Office (GAO) sustained a protest where the solicitation called for award of a fixed-price contract, the protester’s quotes were very low, and the agency concluded that protester’s low prices created a risk of unsuccessful performance.  According to GAO this was a “no-no” since there was nothing in the evaluation criteria that put bidders on notice…

Changes to a Submitted Proposal Can Take You Out of the Running

Sometimes, circumstances force offerors to consider making changes to their proposal after it’s been submitted. In some cases, offerors decide they need to go so far as to alter their own structure to address a newly discovered problem. As the recent decision in Task Source/Military Personnel Services Corporation FEPP, LLC, B-411173.3 (July 8, 2015) shows, however, material changes to the offeror…

Constant Corrective Action Crushing or Compensating Contractors?

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) bid protest docket tells a story that is hard to ignore:  the remarkably high number of protests in which the agency takes corrective action – at least 40% -- suggests the federal procurement system is not working.  “Corrective action” is the term for an agency’s voluntary decision to reexamine or re-conduct some or all aspects of a…

“It\'s Too Late, Baby Now, It\'s Too Late” – When to Protest Corrective Action

We are all too familiar with the current agency practice of taking corrective action when a protest is filed.  Agencies, fearful of incurring any liability for protester’s legal fees in the event the protest is sustained, often cave in at the slightest sign of weakness in the agency record and take corrective action in lieu of fighting to defend the award decision.  This can be very…

Any Way You Look At It: Agency Discretion is a Citadel

Reciting a common refrain, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has once again upheld an agency’s broad discretion to determine its own procurement and solicitation needs.  In its recent decision, Financial Asset Management Systems, Inc., B-409722.9 (Apr. 24, 2015), GAO provides an example of the latitude the "reasonableness" standard gives procuring agencies with respect to drafting…

The Silent Treatment: Agencies Don’t Have to Tell You When Your Price Is Too High

Earlier this year, we published an article warning our readers not to expect more from discussions concerning their proposals than agencies are required to provide.  Specifically, your price may be entirely reasonable but completely uncompetitive but, if so, the agency does not have to tell you a thing.  In short, the requirement that discussions be "meaningful" does not ensure you will obtain any…

Willie Wonka at GAO: Everyone Gets to Compete on the Same Basis

Virtually every child of the 1970s or 80s will remember the scene from the classic movie, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, when Gene Wilder’s character, Willy Wonka, unilaterally changes the rules of competition for the factory, dashing endearing Charlie’s hopes and dreams. Justice is restored when Charlie stands up to Wonka and points out that he has been unfair. Hanel Storage…

Learn from Pinocchio: Don’t Lie and Develop Your Own, Independent, Identity

Small businesses participating in the Small Business Administration’s (SBA’s) 8(a) Business Development Program (BD Program) would do well to recall the story of Pinocchio, the marionette who wanted to be a real boy.  Pinocchio learned two important lessons:  be self-reliant and don’t lie.  Similarly, the petitioner in the recent The Desa Group, Inc., SBA No.  BDPT-543…

 

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