B-297800.3, Skyline ULTD, Inc., August 22, 2006
Decision
Albert
B. Krachman, Esq., and Brian S. Gocial, Esq., Blank Rome LLP, for the
protester.
Adele
Ross Vine, Esq., General Services Administration, for the agency.
Susan K. McAuliffe, Esq., and Christine S. Melody, Esq., Office of the General Counsel, GAO, participated in the preparation of the decision.
DIGEST
Protest challenging rejection of proposal for failure to acknowledge solicitation amendment is denied where amendment contains material terms affecting legal relationship of the parties, including obligation for contractor to monitor changes in foreign travel danger area status and promptly coordinate such changes with contracting agency.
DECISION
Skyline ULTD, Inc. protests the rejection of its proposal for failure to
acknowledge solicitation amendments under request for proposals (RFP) No.
6FG2005MTV00001, issued by the General Services Administration for information
technology services. Skyline contends
that the amendments are not material and that its failure to acknowledge them
should be waived as a minor informality.
The RFP, set aside for
service-disabled, veteran-owned small businesses, provides for the award of multiple
indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contracts for information systems
engineering, operation, and maintenance services for a 5-year base period and a
5-year option period. RFP at F-1, L-1, L-14. The RFP advised that the agency intended to
make all awards on the basis of the offerors’ initial proposals without
conducting discussions.
Acceptability reviews were
performed for each proposal submitted by the scheduled closing time. Skyline’s proposal failed the acceptability
review and was rejected from further consideration for award because it failed
to acknowledge receipt of two solicitation amendments which the agency
considered to be material.[1] This protest followed.
The RFP advised offerors
that performance of the work could take place in locations subject to
designation by the State Department as foreign travel danger areas; in this
regard, for existing orders, the contracting officer was to determine whether
or not performance would continue despite such designation. RFP sect. B-10.
One of the amendments that Skyline failed to acknowledge, amendment No.
6, revised the RFP’s “foreign area
travel/work” terms. Specifically,
regarding changes in foreign travel danger area status (i.e., where the
State Department warns Americans not to travel to an area or issues danger pay
for work there), the amendment provided that “[c]ontractors have an affirmative
duty to monitor area status during order performance and promptly coordinate
with the applicable [ordering contracting officer] on changes in area status.” RFP amend. 6 at 3.
The agency explains that this
additional, affirmative requirement for the contractor to specifically monitor
changes in danger area status will better protect the government in terms of
potential liability for damages that might result from a delay in agency
contracting personnel learning of a change in status, and a resulting delay in determining
whether or not to continue performance of existing orders. The agency explains that prior to the
amendment, the government was solely responsible for monitoring area status
changes, since there was no explicit requirement for the contractor to do so. The agency also asserts that, without the
amendment, it may face greater litigation risk in contractor disputes for
recovery of losses or injuries that could occur from a delay in agency action
to halt contract performance or protect contractor personnel due to a delay in
learning of a change in foreign travel danger area status. In this regard, according to the agency, requiring
the contractor to monitor foreign travel danger area status changes will provide
an additional means for the agency to learn of such changes quickly, which will
better ensure that the agency can promptly determine whether contract
performance should or should not continue, and may also limit the agency’s potential
liability for contractor losses, since the contractor shares in the responsibility
to monitor the danger status and promptly coordinate the change in status with
the agency.
In determining whether an
amendment is material, we look at the facts of each case. While no precise rule exists as to whether a
change required by an amendment is more than negligible, such that the failure
to acknowledge the amendment renders the proposal unacceptable, see Navistar
Marine Instrument Corp., B-277143.2, Feb. 13, 1998, 98-1 CPD para. 53 at 2,
an amendment is material where it imposes legal obligations on the contractor
that were not contained in the original solicitation.
Here, the protester
contends that amendment No. 6 is not material because it merely clarified
existing contract performance requirements and thus did not affect the legal
relationship of the parties. Specifically,
the protester asserts that, despite its failure to acknowledge the amendment, it
would be obliged to monitor foreign travel danger area status changes, since
its proposal generally offers to review policies affecting contract performance. We disagree.
As the agency points out, prior to issuance of amendment No. 6, there
was no specific requirement in the RFP obligating the contractor to affirmatively
monitor foreign travel danger status changes and to promptly coordinate any
such change with the contracting agency. Since there was no such requirement in the
RFP, Skyline’s offer to generally review policies regarding contract peformance
does not constitute an agreement to the specific obligations imposed by
amendment No. 6. Consequently, we cannot
agree with the protester that amendment No. 6 did no more than clarify existing
obligations of the contractor. [2]
In light of the amendment’s
addition of contractor obligations to monitor and coordinate action regarding
changes in foreign travel danger area status, and the agency’s additional
rights derived from those requirements, we conclude that the amendment affects
the legal relationship of the parties and therefore is material. See Federal Constr., Inc.,
B-279638, B‑279638.2, July 2, 1998, 98-2 CPD para. 5 at 4-5. Consequently, the protester’s failure to
acknowledge it cannot, as Skyline requests, be waived as a minor informality. See T&S Maint. Servs.,
B-278598, Feb. 18, 1998, 98‑1 CPD para. 54 at 2-3. Accordingly, we see no basis to object to the
agency’s rejection of the proposal for failure to acknowledge amendment No. 6.
The protest is denied.
Gary L. Kepplinger
General Counsel
[1] The protester’s proposal was rejected for failing to acknowledge amendment Nos. 4 and 6. This decision, however, only discusses the protester’s failure to acknowledge amendment No. 6, since, in its report responding to the protest, the agency concedes that the firm constructively acknowledged amendment No. 4 by incorporating some of the administrative requirements (for instance, regarding font and format of proposals) set out in that amendment. Given our conclusion as to the materiality of amendment No. 6, as discussed further in this decision, the rejection of the firm’s proposal for failure to acknowledge that amendment alone constitutes a proper basis for rejection of the proposal; accordingly, we need not discuss further the terms of amendment No. 4 or the protester’s failure to formally acknowledge its receipt.
[2] We note that, in its comments Skyline for the first time contends that, because the RFP, at sect. B-10, generally provides that work in areas designated as dangerous is unauthorized, the expectation by the agency that the amendment will lessen its risk of liability for contractor losses or injuries is misplaced; Skyline essentially argues that the contractor would be performing in (or would still be located in) such area at its own risk. The argument, which was not raised in the initial protest although based on solicitation terms known to the protester at that time, is untimely. Bid Protest Regulations, 4 C.F.R. sect. 21.2(a)(2) (2006). We note, in any event, that the protester has not shown how this general provision renders unreasonable the agency’s view that its risk of delayed action in response to danger area status changes will be lessened by requiring the contractor to monitor danger area status changes and to promptly coordinate action with the agency (performance requirements not challenged by Skyline prior to submission of its proposal as ambiguous or otherwise), since, as discussed above, the contractor’s responsibility to do so provides legitimate protections for additional prompt notice of area status changes to the agency.