Pacific Ventures Associates, Inc.

Case: B-265878 Agency: Protester: Pacific Ventures Associates, Inc. Date: 1995-11-21 Denied
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B-265878 Nov 21, 1995 Jump To VIEW DECISION RELATED PAGES GAO CONTACTS Highlights Bid which did not include required power of attorney was properly rejected. Despite the fact that omission was not discovered until approximately 2 weeks after bid opening. That power of attorney was included with its bid package prior to bid opening is insufficient to show that bid. The agency determined that the bid was nonresponsive because a comprehensive review of the bid almost 2 weeks after bid opening revealed that the required bid bond was not accompanied by a power of attorney evidencing the authority of the attorney-in-fact to sign the bond on the surety's behalf. Pacific Ventures was the apparent low bidder at bid opening on June 29. Pacific Ventures was notified that the agency rejected its bid as nonresponsive. View Decision Matter of: Pacific Ventures Associates, Inc. File: B-265878 Date: November 21, 1995 Bid which did not include required power of attorney was properly rejected, despite the fact that omission was not discovered until approximately 2 weeks after bid opening, when bid first received a comprehensive review by agency prior to award. Bidder's assertion, supported by employees' affidavits, that power of attorney was included with its bid package prior to bid opening is insufficient to show that bid, as submitted, included the power of attorney. Attorneys DECISION Pacific Ventures Associates, Inc. protests the rejection of its bid under invitation for bids (IFB) No. 1425-5-SI-10-06830, issued by the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, for safety and fire protection enhancement of the Left Powerplant, Grand Coulee Power Office, Columbia Basin Project, Washington. The agency determined that the bid was nonresponsive because a comprehensive review of the bid almost 2 weeks after bid opening revealed that the required bid bond was not accompanied by a power of attorney evidencing the authority of the attorney-in-fact to sign the bond on the surety's behalf. We deny the protest. The solicitation, issued on January 27, 1995, required bidders to submit, along with their bids, a bid bond for 20 percent of the bid price. Pacific Ventures was the apparent low bidder at bid opening on June 29. Approximately 2 weeks after bid opening, the contract specialist conducted a comprehensive review of the bid for completeness prior to award and noticed that the protester's bid did not include the required power of attorney. After the agency's legal review of the omission issue, on July 18, Pacific Ventures was notified that the agency rejected its bid as nonresponsive. On July 24, Pacific Ventures filed an agency-level protest of that determination, stating that the power of attorney was included with its bid package submitted prior to bid opening; the agency denied that protest by letter of August 23. This protest followed. Pacific Ventures states that the power of attorney was included with its bid and, in support of that claim, provides affidavits from two of its employees responsible for the firm's bid submission stating that the requisite document was submitted with the bid. The protester also provides a statement from the attorney-in-fact for the surety listed on the protester's bid bond, asserting that the power of attorney was provided to the protester as an attachment to the bid bond executed by him for the protester in connection with the IFB. (The attorney-in-fact does not state that he has personal knowledge that the power of attorney was submitted with the firm's bid.) Pacific Ventures also states that it communicated with the agency about the project (e.g., regarding small business status and funding) during the 2 weeks after bid opening, and that the fact that the omission of the power of attorney was not raised during that time period shows that the power of attorney was properly submitted but must have been lost by the agency after bid opening. The agency responds that at bid opening, bids were marked with an adhesive tab on the bid form (Standard Form (SF) 1442), the bid bond (SF 24), and the last page of the bid schedule (for ease in locating the information for each bid to be announced at bid opening); the bids, however, were not thoroughly reviewed at that time for completeness. Each bid submission was clipped (then stapled) together, including the bid package's envelope, and placed in a file which remained in the contract specialist's office.

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