Insituform East, Inc.
Case: B-272399
Agency:
Protester: Insituform East, Inc.
Date: 1996-10-03
Denied
B-272399
Oct 03, 1996
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Highlights
That the Navy is allowing VPSI to use a winching installation method. [1] By so doing. Because a contract modification that goes beyond the scope of the contract is tantamount to a sole source award that may not be justified. We will review a protest challenging a contract modification where the allegation is that a modification is beyond the contract's scope and therefore should be the subject of a new procurement. It is simply permitting an installation method allegedly precluded by the specifications. We will resolve the dispute by reading the solicitation as a whole. We will not read specifications restrictively unless it is clear from the solicitation that the agency intended such an interpretation.
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Matter of: Insituform East, Inc. File: B-272399 Date: October 3, 1996
Specification for sewer rehabilitation services which references an American Society for Testing and Materials standard dealing with the inversion method of sewer liner installation does not preclude the use of other installation methods.
Attorneys
DECISION
Insituform East, Inc. protests the alleged modification to contract No. 00187-94-D-8197, awarded by the Department of the Navy to Video Pipe Services, Inc. (VPSI) under invitation for bids (IFB) No. N62470-94-B-8197 for sewer rehabilitation services at various Navy installations in the Norfolk, Virginia area. Insituform contends that the contract requires use of the inversion installation method, but that the Navy is allowing VPSI to use a winching installation method. [1] By so doing, Insituform argues, the Navy has modified the contract beyond the scope of the contract initially awarded.
We deny the protest.
Because a contract modification that goes beyond the scope of the contract is tantamount to a sole source award that may not be justified, we will review a protest challenging a contract modification where the allegation is that a modification is beyond the contract's scope and therefore should be the subject of a new procurement. See Rolm Corp., B-218949, Aug. 22, 1985, 85-2 CPD Para. 212; Webcraft Packaging, Div. of Beatrice Foods Co., B-194087, Aug. 14, 1979, 79-2 CPD Para. 120.
Here, the Navy has not issued an actual modification to the contract; it is simply permitting an installation method allegedly precluded by the specifications. The Navy argues that this case cannot involve an out-of- scope modification because the specifications permit the installation approach taken by the contractor. We agree.
Where a dispute exists as to the actual meaning of a solicitation requirement, we will resolve the dispute by reading the solicitation as a whole, and in a manner that gives effect to all provisions of the solicitation. Energy Maintenance Corp., B-223328, Aug. 27, 1986, 86-2 CPD Para. 234. Moreover, given the fundamental requirement for the use of specifications that permit full and open competition, 10 U.S.C. Sec. 2305(a) (1994), we will not read specifications restrictively unless it is clear from the solicitation that the agency intended such an interpretation. Concrete Sys., Inc., B-259283, Mar. 22, 1995, 95-1 CPD Para. 158; Ampex Data Sys. Corp., B-248112, July 30, 1992, 92-2 CPD Para. 71.
The dispute here arises in connection with the following provision in specification section 02740, entitled "Rehabilitation of Sewer Lines (Cured-In-Place Method)":
"PART 1 General
1.1 REFERENCES
All work must meet the following and will form a part of this specification to the extent referenced.
1.1.1 American Society for Testing and Materials [ASTM]
ASTM F1216-91 Standard Practice for Rehabilitation of Existing Pipelines and Conduits by the Inversion Curing of a Resin-Impregnated Tube.
1.1.2 National Association of Sewer Service Companies (NASSCO)."
The protester points to the language in part 1.1 immediately preceding the reference to ASTM F1216-91: "All work must meet the following and will form a part of the specification to the extent referenced." The protester contends that since the ASTM provision is listed--or "referenced"--all work must be in accordance with it, and since the provision deals only with the inversion method, that method is the sole permissible method of installation. As explained below, while we think that the agency could have expressed its intention to permit all types of installation methods more clearly, on balance, we cannot conclude that the IFB should be read in the restrictive manner Insituform suggests.
First, ASTM F1216-91 does not itself mandate use of the inversion method; it simply sets out a standard practice to be followed when a contractor decides to perform sewer rehabilitation using an inversion installation method.
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