ABC Project Management, Inc.

Case: B-274796.2 Agency: Department of Veterans Affairs Protester: ABC Project Management, Inc. Date: 1997-02-14 Denied
View full decision with AI analysis on ProtestIntel →
B-274796.2 Feb 14, 1997 Jump To VIEW DECISION RELATED PAGES GAO CONTACTS Highlights Amendment was material as agency reasonably anticipates that the services of sprinkler fitters will be required in contract performance. There is no evidence that the bidder was otherwise obligated to pay sprinkler fitters at a level at least as high as that set forth in the wage determination. ABC's bid was rejected for failure to acknowledge amendment No. 0001. ABC was the apparent low bidder. After the agency-level protest was denied on September 16. ABC states that the revised wage rate determination contained in the amendment had no monetary impact on the firm's bid because it intended to employ only pipe fitters (whose wages were not affected by the amendment). ABC asserts that the only work covered by this solicitation that could possibly be done by sprinkler fitters is the moving of sprinkler heads that interfere with the placement of the new steam pipes. View Decision Matter of: ABC Project Management, Inc. File: B-274796.2 Date: February 14, 1997 DIGEST Attorneys DECISION ABC Project Management, Inc. protests the rejection of its bid as nonresponsive under Department of Veterans Affairs invitation for bids (IFB) No. 604-4-96. ABC's bid was rejected for failure to acknowledge amendment No. 0001, which contained a revised Davis-Bacon Act wage rate determination. ABC maintains that its failure to acknowledge the amendment should be waived as a minor informality. We deny the protest. The IFB, issued on July 5, 1996, called for replacement of certain steam and condensation lines. Amendment No. 0001, also issued on July 5, contained a modified wage rate determination under the Davis-Bacon Act, 40 U.S.C. Sec. 276a (1994), which increased the wage rates for sprinkler fitters. The agency received seven bids by the August 6 bid opening date. ABC was the apparent low bidder. The agency rejected ABC's bid as nonresponsive for failure to acknowledge amendment No. 0001. By letter dated September 5, ABC filed an agency-level protest contesting the rejection of its bid as nonresponsive. After the agency-level protest was denied on September 16, ABC protested to our Office. [1] ABC argues that its failure to acknowledge amendment No. 0001 should be waived as a minor informality which did not affect the responsiveness of its bid. ABC states that the revised wage rate determination contained in the amendment had no monetary impact on the firm's bid because it intended to employ only pipe fitters (whose wages were not affected by the amendment). ABC asserts that the only work covered by this solicitation that could possibly be done by sprinkler fitters is the moving of sprinkler heads that interfere with the placement of the new steam pipes. ABC contends that pipe fitters are permitted to work with sprinkler pipes and that it is illogical to assume that a contractor would employ another trade, such as sprinkler fitters, to move sprinkler heads where there is a trade already on the job that can perform the work. Therefore, ABC contends that its failure to acknowledge the amendment should be waived and it should receive the award based on its low bid. A bidder's failure to acknowledge a material amendment to an IFB renders the bid nonresponsive since, absent such an acknowledgment, the government's acceptance of the bid would not legally obligate the bidder to comply with the amendment. Head Inc., 68 Comp.Gen. 198 (1989), 89-1 CPD Para. 82, recon. denied, B-233066.2, May 16, 1989, 89-1 CPD Para. 461. On the other hand, a bidder's failure to acknowledge an amendment that is not material is waivable as a minor informality. Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Sec. 14.405; DeRalco, Inc., 68 Comp.Gen. 349 (1989), 89-1 CPD Para. 327. Where a reasonable possibility exists that a certain trade's services will be required in the performance of a contract, an amendment that revises a wage rate for that trade pursuant to the Davis-Bacon Act is material. Promethean Constr. Co., Inc., B-255222, Feb. 7, 1994, 94-1 CPD Para. 78. This is true regardless of how minimal the revisions because the wage rates are mandated by the Act, and the bidder has no legal obligation to pay the minimum wage rates without acknowledgment of the amendment. Robinson & Co., B-265656, Dec. 1, 1995, 95-2 CPD Para. 262. To give the bidder the opportunity to acknowledge an amendment revising wage rates after bid opening would allow the firm to decide to render itself ineligible for award by choosing not to cure the defect. See Phenix Mechanical Contractors, Inc., B-233061, Dec. 19, 1988, 88-2 CPD Para. 603; RTC Constr., B-217362, Jan. 24, 1985, 85-1 CPD Para. 95. [2] Here, the contracting officer determined that there is a reasonable possibility that sprinkler fitters could be used to perform some of the work under this current project.

Full decision text continues on ProtestIntel...