Brazos Roofing, Inc.

Case: B-275319 Agency: Protester: Brazos Roofing, Inc. Date: 1997-02-07 Denied
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Brazos Roofing, Inc. BNUMBER: B-275319; B-275319.2 DATE: February 7, 1997 TITLE: Brazos Roofing, Inc. ********************************************************************** Matter of:Brazos Roofing, Inc. File: B-275319; B-275319.2 Date:February 7, 1997 Alan M. Grayson, Esq., and Ronald B. Vogt, Esq., Alan M. Grayson & Associates, for the protester. Neil Lowenstein, Esq., and Howard W. Roth III, Esq., Vandeventer, Black, Meredith & Martin, for States Roofing Corporation, an intervenor. Diane D. Hayden, Esq., George N. Brezna, Esq., and Patrick J. Coll, Esq., Department of the Navy, for the agency. Christina Sklarew, Esq., and Michael R. Golden, Esq., Office of the General Counsel, GAO, participated in the preparation of the decision. DIGEST Where the bidder correctly added contract line item amounts together to arrive at a total base year price but then used another figure on the next page of its bid schedule as its total base year price when calculating its option year prices, agency reasonably permitted correction of the obvious transcription error as a clerical mistake. DECISION Brazos Roofing, Inc. protests the Department of the Navy's award of a contract to States Roofing under invitation for bids (IFB) No. N00187-96-B-6331 for roofing repair and replacement. Brazos protests that the agency improperly changed the amount of States's bid in response to a perceived error, displacing Brazos's own apparent low bid. We deny the protest. The IFB was issued on May 20, 1996, as a multiple award, requirements solicitation and contemplated the award of separate contracts for a base year and two 1-year options for each of the five different locations in Virginia. Five firms, including Brazos and States, submitted timely bids. When these were opened, it was apparent that States had submitted the low bids for four of the sites, and Brazos's bid was low for the remaining site, which was Little Creek. For this site, Brazos had bid $1,156,925 for the base year and each of the two option years, for a total of $3,470,775, while States's bid was recorded as $1,274,430 for the base year, $1,197,964 for the first option year, and $1,138,066 for the second option year, for a total of $3,610,460. However, during the bid verification process, the Navy discovered a discrepancy in States's bid for that site which it believed to be a clerical error. The agency corrected the error, lowering States's base-year bid to $1,169,780, its first option year bid to $1,099,593.20, its second option year bid to $1,044,613.54, and its total bid to $3,313,968.74 and displacing Brazos's $3,470,775 bid in the process. When the Navy notified bidders that States had been awarded all five contracts, Brazos filed an agency-level protest, alleging that States's bid was "ambiguous and unbalanced." The Navy denied Brazos's protest and awarded the five contracts to States. Brazos then filed a protest with our Office, and the Navy suspended performance of the Little Creek contract pending our decision. Brazos protests here that it was improper for the agency to allow correction of States's bid because there was no clear and convincing evidence in the bid to support the figures that the agency accepted as the intended bid amount.[1] We agree with the agency that correction of the bid as a clerical mistake was proper. Federal Acquisition Regulation sec. 14.407-2(a) permits the contracting officer to correct a clerical mistake "apparent on its face in the bid." This section contemplates correction of minor errors or omissions in a bid, such as transcription errors. Trade-Winds Envtl. Restoration, Inc., B-259091, Mar. 3, 1995, 95-1 CPD para. 127; Cf. Pipeline Constr., Inc., 73 Comp. Gen. 228 (1994), 94-2 CPD para. 21. The bid schedule in the IFB included contract line items only for the base year. The first 15 pages of the bid schedule listed all of the contract line items and an estimated quantity; bidders were to insert their unit price and multiply it by the given quantity to arrive at an extended amount for each item. Bidders were to add all of the line item total amounts together, to arrive at a total contract price for the base year, and were to insert this figure in a blank provided for this purpose at the bottom of page 16 of the bid schedule. On pages 17 and 18, bidders were to compute their total option year prices by, for the first option year, copying the total base year bid from page 16 and inserting a percentage figure representing the amount, if any, by which the option year price would increase or decrease from the base year price, and then calculating the actual option year price; for the second option year price, bidders were to apply a percentage figure to the computed first option year price.

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