Matter of:Texstar, Inc.

Case: B-275961 Agency: Protester: Matter of:Texstar, Inc. Date: 1997-04-22 Denied
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Matter of:Texstar, Inc. BNUMBER: B-275961; B-275980 DATE: April 22, 1997 TITLE: Matter of:Texstar, Inc. ********************************************************************** DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE A protected decision was issued on the date below and was subject to a GAO Protective Order. This version has been redacted or approved by the parties involved for public release. Matter of:Texstar, Inc. File: B-275961; B-275980 Date:April 22, 1997 Gretchen A. Benolken, Esq., Fogle & Benolken, for the protester. Michael A. Nemeroff, Esq., Sidley & Austin, for Sierracin/Sylmar, an intervenor. Marian Sullivan, Esq., Department of the Air Force, for the agency. Marie Penny Ahearn, Esq., and John M. Melody, Esq., Office of the General Counsel, GAO, participated in the preparation of the decision. DIGEST Multiple awardee on two solicitations for aircraft windshields is not entitled to award for entire requirement under each contract by virtue of its status as a Blue Ribbon Contractor (BRC), where each solicitation provided for two awards and solicitations' BRC provisions were not intended to entitle any one offeror to more than one of the two windshield awards under each solicitation. DECISION Texstar, Inc., an awardee under both Department of the Air Force request for proposals (RFP) Nos. F41608-96-R-56510 and F41608-96-R-56511, for right- and left-sided A-37/T-37 aircraft windshields, protests the award of contracts to Sierracin/Sylmar (Sierracin) under the same solicitations. We deny the protests. Both RFPs solicited prices for initial definite and incremental indefinite quantities, and for government-furnished tooling and contractor-manufactured tooling. Further, both RFPs provided for "multiple awards for sustaining multiple sources"; two contracts would be awarded, consisting of "award of 50 percent of the initial order quantity . . . to each one of the two lowest evaluated offerors" and award of subsequent delivery orders based on a best value determination.[1] The evaluation for the windshields was to be based on a total price developed by multiplying the best estimated quantity (BEQ) for each line item by a weighted average unit price offered for all increments. Additionally, the RFPs provided that "[i]dentification of the lowest and next lowest evaluated offerors" would be "subject to" the provisions of the Air Force Materiel Command's (AFMC) Blue Ribbon Contractor (BRC) program. See AFMC Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (AFMCFARS) Part 5315.605-90. This program, which applies to spare parts acquisitions, recognizes that among responsible contractors "varying degrees of quality and delivery performance exist and that award to the lowest evaluated price offeror is not always in the best interest of the government." Id. When the BRC preference is used, an agency may select the BRC offeror over a lower-priced, non-BRC offeror after considering the price differential. Id. The agency received two offers--from Texstar and Sierracin--under each RFP. Once the agency determined both proposals were acceptable, it awarded each firm contracts under both solicitations; Texstar's evaluated contract price for the windshields was [deleted] and Sierracin's $1,085,088. In addition, under line item No. 0004 in both RFPs, for contractor-furnished tooling, the agency made award to Sierracin based on its low price of $45,660; Texstar offered [deleted].[2] Texstar argues that the evaluation of Sierracin's proposals was defective, and that the windshield awards to Sierracin at prices higher than the protester's were not in the government's best interest. In particular, the protester contends that it should have been awarded the Sierracin contracts based on its status as a BRC. Texstar's status as a BRC did not entitle it to award for the entire requirement under each contract. While the BRC provisions in the RFPs refer to one award and award to the lowest-priced BRC offeror if low overall, they do not purport to override the RFPs' multiple award provisions; indeed, the agency's intention to make two awards under each RFP was reiterated in amendment No. 0002. Reading the RFPs as a whole, then, we think it is clear that, while the BRC provisions could be applied in determining which offeror was entitled to each of the two awards under each RFP,[3] those provisions were not intended to entitle any one offeror to more than one of the two windshield awards under each RFP. Texstar further contends that the agency improperly made a single award of the contractor-furnished tooling item to Sierracin, since it believed the agency would purchase two sets of tooling (one under each contract).

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