B-297789, Goodway Graphics of Virginia, Inc.; NPC, Inc.; P.A. Hutchison Co., March 21, 2006
Case: B-297789
Agency:
Protester: B
Date: 2006-03-21
Denied
B-297789
Mar 21, 2006
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Highlights
Goodway Graphics of Virginia, Inc., NPC, Inc., and P.A. Hutchison Co. protest the Government Printing Office's (GPO) decision to cancel an invitation for bids (IFB) issued pursuant to GPO's Program 421-M for production of Army books and pamphlets. The protesters assert that the agency lacked a compelling reason to cancel the IFB after bid opening.
We deny the protest.
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B-297789, Goodway Graphics of Virginia, Inc.; NPC, Inc.; P.A. Hutchison Co., March 21, 2006
Decision
Matter of: Goodway Graphics of Virginia, Inc.; NPC, Inc.; P.A.Hutchison Co.
File: B-297789
Date: March 21, 2006
AnthonyW. Hawks, Esq., for the protesters.
LaTonyaD. Hayes, Esq., Government Printing Office, for the agency.
KennethKilgour, Esq., and Christine Melody, Esq., Office of the General Counsel, GAO,participated in the preparation of the decision.
DIGEST
Where Government Printing Office (GPO)failed to comply with its policies regarding compilation of a bidders list andpublication of an invitation for bids (IFB), GPO reasonably determined that ithad a compelling reason to cancel the IFB after bid opening and resolicit its requirements.
DECISION
Goodway Graphics of Virginia,Inc., NPC, Inc., and P.A. Hutchison Co. protest the Government PrintingOffice's (GPO) decision to cancel an invitation for bids (IFB) issued pursuantto GPO's Program 421-M for production of Army books and pamphlets. The protesters assert that the agency lackeda compelling reason to cancel the IFB after bid opening.
We deny the protest.
The IFB was sent to 22 firms on October 27, 2005, and 16contractors responded. Bid opening washeld on November 17. The discovery thatone of several incumbents had been unintentionally excluded from the agency'sbidders list prompted the agency to investigate the procurement. That investigation uncovered two significant deviationsfrom the procurement policies contained in GPO's Printing ProcurementRegulation (PPR). The agency did notpost the IFB on either the GPO or Federal Business Opportunities (FedBizOpps)Internet websites,[1]see PPR, Chap. VIII, sect. 5.4, and the agency excluded twoincumbent contractors from the agency distribution list. See PPR, Chap. X, sect. 1.1(b)(4). On December 6, the contracting officer soughtthe concurrence of the GPO Contract Review Board in her decision to cancel andreadvertise the solicitation, as required by PPR, Chap. I, sect. 10.4(a)(2). The Board unanimously concurred with thecontracting officer's decision.
On December 9, the agency reissued the IFB to 21contractors with a December 19 bid opening date. Twenty-two contractors submitted bids, sixmore than responded to the first solicitation.This protest followed.
The PPR requires that there be a compelling reason tocancel an IFB after bid opening. PPR,Chap. XII, sect. 2(a); News Printing, Inc., B-274773.2, Feb. 11, 1997, 97-1 CPD para. 68 at 2.[2] Determining whether a compelling reasonexists involves the exercise of the contracting agency's judgment; we reviewsuch a determination only to ensure that it is reasonable. News Printing, Inc., supra.
The PPR states that an IFB may be cancelled after bidopening where cancellation is clearly in the best interest of thegovernment. PPR, Chap., XII, sect.2.1(b). Here, the contracting officerhad two principal reasons for concluding that the cancellation was in thegovernment's best interest: the agencyfailed to publish the solicitation on FedBizOpps;[3]and the agency failed to solicit two incumbents.[4] As explained below, we think the contractingofficer's decision to cancel the solicitation and, in the resolicitation, toadhere more closely to the policy guidance in the PPR, was reasonable.
The PPR provides that contracting officers shall promoteand provide for competition to the maximum extent practicable. PPR, Chap. VIII, sect. 3.4(a). Under the PPR, the term maximum extentpracticable is defined to mean that all responsible sources are permitted tocomplete. Id.sect. 3.3.[5] In this case, it clearly was reasonable forthe contracting officer to conclude that the failure to publish the IFB on FedBizOppsmay have impeded all responsible sources from competing. Compounding that failure, two incumbentcontractors were not sent the IFB, also contrary to the policy in the PPR toinclude previously successful bidders on the bidders list. PPR, Chap. X, sect. 1.1(b)(2). Under these circumstances, it was reasonablefor the contracting officer to conclude that cancellation would serve thepublic's interest in maximizing competition.Kertzman Contracting, Inc.; Centigrade, Inc.—Entitlement to Costs,supra.
In support of their position that the cancellation lackeda compelling basis, the protesters argue first that the grounds cited by thecontracting officer reflect GPO policy, not regulations, and that the agency actionsnot taken were optional, not required.
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