B-298883; B-298883.2, Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering, December 13, 2006
Case: B-298883
Agency:
Protester: B
Date: 2006-12-13
Denied
B-298883; B-298883.2, Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering, December 13, 2006
TITLE: B-298883; B-298883.2, Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering, December 13, 2006
BNUMBER: B-298883; B-298883.2
DATE: December 13, 2006
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B-298883; B-298883.2, Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering, December 13, 2006
Decision
Matter of: Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering
File: B-298883; B-298883.2
Date: December 13, 2006
Donald A. Stadtler for the protester.
Brian E. Toland, Esq., U.S. Army Materiel Command, for the agency.
Edward Goldstein, Esq., and Christine S. Melody, Esq., Office of the
General Counsel, GAO, participated in the preparation of the decision.
DIGEST
Cancellation of request for proposals (RFP) was reasonable where, after
issuance of the RFP, the agency determined that it was required to satisfy
its requirement from Federal Prison Industries under Federal Acquisition
Regulation sect. 8.602.
DECISION
Management Solutions, L.C. d/b/a EssTech Engineering protests the
cancellation of request for proposals (RFP) No. W52H09-06-R-0314, issued
by the Department of the Army, U.S. Army Materiel Command, for 809
indicator control subassemblies. Management Solutions argues that the
agency did not have a reasonable basis for canceling the solicitation and
also challenges the agency's concurrent decision to obtain the requirement
from Federal Prison Industries, Inc. (FPI), arguing that the RFP instead
should have been set aside for Historically Underutilized Business Zone
(HUBZone) small businesses.
We deny the protest.
On May 11, 2006, the Army issued the RFP as a small business set-aside,
with a closing date of June 13. Prior to the closing date, Management
Solutions sent the contracting officer several e-mail messages requesting
that the solicitation be set aside for HUBZone small businesses. As a
consequence of those requests, the contracting officer amended the RFP's
closing date and issued a sources sought notice, in order to determine
whether a HUBZone set-aside was appropriate.[1] On August 7, however, the
Army received a submission from FPI which provided FPI's price and
delivery terms for the requirement. Upon receipt of that submission, the
contracting officer realized that the agency had not conducted market
research to determine whether the product offered by FPI was comparable to
products available from the private sector, as contemplated by Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) sect. 8.602. In an effort to determine how
FPI's price and delivery terms compared to those of commercial vendors,
the contracting officer sent survey questionnaires to the firms that had,
to date, responded to the RFP. In the surveys, the contracting officer
sought, among other things, information regarding the firms' price,
quality, and delivery schedule for the items. Twelve firms responded to
the surveys. Based on the survey results, the contracting officer
concluded that FPI's price, quality, and delivery terms were comparable to
the commercial vendors'; as a result, the contracting officer canceled the
RFP on September 21 in order to place the requirement with FPI.[2] Agency
Report, Tab L, Memorandum for Record. This protest followed.
A contracting agency need only establish a reasonable basis to support a
decision to cancel an RFP. In this regard, so long as there is a
reasonable basis for doing so, an agency may cancel a solicitation no
matter when the information precipitating the cancellation first arises,
even if it is not until proposals have been submitted and evaluated.
Glen/Mar Constr., Inc., B-298355, Aug. 3, 2006, 2006 CPD para. 117 at 2.
Here, given that, as explained below, the agency was required to purchase
the indicator control subassemblies from FPI, the agency acted reasonably
in canceling the RFP.
Agencies are required to purchase supplies manufactured by FPI where,
after conducting market research, the agency determines that supplies
produced by FPI are comparable to those of the private sector in terms of
price, quality, and time of delivery. FAR sect. 8.602(a)(1), (3). While
the record reflects that the agency did not consider FPI as a source for
the indicator control subassemblies prior to issuance of the RFP, and thus
did not conduct market research in advance of the RFP, upon realizing that
FPI was a potential source for the indicator control subassemblies, the
contracting officer properly took steps required by the FAR to determine
whether FPI's item was comparable to that of the private sector in terms
of price, quality, and time of delivery.
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