JEI

Case: B-416749 Agency: Department of the Interior : National Park Service Protester: JEI Date: 2018-10-24 Denied
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B-416749 Oct 24, 2018 Jump To VIEW DECISION DOWNLOADS RELATED PAGES GAO CONTACTS Highlights J.E.I., of Cameron Park, California, a small business, protests the issuance of a Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) order to American Telecom Solutions, L.L.C. (ATS), of Severna Park, Maryland, also a small business, under request for quotations (RFQ) No. RFQ1317493, issued by the Department of the Interior, National Park Service (NPS) for a commercial digital voice recorder base system, software, and licenses for Glacier National Park, at West Glacier Park, Montana. J.E.I. argues that ATS's quotation should have been rejected as unacceptable. We deny the protest. We deny the protest. View Decision Decision Matter of:  J.E.I. File:  B-416749 Date:  October 24, 2018 Steven Vodoklys, the protester. James L. Weiner, Esq., Department of the Interior, for the agency. Paul N. Wengert, Esq., and Tania Calhoun, Esq., Office of the General Counsel, GAO, participated in the preparation of the decision. DIGEST Protest that agency misevaluated successful vendor’s quotation as acceptable is denied where evaluation was reasonable and consistent with solicitation’s evaluation criteria. DECISION J.E.I., of Cameron Park, California, a small business, protests the issuance of a Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) order to American Telecom Solutions, L.L.C. (ATS), of Severna Park, Maryland, also a small business, under request for quotations (RFQ) No. RFQ1317493, issued by the Department of the Interior, National Park Service (NPS) for a commercial digital voice recorder base system, software, and licenses for Glacier National Park, at West Glacier Park, Montana.  J.E.I. argues that ATS’s quotation should have been rejected as unacceptable.  We deny the protest.  BACKGROUND The RFQ, which was posted on August 13, 2018, using the General Services Administration’s e-Buy system, requested quotations from small businesses that hold FSS contracts under Schedule 70 (the general purpose commercial information technology equipment, software, and services schedule).  The RFQ stated that quotations had to show that the vendor’s recorder system met an accompanying list of “minimum salient characteristics.”  The RFQ provided lines for vendors to provide prices for individual system components and a total price.  RFQ attach. 1 at 1.  The accompanying list of requirements included a general specification that the recorder system had to be compatible with the park’s existing “Telex C-Soft” brand dispatching consoles.  Additionally, as relevant to the protest, two of the listed “minimum salient characteristics” were that the base system be “3U rack mount,” and that there had to be a “Color LCD Touch Screen Display (7[-inch] or bigger).”  RFQ attach. 1 at 1.  NPS received responses from four vendors, of which the agency’s initial review concluded that three were complete quotations, including ones submitted by J.E.I. and ATS.  Memorandum of Law (MOL) at 1.  The agency determined that ATS’s quotation had the lowest price and was technically acceptable, so the agency announced the selection of its quotation for award on that basis on August 21.  MOL at 2.  This protest followed.  PROTEST J.E.I. argues that the RFQ required vendors “to incorporate a 7[-inch] display into the digital recorder housing,”[1] and that ATS’s quotation was therefore unacceptable because the awardee’s system does not have a 7-inch display screen incorporated into the housing of its recorder system.  Protest at 1.  According to the protester, the RFQ specification of a “display” meant “an output device for presentation of information in a visual form which is why the J.E.I. solution incorporates the display into the recorder.”  Id.  The protest alleges that ATS’s equipment uses a separate computer monitor, which J.E.I. argues must be distinguished from the RFQ-required display because a monitor is a “display device, circuitry, casing[,] and power supply[,] and is [a] standalone device.”  Id. NPS explains that the purchase here was conducted consistent with Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) § 8.405-1(c), as applicable to an FSS competition valued between the micropurchase threshold and the simplified acquisition threshold, and that the evaluation was consistent with FAR § 13.106.  MOL at 1.  NPS argues that although the RFQ expressly required the vendor’s product to have a display, there was no requirement for the display to be incorporated into the recorder housing.  Accordingly, a quotation offering a separate display was acceptable under the terms of the RFQ.[2]  Contracting Officer’s Statement at 2-3; MOL at 2.  In an FSS purchase valued between the micropurchase threshold and the simplified acquisition threshold, the contracting officer is directed to evaluate quotations as specified in the solicitation.

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