Courts, Boards, & GAO

Trending Now
“Close Enough” Isn’t Good Enough: Protester’s “Homebrew” Certification Sinks Proposal • Lost in Translation: GAO Upholds Rejection of Lease Written in Japanese • Bid Protests in Alaska • Federal Circuit Holds Challengers to CICA Stay Overrides Need Not Satisfy Four-Factor Injunctive Relief Test • The Clock Is Still Ticking — Claims Timeliness Across the Boards and at the COFC

My Proposal Could Be Improved Through Discussions. Why Am I Not in the Competitive Range?

The protester challenged its exclusion from the competitive range. The protester argued the agency had disparately established the range. For offerors in the range, the agency had determined that flaws in their proposals could be addressed with discussions. The protester alleged flaws in its proposal could also be addressed in discussions, so it should have been included in the range, too. GAO didn't agree. The flaws in the protester’s proposal were more severe than problems in other offerors’ proposals.

Octo Consulting Group, Inc., GAO B-420988, B-420988.2

Background

The National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA) issued a solicitation seeking support for the agency’s geospatial search and retrieval system. NGA received eight proposals, including a proposal from Octo Consulting. NGA established a competitive ranged of the two highest-rated proposals. Octo was not included in the range, so it protested.

Analysis

Technical Evaluation

Octo alleged the agency failed to assign strengths to its technical approach and unreasonably assessed a weakness. GAO found these arguments amounted to disagreement with the agency’s evaluation conclusions.

Price Reasonableness

Octo contended that one of the offerors in the competitive range had proposed an unreasonable price. Octo noted this offeror’s price was more double the lowest-price offeror's.

But GAO found the agency had properly evaluated reasonableness. NGA had calculated the mean of proposed prices and then determined whether prices fell within a standard deviation of the mean. The price Octo objected to was high, but it was less than two standard deviations from the mean.

Professional Compensation

Another offeror in the competitive range had a price $20 million lower than Octo’s. Octo argued this offeror must have proposed unrealistic professional compensation.

NGA acknowledged that it was unable to evaluate this offeror’s compensation plan, because the offeror had not provided detailed salary information. Nevertheless, NGA thought it could obtain this information through discussions. GAO was cool with this. While an award based on missing information would be improper, nothing requires the agency to exclude an offeror from the competitive where the agency concludes a deficiency could be addressed through discussions.

Disparate Treatment

Octo contended NGA had disparately established the competitive range. For offerors in the range, NGA had determined that problems with their proposals could be addressed through discussions. Octo reasoned that problems with its own proposal could also have been addressed through discussions. But when it came to Octo, NGA had been as magnanimous.

GAO, however, found that Octo had not demonstrated that the flaws in its proposal were equal to the problems in other offerors’ proposals. In particular, Octo had received a “Fail” rating under one the evaluation factors. Moreover, Octo’s proposal had fewer strengths than the offerors included in the competitive range.

Octo is represented by Damien C. Specht, James A. Tucker, and Victoria Dalcourt Angle of Morrison & Foerster LLP. The agency is represented by Mark B. Grebel and Kenneth W. Sachs of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. GAO attorneys Uri R. Yoo and Alexander O. Levine participated in the decision.

--Case summary by Craig LaChance, Senior Editor

Get daily insights on bid protests, CDA claims, and contract litigation that shape the GovCon landscape with our Protests & Claims newsletter, delivering up-to-the-minute intelligence Monday–Saturday — Subscribe here.