GCN Home > August 7, 2000 issue
FEDERAL CONTRACT LAW
GAO decisions remake the rules for schedule buys
One case at a time, the rules governing how agencies place orders under the General Services Administrations schedule contracts continue to evolve.

In recent months the General Accounting Office has issued two important decisions in this area.

The first, in May, concerned Computer Products Inc. The protest grew out of an agencys competition among schedule contractors for 11,955 hours of financial services.

Agencies need not conduct competitions under GSAs schedule program. But when they do, GAO enforces the ground rules. GAOs decisions dont cover the full panoply of procedures under Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 15, which outlines the rules for contract negotiations. Instead, the congressional watchdog agency is most concerned with whether or not a buying agency has adhered to notions of fundamental fairness.

In this particular case, the agency fell short of GAOs simple test. Its invitation to submit bids ranked price as the least important evaluation factor after past performance and the experience of personnel. Yet when it came to picking a winner, the agency made its award on the basis of pricethe lowest.

In deciding the protest, GAO looked at the evaluators blithe conclusion that there were no important noncost differences among the bidders. But GAO was convinced otherwise by evaluating documentation; it concluded that the protesting vendors proposal offered some real advantages and that those advantages might justify its higher price.

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In the record the agency failed to explain why these benefits had no weight.

The upshot: GAO sustained the protest.

Agencies that consider competition under the schedule program too troublesome should review a second GAO decision. In the case of Delta International Inc., GAO heard a protest of a schedule order for bomb detecting X-ray equipment. An agency had bought the equipment through a sole-source contract after determining that only one companys equipment met its requirement.

The crux of the determination was that only the company to whom the agency made the award offered what the agency called fully digital equipment. What the phrase fully digital meant and why it was important shifted throughout the protest. But GAOs decision ultimately has wider implications than settling on a definition of state-of-the-art bomb detection gear.
