Better Roads

May 2012

Better Roads Digital Magazine

Issue link: https://read.dmtmag.com/i/85916

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 12 of 67

government's rejection of a low bid as non-responsive, including rejection for failing to submit a price for a minor bid item and for being unbalanced, was deter- mined to be improper. On August 2, 2011, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (COE) issued an invitation for bids for the award of a fixed price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite- quantity (ID/IQ) construction contract for road and drainage work at Fort Polk, Louisiana. The term of the proposed contract was for one base year, with four ad- ditional 1-year option periods. The IFB required bid- ders to complete a bid schedule listing 378 separate line-items. Each line-item included a description, an estimated quantity, and a unit of purchase, in addi- tion to blank spaces for the bidders to insert their unit prices and extended prices. The IFB required bidders to submit pricing for all the items. The 378 line-items included work such as removal of curbs and gutters, removal of trees and stumps, construction of drainage inlet structures and pavement replacement. Lowest bid On September 2nd, two bids were received, includ- ing a low bid from W. B. Construction and Sons, Inc. of $8,984,611.70, and a second low bid from Tanner Heavy Equipment Company LLC of $9,291,020.50. The COE produced an independent government esti- mate (IGE) of $10,304,987.10. Thus, W.B.'s bid was more than $300,000 lower than Tanner's bid, and more than $1.3 million lower than the IGE. On September 26th, the COE rejected W.B.'s bid as non-responsive and awarded the contract to Tanner. The COE rejected W.B.'s bid for two reasons: (1) WB's bid failed to include a unit or extended price for one line-item; and (2) WB's bid contained unbalanced pricing, as several line-item prices were significantly higher or lower than the prices in the IGE. On September 27th, W.B. filed a bid protest. W.B. claimed the omission of the one line-item price in its bid was a waivable minor deviation that did not make its bid non-responsive. In addition, W.B. claimed the COE failed to conduct a required risk analysis before rejecting its bid as unbalanced. In its bid, W.B. failed to submit a price for Line Item 36 regarding removal of 21 to 50 trees from 24" to 36" diameter. However, W.B.'s bid contained prices for at least 11 other "tree removal" bid items. In addition, Line Item 36 was divisible from the contract because the COE was not obligated to perform any ID/IQ work. Further, the government's estimated price for Line Item 36 was less than 0.07 percent of the total IGE. As a result, W.B.'s failure to include a price for Line Item 36 was determined to be a waivable, minor deviation since this line-item was divisible from the contract and the price was de minimis as to the total contract cost. The COE also rejected W.B.'s bid as unbalanced be- cause 92 items in W.B.'s bid were 30 to 50 percent over the IGE, and 54 items were more than 50 percent under the IGE. The COE's initial determination that W.B.'s bid was unbalanced was found to be reasonable. However, the COE is also required to consider risks as- sociated with unbalanced pricing, and only reject a bid where it performs an analysis that shows the unbal- anced bid poses an unacceptable risk. Here, the COE did not perform any analysis. As a result, the COE's rejection of W.B.'s bid as unbalanced was found to be improper. In summary, W.B.'s low bid was missing a price for one line-item and determined to be unbalanced. The COE rejected W.B.'s bid on these grounds. However, that is not the end of the inquiry. Prior to reject- ing a low bid as non-responsive, the government must make more than this minimal showing. The government must also show negative consequences, including that the missing price is more than a minor deviation and the unbalanced bid poses an unaccept- able risk. Here, the Army Corps failed to make this second showing of negative consequences. Therefore, its rejection of W.B.'s low bid was itself determined to be unbalanced. For contractors, this case highlights the importance of making sure that bids are responsive to all bidding requirements, or with the right showing, a public en- tity may reject your bid (even if it is the lowest). For public entities, this case highlights the importance of how unbalanced bids need to be rejected. Specifically, there must be a showing the bid is unbalanced and that negative consequences result. Brian Morrow is a partner in Newmeyer & Dillion LLP, a law firm in California. He is a licensed California Civil Engineer, and specializes in the field of construction law, including road and heavy construction. Contact him at brian.morrow@ndlf.com Better Roads May 2012 9b

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Better Roads - May 2012