95-002648BID Amdahl Corporation vs. Department Of Highway Safety And Motor Vehicles
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, June 6, 1995.


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Summary: Where Request For Proposal specifications provided for three phases of bid evaluation; a protest filed after tabulation of only two phases was premature.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8AMDAHL CORPORATION, )

11)

12Petitioner, )

14)

15vs. ) CASE NO. 95-2648BID

20)

21FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAY )

26SAFETY AND MOTOR VEHICLES, )

31)

32Respondent, )

34and )

36)

37UNISYS CORPORATION, )

40)

41Intervenor. )

43__________________________________)

44RECOMMENDED ORDER OF DISMISSAL

48Upon due notice, on June 1, 1995, this cause came on for oral argument by

63telephonic conference call upon Unisys Corporation's Petition to Intervene and

73Motion to Dismiss. Thereafter, Amdahl Corporation filed a written response

83which, together with all other advices, has been considered by Ella Jane P.

96Davis, a duly designated Hearing Officer of the Division of Administrative

107Hearings.

108APPEARANCES

109For Petitioner: David K. Miller

114M. Stephen Turner

117Jay Adams

119BROAD AND CASSEL

122Post Office DRAWER 11300

126215 South Monroe Street, Suite 400

132Tallahassee, Florida 32302

135For Respondent: Enoch J. Whitney

140Judson Chapman

142Office of the General Counsel

147Department of Highway Safety and

152Motor Vehicles

1542900 Apalachee Parkway

157Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0524

160For Intervenor: Mary Piccard

164W. Robert Vezina III

168CUMMINGS, LAWRENCE & VEZINA, P.A.

1731004 DE SOTO PARK DRIVE

178Post Office Box 589

182Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0589

185STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

189Whether the protest herein is premature under the terms of the Request for

202Proposals and Section 120.53(5) F.S.

207PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

209This cause arises from a Request for Proposal (RFP) issued by the

221Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (DHSMV). Petitioner Amdahl

231Corporation (Amdahl) is ranked as the number two bidder if the bid process

244proceeds no further. Unisys Corporation (Unisys) is ranked as the number one

256bidder if the bid process proceeds no further.

264The case was referred to the Division of Administrative Hearings on May 25,

2771995. Unisys' motion to intervene was already filed. The undersigned hearing

288officer received the file on May 26, 1995. A notice of formal hearing for June

3038-9, 1995 was issued the same day.

310Unisys filed its motion to dismiss on May 30, 1995. Oral argument occurred

323on June 1, 1995, as recited above. This recommended order addresses that

335motion.

336There was no opposition to the intervention of Unisys. Intervention was

347orally ordered. This order also memorializes that ruling. The style of this

359case is hereby amended as set out above.

367FINDINGS OF FACT

3701. This proceeding concerns a protest by Amdahl regarding DHSMV's "notice

381of intent to benchmark" with Unisys pursuant to RFP 046-95 REBID.

3922. The RFP was issued on April 5, 1995. Meetings concerning the

404specifications were held on April 14 and 18, 1995. No protests were timely

417filed with regard to the specifications. On May 4, 1995, the agency issued its

431notice of intent to benchmark as more specifically described below.

4413. The RFP is divided into three sections: the technical proposal, the

453price proposal, and the benchmark. So far, all proposals have been evaluated

465and ranked by DHSMV based on technical and price criteria. At this stage,

478Unisys is ranked first, and Amdahl is ranked second.

4874. When it had determined that Unisys had received the highest combined

499score on the technical and price proposals, DHSMV posted the tabulated scores of

512all proposers and notified them of the agency's intent to proceed to the

525benchmark evaluation phase of the RFP with Unisys. In an abundance of caution,

538the agency included in its notice of intent to benchmark, to which was attached

552the final point tabulation for all competing vendors, the notice of a right to

566protest within 72 hours pursuant to Section 120.53 (5) F.S.

5765. Amdahl timely filed its notice of protest and its formal protest.

588Without unnecessary elaboration, the thrust of Amdahl's protest is directed to

599Sections 3.23 and 6.0 of the RFP and DHSMV's scoring of the technical and price

614proposals. That protest includes, but may not be limited to, an accusation that

627the agency improperly permitted Unisys to manipulate its certified minority

637business enterprise compliance after the submittal of its response to the RFP.

6496. Amdahl further asserted that since a tabulation was attached to the

661notice of intent to benchmark and due to the wording of Section 120.53(5)(b)

674F.S., DHSMV Rule 15-2.003(2), and RFP General Condition 5 and Special Condition

6863.5, Amdahl was required to challenge the DHSMV scoring and tabulation at this

699point in time or be presumed to have waived its right to protest.

7127. Pursuant to Sections 4.1 and 4.2 of the RFP, the highest ranked

725proposer (as determined by the scoring system thus far) next must participate in

738a month-long benchmark designed to demonstrate the highest ranked proposer's

748ability to perform. If the highest ranked proposer fails the benchmark, DHSMV

760will eliminate the highest ranked proposer and the next ranked proposer will be

773given the opportunity to perform the benchmark. If the second ranked proposer

785fails, the third can try benchmarking, and so on. Once some proposer passes the

799benchmark tier of evaluation, the recommendation to award will be posted.

810Specifically, RFP specifications 4.1 and 4.2 which were not challenged by a

822protest within 72 hours of the last explanatory meeting thereon, read as

834follows:

8354.1 CONTRACT AWARD

838It is the intent of the DHSMV to require the

848qualified proposer scoring the highest number

854of points after the Technical evaluation, and

861Costs evaluation of the proposals to benchmark

868all proposed hardware and software on the

875configurations proposed . The Benchmark will

881be performed at the DHSMV, Kirkman Data Center,

889Tallahassee, Florida. Upon successful completion

894of the Benchmark described in ATTACHMENT-B ,

900a recommendation to award the contract resulting

907from RFP 046-95-REBID will be submitted to the

915Governor and Cabinet of the State of Florida.

923Final award of a contract for this RFP will be

933contingent upon the agency obtaining third party

940financing.

9414.2 MANDATORY BENCHMARK REQUIREMENT

945The hardware and software proposed in this RFP

953shall be benchmarked using the performance criteria

960set forth in ATTACHMENT-B. This benchmark shall

967be performed utilizing ORACLE asw the DHSMV data-

975base standard. It is the responsibility of the

983proposer to insure that all hardware and software

991proposed meet this requirement. In the event any

999non conformity or noncompatibility is encountered

1005at any time, the proposer will be eliminated from

1014further consideration and the next highest points

1021scoring proposer will be given the opportunity to

1029perform the benchmark. (Emphasis in the original)

10368. DHSMV asserted unequivocally that in the present case, if Unisys does

1048not pass the benchmark, then Unisys will be eliminated and Amdahl will be

1061permitted to benchmark. It is equally clear that if Unisys passes the

1073benchmark, then a recommendation to award will be issued.

10829. All concerned seem to recognize the foregoing as the natural flow of

1095the RFP award procedure as contemplated by the RFP. Even the prayer for relief

1109contained in Amdahl's petition states, in pertinent part,

"1117. . . Amdahl requests that DHSMV suspend further

1126action with respect to the contract award process

1134until this protest is resolved by final agency

1142action; . . . That a DOAH recommended order and a

1153DHSMV final order be entered selecting Amdahl as

1161the winning proposal for benchmarking and ultimate

1168award of the contract; . . . .

117610. Amdahl asserts that it is both fairer and more efficient to score the

1190competing proposals and resolve all scoring issues pertaining to the technical

1201and price portions before benchmarking the interim winner, rather than providing

1212an opportunity for the interim winner to negotiate the manner in which its

1225products can be integrated to achieve conformance and compatibility with the

1236agency's purposes; that the benchmarking procedure directed to Unisys cannot be

1247monitored by Amdahl for possible protest purposes at a later stage; and that

1260benchmarking permits Unisys to make further adjustments towards qualifying a

1270minority enterprise that was not certified at the time Unisys submitted its

1282proposal. Amdahl did not raise any of these issues prior to submitting its own

1296bid.

1297CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

130011. Any jurisdiction the Division of Administrative Hearings derives

1309herein is pursuant to Sections 120.53(5) and Section 120.57 (1), F.S,

132012. Bid protests are governed by Section 120.53(5) F.S. The statute

1331requires agencies to establish rules regulating protests of their decision or

1342intended decision concerning a bid solicitation or a contract award. There are

1354two types of agency action giving rise to the right to protest. These are

1368decisions concerning the solicitation specifications and an intended decision to

1378award a contract.

138113. The motion to dismiss asserts two grounds for dismissal. First, that

1393Amdahl's protest in effect untimely challenges the specifications, and second,

1403that the protest is premature until the agency completes all phases of its

1416evaluations, including the benchmark tier of evaluation.

142314. Agencies understandably must be circumspect in advising potentially

1432affected parties of statutory time limits, because, absent notice, an agency

1443cannot reject a protest as untimely. See, Capital Copy, Inc. v. University of

1456Florida, 526 So. 2d 988 (Fla. 1st DCA 1988). Here, the agency, in an effort to

1472accommodate all possible interpretations of the statute, has confused the

1482priorities of its own RFP by providing a notice and window of opportunity to

1496protest which is not normally contemplated by the statute. Accordingly, it is

1508not surprising that Amdahl thought it had better protest now to avoid being

1521deemed to have waived all protestable issues now apparent.

153015. The statute is designed to protect parties and the administrative

1541process from unduly burdensome and wasteful litigation. Amdahl's argument that

1551the case of Xerox Corp. v. DPR, 489 So. 2d 1230 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986) requires

1567that a protest be filed any time a tabulation is announced, however non-final

1580that tabulation may be, is not persuasive. That case essentially addressed

1591timeliness for filing a formal protest after a notice of protest has been filed

1605or, in effect, explained the methodology for perfecting a protest toward formal,

1617independent hearing before the Division of Administrative Hearings. It does not

1628control this situation, which is one of filing a premature notice of protest and

1642premature formal protest.

164516. The current proceeding is not authorized. Section 120.53(5) F.S. and

1656Rule 15.2003(3) and (4) F.A.C. are controlling. The two categories of intended

1668agency action set out above (decisions concerning the solicitation

1677specifications and an intended decision to award a contract) are all that may be

1691protested, not a notice of intent to proceed to the third phase or tier of the

1707proposal evaluation process.

171017. If DHSMV proceeds to benchmark and Unisys fails to perform, Amdahl

1722will be invited to benchmark and this current proceeding will have been a

1735fruitless, but expensive and time-consuming exercise. If DHSMV proceeds to

1745benchmark and Unisys performs satisfactorily, Amdahl and all other proposers

1755will have another window of opportunity to protest all three tiers of evaluation

1768when the agency's recommendation (intent) to award is noticed.

177718. To adhere to Petitioner's reasoning would be to invite premature

1788protests at each tier. To adhere to Petitioner's reasoning would be to open the

1802door to sequential protests by each proposer who flunks the benchmark test.

1814Either result would be unduly burdensome on the agency's resources and the

1826administrative forum. Neither result would facilitate Section 120.53 F.S.'s

1835goal to resolve all bid protests in the shortened time frame provided therein.

1848While minds outside the agency may assess the tier system contained in the RFP

1862specifications as increasing, rather than decreasing, costs associated with

1871bidding, evaluating, testing (benchmarking), awarding, and protesting, that is

1880not a viable issue under Section 120.53(5) F.S. The agency has wide discretion

1893to establish its own bid procedure, and it is entitled to the orderly pursuit of

1908its design and implementation. While the three tier evaluation process may be

1920awkward, it is not ambiguous and it was not timely challenged when the

1933specifications were subject to challenge. The motion to dismiss should be

1944granted.

1945RECOMMENDATION

1946Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is

1958recommended that the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles enter a

1970final order dismissing the current petition without prejudice to its appropriate

1981issues being raised within the statutory time frame after the agency's

1992recommendation to award contract described in Section 4.1 of the RFP is issued

2005and prior to that recommendation to award being sumitted to the Governor and

2018Cabinet.

2019DONE and RECOMMENDED this 6th day of June, at Tallahassee, Florida.

2030___________________________________

2031ELLA JANE P. DAVIS

2035Hearing Officer

2037Division of Administrative Hearings

2041The DeSoto Building

20441230 Apalachee Parkway

2047Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550

2050(904) 488-9675

2052Filed with the Clerk of the

2058Division of Administrative Hearings

2062this 6th day of June, 1995

2068COPIES FURNISHED:

2070David K. Miller

2073M. Stephen Turner

2076Jay Adams

2078BROAD AND CASSEL

2081P.O. DRAWER 11300

2084215 South Monroe St. Ste 400

2090Tallahassee, Florida 32302

2093Enoch J. Whitney

2096Judson Chapman

2098Office of the General Counsel

2103Department of Highway Safety and

2108Motor Vehicles

21102900 Apalachee Parkway

2113Tallahassee, Florida 32399

2116Mary Piccard

2118W. Robert Vezina III

2122Cummings, Lawrence & Vezina, P.A.

21271004 De Soto Park Drive

2132PO Box 589

2135Tallahassee, Florida 32302

2138Charles J. Brantley

2141Office of the General Counsel

2146Department of Highway Safety and

2151Motor Vehicles

21532900 Apalachee Parkway

2156Tallahassee, Florida 32399

2159NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

2165All parties have the right to submit written exceptions to this Recommended

2177Order. All agencies allow each party at least 10 days in which to submit

2191written exceptions. Some agencies allow a larger period within which to submit

2203written exceptions. You should contact the agency that will issue the final

2215order in this case concerning agency rules on the deadline for filing exceptions

2228to this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be

2240filed with the agency that will issue the final order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
Date: 06/26/1995
Proceedings: Final Order of Dismissal; Appendix to Final Order of Dismissal Ruling On Exceptions to Recommended Order; Order On Motion to Stay filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/21/1995
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 06/21/1995
Proceedings: Recommended Order
Date: 06/06/1995
Proceedings: (Intervenor) Response and Objections to Request for Production of Documents filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/06/1995
Proceedings: Recommended Order of Dismissal sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held 06/01/95 telephonic conference call.
Date: 06/01/1995
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Objections to Interrogatories; Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum filed.
Date: 06/01/1995
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Response to Motion to Dismiss filed.
Date: 05/31/1995
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Response to Motion to Dismiss; Response to Request for Documents Production filed.
Date: 05/31/1995
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Motion for Protective Order; Petitioner`s Motion to Compel Discovery and Notice of Hearing filed.
Date: 05/30/1995
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Notice of Records Production Without Deposition; Subpoena Duces Tecum; Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum filed.
Date: 05/30/1995
Proceedings: (Intervenor) Request for Production of Documents; Notice of Service of Unisys Corporation's Interrogatories to Amdahl Corporation filed.
Date: 05/30/1995
Proceedings: (Intervenor) Motion to Dismiss and Request for Expedited Preliminary Hearing and Oral Argument filed.
Date: 05/26/1995
Proceedings: Prehearing Order sent out.
Date: 05/26/1995
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for June 8, 1995 (June 9 is also reserved); 9:30am; Tallahassee)
Date: 05/25/1995
Proceedings: Petitioner`s Request for Documents Production filed.
Date: 05/25/1995
Proceedings: (Unisys Corp.) Notice of Correction filed.
Date: 05/24/1995
Proceedings: Agency referral letter; Amdahl Corporation's Formal Written Protest; Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing; Petition to Intervene filed.

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
05/24/1995
Date Assignment:
05/25/1995
Last Docket Entry:
06/26/1995
Location:
Tallahassee, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
Suffix:
BID
 

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Related Florida Statute(s) (2):

Related Florida Rule(s) (1):