04-004252BID
Magnum Construction Management Corporation, D/B/A Mcm Corp. vs.
Broward County School Board
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Monday, March 21, 2005.
Recommended Order on Monday, March 21, 2005.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8MAGNUM CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT ) )
13CORPORATION, d/b/a MCM CORP., )
18)
19Petitioner, )
21) Case No. 04-4252BID
25vs. )
27)
28BROWARD COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD, )
33)
34Respondent, )
36)
37and )
39)
40JAMES B. PIRTLE CONSTRUCTION )
45COMPANY, INC., )
48)
49Intervenor. )
51RECOMMENDED ORDER
53This case came before Administrative Law Judge John G.
62Van Laningham for final hearing on January 19 and 20, 2005, in
74Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
77APPEARANCES
78For Petitioner: J. Alfredo De Armas, Esquire
85Alvarez, De Armas & Borron, P. A.
923211 Ponce De Leon Boulevard, Suite 302
99Coral Gables, Florida 33134
103For Respondent: Robert Paul Vignola, Esquire
109School Board of Broward County
114K. C. Wright Administrative Building
119600 Southeast Third Avenue, 11th Floor
125Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
129For Intervenor: Kevin A. Fernander, Esquire
135Tripp Scott, P. A.
139AutoNation Tower, 15th Street
143110 Southeast Sixth Street
147Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
151STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES
155The issues in this bid protest are whether, in making a
166preliminary decision to award a public contract, Respondent
174acted contrary to a governing statute, rule, policy, or project
184specification; and if so, for each such instance, whether the
194misstep was clearly erroneous, arbitrary or capricious, or
202contrary to competition.
205PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
207Respondent Broward County School Board issued Request for
215Proposals 2021-24-01 on May 18, 2004, for the procurement of
225Design/Build services in connection with the construction of a
234middle school. Responses to the RFP were received from six
244proposers and opened on August 31, 2004. Each proposer was a
255team comprised of a building contractor and a design
264professional.
265The proposals were reviewed and short-listed by a
273Consultant's Review Committee in accordance with the Request for
282Proposals' specifications. The committee recommended that one
289of the six proposals be rejected as nonresponsive. The
298remaining five proposals were then forwarded to the board, which
308was responsible for conducting its own evaluation and making the
318award. The short-listed proposals included those of Petitioner
326Magnum Construction Management Corporation and Intervenor James
333B. Pirtle Construction Company, Inc.
338Respondent held a special meeting on October 12, 2004,
347whereat the proposers made presentations to the board and
356participated in a question-and-answer session, following which
363each board member scored every responsive proposal. Pursuant to
372the Request for Proposals, the proposer receiving the most
381points from a board member would be considered that member's
391first choice. The Request for Proposals provided for the award
401to be made, if at all, to the proposer receiving a majority of
414the first choice votes. When the votes were counted, Intervenor
424received a plurality of four first choices, and the board voted
435to award Intervenor the contract.
440Petitioner filed a formal written protest of the intended
449award on October 25, 2004. At Petitioner's request, its formal
459written protest was referred to the Florida Division of
468Administrative Hearings ("DOAH"), which held a formal hearing in
479the matter on January 19 and 20, 2005, as scheduled.
489The parties stipulated to a number of facts. The
498stipulated facts were memorialized in the record and taken as
508established without need of further proof. Additionally, Joint
516Exhibits 1-39 were admitted into evidence without objection.
524In its case, Petitioner elicited testimony from Fernando
532Munilla; Stephanie Arma Kraft; Lois Wexler; Judie S. Budnick;
541Marty Rubinstein; Darla L. Carter; Benjamin J. Williams; Adolfo
550Cotilla; Dr. Robert D. Parks; and Beverly A. Gallagher. 1
560Respondent presented the testimony of Michelle Bryant Wilcox and
569Denis Herrmann. Intervenor called one witness, Paul Carty.
577The parties stipulated to the filing of proposed
585recommended orders within 20 days after the filing of the
595transcript of the formal hearing. The transcript was filed with
605DOAH on February 9, 2005, making the proposed recommended orders
615due on March 1, 2005. All parties timely filed proposed
625recommended orders containing proposed findings of fact and
633conclusions of law. The parties' proposed recommended orders
641have been carefully considered during the preparation of this
650Recommended Order.
652Unless otherwise indicated, citations to the Florida
659Statutes refer to the 2004 Florida Statutes.
666FINDINGS OF FACT
6691. On May 18, 2004, Respondent School Board of Broward
679County ("School Board" or "SBBC") 2 issued Request for Proposals
691No. 2021-24-01 (the "RFP") to solicit offers on a contract for
703the design and construction of a middle school (the "Project").
7142. Proposals were submitted by Petitioner Magnum
721Construction Management Corporation, d/b/a MCM Corp. ("MCM");
730Intervenor James P. Pirtle Construction Company, Inc.
737("Pirtle"); Seawood Builders, a Division of Catalfumo
746Construction, LLC ("Seawood"); Stiles Construction Co.
754("Stiles"); James A. Cummings, Inc. ("Cummings"); and Skanska
766USA Building, Inc. ("Skanska"). SBBC opened these six proposals
777on August 31, 2004.
7813. In accordance with the evaluation procedure set forth
790in the RFP, the proposals were reviewed by a Consultant's Review
801Committee ("CRC"), whose task was to evaluate the proposals and
813prepare a "short list" of between three and six firms for the
825School Board, which would make the final determination. At its
835first meeting on September 14, 2004, the CRC rejected Skanska's
845proposal as nonresponsive for failing to submit an original bid
855bond. On September 30, 2004, the CRC met again and, after
866deliberating, decided to place the five remaining proposers on
875the "short list."
8784. Following the CRC's review, the evaluation proceeded
886pursuant to Section 1.21 of the RFP, which states:
895A. The Facilities and Construction
900Management Division will forward to the
906Superintendent of Schools the completed
911short-list of the Proposer's Submittal. The
917Superintendent will then forward the Short-
923List to The School Board of Broward County,
931Florida for its use in the interview and
939final selection of the successful
944Proposer(s). The short list of [sic ] will
952be forwarded to the School Board of Broward
960County, Florida unranked.
963B. The short-listed firms shall present
969their design solutions to The School Board
976of Broward County, Florida. Short-listed
981firms will be notified of the time and place
990for their respective presentations.
994Proposer may utilize any media for their
1001presentations, but shall restrict their
1006presentations to 30 minutes total (5 minutes
1013for set-up, 10 minutes for presentation, and
102015 minutes for questions and answers).
1026C. At the conclusion of the Proposer's
1033presentation to the Board, Board Members may
1040ask questions concerning the presentation,
1045the Proposer's assembled Design/Build team,
1050and the Design Criteria Professional's
1055assessment of the Proposers submittal or
1061topic of the Board Member's choice [sic ]
1069preliminary design concept for the project,
1075including means and methods.
1079D. At the conclusion of the presentation
1086and interview of all short-listed firms, The
1093School Board of Broward County, Florida will
1100deliberate and utilize the short-listing
1105evaluation criteria and point schedule to
1111finalize a selection of the successful
1117Proposer. The Board reserves the right to
1124award a contract for the project or award no
1133contract (reject all submittals).
1137E. During and at the conclusion of the
1145presentation and interview of all short-
1151listed firms, the School Board of Broward
1158County, Florida will assign points to each
1165Proposer utilizing the above evaluation
1170criteria and rank them according to their
1177scores. The firm receiving the most points
1184by a Board Member will be considered the
1192first choice of that Board member. The firm
1200that receives a majority of the first choice
1208votes may be awarded the contract.[ 3 ] In the
1218event of a tie, a voice vote will be taken
1228until the tie is broken. The Board reserves
1236the right to award a contract for the
1244project or award no contract.
12495. The "evaluation criteria and point schedule" referred
1257to in Section 1.21(D) and (E) are found in Section 1.20, which
1269provides as follows:
1272A. The School Board of Broward County,
1279Florida's final selection will be based on
1286the Selection Criteria Score Sheet.
1291Evaluation Criteria Maximum Points
1295Profile & Qualifications
1298of Proposer's Team 6
1302Proposed Project Scheduling 7
1306Past Work Performance
1309and References 10
1312Site Design 7
1315Building Design 23
1318Cost proposal 25
1321S.I.T. Award 15
1324MBE Participation 7________
1327Total Points Possible 100
1331B. The School Board of Broward County,
1338Florida will award points up to a maximum,
1346for evaluation criteria numbers listed above
1352as based upon an evaluation of the
1359Proposer's submittal and presentation.
13636. On October 12, 2004, the School Board held a special
1374meeting to discuss the procurement with staff, hear the
1383presentations of the short-listed proposers, and grade the
1391proposals. Eight board members participated. 4
13977. One subject that generated considerable discussion was
1405the "S.I.T. Award," an evaluation criterion worth 15 points.
1414The S.I.T. Award (the acronym stands for School Infrastructure
1423Thrift) was based on a mathematical calculation that left no
1433room for discretion. Points were awarded on a predetermined
1442scale according to the percentage by which a proposer's base
1452proposal amount fell below, or exceeded, the Project's
1460established budget as a function of cost per student station.
1470Because the allowable cost per student station is $15,390 and
1481the Project calls for 1,998 student stations, the budget, for
1492purposes of the S.I.T. Award, is $30,749,200.
15018. As the School Board's staff had determined before the
1511special board meeting on October 12, 2004, MCM's base proposal
1521amount is 15.48 percent below the S.I.T budget. The cost of
1532Cummings' proposal is 11.36 percent below the budget, Pirtle's
1541about three percent below $30.7 million, Seawood's roughly equal
1550to the budget, and Stiles' proposal 12 percent above the
1560established budget. On these percentages, using the scoring
1568scale prescribed in the RFP, MCM and Cummings were entitled to
157915 points apiece in the S.I.T. Award category, Pirtle seven
1589points, Seawood six points, and Stiles zero points. The School
1599Board was informed of these scores before its members graded the
1610proposals on the seven remaining criteria.
16169. After the proposers had made their presentations, the
1625board members individually assigned points to the proposals.
1633MCM received the highest aggregate score (713), followed by
1642Pirtle (705), Cummings (698), Seawood (668), and Stiles (541).
1651Pirtle, however, received the most first choice votes of any
1661proposerfour. Cummings received two first choice votes, and
1669MCM and Seawood were each ranked first by one member.
167910. The following table depicts the rankings by member:
1688Budnick Carter Gallagher Kraft Parks Rubinstein Wexler Williams
16961 Seawood MCM Pirtle Pirtle Cummings Pirtle Cummings Pirtle
17052 MCM Cummings MCM/Seawood Seawood MCM MCM MCM Cummings
1714(-1) (-4) (-2) (-1) (-1)
17193 Cummings Pirtle Cummings Pirtle Cummings Pirtle/Seawood MCM
17274 Pirtle Seawood Cummings MCM Seawood Seawood Seawood
17355 Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles
1744The parenthetic numbers in the second row show by how many
1755points MCM trailed the first choice.
176111. Although Pirtle did not receive a majority of the
1771first choice votes, the School Board nevertheless voted to award
1781the contract to Pirtle. 5
178612. Pirtle has argued that MCM lacks standing to maintain
1796this protest because MCM came in tied (with Seawood) for third
1807behind Pirtle and Cummings, respectivelyaccording to the
1814number of first choice votes each proposal received. While the
1824RFP does not specify a procedure for ranking the proposals
1834behind the number one choice, the method suggested by Pirtle is
1845inconsistent with the RFP's plain language, which is clearly
1854intended to ensure that the contract is awarded to the first
1865choice of a majority of the board members. To determine second
1876place, the proper question is not, Who had the most first choice
1888votes after Pirtle? but rather, Who would be the first choice of
1900a majority if Pirtle were unavailable?
190613. To begin to answer the relevant question, Pirtle must
1916be removed from the rankings of the respective members, and each
1927proposer below Pirtle moved up a spot. When this is done, the
1939rankings look like this:
1943Budnick Carter Gallagher Kraft Parks Rubinstein Wexler Williams
19511 Seawood MCM MCM/Seawood Seawood Cummings MCM Cummings Cummings
19602 MCM Cummings Cummings MCM Cummings MCM MCM
19683 Cummings Seawood Cummings MCM Seawood Seawood Seawood Seawood
19774 Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles Stiles
19865
198714. What the foregoing table shows is that without Pirtle,
1997there is no clear favorite, but essentially a three-way tie
2007between Seawood, MCM, and Cummings. Under the RFP, the School
2017Board would need to take a voice vote until one of the three
2030commanded majority support. That, of course, did not occur in
2040the event. Therefore, it is impossible to determine, on the
2050instant record, which proposer was the School Board's second
2059choice (or third or fourth choice, for that matter).
206815. On October 15, 2004, MCM timely filed a notice of
2079intent to protest the School Board's preliminary decision to
2088award Pirtle the contract. MCM followed its notice of intent
2098with a formal written protest, which was timely filed on October
210925, 2004.
211116. MCM's protest rests on two pillars. The first is a
2122contention that the School Board employed an unstated evaluation
2131criterion, namely a preference for builders who had previously
2140done work for SBBC. The second is an argument that Pirtle's
2151proposal is materially nonresponsive for failing to comply with
2160the RFP's directives on M/WBE participation. 6 The findings that
2170follow are pertinent to MCM's specific protest grounds.
217817. Regarding the alleged unstated evaluation criterion,
2185it is undisputed that the RFP does not expressly disclose that
2196past work for SBBC will or might count for more than similar
2208work for another school district. The RFP does, however,
2217contain a clear and unambiguous statement of experiential
2225preferences, in Section 1.1(E), which states:
2231The School Board of Broward County would
2238prefer to select a Design/Builder with
2244proven successful experience in the Design
2250and Construction of 3 school projects
2256completed within the past 5 years in the
2264State of Florida.
226718. This sentence enumerates five discrete experience-
2274related preferences, which are that, (1) in the past five years,
2285the builder should have (2) designed and built school projects
2295(3) on three occasions, (4) in the State of Florida, (5) each of
2308which was a proven success.
231319. The list of experiential preferences in Section 1.1(E)
2322is clearly exclusive, meaning that it does not purport to
2332include other similar or related preferences, but rather is
2341intended to identify all such preferences. This is demonstrated
2350by the absence of any language, such as "including but not
2361limited to" or "among other things," manifesting an intention to
2371include other matters that are ejusdem generis 7 with the items
2382listed.
238320. Notice, too, that of the five experiential
2391preferences, three are purely objective. Specifically,
2397preference nos. 1, 3, and 4 (as numbered herein) are simply
2408matters of historical fact that either happened or did not
2418happen, for reasons wholly extrinsic to the mind of any School
2429Board member. Moreover, the satisfaction of these three
2437experience-related preferences is not a matter of degree: the
2446desired quality is either objectively present, or it is absent;
2456there is no discretionary middle ground. The upshot is that, as
2467between two proposers who, as a matter of fact, have experience
2478satisfying preference nos. 1, 3, and 4, no qualitative
2487distinction can rationally be drawn as to those particulars.
249621. The other two experiential preferences, in contrast,
2504are infused, in varying degrees, with elements of subjectivity.
2513Thus, preference no. 2 allows the individual evaluator some
2522discretion to determine what constitutes a "school project" and,
2531more important, to distinguish qualitatively between one "school
2539project" and another. Preference no. 5 is even more subjective,
2549for "success," like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.
2560Rational distinctions could be drawn, therefore, between one
2568proposer and another, based on personal (i.e. subjective)
2576assessments of the relative "success" of the respective
2584builders' prior "school projects." 8
258922. In evaluating the five short-listed proposals, seven
2597of the eight participating board members 9 did, in fact, award
2608more points (on some criteria) to proposers that previously have
2618built schools for SBBC (namely Pirtle, Cummings, and Seawood),
2627while deducting or withholding points (on some criteria) from
2636proposers who have not previously done work for SBBC (MCM and
2647Stiles), based on each proposer's status as a former SBBC-
2657contract holder or a newcomer to SBBC contracting. 10 This strong
2668parochial preference most dramatically affected the scoring of
2676the Past Work Performance and References criterion, although
2684some board members also considered a proposer's past work for
2694SBBC (or lack thereof) in scoring Profile & Qualifications of
2704Proposer's Team and even Proposed Project Scheduling. 11
271223. The preference for builders having previous business
2720experience with SBBC had a palpable impact on the scoring and
2731was likely decisive. Although it is impossible to quantify
2740precisely the effect of the parochial preference, its influence
2749can easily be seen in a comparison of the scores awarded, on the
2762criterion of Past Work Performance and References, by the seven
2772board members who favored SBBC-experienced builders:
2778MCM Cummings Pirtle Stiles Seawood
2783Budnick 7 10 10 3 8
2789Gallagher 3 5 10 6 8
2795Kraft 7 9 10 9 9
2801Parks 9 10 10 9 10
2807Rubinstein 5 10 10 8 6
2813Wexler 7 10 10 8 8
2819Williams 5 9 10 5 5
282524. As the table shows, Pirtle, who has performed the most
2836work for SBBC of any of the five competitors, received the
2847maximum score from all seven of the board members who employed
2858the parochial preference. Cummings, whose previous work for
2866SBBC is significant but less extensive than Pirtle's, received
2875an average score of 9 in the past work category. Seawood, which
2887has performed some construction work for SBBC in the past, but
2898not as much as either Pirtle or Cummings, received an average
2909score of 7.71. Stiles and MCM, neither of which has done
2920construction work for SBBC, received average scores of 6.86 and
29306.14, respectively. At bottom, MCM and Stiles received, in the
2940past work category, at least a point less, on average, than the
2952lowest-ranked of the three builders having previous experience
2960with SBBC. Given that three board members (Budnick, Rubinstein,
2969and Wexler) ranked MCM just one point below their respective
2979first choices, the parochial preference could well have
2987determined the result even if its application produced only a
2997small scoring discrepancy in a single evaluative category.
300525. One aspect of the preference for SBBC-experienced
3013builders needs to be repeated for emphasis. The preference was
3023manifested not only as an advantage conferred on builders having
3033such experience, but also as a disadvantage imposed on builders
3043lacking previous experience with SBBC. Builders having worked
3051for SBBC received more points, for that reason, than they would
3062have been awarded, had their previous projects been performed
3071for owners other than SBBC, whereas builders who had not worked
3082for SBBC received fewer points than they would have received, if
3093their previous projects had been built for SBBC. The parochial
3103preference, in other words, operated as a two-edged handicap,
3112making it doubly powerful.
311626. In fact, the preference was so strong that SBBC
3126experience was not, for seven evaluators out of eight, simply a
3137factor to be considered in evaluating a builder's past work; it
3148was effectively a condition of, or a prerequisite to, receiving
3158the total possible points of 100. That is, the effect of the
3170preference was such that unless a builder had previous
3179experience with SBBC, the builder could not receive 10 points in
3190the past work category from most of the board members,
3200regardless of how extensiveand how successfulits experience
3207in building schools for others had been.
321427. In sum, it is determined that the School Board used an
3226undisclosed preference for builders having experience with SBBC
3234in scoring and ranking the proposals, and that the use of this
3246preference had a material effect on the evaluationprobably
3254even deciding the outcome. Indeed, but for the use of this
3265undisclosed preference, there is a good chance (though it is not
3276certain) that MCM would have been the first choice of a majority
3288of the board members. Whether the School Board's conduct in
3298this regard requires that the proposed award to Pirtle be set
3309aside will be taken up in the Conclusions of Law below.
332028. Turning to MCM's other principal contention, it is
3329alleged that Pirtle's proposal deviated materially from the
3337RFP's specifications because Pirtle allegedly failed to comply
3345with the minimum requirements for minority participation in the
3354Project.
335529. On the subject of minority participation, the RFP
3364states, in relevant part:
3368The School Board of Broward County, Florida
3375is committed to affirmatively ensuring a
3381substantial increase in the awarding of
3387construction subcontracts to Minority
3391Businesses. Design/Build firms selected to
3396participate in this RFP must . . . have
3405M/WBE subcontracting goals[,] and [the
3411successful firm must] fully participate in
3417the MBE Program.
3420The M/WBE Contract Goal Range for this
3427project is 20-22 percent.
3431The Proposer should attempt to fulfill the
3438goal with the following ethnic
3443distributions:
3444A. African American 6-8 percent
3449B. Hispanic: 4-5 percent
3453C. White Female 4-6 percent
3458D. Other 0-3 percent
3462The School Board encourages the use of
3469minority subcontractors in excess of the
3475minimum goal ranges established for this
3481project.
3482Section 00030, page 2.
348630. In addition, Section 1.13 requires that the following
3495M/WBE-related information be submitted with a proposal:
3502G. Document 00466 Statement of Commitment
3509[containing the proposer's pledge to comply
3515with the M/WBE program]
3519H. Document 00470 Letter of Intent: M/WBE
3527Subcontractor Participation [from each
3531certified minority business that has agreed
3537to participate in the Project, describing
3543the subject of the subcontract and the
3550dollar amount thereof]
35531. Separate Section with a sub tab: M/WBE
3561Participation
3562(a) Briefly discuss how the Proposer will
3569address the M/WBE participation goals.
3574Identify proposed M/WBE team members, their
3580role, and their anticipated percentage of
3586participation. Include past experience with
3591the team.
3593(b) Proposers shall submit evidence of
3599dollar ($) participation for the past two
3606(2) years, both internal and agency
3612documentation of its M/WBE utilization, and,
3618evidence of any M/WBE outreach, internship,
3624and apprenticeship programs it conducts.
3629(c) Proposers, if awarded a contract,
3635shall submit monthly M/WBE Utilization
3640reports on forms provided by The School
3647Board of Broward County, Florida, M/WBE
3653Compliance Office, with each request for
3659payment. Such reports shall also include
3665evidence of dollar participation for the
3671past 2 years, both internal and agency
3678documentation of its M/WBE utilization, and
3684evidence of any M/WBE outreach, internship,
3690and apprenticeship programs it conducts.
3695The foregoing language, which is contained in an addendum to the
3706RFP that was issued on June 16, 2004, supplanted provisions in
3717the first release of the RFP that would have required proposers
3728to submit even more information relating to the satisfaction of
3738M/WBE goals.
374031. Pirtle's proposal clearly complied with Sections
37471.13(G) and 1.13(H)(1)(a)-(c) of the RFP. Where Pirtle fell
3756short, according to MCM, was on the requirement to submit
3766letters of intent from minority subcontractors. Pirtle did, in
3775fact, attach a couple of letters of intent to its proposalbut
3786these showed minimal minority participation, far below the
3794prescribed range of 20-22 percent. MCM contends that proposers
3803were required to submit letters of intent documenting minority
3812participation meeting the M/WBE goals for the Project. Put
3821another way, it is MCM's position each proposer needed to line
3832up most or all of its minority subcontractors before submitting
3842a proposal.
384432. The School Board asserts that proposers were not
3853required to submit all of their letters of intent, but merely
3864some letters as the fruit of good faith efforts to reach the
3876mandated M/WBE goals. 12 The evidence supports the School Board's
3886contention that this was indeed the operative interpretation and
3895understanding of Sections 1.13(G) and 1.13(H). Under this
3903interpretation, a proposal such as Pirtle's that included some
3912letters of intent would be deemed responsive; a paucity or
3922plethora of letters of intent would then be a factor for the
3934evaluators to consider in scoring MBE Participation, a selection
3943criterion worth seven points.
394733. Whether the plain meaning of Section 1.13(H) supports
3956MCM's or the School Board's position, or alternatively whether
3965the School Board's interpretation is clearly erroneous, is a
3974legal question that will be addressed below.
3981CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
398434. DOAH has personal and subject matter jurisdiction in
3993this proceeding pursuant to Sections 120.569, 120.57(1), and
4001120.57(3), Florida Statutes, and the parties have standing.
400935. Pursuant to Section 120.57(3)(f), Florida Statutes,
4016the burden of proof rests with the party opposing the proposed
4027agency action, here MCM. See State Contracting and Engineering
4036Corp. v. Department of Transp. , 709 So. 2d 607, 609 (Fla. 1st
4048DCA 1998). MCM must sustain its burden of proof by a
4059preponderance of the evidence. Florida Dept. of Transp. v.
4068J.W.C. Co., Inc ., 396 So. 2d 778, 787 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981).
408136. Section 120.57(3)(f), Florida Statutes, spells out the
4089rules of decision applicable in bid protests. In pertinent
4098part, the statute provides:
4102In a competitive-procurement protest, other
4107than a rejection of all bids, the
4114administrative law judge shall conduct a de
4121novo proceeding to determine whether the
4127agency's proposed action is contrary to the
4134agency's governing statutes, the agency's
4139rules or policies, or the bid or proposal
4147specifications. The standard of proof for
4153such proceedings shall be whether the
4159proposed agency action was clearly
4164erroneous, contrary to competition,
4168arbitrary, or capricious.
417137. The First District Court of Appeal has construed the
4181term "de novo proceeding," as used in Section 120.57(3)(f),
4190Florida Statutes, to "describe a form of intra-agency review.[ 13 ]
4201The judge may receive evidence, as with any formal hearing under
4212section 120.57(1), but the object of the proceeding is to
4222evaluate the action taken by the agency." State Contracting ,
4231709 So. 2d at 609. In this, the court followed its earlier
4243Intercontinental Properties, Inc. v. State Dept. of Health and
4252Rehabilitative Services , 606 So. 2d 380, 386 (Fla. 1st DCA
42621992), a decision which predates the present version of the bid
4273protest statute, wherein the court had reasoned:
4280Although the hearing before the hearing
4286officer was a de novo proceeding, that
4293simply means that there was an evidentiary
4300hearing during which each party had a full
4308and fair opportunity to develop an
4314evidentiary record for administrative review
4319purposes. It does not mean, as the hearing
4327officer apparently thought, that the hearing
4333officer sits as a substitute for the
4340Department and makes a determination whether
4346to award the bid de novo. Instead, the
4354hearing officer sits in a review capacity,
4361and must determine whether the bid review
4368criteria set . . . have been satisfied.
437638. In framing the ultimate issue to be decided in this de
4388novo proceeding as being "whether the agency's proposed action
4397is contrary to the agencys governing statutes, the agency's
4406rules or policies, or the bid or proposal specifications," the
4416statute effectively establishes a standard of conduct for the
4425agency, which is that, in soliciting and accepting bids or
4435proposals, the agency must obey its governing statutes, rules,
4444and the project specifications. If the agency breaches this
4453standard of conduct, its proposed action is subject to
4462(recommended) reversal by the administrative law judge in a
4471protest proceeding.
447339. Consequently, the party protesting the intended award
4481must identify and prove, by the greater weight of the evidence,
4492a specific instance or instances where the agency's conduct in
4502taking its proposed action was either: (a) contrary to the
4512agency's governing statutes; (b) contrary to the agency's rules
4521or policies; or (c) contrary to the bid or proposal
4531specifications.
453240. It is not sufficient, however, for the protester to
4542prove merely that the agency violated the general standard of
4552conduct. By virtue of the applicable standards of "proof,"
4561which are best understood as standards of review, 14 the protester
4572additionally must establish that the agency's misstep was: (a)
4581clearly erroneous; (b) contrary to competition; or (c) an abuse
4591of discretion.
459341. The three review standards mentioned in the preceding
4602paragraph are markedly different from one another. The abuse of
4612discretion standard, for example, is more deferential (or
4620narrower) than the clearly erroneous standard. The bid protest
4629review process thus necessarily entails a decision or decisions
4638regarding which of the several standards of review to use in
4649evaluating a particular action. To do this requires that the
4659meaning and applicability of each standard be carefully
4667considered.
466842. The clearly erroneous standard is generally applied in
4677reviewing a lower tribunal's findings of fact. In Anderson v.
4687City of Bessemer City, N.C. , 470 U.S. 564, 573-74 (1985), the
4698United States Supreme Court expounded on the meaning of the
4708phrase "clearly erroneous," explaining:
4712Although the meaning of the phrase "clearly
4719erroneous" is not immediately apparent,
4724certain general principles governing the
4729exercise of the appellate court's power to
4736overturn findings of a [trial] court may be
4744derived from our cases. The foremost of
4751these principles . . . is that "[a] finding
4760is 'clearly erroneous' when although there
4766is evidence to support it, the reviewing
4773court on the entire evidence is left with
4781the definite and firm conviction that a
4788mistake has been committed ." . . . . This
4798standard plainly does not entitle a
4804reviewing court to reverse the finding of
4811the trier of fact simply because it is
4819convinced that it would have decided the
4826case differently. The reviewing court
4831oversteps the bounds of its duty . . . if it
4842undertakes to duplicate the role of the
4849lower court. "In applying the clearly
4855erroneous standard to the findings of a
4862[trial] court sitting without a jury,
4868appellate courts must constantly have in
4874mind that their function is not to decide
4882factual issues de novo. " . . . . If the
4892[trial] court's account of the evidence is
4899plausible in light of the record viewed in
4907its entirety, the court of appeals may not
4915reverse it even though convinced that had it
4923been sitting as the trier of fact, it would
4932have weighed the evidence differently.
4937Where there are two permissible views of the
4945evidence, the factfinder's choice between
4950them cannot be clearly erroneous. . . . .
4959(Citations omitted)(emphasis added).
496243. The Florida Supreme Court has used somewhat different
4971language to give this standard essentially the same meaning:
4980A finding of fact by the trial court in a
4990non-jury case will not be set aside on
4998review unless there is no substantial
5004evidence to sustain it, unless it is clearly
5012against the weight of the evidence, or
5019unless it was induced by an erroneous view
5027of the law. A finding which rests on
5035conclusions drawn from undisputed evidence,
5040rather than on conflicts in the testimony,
5047does not carry with it the same
5054conclusiveness as a finding resting on
5060probative disputed facts, but is rather in
5067the nature of a legal conclusion. . . . .
5077When the appellate court is convinced that
5084an express or inferential finding of the
5091trial court is without support of any
5098substantial evidence, is clearly against the
5104weight of the evidence or that the trial
5112court has misapplied the law to the
5119established facts, then the decision is
5125'clearly erroneous' and the appellate court
5131will reverse because the trial court has
5138'failed to give legal effect to the
5145evidence' in its entirety.
5149Holland v. Gross , 89 So. 2d 255, 258 (Fla. 1956)(citation
5159omitted).
516044. Because administrative law judges are the triers of
5169fact charged with resolving disputed issues of material fact
5178based upon the evidence presented at hearing, and because bid
5188protests are fundamentally de novo proceedings, the undersigned
5196is not required to defer to the letting authority in regard to
5208any findings of objective historical fact that might have been
5218made in the run-up to preliminary agency action. It is
5228exclusively the administrative law judge's job, as the trier of
5238fact, to ascertain from the competent, substantial evidence in
5247the record what actually happened in the past or what reality
5258presently exists, as if no findings previously had been made.
526845. If, however, the challenged agency action involves an
5277ultimate factual determinationfor example, an agency's
5283conclusion that a proposal's departure from the project
5291specifications was a minor irregularity as opposed to a material
5301deviationthen some deference is in order, according to the
5310clearly erroneous standard of review. 15 To prevail on an
5320objection to an ultimate finding, therefore, the protester must
5329substantially undermine the factual predicate for the agencys
5337conclusion or convince the judge that a defect in the agency's
5348logic led it unequivocally to commit a mistake.
535646. There is another species of agency action that also is
5367entitled to review under the clearly erroneous standard:
5375interpretations of statutes for whose administration the agency
5383is responsible, and interpretations of the agency's own rules.
5392See State Contracting and Engineering Corp. v. Department of
5401Transp. , 709 So. 2d 607, 610 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998). In deference
5413to the agency's expertise, such interpretations will not be
5422overturned unless clearly erroneous. Id. 16
542847. This means that if the protester objects to the
5438proposed agency action on the ground that it violates either a
5449governing statute within the agency's substantive jurisdiction
5456or the agency's own rule, and if, further, the validity of the
5468objection turns on the meaning, which is in dispute, of the
5479subject statute or rule, then the agency's interpretation should
5488be accorded deference; the challenged action should stand unless
5497the agency's interpretation is clearly erroneous (assuming the
5505agency acted in accordance therewith). 17
551148. The statute requires that agency action (in violation
5520of the applicable standard of conduct) which is "arbitrary, or
5530capricious" be set aside. Earlier, the phrase "arbitrary, or
5539capricious" was equated with the abuse of discretion standard,
5548see endnote 14, supra , because the concepts are practically
5557indistinguishableand because use of the term "discretion"
5564serves as a useful reminder regarding the kind of agency action
5575reviewable under this highly deferential standard.
558149. It has been observed that an arbitrary decision is one
5592that is not supported by facts or logic, or is despotic. Agrico
5604Chemical Co. v. State Dept. of Environmental Regulation , 365 So.
56142d 759, 763 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978), cert. denied , 376 So. 2d 74
5627(Fla. 1979). Thus, under the arbitrary or capricious standard,
"5636an agency is to be subjected only to the most rudimentary
5647command of rationality. The reviewing court is not authorized
5656to examine whether the agency's empirical conclusions have
5664support in substantial evidence." Adam Smith Enterprises, Inc.
5672v. State Dept. of Environmental Regulation , 553 So. 2d 1260,
56821273 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989). Nevertheless,
5688the reviewing court must consider whether
5694the agency: (1) has considered all relevant
5701factors; (2) has given actual, good faith
5708consideration to those factors; and (3) has
5715used reason rather than whim to progress
5722from consideration of each of these factors
5729to its final decision.
5733Id.
573450. The second district framed the "arbitrary or
5742capricious" review standard in these terms: "If an
5750administrative decision is justifiable under any analysis that a
5759reasonable person would use to reach a decision of similar
5769importance, it would seem that the decision is neither arbitrary
5779nor capricious." Dravo Basic Materials Co., Inc. v. State Dept.
5789of Transp. , 602 So. 2d 632, 634 n.3 (Fla. 2d DCA 1992). As the
5803court observed, this "is usually a fact-intensive
5810determination." Id. at 634.
581451. Compare the foregoing "arbitrary or capricious"
5821analysis with the test for reviewing discretionary decisions:
"5829Discretion, in this sense, is abused when
5836the judicial action is arbitrary, fanciful,
5842or unreasonable, which is another way of
5849saying that discretion is abused only where
5856no reasonable man would take the view
5863adopted by the trial court. If reasonable
5870men could differ as to the propriety of the
5879action taken by the trial court, then it
5887cannot be said that the trial court abused
5895its discretion."
5897Canakaris v. Canakaris , 382 So. 2d 1197, 1203 (Fla. 1980),
5907quoting Delno v. Market St. Ry. Co. , 124 F.2d 965, 967 (9th Cir.
59201942). Further,
5922[t]he trial court's discretionary power is
5928subject only to the test of reasonableness,
5935but that test requires a determination of
5942whether there is logic and justification for
5949the result. The trial courts' discretionary
5955power was never intended to be exercised in
5963accordance with whim or caprice of the judge
5971nor in an inconsistent manner. Judges
5977dealing with cases essentially alike should
5983reach the same result. Different results
5989reached from substantially the same facts
5995comport with neither logic nor
6000reasonableness.
6001Canakaris , 382 So. 2d at 1203
600752. Whether the standard is called "arbitrary or
6015capricious" or "abuse of discretion," the scope of review, which
6025demands maximum deference, is the same. Clearly, then, the
6034narrow "arbitrary or capricious" standard of review cannot
6042properly be applied in evaluating all agency actions that might
6052be challenged in a bid protest; rather, this highly deferential
6062standard appropriately applies only to those decisions which are
6071committed to the agency's discretion.
607653. Therefore, where the protester objects to agency
6084action that entails the exercise of discretion, but only in such
6095instances, the objection cannot be sustained unless the agency
6104abused its discretion, i.e. acted arbitrarily or capriciously.
611254. The third standard of review articulated in Section
6121120.57(3)(f) is unique to bid protests. The "contrary to
6130competition" test is a catch-all which applies to agency actions
6140that do not turn on the interpretation of a statue or rule, do
6153not involve the exercise of discretion, and do not depend upon
6164(or amount to) a determination of ultimate fact.
617255. Although the contrary to competition standard, being
6180unique to bid protests, is less well defined than the other
6191review standards, the undersigned concludes that the set of
6200proscribed actions should include, at a minimum, those which:
6209(a) create the appearance of and opportunity for favoritism; (b)
6219erode public confidence that contracts are awarded equitably and
6228economically; (c) cause the procurement process to be genuinely
6237unfair or unreasonably exclusive; or (d) are unethical,
6245dishonest, illegal, or fraudulent. See , e.g. , R. N. Expertise,
6254Inc. v. Miami-Dade County School Bd., et al. , Case No. 01-
62652663BID, 2002 WL 185217, *21-*22 (Fla.Div.Admin.Hrgs. Feb. 4,
62732002); see also E-Builder v. Miami-Dade County School Bd. et
6283al. , Case No. 03-1581BID, 2003 WL 22347989, *10
6291(Fla.Div.Admin.Hrgs. Oct. 10, 2003)
629556. Moving on to the merits of the case, as discussed in
6307the Findings of Fact, MCM has proved its charge that the School
6319Board scored the proposals using an undisclosed preference for
6328SBBC-experienced builders. Whether this violated the standard
6335of conduct depends on the meaning of certain provisions of the
6346RFP.
634757. The School Board takes the position that previous
6356experience with SBBC brings added value and hence was a factor
6367that could fairly be considered in scoring the proposals,
6376especially with respect to the Past Work Performance and
6385References criterion, and perhaps also in connection with
6393criterion, Profile & Qualifications of Proposer's Team.
640058. The School Board's position, however, conflates two
6408distinct evaluative processes: (a) evaluating past performance
6415qua past performance and (b) handicapping a proposal based
6424solely on the fact that the proposer had or had not previously
6436worked for SBBC. The former is a merit-based exercise, while
6446the latter is status-based. It is important to separate the two
6457analytically, because there is no dispute that the RFP
6466authorizes (and indeed requires) the evaluators to consider a
6475proposer's relevant past work for SBBC, if any, as part of the
6487proposer's experience. (Such experience, of course, might be
6495advantageous or disadvantageous to the proposer, depending on,
6503among other things, whether SBBC was impressed with its work.)
6513But relevant past work, whether for SBBC or not, can be
6524evaluated as experience without also adding or subtracting
6532points merely because SBBC was or wasn't the owner, which latter
6543is what happened here, and what MCM is complaining about.
655359. It is concluded that giving more points to former
6563SBBC-contract holders and fewer points to other proposers based
6572on their respective statuses in this regard, being a discrete
6582scoring phenomenon, cannot be justified as a function of
6591considering SBBC-specific experience, as experience, in scoring
6598the experience-related evaluation criteria. The question before
6605us, therefore, is not, Is experience building schools for SBBC a
6616relevant factor to consider in scoring past performance? That
6625query practically gives its own affirmative answer. Instead, we
6634must ask: Is it permissible independently to reward (or
6643penalize) a proposer for having (or not having) experience
6652building schools for SBBC, irrespective of the facts surrounding
6661the proposer's past school projects and how well (or how poorly)
6672it designed and built them.
667760. The School Board has conceded that the RFP does not
6688expressly authorize the use of a scoring preference for SBBC-
6698experienced builders; its defense of the preference, to the
6707extent grounded in the language of the RFP, seems to rest on the
6720premises that the RFP does not prohibit the practice, and the
6731broadly worded selection criteria provide a sufficient warrant
6739for the evaluators' actions.
674361. The School Board's argument fails to take account of
6753Section 1.1(E) of the RFP, which lists five specific
6762experiential preferences. See paragraphs 17-21, supra .
6769Repeating them here for convenience, the preferences, as
6777paraphrased, are that (1) in the past five years, the builder
6788should have (2) designed and built school projects (3) on three
6799occasions, (4) in the State of Florida, (5) each of which was a
6812proven success.
681462. These experience-related preferences concern the same
6821subjects as the evaluation criteria, Past Work Performance and
6830References, and Profile & Qualifications of Proposer's Team.
6838Being in pari materia in this regard, Section 1.1(E) and the
6849experience-related evaluation criteria must be construed jointly
6856so as to further the common goal of choosing a suitably
6867qualified and experienced builder. See , e.g. , Mehl v. State ,
6876632 So. 2d 593, 595 (Fla. 1993)(separate statutory provisions
6885that are in pari materia should be construed to express a
6896unified legislative purpose); Lincoln v. Florida Parole Com'n ,
6904643 So. 2d 668, 671 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994)(statutes on same subject
6916and having same general purpose should be construed in pari
6926materia ). That is to say, Section 1.1(E) must be read together
6938with the evaluative criteria, which latter it informs and
6947circumscribes.
694863. In practical terms, this means that in scoring
6957proposals, the evaluators must apply the stated experiential
6965preferencesa point that should not be controversial. Whether
6973evaluators can rely upon other experiential preferences not
6981mentioned depends on the wording of Section 1.1(E).
698964. As explained, the undersigned considers Section 1.1(E)
6997to be unambiguously exclusive, manifesting an intention to
7005identify all applicable experiential preferences. The list of
7013preferred qualities, further, is quite specific. Consequently,
7020the undersigned concludes that the exegetic maxim expressio
7028unius est exclusio alterius provides controlling guidance in
7036interpreting Section 1.1(E). This rule holds that if "one
7045subject is specifically named [in a contract], or if several
7055subjects of a large class are specifically enumerated, and there
7065are no general words to show that other subjects of that class
7077are included, it may reasonably be inferred that the subjects
7087not specifically named were intended to be excluded." Espinosa
7096v. State , 688 So. 2d 1016, 1017 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997)(internal
7107quotation marks omitted); see also , e.g. , Gay v. Singletary , 700
7117So. 2d 1220, 1221 (Fla. 1997)("[W]hen a law expressly describes
7128the particular situation in which something should apply, an
7137inference must be drawn that what is not included by specific
7148reference was intended to be omitted or excluded.")
715765. Here, Section 1.1(E) lists several specific subjects
7165within the larger class of experiential preferences, and there
7174are no general words to show that other specific preferences
7184within that class are included. It is therefore concluded that
7194the subjects (i.e. particular experiential preferences) not
7201specifically named were intended to be excluded. 18
720966. From the foregoing conclusion it follows that the
7218preference for SBBC-experienced builders was not merely
"7225unstated"; it was excluded or rejected. This is because the
7235specific and exclusive geographic-experiential preference was
7241for prior similar work done "in the State of Florida." Section
72521.1(E) clearly and unambiguously puts relevant work completed
7260anywhere in Florida on an equal footing with other such work
7271done elsewhere in the state, with all such in-state work
7281occupying a favored position vis-à-vis work done in other
7290states. And plainly, work done anywhere in Florida comprises
7299work done for every school district in the statewhich means
7309that work done for one such district (e.g. Miami-Dade County
7319Public Schools) is no less preferred than work done for another
7330such district (e.g. SBBC).
733467. Accordingly, the undersigned concludes that the
7341evaluators' preference for builders having previous experience
7348with SBBC, which was expressed in the form of a scoring
7359handicap, was contrary to Section 1.1(E) of the RFP 19 and hence
7371violated the applicable standard of conduct. 20
737868. The next question is whether this violation
7386constitutes reversible error under the applicable standard of
7394review, which is, the undersigned concludes, the contrary to
7403competition standard. 21
740669. As an initial observation, a scoring preference for
7415former contract holders, pursuant to which evaluators reward
7423proposers with whom the agency has done business in the past and
7435penalize the other proposers, is suspect on its face. Such a
7446preference undeniably creates the appearance of favoritism and
7454may provide opportunities therefor; favoring those with whom
7462business has been done might also be, depending on the
7472circumstances, unreasonably anticompetitive. This is not to say
7480that a parochial preference can never be valid; but it should
7491usually raise eyebrows.
749470. With that in mind, the undersigned is convinced that
7504to ensure a fair competition, the letting authority should
7513always clearly disclose such a preference in the procurement
7522document. That way, would-be proposers who stand to suffer as a
7533result of the preference at least can attempt to level the
7544playing field before the contest begins by bringing a
7553specifications challenge. That said, however, the undersigned
7560need not conclude here that nondisclosure of a parochial
7569preference is necessarily contrary to competition.
757571. What happened in this case was worse than "mere"
7585nondisclosure, for the RFP informed potential proposers that
7593relevant work completed in one area of Florida would be afforded
7604the same preference as relevant work completed in another area
7614of the state. Thus, not only did potential proposers have no
7625reason to suspect that SBBC's former contract holders would have
7635an advantage; they reasonably should have concluded that SBBC's
7644former contract holders would have no advantage (simply on the
7654basis of having previously done work for SBBC) over proposers
7664who had built schools in Florida for other owners. It almost
7675goes without saying that proposers such as MCM had no reason to
7687bring a specifications protest to object to a preference that
7697the RFP excludes.
770072. In sum, it is concluded that a status-based scoring
7710preference for former contract holders, implemented via giving
7718additional points to favored proposers while taking points away
7727from disfavored proposers, is contrary to competition where, as
7736here, the RFP contains an unambiguous, exclusive list of other
7746specific experiential preferences, manifesting an intention to
7753exclude the very preference utilized.
775873. MCM's contention that Pirtle's proposal was
7765nonresponsive to the RFP turns on a disputed interpretation of
7775Section 1.13(H), raising the question whether that provision
7783required proposers to submit some letters of intent (as the
7793School Board maintains) or, alternatively, enough such letters
7801to document that the M/WBE goals for the Project would be met
7813(as MCM insists).
781674. The undersigned concludes that Section 1.13(H) is
7824ambiguous in this regard, for it is effectively silent on the
7835subject of how many letters of intent must be included with a
7847proposal. 22 MCM argues persuasively that the requirement of
7856including letters of intent makes little sense if a proposer can
7867comply by attaching documents showing de minimis minority
7875participation. On the other hand, Section 1.13(H)(1)(a)
7882requires a forward-looking statement describing how the M/WBE
7890participation goals will be meta statement that arguably would
7899be superfluous if letters of intent coinciding with the minority
7909goals were also supposed to be attached to the proposal. As
7920well, the information required under Section 1.13(H)(1)(b),
7927which asks for evidence of the proposer's historical use of
7937minority subcontractors, would seem to be irrelevant, if
7945proposers were otherwise obligated to document sufficient
7952arrangements for minority participation in the instant Project
7960to meet the prescribed goals. Consequently, the School Board's
7969interpretation is reasonable, too.
797375. It is concluded, therefore, that the School Board's
7982interpretation of Section 1.13(H), while not necessarily the
7990best reading of the text, is at least a permissible one and thus
8003not clearly erroneous. That being the case, it cannot be said,
8014in this proceeding, that Pirtle's proposal deviated materially
8022from the RFP specifications.
802676. Finally, MCM has complained about other sundry
"8034scoring anomalies," which the undersigned has declined to
8042detail herein. Suffice it to say that MCM has pointed to
8053several discrete scoring decisions that reasonable people could
8061second-guess. However, given the wide latitude that evaluators
8069are afforded under the RFP to assign the points allotted to the
8081various evaluation criteria, the undersigned concludes that none
8089of these alleged "anomalies" constituted an abuse of discretion.
8098RECOMMENDATION
8099Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
8109Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a Final Order be entered that
8120rescinds the proposed award to Pirtle. In addition, while
8129recognizing that the choice of remedies for invalid procurement
8138actions is within the agency's discretion, it is nevertheless
8147recommended that a meeting be convened for the purposes of
8157reassigning points to each proposer using the published
8165selection criteria, re-ranking each proposer according to its
8173respective scores, and awarding the contract to the firm that
8183receives a majority of the first choice votes.
8191DONE AND ENTERED this 21st day of March, 2005, in
8201Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
8205___________________________________
8206JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM
8210Administrative Law Judge
8213Division of Administrative Hearings
8217The DeSoto Building
82201230 Apalachee Parkway
8223Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
8226(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
8230Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
8234www.doah.state.fl.us
8235Filed with the Clerk of the
8241Division of Administrative Hearings
8245this 21st day of March, 2005.
8251ENDNOTES
82521 / With the exception of Messrs. Munilla and Cotilla,
8262Petitioner's witnesses were the board members who had evaluated
8271the proposals and voted to award the contract to Intervenor.
8281(At the time of the final hearing, Ms. Wexler and Ms. Budnick
8293were no longer board members.) Given the role that these
8303individuals played in the events giving rise to this protest,
8313the testimony of the board members was critical to the case;
8324indeed, the undersigned relied heavily on this testimony in
8333making the findings of fact herein. A nontrivial question
8342therefore arises as to whether a substitute agency head should
8352be appointed to review this Recommended Order and issue the
8362Final Order. See Ridgewood Properties, Inc. v. Department of
8371Community Affairs , 562 So. 2d 322, 324 (Fla. 1990)(when agency
8381head testifies to material fact in administrative hearing, due
8390process requires that review of the recommended order be
8399undertaken by neutral, disinterested third party); see also
8407§ 120.665, Fla. Stat. (disqualification of agency head for bias,
8417prejudice, or interest); but see Optiplan, Inc. v. School Bd. of
8428Broward County , 710 So. 2d 569, 572 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998)(fact
8439that two board members testified in bid protest hearing did not
8450require disqualification of entire board). To be sure, there
8459are grounds for arguing that Ridgewood , on the one hand, or
8470Optiplan on the other, is distinguishable from the instant case,
8480and the undersigned expresses no opinion herein on the merits of
8491the constitutional issue. It is recommended, however, that the
8500matter be addressed in the first instance at the agency level.
85112 / The term "School Board" will be used herein when reference to
8524the nine-member collegial body that governs the Broward County
8533district school system is intended. The term "SBBC" will be
8543used when referring generally to the district school system as
8553an institution or entity; hence, as used herein, "SBBC" is meant
8564to denote not only the members of the School Board, but also any
8577of the employees and agents of the Broward County School
8587District through whom the district acted.
85933 / This sentence echoes Section 1.1(B) of the RFP, which states:
"8605The School Board of Broward County, Florida intends to award a
8616design/build contract to the design/build firm receiving the
8624majority of School Board Members first choice votes based upon
8634point scores in the selection process . . . ."
86444 / School Board Member Carole Andrews was not present.
86545 / The RFP clearly and unambiguously provides that the contract
8665will be awarded, if at all, to the proposer receiving the
8676majority of the first choice votes. In the context of vote
8687counting, the term "majority" is commonly understood to mean
8696more than half. Pirtle received four votes out of eight, which
8707constitutes a plurality , not a majority. It is highly doubtful,
8717moreover, that the RFP contemplates awarding the contract to the
8727recipient of a mere plurality of first choice votes. Imagine,
8737for example, that all nine board members had voted, and the
8748result was three first choice votes for one proposer (say,
8758Pirtle), with two first choice votes apiece for three other
8768proposers. In that situation, Pirtle would have a plurality of
8778the first choice votes but would not be the first choice of a
8791majority of the members. To award the contract to Pirtle in
8802such a situation would defy the plain language of the RFP, which
8814was designed to prevent the School Board from awarding the
8824contract to a builder whom the majority had found less suitable
8835than other candidates. As in the hypothetical, Pirtle in fact
8845had a plurality of first choice votes but was not the first
8857choice of a majority of members and thus at least arguably
8868should not have been chosen for the award unless and until it
8880picked up another first choice votewhich could have proved
8889difficult, since none of the four members whose first choice was
8900not Pirtle had ranked that builder higher than third .
8910Fortunately for SBBC, MCM failed to object to the proposed award
8921on this ground and hence waived the issue. Still, the School
8932Board might want to take note of the problem for future
8943reference.
89446 / "M/WBE," which is sometimes also rendered "MBE," is an
8955acronym for Minority and Women Business Enterprises.
89627 / See generally Green v. State , 604 So. 2d 471, 473 (Fla.
89751992)("Under the doctrine of ejusdem generis, where an
8984enumeration of specific things is followed by some more general
8994word, the general word will usually be construed to refer to
9005things of the same kind or species as those specifically
9015enumerated."); see also Robbie v. Robbie , 788 So. 2d 290, 293
9027n.7 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000)(When, in implementing a non-exhaustive
9036statutory listing, the use of an unenumerated criterion is
9045indicated, "that ad hoc factor will have to bear a close
9056affinity with those enumerated in the statutei.e., the factor
9065employed must be ejusdem generis with the enumerated ones.").
90758 / An evaluator's subjective judgments on preference nos. 2 or 5
9087could affect objective preference no. 3, if it were determined
9097that some particular past work of a proposer was not a "school
9109project" or was unsuccessful.
91139 / Board Member Darla Carter evidently saw no substantial
9123differences between the proposals, for she awarded the maximum
9132points in every category to all the proposers, except that she
9143awarded Seawood only six (out of seven) points on the criterion,
9154MBE Participation. This had the effect of making the S.I.T.
9164Awardwhich was determined mathematically by staffdecisive in
9171her ranking of the proposals. Because MCM and Cummings were
9181each awarded 15 points (the maximum) on the S.I.T. Award, Ms.
9192Carter had them tied at 100 points apiece. Breaking the tie,
9203Ms. Carter awarded her first choice vote to MCM.
921210 / Board Member Judie Budnick added a unique twist to the
9224preference for SBBC-experienced builders. She testified
9230candidly that a proposer could not get the maximum points from
9241her in connection with the experience-related evaluative
9248criteria unless the proposer had "paid its dues" by making
9258charitable contributions for the benefit of, or otherwise doing
9267good works for, the children of Broward County.
927511 / The use of a particular consideration to "double-dip" (or
"9286triple-dip") across the lines of evaluation criteria was not
9296limited to the parochial preference. A number of board members,
9306for example, cited the fact that MCM had not previously worked
9317as a team with its designated architectural firm as a reason for
9329deducting points from MCM's score in the Profile &
9338Qualifications of Proposer's Team category as well as from its
9348score on Past Work Performance and References. Such double-
9357dipping is problematic because it tends to subvert the relative
9367weight of the evaluation criteria as published in the RFP,
9377arbitrarily magnifying the importance of the cross-criterion
9384consideration. Because MCM did not object to the practice,
9393however, it will not be further addressed.
940012 / The School Board's position is consistent with, if not
9411directly supported by, Section 1.28(B) of the RFP, which
9420requires the successful proposer to submit to SBBC, within 10
9430consecutive calendar days after receiving notice of the contract
9439award, a list of all subcontractors for principal portions of
9449the Project, on a prescribed form known as Document 00433.
945913 / Because DOAH is always independent of the letting authority,
9470see § 120.65(1), Florida Statutes, it might be preferable to
9480label bid protests before DOAH a form of inter -agency review or,
9492alternatively, intra-branch review; however, because the letting
9499authority itself ultimately renders the final order, the first
9508districts nomenclature is not incorrect.
951314 / The term "standard of proof" as used in § 120.57(3)(f)
9525reasonably may be interpreted to reference standards of review .
9535This is because, while the "standard of proof" sentence fails to
9546mention any common standards of proof, it does articulate two
9556accepted standards of review: (1) the "clearly erroneous"
9564standard and (2) the abuse of discretion (= "arbitrary, or
9574capricious") standard. (The "contrary to competition"
9581standardwhether it be a standard of proof or standard of
9591reviewis unique to bid protests.)
959615 / An ultimate factual determination is a conclusion derived by
9607reasoning from objective facts; it frequently involves the
9615application of a legal principle or rule to historical facts:
9625e.g. the driver failed to use reasonable care under the
9635circumstances and therefore was negligent; and it may be infused
9645with policy considerations. Reaching an ultimate factual
9652finding requires that judgment calls be made which are unlike
9662those that attend the pure fact finding functions of weighing
9672evidence and choosing between conflicting but permissible views
9680of reality.
968216 / From the general principle of deference follows the more
9693specific rule that an agency's interpretation need not be the
9703sole possible interpretation or even the most desirable one; it
9713need only be within the range of permissible interpretations.
9722State Bd. of Optometry v. Florida Soc. of Ophthalmology , 538 So.
97332d 878, 885 (Fla. 1st DCA 1988); see also Suddath Van Lines,
9745Inc. v. State Dept. of Environmental Protection , 668 So. 2d 209,
9756212 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996). However, "[t]he deference granted an
9766agency's interpretation is not absolute." Department of Natural
9774Resources v. Wingfield Development Co. , 581 So. 2d 193, 197
9784(Fla. 1st DCA 1991). Obviously, an agency cannot implement any
9794conceivable construction of a statute or rule no matter how
9804strained, stilted, or fanciful it might be. Id. Rather, "only
9814a permissible construction" will be upheld by the courts.
9823Florida Soc. of Ophthalmology , 538 So. 2d at 885. Accordingly,
"9833[w]hen the agency's construction clearly contradicts the
9840unambiguous language of the rule, the construction is clearly
9849erroneous and cannot stand." Woodley v. Department of Health
9858and Rehabilitative Services , 505 So. 2d 676, 678 (Fla. 1st DCA
98691987); see also Legal Environmental Assistance Foundation v.
9877Board of County Com'rs of Brevard County , 642 So. 2d 1081, 1083-
988984 (Fla. 1994)("unreasonable interpretation" will not be
9897sustained).
989817 / The same standard of review also applies, in a protest
9910following the announcement of an intended award, with regard to
9920preliminary agency action taken upon the agency's interpretation
9928of the project specificationsbut perhaps for a reason other
9937than deference to agency expertise. Section 120.57(3)(b),
9944Florida Statutes, provides a remedy for badly written or
9953ambiguous specifications: they may be protested within 72 hours
9962after the posting of the specifications. The failure to avail
9972oneself of this remedy effects a waiver of the right to complain
9984about the specifications per se. Consequently, if the dispute
9993in a protest challenging a proposed award turns on the
10003interpretation of an ambiguous, vague, or unreasonable
10010specification, which could have been corrected or clarified
10018prior to acceptance of the bids or proposals had a timely
10029specifications protest been brought, and if the agency has acted
10039thereafter in accordance with a permissible interpretation of
10047the specification (i.e. one that is not clearly erroneous), then
10057the agency's intended action should be upheldnot necessarily
10065out of deference to agency expertise, but as a result of the
10077protester's waiver of the right to seek relief based on a faulty
10089specification. If, however, the agency has acted contrary to
10098the plain language of a lawful specification, then its action
10108should probably be corrected, for in that event the preliminary
10118agency action likely would be clearly erroneous or contrary to
10128competition; in that situation, there should be no waiver,
10137because a reasonable person would not protest an unambiguous
10146specification that facially conforms to Florida procurement law.
1015418 / The School Board has not advanced a contrary interpretation
10165of Section 1.1(E), and there is no evidence that the evaluators
10176construed this section as authority for giving or withholding
10185points based on whether a proposer previously had done work for
10196SBBC. In any event, the undersigned concludes as a matter of
10207law that Section 1.1(E) is not ambiguous, and alternatively, if
10217it were, construing the pertinent provisions of the RFP to
10227authorize the parochial preference would be clearly erroneous.
1023519 / The preference, as applied, also ran afoul of Section
102461.20(B), which states that points will be awarded, "up to a
10257maximum, for evaluation criteria listed [in Section 1.20(A).]"
10265In fact, due to the preference, only builders who had previously
10276done work for SBBC could receive the maximum points on the
10287experience-related evaluative criteria, because builders without
10293such experience automatically had points taken away for that
10302reason.
1030320 / Board Member Budnick's singular preference for meritorious
10312works in favor of Broward's children finds no support in the
10323stated evaluation criteria and cannot be grounded in Section
103321.1(E) or any other provision of the RFP. Consequently,
10341awarding or withholding points based on a proposer's charitable
10350contributions, as Ms. Budnick admittedly did, was ultra vires
10359and contrary to the RFP.
1036421 / There are no ultimate factual determinations or agency
10374interpretations to review under the clearly erroneous standard,
10382and evaluators do not have discretion to apply scoring
10391preferences in contravention of the RFP.
1039722 / The provision refers only to a letter of intent (singular)
10409and hence, read literally, would require only one such letter.
10419Such a construction, however, while perhaps plausible, seems a
10428bit mechanical, and in any event is not the interpretation put
10439forward by the School Board.
10444COPIES FURNISHED :
10447J. Alfredo De Armas, Esquire
10452Alvarez, De Armas & Borron, P. A.
104593211 Ponce De Leon Boulevard, Suite 302
10466Coral Gables, Florida 33134
10470Robert Paul Vignola, Esquire
10474School Board of Broward County
10479K. C. Wright Administrative Building
10484600 Southeast Third Avenue, 11th Floor
10490Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
10494Kevin A. Fernander, Esquire
10498Tripp Scott, P. A.
10502AutoNation Tower, 15th Street
10506110 Southeast Sixth Street
10510Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
10514John Winn, Commissioner
10517Department of Education
10520Turlington Building, Suite 1514
10524325 West Gaines Street
10528Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
10531Dr. Franklin L. Till, Jr.
10536Superintendent
10537Broward County School Board
10541600 Southeast Third Avenue
10545Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301-3125
10549Daniel J. Woodring, General Counsel
10554Department of Education
10557325 West Gaines Street
105611244 Turlington Building
10564Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
10567NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
10573All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
1058310 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
10594to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
10605will issue the Final Order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 04/12/2005
- Proceedings: MCM`s Withdrawal of Motion for Attorney`s Fees and Suggestion of Mootness filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/30/2005
- Proceedings: MCM`s Motion for Attorney`s Fees Pursuant to Recommended Order Entered March 21, 2005 filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/21/2005
- Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held January 19 and 20, 2005). CASE CLOSED.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/21/2005
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/01/2005
- Proceedings: MCM`s Notice of Filing Proposed Findings and Rulings of Law filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/01/2005
- Proceedings: Intervenor James B. Pirtle Construction`s Proposed Recommended Order.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/01/2005
- Proceedings: Intervenor James B. Pirtle Construction`s Proposed Recommended Order.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/09/2005
- Proceedings: Order Regarding Proposed Recommended Orders (proposed recommended orders shall be filed on or before March 1, 2005).
- Date: 02/09/2005
- Proceedings: Transcript (Volumes I-II) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/26/2005
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Van Laningham from R. Vignola enclosing exhibits filed.
- Date: 01/19/2005
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/18/2005
- Proceedings: Motion to Appear Telephonically or in the Alternative by Video Conference filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/14/2005
- Proceedings: Second Notice of Hearing (hearing set for January 19 and 20, 2005; 11:00 a.m.; Fort Lauderdale).
- PDF:
- Date: 01/13/2005
- Proceedings: Intervenor, James B. Pirtle Construction`s Witness and Exhibits List filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/13/2005
- Proceedings: Magnum Construction Management Corporation`s Witness and Exhibit List filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/12/2005
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for January 19 and 20, 2005; 9:00 a.m.; Fort Lauderdale).
- PDF:
- Date: 01/10/2005
- Proceedings: Respondent School Board`s Second Request to Produce to Petitioner MCM Corp. filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/05/2005
- Proceedings: Magnum Construction Management Corporation`s Witness & Exhibits List filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/30/2004
- Proceedings: Order Granting Petition to Intervene (James B. Pirtle Construction Company, Inc.) .
- PDF:
- Date: 12/30/2004
- Proceedings: Order Granting Petition to Intervene (James B. Pirtle Construction Company, .
- PDF:
- Date: 12/21/2004
- Proceedings: Respondent School Board`s First Request to Produce to Petitioner MCM Corp filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/21/2004
- Proceedings: Respondent School Board`s First Request to Produce to Petitioner MCM Corp filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/21/2004
- Proceedings: Respondent School Board`s Set of Interrogatories to Petitioner MCM Corp. filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/07/2004
- Proceedings: James B Pirtle Construction Company, Inc.`s Petition for Leave to Intervene filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/01/2004
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for January 18 and 19, 2005; 9:00 a.m.; Fort Lauderdale, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 11/22/2004
- Proceedings: Letter to Clerk of the Board from J. Armas pertaining to notice of bid protest (filed via facsimile).
Case Information
- Judge:
- JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM
- Date Filed:
- 11/19/2004
- Date Assignment:
- 01/14/2005
- Last Docket Entry:
- 04/27/2005
- Location:
- Coral Gables, Florida
- District:
- Southern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
- Suffix:
- BID
Counsels
-
J. Alfredo De Armas, Esquire
Address of Record -
Kevin A. Fernander, Esquire
Address of Record -
Robert Paul Vignola, Esquire
Address of Record