09-003442BID Turner Pest Control vs. University Of North Florida
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, December 8, 2009.


View Dockets  
Summary: The posting of adequate and compliant protest bond simultaneous with formal written protest is a jurisdictional issue.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8TURNER PEST CONTROL, )

12)

13Petitioner, )

15)

16vs. ) Case No. 09-3442BID

21)

22UNIVERSITY OF NORTH FLORIDA, )

27)

28Respondent. )

30)

31RECOMMENDED ORDER

33Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held on

42September 18, 2009, by video teleconferencing with sites in

51Tallahassee and Jacksonville, Florida, before Ella Jane P.

59Davis, a duly-assigned Administrative Law Judge of the Division

68of Administrative Hearings.

71APPEARANCES

72For Petitioner: Richard L. Maguire, Esquire

78Charles F. Mills, III, Esquire

831301 Riverplace Boulevard, Suite 1500

88Jacksonville, Florida 32207

91For Respondent: Paul Christopher Wrenn, Esquire

97The University of North Florida

102One University of North Florida Drive

108Jacksonville, Florida 32224

111STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

115Whether Respondent's award for RFP 09-36 is contrary to

124law, against the University's governing statutes, rules or

132policies or the terms of the Request for Proposal.

141PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

143This Preliminary Statement will address only the current

151procedural and evidentiary matters. 1/

156Following a protest by Petitioner Turner Pest Control,

164Respondent University of North Florida (UNF), on June 23, 2009,

174referred this cause to the Division of Administrative Hearings

183(DOAH), pursuant to UNF's contract with DOAH. After a setting

193of final hearing for July 14, 2009, the parties stipulated to a

205later hearing date anytime after September 1, 2009, and the case

216was ultimately scheduled for September 18, 2009.

223On September 2, 2009, Terminix filed a letter-petition to

232intervene. On September 14, 2009, before the time had run for

243the parties' responses to be filed, Terminix withdrew its

252petition to intervene.

255On September 10, 2009, Petitioner filed an Addendum to its

265petition for protest. Although no authority for such an

274addendum was cited, Respondent stipulated to the filing thereof.

283Consistent with the authority granted in Florida Board of

292Governors Rule 18.002, and the procedures outlined in UNF

301Regulation 13.0020R, the parties exchanged exhibits, and on

309September 16, 2009, a Joint Prehearing Stipulation was filed.

318On September 17, 2009, an agreed Amendment to Joint Prehearing

328Stipulation was filed. The facts admitted by the parties have

338been incorporated in the Findings of Fact infra .

347The video hearing was held September 18, 2009. Thirty-two

356joint exhibits were admitted in evidence. Petitioner presented

364the oral testimony of Kathy Ritter and Doug Nelson. Respondent

374presented the oral testimony of Paul Riel and Mark Slater.

384By stipulation of the parties, the proceeding was preserved

393on audio tape, via UNF’s paralegal, and subsequently transcribed

402by a certified court reporter. The Transcript was filed with

412DOAH on October 5, 2009. The parties stipulated to file their

423proposed recommended orders by October 26, 2009, and both

432timely-filed proposals have been considered.

437FINDINGS OF FACT

4401. UNF published its Request for Proposal in reference to

450RFP 09-36, entitled "Pest Control Services at UNF Campus"

459(hereafter, "Project") with a March 10, 2009, Mandatory Pre-Bid

469Date and a March 30, 2009, Opening Date. (Joint Stipulation 1.)

4802. There was one addendum to the RFP 09-36 Project.

490(Joint Stipulation 2.)

4933. Petitioner Turner Pest Control and Terminix submitted

501proposals in response to the RFP 09-36 Project. (Joint

510Stipulation 3.)

5124. There were seven other responsive proposers besides

520Terminix and Petitioner.

5235. Addendum No. 1, RFP 09-36 Section 6, included a heading

534in bold font, entitled "Rating Criteria." The third criterion,

543which for scoring purposes was assigned a maximum of 20 points,

554reads as follows:

557Provide the names and contact information to

564at least three (3) references to support

571past performance of a similar size

577University and/or commercial type business.

5826. Paragraph 8, of the RFP provided:

589For the purpose of this project, Doug

596Nelson, or his/her duly appointed successor

602or assigned representative, shall be

607authorized Contract Administrator . . .

613It shall be the Contract Administrator's

619responsibility to supervise the receipt and

625handling of proposals, to respond to all

632inquiries relating to the proposal or

638submittal procedures, to coordinate and

643provide required support information

647necessary for committee review and

652evaluation of proposals received and to be

659responsible for all contractual

663matters. . . .

6677. UNF Contract Administrator, Doug Nelson, drafted

674Section 6, of the RFP and facilitated the meeting of the full

686evaluation committee, which analyzed the responsive proposals.

693In his opinion, Section 6, only required the submission of three

704suitable references; it permitted the committee to accept the

713three names and contact information at face value; and it did

724not presume that letters of reference from those named must be

735attached to the proposal, although it was acceptable to attach

745them. Also in Mr. Nelson’s opinion, the foregoing language of

755the RFP did not contemplate that the evaluation committee must

765contact or otherwise verify the references provided.

7728. The evaluation committee was carefully selected and

780qualified. The committee was provided a matrix that contained

789evaluation criteria and identified the number of points that

798could be assigned to each proposer for each criterion.

8079. On the evaluation matrix, one column heading reads

"816Three (3) References and Past Performance," in the conjunctive.

825(Emphasis supplied.)

82710. On April 7, 2009, the evaluation committee met to

837review all responsive proposals received pursuant to RFP 09-36.

846(Joint Stipulation 4, modified for detail.) What the committee

855did with regard to scoring references could be characterized as

865first separately rating proposers on their references and

873secondly, separately rating proposers on their past performance.

88111. Utilizing the evaluation matrix provided, the

888committee assigned a total of 12 points to Terminix and a total

900of 20 points to Petitioner for their respective references.

90912. The evaluation committee allocated 10 points to

917Petitioner and 10 points to Terminix simply because each had

927submitted three references and contact information.

93313. Terminix did not submit a testimonial letter from a

943reference and did not have a history with committee members, so

954Terminix was awarded only two more points, beyond the first 10

965points, for a total score of 12, on “references.”

97414. Two other proposers received a total of 20 points for

985their references because they had submitted three names with

994contact information which evaluators considered "strong"

1000references; because the proposer had a history familiar to

1009members of the committee; or because the proposer submitted

1018actual testimonial letters from one or more of the proposer’s

1028listed references.

103015. The committee added 10 more points to Petitioner's

1039score for references (totaling the entire 20 points available

1048for that category) because of committee members' personal

1056knowledge of Petitioner's past quality performance at UNF, even

1065though Petitioner had not submitted UNF as a reference with

1075contact information as part of its proposal.

108216. The ultimate result was that the evaluation committee

1091rated Terminix only two points out of a possible 10 points due

1103to Terminix’s lack of direct experience with UNF, and some other

1114proposers were rated lower than Petitioner for similar reasons.

112317. On some prior UNF RFPs and ITBs, evaluation committees

1133have gone behind the face value of references and on some they

1145have not. On this occasion, the committee was not told either

1156to rate references as they did or to calculate differently in

1167rating the references provided by respective proposers.

117418. Petitioner was the highest-ranked proposer overall.

1181Terminix was the second highest-ranked proposer overall.

118819. The parties have stipulated that, "The University of

1197North Florida awarded RFP 09-36 Project to Turner Pest Control

1207on April 9, 2009." (Joint Stipulation 5; emphasis supplied.)

121620. UNF's April 9, 2009, letter to all proposers read, in

1227pertinent part:

1229Please be advised that on Thursday April 9,

12372009, the University of North Florida

1243awarded Request for Proposal 09-36 "Pest

1249Control Services at UNF" to Turner Pest

1256Control.

1257The University of North Florida is providing

1264notice to all respondents [proposers] by

1270copy of this letter and is required to

1278include in this notice the following

1284statement:

1285Failure to file a protest in accordance with

1293UNF Regulation 13.0020R, or failure to post

1300the bond or other security as required in

1308UNF Regulation 13.0030R, shall constitute a

1314waiver of protest proceedings. (Bracketed

1319material provided for clarity; emphasis

1324supplied.)

132521. Paragraph 12 of the RFP provided:

1332Any qualified offeror who is adversely

1338affected by the University's decision may

1344file a written notice of intent to protest

1352within 72 hours after the University posting

1359of the award of intent to award notice . The

1369protesting firm must reduce its complaint to

1376written petition and file it with the

1383President of the University within ten (10)

1390calendar days from registration of the

1396original complaint. If the competitive

1401solicitation documents require the posting

1406of a bond with the protest, the bond shall

1415be included with the protest. A Bond,

1422payable to the University of North Florida,

1429in an amount equal to: 10% of the estimated

1438value of the protestor's proposal; 10% of

1445the estimate of the University's estimate of

1452the total volume of the contract, or

1459$10,000, whichever is less. The bond shall

1467be conditioned upon the payment of all costs

1475which may be adjudged against the vendor.

1482Failure to file a notice of protest or the

1491written petition, including posting of the

1497required protest bond shall constitute a

1503waiver of the right to protest proceedings.

1510Upon receipt of the formal written petition

1517filed in accordance with this regulation,

1523the President or the President’s designee

1529shall delay the execution of the contract

1536until the protest is resolved by mutual

1543agreement between the parties or by final

1550presidential action . . . (Emphasis

1556supplied.)

155722. On April 10, 2009, Terminix filed a Notice of Intent

1568to Protest award of RFP 09-36 to Petitioner. (Joint Stipulation

15786.) It was filed with Doug Nelson within 72 hours of UNF's

1590April 9, 2009, letter. It was not inappropriate or non-

1600compliant because only the written protest is required to be

1610filed with the University President.

161523. The thrust of Terminix's April 10, 2009, notice of

1625intent to protest was that Terminix had submitted a proposal for

1636a lower total cost of doing the work than had Petitioner.

164724. After receiving Terminix's Notice of Intent to

1655protest, Kathy G. Ritter, UNF's Director of Purchasing and

1664Mr. Nelson's superior, reviewed the file. After her review, she

1674notified UNF's General Counsel's Office (OCG) that she wanted to

1684rescind the award to Petitioner due to an error. At that time,

1696her concerns were based on the RFP language seeking three

1706references for an analysis of past performance and the matrix

1716used by the evaluation committee and also the committee’s

1725deliberations which had separated the scoring of three

1733references from the scoring of past performance

174025. Ms. Ritter felt the RFP criteria required the

1749evaluators to check up on all references provided in each

1759proposal and they had not done so. She also was not satisfied

1771that the evaluation committee had fully considered pricing

1779issues.

178026. Paragraph 10 of the RFP provided:

1787No interpretation of the meaning of any part

1795of this RFP, nor corrections of any apparent

1803ambiguity, inconsistency or error herein,

1808will be made to any Proposer orally. All

1816requests for written interpretation or

1821corrections MUST be in writing.

182627. Paragraph 15 of the RFP provided:

1833In the event that any of the provisions of

1842the contract are violated by the successful

1849vendor(s), the University may serve written

1855notice upon vendor(s) of its intention to

1862terminate the contract.

186528. Paragraph 16 of the RFP provides:

1872. . . the University may terminate this RFP

1881process at any time up to notice of award ,

1890without prior notice, and without liability

1896of any kind or amount. . . .(Emphasis

1904supplied.)

190529. Nonetheless, Ms. Ritter felt her only option was to

1915rescind the award or throw out all responses and re-bid the

1926proposal. Because she believed the flaw in scoring was limited

1936to the references, which flaw could be corrected, and possibly

1946the pricing, she elected to "re-do" a portion of the evaluation

1957and notified the evaluation committee accordingly. She

1964considered rescission and topical reconsideration to be within

1972the authority of her position.

197730. However, Ms. Ritter referred to no specific

"1985authority" (rule, regulation, RFP, or statute) by which she

1994could "rescind" a notice of award or part thereof, and she did

2006not rescind the award until after a written formal protest was

2017filed. See infra .

202131. Terminix made an oral request to Ms. Ritter for an

2032extension of time to file a written protest. On or about

2043April 15, 2009 (six calendar days after Terminix’s notice of

2053intent to protest), Ms. Ritter orally granted Terminix until

2062April 24, 2009, to file its formal protest. April 24, 2009, was

207414 days from UNF's receipt of Terminix's notice of intent to

2085protest. Terminix never submitted a written request for

2093extension and ever received a written extension, but it relied

2103upon Ms. Ritter’s oral extension.

210832. In a letter dated April 20, 2009, and received by UNF

2120on April 23, 2009, Terminix filed a written formal protest,

2130challenging the award of RFP 09-36, to Petitioner, Turner Pest

2140Control. (Joint Stipulation 7, amplified for detail.) The

2148thrust of Terminix's formal petition was that UNF had failed to

2159contact the references provided by each bidder and that UNF had

2170failed to properly evaluate Terminix's proposed costs.

217733. With its written formal protest filed appropriately

2185with UNF's President, Terminix submitted a protest bond that was

2195less than that required by the RFP and by University Regulation

2206No. 13.0030R(II)(3), which provides:

2210Solicitation Protest Bond. Any entity

2215filing an action protesting a decision or

2222intended decision pertaining to a

2227competitive solicitation shall, at the time

2233of filing of the formal protest, post with

2241the University a bond payable to the

2248University in an amount equal to the lesser

2256of the following: 10% of the estimated

2263value of the protestor's bid or proposal;

227010% of the estimated expenditure during the

2277contract term or $10,000. The bond shall be

2286conditioned upon the payment of all costs,

2293which may be adjudged against the entity

2300filing the protest action . . . . Failure

2309of the protesting entity to file the

2316required bond, . . . at the time of filing

2326the formal protest shall result in a

2333dismissal of the protest.

233734. Terminix's proposal had been for $32,076.00, annually,

2346for three years, totaling $96,028.00. Terminix posted a protest

2356bond for only $3,200.80, instead of for ten percent of its bid,

2369or even for $3,207.60 for ten percent of its bid on an annual

2383basis.

238435. There is no evidence whatsoever that Ms. Ritter's

2393April 15, 2009, oral extension of the time to file Terminix's

2404formal written protest in any way included a waiver of the

2415requirements for posting a bond; that it specified a bond amount

2426different than 10 percent of Terminix’s proposal; or that it

2436included any reduction of the amount of the required bond or

2447security.

244836. On April 24, 2009, a day after receiving Terminix's

2458written protest, UNF rescinded its award of Project RFP 09-36 to

2469Petitioner. (Joint Stipulation 8, amplified for detail.)

247637. A letter of that date, authored by Ms. Ritter, stated:

2487. . . the notice of award dated April 9,

24972009, is rescinded and the evaluation

2503committee is instructed to reopen its

2509evaluations in this RFP for the purpose of

2517contacting all references supplied by all

2523bidders and assigning points based upon an

2530average of their responses supporting the

2536bidders’ past performance. Following

2540determination of the points to be assigned

2547for Rating Criteria 3, the evaluation

2553committee will re-tally the total points

2559assigned to each bidder for all rating

2566criteria and identify the successful bidder,

2572by issuing a new notice of award . (Emphasis

2581supplied.)

258238. The "re-evaluation" involved eight questions drafted

2589by Ms. Ritter, a previously uninvolved employee of UNF’s

2598Purchasing Department, UNF's OCG, and possibly Mr. Nelson. The

2607previously uninvolved Purchasing Department employee put the

2614same eight questions (five yes/no questions and three questions

2623which were each to be rated on a scale of 1-10) to at least

2637three references listed by each responsive bidder. 2/ She

2646unilaterally rated the three scaled questions at between 1 and

265610 points. Thereafter, she deleted the evaluation committee's

2664previous scores based on references, and the average of the

2674three new scores per reference were substituted on the original

2684RFP evaluation matrix. These scores were then factored into a

2694final total score per proposer. Apparently, some adjustments

2702were made, based on Terminix's original provision of 14 (not

2712just three) references, and some weighting of questions also was

2722involved, but how these latter adjustments were mathematically

2730accomplished is not entirely clear. Therefore, even the final

2739mathematical tabulation, ranking Terminix No. 1 and Petitioner

2747No. 2, cannot be relied upon.

275339. The final numerically altered RFP score matrix was

2762presented to some of the evaluation committee members. Some

2771committee members were not present when it was presented, and

2781the members present were only permitted to approve the new

2791scores.

279240. On May 15, 2009, UNF awarded RFP 09-36 to Terminix.

2803(Joint Stipulation 9.)

280641. On May 18, 2009, Petitioner filed its Notice of Intent

2817to Protest Award of RFP 09-36 to Terminix (Joint Stipulation

282710). It is found to be timely.

283442. On May 27, 2009, Petitioner filed its Bid Protest of

2845Award RFP 09-36 to Terminix. (Joint Stipulation 11.) This item

2855is found to be the timely written protest herein. It was

2866correctly filed with UNF's President and was accompanied by an

2876appropriate bid protest bond. Among the issues raised were the

2886insufficiency of Terminix's original protest bond and the new

2895scoring of references for past performance.

2901CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

290443. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

2911jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of this cause, in

2922accordance with Florida Board of Governors Regulation 18.002.

2930This hearing has been conducted in accordance with the

2939requirements of Board of Governors Regulation 18.002 and the

2948University's Regulation 13.0020R. However, the parties have,

2955either by express stipulation or by their actions, waived the

2965usual period (ten days post-hearing) for entry of this

2974Recommended Order.

297644. The term used throughout most of the RFP (see Finding

2987of Fact 21), in UNF’s April 9, 2009, and April 24, 2009, letters

3000(see Findings of Fact 20 and 37), and in the parties’ factual

3012stipulations for hearing (see Finding of Fact 19), not to

3022mention their entire course of dealing, establish that UNF’s

3031April 9, 2009, letter constituted a notice of award, not a

3042notice of intent to award. 3/

304845. Even if Ms. Ritter's oral extension of the time in

3059which to file Terminix's written protest could be considered a

3069permissible waiver of a minor irregularity, and even if Terminix

3079were entitled to some consideration because it relied on Ms.

3089Ritter’s representations concerning when to file its formal

3097written protest, Petitioner Turner Pest Control must prevail

3105herein.

310646. Ms. Ritter’s oral time extension did not eliminate the

3116requirement that Terminix post a compliant bid protest bond

3125simultaneously with filing its written protest. Although

3132Terminix's bond’s defective amount was relatively minor,

3139Terminix's protest bond clearly was not compliant with the RFP

3149or with UNF regulations. ( See Findings of Fact 21 and 33.)

3161Under the terms of the RFP and UNF regulations, that inadequate

3172bond constituted Terminix's "waiver of the right to protest

3181proceedings," and UNF was required to dismiss the protest

3190procedure and execute a contract with Petitioner.

319747. If it could be legitimately held that UNF's April 9,

32082009, letter constituted a notice of intent to award, as opposed

3219to a notice of award, UNF could, at anytime, even now, pursuant

3231to Section 16 of the RFP, terminate and recommence the entire

3242RFP process, but UNF has never proceeded on such a theory.

3253Instead, UNF attempted a piecemeal approach, which is contrary

3262to the RFP and unacceptable to a fair bidding process. Under

3273such circumstances, Petitioner should prevail.

327848. It was not unreasonable for committee members to take

3288into consideration their individual experience with one or more

3297of the proposers in their first assessment of the respective

3307proposals, and they could also legitimately have done that the

3317second time around, had a timely written formal protest been

3327accompanied by an adequate bond.

333249. Also, had there been a timely written formal protest

3342and the simultaneous posting of an adequate bond, there might

3352have been an opportunity for the committee to address the

3362references differently than it had the first time, but it is

3373abundantly clear that the way in which the references were

3383addressed the second time around was contrary to law, the

3393University's rules, and the terms of the RFP.

340150. Mr. Nelson's opinion notwithstanding, the only

3408reasonable purpose for the RFP to require submittal of three

3418references and contact information was so that the evaluation

3427committee could actually contact the references and evaluate

3435their responses. Therefore, the first evaluation was flawed

3443because the committee did not contact any references and

3452evaluate their responses, but the first evaluation flaw could

3461not be “corrected” after an award had been posted, unless a

3472written protest was timely filed addressing that issue together

3481with a compliant bond.

348551. It also could not be corrected by requiring the

3495evaluation committee to "rubber stamp" a new procedure (scoring

3504of responses to questions) that was not arrived-at by the

3514committee. Who drafted the uniform questions, who asked them,

3523and who recorded the actual responses from the proposers'

3532references, are not so much a problem as are the facts that the

3545questions themselves were assigned points by a non-committee

3553member and that the evaluation committee had no analytical part

3563in that portion of the reassessment of the proposals. The

3573result of these machinations was that the evaluation committee's

3582score for references was recomputed by someone outside the

3591committee, using a purely mathematical rating system based on

3600three questions asked of each reference. That single person’s

3609subjective results on a scale of 1 to 10 were then presented to

3622only a portion of the evaluation committee, and the whole

3632committee did not vote. Had the questions and answers been

3642submitted to the committee, the ministerial act of someone else

3652recording the answers might constitute a minor irregularity, but

3661here, the evaluation committee established by the RFP was not

3671even given the opportunity to rank, on the newly established 1-

368210 scale, the answers from the references provided. Further,

3691committee members were not given the opportunity to factor in

3701any other elements they might have felt were relevant to the

3712RFP, such as the proposers’ past history with UNF. This new

3723procedure, resulting from Terminix's incomplete (and thus waived

3731protest), was contrary to law, against the University's rules,

3740and contrary to the terms of the RFP.

3748RECOMMENDATION

3749Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of

3759Law, it is

3762RECOMMENDED that the President of the University of North

3771Florida, pursuant to his authority under the Board of Governors

3781Regulation 18.002, enter a final order rescinding the award to

3791Terminix and awarding the contract to Petitioner.

3798DONE AND ENTERED this 8th day of December, 2009, in

3808Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

3812S

3813ELLA JANE P. DAVIS

3817Administrative Law Judge

3820Division of Administrative Hearings

3824The DeSoto Building

38271230 Apalachee Parkway

3830Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

3833(850) 488-9675

3835Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

3839www.doah.state.fl.us

3840Filed with the Clerk of the

3846Division of Administrative Hearings

3850this 8th day of December, 2009.

3856ENDNOTES

38571/ Because the prior award to Petitioner Turner Pest Control,

3867the prior intent to protest filed by Terminix International

3876Company, L.P. (Terminix), UNF’s rescission of that prior award,

3885UNF’s re-calculation, and the instant protest are factual

3893issues, pivotal to resolution of the present dispute, they will

3903be discussed only in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of

3914Law.

39152/ Terminix had submitted 14 references with contact

3923information for each. How this situation was handled is not

3933clear in the record. Nor is it clear how reference letters

3944attached to certain proposals in place of just contact

3953information were addressed, if at all.

39593/ This is a crucial point. Some other entities’ procurement

3969procedures provide for a “notice of intent to award” which is

3980not superseded by a “notice of award” until after the time has

3992run for any protests. In other words, a notice of intent to

4004award is entered and only after 72 hours has passed without any

4016intent to protest being filed, will a notice of award be

4027entered, or if an intent to protest and a compliant written

4038protest are both timely filed, the “notice of award” is entered

4049only after the protest has been resolved.

4056COPIES FURNISHED :

4059Richard L. Maguire, Esquire

4063Charles F. Mills, III, Esquire

40681301 Riverplace Boulevard, Suite 1500

4073Jacksonville, Florida 32207

4076Paul Christopher Wrenn, Esquire

4080The University of North Florida

4085One University of North Florida Drive

4091Jacksonville, Florida 32224

4094John A. Delaney, President

4098The University of North Florida

4103One University of North Florida Drive

4109Jacksonville, Florida 32224

4112NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

4118Pursuant to the procedure specified in Board of Governors Rule

412818.002, upon submission of this Recommended Order to the

4137President of the University of North Florida, the President will

4147issue a preliminary order for final action and notify the

4157parties of such order. The preliminary order of the president

4167shall be final, unless the firm under consideration takes

4176exception to such order; in which event it may file with the

4188President such exceptions within twenty-one days of receipt of

4197notice of the preliminary order.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 01/11/2010
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 01/11/2010
Proceedings: President's Confirmation of Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/15/2009
Proceedings: President's Order for Final Action Rescinding the Award to Terminix International Company, LP, and Awarding the Contract to Turner Pest Control filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/15/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Preliminary Order for Final Action filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/08/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 12/08/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held September 18, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 12/08/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 10/26/2009
Proceedings: (Respondent UNF's) Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/26/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing (UNF's Proposed Recommended Order) filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/23/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner Turner Pest Control's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/23/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing (Petitioner's) Proposed Recommended Order.
PDF:
Date: 10/06/2009
Proceedings: Post-hearing Order.
Date: 10/05/2009
Proceedings: Transcript filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/05/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing of Transcript filed.
Date: 09/18/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 09/17/2009
Proceedings: Amendment to Joint Pre-Hearing Stipulation filed.
Date: 09/16/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 09/16/2009
Proceedings: Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation (exhibits not available for viewing) filed.
Date: 09/15/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 09/15/2009
Proceedings: Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/14/2009
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from D. Katz withdrawing Terminix's request to intervene filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/10/2009
Proceedings: Addendum to Turner Pest Control Petition for Protest filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/08/2009
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from P. Wrenn advising that there is no objection to intervention by Terminix filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/08/2009
Proceedings: Letter to parties of record from Judge Davis enclosing a copy of a letter, which appears to be from W. Knight, of Terminix International Company, L.P., dated August 31, 2009.
PDF:
Date: 09/02/2009
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from W. Knight regarding Terminix International Compnay, L.P's request to act as intervener filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/06/2009
Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for September 18, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Jacksonville and Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 07/02/2009
Proceedings: Stipulation by Counsel to Extend Hearing Date filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/24/2009
Proceedings: Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 06/24/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for July 14, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Jacksonville and Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 06/24/2009
Proceedings: Written Petition of Protest (with exhibits) filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/23/2009
Proceedings: Written Petition of Protest filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/23/2009
Proceedings: Notice and Protest Procedures filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/23/2009
Proceedings: Agency referral

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
06/23/2008
Date Assignment:
06/23/2009
Last Docket Entry:
01/11/2010
Location:
Jacksonville, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
Suffix:
BID
 

Counsels

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