THOMAS WHEELER, Judge.
Plaintiff DynCorp International, LLC ("DynCorp") filed this pre-award bid protest challenging the U.S. Air Force's decision to continue with a War Reserve Materiel III ("WRM III") solicitation after the Air Force had publicly disclosed DynCorp's proprietary cost and pricing data. DynCorp had been the incumbent on the prior WRM I and II contracts, and in the course of performing those contracts, had submitted proprietary indirect cost and profit data to the Air Force as part of life cycle management reports. By the Air Force's posting of this proprietary data online as part of the new WRM III solicitation, DynCorp contends that the Air Force put DynCorp at a severe competitive disadvantage. DynCorp says that the only permissible remedy is for the Air Force to extend DynCorp's current contract for five years on a sole source basis.
The record does not support DynCorp's position. As will be shown, DynCorp consistently failed to mark its indirect cost and profit data as "proprietary," and did not even object when the Air Force inquired whether the life cycle management reports could be posted as part of the new solicitation. DynCorp thereby waived its right to assert that the data was "proprietary," and the Air Force did nothing wrong by disclosing the data as part of the new solicitation. Moreover, the Air Force's actions to mitigate the effects of disclosure on DynCorp's competitive position were reasonable. Accordingly, DynCorp's protest is DENIED, and the Court GRANTS Defendant's motion for judgment on the administrative record.
For the past sixteen years, DynCorp has served as the prime contractor for the WRM program, through the initial WRM I contract and a successor contract, WRM II. Pl. Mem. at 3. The United States Air Force Air Combat Command Acquisition Management and Integration Center ("AMIC") runs the WRM program and conducts the WRM procurements. Gov't Mem. at 2. Among other responsibilities, the AMIC must manage and maintain stockpiles of war reserve materiel and other government equipment.
On March 9, 2015, the Air Force posted the initial draft WRM III solicitation to FedBizOpps.gov, which was followed by the final solicitation (No. FA4890-15-R-0004) on July 24, 2015. AR 1, 143. Along with a detailed description of what the Air Force would require from the awardee in terms of maintaining and repairing Government-owned equipment, the WRM III solicitation also included examples of the deliverables the eventual awardee would be responsible for providing to the Air Force over the course of the contract.
Under the WRM II contract, DynCorp had been submitting life cycle report spreadsheets to the Air Force since at least 2012. Declaration of Everton Chapman ("Chapman Decl.") ¶ 5. These reports "identified the date on which the Government purchased certain tools (such as pressure washers, wrenches, battery chargers . . . ), how much the Government paid for those tools at the time they were purchased, and the projected date and cost when the Air Force would have to buy replacements." Gov't Mem. at 3; AR 704. Most importantly for purposes of the present protest, these spreadsheets also included DynCorp's indirect rate and award fee data, information that Plaintiff maintains "is highly confidential and proprietary" as it relates to DynCorp's "performance and cost structure under the incumbent WRM II program." Pl. Mem. at 7-8. For instance, on July 31, 2012, DynCorp representative Steve Trotter sent Everton Chapman, an Air Force contract logistics manager, a life cycle report that "included blocks containing an `Indirect' [. . .] rate and a `Fee' of [. . .]." Chapman Decl. ¶ 5. According to Mr. Chapman, the report contained no proprietary markings and "Mr. Trotter did not indicate that any of the information in the report was protected" in transmitting the report.
Pursuant to the WRM II contract between DynCorp and the Air Force, the Government expressly acquired "unlimited rights to all deliverables procured under [the] contract," with unlimited rights defined as "rights to use, modify, reproduce, perform, display, release, or disclose in whole or in part, in any manner, and for any purposes whatsoever, and to authorize others to do so," and deliverables defined as "the documents, regardless of media format (e.g. print or electronic), identified in the PWS [Performance Work Statement], and described in the PWS Appendix B, Deliverables." AR 1342. To guard against the possibility that proprietary information submitted in deliverables might be shared or released, the WRM II contract included the following paragraph explaining how to flag proprietary deliverables:
AR 1345. In addition to these two contract provisions, the WRM II contract also incorporated by reference sections of the Federal Acquisition Regulation ("FAR") and Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement ("DFARS") defining the Government's right to contractor-furnished data.
In his role as Logistics Manager for the WRM II contract and Chief of the Materiel Management Branch of the AMIC, Mr. Chapman assisted in developing the WRM III solicitation. Based on his experience with the WRM II contract, Mr. Chapman decided that the eventual awardee of the WRM III should also be required to deliver life cycle reports on Government-furnished equipment. Chapman Decl. ¶ 7. As an example of the type of deliverables prospective offerors would be required to produce, Mr. Chapman wanted to include a version of DynCorp's life cycle reports as part of the solicitation's performance work statement.
On August 5, 2015, Vectrus Systems Corporation ("Vectrus"), a prospective offeror, contacted the Air Force after one of its employees alerted the Vectrus legal department that the WRM III solicitation included "material that the company believes may contain proprietary information from the incumbent contractor." AR 1225. At that point, the life cycle management list had been available to the public through the FedBizOpps website for more than five months. After verifying that DynCorp's profit and pricing data were in fact publicly available on the FedBizOpps website, the agency removed the solicitation and notified its legal department. Pl. Mem. at 12; AR 1220, 1225. On August 6, 2015, Contracting Officer Sheila Reshard-Bryant corresponded with Gregory Passig at Vectrus to ensure that all copies of the life cycle report would be destroyed. AR 1220. In a letter dated August 19, 2015, Vectrus's Deputy General Counsel of Government Contracts, Tim Kobes, explained that only Vectrus's Business Development Manager had actually viewed the pricing information and confirmed that the company had deleted all known copies of the file. AR 1225-26.
Also on August 6, Ms. Reshard-Bryant and another agency contracting officer contacted Robert Caldwell, Senior Contracts Director at DynCorp, and identified the information that had been posted publicly and the steps the agency was taking in response, namely, sanitizing the documents and reposting the solicitation. AR 1220. Initially, Mr. Caldwell indicated that he "didn't find it to be a big deal."
AR 1212-13. To remedy the alleged harm caused by the Air Force's disclosure, DynCorp requested nothing less than the cancellation of the WRM III solicitation coupled with a five-year extension of its current WRM II contract.
Unsatisfied with the Air Force's mitigation response, DynCorp filed a protest with the U.S. Government Accountability Office ("GAO") on October 9, 2015. In its protest before the GAO, DynCorp again sought to have the WRM III solicitation cancelled and requested that the GAO recommend it be issued a five-year sole-source extension for the contract. AR 1245. Finding that DynCorp's protest was not timely filed, the GAO declined to consider the merits of the protest. AR 1250. DynCorp then filed a pre-award bid protest with this Court on November 18, 2015. The motion for a preliminary injunction that accompanied DynCorp's complaint was rendered moot by the Air Force's voluntary stay of the solicitation. The parties have fully briefed their respective motions for judgment on the administrative record, and the Court heard oral argument on February 9, 2016.
Pursuant to the Tucker Act, as amended by the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996, this Court has "jurisdiction to render judgment on an action by an interested party objecting to a solicitation by a Federal agency for bids or proposals for a proposed contract or to a proposed award or the award of a contract or any alleged violation of statute or regulation in connection with a procurement or a proposed procurement." 28 U.S.C. § 1491(b)(1). Determining whether a bid protester has standing to pursue a claim in this Court "is a threshold jurisdictional issue" that must be met in any protest.
In a bid protest, this Court reviews an agency's decision pursuant to the standards set forth in the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"). 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-706 (2000);
Under the APA standard, this Court must sustain an agency official's decision unless that decision lacked a rational basis or the agency's decision-making involved a violation of regulation or procedure.
DynCorp asks the Court to find that the Air Force caused it competitive harm by disclosing its indirect rate and fee data and that its decision to proceed with the WRM III solicitation after the disclosure was unreasonable. Compl. ¶¶ 5-7. Additionally, DynCorp claims that the Air Force's decision to continue with the procurement violates sections 1.602-2(b) and 3.101-1 of the FAR, the Procurement Integrity Act ("PIA"), 41 U.S.C. § 423 et seq., and the Government's implied-in-fact contract obligations to DynCorp as a "bidder-claimant." Compl. ¶¶ 53-71 ("The government is said to breach [an] implied in fact contract if its consideration of offers is found to be arbitrary and capricious toward the bidder-claimant.") (citing
The Government argues that, assuming the information it released was proprietary, the Air Force reasonably found that it sufficiently mitigated any competitive harm that could have resulted from the release. However, the Government maintains that this protest can be decided on the issue of waiver. Namely, the Government argues that DynCorp waived any protections or rights to relief it may have had when it repeatedly and consistently failed to treat its data as proprietary.
"A waiver is ordinarily an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege."
This Court has held that a contractor's failure to properly mark deliverable data with the appropriate restrictive indicators will result in the government gaining full use of that data.
Pursuant to the WRM II contract between DynCorp and the Air Force, the government expressly acquired "unlimited rights to all deliverables procured under [the] contract." AR 1342. Certainly, as the Government acknowledges, this language did not authorize the Air Force to release proprietary data. In fact, to guard against such a possibility, the WRM II contract included a section dedicated to explaining how to flag proprietary deliverables. AR 1345. Thus, as the Government explains, "[t]he point is not that the WRM II contract permitted the Government to release DynCorp's proprietary information. It did not. Rather, the point is that the contract provided DynCorp notice that unrestricted reports could be released publicly (and detailed the ways in which confidential data should be marked)." Gov't Reply at 4 (emphasis in original). In light of this notice, the fact that DynCorp officials (1) consistently failed to flag the life cycle management reports as proprietary over a period of years, (2) raised no objections when informed that the Air Force planned to include these reports in the WRM III solicitation, and (3) failed to object to the inclusion of those reports for more than five months after the they were made publicly available on FedBizOpps.gov—in the very solicitation upon which DynCorp was bidding—creates a pattern of consistent action that effectively gives rise to the implication that DynCorp knowingly waived protection for its information.
Finally, DynCorp insists that the Air Force's decision to remove and sanitize the solicitation and to require sworn statements from offerors affirming that they destroyed any copies "demonstrate a high degree of concern regarding the Agency's improper disclosure of proprietary information." Pl. Reply at 3. The Court is not convinced that the Air Force's decision to remove the solicitation and clear the rate and fee data after it was contacted by a concerned offeror is tantamount to an admission of wrongdoing on the agency's part. As the Government has explained, "[i]n its discussions with DynCorp and the resulting administrative proceedings, the Air Force did not conduct a detailed analysis of whether the data at issue is, in fact, protected—rather, the Air Force assumed that it was, and focused on devising the most appropriate means to remedy the harm to DynCorp." Gov't Mot. to Supplement at 4 (emphasis in original) (citing AR 1229-31 (Contracting Officer's final decision about appropriate remedial action)). The Court finds the Air Force's chosen course of conduct reasonable in light of the information it had at the time and refuses to interpret its precautionary remedial measures as an admission of fault.
In addition to finding that DynCorp waived any right to claim that its fee and award data should have been protected, the Court finds that the Air Force's mitigation efforts were a reasonable solution to the apparent problem presented by the release of the data. As published on FedBizOpps.gov, the life cycle management spreadsheet included DynCorp's indirect rate and award fee data from its WRM II contract. To remove the possibility that DynCorp's competitors could benefit from access to the indirect rate, the Air Force issued an amendment that required offerors to use fixed "plug" figures, rather than a proposed rate, in their calculations, thereby removing the competitive variable from that portion of the solicitation. AR 1230; AR 838-70 (Amendment 0001). As to the award fee, the Air Force determined that offerors would not gain a competitive advantage from access to that information because the WRM III solicitation stipulates a set fee and therefore offerors were not asked to submit proposed award fee percentages, as they had been for the WRM II solicitation. AR 1230. DynCorp's additional contentions that its competitors may be able to gain a competitive advantage by applying the indirect rate to other contract line item numbers are speculative and implausible. Given the information available to the Air Force and subsequently presented to this Court, the Court agrees that the agency's remediation efforts were reasonable and that its decision to proceed with the procurement in light of those efforts also was reasonable.
Based upon the foregoing, the Court DISMISSES DynCorp's claims as barred by the doctrine of waiver, and GRANTS the Government's Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record.
IT IS SO ORDERED.