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311 Open, Withdrawn, and Closed Protests Under NIH Solicitation 75N98121R00001


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Keeping the GAO Protest Unit busy with 311 protests under Solicitation 75N98121R00001  Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health Chief Information Officer-Solutions and Partners (CIO-SP4).

Notice the GAO's protest number under Infotrend Inc., B-419956.301, May 11, 2023.

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NIH issued the solicitation on May 25, 2021, seeking proposals to provide IT solutions and services in the areas of health, biomedical, scientific, administrative, operational, managerial, and information systems requirements. Req. for Dismissal (RFD) at 2; RFD, exh. 1, RFP at 7. 2 The purpose of the CIO-SP4 contracts is to “provide government agencies a mechanism for quick ordering of IT solutions and services at fair and reasonable prices, to give qualified small businesses a greater opportunity to participate in these requirements, and give government agencies a mechanism to help meet their socio-economic contracting goals.” Id. at 7.

The RFP anticipates the award of multiple contracts, each of which will have a base period of performance of 5 years and one 5-year option. RFP at 38. The solicitation states that the agency will award approximately 305 to 510 IDIQ contracts, including as relevant here, 20 to 40 contracts to 8(a) small businesses. Id. at 143. Each awarded contract will have a maximum ordering value of $50 billion. Id. at 50.

 

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The entire multiple award IDIQ concept is broken.  This CIO-SP4 example shows how ridiculous the process has become.   A huge amount of both government and industry time and effort goes into just getting to contract award which takes literally years after all protests are resolved.  Then ordering agencies go through similar efforts at the task order levels beginning with providing “fair opportunity” to “approximately 305 to 510 IDIQ contracts” holders.  Where is the “streamlining,” “efficiency,” and “economy” of the process?

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The RFP anticipates the award of multiple contracts, each of which will have a base period of performance of 5 years and one 5-year option. RFP at 38. The solicitation states that the agency will award approximately 305 to 510 IDIQ contracts, including as relevant here, 20 to 40 contracts to 8(a) small businesses. Id. at 143. Each awarded contract will have a maximum ordering value of $50 billion. Id. at 50.

400 contracts x $50,000,000,000 (billion) = $20,000,000,000,000 (trillion)  

I've never been great at math but I estimated the number of contracts at 400 with a maximum of $50 billion.  Possible 10 years = $2 trillion a year.  Is my math correct?  Does the solicitation state that all contracts awarded could be worth $20 trillion?

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1 hour ago, bob7947 said:

I'm astonished that only formerfed said anything about this procurement.

Well, it's yet another indication that (1) the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994 did not streamline anything, that (2) multi-agency multiple-award IDIQ contracts are a bonanza for the legal profession but are otherwise time-consuming and wasteful, and that (3) the government and political system created by the founders is foundering and nothing can save it from itself. It is proof that we are living in the age of incompetent government.

There is no chance of meaningful "reform."

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The solicitation states that the agency will award approximately 305 to 510 IDIQ contracts

Why 305 to 510 awarded contracts?  I haven't checked any previous procurement but I expect a lot less than that number of contractors ever getting work to do. 

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Each awarded contract will have a maximum ordering value of $50 billion. Id. at 50.

I admit my math could be better.  However, 305 to 510 contracts with orders of $50 billion could exceed $20 trillion.  Who's kidding who?

Now, for a true story.  A contracting agency had about 6 IDIQ contracts with maximum order limits of $50 million each.  One contractor was going to exceed the $50 million limit because it received most of the awards.  The other 5 contractors received next to nothing.  The contracting agency believed that increasing the maximum order limit for the one contractor would be improper and get the other contractors to take legal action.  What to do?  All 6 contractors had their original contracts maximum increased to $50 million even those who never received any business.  That reminded me of the $50 billion number.

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1 hour ago, bob7947 said:

Why 305 to 510 awarded contracts?  I haven't checked any previous procurement but I expect a lot less than that number of contractors ever getting work to do. 

How about Navy seaport-e?  23 functional areas with over 2400 contractors!

I don’t know how NIH did their calculations.  But I do know how a couple other GWACS planned the number of awardees.  They looked at past ordering, the range of technical requirements, the span of industry capabilities including those of small businesses, and did some rough guesses on how many contractors will be required to cover it all assuming a minimum of three responses for each potential order across the technical spectrum.

 

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For FY 2022, the Congressional Budget Office said that the U. S. spent:  

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"In fiscal year (FY) 2022, the government spent $6.27 trillion . . ."

Iif we project the same amount in FY 2023, then NIH's annual contract amounts of $2 trillion under that procurement would cover 32 percent of the amount that the U. S. spent for everything and more than the discretionary money for FY 2023.   CBO defines discretionary funding as 

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Discretionary spending is determined by the President and Congress each year in the budget and appropriations process and includes spending for most defense, education, and transportation programs.

With those contracts NIH could cover the entire discretionay funding for FY 2023.  "An electronic chcken in every pot."  That makes me feel warm and fuzzy.

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My agency, within HHS, is a heavy user of GWACs, and I love them.  They are great and should be praised.

CIO-SP3 & NITAAC are for IT.  Purchasing IT services and software using a GWAC is drastically easier and faster than open-market.  This is mostly because the GWAC has dealt with compliance and Terms & Conditions (all the stuff that needs to be done unrelated to actually meeting the government's requirement). Examples:

  • Terms of Service.  Does the publisher have federally compliant mandatory ToS?  If not, you might have to negotiate a bespoke ToS, which is a big undertaking regardless of price.   At a minimum you may have to check with legal about it, which brings things to a halt for a week or two.
  • Pricing.  A scientific software platform my agency uses a lot has something like 20+ different pricing models.  Just figuring out how to accurately code the pricing structure as line items in a federal contract can be a challenge.  When the software in question costs $5,000, this extra effort is not a good use of time.   For the most part, the pricing in GWACs is federal government friendly. (Note: its been >20 years, we need to have consumption-based pricing in the FAR).
  • FAR 25.  IMO, this is the most complicated part of the FAR, by far.  If your widget might have FAR 25 apply to it, you really want to get it from a source that's taken care of all that stuff.  GWAC vendors are very good at policing each other.  You'll hear about it if a vendor is offering you a cheaper but non-TAA compliant printer.

Pricing?  My guess is on a per-unit basis pricing on GWACs is about the same as open-market.  But if you factor into your cost equation time and effort spent by all parties, then GWACs have big cost savings.

A major benefit of having redundant (overlapping in scope) GWACs is competition for buyers.  Its really important to have several comparable GWACs which we can pick from to procure stuff.    Incentives matter.  

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Valid points raised General.Zhukov.  But in practice, many orders for services take a very long time to award.  That largely is due to the huge number of contract holders and the requirement for fair opportunity.  I wonder how much of the overall time and effort in awarding the basic contracts really produces benefits.  For example and this article is over a year old with lots more protests since:

https://federalnewsnetwork.com/reporters-notebook-jason-miller/2023/04/cio-sp4-a-tragedy-a-comedy-and-a-drama-we-couldnt-stop-watching/

All this takes place before ordering agencies can even place orders.

As an alternative, I’ve seen agencies getting great results from using GSA Schedules.  They do upfront market research and identify a small pool of companies capable of meeting their requirements (often as few as 3-5).  They issue a quick solicitation, receive and evaluate responses, communicate as necessary, and make awards.  No need to synopsize or provide notice to hundreds of companies, deal only with a manageable number of companies the agency knows and are reasonably comfortable with, and place order awards quickly.

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15 hours ago, formerfed said:


Valid points raised General.Zhukov.  But in practice, many orders for services take a very long time to award.  That largely is due to the huge number of contract holders and the requirement for fair opportunity.  I wonder how much of the overall time and effort in awarding the basic contracts really produces benefits.  For example and this article is over a year old with lots more protests since:

https://federalnewsnetwork.com/reporters-notebook-jason-miller/2023/04/cio-sp4-a-tragedy-a-comedy-and-a-drama-we-couldnt-stop-watching/

All this takes place before ordering agencies can even place orders.

As an alternative, I’ve seen agencies getting great results from using GSA Schedules.  They do upfront market research and identify a small pool of companies capable of meeting their requirements (often as few as 3-5).  They issue a quick solicitation, receive and evaluate responses, communicate as necessary, and make awards.  No need to synopsize or provide notice to hundreds of companies, deal only with a manageable number of companies the agency knows and are reasonably comfortable with, and place order awards quickly.

Yes, they are convenient. And likely profitable for the contractors. 

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On 5/24/2023 at 7:18 AM, bob7947 said:

I'm astonished that only formerfed said anything about this procurement.  

The downhill rolling snowball has an unstoppable momentum.  So much so is has taken over BPA's too.

"The Land Management Integrated Resources BPA (LMIR) is a National BPA that will consist of a large variety of work including Professional Services, Natural Resources Restoration, Engineering, Project Management, NEPA, Communications, and more. The BPA will have a period of performance from early spring 2023 through early spring 2033 and can be utilities on all Forests and Grasslands and is available for all federal agencies to utilize. "

https://sam.gov/opp/e1e14956cafa4c409babece95c6200eb/view

 

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On 5/28/2023 at 3:24 PM, formerfed said:


Valid points raised General.Zhukov.  But in practice, many orders for services take a very long time to award.  That largely is due to the huge number of contract holders and the requirement for fair opportunity....

As an alternative, I’ve seen agencies getting great results from using GSA Schedules.  They do upfront market research and identify a small pool of companies capable of meeting their requirements (often as few as 3-5). 

Agreed.  3-5 is about right.  COs are well aware of the costs of getting too-much competition, and have techniques to keep the pool to a reasonable number.   Some of these techniques are now endorsed by FAI, Periodic Table of Acquisition Innovations.   Personal fav is the 'down select' - its like a voluntary and much simplified competitive range. 

 

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26 minutes ago, General.Zhukov said:

Some of these techniques are now endorsed by FAI, Periodic Table of Acquisition Innovations.   Personal fav is the 'down select' - it’s like a voluntary and much simplified competitive range. 

 

Good.  I was hasty in my response.  I’m looked over maybe a couple dozen CIO-SP3 files and don’t remember any of the agencies reducing the pool.  Glad you are doing that.

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The “down select” procedure is the primary purpose of the FAR 36.3,  2 Phase D-B process, which was proposed by the industry and jointly developed for FAR with the USACE and other some DoD agencies in 1996-1997 timeframe. Phase 1 is very similar to the industry Phase 1 “request for qualifications” (“RFQ”) with no price or technical design proposals.

Industry wants to short-list only 3-5 most highly qualified firms to spend the time, cost and resources to develop phase 2 preliminary design and price proposals.

This allows a firm a reasonable probability of award after expending the time, cost and resources in phase 2.

In contrast, in the one-step D-B process, industry must submit a full price proposal and usually a preliminary design proposal, against an unknown number of competitors with an unknown probability of award.. 

The FAR Part 15 rewrite of 1996 included the multi-step advisory process in . 15.202. This was a step down from the 2 phase D-B process in 36.3.

It is mostly for the benefit of the government, in my opinion.

 

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