State Round-Up
June 27, 2001
Richard Moore - Northern Virginia
Karen Walker - Tallahassee
As the economy has slowed over the past year, more and more companies are
looking to government marketplace as a steady source of demand for their
products and services. The Holland & Knight Government Contracts Newsletter
usually focuses on new developments in the federal procurement world. However,
the state and local government procurements, while more diverse, in aggregate
exceed their federal counterparts in many areas. For instance, a recent report
in Washington Technology projects that spending for state and local government
information technology products and services will exceed federal IT spending by
almost $10 billion dollars in 2001. The state and local IT market is projected
to grow at an annual rate of 7%, from $45.6 billion in 2001 to over $52.2
billion in 2003.
Given the importance of state and local government procurements, we have
included two articles in this edition of the newsletter dealing with changes in
the procurement process in two of the jurisdictions where we have offices -
Virginia and Florida. We should note that, while the overall framework for
government procurements is relatively consistent from the federal to state
level, and across the various states, there are enough variations in practices
and procedures to require that each jurisdiction must be treated separately. We
therefore recommend that before a company pursues sales or marketing
opportunities with a particular government entity, that they become familiar
with the rules and regulations governing procurements by that organization.
Florida Contracts
The state of Florida spends approximately $12 billion each year on goods and
services, ranging from computers to accounting services to paper goods. On May
4, 2001, the Florida Legislature passed a bill that will change the way that
those goods and services are procured.
The bill, Senate Bill 1738, deals primarily with One-Stop Permitting and the
use of technology in procurements. It requires executive branch state agencies
to participate in an online procurement program to be developed by the State
Technology Office. Participation in the online procurement program by other
agencies is optional. The program will establish requirements and qualification
criteria for pre-qualifying bidders, procedures for accessing and conducting
online procurements, and criteria for eligible commodities and contractual
services. The bill further authorizes collecting fees for use of the online
procurement system.
The portion of Senate Bill 1738 that could most significantly change Florida
procurement, however, was part of a last-minute amendment which created two new
methods for procuring commodities and contractual services in Florida. Florida
law previously requires executive branch agencies, absent express statutory
exceptions, to award all contracts for the purchase of commodities or
contractual services in excess of $25,000 using competitive sealed bidding. Only
when an agency determined in writing that the use of competitive sealed bidding
is not practicable, could the agency procure commodities or contractual services
through competitive sealed proposals. Senate Bill 1738 adds invitations to
negotiate and requests for quotes to the types of solicitation documents that
may be issued by executive branch agencies.
The bill defines an invitation to negotiate as "a written solicitation
that calls for responses to select one or more persons or business entities with
which to commence negotiations for the procurement of commodities or contractual
services." The bill authorizes the use of an invitation to negotiate where
an "an agency determines that the use of an invitation to bid or a request
for a proposal would not result in the best value to the state, based on
factors, including, but not limited to, price, quality, design, and workmanship
. . . ."
Senate Bill 1738 defines a request for quote as "a solicitation that
calls for pricing information for purposes of competitively selecting and
procuring commodities and contractual services from qualified or registered
vendors." The bill provides that an agency may procure commodities or
contractual services "by a request for quote from vendors under contract
with the department."
Notwithstanding the previous lack of statutory authority for invitations to
negotiate and requests for quotes, some Florida executive branch agencies have
been using these procurement methods for years. Agencies like invitations to
negotiate because they provide greater flexibility in evaluating responses and
reaching contract terms and conversely make it more difficult to protest award
decisions. Requests for quotes have historically been used to obtain price
quotes from pre-qualified bidders by those agencies that have a
pre-qualification process.
With the new law, the use of these procurement methods is likely to increase.
The practical effect is that agencies will have greater flexibility to evaluate
proposals, agree on contract terms and negotiate prices throughout the course of
a procurement without necessary adherence to more rigid specifications and
evaluation criteria required as part of an invitation to bid, and to a lesser
extent, a request for proposals. This will allow for more discretion on the part
of the agency in contracting for commodities and contractual services.
The most dramatic change in Florida procurement law could come from the
language describing when a request for quotes may be used by an agency. Read
literally, Senate Bill 1738 could allow the Department of Management Services to
limit the field of bidders in a procurement using a request for quotes to only
those persons or entities currently under contract with the Department of
Management Services. State Representative Loranne Ausley and an editorial in the
St. Petersburg Times have expressed concern that this language could be applied
more broadly by all executive branch agencies to use a request for quotes to
limit a procurement to those entities currently under contract with the
soliciting agency. Governor Bush, however, has stated that "request for
quotes" will be used when multiple vendors are qualified by reason of being
on a state term contract and an agency then requests a quote from the multiple
vendors, negotiating for the best price under the state term contract cap.
Whether this is how the language regarding "request for quotes" will
actually be applied remains to be seen.
Virginia Contracts
11 Amendments to the Virginia Public Procurement Act
Virginia has enacted 11 amendments to the Virginia Public Procurement Act and
state contracts statutes, all effective July 1, 2001, and a statutory request to
the Departments of General Services, Transportation, and Technology Planning, in
consultation with the Joint Commission on Technology and Science, to study the
methods and technologies needed to implement competitive procurement via
electronic means, including electronic sealed bidding. The statutory amendments
are as follows: HB-1859 (Fair Employment Contracting Act; discrimination);
SB-1052 (VDOT contracts) (identical to HB-2303); HB-2418 (Submissions of claims
to VDOT and Commonwealth Transportation Board); SB-1024 (Public Procurement Act;
procurement by reverse auctioning); SB-1212 (Procurement; faith-based
organizations); HB-2183 (Public Procurement Act; professional services); HB-2020
(Public Procurement Act; indemnification provisions); HB-2050 (Public
Procurement Act; preference for Virginia products); HB-2052 (Public Procurement
Act; damages for unreasonable delay); HB-2051 (Public Procurement Act; actions
on payment bonds); and HB-2054 (Public Procurement Act; contractual disputes).
Immunity from Claims Based on Quasi-contract
The Virginia Supreme Court found that the Commonwealth of Virginia has not
waived its immunity from claims based on quasi-contract, even though recovery
may be had against a municipality under similar circumstances. The court also
made it clear that, for claims under the Procurement Act, the Act's notice and
filing requirements trump those of general statutes relating to the presentation
of pecuniary claims against the Commonwealth. Contractor claimants should,
therefore, strictly adhere to the Procurement Act's requirements, such as those
found in Virginia Code § 11-69, in filing contract claims arising from state
procurement transactions, and avoid any reliance on the notice of filing
provisions of general pecuniary claim statutes.
The Doctor William E.S. Flory Small Business Development Center, Inc. v.
Commonwealth, 261 Va. __, 541 S.E. 2d 915 (Va. 2001)
Six-month Period Following Notice May Be Tolled
The Virginia Public Procurement Act requires a contractor to give written
notice of its intention to file a contractual claim with a public body and gives
the contractor six months thereafter to institute legal action appealing a final
decision of the public body denying the claim. The Virginia Supreme Court found
that the six-month period can be tolled (i.e., suspended temporarily). Following
a public body's denial of its contractual claim, a contractor filed suit in a
United States district court in West Virginia, which dismissed the suit without
prejudice and on jurisdictional grounds. The contractor then filed suit in a
Virginia circuit court approximately 11 months after the public body's denial of
its contractual claim and claimed that its suit was timely, arguing that the
period its suit was pending in federal court was excludable from the six-month
requirement.
The court agreed. If an action is commenced within the prescribed limitation
period for any cause abates or is dismissed without determining the merits, the
time such action is pending shall not be computed as part of the period within
which the action may be brought.
In Welding, Inc. v. Bland County Service Authority, 261 Va. __, 541 S.E.2d
909 (Va. 2001).