Tag Archives: public bidding

Massachusetts Attorney General Finds Minority-Owned Business Goals to be Statutorily Mandated

By on June 27, 2016

In a recent bid protest decision the Massachusetts Attorney General allowed a protest contesting a bidder’s right to submit Minority Business Enterprise (“MBE”) or Women’s Business Enterprise (“WBE”) qualifications after the bid opening. The opinion deemed MBE and WBE goals to be statutory and therefore not waivable by the awarding authority. The decision also found that allowing such post-bid submissions would violate the equal-footing principles upon which bidding laws rely.

The Fall River project required M/WBE compliance forms to be included with bids. The low bidder listed itself as an MBE in its bid. However, it soon learned that a change in the law made it no longer qualified to be a certified MBE. It then provided the city with the name of a qualifying subcontractor, albeit post bid opening. The city was willing to accept this post-bid supplement, however, another bidder filed a protest.

Generally speaking, cities may use their discretion in waiving their own public bidding requirements in certain circumstances. However, they are not authorized to waive statutory requirements. M.G.L. c. 7C, § 6(a)(6), enacted in 2013, provides that “state assisted construction contracts shall include language… setting forth the participation goals of minority and women workers to be employed on each such contracts.” Given the mandate of the “shall” language, the AG hearing officer found the M/WBE participation requirements to be statutory and therefore the city could not waive them.

The decision went further in finding that accepting the supplement post-bid would violate equal footing principles. An entity that already has the low bid will tend to have more leverage in negotiating prices with subcontractors and suppliers than competitors had pre-bid. Such advantages are not allowed.

Bidders should use caution going forward in verifying the current status of the M/WBE components of their bids and including thoroughly completed participation compliance forms in bid submissions.

Massachusetts Attorney General’s Bid Protest Decisions Finds No Violation of Public Construction Bidding Laws Where Low Bidder Included Minor Deviation on Bid Form

By on October 27, 2015

In a recent decision, In re: Town of Danvers; Thorpe School Library Project (October 8, 2015), the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Bid Unit rejected a protest from the second low sub-bidder, on the grounds that the low bidder’s notation on the bid form was a clerical error that gave it no unfair advantage.

The town’s bid form included a line requesting the proposed contract price “without alternates.” The low bidder’s form listed a price on that line and added the notation that its price included three alternates. However, the price of each alternate was listed separately, making the mistake easy to ascertain, and the awarding authority accepted it as the low bid.

The second lowest bidder filed a protest, claiming the notation was “an addition not called for” in violation of the public bidding statutes, mandating rejection. The Bid Unit disagreed, deeming this a “clerical error,” a well-established exception to the otherwise strict statutory bid requirements.

The Bid Unit further analyzed whether there was any way in which the low bidder gained an unfair advantage over other bidders by allowing this notation and decided it did not. Finding no prejudice to the other bidders is central to one of the statutory purposes of the bid laws; that is, putting all bidders on equal footing.

While the low bidder ultimately survived this protest, it should serve as a reminder to all bidders to use great caution when adding any words to a statutory bid form. You can read the full decision below.

http://www.bpd.ago.state.ma.us/

Avoiding Fatal Errors When Submitting Bids on Public Construction Projects

By on June 18, 2015

Those who perform public work in Massachusetts know the phrase “lowest, responsible and eligible” bidder well, as it applies to the standard for awarding subcontracts on public construction projects subject to the bid statutes.  However, as many subcontractors have experienced, some of the bid requirements to be considered an “eligible” bidder are in fact waivable by the awarding authority.

 The nuances of public bidding are that some bid requirements, even those that are statutory, are waivable by the awarding authority.   For instance, the bidding statute requires that a sub-bidder must include its certificate of eligibility and update statement with its bid to establish prequalification.  However, the Attorney General (“AG”) has held that a bidder can actually submit its certificate of eligibility after the opening of the bids.  Yet, failure to submit the update statement at the time of bid opening necessitates automatic rejection of the bid.  Why this discrepancy?  In evaluating whether an awarding authority has the discretion to accept a bid that fails to include a certificate of eligibility at the time of bid opening, the AG reasoned that awarding authority can verify contemporaneously whether a bidder is DCAM certified.  Therefore, there is no harm in allowing a bidder to submit its certificate a few hours later.  Conversely, allowing a bidder to furnish its update statement after bid opening would result in an unfair advantage because the update statement, unlike DCAM certification, cannot be independently and instantaneously verified.  Allowing a bidder to submit a document that is entirely within the bidder’s control, like the update statement, could result in “two bites of the apple,” as the saying goes, because the bidder could decide after bid opening whether to submit the document based on whether the bidder still wants the job. 

So how does one determine which deviations from the bid requirements would be minor enough to warrant an awarding authority to use its discretion to accept an otherwise non-complying bid?  It all comes down to whether or not a bidder would have an unfair advantage which would undermine the purpose of the competitive bidding statute to obtain the lowest price for work that competition among responsible bidders can secure.  For instance, as explained above a certificate of eligibility submitted late is not unfair as there is no upper hand gained by a certificate-less bidder.  Conversely, a bidder is not allowed to submit bid security a few hours late.  The AG explained allowing a bid bond to be submitted even a few hours late could upset the balance of fair bidding as some bidders could abuse such leniency by submitting a low bid without a bid bond and then have second thoughts after the opening and nullify their bid by never filing a bond.  Below is a brief summary of bid requirements that the AG has determined require rejection by the awarding authority, and those for which the awarding authority may use its discretion in determining whether to reject.  It’s important to recognize that an awarding authority is not compelled to overlook “waivable” bid requirements.

Bid Requirements which the AG has held may be waived by the awarding authority, in its discretion: 

1.  Minor clerical errors.

–Such clerical errors much be minor enough that they are obvious and deceive no one.

2.  Failure to submit non-statutory items where bid documents do not make submission mandatory.

–These include items which do not go to the scope of work or price of the work.

3.  Noncompliance with discretionary minority requirement.                                                         

4.  Failure to acknowledge addenda which do not go to price and scope.

–Such addenda must be small or insignificant as to be a minor deviation.

5.  Update statement with an omission.

 –Massachusetts Courts have held that even if a contractor makes an intentional misrepresentation on the update statement, the awarding authority still has the discretion to terminate, but is not required to terminate the contract.

6.  Submitting certificate of eligibility after bid opening.

There are certain deviations from the bid requirements that mandate bid rejection by the awarding authority:

1.  No bid bond.                                                                                                                                            

2.  No signature on bid.                                                                                                                                  

3.  Failure to submit update statement.    

4.  Failure to timely submit bid.                                                                                                                

5.  Bids that are incomplete, obscure, or contain conditions.

–For example, failure to bid on materials specified in bid documents; failure to acknowledge addenda which affect price and scope of work; or not bidding on the amount of material specified.  Another pitfall would be a bidder who put conditions on the bid price or does not comply with specifications but tries to change them.

Of course, the statute also provides modes of protesting the award of a contract.  A bidder can chose to go to either Superior Court, or to the Attorney General’s office to protest a bid award. Because these issues are often very fact specific, bidders that may have been aggrieved by the awarding authority or other parties in the bid process should consult their construction attorney to determine whether there are grounds for a bid protest, and to provide the bidder with guidance on the bid protest process.