GSA ponders reopening e-mail contract
Agency is studying GAO's decision to support the protests filed by two losing bidders.
The General Services Administration hasn't decided yet whether it will reopen the competition for a cloud-computing contract after the Government Accountability Office ruled against the agency in a bid protest.
“We are currently reviewing the GAO’s recommendation that GSA clarify the requirements language in the two sustained protest grounds,” Steven Kempf, commissioner of GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service, said in a statement.
GAO sustained a protest by two companies that challenged where a data center, storing government information, should be located. The companies, Technosource Information Systems of Annapolis, Md., and TrueTandem of Reston, Va., argued that GSA’s solicitation, which required vendors to locate their data services in “designated countries” based on the Trade Agreements Act, unduly restricts competition. They also said the requirement has no basis in law or regulation.
GAO agreed.
“We conclude that GSA has failed to proffer an adequate explanation for limiting non-U.S. based data centers to those countries listed as designated countries,” GAO wrote.
GAO said GSA should amend the solicitation to reflect its actual needs concerning non-U.S. data center locations. GAO also sustained another protest regarding a clarification of a term in the solicitation.
Kempf said GSA officials will “make a decision on corrective action following a thorough review of the GAO’s decision.”
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