Judge delays FirstSource III proceedings amid growing case load
A U.S. Court of Federal Claims judge will reassess timeline as protests mount against the Homeland Security Department's $10 billion small business IT contract.
The number of companies joining the FirstSource III protest has grown substantially at the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, which has led the judge overseeing the case to pause the pause button on deadlines he set earlier on.
As of now, there are 11 protests at the court with another 14 active at the Government Accountability Office. FirstSource III is a potential $10 billion vehicle the Homeland Security Department will use to buy hardware, software and related services from small businesses.
DHS began making awards in Septemberm but they were quickly followed by protests at GAO and then the Court of Federal Claims.
When protests are filed at court, GAO will generally dismiss the protests it has because the court has higher jurisdiction. But the dismissals are not automatic.
GAO checks each protest to make sure that the cases before the court will address the same issues raised at GAO,
Most of the challenges have focused on how DHS evaluated proposals.
Some protesters have voluntarily withdrawn their GAO protests, either to join the court case or sit on the sideline and wait for the judge's ruling.
Judge Edward Meyers had set some deadlines in the cases before him. But he has since cancelled or vacated those orders because of the number of protests and the potential for more to move from GAO to the court.
He has scheduled a conference with attorneys for either Oct. 29 or Oct. 30, depending on availability.
In Meyers' newest order, he said that there are two choices – condense the schedule or extend it.
Condensing the schedule may be untenable.
“It is not realistic for the parties to expect that the court can issue decisions in 30 protests in five weeks when the parties will spend three months briefing those same protests,” he wrote in his order handed down Tuesday.