Post on 10-Sep-2019
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
Past Performance Information Retrieval System (“PPIRS”) and Past Performance IssuesDaniel S. Herzfeld – Counsel
daniel.herzfeld@pillsburylaw.com
703.770.7612
July 22, 2010
1 | PPIRS
Past Performance As Evaluation Factor in Source Selection
Generally, “past performance shall be evaluated in all source selections for negotiated competitive acquisitions expected to exceed the simplified acquisition threshold.”FAR 15.305(c)(3)(i).
Simplified Acquisition Threshold is generally $100,000. FAR 2.101 (Contingency Operation or Defense Against Nuclear/Biological/Chemical/Radiological Attack - $250,000 within U.S.; $1 million outside)
Frequently a factor in General Services Administration’s Federal Supply Schedule (i.e. Multiple-Award Schedule) Orders. FAR 8.405-1(c)(3)(1).
2 | PPIRS
What is the Past Performance Information Retrieval System? PPIRS
PPIRS is a centralized database of past performance information.
“Agencies shall submit past performance reports electronically to the Past Performance Information Retrieval System (PPIRS) at www.ppirs.gov.”FAR 42.1503(c).
3 | PPIRS
PPIRS – Centralizing Past Performance Data
FAPIISAccessed through PPIRS
National Institutes of HealthContractor Performance System
Contractor Performance Assessment Reporting System
(CPARS)
Other Agency Databases
PPIRS
Terminationsfor Default
(Proposed Rule)
4 | PPIRS
Past Performance Evaluations MustBe Prepared By Agencies. FAR 42.1502
When Is An Agency Required To Prepare Evaluation?Completion of Contract or Order.Interim Evaluations – If contract performance exceeds one year.
What Types Of Contracts & What Thresholds?Construction Contracts of $550,000 or More.Federal Supply Schedule Orders Exceeding Simplified Acquisition Threshold.Single Agency Task Orders or Delivery Orders Exceeding Simplified Acquisition Threshold Where More Useful Than Evaluation of Overall Contract.Architect-Engineer Contracts of $30,000 or More.All Other Contracts Exceeding Simplified Acquisition Threshold.
5 | PPIRS
PPIRS - You Can Lead a Horse to Water . . .
Agencies must prepare evaluations.
BUT . . .
They don’t have to actually use them in source selection decisions:
“Language was revised to delete the phrase ‘For source selection purposes’ in order to clarify that this language deals with retention of past performance information rather than required procedures to be utilized in a source selection.” 74 Fed. Reg. 31556, 31559 (July 1, 2009).
6 | PPIRS
PPIRS Or Other Sources May Be Usede.g. FAR 13.106-2(b)(3)(ii)
PPIRS;
Contracting Officer’s Knowledge;
Customer surveys;
Past Performance questionnaires; or
Any other reasonable basis.
7 | PPIRS
How do contractors see and comment on evaluations in PPIRS?
A Contractor can gain access to the past performance ratings in PPIRS through its Contractor Central Registration – www.ccr.gov
8 | PPIRS
PPIRS – What It Should Look Like When You Get In: http://www.ppirs.gov/ppirsfiles/pdf/ppirssrusrman1109.pdf
9 | PPIRS
PPIRS – Assessment Reports
10 | PPIRS
PPIRS – Example of CPARS Report Card
11 | PPIRS
Challenges to Past Performance Ratings:
Agencies must allow contractors to comment on and challenge past performance ratings:
“Contractors shall be given a minimum of 30 days to submit comments, rebutting statements, or additional information. Agencies shall provide for review at a level above the contracting officer to consider disagreements between the parties regarding the evaluation.” FAR 42.1503(b).
12 | PPIRS
PPIRS – Challenging Ratings.
13 | PPIRS
Can you dispute a PPIRS or other Contractor Evaluation? Yes.
Submit a claim under the Disputes Clause of the contract. asking for a contracting officer’s final decision. FAR 52.233-1.
The Government cannot avoid the Disputes Clause – as it has attempted to do with some CPARS report cards – by attempting to state that the contracting officer (or a level above) is an unappealable final determination. Colonna’s Shipyard, Inc., ASBCA No. 56940, 2010 WL 2676460.
14 | PPIRS
Can you appeal or file suit to reverse the contracting officer’s final decision? Yes.
File Suit at the U.S. Court of Federal Claims for declaratory relief:Record Steel & Constr., Inc. v. United States, 62 Fed. Cl. 508 (2004).Todd Constr., L.P. v. United States, 85 Fed. Cl. 34 (2008) & 88 Fed. Cl. 235 (2009).BLR Group of Am., Inc. v. United States, 84 Fed. Cl. 634 (2008).
Appeal to a Board of Contract Appeals – Not all the Boards have concluded they have jurisdiction:
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals: Versar, Inc., ASBCA No. 56857, 10-1 BCA ¶ 34437.
15 | PPIRS
Can you wait to challenge finalized ratings during a bid protest? Probably Not.
“[A] bid protest is not the proper forum, under FAR § 42.1503(b), to litigate [Contractor Evaluation Form] disputes.” Bannum, Inc. v. United States, 404 F.3d 1346, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
“Our bid protest forum is not the place for a firm to first complain of not having received an assessment, nor do we serve as a forum for a firm to dispute the substance of an agency’s assessment of the firm’s work . . . .” Ocean Tech. Servs., Inc., B-288659, Nov. 27, 2001, 2001 CPD ¶ 193 at 5.