GAO Bid Protest Series - Part 6: GAO Bid Protest ProceduresSolosky, Nicholas
The reasons for the sharp increase in GAO's sustain rate are not immediately discernible. There has been no sea change in GAO's procedures or its substantive views on bid protest issues. GAO has continued to apply the same standard of review, which generally involves an examination of...
North America Legal Chronicle KPMG LLP’s GAO Bid Protest July 28, 2023Martina Bellini Tagged:7-28-2023Blank Rome LLPDominique CasimirKPMGMichael Joseph MontalbanoRobyn Burrows Blank Rome advised KPMG LLP on the deal.KPMG LLP (‘KPMG’) was successfully represented in the Court of Federal Claims...
James McCullough provides GAO bid protest advice in Law360 articleJames J. McCullough
In Short The Situation: The U.S. Government Accountability Office ("GAO") recently sustained a bid protest concluding that a company was ineligible for award because of "key personnel unavailability." Although the employee remained employed by the company and was...
Each year around this time, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) publishes its annual report to Congress on bid protests. Earlier this week, the GAO published the report for Fiscal Year (FY) 2022. The following are the updated statistics at
trends in bid protests filed against DOD. Its companion report, CRS Report R40228,GAO Bid Protests: An Overview of Time Frames and Procedures, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], provides background and an overview of the time frames and procedures in a GAO bid protest. ...
The report is one of two providing Congress with background on the GAO bid-protest process. It provides an overview of the time frames and procedures in a GAO bid protest, including (1) what issues can be protested with GAO; (2) who can file or be a party to a GAO protest; (3) ...
GAO Bid Protest Procedures under the Competition in Contracting Act: Constitutional Implications after Buckley and ChadhaJames McKay WeitzelJrCath.u.l.rev
New GAO Bid Protest Regulations—Process Is Streamlined but Problems RemainJoel R. FeidelmanFederal Contracts Report