Maintaining Level Playing Field Key to Overlooking RFP Issue
The Commission recently granted the appeal of two schools that had been denied funding by USAC because of competitive bidding issues. In each instance, the Form 470s filed by the schools indicated that no RFPs would be issued even though an RFP was, in fact, released. The Commission found that despite the discrepancy, the Form 470s prepared by the schools had contained enough information regarding requested services that service providers unaware of the existence of the RFPs would not have been at a disadvantage in the bidding process. The Commission remanded the schools’ funding requests to USAC for further processing in light of the decision.1
USAC Misinterprets State Master Contract Procurement Provision
The Commission granted the appeal of a school that it found had properly followed both the Commission’s competitive bidding requirements and state and local procurement requirements. At issue was a provision of a competitively-bid state master contract that stated that schools choosing vendors from the master contract should prepare their own evaluation to support their selection. The Commission determined that the provision did not require the schools to complete their own competitive bidding process prior to selecting a vendor from the master contract; rather the schools were simply encouraged to do so. The Commission stressed that the school was only required to comply with the state bidding requirements, because the master contract itself had already been competitively bid in accordance with the Commission’s rules. Accordingly, the Commission found that the school had not violated the state and local procurement provisions when it selected a single vendor from the master contract list without evaluating other vendors from the list.2
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