Eco Tour Adventures, Inc. v. United States , 2013 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1919 ( 2013 )


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  •               In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 13-532 C
    (Filed December 12, 2013)1
    *********************                                  Pre-Award Bid Protest; National
    ECO TOUR ADVENTURES, INC., *                           Park Service Concessions
    *                           Management Improvement Act
    Plaintiff,   *                           of 1998, 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 5951-5966
    *                           (2012); Right of Preference for
    v.                *                           Preferred Offerors; Procurement
    *                           Integrity Act, 
    41 U.S.C. §§ 2101
    -
    THE UNITED STATES,         *                           2107 (Supp. V 2011); Implied
    *                           Contract to Consider Bids Fairly
    Defendant.   *                           and Honestly.
    *********************
    Kevin R. Garden, Alexandria, VA, for plaintiff.
    Joshua A. Mandlebaum, United States Department of Justice, with whom
    were Stuart F. Delery, Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director,
    and Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director, Washington, DC, for defendant.
    _________________________
    OPINION AND ORDER
    _________________________
    BUSH, Senior Judge.
    Now pending before the court are the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on
    the administrative record. Plaintiff Eco Tour Adventures, Inc. (Eco Tour) filed a
    pre-award bid protest complaint on August 1, 2013, and filed an amended
    1
    / This opinion was issued under seal on November 26, 2013. Pursuant to ¶ 6 of the
    ordering language, the parties were invited to identify proprietary or confidential material subject
    to deletion on the basis that the material was protected/privileged. The parties submitted their
    proposed redactions on December 11, 2013. Brackets ([ ]) identify the redacted portions of this
    opinion.
    complaint on August 8, 2013.2 In this protest, Eco Tour objects to the anticipated
    award by the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service (the
    Park Service or NPS) of two concession contracts to provide guided cross-country
    ski tours, including associated transportation and food services, in Grand Teton
    National Park. Eco Tour alleges that certain actions taken by NPS in connection
    with its selection of cross-country ski touring concessioners were arbitrary,
    capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law. Eco
    Tour seeks a permanent injunction, declaratory relief, and bid preparation costs, as
    well as attorney fees and costs incurred in pursuing this bid protest.
    The administrative record (AR) was originally filed on August 12, 2013, and
    supplements to the AR were filed on September 6, 2013, and October 1, 2013.3
    Briefing was filed according to an expedited schedule and oral argument was held
    on November 8, 2013. As discussed below, the NPS violated applicable law, acted
    arbitrarily and capriciously, and abused its discretion in concluding that incumbent
    concessioners Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Corporation and The Hole Hiking
    Experience, Inc. submitted proposals that were “responsive” to the requirements of
    the prospectus and in allowing them to match the better terms of Eco Tour’s
    proposals for the disputed contracts. Accordingly, plaintiff’s motion for judgment
    on the administrative record is granted, and defendant’s motion for judgment on
    the administrative record is denied.4
    2
    / The court notes that plaintiff’s name appears as “EcoTour” in several portions of the
    administrative record, including in plaintiff’s proposals for the disputed contracts. See, e.g., AR
    Tabs 21-22. However, the court will refer to plaintiff as “Eco Tour,” as that is the spelling of
    plaintiff’s name used in the complaint and amended complaint.
    3
    / On September 6, 2013, the government filed a supplement to the AR with
    documentation of the source-selection authority’s final decisions. AR Tabs 42-45. On October
    1, 2013, the court granted the government’s unopposed motion to further supplement the AR to
    include a copy of the signed transmittal letter accompanying Jackson Hole Mountain Resort
    Corporation’s proposal. AR Tab 46.
    4
    / Although the court concludes that Eco Tour has prevailed on the merits of its bid
    protest, the court does not grant all of plaintiff’s requested relief for the reasons discussed infra.
    2
    BACKGROUND
    I.    Statutory and Regulatory Framework for NPS Concession Contracts
    Congress first created the NPS in 1916, authorizing the Secretary of the
    Interior to “grant privileges, leases, and permits for the use of land for the
    accommodation of visitors in the various parks, monuments, or other reservations”
    under the Secretary’s authority. Act of Aug. 25, 1916, ch. 408, Pub. L. No. 64-
    235, § 3, 
    39 Stat. 535
    , 535; Circle Line-Statue of Liberty Ferry, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    76 Fed. Cl. 490
    , 491 (2007) (Circle Line). From its inception, the NPS
    offered financial incentives to attract concessioners to provide services in National
    Park locations and to induce substantial capital investments on those lands. See
    Circle Line, 76 Fed. Cl. at 491; S. Rep. No. 89-765, at 7 (1965), reprinted in 1965
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 3489, 3495. These incentives included a preferential right of
    renewal, allowing an incumbent concessioner to renew its contract by matching the
    best offer of any competing bidder so long as it had performed its present contract
    satisfactorily. See Circle Line, 76 Fed. Cl. at 491 (citation omitted); S. Rep. No.
    89-765, at 7, 10-11.
    For almost fifty years, the NPS recognized the preferential right of renewal
    as a matter of policy, although it did not generally write such a term within its
    concession contracts. Circle Line, 76 Fed. Cl. at 491-92. In 1965, however,
    Congress enacted the National Park Service Concession Policies Act, Pub. L. No.
    89-249, 
    79 Stat. 969
     (the 1965 Act), in order to “put into statutory form policies
    which, with certain exceptions, have heretofore been followed by the National Park
    Service in administering concessions.” S. Rep. No. 89-765, at 1.
    In November 1998, Congress revisited the issue of renewal preferences in
    the National Park Service Concessions Management Improvement Act of 1998,
    Pub. L. No. 105-391, tit. IV, 
    112 Stat. 3497
    , 3503 (the 1998 Act) (codified at 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 5951-5966
     (2012)), which repealed the 1965 Act and “establish[ed] a
    new and comprehensive concession management program for national parks.”
    Nat’l Park Hospitality Ass’n v. Dep’t of the Interior, 
    538 U.S. 803
    , 806 (2003)
    (National Park Hospitality); see also Circle Line, 76 Fed. Cl. at 492. Having
    found that “[t]rue competition simply did not exist” in the award of concession
    contracts, Concession Contracts, 
    65 Fed. Reg. 20630
    , 20630 (Apr. 17, 2000),
    Congress restricted the right of preference set forth in the 1965 Act to apply only to
    3
    (1) “outfitting and guide” concessioners and (2) concessioners holding contracts
    with annual gross receipts under $500,000, 
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (7)-(8); Circle Line,
    76 Fed. Cl. at 492; 65 Fed. Reg. at 20630-31. 5
    Under the 1998 Act, an outfitting and guide concessioner is entitled to
    exercise a right of preference if each of the following requirements is satisfied:
    (i) the contract with the outfitting and guide
    concessioner does not grant the concessioner any interest
    . . . in capital improvements on lands owned by the
    United States within a unit of the National Park System
    [with certain exceptions not relevant here] . . .
    (ii) the Secretary determines that the concessioner has
    operated satisfactorily during the term of the contract
    (including any extension thereof); and
    (iii) the concessioner has submitted a responsive
    proposal for a proposed new contract which satisfies the
    minimum requirements established by the Secretary
    pursuant to [
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (4)].
    5
    / The 1998 Act defines the term “outfitting and guide concessions contract” as follows:
    [A] concessions contract which solely authorizes the provision of
    specialized backcountry outdoor recreation guide services which
    require the employment of specially trained and experienced
    guides to accompany park visitors in the backcountry so as to
    provide a safe and enjoyable experience for visitors who otherwise
    may not have the skills and equipment to engage in such activity.
    Outfitting and guide concessioners, where otherwise qualified,
    include concessioners which provide guided river running,
    hunting, fishing, horseback, camping, and mountaineering
    experiences.
    
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (8)(B).
    4
    
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (8)(B). In contrast, a concessioner holding a concession contract
    with annual gross receipts under $500,000 is entitled to exercise a right of
    preference if requirements (ii) and (iii) above are satisfied. 
    Id.
     § 5952(8)(C).
    The 1998 Act directed the Secretary of the Interior to promulgate regulations
    “appropriate” for the implementation of the 1998 Act. Id. § 5965. Pursuant to this
    statutory grant of authority, the NPS promulgated implementing regulations in
    April 2000. 
    65 Fed. Reg. 20630
     (codified at 
    36 C.F.R. §§ 51.1-51.104
     (2013)).
    Under the regulations, an incumbent concessioner that is eligible to exercise
    a right of preference is referred to as a “preferred offeror.” 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.27
    (a).
    A concessioner is a preferred offeror if each of the following conditions is met:
    (a) The concessioner was a satisfactory concessioner
    during the term of its concession contract . . . ;
    (b) The applicable new contract is a qualified concession
    contract . . . ; 6 and
    6
    / For purposes of 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.36
    (b), a new contract is a “qualified concession
    contract” if the NPS Director determines that:
    (a) The new concession contract provides for the continuation of
    the visitor services authorized under a previous concession contract
    . . . ; and either
    (b) The new concession contract . . . is estimated to result in . . .
    annual gross receipts of less than $500,000 . . . ; or
    (c) The new concession contract is an outfitter and guide
    concession contract . . . .
    
    Id.
     § 51.37. “Visitor services” are defined as “accommodations, facilities and services
    determined by the Director as necessary and appropriate for public use and enjoyment of a park
    area provided to park area visitors for a fee or charge by a person other than the Director.” Id. §
    51.3. Such services “may include, but are not limited to, lodging, campgrounds, food service,
    merchandising, tours, recreational activities, guiding, transportation, and equipment rental.” Id.
    5
    (c) If applicable, the concessioner’s previous concession
    contract was an outfitter and guide concession contract . .
    ..
    Id. § 51.36.
    Preferred offeror status does not guarantee a right of preference, however.
    Under the regulations, in order to exercise a right of preference and match the best
    offer of any competing bidder, a preferred offeror must first submit a “responsive”
    proposal. Id. § 51.27(b) (“A right of preference is the right of a preferred offeror,
    if it submits a responsive proposal for a qualified concession contract, to match in
    accordance with the requirements of this part the terms and conditions of a
    competing proposal that the [NPS] Director has determined to be the best
    responsive proposal.”) (emphasis added); id. § 51.30 (“A preferred offeror must
    submit a responsive proposal . . . if the preferred offeror wishes to exercise a right
    of preference.”); id. § 51.31. A “responsive” proposal is “a timely submitted
    proposal that is determined by the Director as agreeing to all of the minimum
    requirements of the proposed concession contract and prospectus and as having
    provided the information required by the prospectus.” Id. § 51.3.
    If a preferred offeror fails to submit a responsive proposal, the preferred
    offeror “may not exercise a right of preference” and the contract “will be awarded
    to the offeror submitting the best responsive proposal.” Id. § 51.31. If, however,
    the preferror offeror submits a responsive proposal, the NPS “must advise the
    preferred offeror of the better terms and conditions of the best proposal and permit
    the preferred offeror to amend its proposal to match them.” Id. § 51.32. If a
    preferred offeror amends its proposal within the time period allowed by the NPS,
    and the NPS determines that the amended proposal matches the better terms and
    conditions of the best proposal, then the NPS “must select the preferred offeror for
    award of the contract upon the amended terms and conditions.” Id. Conversely,
    “[i]f a preferred offeror does not amend its proposal to meet the terms and
    conditions of the best proposal within the time period allowed by the Director, the
    Director will select for award of the contract the offeror that submitted the best
    responsive proposal.” Id. § 51.33.
    6
    II.   The Disputed Contracts and Eco Tour’s Bid Protest
    On December 20, 2012, NPS issued a prospectus, titled “A Concession
    Business Opportunity for Guided Ski Touring Services within Grand Teton
    National Park,” soliciting proposals for three concession contracts – GRTE024-13,
    GRTE025-13, and GRTE032-13 – for the provision of guided cross-country ski
    touring services, including associated transportation and food services, in Grand
    Teton National Park. AR Tabs 4-17 (prospectus and appendices). Proposals for
    the contracts were to be submitted no later than March 20, 2013. AR Tab 4 at 9,
    27.
    The concession services solicited by the prospectus are currently being
    provided by incumbent concessioners Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Corporation
    (Jackson Hole), under contract GRTE024-03; Powder Hounds, Inc., doing business
    as Rendezvous Ski Tours, under contract GRTE025-03; and The Hole Hiking
    Experience, Inc. (Hole Hiking), under contract GRTE032-03. The NPS has
    “determined [that] the three existing Concessioners are qualified contracts and,
    therefore the existing Concessioners are Preferred Offerors for the New Contracts.”
    AR Tab 4 at 24; see also Tab 2 at 4 (concluding that “[a]ll three Winter Ski Tour
    Contracts will be released as having preferred offeror status”). The agency’s
    determination in that regard is not in dispute.
    The prospectus included detailed instructions setting forth the protocol for
    submitting proposals and the selection factors to be used by the NPS to evaluate
    proposals. See AR Tab 4 at 25-31. Of particular relevance to this bid protest, the
    instructions state that “[o]nly an Offeror submitting a responsive proposal is
    eligible to be awarded the new concession contract.” Id. at 27. The instructions
    define a “responsive proposal” as a “timely submitted proposal that is determined
    by the Service as agreeing to all of the minimum requirements of the draft
    concession contract and Prospectus and as having provided the information
    required by the Prospectus.” Id. In addition, paragraph 1(d) of the instructions
    defines “information required by the prospectus” as “information expressly
    required by the Prospectus and that is material, as determined by the Service, to an
    effective evaluation of the proposal under the applicable selection factor.” Id. at
    27 (emphasis added).
    7
    The instructions further provide that NPS, when evaluating proposals, “will
    apply the principal selection factors and secondary factors as set forth in 36 C.F.R.
    Part 51 by assessing each timely proposal under each of the selection factors on the
    basis of a narrative explanation discussing any subfactors when applicable and
    other supporting information.” Id. at 28.7 The principal and secondary selection
    factors set forth in the instructions are:
    Principal Selection Factor 1. The responsiveness of the
    proposal to the objectives, as described in the prospectus,
    of protecting, conserving, and preserving resources of the
    park area;
    Principal Selection Factor 2. The responsiveness of the
    proposal to the objectives, as described in the prospectus,
    of providing necessary and appropriate visitor services at
    reasonable rates;
    Principal Selection Factor 3. The experience and
    related background of the Offeror, including the past
    performance and expertise of the Offeror in providing the
    same or similar visitor services as those to be provided
    under the new concession contract;
    Principal Selection Factor 4. The financial capability
    of the Offeror to carry out its proposal;
    Principal Selection Factor 5. The amount of the
    proposed minimum franchise fee, if any, and/or other
    forms of financial consideration to the Service.
    Consideration of revenue to the United States will be
    subordinate to the objectives of protecting, conserving,
    and preserving resources of the park area and of
    providing necessary and appropriate visitor services to
    the public at reasonable rates; and
    7
    / The selection factors set forth in the prospectus are consistent with those set forth in
    the 1998 Act, see 
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (5), and the regulations, see 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.17
    .
    8
    ....
    Secondary Selection Factor 1. The quality of the
    Offeror’s proposal to conduct its operations in a manner
    that furthers the protection, conservation, and
    preservation of the park area and other resources through
    environmental management programs and activities,
    including, without limitation, energy conservation, waste
    reduction, and recycling.
    
    Id. at 29
    . Each proposal was to receive a “score that reflects the determined merits
    of the proposal under the applicable selection factor and in comparison to the other
    proposals received.” AR Tab 4 at 28. The first four principal selection factors
    were to be scored from zero to five; the fifth principal selection factor was to be
    scored from zero to four; and the secondary selection factor was to receive a score
    from zero to three. 
    Id.
     The NPS would then “assign a cumulative point score to
    each proposal based on the assigned score for each selection factor.” 
    Id. at 29
    .
    The prospectus also included a proposal package explaining the minimum
    requirements of the disputed contracts as well as the information required by the
    prospectus. Part A of the proposal package sets forth the minimum requirements
    of the disputed contracts. 
    Id. at 27, 41
    . Although Part A states that principal
    selection factors 3 and 4 “do not have specific requirements,” it also states that
    certain information “is required for principal selection factors 3 and 4” and that
    “[f]ailure to provide material information required thereunder may result in an
    offeror being deemed non-responsive.” 
    Id. at 41
    .
    Part B of the proposal package provides explanations for each of the
    selection factors, and also sets forth various subfactors to be considered by the
    NPS in evaluating proposals. Of particular relevance here, the subfactors under
    principal selection factor 4 list the specific information “required” by Part A of the
    proposal package:
    Subfactor 4(a). Demonstrate that you have a credible,
    proven track record of meeting your financial
    obligations by providing the following:
    9
    (1) The completed Business History Information
    Form provided on the next page. . . .
    (2) Financial statements for the two most recent
    fiscal years in one of the following formats:
    o NPS Concessioner Annual Financial Reports
    (AFR), including a current balance sheet if a
    balance sheet was not submitted as part of the
    AFR. . . .
    (3) A CURRENT credit report (within the last six
    months) in the name of the Offeror from a major
    credit reporting company such as Equifax,
    Experian, TRW or Dun & Bradstreet. . . .
    Subfactor 4(b). Demonstrate that your proposal is
    financially viable and that you understand the
    financial obligations of the Draft Contract by
    providing the following:
    (1) Please list . . . the personal property
    (equipment) . . . with monetary value over $500
    that you will be using for this operation. Please
    note whether you currently own this equipment or
    not. . . .
    (2) Please estimate the amount of money that you
    will need to begin operating the business in the
    format of the table below. Only provide estimates
    for the Personal Property items (Equipment) that
    you need to acquire in order to begin operating.
    Do not include items that you already own. . . .
    (3) Please demonstrate that your proposal is
    financially feasible (that you will have a
    reasonable opportunity to make a profit from your
    10
    business while carrying out the terms and
    conditions of the Draft Contract) by completing
    the Proforma Income Statement and Operating
    Assumptions. . . .
    o Please fully explain the assumptions on which you
    base your projections and detail them sufficiently
    so the Service can determine whether the
    projections are realistic. . . .
    Subfactor 4(c). Demonstrate your ability to obtain
    the required funds for start-up costs under the Draft
    Contract by providing credible, compelling
    documentation, particularly evidence from
    independent sources, such as bank statements,
    financial statements, and signed loan commitment
    letters. Fully explain the financial arrangements you
    propose, using the following guidelines:
    ....
    (4) Current bank statements must be provided,
    regardless of the funding source . . . . Current
    bank statements must be provided even if you do
    not anticipate significant start-up costs.
    
    Id. at 49-54
    .
    For contract GRTE024-13, the NPS received timely proposals from Eco
    Tour, Jackson Hole (the preferred offeror), and two other offerors. AR Tabs 20-
    21. For contract GRTE032-13, the NPS received timely proposals from Eco Tour,
    Hole Hiking (the preferred offeror), and two other offerors. AR Tabs 19, 22. Eco
    Tour did not compete for contract GRTE025-13; therefore, the only contracts in
    dispute are contract GRTE024-13 and contract GRTE032-13.
    An evaluation panel reviewed each proposal against the five principal
    selection factors and one secondary selection factor, and assigned cumulative
    11
    scores to each proposal. AR Tabs 23-24. Eco Tour’s proposals received the
    highest cumulative scores for both contract GRTE024-13 and contract GRTE032-
    13. AR Tab 23 at 1094, Tab 24 at 1120. The evaluation panel therefore
    determined that Eco Tour submitted the best proposals for both contracts. AR
    Tabs 28-29, Tab 42 at 1272-75, 1304-07, Tab 43 at 1312-15, 1344-47.
    In its evaluation of Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals, the panel
    found that each offeror had omitted certain financial information specified by
    principal selection factor 4. AR Tab 23 at 1112-16, Tab 24 at 1138-42, Tab 42 at
    1273, Tab 43 at 1313. Despite these omissions, the panel nevertheless found
    Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals to be “responsive to the minimum
    requirements of the Prospectus.” AR Tab 30 at 1190, Tab 31 at 1193; see also AR
    Tab 42 at 1273-74, 1304-06, Tab 43 at 1313-14, 1344-46. Accordingly, in letters
    dated June 20, 2013, the NPS advised Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking that they
    could exercise a right of preference by agreeing to match twelve terms of Eco
    Tour’s proposals that the evaluation panel “determined were elements of a better
    offer”:
    1.   Principal Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal committed to an Idle Free Policy to
    protect the air that surrounds the park as well as
    minimize any disturbance to wildlife from the sound
    of a running vehicle. . . .
    2.   Principal Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal committed to requiring guides to carry
    a minimum of one pair of binoculars on each tour to
    share with guests. . . .
    3.   Principal Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal committed to carrying a vehicle spill
    kit to contain fluid spills in case of leaks or
    accidents. The best proposal committed to scanning
    the parking area and cleaning up any leaks from the
    vehicle. . . . An example of a spill kit is the Pig Spill
    Kit in Spill Pack.
    12
    4.   Principal Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal committed to removing all solid
    human waste with human waste removal bags. The
    best proposal committed to carrying one human
    waste removal bag per person, in addition to extra
    bags in case they are needed. The best proposal
    committed to removing all toilet paper and hygiene
    products. . . . An example of the human waste
    removal bags are the Cleanwaste WagBag products.
    5.   Principal Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal committed to removing all trash
    created while on tours and disposing of the waste
    outside of the Park, in order to limit the frequency of
    trash trucks traveling in the park. . . .
    6.   Principal Selection Factor 2 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal committed to requiring Wilderness
    First Responder certification for all guides. . . .
    7.   Principal Selection Factor 2 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal committed to requiring all driving
    guides to complete a winter driving program. . . .
    8.   Principal Selection Factor 5 . . . . The best
    proposal committed to a franchise fee of 4.25% of
    annual gross receipts or a flat fee of $500, whichever
    is greater. . . .
    9.   Secondary Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal committed to using reusable plates,
    reusable silverware, cloth napkins and reusable mugs
    on the tour in order to reduce the amount of trash
    produced on each tour. . . .
    10. Secondary Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal committed to providing each guest
    13
    with a high quality, Made in America, reusable water
    bottle for guest use on the tour. Guests are given the
    bottle to take home with them. The goal of the water
    bottle is to limit plastic petroleum disposable bottles
    and encourage visitors to reuse their new water
    bottle while in the area. . . .
    11. Secondary Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal described how it will train its guides
    about the Wilderness Act using, among other
    methods, an online training course called “The
    Wilderness Act of 1964” produced by the Eppley
    Institute for Parks and Public Lands. . . .
    12. Secondary Selection Factor 1 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal described how it will monitor the
    accuracy of the information guides provide on tours
    by having the owner or manager shadow each guide
    unannounced at least once per season. . . .
    AR Tab 30 at 1190-91, Tab 31 at 1193-94.
    The NPS also asked both Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking to “expand on your
    initial response . . . in order to bring the quality of your response up to the level of
    the best proposal” by providing the financial information that had been omitted
    from Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals. AR Tab 30 at 1192, Tab 31 at
    1195. In that regard, the NPS requested the following financial information that
    had been omitted from Jackson Hole’s proposal:
    1.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal provided a complete set of financial
    statements. Although you submitted an Annual
    Financial Report (AFR), it did not contain a balance
    sheet. Please submit a current balance sheet or a
    balance sheet as of the year ending date of the AFR.
    14
    2.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal provided a current credit report.
    Although you provided your Dun & Bradstreet
    Company ID, the National Park Service (Service) is
    unable to run the report. Please submit a current
    credit report for each Offeror-Guarantor.
    3.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (c). The
    best proposal provided a current bank statement as
    requested in Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor c,
    question 4. Please submit a current bank statement.
    AR Tab 30 at 1192. Additionally, the NPS requested the following financial
    information that had been omitted from Hole Hiking’s proposal:
    1.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (a). The
    best proposal provided a complete set of financial
    statements. Although you submitted an Annual
    Financial Report (AFR) it did not appear to be
    complete. Please submit the complete AFR for 2011
    and 2012.
    2.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal provided clear revenue and expense
    projection assumptions. Please submit additional
    assumptions for your revenue and expense
    projections. The panel is interested in understanding
    why revenue projections are so much higher than
    historical projections and why some of the expense
    assumptions appear low.
    3.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (b). The
    best proposal provided a clear Pro forma. Please
    correct the mathematical errors on the Pro forma and
    resubmit.
    15
    4.   Principal Selection Factor 4 Subfactor (c). The
    best proposal provided substantial documentation
    related to its financial position. Although you
    provided a balance sheet and bank statement, the
    reporting period of the balance sheet did not
    correspond with the bank statement. The panel is
    interested in understanding your financial position,
    specifically, if you have a cash position to respond to
    any unanticipated expenses as you indicated you do
    not need any financing in Subfactor 4c. Please
    submit a current bank statement with a list of current
    liabilities.
    AR Tab 31 at 1195.
    Both Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking timely exercised a right of preference
    by agreeing to match the twelve terms set forth in NPS’s June 20, 2013 letters and
    by providing the requested additional financial information. AR Tabs 25-26, Tabs
    32-35, Tab 38, Tab 44 at 1368-83, Tab 45 at 1400-20.
    Eco Tour filed its bid protest complaint in this court on August 1, 2013, and
    filed an amended complaint on August 8, 2013. Eco Tour’s amended complaint
    contains three counts. In Count I, Eco Tour alleges that the NPS violated
    applicable law, acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and abused its discretion by
    finding that Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals were “responsive” to the
    requirements of the prospectus and by allowing them to match the better terms of
    Eco Tour’s proposals for contracts GRTE024-13 and GRTE032-13. In Count II,
    Eco Tour alleges that the NPS violated the Procurement Integrity Act, as amended,
    
    41 U.S.C. §§ 2101-2107
     (Supp. V 2011), by disclosing to Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking information that Eco Tour had allegedly marked in its proposal as
    confidential. Finally, in Count III, Eco Tour alleges that the NPS violated
    applicable law, acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and abused its discretion when it
    found that Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking had matched all of the better terms of
    Eco Tour’s proposals for contracts GRTE024-13 and GRTE032-13. With respect
    to all three counts, Eco Tour further asserts that the NPS’s actions breached an
    implied contractual obligation of the government to consider bids fairly and
    honestly.
    16
    On August 19, 2013, the court amended the briefing schedule to allow time
    for the government to obtain final decisions from the source-selection authority. 8
    The source-selection authority subsequently determined that Eco Tour, Jackson
    Hole, and Hole Hiking had submitted responsive proposals for the contracts at
    issue, that Eco Tour’s proposals were the best, and that Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking had amended their proposals to match the terms of Eco Tour’s best
    proposals. AR Tabs 42-45. On September 4, 2013, the source-selection authority
    determined that contracts GRTE024-13 and GRTE032-13 should be awarded to
    Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking, respectively. AR Tab 44 at 1352-53, Tab 45 at
    1384-85.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Jurisdiction
    Before proceeding to the merits of Eco Tour’s bid protest, the court must
    address the threshold issue of jurisdiction. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
    
    523 U.S. 83
    , 94-95 (1998) (“The requirement that jurisdiction be established as a
    threshold matter . . . is ‘inflexible and without exception.’” (quoting Mansfield, C.
    & L. M. Ry. Co. v. Swan, 
    111 U.S. 379
    , 382 (1884))); Hambsch v. United States,
    
    857 F.2d 763
    , 765 (Fed. Cir. 1988) (“When a court is without jurisdiction to hear a
    case, it is correspondingly without authority to decide the merits of that case.”)
    (citations omitted).
    Although the government does not question the court’s jurisdiction to
    consider Eco Tour’s claims, the parties dispute the source of that jurisdiction and,
    8
    / On August 15, 2013, the government filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint
    on ripeness grounds based on the government’s assertion that the source-selection authority had
    not rendered final decisions with respect to the award of the disputed contracts. On August 19,
    2013, the court deferred ruling and suspended briefing on defendant’s motion to allow the
    source-selection authority to render final decisions and to allow defendant to supplement the
    administrative record accordingly. The government filed a supplement to the AR with
    documentation of the source-selection authority’s final decisions on September 6, 2013, AR Tabs
    42-45, and the government did not renew its motion to dismiss in connection with its motion for
    judgment on the administrative record. Accordingly, the court denies defendant’s motion to
    dismiss as moot.
    17
    correspondingly, the nature of the relief the court is authorized to grant. Eco Tour
    seeks injunctive and declaratory relief, as well as bid preparation costs, and asserts
    that the court possesses jurisdiction to grant such relief pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(1) (2006) and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(1) (2006). See Am. Compl. ¶ 1; Pl.’s
    Mot. at 43-48. Defendant contends that “[r]elief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b) is
    unavailable because the contracts at issue are not procurements.” Def.’s Mot. at
    28. For the reasons specified below, the court agrees with the government that
    section 1491(a)(1) – not section 1491(b)(1) – provides the jurisdictional basis for
    Eco Tour’s claims.
    Section 1491(b)(1), which Congress added to the Tucker Act by enacting the
    Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996 (ADRA), Pub. L. No. 104-320,
    sec. 12, § 1491, 
    110 Stat. 3870
    , 3874, grants the court “jurisdiction to render
    judgment on an action by an interested party objecting to a solicitation by a Federal
    agency for bids or proposals for a proposed contract or to a proposed award or the
    award of a contract or any alleged violation of statute or regulation in connection
    with a procurement or a proposed procurement.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(1)
    (emphasis added). As the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    has held, “relief under [section] 1491(b)(1) is unavailable outside the procurement
    context.” Res. Conservation Grp., LLC v. United States, 
    597 F.3d 1238
    , 1245
    (Fed. Cir. 2010) (Resource Conservation). Thus, whether the court has jurisdiction
    under section 1491(b)(1) depends upon whether the disputed solicitation for
    concessions contracts involved a “procurement.”
    Section 1491(b) does not define the term “procurement.” However, for
    purposes of determining the scope of section 1491(b), the Federal Circuit has
    adopted the definition of “procurement” contained in 
    41 U.S.C. § 403
    (2), which
    has been reorganized into 
    41 U.S.C. § 111
     (Supp. V 2011). Resource
    Conservation, 
    597 F.3d at
    1244 (citing Distributed Solutions, Inc. v. United States,
    
    539 F.3d 1340
    , 1345-46 (Fed. Cir. 2008)). Section 111 provides that “the term
    ‘procurement’ includes all stages of the process of acquiring property or services,
    beginning with the process for determining a need for property or services and
    ending with contract completion and closeout.” 
    41 U.S.C. § 111
    .
    The court has previously noted the existence of “conflicting authority as to
    whether a solicitation for concession contracts is a ‘procurement.’” Frazier v.
    United States, 
    79 Fed. Cl. 148
    , 160 & n.5 (2007), aff’d, 301 F. App’x 974 (Fed.
    18
    Cir. 2008). This court has thrice ruled that concession contracts are not
    procurement contracts, albeit not in the specific context of a bid protest
    jurisdictional challenge. Terry v. United States, 
    98 Fed. Cl. 736
    , 737 (2011)
    (holding that a concession contract for the operation of a t-shirt kiosk at Fort
    Benning was not a procurement contract subject to the Contract Disputes Act
    (CDA), 
    41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109
     (Supp. V 2011), because it did not involve the
    procurement of property or services by the government); Frazier v. United States,
    
    67 Fed. Cl. 56
    , 59 (2005) (same with respect to a concession lease for the operation
    of a marina on a federal reservoir), aff’d, 186 F. App’x 990 (Fed. Cir. 2006); YRT
    Servs. Corp. v. United States, 
    28 Fed. Cl. 366
    , 392 n.23 (1993) (YRT Services)
    (concluding that an NPS concession contract for the provision of “lodging, food
    and gift services” in Yosemite National Park “does not constitute a procurement,
    but is a grant of a permit to operate a business and the government is not
    committing to pay out government funds or incur any monetary liability”). 9
    In contrast to YRT Services and related decisions of this court, the Interior
    Board of Contract Appeals has consistently held that NPS concession contracts are
    procurement contracts subject to the CDA, see, e.g., Watch Hill Concessions, Inc.,
    IBCA No. 4284-2000, 
    2001 WL 170911
     (Feb. 16, 2001) (holding that “at least in
    any concession contract where the concessioner is required to perform specific
    services or to make specific improvements to the land it occupies, as is the case
    here, the contract is a procurement contract, subject to the Contract Disputes Act”),
    and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has consistently held that
    concession contracts which involve the delivery of more than de minimis services
    to a federal agency are procurement contracts, see, e.g., Great South Bay Marina,
    9
    / In Blue & Gold Fleet, LP v. United States, 
    70 Fed. Cl. 487
     (2006), aff’d, 
    492 F.3d 1308
     (Fed. Cir. 2007) (Blue & Gold Fleet), this court assumed, without deciding, that it had
    jurisdiction under section 1491(b) over a pre-award bid protest involving an NPS concession
    solicitation. 70 Fed. Cl. at 492. Jurisdiction was not challenged on appeal, and the Federal
    Circuit likewise assumed, without deciding, that the Court of Federal Claims had jurisdiction
    under section 1491(b). 
    492 F.3d at 1313, 1315
    . The Federal Circuit in Blue & Gold Fleet did
    not address the issue of whether NPS concession contracts are procurement contracts subject to
    section 1491(b). This is unsurprising, given that Blue & Gold Fleet was decided before
    Resource Conservation, which clarified that section 1491(b)(1) bid protest jurisdiction is limited
    to the procurement context. 
    597 F.3d at 1245
    . Because Blue & Gold Fleet did not address the
    issue of the jurisdictional basis for bid protests involving NPS concession contracts, it is not
    dispositive of that issue here.
    19
    Inc., B-296335, 2005 CPD ¶ 135, 
    2005 WL 1650829
    , at *1 (Comp. Gen. July 13,
    2005) (“It has consistently been our Office’s view that a mixed transaction that
    includes the delivery of goods or services of more than de minimis value to the
    government is a contract for the procurement of property or services within the
    meaning of [the Competition in Contracting Act, 
    31 U.S.C. §§ 3551-3556
    (2006)].” (citing Starfleet Marine Transp., Inc., B-290181, 2002 CPD ¶ 113, 
    2002 WL 1461877
     (Comp. Gen. July 5, 2002))).
    The court, cognizant of the somewhat conflicting authority on this issue,
    concludes that the greater weight of authority is to the effect that NPS concession
    contracts, such as those in dispute in this bid protest, are not contracts for the
    procurement of goods and services, and thus are not subject to the court’s section
    1491(b) jurisdiction. As an initial matter, the court notes that the prospectus at
    issue here “is issued under the authority of” the regulations set forth at 
    36 C.F.R. §§ 51.1-51.104
    , which are incorporated by reference into the prospectus and
    control in the event of any inconsistency between the terms of the prospectus and
    the regulations. See AR Tab 4 at 27. In the regulations, the NPS has taken the
    position that NPS concession contracts “are not contracts within the meaning of
    [the CDA] and are not service or procurement contracts within the meaning of
    statutes, regulations or policies that apply only to federal service contracts or other
    types of federal procurement actions.” 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
    ; see also National Park
    Hospitality, 
    538 U.S. at 806
     (quoting 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
    ); 65 Fed. Reg. at 20635
    (“NPS concession contracts [under the 1998 Act] do not procure services for the
    government; rather, they authorize third parties to provide services to park area
    visitors.”).
    Although the court is not bound to accept the agency’s views regarding NPS
    concession contracts, the agency’s reasoning finds support in the language of the
    1998 Act, which indicates in several places that NPS concession contracts are for
    the provision of goods and services to the public, not to the government. See, e.g.,
    
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
     (directing the Park Service to enter into concession contracts “to
    authorize a person, corporation or other entity to provide accommodations,
    facilities and services to visitors to units of the National Park System”) (emphasis
    added); 
    id.
     § 5955 (requiring that “[e]ach concessions contract shall permit the
    concessioner to set reasonable and appropriate rates and charges for facilities,
    goods, and services provided to the public”) (emphasis added). The 1998 Act also
    requires that “[a] concessions contract shall provide for payment to the government
    20
    of a franchise fee or such other monetary consideration as determined by the
    Secretary.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 5956
    ; see also AR Tab 4 at 24, 41, 55, 64 (prospectus
    stating that concessioners will be charged a “franchise fee” equal to at least three
    percent of the concessioner’s gross receipts or a flat fee of $500, whichever is
    greater). Thus, according to the language of the 1998 Act itself, NPS concession
    contracts appear to be unlike traditional government procurement contracts insofar
    as the government does not make payments to the contractor in exchange for the
    provision of goods or services to the government; instead, concessioners pay the
    government a fee for the privilege of charging the public for services provided to
    the public. See YRT Services, 28 Fed. Cl. at 392 n.23. The essence of NPS
    concession contracts is not the acquisition of goods or services by the government,
    but the grant, for a fee, of certain rights to private contractors.
    The agency’s reasoning also finds support in the legislative history of the
    1998 Act. The committee reports accompanying the 1998 Act concluded that Park
    Service concession contracts “do not constitute contracts for the procurement of
    goods and services for the benefit of the government or otherwise.” S. Rep. No.
    105-202, at 39 (1998); H.R. Rep. No. 105-767, at 43 (1998).
    Additionally, it is worth noting that the United States Court of Appeals for
    the District of Columbia Circuit has concluded, in the context of a challenge to 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
    , that NPS concession contracts are not procurement contracts subject
    to the CDA. See Amfac Resorts, L.L.C. v. Dep’t of the Interior, 
    282 F.3d 818
    , 835
    (D.C. Cir. 2002) (“A procurement contract . . . is a contract for which the
    government bargains for, and pays for, and receives goods and services.
    Concession contracts are not of that sort.”) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted), vacated on other grounds sub nom National Park Hospitality, 
    538 U.S. 803
    . Although the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in Amfac Resorts was later vacated by
    the United States Supreme Court on ripeness grounds, see National Park
    Hospitality, 
    538 U.S. at 808-12
    , its analysis nevertheless provides further support
    for the conclusion that NPS concession contracts are not procurement contracts
    because they do not involve the payment of money or conferral of a benefit by the
    government in exchange for goods and services.
    The court has considered Eco Tour’s arguments in support of section
    1491(b) jurisdiction and finds them unpersuasive. In its reply brief, Eco Tour
    argues that “the contracts at issue qualify as procurements by NPS of services,
    21
    through contractors, that meet NPS’s statutory obligations” under the 1998 Act.
    Pl.’s Reply at 22. This ipse dixit argument carries no authoritative weight, and
    avails Eco Tour nothing. Accordingly, the court concludes that the concession
    contracts in dispute are not procurement contracts and, consequently, the court
    lacks jurisdiction under section 1491(b).
    As noted, Eco Tour also alleges that defendant’s actions breached an implied
    contractual obligation to treat offerors fairly. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 105, 115, 122;
    Pl.’s Mot. at 40-42. This court has long had jurisdiction, under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a), to hear cases and grant relief premised on the theory that when the
    government invites bids or solicits proposals from the public, it enters into an
    “implied-in-fact” contract to consider those bids or proposals fairly. See e.g.,
    Resource Conservation, 
    597 F.3d at 1242
    ; Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico
    Garufi v. United States, 
    238 F.3d 1324
    , 1331 (Fed. Cir. 2001); Southfork Sys., Inc.
    v. United States, 
    141 F.3d 1124
    , 1132 (Fed. Cir. 1998); CACI, Inc.-Federal v.
    United States, 
    719 F.2d 1567
    , 1573 (Fed. Cir. 1983). The Federal Circuit recently
    held, in Resource Conservation, that this court’s implied-in-fact contract
    jurisdiction under section 1491(a) survives, post-ADRA, for bid protests in which
    section 1491(b) may not provide a remedy. 
    597 F.3d at 1245-47
    . Based on this
    binding precedent, the court concludes that it has jurisdiction over Eco Tour’s
    implied contract claims under section 1491(a).
    II.   Standards of Review
    A.    Judgment on the Administrative Record
    Rule 52.1(c) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims
    (RCFC) provides for judgment on the administrative record. To review a motion
    or cross-motions under RCFC 52.1(c), the court asks whether, given all the
    disputed and undisputed facts, a party has met its burden of proof based on the
    evidence in the record. Bannum, Inc. v. United States, 
    404 F.3d 1346
    , 1356-57
    (Fed. Cir. 2005). The court must make factual findings where necessary. 
    Id.
     The
    resolution of RCFC 52.1(c) cross-motions is akin to an expedited trial on the paper
    record. 
    Id.
    22
    B.     Bid Protest Review
    The court first examines whether the plaintiff in a bid protest has standing to
    bring the suit. Info. Tech. & Applications Corp. v. United States, 
    316 F.3d 1312
    ,
    1319 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (ITAC). Bid protest standing is limited to those plaintiffs
    who are actual or prospective bidders and whose direct economic interest would be
    affected by the award of the contract or by the failure to award the contract. Orion
    Tech., Inc. v. United States, 
    704 F.3d 1344
    , 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (citation
    omitted). In the circumstances of a pre-award protest where, as here, an award
    decision has been made but not finalized, a protester possessing a “substantial
    chance” of winning the disputed contract has a “direct economic interest” and has
    standing before this court. 
    Id. at 1348-49
    .
    Upon determining that a plaintiff has standing to sue, the court next
    considers the merits of the bid protest. A bid protest proceeds in two steps, with
    the trial court first determining whether the government acted without a rational
    basis or contrary to law, and then determining as a factual matter whether the
    plaintiff was prejudiced by the arbitrary or unlawful conduct. Bannum, 
    404 F.3d at 1351
    .
    The standard of review for the typical bid protest brought pursuant to section
    1491(b) is whether the agency action was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
    discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law (the APA standard). 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(4) (incorporating the APA standard set forth in 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
     (2012));
    Banknote Corp. of Am. v. United States, 
    365 F.3d 1345
    , 1350-51 (Fed. Cir. 2004)
    (citing Advanced Data Concepts, Inc. v. United States, 
    216 F.3d 1054
    , 1057-58
    (Fed. Cir. 2000)). Under the APA standard, a procurement decision may be set
    aside if it lacks a rational basis or if the agency’s decision-making involved a clear
    and prejudicial violation of statute or regulation. Banknote, 
    365 F.3d at 1351
    ;
    Emery Worldwide Airlines, Inc. v. United States, 
    264 F.3d 1071
    , 1085-86 (Fed.
    Cir. 2001) (citing Impresa, 
    238 F.3d at 1332-33
    ).
    The APA standard is “highly deferential.” Advanced Data Concepts, 
    216 F.3d at 1058
    . Under this standard, de minimis errors in the procurement process do
    not justify relief. Grumman Data Sys. Corp. v. Dalton, 
    88 F.3d 990
    , 1000 (Fed.
    Cir. 1996) (citing Andersen Consulting v. United States, 
    959 F.2d 929
    , 932-33, 935
    (Fed. Cir. 1992)). A bid protest plaintiff bears the burden of proving that a
    23
    significant error marred the procurement in question. 
    Id.
     (citing CACI Field
    Servs., Inc. v. United States, 
    854 F.2d 464
    , 466 (Fed. Cir. 1988)). Examples of
    arbitrary and capricious agency action include “when the agency ‘entirely failed to
    consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision
    that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or [the decision] is so
    implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of
    agency expertise.’” Ala. Aircraft Indus., Inc.-Birmingham v. United States, 
    586 F.3d 1372
    , 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quoting Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm
    Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983)) (alteration in original). The court will,
    however, “uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may
    reasonably be discerned.” Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys.,
    Inc., 
    419 U.S. 281
    , 286 (1974) (citation omitted).
    Similarly, to recover under the implied contract for bids to be fairly and
    honestly considered in a protest brought pursuant to section 1491(a), a plaintiff
    must establish that the agency acted arbitrarily or capriciously, or abused its
    discretion. Southfork, 
    141 F.3d at
    1132 (citing Keco Indus., Inc. v. United States,
    
    492 F.2d 1200
    , 1203 (Ct. Cl. 1974) (Keco II)); Distributed Solutions, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    106 Fed. Cl. 1
    , 25 (2012) (citations omitted), aff’d, 500 F. App’x 955 (Fed.
    Cir. 2013); FAS Support Servs., LLC v. United States, 
    93 Fed. Cl. 687
    , 694 (2010)
    (citing Keco II, 
    492 F.2d 1200
    ). The standard of review for a bid protest alleging a
    breach of the implied contract under section 1491(a) is, therefore, “essentially the
    same” as the APA standard applicable to protests pursued under section 1491(b).
    FAS Support, 93 Fed. Cl. at 694.
    “‘If the court finds a reasonable basis for the agency’s action, the court
    should stay its hand even though it might, as an original proposition, have reached
    a different conclusion as to the proper administration and application of the
    procurement regulations.’” Honeywell, Inc. v. United States, 
    870 F.2d 644
    , 648
    (Fed. Cir. 1989) (quoting M. Steinthal & Co. v. Seamans, 
    455 F.2d 1289
    , 1301
    (D.C. Cir. 1971)). If, on the other hand, the protester has shown a significant error
    in the procurement process, the court must determine as a factual matter whether
    that error prejudiced the protester, because both error and prejudice are required for
    the protester to prevail. Statistica, Inc. v. Christopher, 
    102 F.3d 1577
    , 1581 (Fed.
    Cir. 1996) (citing Data Gen. Corp. v. Johnson, 
    78 F.3d 1556
    , 1562 (Fed. Cir.
    1996)).
    24
    A bid protest plaintiff bears the burden of establishing prejudice. Bannum,
    
    404 F.3d at 1358
    . To meets its burden, a protester must show that there was a
    “substantial chance” it would have received the contract, but for the agency’s
    alleged error. Bannum, 
    404 F.3d at 1353
    ; Alfa Laval Separation, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    175 F.3d 1365
    , 1367 (Fed. Cir. 1999); Data Gen. Corp., 
    78 F.3d at 1562
    .
    This “substantial chance” inquiry is the same as that applied to determine a
    protester’s standing. Thus, in this bid protest, the “substantial chance” standard
    must be applied twice: first, to determine EcoTour’s standing to bring its suit; and,
    second, to determine whether EcoTour suffered prejudice as a result of any
    adjudged errors in the procurement process. See, e.g., Linc Gov’t Servs., LLC v.
    United States, 
    96 Fed. Cl. 672
    , 695-96 (2010) (differentiating between
    “allegational prejudice” and “APA prejudice,” both of which apply the “substantial
    chance” test).
    III.   Standing
    Although the government has not challenged Eco Tour’s standing in either
    its motion for judgment on the administrative record or its reply brief, standing is a
    threshold inquiry that the court must address before considering the merits. ITAC,
    
    316 F.3d at 1319
    . As stated supra, bid protest standing is limited to those plaintiffs
    with a substantial chance of winning the contracts at issue in the protest. Orion,
    704 F.3d at 1348-49. The record demonstrates that Eco Tour submitted responsive
    proposals that received the highest cumulative scores of any of the proposals
    received by the NPS for the disputed contracts. AR Tab 23 at 1094, Tab 24 at
    1120, Tabs 28-29, Tab 42 at 1272-74, Tab 43 at 1312-14. Thus, under the
    regulations, there is a substantial chance that Eco Tour would have been awarded
    the disputed contracts if not for the errors alleged in the amended complaint. See
    
    36 C.F.R. §§ 51.31
    , 51.33. Accordingly, the court concludes that Eco Tour has
    standing to bring its bid protest.
    IV.    Analysis of the Merits
    Eco Tour challenges three determinations by the NPS as arbitrary,
    capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law. First,
    Eco Tour challenges the agency’s determination that Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking submitted “responsive” proposals despite their failure to include certain
    financial information required by the prospectus. Second, Eco Tour alleges that
    25
    the Park Service violated applicable law – including the Procurement Integrity Act
    and the implied contract to consider bids fairly and honestly – by disclosing to
    Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking information that Eco Tour had allegedly marked in
    its proposal as confidential. Third, Eco Tour alleges that the NPS improperly
    failed to require Hole Hiking to match one of the better terms of Eco Tour’s
    proposal for contract GRTE032-13, and therefore improperly determined that Hole
    Hiking had matched all of the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposal for that contract.
    A.      The Agency’s “Responsiveness” Determination (Count I) 10
    With respect to Count I, Eco Tour asserts that Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking
    omitted from their proposals certain financial information required by the
    prospectus, and that the NPS therefore erred in determining that these preferred
    offerors’ proposals were “responsive.” 11 Pl.’s Mot. at 19-37. In this regard, Eco
    10
    / The court is mindful that, in procurements subject to the Federal Acquisition
    Regulation (FAR), the concept of responsiveness is generally confined to sealed bidding. See
    Excel Mfg., Ltd. v. United States, 
    111 Fed. Cl. 800
    , 806 & n.3 (2013); Dyonyx, L.P. v. United
    States, 
    83 Fed. Cl. 460
    , 468 (2008) (citations omitted). By contrast, “[i]n negotiated
    procurements, a proposal that fails to conform to the material terms and conditions of the
    solicitation should be considered unacceptable and a contract award based on such an
    unacceptable proposal violates the procurement statutes and regulations.” E.W. Bliss Co. v.
    United States, 
    77 F.3d 445
    , 448 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    As explained supra, solicitations for NPS concession contracts are not “procurements” subject to
    the FAR. Moreover, as the government correctly noted at oral argument, the NPS’s
    determination of the “responsiveness” of proposals for the disputed contracts is mandated by the
    particular regulations governing NPS concession contracts. Tr. at 53-54; see also 
    36 C.F.R. §§ 51.27
    , 51.30-51.31. Accordingly, the aforementioned authorities confining the concept of
    responsiveness to sealed bidding are inapplicable in the unique context of NPS concession
    contracts.
    11
    / Eco Tour also argues that Jackson Hole’s proposal was non-responsive because
    Jackson Hole did not submit a signed transmittal letter with its proposal as required by the
    prospectus. Pl.’s Mot. at 14-15, 22-23; see AR Tab 4 at 27 (prospectus instructions stating that
    “[f]ailure to submit a signed Offeror’s Transmittal Letter . . . will make your proposal non-
    responsive”), 35 (proposal package stating that the transmittal letter “indicates your acceptance
    of the terms and conditions of the concession opportunity as set forth in this Prospectus” and
    “must bear original signatures”), Tab 20 at 638-40 (Jackson Hole’s unsigned transmittal letter).
    However, after the filing of Eco Tour’s motion, the government supplemented the AR to include
    a copy of the signed transmittal letter accompanying Jackson Hole’s proposal. See AR Tab 46.
    (continued . . .)
    26
    Tour relies upon the regulations implementing the 1998 Act, which define a
    “responsive” proposal as “a timely submitted proposal that is determined by the
    Director as agreeing to all of the minimum requirements of the proposed
    concession contract and prospectus and as having provided the information
    required by the prospectus.” 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
     (emphasis added).
    The court agrees with Eco Tour that the prospectus required each offeror to
    submit with its proposal certain financial information to allow the NPS to evaluate
    the financial capability of the offeror to carry out its proposal. As noted, Part A of
    the proposal package stated that certain information “is required for principal
    selection factors 3 and 4,” and that “[f]ailure to provide material information
    required thereunder may result in an offeror being deemed non-responsive.” AR
    Tab 4 at 41. Part B of the proposal package listed the specific financial
    information “required” by Part A. 
    Id. at 49-54
    .
    The court also agrees with Eco Tour that neither Jackson Hole nor Hole
    Hiking submitted with their proposals all of the financial information required by
    the prospectus. With its proposal for contract GRTE024-13, Jackson Hole
    provided: (1) a business history form; (2) Annual Financial Reports (AFRs) for
    two previous years; (3) a chart of the equipment to be used and its value; (4) a pro
    forma income statement; and, (5) a chart of financial “operating assumptions.” AR
    Tab 20 at 705-23. However, Jackson Hole’s proposal did not include the balance
    sheet or credit report required under principal selection subfactor 4(a) or bank
    statements required under principal selection subfactor 4(c). AR Tab 23 at 1112,
    Tab 30 at 1192, Tab 42 at 1305-06.
    With its proposal for contract GRTE032-13, Hole Hiking provided: (1) a
    business history form; (2) AFRs for two previous years; (3) a balance sheet; (4) a
    credit report; (5) a chart of the equipment to be used and its value; (6) a pro forma
    income statement; (7) a chart of financial “operating assumptions”; and, (8) bank
    statements from January and February 2013. AR Tab 19 at 588-613, 615-18, 620-
    26. However, the Park Service found that the AFRs submitted by Hole Hiking
    were incomplete, AR Tab 24 at 1139, Tab 31 at 1195, Tab 43 at 1345-46, and
    Therefore, Eco Tour’s additional responsiveness argument is unsupported by the record. Indeed,
    Eco Tour did not continue to advance that particular argument in either its reply brief or at oral
    argument.
    27
    noted that Hole Hiking failed to completely explain its revenue and expense
    projections, AR Tab 24 at 1140, Tab 31 at 1195. The Park Service also determined
    that the pro forma income statement submitted by Hole Hiking contained
    “numerous mistakes,” AR Tab 24 at 1140, including “mathematical errors,” AR
    Tab 31 at 1195. Additionally, the Park Service concluded that the January and
    February 2013 bank statements submitted by Hole Hiking did not correspond to
    the reporting period of Hole Hiking’s balance sheet, and therefore the Park Service
    was unable to ascertain whether Hole Hiking’s cash position was sufficient “to
    respond to any unanticipated expenses” in light of Hole Hiking’s assertion that it
    did not require any financing for start-up costs. AR Tab 31 at 1195. Finally, the
    NPS determined that Hole Hiking’s balance sheet contained certain unspecified
    “anomalies,” AR Tab 43 at 1346, and noted that “without notes to explain the
    balance sheet, the panel was concerned with the financial position of the Offeror,”
    AR Tab 24 at 1139.
    Despite these omissions, the NPS found that Jackson Hole’s and Hole
    Hiking’s proposals were “responsive to the minimum requirements of the
    Prospectus” because the agency determined that the omitted financial information
    was not material to an effective evaluation of the proposals. AR Tab 37 at 1244
    (“The lack of quality and omissions [in the preferred offerors’ proposals] were
    reflected in lower scores for the preferred offerors; however, the omissions were
    not significant enough to hamper an effective evaluation of the proposals.”), Tab
    40 at 1268 (same), Tab 42 at 1305-06 (responsiveness determination for Jackson
    Hole), Tab 43 at 1345-46 (responsiveness determination for Hole Hiking). In that
    regard, the NPS relied upon paragraph 1(d) of the prospectus instructions, which
    limits the meaning of the term “information required by the prospectus” to only
    such information as is “material, as determined by the Service, to an effective
    evaluation of the proposal under the applicable selection factor.” AR Tab 4 at 27
    (emphasis added).
    Eco Tour first contends that paragraph 1(d) of the prospectus instructions is
    contrary to the regulations insofar as it limits the definition of “information
    required by the prospectus” to information that is expressly required by the
    prospectus and is deemed “material” by the NPS. Pl.’s Mot. at 27-32; Pl.’s Reply
    at 4-5. Next, Eco Tour contends that, even if the NPS were allowed to impose
    such a “materiality” limitation, the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and
    abused its discretion, in determining that the financial information omitted from
    28
    Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals was not material to an effective
    evaluation of those proposals. Pl.’s Mot. at 32-37; Pl.’s Reply at 6-10. Therefore,
    to resolve Eco Tour’s claims with respect to Count I, the court must determine
    whether the NPS violated applicable law, acted arbitrarily and capriciously, or
    abused its discretion in determining that the financial information omitted from
    Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals was not material.
    1.    Eco Tour’s Objection to the Materiality Limitation Set
    Forth in Paragraph 1(d) of the Prospectus Instructions
    Eco Tour first contends that the NPS acted contrary to law and abused its
    discretion by limiting the definition of “information required by the prospectus” to
    only such information that the NPS deems “material . . . to an effective evaluation
    of the proposal under the applicable selection factor.” Pl.’s Mot. at 30. In that
    regard, Eco Tour relies upon the definition of “responsive” set forth in 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
    , and contends that paragraph 1(d) of the prospectus instructions is “directly
    contrary to the plain language of” 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
     insofar as the regulation “does
    not include a provision that allows NPS to limit the term ‘required’ to information
    which NPS, in its discretion, determines is ‘material to an effective evaluation of
    the proposal.’” 
    Id.
     Eco Tour also argues that paragraph 1(d) constitutes an
    improper “expan[sion] [of] the very limited exception set by Congress for when a
    concessioner can exercise a right of preference and evade true competition.” 
    Id. at 31
    . For the reasons specified below, the court concludes that the NPS neither acted
    contrary to law nor abused its discretion in imposing a materiality limitation.
    a.     Eco Tour Waived Any Objection to Paragraph 1(d)
    Defendant argues that Eco Tour’s contention that “materiality” cannot be a
    factor in evaluating responsiveness is a challenge to paragraph 1(d) of the
    prospectus instructions, and, as such, is waived because Eco Tour failed to object
    to paragraph 1(d) before the deadline for the submission of proposals. See Def.’s
    Mot. at 11-12 (citing Blue & Gold Fleet, LP v. United States, 
    492 F.3d 1308
    , 1313-
    14 (Fed. Cir. 2007)). The court agrees.
    It is axiomatic that “a party who has the opportunity to object to the terms of
    a government solicitation containing a patent error and fails to do so prior to the
    close of the bidding process waives it ability to raise the same objection
    29
    subsequently in a bid protest action in the Court of Federal Claims.” Blue & Gold
    Fleet, 
    492 F.3d at 1313
    . Citing the desire to prevent contractors “from taking
    advantage of the government and other bidders” and to “avoid[] costly after-the-
    fact litigation,” the Federal Circuit, in Blue & Gold Fleet, stated that “‘[v]endors
    cannot sit on their rights to challenge what they believe is an unfair solicitation,
    roll the dice and see if they receive the award.’” 
    Id. at 1314
     (quoting Argencord
    Mach. & Equip., Inc. v. United States, 
    68 Fed. Cl. 167
    , 175 n.14 (2005)); see also
    Weeks Marine, Inc. v. United States, 
    575 F.3d 1352
    , 1362-63 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
    Blue and Gold Fleet thus prevents a protester from raising post hoc objections to
    the terms of a solicitation. That is precisely what Eco Tour seeks to do here. Eco
    Tour’s argument that the materiality limitation in paragraph 1(d) of the prospectus
    instructions conflicts with 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
     is, essentially, an allegation of patent
    error in the prospectus. Having failed to object to the materiality limitation before
    the deadline for the submission of proposals, Eco Tour has waived its right to do so
    before this court. See Blue & Gold Fleet, 
    492 F.3d at 1313
    .
    In an attempt to avoid the waiver rule announced in Blue & Gold Fleet, Eco
    Tour asserts that it is not challenging the terms of the prospectus, but rather
    invoking the prospectus’s own mechanism for resolving conflict between the terms
    of the prospectus and the regulations, which are incorporated by reference into the
    prospectus and control in the event of any inconsistency. See Pl.’s Mot. at 30 n.8
    (“[B]ecause the terms of the Prospectus were not defective, Eco Tour was not
    required to challenge those terms prior to the submission of its proposal.”); Pl.’s
    Reply at 13. Eco Tour’s argument in this regard is unpersuasive and unsupported.
    A patent ambiguity is “present when the contract contains facially inconsistent
    provisions that would place a reasonable contractor on notice and prompt the
    contractor to rectify the inconsistency by inquiring of the appropriate parties.”
    Stratos Mobile Networks USA, LLC v. United States, 
    213 F.3d 1375
    , 1381 (Fed.
    Cir. 2000). To the extent that there is any conflict between the prospectus
    instructions and the regulations incorporated by reference into the contract –
    insofar as the former impose a materiality limitation on the definition of
    “information required by the prospectus” – any such conflict is a patent ambiguity
    regarding which Eco Tour “‘had a duty to seek clarification from the government’”
    before the close of bidding. Blue & Gold Fleet, 
    492 F.3d at 1314
     (quoting Stratos
    30
    Mobile Networks, 
    213 F.3d at 1381
    ). Accordingly, Eco Tour’s challenge to the
    materiality limitation in paragraph 1(d) is waived.12
    b.      The Materiality Requirement in Paragraph 1(d) Is
    Consistent with 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
    Even assuming, arguendo, that Eco Tour did not waive its right to challenge
    the materiality limitation in paragraph 1(d), its challenge fails for the additional
    reason that such a limitation is not contrary to law. As noted supra, 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.3
     defines a “responsive” proposal as “a timely submitted proposal that is
    determined by the Director as agreeing to all of the minimum requirements of the
    proposed concession contract and prospectus and as having provided the
    information required by the prospectus.” Although section 51.3 does not expressly
    provide for a materiality limitation, it also does not preclude such a limitation.
    Indeed, by including the phrase “determined by the Director,” section 51.3 confers
    discretion upon the NPS to determine whether a proposal has provided the
    information required by the prospectus. Contrary to Eco Tour’s argument, this
    conferral of discretion is sufficiently broad to allow the NPS to place limits on the
    definition of “information required by the prospectus.”
    Neither is paragraph 1(d) in conflict with the 1998 Act. Eco Tour argues
    that by imposing a materiality limitation the NPS “is improperly trying to expand
    the very limited exception set by Congress for when a concessioner can exercise a
    right of preference and evade true competition.” Pl.’s Mot. at 31. Yet, the 1998
    Act provides that outfitting and guide concessioners such as Jackson Hole and
    Hole Hiking are entitled to exercise a preferential right of renewal if, inter alia, the
    concessioner “has submitted a responsive proposal for a proposed new contract
    which satisfies the minimum requirements established by the Secretary pursuant to
    [
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (4)].” 
    16 U.S.C. § 5952
    (8)(B)(iii).
    12
    / The only authority Eco Tour cites in support of its argument that it was not required
    to challenge paragraph 1(d) before the close of bidding is BayFirst Solutions, LLC v. United
    States, 
    102 Fed. Cl. 677
    , 681-82 (2012). See Pl.’s Mot. at 30 n.8. That case is inapposite
    because it did not involve a challenge to the terms of a solicitation, but rather a challenge to the
    agency’s evaluation of proposals. Eco Tour’s reliance upon the court’s passing statement that a
    chart contained in the solicitation “could, with effort, be harmonized with the weighting scheme
    presented on the previous page of the solicitation,” BayFirst, 102 Fed. Cl. at 681, is therefore
    fruitless.
    31
    Moreover, the materiality limitation in paragraph 1(d) is consistent with
    analogous precedent applying provisions of the FAR in the context of negotiated
    procurements. Under such precedent, “‘a proposal that fails to conform to the
    material terms and conditions of the solicitation should be considered unacceptable
    and a contract award based on such an unacceptable proposal violates the
    procurement statutes and regulations.’” Allied Tech. Grp., Inc. v. United States,
    
    649 F.3d 1320
    , 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (emphasis added) (quoting E.W. Bliss, 
    77 F.3d at 448
    ); Furniture by Thurston v. United States, 
    103 Fed. Cl. 505
    , 518 (2012)
    (“It is blackletter law that a procuring agency may only accept an offer that
    conforms to the material terms of the solicitation.” (emphasis added) (citing
    Centech Grp., Inc. v. United States, 
    554 F.3d 1029
    , 1037 (Fed. Cir. 2009))).
    Although such FAR-based cases are not directly applicable to the concession
    contracts at issue in this bid protest, they further undermine Eco Tour’s contention
    that a materiality component to responsiveness is contrary to law. See YRT
    Services, 28 Fed. Cl. at 414 n.33 (“[T]he language and experience represented by
    the FAR is helpful for reference purposes.”).
    2.     Was the Agency’s Materiality Determination a
    Responsibility Determination?
    The government argues that because the information omitted from Jackson
    Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals related to their financial ability to carry out
    their proposals, the NPS’s determination that these omissions were immaterial was
    a responsibility determination, not a responsiveness determination. Def.’s Mot. at
    14; Def.’s Reply at 4-6. As such, defendant contends that the agency’s materiality
    determination is “effectively unreviewable absent a claim of fraud or bad faith.”
    Def.’s Mot. at 14; Def.’s Reply at 5. Inasmuch as Eco Tour has not formally
    alleged fraud or bad faith on the part of the NPS, the government argues that Eco
    Tour’s challenge to the agency’s responsiveness determination “need not be
    considered further by the Court.” Def.’s Mot. at 15; see also Def.’s Reply at 6.
    In response, Eco Tour asserts that the deference typically afforded to an
    affirmative determination of responsibility is inappropriate here because the NPS
    “was not making a threshold ‘responsibility’ determination with regard to this
    information, but in fact was evaluating, comparing and scoring proposals on a 0-5
    point scale pursuant to Principal Selection Factor 4 and as required by the
    32
    regulations.” Pl.’s Reply at 11; see also id. (“This information was not part of a
    ‘yes/no’ responsibility determination, it was sought as part of an effort to evaluate
    and score each offeror’s capabilities by comparing them to the other offerors.”).
    Eco Tour also argues that “in making ‘responsibility’ determinations under the
    FAR, government agencies do not identify specific information that must be
    provided as NPS did here, but instead they allow bidders to provide whatever
    information they believe would show their ‘responsibility’ after bids are opened.”
    Pl.’s Reply at 12 (citing John C. Grimberg Co. v. United States, 
    185 F.3d 1297
    ,
    1299 (Fed. Cir. 1999), and Blount, Inc. v. United States, 
    22 Cl. Ct. 221
    , 226
    (1990)). Here, by contrast, the prospectus requires specific financial information
    and the regulations governing NPS concession contracts provide very limited
    circumstances in which proposals may be amended or supplemented after the
    deadline for submitting proposals has passed. Pl.’s Reply at 12 (citing 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.15
    (a) (allowing offerors to amend or supplement proposals after submission
    only if “requested by the Director to do so and the Director provides all offerors
    that submitted proposals a similar opportunity to amend or supplement their
    proposals”)).
    The court agrees with Eco Tour that the NPS’s materiality determination
    was not a responsibility determination. Although a determination of an offeror’s
    financial capability is traditionally considered to pertain to the offeror’s
    responsibility, e.g., Supreme Foodservice GmbH v. United States, 
    112 Fed. Cl. 402
    , 413 (Fed. Cl. 2013) (“A responsibility evaluation includes consideration of
    financial backing as well as the ability to meet the operational requirements of the
    contract . . . .”) (citations omitted); Blount, 22 Cl. Ct. at 227; see also 
    48 C.F.R. § 9.104-1
     (2012) (setting forth “general standards” for responsibility in the
    procurement context, including “adequate financial resources to perform the
    contract, or the ability to obtain them”), here the offerors’ financial capability is
    one of several evaluation factors considered under a comparative assessment of the
    various proposals. By contrast, a determination of responsibility is a “pass/fail
    inquiry.” PlanetSpace, Inc. v. United States, 
    92 Fed. Cl. 520
    , 527 (2010) (citing 
    48 C.F.R. § 9.103
    ); see also Frontier Sys. Integrators, LLC, B-298872.3, 2007 CPD ¶
    46, 
    2007 WL 776887
    , at *5 (Comp. Gen. Feb. 28, 2007) (“Our Office has long
    held that pass/fail evaluations of capability issues, such as past performance, are
    tantamount to responsibility determinations, with the result that a rating of
    ‘unacceptable’ in these areas is the same as a determination of nonresponsibility.”
    (citing Phil Howry Co., B-291402.4, 2003 CPD ¶ 33, 
    2003 WL 282206
     (Comp.
    33
    Gen. Feb. 6, 2003))). A consideration of responsibility-related factors, such as
    financial capability, in the context of a comparative assessment of proposals does
    not constitute a responsibility determination. See, e.g., PlanetSpace, 92 Fed. Cl. at
    546 (“Standing apart from the responsibility determination, however, procuring
    agencies may, in the context of a comparative evaluation of proposals, use
    traditional responsibility criteria, such as considering an offeror’s financial
    resources and past performance.” (citing Delta Data Sys. Corp. v. Webster, 
    744 F.2d 197
    , 203 (D.C. Cir. 1984), and YRT Services, 28 Fed. Cl. at 394-95)); YRT
    Services, 28 Fed. Cl. at 394-95 (“‘Agencies commonly use responsibility related
    factors in the evaluation process, notwithstanding the fact that a responsibility
    determination must ultimately be made. . . . This process does not constitute a
    responsibility determination . . . .’” (quoting John Cibinic, Jr. and Ralph C. Nash,
    Jr., Formation of Government Contracts 547 (2d ed. 1986))).
    The court has considered the government’s arguments to the contrary and
    finds them unpersuasive. Defendant cites several cases in support of its argument
    that the NPS’s materiality determination was a responsibility determination that is
    “effectively unreviewable absent a claim of fraud or bad faith.” Def.’s Mot. at 14-
    15; Def.’s Reply at 4-6 (citing John C. Grimberg, 
    185 F.3d at 1303
    , Trilon Educ.
    Corp. v. United States, 
    578 F.2d 1356
    , 1358 (Ct. Cl. 1978), News Printing Co., Inc.
    v. United States, 
    46 Fed. Cl. 740
    , 746 (2000), and Blount, 22 Cl. Ct. at 227).
    However, none of these cases involved an assessment of responsibility-related
    factors, such as financial capability, in the context of a comparative assessment of
    proposals. Rather, each involved a “pass/fail” determination of responsibility (i.e.,
    was the offeror responsible or not?). Accordingly, defendant’s case law is
    inapposite.13
    13
    / Additionally, even if defendant’s case law were applicable, the government
    overreaches when it suggests that responsibility determinations are “effectively unreviewable”
    absent allegations of fraud or bad faith. Indeed, the government conceded so at oral argument by
    pointing the court to Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United States, 
    238 F.3d 1324
     (Fed. Cir. 2001), in which the Federal Circuit rejected an argument, virtually identical to
    that made by the government here, that “absent allegations of fraud or bad faith,” a responsibility
    determination is “immune from judicial review.” 
    238 F.3d at 1333
    ; see Tr. at 55. In disposing
    of that argument, the Federal Circuit concluded that the government had “seriously misread” the
    Court of Claims’ decisions in Keco Indus., Inc. v. United States, 
    492 F.2d 1200
     (Ct. Cl. 1974)
    (Keco II), and Trilon Educ. Corp. v. United States, 
    578 F.2d 1356
     (Ct. Cl. 1978), which the
    (continued . . .)
    34
    Additionally, in its reply brief, defendant appears to argue that the NPS’s
    materiality determination constitutes a responsibility determination because it was
    a “yes/no” determination (i.e., were the omissions material or not?). Def.’s Reply
    at 6 (“What Eco Tour does contest is NPS’s separate ‘yes/no’ determination that
    the responses to [principal selection factor] 4 were ‘material,’ and therefore
    responsive. . . . These are responsibility determinations.”). But both
    responsiveness and responsibility are “yes/no” inquiries. Thus, the “yes/no”
    character of the agency’s materiality determination does nothing to transform it
    from a responsiveness determination to a responsibility determination.
    For these reasons, the court rejects defendant’s attempt to characterize the
    NPS’s materiality determination as one of responsibility, which the court would
    normally afford heightened deference. Accordingly, the court will address whether
    the agency’s materiality determination was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
    discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.
    3.      Was the NPS’s Materiality Determination Arbitrary,
    Capricious, an Abuse of Discretion, or Otherwise Not in
    Accordance with Law?
    a.     Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s Failure to Provide
    Current Bank Statements (Principal Selection
    Subfactor 4(c))
    The NPS determined that neither Jackson Hole nor Hole Hiking submitted
    current bank statements demonstrating their ability to obtain funds for start-up
    costs as required under principal selection subfactor 4(c). AR Tab 23 at 1115, Tab
    30 at 1192, Tab 31 at 1195, Tab 42 at 1305-06. The NPS nevertheless found these
    omissions to be immaterial because both Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking indicated
    in their proposals that, as incumbent concessioners, they had no start-up costs.
    With respect to Jackson Hole, the agency stated as follows:
    Federal Circuit determined “impose no such limits” on judicial review of responsibility
    determinations. Impresa, 
    238 F.3d at 1333
    .
    35
    [Principal selection subfactor 4(c)] requests that the
    Offeror demonstrate its ability to obtain the required
    funds for any start-up costs under the new Contract. It
    also requests the Offeror to provide a bank statement.
    Jackson Hole responded that [principal selection
    subfactor 4(c)] is not applicable because Jackson Hole is
    already operating as the current concessioner. Jackson
    Hole did not provide a bank statement. The Panel
    concluded that Jackson Hole’s status as the incumbent
    concessioner supported Jackson Hole’s assertion that it
    had no start-up costs. Thus, Jackson Hole did not need to
    demonstrate funding to support such costs, and provided
    a material response.
    AR Tab 42 at 1306; see also AR Tab 20 at 664-65 (Jackson Hole’s proposal stating
    that the requirements in the prospectus to identify property to be acquired and the
    source of funding for start-up costs were “not applicable”). Similarly, with respect
    to Hole Hiking, the NPS stated that “Hole Hiking responded in [principal selection
    subfactor 4(b)] that it would not have any start-up expenses and the response in
    [principal selection subfactor 4(c)] supported this assertion.” AR Tab 43 at 1346;
    see also AR Tab 19 at 614, 619 (Hole Hiking’s proposal stating that it would have
    no start-up costs).
    Eco Tour argues that the NPS erroneously accepted Jackson Hole’s and Hole
    Hiking’s representations that they had no start-up costs. Pl.’s Mot. at 24-25, 36-37;
    Pl.’s Reply at 7-8. In that regard, Eco Tour notes that Jackson Hole stated, on a
    chart listing the equipment to be used by Jackson Hole in carrying out contract
    GRTE024-13, that it “anticipated” purchasing a [ ] and [ ] “for Season 2014.” AR
    Tab 20 at 720. Eco Tour further notes that Hole Hiking stated, in the portion of its
    proposal related to principal selection subfactor 2(a), that “[a]t the beginning of the
    year, we order new [ ] and [ ].” AR Tab 19 at 581. In light of these anticipated
    purchases, Eco Tour asserts that Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking did, in fact, have
    start-up costs, and therefore the NPS acted arbitrarily and capriciously in accepting
    Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s contrary representations. Pl.’s Mot. at 24-25,
    36-37; Pl.’s Reply at 7-8.
    36
    The court agrees with Eco Tour that the NPS arbitrarily and capriciously
    determined that Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking had no start-up costs and that their
    failure to provide bank statements was immaterial. Although the evaluation panel,
    in its evaluation of Jackson Hole’s proposal, acknowledged Jackson Hole’s
    anticipated purchase of a [ ] and [ ], AR Tab 23 at 1114, the panel subsequently
    ignored this information in its responsiveness evaluation, in which it concluded
    that “Jackson Hole’s status as the incumbent concessioner supported Jackson
    Hole’s assertion that it had no start-up costs,” AR Tab 42 at 1306. Similarly, in
    concluding that Hole Hiking had no start-up costs, see AR Tab 43 at 1346, the
    panel completely ignored Hole Hiking’s anticipated purchase of [ ] and [ ] “[a]t the
    beginning of the year,” AR Tab 19 at 581.
    To the extent that the panel mentioned this information at all in its
    responsiveness determinations, it merely noted that “Jackson Hole’s anticipated
    purchases were not firm commitments” and that Jackson Hole’s failure to identify
    these as start-up costs “is immaterial because these purchases are not required by
    the terms of the Prospectus, including the Draft Contract.” AR Tab 42 at 1306.
    Defendant relies upon this statement to argue that Jackson Hole’s failure to provide
    bank statements to prove its financial ability to make its anticipated purchases was
    immaterial because such purchases were not required by the terms of the
    prospectus. Def.’s Mot. at 18; Def.’s Reply at 9-10 (citing AR Tab 42 at 1306).
    This argument fails for the simple reason that nothing in principal selection
    subfactors 4(b) or 4(c) limits the requirement to identify start-up costs (and to
    demonstrate financial ability to pay for such costs by providing bank statements) to
    only those start-up costs specifically required by the prospectus. To the contrary,
    principal selection subfactor 4(b)(2) directed offerors to “provide estimates for the
    Personal Property items (Equipment) that you need to acquire in order to begin
    operating,” AR Tab 4 at 51, and principal selection subfactor 4(c) directed offerors
    to demonstrate their “ability to obtain the required funds” for such start-up costs,
    AR Tab 4 at 54.
    Defendant’s additional arguments fare no better. For instance, defendant
    argues that Hole Hiking’s failure to report [ ] and [ ] as start-up costs, and to
    provide bank statements demonstrating its ability to obtain funds for such costs, is
    immaterial because the total cost of the [ ] and [ ] is low and “will likely not
    prevent Hole Hiking from performing the contract.” Def.’s Mot. at 19; see also
    Def.’s Reply at 10. However, nothing in principal selection subfactors 4(b) or 4(c)
    37
    limits the requirement to identify start-up costs (and to demonstrate financial
    ability to pay for such costs) to only those start-up costs above a certain dollar
    amount. To the contrary, principal selection subfactor 4(c) expressly states that
    “[c]urrent bank statements must be provided even if you do not anticipate
    significant start-up costs.” AR Tab 4 at 54 (emphasis added).
    Finally, defendant argues that, even assuming that Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking failed to demonstrate their ability to obtain the required funds for start-up
    costs, Eco Tour’s proposal suffered from the same defect, and should likewise be
    rejected as non-responsive, because Eco Tour failed to explain the cost of and to
    demonstrate funding for its anticipated conversion to natural gas. Def.’s Mot. at
    18-19 (citing AR Tab 21 at 901 (describing Eco Tour’s plan to convert one-half of
    its vehicles to natural gas “in the first year after a compressed natural gas filling
    station comes to . . . Jackson, Wyoming,” and to convert the other half the
    following year, with unspecified “viable grant sources”), and Tab 22 at 1086
    (same)). This argument is similarly unpersuasive because, unlike Jackson Hole
    and Hole Hiking, both of whom anticipated making purchases of equipment at the
    beginning of the 2014 winter season, Eco Tour anticipated converting one-half of
    its vehicles to natural gas “in the first year after a compressed natural gas filling
    station comes to . . . Jackson, Wyoming,” and the other half “during the second
    year that [a natural gas] fuel source is available in Jackson.” AR Tab 21 at 901,
    Tab 22 at 1086. Although Eco Tour “estimate[d]” that a compressed natural gas
    filling station would arrive in Jackson “in early 2014,” this was merely an estimate
    and, ultimately, outside of Eco Tour’s control. 
    Id.
     Thus, Eco Tour’s anticipated
    conversion to natural gas cannot reasonably be deemed to constitute a start-up cost.
    b.     Jackson Hole’s Failure to Provide a Balance Sheet
    and Credit Report (Principal Selection Subfactor
    4(a))
    The NPS also determined that Jackson Hole failed to provide a balance sheet
    and credit report as required under principal selection subfactor 4(a). AR Tab 23 at
    1112, Tab 30 at 1192, Tab 42 at 1305-06. The NPS nevertheless concluded that
    these omissions were immaterial because the NPS was able to obtain the missing
    information by reviewing Jackson Hole’s business history form, AFRs, and
    financial projections and assumptions:
    38
    [Principal selection subfactor 4(a)] requests the Offeror
    to demonstrate that it has a credible, proven track record
    of meeting financial obligations by submitting (1) a
    business history form; (2) a balance sheet; (3) Annual
    Financial Report (AFRs) (for current concessioners) OR
    financial statements (for interested parties who are not
    current concessioners); and (4) a credit report. Jackson
    Hole submitted a complete business history form and two
    years of AFRs. However, Jackson Hole did not submit a
    balance sheet, and provided a Dun & Bradstreet
    Company ID instead of a physical copy of the credit
    report. The Service does not have access to credit
    reporting services.
    By analyzing the business history form and the AFRs in
    combination with the projections and assumptions
    supplied in [principal selection subfactor 4(b)], the panel
    determined that Jackson Hole had a credible proven track
    record of meeting its financial obligations and would
    have the operating income to satisfy its liabilities. All of
    the information supplied on the business history form
    was positive, and both of Jackson Hole’s AFRs revealed
    a positive net income. A balance sheet and physical
    credit report might have provided further corroboration,
    but the Panel did not view these omissions as material.
    AR Tab 42 at 1305-06.
    Eco Tour argues that the NPS could not effectively evaluate Jackson Hole’s
    financial ability to carry out its proposal without the balance sheet and credit
    report, and, therefore, the NPS arbitrarily and capriciously determined that Jackson
    Hole’s failure to provide these documents was immaterial. Pl.’s Mot. at 34-35;
    Pl.’s Reply at 6-7. In that regard, Eco Tour first asserts that Jackson Hole’s
    business history form consists solely of uncorroborated “one-word responses” to
    general questions regarding Jackson Hole’s recent history of default, bankruptcy,
    foreclosure, receivership, or litigation related to unmet financial obligations. Pl.’s
    Mot. at 35 (citing AR Tab 20 at 719). Next, Eco Tour argues that the AFRs
    39
    submitted by Jackson Hole “merely pertain to [Jackson Hole’s] revenues and
    expenses under the prior contract,” and do not demonstrate anything about Jackson
    Hole’s “track record of meeting its financial obligations.” Pl.’s Mot. at 35 (citing
    AR Tab 20 at 705-18); see also Pl.’s Reply at 7 (“Nowhere in those documents
    does [Jackson Hole] state its current credit status, amount of assets, funding or
    available cash.”). As a result, Eco Tour contends, the NPS “was totally unaware of
    the status of [Jackson Hole’s] current cash assets, its corporate balance sheet health
    and its credit rating.” Pl.’s Reply at 7.
    The court agrees with Eco Tour that the NPS acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously in concluding that Jackson Hole’s failure to provide a balance sheet
    and credit report was immaterial to an effective evaluation of Jackson Hole’s
    history of meeting its financial obligations. Principal selection subfactor 4(a)
    required Jackson Hole to “[d]emonstrate . . . a credible, proven track record of
    meeting [its] financial obligations.” AR Tab 4 at 49 (emphasis added). The
    financial information Jackson Hole supplied did not demonstrate such a track
    record. While the AFRs submitted by Jackson Hole indicate its gross receipts and
    expenses under its current contract, they provide no information regarding the
    extent of Jackson Hole’s liabilities or its credit history. See AR Tab 20 at 705-18.
    At most, the AFRs demonstrate that Jackson Hole has achieved a positive net
    income under its current contract. A positive net income, however, cannot allay
    potential concerns regarding the extent of Jackson Hole’s liabilities as compared to
    its assets, nor can it demonstrate that Jackson Hole has a history of paying its
    debts. Additionally, although the pro forma income statement and operating
    assumptions submitted by Jackson Hole under principal selection subfactor 4(b)
    demonstrate Jackson Hole’s projections and assumptions regarding its future
    performance and profitability, they provide no information regarding Jackson
    Hole’s prior “track record” of meeting its financial obligations. See AR Tab 20 at
    721-23. Therefore, the NPS’s conclusion that Jackson Hole’s AFRs, pro forma
    income statement, and operating assumptions were sufficient to demonstrate
    Jackson Hole’s “track record of meeting its financial obligations” was arbitrary and
    capricious.
    Defendant posits that Jackson Hole’s business history form – on which
    Jackson Hole indicated, inter alia, that it had never defaulted on a concession
    contract, had no recent bankruptcies or foreclosures, and had been the subject of no
    recent lawsuits or administrative proceedings – adequately demonstrated Jackson
    40
    Hole’s history of meeting its financial obligations. Def.’s Mot. at 18 (citing AR
    Tab 20 at 719). Defendant argues that the NPS was entitled to “accept Jackson
    Hole’s responses without confirming their accuracy.” Id. at 17. In support of this
    argument, defendant quotes from L-3 Global Communications Solutions, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    82 Fed. Cl. 604
    , 609 (2008), for the proposition that “the test for
    noncompliance is generally a test of facial noncompliance, not a test as to whether
    the subjective, undisclosed intent of an offeror is noncompliant with the
    solicitation’s requirements,” and Akal Sec., Inc. v. United States, 
    103 Fed. Cl. 310
    ,
    326 (2011), for the proposition that “[c]ontracting officers generally are entitled to
    rely on information available to them at the time of a responsibility determination,
    absent any indication that the information is defective, unsupported, or suspect.”
    Def.’s Mot. at 17. Yet, in making this argument, defendant ignores the plain
    language of principal selection subfactor 4(a), which required Jackson Hole to
    demonstrate a “credible” and “proven” record of meeting its financial obligations
    by presenting documentary proof in the form of a balance sheet and credit report.
    AR Tab 4 at 49. Defendant also relies upon inapposite case law. Unlike L-3
    Global, in which “all three bids were facially compliant with the solicitation’s
    requirements,” 82 Fed. Cl. at 612, Jackson Hole’s proposal omits required financial
    information and, thus, is noncompliant on its face. Defendant’s citation to Akal is
    likewise off the mark because Akal involved a determination of whether the
    prevailing bidder was a “responsible offeror,” not whether it had submitted a
    proposal that was responsive to the material terms and conditions of the
    solicitation. See 103 Fed. Cl. at 324-26.
    c.     Deficiencies in Hole Hiking’s Financial Records
    (Principal Selection Subfactors 4(a) and 4(b))
    Finally, as noted, the NPS determined that Hole Hiking’s financial
    documents omitted information and contained errors. AR Tab 24 at 1139-40, Tab
    31 at 1195, Tab 43 at 1345-46. Specifically, the NPS concluded that: (1) the
    AFRs submitted by Hole Hiking were each missing a page, AR Tab 24 at 1139,
    Tab 31 at 1195, Tab 43 at 1345-46; (2) Hole Hiking’s pro forma income statement
    and operating assumptions failed to explain “why [Hole Hiking’s] revenue
    projections are so much higher than historical projections and why some of the
    expense assumptions appear low,” Tab 31 at 1195; see also AR Tab 24 at 1140; (3)
    Hole Hiking’s pro forma income statement contained “numerous mistakes,” AR
    Tab 24 at 1140, including “mathematical errors,” Tab 31 at 1195; and, (4) Hole
    41
    Hiking’s balance sheet contained certain unspecified “anomalies,” AR Tab 43 at
    1346, which raised “concern[s]” regarding Hole Hiking’s financial position, AR
    Tab 24 at 1139.
    The NPS nevertheless concluded that these deficiencies were immaterial,
    and that “[t]he Panel was able to evaluate the proposal and conclude [that] Hole
    Hiking had the financial ability to carry out the terms and conditions of the
    contract.” AR Tab 43 at 1346. With respect to principal selection subfactor 4(a),
    the Park Service determined that “[a]lthough each AFR was missing a page, the
    panel was able to use the information provided [on the business history form and
    credit report] to estimate a positive net income.” AR Tab 43 at 1345.
    Additionally, the NPS concluded that “[a]lthough the current liability information
    supplied on the balance sheet was somewhat ambiguous, Hole Hiking’s credit
    report demonstrated that it had satisfied its liabilities in the past,” and, “[t]herefore,
    the panel concluded [that] Hole Hiking would have the operating income to satisfy
    its liabilities.” AR Tab 43 at 1345. With respect to principal selection subfactor
    4(b), the NPS simply noted that “Hole Hiking submitted the requested forms.” AR
    Tab 43 at 1346.
    Eco Tour argues that “Hole Hiking did not fully explain its assumptions that
    future revenues would be much higher than past levels and expenses would be very
    low,” and, therefore, the NPS arbitrarily and capriciously determined that the
    deficiencies in Hole Hiking’s financial documentation were immaterial. Pl.’s Mot.
    at 36. Eco Tour also asserts that Hole Hiking’s financial projections are “further
    suspect given that Hole Hiking reported total gross revenues in 2010/2011 of
    $21,835 based on 569 total tours,” resulting in approximately $38 of revenue per
    tour – which Eco Tour contends is “well below the approved rates” under Hole
    Hiking’s current contract (contract GRTE032-03). Id. at 36 n.9 (citing AR Tab 4
    at 23-24 (listing annual gross revenue for the last three seasons under contracts
    GRTE024-03 and GRTE032-03), and Tab 8 at 186 (listing approved rates under
    Hole Hiking’s current contract)); see also Tab 19 at 618 (listing Hole Hiking’s
    projected revenue per tour under contract GRTE032-13). Defendant offers no
    rebuttal other than to assert that Eco Tour “misreads the charts” on the prospectus,
    which show that Hole Hiking led only 294 tours during the 2010/2011 season
    resulting in approximately $74 of revenue per tour – which defendant implies is
    much closer to the approved rates under Hole Hiking’s current contract. Def.’s
    Mot. at 19 (citing AR Tab 4 at 23-24).
    42
    Here again, the court must agree with Eco Tour that the NPS failed to
    provide a rational basis for its determination that the errors and omissions in Hole
    Hiking’s financial information were immaterial. Although the NPS rationally
    determined that Hole Hiking’s omissions under principal selection subfactor 4(a)
    were immaterial (i.e., missing pages in the AFRs and ambiguous current liability
    information on the balance sheet) because the NPS could determine from the
    business history form and credit report that Hole Hiking had “satisfied its liabilities
    in the past,” AR Tab 43 at 1345, the NPS failed to even address the mathematical
    errors on Hole Hiking’s pro forma income statement and Hole Hiking’s
    unexplained revenue and expense projections. AR Tab 43 at 1346. Rather, the
    NPS merely stated, without explanation, that “Hole Hiking submitted the requested
    forms.” AR Tab 43 at 1346. The NPS’s failure to provide any explanation with
    respect to its materiality determination as to the pro forma income statement and
    operating assumptions is wholly arbitrary.
    For the aforementioned reasons, the court concludes that each of the NPS’s
    materiality determinations, as well as its resulting responsiveness determinations,
    was arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion. Therefore, the court must
    proceed to determine, as a factual matter, whether Eco Tour was prejudiced by the
    NPS’s arbitrary and unlawful conduct. See Bannum, 
    404 F.3d at 1351
    .
    4.     Prejudice Resulting from the NPS’s Responsiveness
    Determinations
    As noted, to demonstrate prejudice, Eco Tour must show a “substantial
    chance” that it would have received the disputed contracts if not for the NPS’s
    arbitrary and capricious responsiveness determinations. See 
    id. at 1353
    . The court
    concludes that Eco Tour has made such a showing because it submitted responsive
    proposals that received the highest cumulative scores of any of the proposals
    received by the NPS for the disputed contracts. AR Tab 23 at 1094, Tab 24 at
    1120, Tabs 28-29. Thus, in accordance with the regulations, there is a substantial
    chance that Eco Tour would have been awarded the disputed contracts if not for
    the errors alleged in the amended complaint. See 
    36 C.F.R. §§ 51.31
    , 51.33.
    B.     The Agency’s Disclosure of the Better Terms of Eco Tour’s
    Proposals (Count II)
    43
    With respect to Count II, presented as an alternative to Count I, Eco Tour
    argues that the NPS improperly disclosed to Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking the
    better terms of Eco Tour’s proposals in contravention of paragraph 4 of the
    prospectus instructions. Pl.’s Mot. at 8-15, 40-42; Pl.’s Reply at 20-21. That
    paragraph, titled “Proposals Considered Public Documents,” provides as follows:
    (a) All proposals submitted in response to this
    Prospectus may be disclosed by the Service to any
    person, upon request, to the extent required or authorized
    by the Freedom of Information Act (
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    ).
    (b) If you believe that your proposal contains trade
    secrets or confidential commercial or financial
    information exempt from disclosure under the Freedom
    of Information Act, mark the cover page of each copy of
    the proposal with the following legend:
    The information specifically identified on pages of this
    proposal constitutes trade secrets or confidential
    commercial or financial information that the Offeror
    believes to be exempt from disclosure under the Freedom
    of Information Act. The Offeror requests that this
    information not be disclosed to the public, except as may
    be required by law.
    You must specifically identify what you consider to be trade
    secret information or confidential commercial or financial
    information on the page of the proposal on which it appears,
    and you must mark each such page with the following legend:
    This page contains trade secrets or confidential
    commercial and financial information that the Offeror
    believes to be exempt from disclosure under the Freedom
    of Information Act, and which is subject to the legend
    contained on the cover page of this proposal.
    44
    (c) Information so identified will not be made public by
    the Service except in accordance with law.
    AR Tab 4 at 28. Eco Tour asserts that the NPS, in paragraph 4, “promised offerors
    . . . that it would not disclose confidential information included in the proposals.”
    Pl.’s Mot. at 40. Eco Tour further asserts that its “reasonable assumption . . . in
    light of [the] NPS’s unqualified agreement to not disclose confidential information
    was that [Eco Tour] would be provided with the opportunity to agree to have its
    confidential information disclosed to its competitor, but that it did not have to
    agree.” 
    Id. at 40-41
    . “If [Eco Tour] did not want this disclosure to occur, it would
    have the option of withdrawing its proposal.” 
    Id. at 41
    .
    Eco Tour argues that the NPS improperly disclosed Eco Tour’s confidential
    information – in contravention of paragraph 4 of the prospectus instructions, and in
    violation of the Procurement Integrity Act as well as the implied contract to
    consider bids fairly and honestly – by identifying the better terms and conditions of
    Eco Tour’s proposals in the NPS’s June 20, 2013 letters to Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking. 
    Id. at 15, 40-41
    . The allegedly confidential information disclosed to
    Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking
    related to Eco Tour’s policies as to minimizing idling
    time of its vehicles, ensuring it had maximized visitors’
    experiences through the use of binoculars, preventing or
    remedying spills of fluids from its vehicles, ensuring
    removal of human waste and other related waste,
    ensuring its guides had certifications and training to
    ensure the safety of all guests, the use of reusable
    products to minimize waste and quality control measures
    to ensure its guides were performing in an optimal
    manner.
    
    Id.
     at 41 (citing AR Tabs 30-31, Tab 37); see also 
    id. at 15
    . Eco Tour contends
    that it marked this information as confidential in accordance with paragraph 4 of
    the prospectus instructions, and therefore was entitled to prevent the disclosure of
    such information. 
    Id.
     at 9 (citing AR Tabs 21-22)); Pl.’s Reply at 20.
    45
    1.    Eco Tour Has Not Waived Its Unlawful Disclosure Claim
    Defendant argues, unpersuasively, that Eco Tour has waived its objection to
    the NPS’s disclosure of the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposals. Def.’s Mot. at
    23; Def.’s Reply at 14. The government’s waiver theory is premised upon its
    characterization of Count II as a challenge to the terms of the prospectus, which
    notified potential offerors that “[i]f an existing Concessioner submits a responsive
    proposal and that proposal is not selected as the best proposal, the Preferred
    Offeror designation allows it to match the terms of the best offer and be awarded
    the Contract.” AR Tab 4 at 24. Defendant contends that pursuant to this language
    in the prospectus, “Eco Tour . . . was on notice that ‘terms of the best offer’ could
    be disclosed” and, therefore, waived its right to object to this language by not
    objecting before the close of bidding. Def.’s Mot. at 23 (citing Blue & Gold Fleet,
    
    492 F.3d at 1313
    ). However, in Count II, Eco Tour does not object to any terms of
    the prospectus, but rather invokes the confidentiality provisions in paragraph 4 of
    the prospectus instructions. See Pl.’s Mot. at 8-15, 40-42; Pl.’s Reply at 20-21.
    Thus, defendant’s waiver theory with respect to Count II is without merit.
    2.    No Violation of the Procurement Integrity Act
    The government asserts that Count II fails to the extent that it arises under
    the Procurement Integrity Act because NPS concession contracts are not
    “procurement” contracts, as that term is defined by the Procurement Integrity Act.
    Def.’s Mot. at 23-24; Def.’s Reply at 14. The court agrees. The Procurement
    Integrity Act generally prohibits, “[e]xcept as provided by law,” the disclosure of
    “contractor bid or proposal information or source selection information before the
    award of a Federal agency procurement contract to which the information relates.”
    
    41 U.S.C. § 2102
    (a)(1). “Federal agency procurement” is defined under the statute
    as “the acquisition (by using competitive procedures and awarding a contract) of
    goods or services (including construction) from non-Federal sources by a Federal
    agency using appropriated funds.” 
    Id.
     § 2101(4). The disputed concession
    contracts do not satisfy that definition. First, as explained supra, the court
    concludes that NPS concession contracts, such as those in dispute in this bid
    protest, are not contracts for the procurement of goods and services. Second, even
    if NPS concession contracts did involve the acquisition of goods or services for the
    benefit of the government, they do not involve the expenditure of appropriated
    funds by the NPS. Rather, such contracts “provide for payment to the government
    46
    of a franchise fee or such other monetary consideration as determined by the
    Secretary.” 
    16 U.S.C. § 5956
    (a) (emphasis added); see also 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.78
    (“Concession contracts will provide for payment to the government of a franchise
    fee or other monetary consideration as determined by the Director upon
    consideration of the probable value to the concessioner of the privileges granted by
    the contract involved.”) (emphasis added). Therefore, the Procurement Integrity
    Act does not apply to Eco Tour’s bid protest.
    Additionally, defendant contends that even if the Procurement Integrity Act
    were applicable to the instant lawsuit, it has not been violated because the
    allegedly confidential information disclosed to Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking was
    already public knowledge. Def.’s Mot. at 24-26; Def.’s Reply at 14-15. Again, the
    court agrees with defendant. As noted, the Procurement Integrity Act applies only
    to the disclosure of “contractor bid or proposal information.” 
    41 U.S.C. § 2102
    (a)(1). The term “contractor bid or proposal information” is defined as certain
    types of information submitted to a federal agency in connection with a proposal to
    enter into a procurement contract “if that information previously has not been
    made available to the public or disclosed publicly.” 
    Id.
     § 2101(2). The NPS’s
    letters to Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking did not mention Eco Tour by name, nor
    did they disclose any information about the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposals
    that was not otherwise publicly known. See AR Tabs 30-31. The twelve better
    terms of Eco Tour’s proposals included: minimizing the idling of vehicles; using
    binoculars, spill kits, human waste removal bags, and reusable plates, utensils,
    mugs, and water bottles; disposing of waste outside the park; requiring guides to
    receive Wilderness First Responder certification and training in winter driving and
    the Wilderness Act; and, unannounced monitoring of guides. See AR Tab 30 at
    1190-91, Tab 31 at 1193-94. The availability of such practices, none of which
    involve the use of Eco Tour’s proprietary information or trade secrets, is within the
    realm of public knowledge. Indeed, as defendant notes, four of the twelve
    disclosed terms – the use of binoculars, spill kits, solid human waste removal bags,
    and disposal of trash outside the park – were already in use by one or both of the
    preferred offerors by the time the NPS sent its June 20, 2013 letters. See AR Tab
    19 at 578 (Hole Hiking’s proposal stating that “[w]e carry plastic bags and offer to
    guest[s] if needed for any refuse. . . . [and] then dispose[] of [such bags] in
    appropriate container[s],” and that “[w]e purchase environmentally approved
    products such as recyclable napkins and containers”), Tab 20 at 642 (Jackson
    Hole’s proposal stating that “[c]lients are educated on ‘Leave-No-Trace’ principles
    47
    and guides sweep all rest/break areas for waste before departing,” and that Jackson
    Hole “commits to including a set of binoculars in every guide pack”), Tab 20 at
    645 (Jackson Hole’s proposal stating that “[a]ll guides carry one emergency
    ‘wagbag’”), AR Tab 34 at 1204-05 (Jackson Hole’s response to the NPS’s June 20,
    2013 letter stating that Jackson Hole “currently supplies spill kits for all vehicles
    and commits to continuing to do so,” and that Jackson Hole “currently use[s] the
    Wag Bag Wastekit [human waste disposal] product” and “[a]ll guide packs are, and
    will continue to be, supplied with this product”), Tab 45 at 1405 (Hole Hiking’s
    response to the NPS’s June 20, 2013 letter stating that “[Hole Hiking] guides
    always carry a minimum of one pair of binoculars on each tour”).
    Eco Tour counters, unpersuasively, that the twelve better terms of Eco
    Tour’s proposals that were disclosed by the NPS were not publicly known because,
    if they were, Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking “would have included those policies in
    their proposals.” Pl.’s Mot. at 41; see also Pl.’s Reply at 21. Yet, of course, the
    fact that the preferred offerors did not include particular terms in their proposals
    does not prove that such terms were not publicly known. Next, Eco Tour asserts
    that, even if the twelve better terms of its proposals constitute public information
    when considered in isolation, its particular combination of such terms is a
    “confidential and strategic business decision.” Pl.’s Reply at 20. According to
    Eco Tour, “[s]imply because the public knows that some of those items exist does
    not mean that a company’s strategic decision to include them in its proposal is also
    public knowledge.” Id. at 20-21. This argument, too, is unpersuasive. Under Eco
    Tour’s argument, any business practice undertaken by a concessioner, no matter
    how commonly employed in the industry, would qualify as confidential so long as
    it is combined with other similarly common practices. This view is not in
    accordance with law. Although the court recognizes that a particular combination
    of individual pieces of information in the public domain may qualify as a trade
    secret if the combination is itself not generally known or not easily duplicated,14
    the combination of Eco Tour’s twelve better terms does not meet that standard. As
    noted above, none of these twelve better terms involved proprietary information or
    trade secrets, and four of the terms were already in use by Jackson Hole and Hole
    14
    / See, e.g., Comprehensive Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Software Artisans, Inc., 
    3 F.3d 730
    , 736-
    37 (4th Cir. 1993) (“[A]lthough a trade secret cannot subsist in information in the public domain,
    it can subsist in a combination of such information as long as the combination is itself a secret.”)
    (citations omitted), vacated pursuant to settlement and appeal dismissed, Sept. 30, 1993.
    48
    Hiking. Eco Tour has offered no evidence to support its view that the combination
    of the twelve better terms of its proposals was not generally known or not easily
    duplicated.
    For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that even if the Procurement
    Integrity Act were applicable to Eco Tour’s bid protest, it was not violated in this
    instance because none of the information disclosed to Jackson Hole and Hole
    Hiking constitutes “contractor bid or proposal information” as defined by the Act.
    Therefore, Count II fails to the extent that it is based upon an alleged violation of
    the Procurement Integrity Act.
    3.     No Breach of the Implied Contract to Consider Bids Fairly
    and Honestly
    The government also argues that Eco Tour has failed to prove that the NPS’s
    disclosure of the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposals breached the implied-in-fact
    contract to consider bids fairly and honestly. Def.’s Mot. at 27; Def.’s Reply at 16.
    Again, the court agrees with defendant. As noted, to recover under the implied
    contract for bids to be fairly and honestly considered, Eco Tour must establish that
    the NPS acted arbitrarily or capriciously, or abused its discretion. E.g., Southfork,
    
    141 F.3d at
    1132 (citing Keco II, 492 F.2d at 1203-04). Four factors are generally
    relevant to a determination of whether the government has breached the implied
    contract to consider bids fairly: (1) subjective bad faith on the part of the
    government; (2) the absence of a reasonable basis for the administrative decision;
    (3) the amount of discretion afforded to the procurement officials by applicable
    statutes and regulations; and (4) proven violations of pertinent statutes or
    regulations. Id.
    Eco Tour has not demonstrated that the agency’s disclosure of the better
    terms of Eco Tour’s proposals was motivated by bad faith, lacked a reasonable
    basis, or violated any statute or regulation. To the contrary, under the regulations,
    the NPS was required to “advise the preferred offeror of the better terms and
    conditions of the best proposal and permit the preferred offeror to amend its
    proposal to match them.” 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.32
    . The NPS’s June 20, 2013 letters to
    the preferred offerors complied with this regulatory provision.
    49
    Additionally, while paragraph 4 of the prospectus instructions provided that
    the NPS would not make public any information specifically marked in Eco Tour’s
    proposal as a trade secret or as “confidential commercial and financial
    information,” see AR Tab 4 at 28, Eco Tour failed to mark its proposals in
    accordance with paragraph 4. Specifically, Eco Tour failed to mark the cover
    pages of its proposals with the legend specified in paragraph 4(b), and also failed
    to specifically identify the allegedly confidential information in its proposals as
    required by paragraph 4(b). Compare AR Tab 4 at 28 (requiring the offeror to
    “mark the cover page of each copy of the proposal with the following legend” and
    to “specifically identify what you consider to be trade secret information or
    confidential commercial or financial information on the page of the proposal on
    which it appears”), with AR Tabs 21-22 (showing that Eco Tour’s proposals lack
    legends on cover pages and specific identification of confidential information).
    Although Eco Tour marked most pages of its proposals with the general disclaimer
    set forth in paragraph 4(b), it failed to satisfy the second requirement of paragraph
    4(b), which was to “specifically identify” the allegedly confidential information.
    See AR Tab 4 at 28 (“You must specifically identify what you consider to be trade
    secret information or confidential commercial or financial information on the page
    of the proposal on which it appears, and you must mark each such page with the
    following legend . . . .”) (emphasis added). Therefore, even if paragraph 4 would
    otherwise prohibit the NPS from disclosing Eco Tour’s properly identified
    confidential information, Eco Tour cannot take advantage of such protection after
    having failed to comply with the requirements of paragraph 4.
    4.    Eco Tour Has Not Demonstrated Prejudice Resulting from
    the Alleged Improper Disclosure
    Finally, the government contends that, even assuming that the NPS’s
    disclosure of the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposals violated the Procurement
    Integrity Act or breached the implied contract to consider bids fairly and honestly,
    Eco Tour has failed to demonstrate prejudice. The court must again agree with
    defendant. In its motion, Eco Tour asserts, without explanation, that the NPS’s
    disclosure caused Eco Tour unspecified “substantial harm.” Pl.’s Mot. at 41. Eco
    Tour reiterates this unsupported assertion in its reply brief and asserts that
    prejudice is “obvious.” Pl.’s Reply at 21 (“[B]y unilaterally disclosing these
    products and services to Eco Tour’s direct competitors and explicitly informing
    those competitors that their competitor offered a better proposal because of these
    50
    specific terms, NPS has now totally eliminated Eco Tour’s competitive advantage.
    That is obvious prejudice.”). These unsupported allegations of “substantial harm”
    and elimination of competitive advantage cannot satisfy Eco Tour’s burden to
    demonstrate that the government’s disclosure of the better terms of Eco Tour’s
    proposals deprived Eco Tour of a “substantial chance” of being awarded the
    disputed contracts. See Bannum, 
    404 F.3d at 1353
    .
    Eco Tour’s only specific allegation of prejudice is that the NPS deprived
    Eco Tour of the opportunity to “weigh the risks of having its confidential
    information handed over to its competitors” and to choose between “agree[ing] to
    have its confidential information disclosed to its competitor” or “withdrawing its
    proposal.” Pl.’s Mot. at 41. This allegation is likewise insufficient to demonstrate
    prejudice. As defendant correctly notes, “[a]n opportunity to withdraw from the
    competition would not have given Eco Tour a substantial chance of winning the
    competition.” Def.’s Mot. at 28.
    C.      The Agency’s Failure to Require Hole Hiking to Use Biodiesel
    Fuel (Count III)
    With respect to Count III, also presented as an alternative to Count I, Eco
    Tour argues that the NPS violated applicable law, acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously, and abused its discretion when it found that Hole Hiking had matched
    the better terms of Eco Tour’s proposal for contract GRTE032-13. Pl.’s Mot. at
    15-16, 39; Pl.’s Reply at 14-19. In its proposal, Eco Tour stated that it has used
    biodiesel fuel in all of its vehicles since 2008, AR Tab 22 at 937, and that, “[u]nder
    the new concession contract, [it] will use biodiesel in over 60 percent of [its]
    vehicles until 100 percent of the vehicles have been converted [to] compressed
    natural gas,” id. at 1086. Eco Tour contends that the NPS, by not requiring Hole
    Hiking to match this term of Eco Tour’s proposal, violated 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.32
    ,
    which requires the NPS to “advise the preferred offeror of the better terms and
    conditions of the best proposal and permit the preferred offeror to amend its
    proposal to match them.” Pl.’s Mot. at 39.15
    15
    / In contrast to Jackson Hole, which indicated in its proposal for contract GRTE024-13
    that it uses biodiesel [ ], see AR Tab 20 at 645, 668, Hole Hiking did not state in its proposal for
    contract GRTE032-13 that it uses any sort of alternative fuels [ ], see AR Tab 19 at 630.
    51
    In response, the government first argues that the NPS is not obligated to
    require Hole Hiking to use biodiesel in its vehicles in order to exercise a right of
    preference because doing so would violate 
    36 C.F.R. § 51.19
    , which prohibits the
    agency from awarding a concession contract which “materially amends” the terms
    and conditions of the draft concession contract set forth in the prospectus “[e]xcept
    for incorporating into the concession contract appropriate elements of the best
    proposal.” Def.’s Mot. at 21; Def.’s Reply at 11. In that regard, the government
    asserts that the utilization of alternative fuels in vehicles is not “appropriate” for
    the disputed contracts because such contracts are for cross-country ski tours, not
    vehicle-based tours. Def.’s Mot. at 21; Def.’s Reply at 11.
    Eco Tour argues, in rebuttal, that “the use of alternative fuel vehicles was
    appropriate and a better term in Eco Tour’s proposal” because it “result[s] in
    greatly reduced emissions, thus protecting the environment in and around Grand
    Teton National Park” in furtherance of the goals articulated under principal
    selection subfactor 1(a) and secondary selection factor 1. Pl.’s Reply at 14. The
    government responds that the only environmental practices required under
    principal selection subfactor 1(a) and secondary selection factor 1 are “those that
    protect the park from contamination,” and that the use of alternative fuels is but
    one of “numerous environmental practices in [Eco Tour’s] proposal” which “have
    nothing to do with protecting the park environment during a ski tour.” Def.’s
    Reply at 12-13.
    By way of background, principal selection subfactor 1(a) directs offerors to
    “describe how you will conduct your operations in a manner that will minimize
    disturbance to Park wildlife by addressing . . . [t]he measures you will take to
    minimize disruption of wildlife while conducting tours.” AR Tab 4 at 43.
    Secondary selection factor 1 is the “quality of the offeror’s proposal to conduct its
    operations in a manner that furthers the protection, conservation, and preservation
    of the park and other resources through environmental management programs and
    activities, including, without limitation, energy conservation, waste reduction, and
    recycling.” AR Tab 4 at 57 (emphasis added).
    Eco Tour’s argument regarding biodiesel is not without support in the
    record. In rating Eco Tour’s proposal for contract GRTE032-13 as “excellent”
    under principal selection subfactor 1(a), the evaluation panel noted that Eco Tour’s
    commitment to an “idle free policy” with its tour vehicles helped to “minimize
    52
    disruption of wildlife while conducting tours.” AR Tab 24 at 1122. The NPS also
    required Hole Hiking to match Eco Tour’s “idle free policy” because such a policy
    “minimize[s] any disturbance to wildlife from the sound of a running vehicle.” AR
    Tab 31 at 1193. In its proposal for contract GRTE032-13, Eco Tour stated that
    using biodiesel not only reduces total vehicle emissions, but also produces “less
    offensive” vehicle exhaust than petroleum-based fuel. AR Tab 22 at 937
    (“Biodiesel is a fuel made in this country that has safer emissions than regular fuel.
    Life cycle analysis completed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and
    later by Argonne National Laboratory, found that greenhouse gas emissions for
    biodiesel could be more than 52 percent lower than those from other petroleum
    products. In addition, the smell of exhaust is less offensive than petroleum
    exhaust.”), 1086 (“The biodiesel fuel we have used since 2008 is produced in
    Colorado and is made from used vegetable oil or soybean oil. The fuel releases
    carbon dioxide into the air in smaller quantities than does petroleum-based fuel.”).
    Thus, the record suggests that Eco Tour’s use of biodiesel fuel, like its “idle free
    policy,” may reduce the disturbance of wildlife in furtherance of the goals
    articulated under principal selection subfactor 1(a).
    Additionally, in rating Eco Tour’s proposal for contract GRTE032-13 as
    “very good” under secondary selection factor 1, the evaluation panel took into
    account Eco Tour’s “multiple company-wide policies and practices related to
    environmental stewardship, such as using biofuel, using ‘green’ cleaning products,
    and contributing to a carbon-offset fund.” AR Tab 24 at 1144 (emphasis added).
    Therefore, at least one of the goals articulated in the prospectus is the conservation
    of energy, and the NPS expressly recognized that Eco Tour’s use of biodiesel fuel
    furthered that goal.
    However, despite the foregoing, the court is unable to conclude that the NPS
    violated applicable law, acted arbitrarily or capriciously, or abused its discretion in
    not requiring Hole Hiking to use biodiesel or similar alternative fuels in its tour
    vehicles. First, in requiring the preferred offerors to adopt an “idle free policy”
    under principal selection subfactor 1(a), the NPS appears to have been primarily
    concerned with the disturbance caused by “the sound of a running vehicle.” AR
    Tab 31 at 1193. Even if biodiesel fuel produces “less offensive” vehicle exhaust
    than petroleum-based fuel, see AR Tab 22 at 937, the record contains no evidence
    that vehicles using biodiesel fuel produce less noise than vehicles using petroleum-
    53
    based fuel. Thus, the record does not establish that the use of biodiesel fuel
    achieves precisely the same environmental benefits as an “idle free policy.”
    Second, Eco Tour’s use of biodiesel fuel was but one of several “company-
    wide policies and practices related to environmental stewardship” that the NPS
    considered in its evaluation of Eco Tour’s proposal under secondary selection
    factor 1. AR Tab 24 at 1144. Other such policies and practices included utilizing
    “green” cleaning products and contributing to a carbon-offset fund. 
    Id.
     Under Eco
    Tour’s theory, the NPS should have required Hole Hiking to match each of these
    terms. That the NPS did not do so provides support for the government’s argument
    that the use of biodiesel fuel, like the use of “green” cleaning products and
    contributing to a carbon-offset fund, is outside the scope of the disputed contracts
    for guided cross-country ski tour concessions.
    Therefore, although Eco Tour’s use of biodiesel fuel could reasonably be
    viewed as furthering the goals articulated under principal selection subfactor 1(a)
    and secondary selection factor 1, Eco Tour has not shown that the NPS acted
    irrationally or arbitrarily in declining to require Hole Hiking to match this term,
    and the court will not second guess the agency’s technical determination in that
    regard. See, e.g., E.W. Bliss, 
    77 F.3d at 449
     (“[T]echnical ratings . . . involve
    discretionary determinations of procurement officials that a court will not second
    guess.”) (citations omitted); Omega World Travel, Inc. v. United States, 
    54 Fed. Cl. 570
    , 578 (2002) (“It is well settled that contracting officers are given broad
    discretion with respect to evaluation of technical proposals.” (citing E.W. Bliss, 
    77 F.3d at 449
    )); Electro-Methods, Inc. v. United States, 
    7 Cl. Ct. 755
    , 762 (1985)
    (“[W]here an agency’s decisions are highly technical in nature, . . . judicial
    restraint is appropriate and proper.” (citing Isometrics v. United States, 
    5 Cl. Ct. 420
    , 423 (1984))).16
    16
    / In reaching this conclusion, the court declines to consider Eco Tour’s citations to
    various extra-record evidence purportedly demonstrating that the use of alternative fuel was
    within the scope of the disputed contracts. Pl.’s Reply at 16-19 (citing a “Fact Sheet” available
    on the NPS website and two articles available on the Department of Energy website). As Eco
    Tour’s extra-record evidence is not necessary for effective judicial review, and would not alter
    the court’s analysis with respect to Count III even if the court were to consider it, the court grants
    defendant’s motion to strike such evidence. See, e.g., Axiom Res. Mgm’t, Inc. v. United States,
    
    564 F.3d 1374
    , 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
    54
    IV.   Eco Tour is Limited to a Recovery of Bid Preparation Costs
    Having determined that the NPS acted arbitrarily and capriciously in
    concluding that Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals were responsive, and
    that Eco Tour was prejudiced as a result, the court now turns to the issue of the
    relief to be granted. The government argues that the court lacks authority to grant
    Eco Tour’s requested injunctive and declaratory relief “because 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b) does not apply to concession contracts, and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a) provides
    for only monetary relief.” Def.’s Mot. at 28; see also Def.’s Reply at 17-20. For
    the reasons specified below, the court agrees that it lacks the authority to award
    injunctive or declaratory relief to Eco Tour. Therefore, Eco Tour is limited to an
    award of damages in the form of bid preparation costs.
    Except in narrow statutorily defined circumstances, the Court of Federal
    Claims lacks jurisdiction to award injunctive or declaratory relief. United
    Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians of Okla. v. United States, 
    480 F.3d 1318
    ,
    1326 n.5 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (citation omitted); Kanemoto v. Reno, 
    41 F.3d 641
    , 644-
    45 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (“The remedies available in [the Court of Federal Claims]
    extend only to those affording monetary relief; the court cannot entertain claims
    for injunctive relief or specific performance, except in narrowly defined, statutorily
    provided circumstances . . . .”); Terry v. United States, 
    103 Fed. Cl. 645
    , 656
    (2012); Leitner v. United States, 
    92 Fed. Cl. 220
    , 223 (2010) (“This Court may
    issue declaratory judgments or offer equitable relief only under an express grant of
    such jurisdiction in a federal statute.” (citing United States v. Testan, 
    424 U.S. 392
    ,
    398 (1976), and United States v. King, 
    395 U.S. 1
    , 4 (1969))). This court has
    statutory authority to award equitable relief in certain types of tax cases, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1507
     (2006); in “nonmonetary disputes” arising under the CDA, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(2); and, in procurement bid protests, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(2).
    Additionally, in cases where the equitable relief is “‘tied and subordinate to a
    money judgment,’” James v. Caldera, 
    159 F.3d 573
    , 580 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (quoting
    Austin v. United States, 
    206 Ct. Cl. 719
    , 723 (1975)), the court may “issue orders
    directing restoration to office or position, placement in appropriate duty or
    retirement status, and correction of applicable records,” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(2).
    The court concludes that none of these statutory provisions authorize the
    injunctive and declaratory relief requested by Eco Tour. As an initial matter, this
    case is not a tax case, nor does it invoke the CDA. Therefore, the first and second
    55
    statutory bases for equitable relief are inapplicable. Additionally, as set forth
    supra, the court finds that the disputed concession contracts are not procurement
    contracts, and thus section 1491(b) is inapplicable.
    Nor is Eco Tour entitled to injunctive or declaratory relief under section
    1491(a). In its reply brief, Eco Tour suggests that the court may grant equitable
    relief under section 1491(a)(2) because such relief would be “‘incident of and
    collateral’ to a monetary judgment.” Pl.’s Reply at 22-23 (quoting Voisin v. United
    States, 
    80 Fed. Cl. 164
    , 177-78 (2008)). Yet Eco Tour has not cited any case in
    which equitable relief was granted under section 1491(a)(2) in the context of a
    claim for breach of the implied contract to consider bids fairly and honestly.
    Additionally, the court concludes that Congress, by enacting ADRA in 1996,
    divested this court of authority to award equitable relief in bid protests pursued
    under an implied contract theory. Before the enactment of ADRA in 1996, this
    court’s jurisdiction over bid protests was predicated on an implied contract
    between the government and prospective bidders to treat bidders’ proposals fairly
    and honestly. See, e.g., Resource Conservation, 
    597 F.3d at 1242
    ; Emery
    Worldwide Airlines, 
    264 F.3d at 1078-80
     (explaining the “long and complicated”
    history of judicial review of government procurement decisions); Impresa, 
    238 F.3d at 1331-32
     (same); Southfork, 
    141 F.3d at 1132
    ; CACI, Inc.-Federal, 
    719 F.2d at 1573
    ; United States v. John C. Grimberg Co., 
    702 F.2d 1362
    , 1367 (Fed. Cir.
    1983); Keco Indus., Inc. v. United States, 
    428 F.2d 1233
    , 1237 (Ct. Cl. 1970)
    (Keco I).
    Until 1982, an aggrieved bidder asserting an implied contract claim “was
    typically limited to monetary relief such as bid preparation costs.” Impresa, 
    238 F.3d at
    1331 (citing Keco II, 492 F.2d at 1203, and Finley v. United States, 
    31 Fed. Cl. 704
    , 708 (1994)); see also Keco I, 
    428 F.2d at 1240
     (“[I]f it should be
    determined subsequently by the commissioner that plaintiff’s bid was not treated
    honestly and fairly by the Government, then plaintiff should be allowed to recover
    only those costs incurred in preparing its technical proposals and bid.”). In 1982,
    the court was first given authority to grant declaratory and injunctive relief in pre-
    award bid protests pursued under an implied contract theory. Federal Courts
    Improvement Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-164, sec. 133(a), § 1491(a)(3), 
    96 Stat. 25
    , 39-40. Such authority was formerly codified at 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(3), which
    provided, in pertinent part: “‘To afford complete relief on any contract claim
    56
    brought before the contract is awarded, the court shall have exclusive jurisdiction
    to grant declaratory judgments and such equitable and extraordinary relief as it
    deems proper, including but not limited to injunctive relief.’” Resource
    Conservation, 
    597 F.3d at
    1244 n.10 (quoting former section 1491(a)(3)).
    In 1996, however, Congress enacted ADRA, which “repealed former section
    1491(a)(3), and enacted its substance as section 1491(b)(2).” 
    Id.
     In so doing,
    Congress removed bid protest remedies from section 1491(a) and provided this
    court with a new, and independent, basis for bid protest jurisdiction in section
    1491(b), under which the Court of Federal Claims is authorized to award “any
    relief that the court considers proper, including declaratory and injunctive relief.”
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(2); see also Lion Raisins, Inc. v. United States, 
    52 Fed. Cl. 115
    , 118 (2002) (citations omitted).
    Although the Federal Circuit has not had occasion to rule on the issue of
    whether the Court of Federal Claims has authority, post-ADRA, to grant equitable
    relief in implied contract bid protests pursued under section 1491(a), this court has
    consistently answered that question in the negative. See Terry v. United States, 
    96 Fed. Cl. 131
    , 153 (2010) (citations omitted) (“Under section 1491(a)(1), plaintiff is
    precluded from obtaining equitable relief, which is only available for a section
    1491(b)(1) protest, and is limited to a recovery of monetary damages that comprise
    the costs she incurred while preparing her proposal.”), vacated in part on other
    grounds, 
    98 Fed. Cl. 736
     (2011); FAS Support, 93 Fed. Cl. at 694 (“The major
    difference between a protest brought under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (b)(1) and one
    brought pursuant to an implied contract under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(1) is the
    equitable relief which is available for the section 1491(b)(1) protest, but not for
    breach of the implied contract. Only monetary relief is available for breach of the
    implied contract, comprising the costs incurred in preparing the proposal and bid.”
    (citing Keco I, 
    428 F.2d at 1240
    )); Overstreet Elec. Co. v. United States, 
    47 Fed. Cl. 728
    , 731 n.5 (2000) (noting that a claim for breach of an implied-in-fact
    contractual obligation to consider and treat all bids fairly “no longer is the trigger
    for injunctive relief in this court”); W & D Ships Deck Works, Inc. v. United States,
    
    39 Fed. Cl. 638
    , 641 (1997) (“The repeal by [ADRA] . . . of § 1491(a)(3)
    eliminated this court’s statutory authority to grant equitable relief on the basis of
    the old implied contract theory.”); cf. L-3 Commc’ns Integrated Sys., L.P. v. United
    States, 
    94 Fed. Cl. 394
    , 397 (2010) (“Section 1491(a)(1) continues to allow any
    plaintiff, including a disappointed bidder, to invoke this Court’s general contract
    57
    jurisdiction to recover money damages, including bid preparation and proposal
    costs.”).
    While the court is not bound to follow its prior decisions concerning the
    availability of equitable relief in bid protests pursued under an implied contract
    theory, it finds the reasoning of those decisions to be persuasive. Simply put, if
    equitable relief was unavailable in implied contract bid protests pursued under
    section 1491(a) until the enactment of section 1491(a)(3) in 1982, and section
    1491(a)(3) was repealed with the enactment of ADRA in 1996, then it follows that
    equitable relief is again unavailable in implied contract bid protests pursued under
    section 1491(a). Accordingly, the court concludes that Eco Tour is precluded from
    obtaining injunctive and declaratory relief.
    In its reply brief, Eco Tour argues that “this Court has the explicit authority
    from Congress [under section 1491(a)(2)] to issue as declaratory relief an order
    remanding this matter to NPS with directions as to what this Court deems proper
    and just.” Pl.’s Reply at 23. Specifically, Eco Tour asks the court to “remand with
    a direction for NPS to review its decision that the preferred offerors’ proposals
    were responsive and, even if NPS continues to find such proposals responsive, to
    provide direction that Hole Hiking needs to match Eco Tour’s better terms.” 
    Id. at 24
    . The court rejects Eco Tour’s request for a remand.
    Even if the court were authorized to grant a remand under section 1491(a)(2)
    in connection with a bid protest pursued under an implied contract theory (an issue
    which is far from certain 17), Eco Tour’s requested remand is beyond the scope of
    any such authority. Eco Tour would shoehorn into the court’s ability to remand
    with “proper and just” directions unfettered authority for the court to issue
    essentially unlimited orders to the agency, such as requiring Hole Hiking to “match
    Eco Tour’s better terms.” Pl.’s Reply at 24. This treads beyond the proper scope
    of remand into the realm of injunctive relief. The power to remand with “proper
    and just” instructions cannot trump the unavailability of injunctive and declaratory
    relief under section 1491(a). See, e.g., Todd Const., L.P. v. United States, 
    88 Fed. Cl. 235
    , 245 (2009).
    17
    / Eco Tour cites no authority supporting the grant of a section 1491(a)(2) remand in the
    context of a bid protest pursued under an implied contract theory, and the court has found none.
    58
    For all of the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that Eco Tour is
    precluded from obtaining injunctive or declaratory relief and is limited to a
    recovery of monetary damages that comprise the costs Eco Tour incurred while
    preparing its proposal. Accordingly, the court need not consider the parties’
    remaining arguments concerning the particular equitable relief requested by Eco
    Tour.
    CONCLUSION
    The Park Service acted arbitrarily and capriciously in concluding that the
    financial information omitted from Jackson Hole’s and Hole Hiking’s proposals
    for the disputed contracts was immaterial, and therefore that Jackson Hole’s and
    Hole Hiking’s proposals were responsive to the requirements of the prospectus.
    Accordingly, in allowing Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking to match the better terms
    of Eco Tour’s proposals for the disputed contracts, the Park Service breached the
    implied contract for bids to be fairly and honestly considered. As Eco Tour
    submitted responsive proposals for the disputed contracts that received the highest
    cumulative scores of any of the proposals received by the Park Service, Eco Tour
    has demonstrated a “substantial chance” that it would have received the disputed
    contracts if not for the Park Service’s arbitrary and capricious responsiveness
    determination with regard to the proposals of Jackson Hole and Hole Hiking.
    Having established prejudice resulting from the Park Service’s arbitrary and
    capricious action, Eco Tour is entitled to judgment on the administrative record.
    The court encourages the parties to resolve the bid preparation costs issue
    amicably, preferably by stipulation as to an amount due Eco Tour. If such a
    resolution is not achieved, Eco Tour must file a motion and accompanying brief in
    support of its request for bid preparation costs. The parties are directed to confer
    to determine how they wish to proceed with respect to determining the amount of
    bid preparation costs Eco Tour is entitled to receive in light of the court’s
    resolution of this protest. The court also encourages the parties to explore and
    address the issue of attorney fees and costs in advance of any necessity to litigate
    that issue. Defendant shall file a status report as to the results of the parties’
    negotiations in that regard on or before January 6, 2014.
    59
    Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED that 18
    (1)    Plaintiff’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record, filed
    September 20, 2013, is GRANTED;
    (2)    Defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record, filed
    October 22, 2013, is DENIED;
    (3)    Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction, filed August
    15, 2013, is DENIED as moot;
    (4)    Defendant’s Motion to Strike References to Documents Outside of the
    Administrative Record Made Within Plaintiff’s Opposition to
    Defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record, filed
    November 1, 2013, is GRANTED;
    (5)    On or before December 20, 2013, counsel for the parties shall
    CONFER and FILE with the Clerk’s Office a redacted copy of this
    opinion, with any material deemed proprietary or confidential marked
    out and enclosed in brackets, so that a copy of the opinion can then be
    prepared and made available in the public record of this matter;
    (6)    On or before December 20, 2013, defendant shall FILE, as a separate
    UNSEALED document on CD-ROM, a redacted version of the
    administrative record filed August 12, 2013, as well as redacted
    versions of the supplements to the administrative record filed on
    September 6, 2013 and October 1, 2013, so as to establish a proper
    public record of this protest;
    (7)    The parties shall CONFER and attempt a resolution of plaintiff’s
    requests for bid preparation costs and attorney fees and costs; and
    18
    / In ¶ 5 of the ordering language in the sealed version of this opinion issued on
    November 26, 2013, the court directed the entry of final judgment in favor of plaintiff.
    However, because the quantum of Eco Tour’s bid preparation costs has yet to be determined, the
    court defers entry of final judgment pending the court’s final disposition regarding Eco Tour’s
    bid preparation costs.
    60
    (8)   On or before January 6, 2014, defendant shall FILE a Status Report
    as to the results of the parties’ negotiations regarding plaintiff’s
    requests for bid preparation costs and attorney fees and costs.
    /s/Lynn J. Bush
    LYNN J. BUSH
    Senior Judge
    61
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-532C

Citation Numbers: 114 Fed. Cl. 6, 2013 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1919, 2013 WL 6503556

Judges: Bush

Filed Date: 12/12/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (38)

Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railway Co. v. Swan , 4 S. Ct. 510 ( 1884 )

Keco Industries, Inc. v. The United States , 428 F.2d 1233 ( 1970 )

E.W. Bliss Company v. United States , 77 F.3d 445 ( 1996 )

Stratos Mobile Networks Usa, LLC v. United States, and ... , 213 F.3d 1375 ( 2000 )

Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United States , 238 F.3d 1324 ( 2001 )

Emery Worldwide Airlines, Inc. v. United States and Federal ... , 264 F.3d 1071 ( 2001 )

Resource Conservation Group, LLC v. United States , 597 F.3d 1238 ( 2010 )

marion-kanemoto-richard-tsutakawa-robert-tsutakawa-mildred-fukumoto , 41 F.3d 641 ( 1994 )

Anthony R. Hambsch, III v. United States , 857 F.2d 763 ( 1988 )

United States, Appellant/cross-Appellee v. John C. Grimberg ... , 702 F.2d 1362 ( 1983 )

Honeywell, Inc. v. The United States v. Haz-Tad, Inc. , 870 F.2d 644 ( 1989 )

Centech Group, Inc. v. United States , 554 F.3d 1029 ( 2009 )

National Park Hospitality Association v. Department of the ... , 123 S. Ct. 2026 ( 2003 )

Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United States, Inc. v. State ... , 103 S. Ct. 2856 ( 1983 )

Alfa Laval Separation, Inc. v. United States, and Westfalia ... , 175 F.3d 1365 ( 1999 )

Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment , 118 S. Ct. 1003 ( 1998 )

John C. Grimberg Company, Inc. v. United States , 185 F.3d 1297 ( 1999 )

M. Steinthal & Co., Inc. v. Robert J. Seamans, Jr., ... , 455 F.2d 1289 ( 1971 )

Alabama Aircraft Industries, Inc.—Birmingham v. United ... , 586 F.3d 1372 ( 2009 )

comprehensive-technologies-international-incorporated-v-software , 3 F.3d 730 ( 1993 )

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