If the Government exercises the authority provided in 239.7305(d) to limit disclosure of information, no action undertaken by the Government under such authority shall be subject to review in a bid protest before the GAOor in any Federal court (see subpart 239.73).
資料由法律人 LawPlayer整理提供·U.S. federal law / curated by LawPlayer from GPO govinfo & eCFR
PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS
(c) Protests after award. (1) In lieu of the time periods in FAR 33.104(c)(1), contracting officers shall immediately suspend performance or terminate the awarded contract, task order, or delivery order upon notice from the GAO of a protest filed within the time periods listed in paragraphs (c)(1)(A) through (D) of this section, whichever is later, except as provided in FAR 33.104(c)(2) and (3)—
(A) Within 10 days after the date of contract award;
(B) Within 10 days after the date a task order or delivery order is issued, where the value exceeds $25 million (10 U.S.C. 3406(f));
(C) Within 5 days after a debriefing date offered to the protestor under a timely debriefing request in accordance with FAR 15.506 regardless of whether the protestor rejected the offered debriefing date, unless an earlier debriefing date is negotiated as a result; or
(D) Within 5 days after a postaward debriefing under FAR 15.506 is concluded in accordance with 215.506-70(b).
Follow the procedures at PGI 233.170 for briefing protested acquisitions valued at $1 billion or more.
Follow the procedures at PGI 233.171 for reporting information on protests involving the same contract award or proposed award that have been filed at both the GAO and the United States Court of Federal Claims.
See 10 U.S.C. 3862 for limitations on Congressionally directed payment of a claim under 41 U.S.C. chapter 71 (Contract Disputes), a request for equitable adjustment to contract terms, or a request for relief under Public Law 85-804.
See PGI 233.210 for guidance on reviewing a contractor's claim.
Use Alternate I of the clause at FAR 52.233-1, Disputes, when—
(1) The acquisition is for—
(i) Aircraft
(ii) Spacecraft and launch vehicles
(iii) Naval vessels
(iv) Missile systems
(v) Tracked combat vehicles
(vi) Related electronic systems;
(2) The contracting officer determines that continued performance is—
(i) Vital to the national security, or
(ii) Vital to the public health and welfare; or
(3) The head of the contracting activity determines that continued performance is necessary pending resolution of any claim that might arise under or be related to the contract.
Use the clause at 252.233-7001, Choice of Law (Overseas), in solicitations and contracts when contract performance will be outside the United States and its outlying areas, unless otherwise provided for in a government-to-government agreement.
Cite this law
PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS (U.S.C.). Retrieved via LawPlayer, https://lawplayer.com/us/act/cfr-title-48-part-233
United States government works (U.S. Code, Code of Federal Regulations) are in the public domain under 17 U.S.C. § 105.
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