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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF DECEMBER 30,1998 PSA#2252Defense Supply Service-Washington, 5200 Army Pentagon, Rm. 1D245,
Washington, DC 20310-5200 A -- R&D BROAD AGENCY ANNOUNCEMENT DUE 031999 POC Carole Mattice,
Contract Specialist (703) 697-6259 and/or Joyce Rose, Supr. Contract
Specialist, (703)695-2564 BAA SUBJECT: NGP Research Element 4.D-c New
Technologies for Rapid Flooding with Aerosol Agents BROAD AGENCY
ANNOUNCEMENT -- The Executive Director, Strategic Environmental
Research and Development Program (SERDP), is soliciting proposals under
NGP Research Element 4.D-c New Technologies for Rapid Flooding with
Aerosol Agents. [NOTE: In addition to this BAA, proposals will be also
be solicited within the Government by the SERDP Executive Director.]
BACKGROUND: Halon 1301, used for fire extinguishment and explosion
suppression applications in fielded weapon systems and mission-critical
facilities, has been banned from national production due to its high
ozone-depleting potential. Alternatives developed by industry to date
have sizable weight and volume penalties, and their application to
fielded current weapons systems could require expending large amounts
of funding and time. Consequently, the DoD has embarked on an
aggressive new R&D program -- the Next-Generation Fire Suppression
Technology Program (NGP) -- under the technical direction and oversight
of the Office of the Director, Defense Research and
Engineering/Platform and Materials Technology (ODDR&E/PMT). The NGP
goal is to develop and demonstrate, by 2005, retrofitable, economically
feasible, environmentally-friendly and user-safe processes, techniques,
and fluids that meet the operational requirements currently satisfied
by halon 1301 systems in aircraft, ships, land combat vehicles, and
critical mission support facilities. The results will be specifically
applicable to fielded weapons systems, and will provide dual-use fire
suppression technologies for preserving both life and operational
assets. Successful candidates must perform satisfactorily in tests for
a wide variety of properties, including those reviewed by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). An initial survey of fires for
which the DoD currently uses halon 1301 shows an extremely broad range
of fire conditions and several distinct hazards to be avoided. The
Military Departments and other participating government agencies will
conduct research projects within the NGP, and proposals accepted from
industry or academia for NGP research projects will be incorporated
into these programs. Additional information on the NGP, including
preliminary information about the types of fires to be suppressed, may
be found on the Internet Web site http://www.dtic.mil/ddre/, under
"Science and Technology Programs," at document "The Next-Generation
Fire Suppression Technology: Strategy for a National Program," dated
July 1996. The NGP Technical Point of Contact is Dr. Richard G. Gann,
Technical Program Manager (TPM), NGP, National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST), e-mail (preferred): rggann@nist.gov, phone:
(301) 975-6866; fax: (301) 975-4052. A. BAA OBJECTIVE: To identify and
demonstrate (proof of concept of) the effectiveness of new techniques
for rapid dispersion of aerosol suppressants. B. EXPECTED PAYOFF:
Improving the ability of suppressants to fill the volume being
protected will enable a greater range of agents to be considered for
use in cluttered spaces and where small fires must be extinguished with
confidence. C. BACKGROUND: Fine mist/particle systems can offer
efficient storage and suppression. Misting also expands the range of
potential chemicals to include those with high boiling points. However,
fine droplets and particles have proven slow and inefficient at
quenching small flames and flames that are heavily obstructed. For
ground vehicles and aircraft dry bays, dispersion times of under 1/4
second are needed. For small, obstructed fires in shipboard machinery
spaces, agent coverage in 10 seconds is desirable. D. ESTIMATED COST
AND DURATION OF PROPOSED WORK: The government estimate of the cost and
time to meet the requirements of this SON is $200,000 for one year. It
is expected that 2-4 projects might be supported within the estimated
resources. Proposers should not consider these estimates to be either
minima or maxima; they are provided only as estimates around which
reasonable proposals may be developed. It also should be understood
that the government reserves the right to fund more than one proposal
either to meet this requirement fully or to pursue more than one
innovative approach; the reasonable total cost of which might be more
or less than the government estimate. The government will consider
proposals which offer technical or cost advantages but only meet
partial technical requirements of this Research Element. Estimated
additional funding (cost sharing) from performing organizations:
colleges/ universities and small business firms -- 10% of total
request; all others -- 33% of total request. SUBMISSIONS: Offerers are
encouraged to submit concise, but descriptive, proposals. Proposals
for FY 2000 contract awards will be accepted until 3:00 PM EST on 19
March 1999. The proposal, including the original signed copy, six
additional copies, and one copy on a 3 " diskette (DOS-formatted, with
text in a convertible word processor), all referencing BAA 4d-c and
must be submitted to: Brenda J. Batch, Administrative Officer, SERDP
Program Office, 901 North Stuart Street, Suite 303, Arlington, Virginia
22203, TEL: (703) 696-2123; FAX: (703) 696-2114. All technical
questions concerning this BAA should be addressed to Dr. Richard G.
Gann. PROPOSALS SENT BY FAX OR E-MAIL WILL BE REJECTED. Proposals will
be selected through a technical/scientific/business decision process
with technical and scientific considerations being most important.
Individual proposal evaluations will be based on acceptability or
non-acceptability without regard to other proposals submitted under the
announcement; however, due to budgetary constraints, all acceptable
proposals may not be funded. No award will be made without a proposal
to perform the specific effort within an estimated cost and time
framework. Offerers, if selected, must be willing to cooperate and
exchange information in an integrated program with other contractors
chosen by the TPM. PROPOSAL CONTENT: Proposals shall consist of two
separate parts. Part I shall provide the technical proposal and
management approach, and Part II shall address costs. The proposals
shall be prepared on 8.5 x 11 inch paper, with one and one-half line
spacing or double spaced, in at least 10-point type. Part I of the
proposal should, as a minimum, describe the proposed concept
thoroughly. This should include naming the proposed chemical(s) or
technology, indicating why there is reason to believe it will be
effective, and showing the types of fires for which its use is
suggested. In addition, the document should describe the experiments
proposed to obtain the proof of concept and the criteria for success,
and the performance schedule. In particular, Part I of the proposal
shall include: (a) a cover page including BAA number, proposal title,
technical and administrative points of contact including mailing
addresses, telephone numbers, electronic mail addresses, and facsimile
machine numbers; (b) a one-page summary identifying any technical
ideas to be pursued and their expected impact on the state of the art
and the NGP; (c) a statement of work, detailing the scope of the
proposed work and specific utilization of subcontractors; (d) a
description of results, products, and transferable technology expected
from the project; (e) a list of the milestones and schedule; (f) a
statement of the technical rationale that substantiates the schedule
and justifies the overall technical approach of the proposal; (g) a
(not-to-exceed) one-page summary of any proprietary claims to results,
prototypes, or systems supporting and/or necessary for the use of the
research, results, and/or prototype (if there are no proprietary
claims this section shall consist of a statement to that effect); (h)
a section describing relevant capabilities, accomplishments, and work
in these or closely related areas along with the qualifications of
proposed subcontractors; (i) a management plan describing the overall
approach to management of this effort, including brief discussions of
total organizations, use of personnel, project/function/subcontractor
relationships, government research and facility interface, and
planning, scheduling and control practices. Part I must be no longer
than 10 pages in length, including up to one appendix for figures.
Foldouts shall be counted as a single page. The contents of the
appendix shall be limited to figures that directly support items
discussed in the text of the proposal. If items are included in the
appendix which are not covered in the basic proposal, the proposal may
not be reviewed. Proposals with Part I in excess of 10 pages may not
be reviewed. Proposals of fewer than the maximum number of pages will
not be penalized. Part II of the proposal shall be no longer than 10
pages and shall include a one page summary. Costs shall be supported by
detailed breakdowns of labor hours by labor category and
tasks/subtasks, materials, travel, computer and other direct and
indirect costs. An explanation of any estimating factors, including
their derivation and application, shall be provided. Details of any
cost sharing to be undertaken by the Offerer should also be included in
the cost section. [See APPENDIX A of this BAA for additional
requirements and amplifying information concerning preparation of Part
II cost data.] ABSTRACT: Offerers, either individual or teamed, are
strongly encouraged to submit a two-page abstract of their proposed
work to preclude unwarranted effort (a) on the part of an Offerer in
preparing a full proposal and (b) on the part of the Government, in
reviewing one. Page one shall be a title page clearly labeled "PROPOSAL
ABSTRACT" and including this BAA number, proposal title, plus Offerer's
administrative and technical points of contact along with mailing
addresses, telephone and facsimile numbers, e-mail addresses, and the
signature of an authorized officer. The second page should include a
summary of the technical ideas proposed and their anticipated
deliverables, and total cost. The abstract shall be on 8.5 x 11 inch
paper, with one and one-halfline spacing or double spaced, in at least
10-point type. The original and one copy of each abstract shall be
received no later than 3:00 p.m. January 19, 1999, by the SERDP Program
Office, 901 North Stuart Street, Suite 303, Arlington, Virginia 22203,
TEL: 703-696-2117; FAX: 703-696-2114. A copy of the abstract should
also be sent -- preferably by e-mail -- to the Technical Point of
Contact, Dr. Richard G. Gann, by the same date. An abstract is not a
requirement for submission or selection of a proposal. Any Offerer
whose abstract is found to be consistent with the intent of this BAA
will be invited by February 12, 1999, to submit a full technical and
cost proposal. Such an invitation does not assure subsequent contract
award. Regardless of the recommendation, the decision to submit or not
submit a proposal is the responsibility of the Offerer.
EVALUATION/AWARD PROCESS: Evaluation of the abstracts and proposals
will be performed using the following criteria, listed in descending
order of relative importance: (1) technical quality and originality of
the proposed research; (2) relevance to the NGP goal and impact on the
goal if successful; (3) the Offeror's capabilities, related experience,
facilities, techniques, or unique combinations thereof, which are
integral factors for achieving the proposed objectives; and (4) the
appropriateness of the budget to accomplishing the work proposed under
this BAA. Proposals will be evaluated and ranked by a Peer Review
Panel chaired by the NGP TPM. Dr. Richard G. Gann, the NGP Technical
Program Manager (TPM) and Chairman of the NGP Technical Coordinating
Committee (TCC), will Chair the Peer Review Panel selected by the TPM.
The Panel will be composed of three or more evaluators. Each proposal
will be evaluated and ranked by at least three Panel members. The NGP
TPM/TCC will review the Panel results and consider acceptable
proposals that best meet the programmatic needs of the NGP, as
advertised in the BAA. The NGP TPM/TCC will recommend to the SERDP
Executive Director, through the Halon Alternatives R&D Steering Group
(HASG) and the SERDP Pollution Prevention Thrust Area Working Group
(PP/TTAWG), a subset of the acceptable proposals for award which will
construct a balanced program, meeting the needs of the NGP. These
recommended proposals will then be reviewed by the SERDP Scientific
Advisory Board (SAB). The mission of the SAB is to review all proposed
SERDP-funded projects and, based on the projects' technical merit and
funding, make appropriate selection recommendations to the SERDP
Council. The TPM will make a concise presentation of the proposals to
the SAB, usually in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. Principal
investigators of the recommended projects may attend, as coordinated
with the TPM, who will provide specific guidance for this presentation,
including date, time, and location. Contract award selections will be
recommended by the SERDP Executive Director to the SERDP Council, which
will approve the FY 2000 SERDP new-start projects prior to 1
October1999. The Defense Supply Service-Washington (DSS-W) Contracts
Office, the contracting agency for the NGP, will make contract awards
within a reasonable period of time. A Military Department or NIST
official will be designated a Contracting Officer's Representative
(COR) for each contract, as recommended by the NGP TPM. It is the
policy of the SERDP Program Office and the DSS-W Contracts Office to
treat all proposals as competitive and proprietary information and to
disclose the contents only for the purpose of evaluation. The
Government may use selected support contractor personnel as special
resources to assist in administering the evaluation of the proposals.
These persons are restricted by their contracts from disclosing the
proposal information or using it for other than performing their
assigned administrative task. Contractor personnel are required to sign
non-disclosure statements. By submission of your proposal, you agree
that your proposal information may be disclosed to these selected
contractors for the limited purpose stated above. Any information
submitted with your proposal that you do not consent to limited release
to these contractors must be clearly marked and submitted segregated
from other proposal material. This announcement constitutes a Broad
Agency Announcement as contemplated in FAR 6.102(d)(2). There will be
no formal request for proposals or other solicitations outside the
Government regarding this announcement. The Government reserves the
right to select for award all, some, or none of the proposals received
in response to this announcement. All responsible sources may submit
a proposal which shall be considered. Historical Black Colleges and
Universities (HBCU) and Minority Institutions (MI) are encouraged to
submit proposals and join others in submitting proposals; however, no
portion of this BAA will be set aside for HBCU and MI participation due
to the impracticality of reserving discrete or severable areas of NGP
technology for exclusive competition among these entities. Points of
contact at the Defense Supply Service Washington: Carole Mattice,
Contract Specialist (703) 697-6259 and/or Joyce Rose, Supervisory
Contract Specialist, (703) 695-2564. Detail concerning additional
requirements and amplifying information for preparation of Part II Cost
Data can be found at NGP's Web Site; the address is
http://www.dtic.mil/ngp/solicitation/html Cost Estimate: An estimate of
the total research project cost, with a break down of direct and
indirect funds by category and year, must accompany each formal
proposal (PART II). Multiple-year proposals are encouraged to cover the
total estimated duration of the project, as appropriate. Incremental
funds will be provided by SERDP to successful proposers for effort
performed during each Federal fiscal year, given that sufficient funds
are provided to SERDP and the defense requirements indicate that the
research is a continuing priority. Costs proposed must conform with the
following regulations and principles: Commercial firms: Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Part 31 and Defense FAR Supplement Part
31, Contract Cost Principles and Procedures. Educational Institutions:
OMB Circulars A-21 and A-88. Nonprofit Organizations: OMB Circulars
A-122, and A-133. The budget estimate must include the following: a.
Direct Labor Costs: Show the current and projected salary amounts in
terms of man-hours, man-months or annual salary to be charged by the
PI(s), research associates and assistants, and the total amount per
year to be paid to each from the project. State the number of man-hours
used to calculate a man-month or man-year. For proposals from
universities, the time and amounts to be charged should be identified
by academic year and summer effort. The proposal must identify the
basis for the direct labor hours or percentage of effort, e.g.,
historical hours or estimates, as well as rates and salaries. Labor
costs should be predicated upon actual labor rates or salaries. These
estimates may be adjusted upward for forecast salary or wage
cost-of-living increases that will occur during the contract period. b.
Fringe Benefits and Indirect Cost Rates, c. Major Equipment: 1) It is
DoD's policy that commercial and nonprofit contractors provide the
equipment needed to support proposed research. Where specific
additional equipment is approved, approved costs shall be
"non-fee-bearing." 2) An itemized list with cost of permanent equipment
is required. Permanent equipment is an article of nonexpendable
tangible property having a useful life of more than 2 years and an
acquisition cost of $500 or more per unit. The basis must be disclosed,
such as a Vendor Quote or Historical Cost. : d) Special test equipment
to be fabricated by the contractor for specific research purposes and
its cost. e) Standard equipment to be acquired and modified to meet
specific requirements, including acquisition and modification costs,
listed separately. f) Existing equipment to be modified to meet
specific research requirements, including modification costs. Do not
include as special test equipment those items of equipment that, if
purchased by the contractor with contractor funds, would be capitalized
for Federal income tax purposes. d. Materials and Supplies. e.
Subcontracts. f. Travel Costs: List and detail all proposed travel.
Project Principal Investigators will be required to attend the NGP
Annual Research Meeting in the Washington, D.C. Metro Area, to present
their research findings. The meeting duration is 3 days in the
June/July time-frame. Travel to scientific meetings requires
identification and purpose. For planning purposes, SERDP may require
PIs to attend up to four meetings each year. g. Publication and Report
Costs. h. Consultant Costs. i. Other Direct Costs, and j. Fixed Fee.
Posted 12/28/98 (W-SN283574). (0362) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0002 19981230\A-0002.SOL)
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