Or. Admin. Code § 137-047-0740 - Protests and Judicial Review of Contract Award
(1) Purpose. An Offeror may protest the Award
of a Contract, or the intent to Award of a Contract, whichever occurs first, if
the conditions set forth in ORS 279B.410(1) are satisfied. An Offeror must file
a Written protest with the Contracting Agency and exhaust all administrative
remedies before seeking judicial review of the Contracting Agency's Contract
Award decision.
(2) Delivery.
Unless otherwise specified in the Solicitation Document, an Offeror must
deliver a Written protest to the Contracting Agency within seven (7) Days after
the Award of a Contract, or issuance of the notice of intent to Award the
Contract, whichever occurs first.
(3) Content of Protest. An Offeror's Written
protest shall specify the grounds for the protest to be considered by the
Contracting Agency pursuant to ORS 279B.410(2).
(4) Contracting Agency Response. The
Contracting Agency shall not consider an Offeror's Contract Award protest
submitted after the timeline established for submitting such protest under this
rule, or such different time period as may be provided in the Solicitation
Document. The Contracting Agency shall issue a Written disposition of the
protest in a timely manner as set forth in ORS 279B.410(4). If the Contracting
Agency upholds the protest, in whole or in part, the Contracting Agency may in
its sole discretion either Award the Contract to the successful protestor or
cancel the Procurement or solicitation.
(5) Judicial Review. Judicial review of the
Contracting Agency's decision relating to a Contract Award protest shall be in
accordance with ORS 279B.415.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 279A.065 & 279B.410
Stats. Implemented: ORS 279B.410 & 279B.415
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.