34 Tex. Admin. Code § 67.201 - Procedures Governing Bid Protests

(a) A vendor who is aggrieved by the solicitation, evaluation, or award of a contract may file a formal written protest with the Director of Procurement and Contract Oversight. Formal protests must conform to the requirements of this subsection, subsections (c) and (d), and, when applicable, subsection (e) of this section, and shall be resolved in accordance with subsections (f) - (h) of this section. A protest must be emailed or mailed as specified on the ERS website or hand delivered to ERS during regular business hours.
(b) If the Executive Director determines that the award of a contract without delay is necessary to protect the best interests of ERS, the agency may proceed with the award despite a timely protest.
(c) A formal protest must be sworn and contain:
(1) a list of every statutory and regulatory provision that is alleged to have been violated;
(2) a specific description of every act that is alleged to have violated the listed statutory and regulatory provisions;
(3) a precise statement of relevant facts;
(4) a precise statement of every issue of law and fact that the protesting party contends must be resolved; and
(5) argument and authorities in support of the protest.
(d) To be considered timely, the protest must be received:
(1) by the last day of the posted solicitation period, if the protest concerns the solicitation;
(2) by the day of the contract award, if the protest concerns the evaluation; or
(3) no later than 10 business days after the date that ERS issued notice of award, if the protest concerns the award.
(e) If a protest is not resolved by mutual agreement, the Director of Procurement and Contract Oversight shall issue a written determination.
(f) A protesting party may submit a written appeal of a protest determination to the Deputy Executive Director. An appeal must be emailed or mailed as specified on the ERS website or hand delivered to ERS during regular business hours and must be received by ERS no later than 10 business days after the date that ERS issued notice of the determination. Any appeal shall be limited to the matters timely raised in writing in the formal protest.
(g) An untimely appeal shall not be considered unless the appealing party demonstrates good cause for the untimeliness. "Good Cause" means that a person's failure to act was not because of a lack of due diligence the exercise of which would have caused a reasonable person to take prompt and timely action. A failure to act based on ignorance of the law or facts reasonably discoverable through the exercise of due diligence does not constitute good cause.
(h) A protesting party may appeal a protest determination only to the Deputy Executive Director, and the determination of the Deputy Executive Director shall not be subject to further appeal or judicial review.

Notes

34 Tex. Admin. Code § 67.201
Adopted by Texas Register, Volume 40, Number 51, December 18, 2015, TexReg 9304, eff. 12/24/2015; Amended by Texas Register, Volume 42, Number 36, September 8, 2017, TexReg 4655, eff. 9/12/2017; Amended by Texas Register, Volume 50, Number 15, April 11, 2025, TexReg 2436, eff. 4/16/2025

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