GSA releases Millennia Lite RFP

The General Services Administration this week released the final request for proposals on its latest multibilliondollar contract for information technology services and plans to use performance to determine whether a vendor receives a contract extension.

The General Services Administration this week released the final request for proposals on its latest multibillion-dollar contract for information technology services and plans to use performance to determine whether a vendor receives a contract extension.

The $20 billion Millennia Lite contract is the companion contract to the GSA Federal Technology Service's $25 billion Millennia indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract. Under Millennia Lite, vendors will provide IT services in four areas: IT planning and studies under assessment; high-end IT services; services related to current regional mission support services; and legacy systems migration and new enterprise systems development. Responses are due Dec. 6.

Millennia Lite marks GSA's first use of a contracting method developed by the Air Force called award-term contracting. Award-term contracting is a form of performance-based contracting similar to award-fee contracting in which a vendor is rewarded for good performance. Rather than paying a vendor for meeting certain performance measures, under award-term contracting a vendor's contract term can be extended, shortened or cut off completely.

GSA has developed a 12-page document describing and defining the responsibilities of vendors and an award-term organization made up of a contract-term official and award-term review board. Each vendor will start out with an award of three years that can be extended to more than 10 years. The award-term organization will review each contract after 18 months and then once every year on a series of criteria to decide whether to give the vendor an extension of one year.

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