RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT THE ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD
Before the court are Plaintiffs Motion to Supplement the Administrative Record (“motion to supplement”); Intervenor QSS’s Motion to Admit Harm Declaration of Wil
I. GCE’S MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT
In its motion to supplement, GCE seeks to include “documents and declarations beyond the limited record filed by the agency.” Pl.’s Mot. Supplement Administrative R. (“Pl.’s Mot.”)
Among the documents GCE seeks to incorporate into the administrative record are declarations of several GCE employees. See, e.g., Pl.’s App. 1-46 (containing declarations of GCE’s president and CEO, chief strategy officer, and director of financial systems), 922-85 (containing supplemental declarations of GCE’s president and CEO, chief strategy officer, and director of financial systems, as well as declarations from GCE’s United States Secret Service TOPS Project Manager and a former GCE project manager). Additionally, GCE seeks to incorporate various other materials, including previous federal financial systems solicitation awards, see Pl.’s App. 302-504, and other legal, regulatory, and agency documents.
A. GCE’s Arguments
GCE asserts in this case that Modifications 30 and 32 to the SETS II task order are unlawful. Compl. ¶¶ 32, 35, 50-63. It relies, in part, upon AT&T Communications, Inc. v. Wiltel, Inc.,
In its complaint, GCE alleges that audit-supporting federal financial management system services differ from mission and administrative support information technology (“IT”) services, which it maintains were provided under the SETS II task order. Compl. ¶ 10. GCE claims that audit-supporting federal fi-
[t]he central question here is whether Modifications 30 and 32 to the [SETS II] task order exceeded the scope of that order, thereby working an unlawful standalone sole-source procurement beyond the ordering period of the underlying ID/IQ contract. To answer that question, the Court must ask whether “potential bidders” for [the] SETS II [task order] “would have expected” the financial management systems IT work encompassed in Modifications 30 and 32 to fall within the scope of the task order. This inquiry is necessarily an “objective one viewed from the perspective of potential bidders for the first procurement.”
The Government-filed administrative record “would not, and cannot” contain the information needed to make this determination. Whatever that filed record may say about the Coast Guard’s perspective on [the] SETS II [task order], it says nothing about what perspective “potential bidders” in the broader marketplace would have regarding the procurement. By definition, the evidence most relevant to that inquiry will be evidence outside the Coast Guard’s own materials....
Pl.’s Mot. 2 (citations omitted); accord Pl.’s Opp’n Intervenor’s Mot. Strike (“Pl.’s Opp’n”) 5 (arguing that “one of the key issues” presented in this case is “whether the SETS II [task order] solicitation would have reasonably been seen by potential bidders as encompassing financial systems work” and emphasizing that in order “[t]o resolve this issue, the Court needs information regarding the expectations that the potential bidders would have had based on prior procurements”). In order to ascertain what a potential bidder would have understood, GCE argues that the court must “look at what information potential bidders would have had; not simply what documents were in front of the agency.” Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 20:5-7, May 28, 2008. To that end, GCE emphasizes that
what the Court has to answer here is not anything about the agency’s own decision-making process — we all agree on what the agency did and did not do — but what would potential bidders in 2005 have understood the SETS [II task order] solicitation and the prospect of changes in the performance of [the] SETS [II task order] over time to have included[.] That’s not anything answered by the agency’s internal documents or audit files. That’s something where you do need to go outside and to see what it is that the people, the community of potential bidders, thinks.
Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 90:18-91:4, Mar. 26, 2008; see also CCL, Inc.,
GCE maintains that the evidence it proffers aids in determining what prospective bidders “would know [about] the structure of the industry, and the fact that only a limited niche market of eompan[ies] can compete and does compete for audit supporting financial systems work.” Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 18:2-5. It emphasizes that these prospective bidders “would know that for eight years, the Coast Guard itself bid financial systems IT work on a completely separate track from all other IT work.” Id. 18:6-9. According to GCE, its “solicitation and declaration evidence eon-fii’m[s] that the community of potential bidders would not have understood [the] SETS II [task order] to ever include, then or in the future, support work for federal financial management systems. It is appropriate to supplement the administrative record to include that evidence.” Mem. PI. Global Computer Enterprises, Inc. Filed Pursuant Ct.’s Apr. 7, 2008 Order (“Pl.’s Mem.”) 21; see also Pl.’s Opp’n 5 (noting that the declarations of GCE’s personnel provide “some gen
Finally, GCE argues that supplementation of the administrative record is supported by Esch v. Yeutter,
(1) when agency action is not adequately explained in the record before the court;
(2) when the agency failed to consider factors which are relevant to its final decision;
(3) when an agency considered evidence which it failed to include in the record; (4) when a case is so complex that a court needs more evidence to enable it to understand the issues clearly; (5) in cases where evidence arising after the agency action shows whether the decision was correct or not; (6) in cases where agencies are sued for a failure to take action; (7) in eases arising under the National Environmental Policy Act; and (8) in cases where relief is at issue, especially at the preliminary injunction stage.
B. The Government’s and QSS’s Objections
The government states that it “is not arguing that ... the record has to be absolutely firmly set in stone.” Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 44:22-25. Nevertheless, it objects to GCE’s attempts to present evidence of “ ‘trade practice and custom’ to prove that a financial management system could not be added to the SETS II task order.” Def.’s Opp’n Pl.’s Cross-Mot. J. Administrative R., Pl.’s Mot. Perm. Inj., & Pl.’s Mot. Supplement Administrative R., & Def.’s Reply Pl.’s Opp’n Def.’s Mot. Dismiss or, Alternative, Mot. J. Administrative R. (“Def.’s Opp’n & Reply”) 16. Ad
First, the government argues that GCE “misapplies” the standard — what potential bidders would have understood the SETS II task order to include — “when it argues that ‘it is impossible to answer that question without reference to “extrinsic” evidence concerning those bidders’ understanding.’ ” Id. at 17 (quoting Pl.’s Cross-Mot. J. Administrative R. & Mot. Penn. Injunctive Relief 20). Rather, the government emphasizes that a reasonable potential bidder “will both start and end its inquiry with the language of the solicitation itself” when determining the scope of a proposed contract. Id. Here, the government notes that “we[,] in faet[,] have the record evidence from the ITOP II contract that shows that a system does include financial management systems.”
Second, the government argues that GCE’s proffered solicitations from other government agencies should not be considered by the court because “the record should consist of ... documents that were relied upon by the contracting officer or documents that [are] otherwise related to the contract at issue.”
QSS notes that courts will “occasionally permit supplementation of the Administrative Record to fill a gap.” QSS Group’s Opp’n PL’s Mots. (1) J. Administrative R., (2) Perm. Inj., & (3) Supplement Administrative R., & Reply Supp. QSS Group’s Mot. Dismiss & Alternatively, J. Administrative R. (“Def.-Intervenor’s Opp’n & Reply”) 25 (citing Precision Standard, Inc. v. United States,
If the court “open[s] th[e] door” to supplementation, then QSS questions what information is appropriate to incorporate in the administrative record. Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 81:2-3. In the absence of a statute requiring separate solicitations for IT services, QSS contends that GCE only offers “a sampling of solicitations across 18 years, no offer or other assertion from the Plaintiff that these are exhaustive or representative, nothing like that.”
C. Standards for Determining Whether Supplementation Is Appropriate
“As a general rule, in determining whether an agency’s actions are arbitrary or irrational, the ‘focal point for judicial review [of the agency’s decision] should be the administrative record already in existence, not some new record made initially with the reviewing court.’ ” Knowledge Connections, Inc. v. United States,
The administrative record “is not a documentary record maintained contemporaneously with the events or actions included in it. Rather, it is a convenient vehicle for bringing the decision of an administrative body before a reviewing agency or a court.” Tech Sys., Inc. v. United States,
Nevertheless, supplementation of the administrative record is not automatic, and “the flexibility of the court’s scope of review does not give the parties carte blanche to supplement the record....” Al Ghanim, 56
While the Federal Circuit clearly disfavored reliance upon the Esch factors in Axiom Resource Management, Inc., it did so under circumstances in which the trial court in that case “add[ed] ... documents to the record without evaluating whether the record before the agency was sufficient to permit meaningful judicial review.” Id. at 1380 (emphasis added). The trial court, according to the Federal Circuit, “made clear that it would freely allow the parties to supplement the record ‘with whatever they want,’ and, by doing so, failed to make the required threshold determination of whether additional evidence was necessary.” Id. As such, the Federal Circuit cautioned that supplementation should occur “only if the existing record is insufficient to permit meaningful review consistent with the APA.” Id. at 1381 (emphasis added).
Supplementation, therefore, is justified when “required for meaningful judicial review,” Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United States,
D. Supplementation of the Administrative Record Is Warranted
The court need not resolve the issue of whether the term “system” includes audit-supporting federal financial management systems for the purpose of ruling upon GCE’s motion to supplement. Therefore, QSS’s concerns that GCE’s declarations “go into the merits,” Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 78:12-13, are premature, as are the government’s arguments that the court need only look to the language of the solicitation itself in order to determine the scope of the SETS II task order, see Def.’s Opp’n & Reply 17. As noted above, GCE alleges in its complaint that a niche market exists for audit-supporting federal financial management services. Compl. ¶ 15. The existence and nature of this alleged market would not necessarily be reflected within or encompassed by the agency-produced administrative record.
“[T]he matter of supplementation must be carefully weighed,” Ala. Aircraft Indus., Inc.Birmingham v. United States,
Additionally, the court determines that supplementation is warranted in this case given the multitude of issues presented with respect to both jurisdiction and the merits, especially in light of the “enormous amount of information” presented by the parties. Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 96:18; see also Esch,
II. QSS’S MOTION TO STRIKE AND RENEWED MOTION TO STRIKE
Having determined that incorporation of GCE’s evidence into the administrative record is appropriate, the court now addresses QSS’s motion to strike and renewed motion to strike, the latter of which was initially made orally pursuant to Rule 7(b)(1) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”). In its motion to strike, QSS states, as noted previously, that it “has no objection, in principle, to the submission of declarations by Plaintiffs declarants....” Def.-Intervenor’s Mot. Strike 2. It does, however, raise specific objections “about particular portions” of the declarations GCE submitted in this case.
A. GCE’s Declarations and Lay Opinion Testimony
QSS states that “[s]inee Plaintiff has not disclosed any of its declarants as expert witnesses ... or provided an expert report, ... [it] must construe them as fact witnesses.” Id. at 2; see also RCFC 26(a)(2)(A)-(B) (requiring that a party disclose the identity of any person who may present expert testimony as well as a written report). Relying upon Rule 701 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, QSS argues that GCE’s declarations constitute opinion testimony by lay witnesses.
QSS states: “We don’t have a problem when the declarations are reporting historical facts. We don’t have problems when they are declarations that are reporting what the five senses sensed. But they go beyond that.” Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 72:13-17. However, QSS objects to the initial Muslimani declaration because it allegedly contains lay opinion testimony concerning: (1) types of Coast Guard computer applications in use in locations where GCE performs no work, see Pl.’s App. 7 (Muslimani Deel. ¶ 25); (2) industry interpretation of the expiration of GCE’s sole-source bridge contract, see id. at 8 (Mus-limani Deck ¶ 31); (3) whether QSS might be awarded particular work, see id. (Muslimani Deel. ¶ 33); (4) the Coast Guard’s capabilities and how any alleged shortcomings might be attributed to GCE, see id. at 9 (Muslimani Deel. ¶ 34); and (5) statements that QSS believes could only be derived from personal knowledge if the declarant were a Coast Guard contracting officer, see id. (Muslima-ni Deck ¶ 36). Def.Intervenor’s Mot. Strike 3-4. According to QSS, the initial Lucas declaration contains improper lay opinion testimony concerning: (1) the existence, characteristics, conditions, and quality of contract performance in an alleged specialized niche financial IT market, whether QSS is part of this market, and the capabilities of other companies, see Ph’s App. 14-22, 28 (Lucas Deck ¶¶ 5-8, 11-30, 32, 55); (2) the behavior of federal agencies in them financial IT procurements, see id. at 15 (Lucas Deck ¶ 10); (3) how offerors break down into “pools” and the nature of work on which other companies bid, see id. at 21-22 (Lucas Deck ¶31); (4) standard industry practice and the general practice of the government in contract management, see id. at 23, 27 (Lucas Deel. ¶¶ 36, 53); and (5) reputational harm to GCE,
GCE responds by arguing that Rule 701 applies only to “opinion” testimony and permits lay opinion testimony “when it is helpful to understand a fact in issue, as long as the opinion is based on the witness’ perceptions rather than technical expertise.” Pl.’s Opp’n 2. According to GCE, “many of the statements” contained in these declarations are not opinion testimony and, consequently, “Rule 701 is ... not even applicable_” Id. at 3. Moreover, GCE states that “[t]o the extent that portions of the declarations are deemed to contain some lay opinion testimony, they are still admissible.” Id.
GCE emphasizes that its declaration evidence contains information “from individuals with decades of experience confirming that only a distinct and specialized group of contractors would bid on — and had the expertise to perform — contracts for IT work related to audit-supporting financial management systems.” Pl.’s Mem. 7. As such, GCE maintains that its declarants’ testimony “is grounded in their firsthand perceptions of them numerous interactions with agencies and other contractors through the years.” Pl.’s Opp’n 5. To that end, GCE responds to each objection raised by QSS, noting in each instance that the challenged testimony is either proper lay opinion testimony — based upon personal knowledge or personal observations — or purely factual based upon personal observations. See id. at 7-15. Thus, GCE maintains that its declarations
consist[ ] predominantly of specific factual statements relating to those individuals’ personal knowledge of their industry and the work their company has done for the Coast Guard. Therefore, most of the content of the declarations does not qualify as “opinion” testimony subject to Rule 701. However, some of the testimony is presented at a more general level, allowing the declarants to discuss their impressions based on cumulative experience. While such statements may be considered lay opinion, they are entirely proper under Rule 701 because they are based on the declarants’ own personal knowledge of ... financial IT systems and procurements in their niche industry.
Id. at 15-16.
1. Opinion Testimony and Rule 701
Rule 701 governs opinion testimony by lay witnesses:
If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness’ testimony in the form of opinions or inferences is limited to those opinions or inferences which are (a) rationally based on the perception of the witness, (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue, and (e)¡not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.20
Fed.R.Evid. 701 (footnote added). In 2000, Rule 701 was amended to “eliminate the risk that the reliability requirements set forth in Rule 702 will be evaded through the simple expedient of proffering an expert in lay witness clothing.” Fed.R.Evid. 701 advisory committee’s note. Although “the difficulty in administering the 2000 amendment [is] draw
“Implicit in [Rule 701] is a distinction between fact and opinion, and the premise is that generally lay witnesses should testify to facts.” 3 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 7:1 (3d ed.2007). There is, however, “no satisfactory dividing line between these two categories.” Id. Witnesses should state facts, i.e., “they should provide particulars or details, so the trier of fact may put them together....” Id.; see also 1 McCormick on Evidence, supra, § 10 (“[T]he law prefers that a witness testify to facts, based on personal knowledge, rather than opinions inferred from such facts.”); 4 Weinstein & Berger, supra, § 701.03[1] (“To be admissible, lay opinion testimony must be based on the witness’s personal perception.”). Where Rule 701 allows opinions or inferences, “what is meant is that the witness may be more general, con-elusory, and evaluative.” 3 Mueller & Kirkpatrick, supra, § 7:1; accord 4 Weinstein & Berger, supra, § 701.03[1] (“Lay opinion testimony is ... admissible when the inference is a conclusion drawn from a series of personal observations over time.”). As the United States Court of Appeals for the Eight Circuit (“Eighth Circuit”) explained in United States v. Espino,
Rule 701 permits lay opinion testimony if it is based on “relevant historical or narrative facts that the witness has perceived,” and if it “would help the factfinder determine a matter in issue[.]” “While the ordinary rule confines the testimony of a lay witness to concrete facts within his knowledge or observation, the [cjourt may rightly exercise a certain amount of latitude in permitting a witness to state his conclusions based upon common knowledge or experience.”
“The general application of Rule 701 indicates that a lay witness may testify about facts within his or her range of generalized knowledge, experience, and perception.” Espino,
As the Federal Circuit recognized in Union Pacific Resources Co., lay opinion testimony based upon extensive experience in an industry is admissible under Rule 701. See
2. GCE’s Initial Declarations Are Admissible
The court disagrees with QSS’s contention that GCE’s initial declarations contain improper lay opinion. First, many of the statements are not opinion. See, e.g., Pl.’s App. 7 (Muslimani Decl. ¶ 25 (describing computer systems hosted at the Coast Guard’s OSC that did not include audit-supporting federal financial management systems based upon the declarant’s personal knowledge of those systems)), 15 (Lucas Decl. ¶ 10 (stating that federal agencies “have consistently bid out their IT work for audited financial management systems separately from their mission-focused or other IT work,” which is based upon the declarant’s personal involvement “with procurement competitions for federal systems work with GCE since 2001”)), 41-42 (Winslow Decl. ¶¶ 39 — 41 (describing qualifications of the GCE team, referencing job solicitations seeking developers and analysts who possess specific training, and describing types of software changes and the specific expertise associated with performing such changes, all of which are based upon the declarant’s experience supervising GCE employees and working within the industry)). Indeed, these statements are factual in nature. As such, the court is satisfied that these and other statements contained within GCE’s proffered declarations are based entirely upon the de-clarants’ personal observations and knowledge derived from experience within their fields.
Second, to the extent that GCE’s declarants offer lay opinion testimony that is subject to Rule 701, the court finds that such testimony falls within the rule’s parameters and is admissible. As noted above, lay opinion testimony “must have a rational connection,” Miss. Chem. Corp.,
Indeed, these proffered opinions do not require any particular expertise or specialization in government contracting. Cf. Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 72:20-23 (containing QSS’s argument that GCE declarants are “giving them expert opinion that there is such a niche market; or whether or not SETS II included or could include financial management systems”). To the contrary, these statements are “general, conelusory, and evaluative,” 3 Mueller & Kirkpatrick, supra, § 7:1, and are based entirely upon personal experience and observations obtained through the declarants’ line of work. For example, Mr. Winslow’s ability to offer lay opinion testimony about the requirements contained in these contracts stems from his eight years of financial management systems IT experience tracking and reviewing approximately two solicitations per month, regular attendance at numerous financial management conferences, and previous work on approximately nineteen competitions for various federal agencies.
B. QSS’s Additional Objections
As noted above, QSS maintains that GCE’s supplemental declarations and additional extra-record evidence constitute inadmissible hearsay. Def.-Intervenor’s Opp’n & Reply 26-28. Furthermore, QSS argues that these materials are “unnecessary and cumulative,” Def.Intervenor’s Renewed Mot. 4, and therefore do not meet the standards of admissibility under Federal Rule of Evidence 403, id. at 7-12. The court addresses QSS’s hearsay objections first.
1. Hearsay
Hearsay is defined as a “statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.”
According to QSS, GCE’s declarations “are hearsay to which no exception ... applies, including the residual exception to the hearsay rule.” Def.-Intervenor’s Opp’n & Reply 27. Specifically, QSS contends that these declarations contain “statements prepared exclusively for this litigation and [are] not competent evidence for the Court to consider to resolve the merits of this litigation.” Id. at 28; see also Def.’s Mot. Dismiss, or, Alternative, Mot. J. Administrative R., & Def.’s Opp’n Pl.’s Mot. Prelim. Inj. & Application TRO (“Def.’s Mot. & Opp’n”) 26 n. 13 (raising hearsay objections to statements made in GCE’s declarations). Interestingly, QSS does not identify any specific statement that it believes constitutes inadmissible hearsay. Cf. Def.’s Mot. & Opp’n'26 n. 13 (identifying one such statement).
a. GCE’s Supplemental Declarations Are Admissible
As QSS notes, none of the “four cases [upon which GCE relies] diseuss[es] hearsay. So they do not go to the issue that GCE appears to [propose] that they stand for, which is that you can let hearsay in.” Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 74:2-6. Indeed, the cases GCE cites do not specifically address hearsay and whether any materials supplementing the administrative record contained inadmissible statements. Although it apparently did not exclude materials on the basis of hearsay, the court in CCL, Inc. refused to admit materials it found were irrelevant; it only admitted proffered affidavits “to the extent that they [we]re relevant.”
b. GCE’s Non-Coast Guard RFP Summaries and Internet Web Page Material Are Admissible
QSS also argues that commercially obtained materials purporting to be excerpts from federal financial IT procurements are inadmissible hearsay to which no exception applies.
Evidently, [GCE] went out to this input.com website, and there are these procurement summaries, which are summaries of the solicitation. So necessarily, if there’s a summary, there is a summarizer. I don’t know that there’s any reliability that the summarizer, when she or he was putting those together, would have even known or was wearing the rose colored glasses that GCE wears.... Instead, those summaries talk in terms of services. Again, for performance work stated for SETS II in the Mod[ification] 30, services are the same. So we see through the summaries what the summarizer thought. But we don’t know what training the summarizer had or if they even knew that they should try and split the world into those two halves.
Market reports and commercial publications are excepted from the hearsay rule. See Fed.R.Evid. 803(17) (excluding from the hearsay rule “[m]arket quotations, tabulations, lists, directors, or other published compilations, generally used and relied upon by the public or by persons in particular occupations”). Mr. Lucas describes Input.com, a “market research/intelligence service” to which GCE subscribes, as a service that provides GCE with “pre-solicitation information and teaming opportunities.” Pl.’s App. 929 (Lucas Supp’l Decl. ¶ 5). It is therefore apparent that GCE relies upon the information supplied by this service.
2. Cumulative and Unnecessary Evidence
QSS objects to the remainder of GCE’s proffered extra-record evidence as not satisfying the standards of admissibility under Federal Rule of Evidence 403. Def.-Intervenor’s Renewed Mot. Strike 7-10. Rule 403 provides: “Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Rule 403 “governs the admittance of evidence at trial,”
QSS asserts that GCE’s “original premise” in seeking to supplement the administrative. record “was that the Court would need to consult evidence outside the Record to understand whether potential bidders for the SETS II task order would have expected the financial management systems IT work encompassed in Modifications 30 and 32 ... to fall within the scope of the task order.” Def.-Intervenor’s Renewed Mot. Strike 9. It notes that GCE then “urged the Court to consider the evidence in the Record ... to find a fully adequate basis for the Plaintiffs desired conclusion.” Id. at 9-10 (citing Pl.’s Mem. 21-22). Based upon GCE’s position, QSS states that “Plaintiffs argument necessarily means that the Court must reject Plaintiffs extra-Record evidence as cumulative.” Id. at 10.
GCE argues, as noted above, that it has not conceded that supplementation is ultimately unnecessary because sufficient evidence may already exist within the administrative record for the court to rule in its
The court declines to strike GCE’s supplemental materials on the grounds that they are cumulative or duplicative. As GCE notes, QSS “does not argue that GCE’s evidence is unfairly prejudicial, that the supplemental evidence confuses the issues, or that it is likely to mislead the trier of fact.” Id. at 4. In fact, QSS adopts the position that GCE’s proffered evidence “adds nothing to the debate.” Def.-Intervenor’s Renewed Mot. Strike 12. The relevant question is whether GCE’s proffered evidence aids the court in “conducting a ‘thorough, probing, in-depth’ review of the agency action_” Savantage Fin. Servs., Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
The court has carefully reviewed the agency-filed administrative record in this ease and GCE’s proffered materials. It has determined, for the reasons explained in Part I.D, supra, that supplementation furthers meaningful judicial review of the issues presented before the court. As such, supplementation is appropriate and, in fact, necessary in this case.
This decision, however, does not bear upon the separate, merits-based question of whether the SETS II task order contemplated the addition of audit-supporting federal financial management systems and related services. The sole question presented to and resolved by the court at this juncture is whether, as QSS aptly stated, GCE can “get through the gates in order to get their extrinsic information even considered by the Court.” Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 79:3-4. GCE has made the necessary showings. Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED:
1. GCE’s motion to supplement is GRANTED.
2. QSS’s motion to strike is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
3. QSS’s renewed motion to strike is DENIED.
4. The government’s motion and opposition is DENIED IN PART.
5. QSS’s motion and opposition is DENIED IN PART.
The court has filed this decision under seal. The parties shall confer to determine proposed redactions that are agreeable to all parties. Then, by no later than Friday, June 26, 2009, the parties shall file a joint status report indicating their agreement with the proposed redactions and attaching a complete copy of the court’s decision with all redactions clearly indicated.
Notes
. The court also considers the following briefs, to the extent that they address plaintiff's motion to supplement: Defendant's Opposition to Plaintiff's Cross-Motion for Judgment Upon the Administrative Record, Plaintiff's Motion for a Permanent Injunction, and Plaintiff’s Motion to Supplement the Administrative Record, and Defendant’s Reply to Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, Motion for Judgment Upon the Administrative Record ("government’s opposition and reply”); and QSS Group's Opposition to Plaintiff's Motions (1) for Judgment on the Administrative Record, (2) for Permanent Injunction, and (3) to Supplement the Administrative Record, and Reply in Support of QSS Group's Motion to Dismiss and. Alternatively, for Judgment on the Administrative Record ("QSS's opposition and reply”).
. Because GCE's appendices are paginated consecutively, see GCE's App. Mem. P. & A. Supp. Pl.'s Mot. Prelim. Inj. & Application TRO; GCE's Supplemental App. Mem. Supp. Pl.’s Cross-Mot. J. Administrative R. & Mot. Perm. Injunctive Relief; App. Mem. PI. Global Computer Enterprises, Inc. Filed Pursuant Ct.'s Apr. 7, 2008 Order, the court considers those materials submitted with its motion for preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order, its cross-motion for judgment on the administrative record and motion for permanent injunctive relief, and its memorandum filed pursuant to the court’s April 7, 2008 order as one appendix, hereinafter cited as "Pl.'s App."
. For example, GCE’s appendix contains the following materials: Audit Remediation Strategic Plan Executive Summary, Pl.’s App. 986-92; a statement by Department of Homeland Security officials before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, id. at 993-99; GCE's Background Investigation Procedure, id. at 1000-03; GCE's Background Investigation Policy, id. at 1004-06; and excerpts from the administrative record.
. Following a hearing on GCE's motion for preliminary injunction, the court permitted the parties to file additional declarations "relating to the risks of harm to the parties.” Order, Apr. 7, 2008. Accordingly, GCE submitted three supplemental declarations with its memorandum. See PL's App. 1007-30. As QSS notes, these supplemental declarations were not included with GCE's motion. See Intervenor QSS Group, Inc.'s Renewed Mot. Strike Pl.'s Extra-Record Evid. ("Def.-Intervenor's Renewed Mot. Strike”) 4 n. 8. Nevertheless, QSS objects to two of these supplemental declarations and emphasizes that they "may be considered only with regard to the risks of harm.” Id. QSS previously indicated that “it had no objection, in principle, to the submission of declarations on harm...." Id. at 1 n. 2. Indeed, QSS requests that the court admit its own harm declaration of William R. Bowen. Intervenor QSS’s Mot. Admit Harm Deck William R. Bowen & Strike Improper Lay Opinion Testimony Decís. Supp. Pl.’s Mot. Prelim. Inj. & Application Restraining Order ("Def.-Interve-nor’s Mot. Strike”) 1-2.
. Briefing on GCE's motion to supplement concluded prior to the Federal Circuit's ruling in Axiom Resource Management, Inc. v. United States,
. According to GCE, exception number 4 is applicable in the instant case because
the core legal inquiry into how potential bidders would have viewed the SETS II [task] order in 2005[ ] cannot be understood without GCE's evidence of the specialized and separate market for federal financial management systems supporting IT work and the virtually universal practice across federal agencies of procuring such work separately from other kinds of IT work.
Pl.'s Mot. 3. Exception six applies here, according to GCE, because other cases involving agency inaction, including CCL, Inc., have permitted supplementation. Id.; see also
. Nevertheless, GCE acknowledges that
[e]ven without supplementation, ... the Government's proposed administrative record, together with any documents of which the Court takes judicial notice, provide[s] a fully adequate basis for [the] conclusion [that the community of potential bidders would not have understood the SETS II task order to include audit-supporting federal financial management system services]. That record includes, but is not limited to, SETS II's text, the Modifications themselves, evidence of GCE's prior contracts for financial management systems support, and evidence of the Coast Guard’s history of procuring federal financial management systems on a separate track from [the] SETS II [task order].
Pl.’s Mem. 21-22. Indeed, QSS emphasizes that the "extensive Record gives the Court more than adequate material to answer” whether "potential offerors could reasonably have anticipated that financial management IT system services could be included within [the] SETS II [task order].” Def.-Intervenor's Renewed Mot. Strike 10. It therefore characterizes GCE's acknowledgment quoted above as a “concession.” Id. at 5. But see Mem. PI. Global Computer Enterprises, Inc. Opp'n QSS Group, Inc.'s Renewed Mot. Strike ("Pl.'s Opp’n Mem.”) 1 ("[T]here has been no 'concession,' and QSS’s strained efforts to manufacture one are untenable.”).
. The government states that "if GCE can prove, through extrinsic evidence, that the generic term 'computer system,' as that term is used in the IT industry, does not include a 'financial management system,' then GCE could potentially prevail. Unfortunately for GCE, it has presented no such evidence_" Def.'s Opp'n & Reply 18.
. Nevertheless, the government acknowledges that with respect to the "numerous solicitations that [GCE] submitted stretching back over approximately 18 years,” the “standard for [admitting such] documentation is probably not quite as high_" Prelim. Inj. Hr'gTr. 44:12-15.
. GCE responded to this contention during the hearing on its motion for a permanent injunction: "Counsel for both the government and QSS represented at the last hearing that there are counterexamples, but they still haven't provided a single one.... We've kept looking, and we still found nothing other than the one Veteran's Administration solicitation that we identified at the very beginning.'' Perm. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 18:25-19:8.
. First, the Federal Circuit noted that the exceptions were derived from a law review article that predated the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Florida Power & Light Co., which determined that a reviewing court must apply • the appropriate Administrative Procedure Act (''APA”) standard to agency decisions based upon the record presented by the agency to the court. Axiom Res. Mgmt., Inc.,
.Notwithstanding the flexible approach it adopts in this case, the court recognizes that supplementation of the administrative record in bid protest actions " 'must be extremely limited,’ lest the admission of evidence not considered by the agency below and its consideration by the court convert the 'arbitrary and capricious’ standard into effectively de novo review.” Murakami,
. The court can extrapolate the potential existence of this market from portions of the administrative record, but supplemental materials offer the court a fuller understanding.
. Indeed, a court would be unable to determine "whether the contracting agency provided a coherent and reasonable explanation of its exercise
. GCE’s declarations that are the subject of QSS’s motion to strike are those of Raed Musli-mani, GCE’s President and CEO (“Muslimani Decl.’’); David Lucas, GCE’s Chief Strategy Officer (“Lucas Decl."); and David Winslow, GCE’s Director of Financial Systems ("Winslow Decl.”). See Def.-Intervenor’s Mot. Strike 3-5.
. The Federal Rules of Evidence apply to proceedings before the United States Court of Federal Claims ("Court of Federal Claims”). See 28 U.S.C. § 2503(b) (2006). Rule 701 governs opinion testimony by lay witnesses, whereas Rule 702 governs expert testimony. For a discussion of Rule 701, see Part II.A.l, infra.
. Additionally, QSS objects to paragraphs 57 through 61 of the initial Lucas declaration, see Pl.'s App. 28-29, which it maintains are "entirely comprised of improper opinion testimony", Def.-Intervenor’s Mot. Strike 5.
.QSS characterizes additional portions of the initial Winslow declaration as "an expert report masquerading as a factual declaration.” Def.-Intervenor's Mot. Strike 5 (citing PL's App. 43-45 (Winslow Deck ¶¶ 48-55)).
. In its renewed motion to strike, QSS argues that the supplemental declarations of Messrs. Muslimani ("Muslimani Supp'l Decl."), Lucas ("Lucas Supp'l Decl.”), and Winslow ("Winslow Supp'l Decl.”) — as well as the second supplemental declarations of Messrs. Muslimani ("Muslimani 2d Supp'l Decl.”) and Winslow— are "unnecessary and cumulative.” Def.Interve-nor’s Renewed Mot. Strike 4. Additionally, QSS asserts that the second supplemental declarations of Messrs. Muslimani and Winslow contain hearsay. Id. at 4 n. 8; accord Perm. Inj. Hr'g Tr. 73:15-20 (arguing that GCE's declarations contain hearsay, which "this Court has properly struck from the record in bid protests before"). These arguments are addressed in Parts II.B.l.a-b, infra.
. Rule 702 states:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
Fed.R.Evid. 702.
. The amendments to Rule 701 were
intended to induce the courts to focus on the reasoning process by which witnesses reached their opinions; the courts are to determine whether the proffered testimony should be analyzed under Rule 701 or Rule 702 by ascer-taming whether the witness used a reasoning process normal to the activities of everyday life.
4 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein’s Federal Evidence § 701.03[1] (2d ed.2008).
. This information is reinforced in Mr. Musli-mani’s subsequent declarations. See Pl.’s App. 923 (Muslimani Supp’l Deck ¶¶ 5-6 (discussing the declarant's participation in industry conferences and conversations with potential teaming partners, and offering an opinion about the effects upon a company’s reputation within this community if it is perceived to have performed poorly)), 1008 (Muslimani 2d Supp’l Deck ¶¶ 5-6 (same)). The court considers Mr. Muslimani’s second supplemental declaration only with regard to potential harms, see supra note 4, though statements contained therein reference Mr. Mus-limani’s experience within the profession. Furthermore, because the court finds that the administrative record does not aid the court in determining the full scope of potential harms to the parties, the court admits the harm declaration of Mr. Bowen proffered by QSS. See Def.-Intervenor’s Mot. Strike Ex.
. Again, this information is reinforced in Mr. Lucas’s supplemental declaration. See Ph’s App. 930 (Lucas Supp'l Deck ¶ 7 (opining that the same pool of companies that regularly competes for financial management systems contracts based upon the declarant’s familiarity with "the market of companies who regularly attend these federal financial management systems conferences’’)).
. Mr. Winslow, who has been a GCE employee since 2000, states that he has more than sixteen years of IT experience. Pl.’s App. 937 (Winslow Supp'l Deck ¶ 2).
. Mr. Muslimani states that he has worked in the IT support field for audit-supporting federal financial management systems for almost twenty years and that he has approximately thirteen years of experience with the Coast Guard’s financial management systems. Pl.’s App. 922 (Musli-mani 2d Supp’l Deck ¶ 3). According to Mr. Muslimani, he has "followed the solicitations and procurements of the Coast Guard closely throughout this time[] because the Coast Guard has been a key part of [his] company’s business." Id.
. The statement may be either (1) an oral or written assertion, or (2) nonverbal conduct of a person, if it is intended by the person as an assertion. Fed.R.Evid. 801(a).
. The government references a statement in Mr. Winslow’s initial declaration in which he states that Ms. Linda Dealing, an employee within the Headquarters Procurement Office at the OSC, informed him and other GCE employees that the OSC was "[...]_" Pl.’s App. 38 (Winslow Deck ¶ 25).
.GCE notes that "QSS does not identify with particularity any portions of the challenged declarations as hearsay, instead apparently arguing that they are hearsay in their entirety because they are not live testimony." Pl.'s Mem. 21.
. QSS is "not claiming that there's hearsay in those government RFPs.... What we’re focusing on ... are the procurement summaries.” Perm. Inj. Hr'g Tr. 77:19-22. According to GCE, "agency solicitations are plainly admissible because they are publicly available documents of which the Court may take judicial notice” pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b).
. Courts may take judicial notice of facts that are "capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned." Fed.R.Evid. 201(b); see also Lussier v. Runyon,
.In fact, Input.com’s website represents that over 1,300 companies rely upon the information it furnishes in order "to achieve results in the government market.” About INPUT, http:// www .input.com/corp/about/company.cfm (last visited May 19, 2009).
. Here, the parties seek judgment on the administrative record pursuant to RCFC 52. 1, which "is ‘designed to provide for a trial on a paper record, allowing fact-finding by the trial court.’ " Sealift, Inc. v. United States,
