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37 Procurement Law. 1 (2001-2002)

handle is hein.journals/procurlw37 and id is 1 raw text is: 


















When More Produces Less: California's IT Terms and

Conditions Produce Less Competition and Lower Value

By RaceRT S. METzGER, DmA G. RicH.AW, AND DAwN FIGUEIRAS


Diana G. Richard


State agencies are important purchasers of information
technology and services. With regularity, state agencies
are replacing legacy systems to increase functionality,
improve responsiveness, and enhance the overall quality
of services being delivered to state users of information
technology (IT). The advent of these new, highly sophis-
ticated systems promises something of a revolution in
both the process and substance by which state govern-
ments deliver services to their constituencies.
   Unfortunately, analysis shows that the laws, rules, sys-
tems, and procedures employed by state governments to
manage the procurement of such IT services have not
always kept pace. Significant initiatives have been taken

Robert S. Metzger is a partner in the Los Angeles, California, office of
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, LLP, chairs the firm's telecommunications
practice group, and co-chairs the commercial and government contracts
practice group.
  Diana G. Richard is of counsel in the Washington, DC, office of Gib-
son, Dunn & Crutcher, LLP, practicing in the intellectual property and
high technology practice groups and specializing in infonnation technology
contracting.
  Dawn Figueiras is an associate in the Washington, DC, office of Gib-
son, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, practicing in the corporate transactions
group and specializing in general corporate transactions and government
and commercial contracts.


                           at the federal level toward
                           acquisition reform in order
                           to use techniques that are
                           more representative of the
                           commercial marketplace in
                           federal government procure-
                           ments; however, these same
                           initiatives have not yet been
                           taken or, at a minimum,
                           have not been consistently
                           applied at the state level.
     Dawn Figueiras        The result is a patchwork of
                           inconsistent procedures and,
worse, a continuing pattern of efforts on the part of some
state purchasers to demand that IT providers accept
terms and conditions that are grossly out of synch with
the commercial world.
   Although these positions have nominally been taken
in state procurement to protect the public interest and to
obtain best value for lowest price, in fact, it can be shown
that such positions injure the public in several ways. First,
in a situation where the procurement process is overly
                                 (continued on page 20)


Robert S. Metzger

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