Monday, May 26, 2014

Watchdog cancels JKIA fast food tender


The Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi. Photo/FILE
The Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi. Photo/FILE 
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO, aodhiambo@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
  • The Public Procurement Oversight Authority (PPOA) says KAA failed fairness test in award of contract.

The search for a fast-food operator at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport has run into tendering headwinds after the port manager was stopped from awarding the contract to a Kenyan firm.
The Public Procurement Oversight Authority (PPOA) said the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) erred in awarding the tender to Barintown Ltd, which runs the Hurlingham-based Slims Restaurants in Nairobi.

 
“The action of the procuring entity’s evaluation committee failed the test of promoting competition and ensuring that competitors are treated fairly in accordance with Section 2(b) of the Act (Public Procurement),” the PPOA review board said in an assessment.
The freeze of the fast-food contract was prompted by a complaint from Liberty Eagle Kenya Ltd, which owns the local franchise of top US-based fast food chain, Subways.
It complained that Slims restaurant did not meet the threshold of having international reputation and that KAA delayed the release of the award of the tender, making it difficult for Subway to appeal within the provided seven-day window.
The applicant said that KAA breached regulation 66(2) of the public procurement by delaying the release of information on the outcome of the tender which placed its right to appeal at risk because of the seven-day window provided for entities that are not satisfied with award decisions.
Liberty Eagle said KAA emailed a notification on April 16 despite the award letter having been dated April 9. Subway also protested its exclusion from the tender after providing a bank statement that did not bear the name of the account holder, which KAA say made it difficult to establish the bidder’s financial ability.
PPOA ordered the award of the tender to Braitown be cancelled and the bids re-evaluated by May 30.
KAA issued the tender in January for the development and management of an international brand fast food outlet at JKIA’s new Unit 4, expected to be opened in July.
“Kenya Airports Authority wishes to engage an internationally reputable firm with experience in operating an international brand fast food outlet, to manage a similar facility at the new terminal Unit 4,” read the tender notice.
Liberty Eagle indicated in bid papers that it has 41,000 fast food outlets in 104 countries and offered to run the restaurant at JKIA at an annual concession rate of 10 per cent.
The Unit 4 is the extension of the exiting airport and is expected to handle 2.5 million passengers that will ease congestion at the East Africa’s main air travel hub.
The airport was built in the 1970s to handle 2.5 million passengers annually and has been struggling to handle more than six million people a year as its regional importance grew.
This has seen KAA race to host facilities like hotels at the airport that will offer comfort to foreigners and local travellers who have developed an appetite for Western brands.
The KAA tender team had on March 27, recommended that the contract be awarded to Barintown Ltd Group after it beat six other bidders with a score of 98.30 points

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