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Procurement Procedures for Higher
Education
By R. Carson Fisk
The author outlines the various
procurement procedures for Texas higher education contracts.

R. Carson Fisk is an attorney
at Ford Nassen & Baldwin P.C. in Austin. The firm
specializes in the representation of owners, general contractors,
subcontractors, major suppliers and sureties in public
and private sectors. |
Procurement procedures for the
construction of and improvements to institutions of higher
education are governed by Chapter 51 of the Texas Education
Code. An institution generally includes public colleges or
universities with the exception of junior colleges.
Prior to advertising for bids, an institution is required
to determine the method that provides the best value and establish
criteria to select among bidders. The basis of the selection
is made available to the public.
The competitive bidding method is the default manner in which
contracts are secured and, unless otherwise authorized, contracts
secured through other methods are void.
Design-Build Under this method, offerers are evaluated in
two phases. First, the institution prepares the request and
evaluates each offerer. Up to five offerers may qualify to
submit additional information and an interview. Second, the
institution evaluates the submitted information and the results
of any interviews. Following a ranking of each proposal, the
firm offering the best value is selected. If a contract cannot
be negotiated, the institution will end all negotiations and
negotiate with the next ranked offerer. The process continues
until a contract is reached or negotiations end. After the
selection, the completed design is submitted for review. The
institution may provide inspection and testing services or
contract out such services. Any payment or performance bond
is not required for, and may not provide coverage for, the
design services.
Construction Manager Agent
Under this method, the manager provides construction consultation
services. The manager represents the institution in a fiduciary
capacity and may be required to provide certain services.
The design professional who prepares the construction documents
is generally barred from serving as the manager but is not
barred from providing customary services. The institution
selects the most qualified candidate and attempts to negotiate
a contract at a fair and reasonable price. The institution
is to retain the prime contractors and either the institution
or the manager is tasked with retaining all required inspection
and testing services.
Construction Manager-At-Risk
The CMAR assumes the risk of construction as a general contractor
and provides construction consulting services during and after
the design phase. The selection of the engineer or architect
under this method is similar to the process used under the
construction manager-agent method. The institution retains,
independent of the CMAR, all required inspection and testing
services. The CMAR is selected in either a one- or two-step
process. In either, the proposal offering the best value is
selected. The CMAR is to retain subcontractors. Under certain
conditions, a CMAR is permitted to perform the major elements
of the work. If the CMAR recommends a subcontractor the institution
does not approve, the CMAR is compensated for additional cost
and risk incurred.
Competitive Sealed Proposals
The institution selects a design professional to prepare the
construction documents and provides or contract for all inspection
and testing services independent of the contractor. The institution
advertises its request for competitive sealed proposals, which
includes the construction documents, certain project information
and selection criteria. Selection is made on the stated criteria
and the institution is not restricted to considering price
alone. The names of the offerers are to be publicly open and
read as are all prices. The institution is to evaluate and
rank each proposal. The candidate offering the best value
is selected. The parties may negotiate changes to scope and
time and any price change as a result.
Job-Order Contracts For recurring
minor construction or repair, an institution is permitted
to use job order contracts. Orders are awarded substantially
on the basis of pre-described and pre-priced tasks. More than
one job order contract may be awarded with each solicitation.
Work on a job order may be a lump-sum contract or a unit-price
contract. Generally, the term of a job order contract and
renewal options are included in the request for proposals.
If not included, the term may not exceed two years and is
not renewable without further solicitation.
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