Appendix C to Part 152 - Procurement Procedures and
Requirements
There is set forth below procurement
procedures and requirements applicable to grants for airport development
under the Airport and Airway Development Act of 1970.
1. General. Each contract under a
project must meet the requirements of local law and the requirements and
standards contained in this appendix. The sponsor shall establish
procedures for procurement of supplies, equipment, construction, and
services funded under the project which meet the requirements of
Attachment O of Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-102 (44
FR 47874) and of this appendix. Subject to funding and time limitations,
the FAA reviews the sponsor's procurement system to determine whether it
may be certified in accordance with Attachment O of OMB Circular A-102.
2. Out-of-state labor. No
procedure or requirement shall be imposed by any grantee which will
operate to discriminate against the employment of labor from any other
State, possession, or territory of the United States in the construction
of a project.
3. Bid guarantee. All bids for
construction or facility improvement in excess of $100,000 shall be
accompanied by a bid guarantee consisting of a firm commitment such as a
bid bond, certified check or other negotiable instrument equivalent to
five percent of the bid price as assurance that the bidder will, upon
acceptance of his bid, execute such contractual documents as may be
required within the time specified.
4. Construction work. All
construction work under a project must be performed under contract, except
in a case where the Administrator determines that the project, or a part
of it, can be more effectively and economically accomplished on a force
account basis by the sponsor or by another public agency acting for or as
agent of the sponsor.
5. Change order. Unless otherwise
authorized by the Administrator, no sponsor may issue any change order
under any of its construction contracts or enter into a supplemental
agreement unless three copies of that order or agreement have been sent
to, and approved by, the FAA.
6. Beginning work. No sponsor may
allow a contractor or subcontractor to begin work under a project until --
a. The sponsor has furnished three
conformed copies of the contract to the appropriate FAA office;
b. The sponsor has, if applicable,
submitted a statement that comparable replacement housing, as defined in
§25.15 of the Regulations of the Office of the Secretary of
Transportation, will be available within a reasonable period of time
before displacement.
c. The appropriate FAA office has agreed
to the issuance of a notice to proceed with the work to the contractor.
7. Supervision and inspection. No
work will be commenced until the sponsor has provided for adequate
supervision and inspection of construction and advised the appropriate FAA
office.
8. Engineering and planning services.
Unless otherwise authorized by the Administrator, each proposal for
engineering and planning services shall be reviewed by FAA before the
commencement of the development of design plans and specifications.
9. Advertising general. Unless
the Administrator approves another method for use on a particular airport
development project, each contract and supplemental agreement for
construction work on a project in the amount of more than $10,000 must be
awarded on the basis of public advertising and open competitive bidding
under the local law applicable to the letting of public contracts.
10. Advertising: conditions and
contents. There may be no advertisement for bids on, or negotiation
of, a construction contract or supplemental agreement until the
Administrator has either approved the plans and specifications or accepted
a certification in accordance with §152.7 that they meet all applicable
standards prescribed by this part. The advertisement shall inform the
bidders of the equal employment opportunity requirements of part 152.
Unless the estimated contract price or construction cost in $2,000 or
less, there may be no advertisement for bids or negotiations until the
Administrator has given the sponsor a copy of a decision of the Secretary
of Labor establishing the minimum wage rates for skilled and unskilled
labor under the proposed contract. In each case, a copy of the wage
determination decision, including fringe benefits, must be set forth in
the initial invitation for bids or proposed contract, or incorporated
therein by reference to a copy set forth in the advertised or negotiated
specifications.
11. Procedures for obtaining wage
determinations. (a) Specific request for wage determination. At
least 60 days before the intended date of advertising or negotiating of
this section, the sponsor shall send to the appropriate FAA office,
completed Department of Labor Form DB-11 or DB-11(a), as appropriate, with
only the classifications needed in the performance of the work checked.
General entries (such as "entire schedule" or "all applicable
classifications") may not be used. Additional necessary classifications
not on the form may be typed in the blank spaces or on an attached
separate list. A classification that can be fitted into classifications on
the form, or a classification that is not generally recognized in the area
or in the industry, may not be used. Except in areas where the wage
patterns are clearly established, the Form must be accompanied by any
available pertinent wage payment or locally prevailing fringe benefit
information.
(b) General wage determination.
Whenever the wage patterns in a particular area for a particular type of
construction are well settled and whenever it may be reasonably
anticipated that there will be a large volume of procurement in that area
for that type of construction, the Secretary of Labor, upon the request of
a Federal agency or in his discretion, may issue a general wage
determination when, after consideration of the facts and circumstances
involved, he finds that the applicable statutory standards and those of
part 1, 29 CFR, subtitle A, will be met. This general wage determination
is used for all projects located in the area and for the type of
construction covered by the general wage determination.
12. Advertising: wage determinations.
(a) Wage determinations are effective only for 120 days from the date of
the determinations. If it appears that a determination may expire between
bid opening and award, the sponsor shall so advise the FAA as soon as
possible. If it wishes a new request for wage determination to be made and
if any pertinent circumstances have changed, it shall submit the
appropriate form of the Department of Labor and accompanying information.
If it claims that the determination expires before award and after bid
opening due to unavoidable circumstances, it shall submit proof of the
facts which it claims support a finding to that effect.
(b) The Secretary of Labor may modify
any wage determination before the award of the contract or contracts for
which it was sought. If the proposed contract is awarded on the basis of
public advertisement and open competitive bidding, any modification that
the FAA receives less than 10 days before the opening of bids is not
effective, unless the Administrator finds that there is reasonable time to
notify bidders. A modification may not continue in effect beyond the
effective period of the wage determination to which it relates. The
Administrator sends any modification to the sponsor as soon as possible.
If the modification is effective, it must be incorporated in the
invitation for bids, by issuing an addendum to the specifications or
otherwise.
13. Awarding contracts. (a) A
sponsor may not award a construction contract without the written
concurrence of the Administrator (through the appropriate FAA office) that
the contract prices are reasonable. A sponsor that awards contracts on the
basis of public advertising and open competitive bidding, shall, after the
bids are opened, send a tabulation of the bids and its recommendations for
award to the appropriate FAA office. The sponsor may not accept a bid by a
contractor whose name appears on the current list of ineligible
contractors published by the Comptroller General of the United States
under §5.6(b) of the regulations of the Secretary of Labor (29 CFR part
5), or a bid by any firm, corporation, partnership, or association in
which an ineligible contractor has a substantial interest.
(b) A sponsor's proposed contract must
have pre-award review and approval by the FAA in any of the following
circumstances:
(1) The sponsor's procurement system is
not in compliance with one or more significant aspects of Attachment O of
OMB Circular A-102 or with the standards of this appendix.
(2) The procurement is expected to
exceed $10,000 and is to be awarded without competition or only one bid or
offer is received in response to solicitation.
(3) The procurement is expected to
exceed $10,000 and specifies a "brand name" product.
(c) The FAA may require pre-award review
and approval of a sponsor's proposed contract under any of the following
circumstances:
(1) The sponsor's procurement system has
not yet been reviewed by the FAA for compliance with OMB Circular A-102
and this appendix.
(2) The sponsor has requested pre-award
assistance.
(3) The proposal is for automatic data
processing in accordance with paragraph C1 of Attachment B to Federal
Management Circular 74-4 (39 FR 27133; 43 FR 50977).
(4) The proposal is one of a series with
the same firm.
(5) The proposal is to be performed
outside the recipient's established procurement system or office.
(6) The proposal is for construction and
is to be awarded through the negotiation procurement method or without
competition.
14. Force account work. Before
undertaking any force account construction work, the sponsor (or any
public agency acting as agent for the sponsor) must obtain the written
consent of the Administrator through the appropriate FAA office. In
requesting that consent, the sponsor must submit --
(a) Adequate plans and specifications
showing the nature and extent of the construction work to be performed
under that force account;
(b) A schedule of the proposed
construction and of the construction equipment that will be available for
the project;
(c) Assurance that adequate labor,
material, equipment, engineering personnel, as well as supervisory and
inspection personnel as required by this appendix, will be provided; and
(d) A detailed estimate of the cost of
the work, broken down for each class of costs involved, such as labor,
materials, rental of equipment, and other pertinent items of cost.
15.
Each
sponsor shall --
(a) Include the equal opportunity clause
required by 41 CFR 60-1.4(b) in each nonexempt construction contract and
subcontract;
(b) Prior to the award of each nonexempt
contract, require each prime contractor and subcontractor to submit the
certification required by 41 CFR 60-1.8(b);
(c) Include the Notice of Requirement
for Affirmative Action to Ensure Equal Employment Opportunity (Executive
Order 11246) required by 41 CFR 60-4.2 in all solicitations for offers and
bids on each nonexempt construction contract and subcontract;
(d) Include the Standard Federal Equal
Employment Opportunity Construction Contract Specifications (Executive
Order 11246) required by 41 CFR 60-4.3(a) in each nonexempt construction
contract and subcontract.
16. Exceptions. (a) Paragraphs 1
through 5 and paragraphs 9 through 13 of this section do not apply to
contracts with the owners of airport hazards, buildings, pipelines,
powerlines, or other structures or facilities, for installing, extending,
changing, removing, or relocating any of those structures or facilities.
However, the sponsor must obtain the approval of the appropriate FAA
office before entering into such a contract.
(b) Any oral or written agreement or
understanding between a sponsor and another public agency that is not a
sponsor of the project, under which that public agency undertakes
construction work for or as agent of the sponsor, is not considered to be
a construction contract for the purposes of this appendix.
[Doc. No. 19430, 45 FR 34796, May 22, 1980]