Provides veterans with access to certain economic programs and incentives; expands the population served by the division of minority and women's business development to include veterans; makes conforming changes to various provisions of law to reflect the inclusion of veterans.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
3971
2017-2018 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
January 30, 2017
___________
Introduced by M. of A. McDONALD, STEC, SIMANOWITZ, SKARTADOS, BRINDISI,
OTIS, McDONOUGH, LUPARDO, SKOUFIS, SANTABARBARA, GRAF, LUPINACCI,
DiPIETRO, SEPULVEDA, JOHNS, TITONE, CUSICK, PALMESANO, PICHARDO,
MOSLEY, RAIA, PERRY, WOERNER -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. COLTON,
CROUCH, GARBARINO, HOOPER, KEARNS, McLAUGHLIN, RAMOS -- read once and
referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs
AN ACT to amend the executive law, the economic development law, the New
York state urban development corporation act, the facilities develop-
ment corporation act and the New York state medical care facilities
finance agency act, in relation to providing veterans with access to
certain economic programs and incentives, and to expanding the popu-
lation served by the division of minority and women's business devel-
opment; to amend the state finance law, the retirement and social
security law, the public authorities law, the arts and cultural
affairs law, the banking law, the environmental conservation law and
the general municipal law, in relation to making conforming changes;
and to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in
relation to providing veterans with access to certain economic
programs and incentives
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as "OORAH! An ACT
2 Opening Opportunities, Resources and Access for Heroes".
3 § 1-a. The article heading of article 15-A of the executive law, as
4 added by chapter 261 of the laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows:
5 PARTICIPATION BY MINORITY GROUP MEMBERS [AND],
6 WOMEN AND VETERANS WITH RESPECT TO STATE CONTRACTS
7 § 2. Subdivisions 1, 4, 9, 10, 19 and 22 of section 310 of the execu-
8 tive law, subdivisions 1 and 9 as added by chapter 261 of the laws of
9 1988, subdivisions 4 and 10 as amended by chapter 55 of the laws of 1992
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD04099-02-7
A. 3971 2
1 and subdivisions 19 and 22 as added by chapter 175 of the laws of 2010,
2 are amended and a new subdivision 15-a is added to read as follows:
3 1. "Certified business" shall mean a business verified as a minority
4 [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprise pursuant to
5 section three hundred fourteen of this article.
6 4. "Director" shall mean the director of the division of minority [and
7 women's], women and veterans' business development in the department of
8 economic development.
9 9. "Utilization plan" shall mean a plan prepared by a contractor and
10 submitted in connection with a proposed state contract. The utilization
11 plan shall identify certified minority [or women-owned], women or veter-
12 an-owned business enterprises, if known, that have committed to perform
13 work in connection with the proposed state contract as well as any such
14 enterprises, if known, which the contractor intends to use in connection
15 with the contractor's performance of the proposed state contract. The
16 plan shall specifically contain a list, including the name, address and
17 telephone number, of each certified enterprise with which the contractor
18 intends to subcontract.
19 10. "Office" shall mean the division of minority [and], women's and
20 veterans' business development in the department of economic develop-
21 ment.
22 15-a. "Veteran-owned business enterprise" shall mean a business enter-
23 prise, including a sole proprietorship, partnership or corporation that
24 is:
25 (a) at least fifty-one percent owned by one or more United States
26 citizens or permanent resident aliens who are honorably discharged
27 United States veterans;
28 (b) an enterprise in which the ownership interest of such veterans is
29 real, substantial and continuing;
30 (c) an enterprise in which such veteran ownership has and exercises
31 the authority to control independently the day-to-day business decisions
32 of the enterprise;
33 (d) an enterprise authorized to do business in this state and inde-
34 pendently owned and operated;
35 (e) an enterprise owned by an individual or individuals, whose owner-
36 ship, control and operation are relied upon for certification, with a
37 personal net worth that does not exceed three million five hundred thou-
38 sand dollars, as adjusted annually on the first of January for inflation
39 according to the consumer price index of the previous year; and
40 (f) an enterprise that is a small business pursuant to subdivision
41 twenty of this section.
42 A firm owned by a minority group member who is also a veteran may be
43 certified as a minority-owned business enterprise, a veteran-owned busi-
44 ness enterprise, or both, and may be counted towards either a minority-
45 owned business enterprise goal or a veteran-owned business enterprise
46 goal, in regard to any contract or any goal, set by an agency or author-
47 ity, but such participation may not be counted towards both such goals.
48 Such an enterprise's participation in a contract may not be divided
49 between the minority-owned business enterprise goal and the veteran-
50 owned business enterprise goal. A firm owned by a woman who is also a
51 veteran may be certified as a women-owned business enterprise, a veter-
52 an-owned business enterprise, or both, and may be counted towards either
53 a women-owned business enterprise goal or a veteran-owned business
54 enterprise goal, in regard to any contract or any goal, set by an agency
55 or authority, but such participation may not be counted towards both
56 such goals. Such an enterprise's participation in a contract may not be
A. 3971 3
1 divided between the women-owned business enterprise goal and the veter-
2 an-owned business enterprise goal.
3 19. "Personal net worth" shall mean the aggregate adjusted net value
4 of the assets of an individual remaining after total liabilities are
5 deducted. Personal net worth includes the individual's share of assets
6 held jointly with said individual's spouse and does not include the
7 individual's ownership interest in the certified minority [and women-
8 owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprise, the individual's
9 equity in his or her primary residence, or up to five hundred thousand
10 dollars of the present cash value of any qualified retirement savings
11 plan or individual retirement account held by the individual less any
12 penalties for early withdrawal.
13 22. "Diversity practices" shall mean the contractor's practices and
14 policies with respect to:
15 (a) utilizing certified minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
16 an-owned business enterprises in contracts awarded by a state agency or
17 other public corporation, as subcontractors and suppliers; and
18 (b) entering into partnerships, joint ventures or other similar
19 arrangements with certified minority [and women-owned], women or veter-
20 an-owned business enterprises as defined in this article or other appli-
21 cable statute or regulation governing an entity's utilization of minori-
22 ty [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises.
23 § 3. The section heading, subdivision 1, paragraphs (a), (d), (e) and
24 (f) of subdivision 3 of section 311 of the executive law, the section
25 heading, subdivision 1, and paragraphs (d) and (e) of subdivision 3 as
26 amended by chapter 55 of the laws of 1992, and paragraphs (a) and (f) of
27 subdivision 3 as added by chapter 261 of the laws of 1988, are amended
28 to read as follows:
29 Division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business develop-
30 ment. 1. The head of the division of minority [and], women's and veter-
31 ans' business development shall be the director who shall be appointed
32 by the governor and hold office at the pleasure of the commissioner. It
33 shall be the duty of the director of the division of minority [and],
34 women's and veterans' business development to assist the governor in the
35 formulation and implementation of laws and policies relating to minority
36 [and women-owned] women and veteran-owned business enterprises.
37 (a) to encourage and assist contracting agencies in their efforts to
38 increase participation by minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
39 an-owned business enterprises on state contracts and subcontracts so as
40 to facilitate the award of a fair share of such contracts to them;
41 (d) to review periodically the practices and procedures of each
42 contracting agency with respect to compliance with the provisions of
43 this article, and to require them to file periodic reports with the
44 division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business development
45 as to the level of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
46 business enterprises participation in the awarding of agency contracts
47 for goods and services;
48 (e) on January first of each year report to the governor and the
49 chairpersons of the senate finance and assembly ways and means commit-
50 tees on the level of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
51 business enterprises participating in each agency's contracts for goods
52 and services and on activities of the office and effort by each
53 contracting agency to promote employment of minority group members
54 [and], women and veterans, and to promote and increase participation by
55 certified businesses with respect to state contracts and subcontracts so
56 as to facilitate the award of a fair share of state contracts to such
A. 3971 4
1 businesses. The comptroller shall assist the division in collecting
2 information on the participation of certified business for each
3 contracting agency. Such report may recommend new activities and
4 programs to effectuate the purposes of this article;
5 (f) to prepare and update periodically a directory of certified minor-
6 ity [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
7 which shall, wherever practicable, be divided into categories of labor,
8 services, supplies, equipment, materials and recognized construction
9 trades and which shall indicate areas or locations of the state where
10 such enterprises are available to perform services;
11 § 3-a. Paragraph (c) of subdivision 4 of section 311 of the executive
12 law, as added by chapter 361 of the laws of 2009, is amended to read as
13 follows:
14 (c) seek to maximize utilization by minority [and women-owned], women
15 and veteran-owned business enterprises of available federal resources
16 including but not limited to federal grants, loans, loan guarantees,
17 surety bonding guarantees, technical assistance, and programs and
18 services of the federal small business administration.
19 § 4. The section heading and subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of section 311-a
20 of the executive law, as added by section 4 of part BB of chapter 59 of
21 the laws of 2006, are amended to read as follows:
22 Minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enter-
23 prise statewide advocate. 1. There is hereby established within the
24 department of economic development an office of the minority [and
25 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise statewide
26 advocate. The statewide advocate shall be appointed by the commissioner
27 with the advice of the small business advisory board as established in
28 section one hundred thirty-three of the economic development law and
29 shall serve in the unclassified service of the director. The statewide
30 advocate shall be located in the Albany empire state development office.
31 2. The advocate shall act as a liaison for minority [and women-owned],
32 women and veteran-owned business enterprises [(MWBEs)] (MWVBEs) to
33 assist them in obtaining technical, managerial, financial and other
34 business assistance for certified businesses and applicants. The advo-
35 cate shall investigate complaints brought by or on behalf of [MWBEs]
36 (MWVBEs) concerning certification delays and instances of violations of
37 law by state agencies. The statewide advocate shall assist certified
38 businesses and applicants in the certification process. Other functions
39 of the statewide advocate shall be directed by the commissioner. The
40 advocate may request and the director may appoint staff and employees of
41 the division of minority [and women], women's and veterans' business
42 development to support the administration of the office of the statewide
43 advocate.
44 3. The statewide advocate shall establish a toll-free number at the
45 department of economic development to be used to answer questions
46 concerning the [MWBE] MWVBE certification process.
47 § 5. The section heading and paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section
48 312 of the executive law, as added by chapter 261 of the laws of 1988,
49 are amended to read as follows:
50 Equal employment opportunities for minority group members [and], women
51 and veterans.
52 (a) The contractor will not discriminate against employees or appli-
53 cants for employment because of race, creed, color, national origin,
54 sex, age, disability or marital status, and will undertake or continue
55 existing programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group
56 members [and], women and veterans are afforded equal employment opportu-
A. 3971 5
1 nities without discrimination. For purposes of this article affirmative
2 action shall mean recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion,
3 upgradings, demotion, transfer, layoff, or termination and rates of pay
4 or other forms of compensation.
5 § 6. Section 312-a of the executive law, as amended by section 1 of
6 part Q of chapter 58 of the laws of 2015, is amended to read as follows:
7 § 312-a. Study of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
8 business enterprise programs. 1. The director of the division of minori-
9 ty [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business development in
10 the department of economic development is authorized and directed to
11 recommission a statewide disparity study regarding the participation of
12 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
13 in state contracts since the amendment of this article to be delivered
14 to the governor and legislature no later than August fifteenth, two
15 thousand sixteen. The study shall be prepared by an entity independent
16 of the department and selected through a request for proposal process.
17 The purpose of such study is:
18 (a) to determine whether there is a disparity between the number of
19 qualified minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned businesses
20 ready, willing and able to perform state contracts for commodities,
21 services and construction, and the number of such contractors actually
22 engaged to perform such contracts, and to determine what changes, if
23 any, should be made to state policies affecting minority [and women-
24 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises; and (b) to deter-
25 mine whether there is a disparity between the number of qualified minor-
26 ities [and], women and veterans ready, willing and able, with respect to
27 labor markets, qualifications and other relevant factors, to participate
28 in contractor employment, management level bodies, including boards of
29 directors, and as senior executive officers within contracting entities
30 and the number of such group members actually employed or affiliated
31 with state contractors in the aforementioned capacities, and to deter-
32 mine what changes, if any, should be made to state policies affecting
33 minority [and], women and veterans group populations with regard to
34 state contractors' employment and appointment practices relative to
35 diverse group members. Such study shall include, but not be limited to,
36 an analysis of the history of minority [and women-owned], women and
37 veteran-owned business enterprise programs and their effectiveness as a
38 means of securing and ensuring participation by minorities [and], women
39 and veterans, and a disparity analysis by market area and region of the
40 state. Such study shall distinguish between minority males, minority
41 females and non-minority females, and between minority veterans and
42 non-minority veterans, and female veterans and male veterans, in the
43 statistical analysis.
44 2. The director of the division of minority [and women-owned], women
45 and veteran-owned business development is directed to transmit the
46 disparity study to the governor and the legislature not later than
47 August fifteenth, two thousand sixteen, and to post the study on the
48 website of the department of economic development.
49 § 7. Section 313 of the executive law, as amended by chapter 175 of
50 the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
51 § 313. Opportunities for minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
52 an-owned business enterprises. 1. Goals and requirements for agencies
53 and contractors. Each agency shall structure procurement procedures for
54 contracts made directly or indirectly to minority [and women-owned],
55 women and veteran-owned business enterprises, [in accordance with the
56 findings of the two thousand ten disparity study,] consistent with the
A. 3971 6
1 purposes of this article, to attempt to achieve the following results
2 with regard to total annual statewide procurement:
3 (a) construction industry for certified minority-owned business enter-
4 prises: fourteen and thirty-four hundredths percent;
5 (b) construction industry for certified women-owned business enter-
6 prises: eight and forty-one hundredths percent;
7 (b-1) construction industry for certified veteran-owned business
8 enterprises: a percentage to be determined by the disparity study
9 described in subdivision one of section three hundred twelve-a of this
10 article;
11 (c) construction related professional services industry for certified
12 minority-owned business enterprises: thirteen and twenty-one hundredths
13 percent;
14 (d) construction related professional services industry for certified
15 women-owned business enterprises: eleven and thirty-two hundredths
16 percent;
17 (d-1) construction related professional services industry for certi-
18 fied veteran-owned business enterprises: a percentage to be determined
19 by the disparity study described in subdivision one of section three
20 hundred twelve-a of this article;
21 (e) non-construction related services industry for certified minori-
22 ty-owned business enterprises: nineteen and sixty hundredths percent;
23 (f) non-construction related services industry for certified women-
24 owned business enterprises: seventeen and forty-four hundredths percent;
25 (f-1) non-construction related services industry for certified veter-
26 an-owned business enterprises: a percentage to be determined by the
27 disparity study described in subdivision one of section three hundred
28 twelve-a of this article;
29 (g) commodities industry for certified minority-owned business enter-
30 prises: sixteen and eleven hundredths percent;
31 (h) commodities industry for certified women-owned business enter-
32 prises: ten and ninety-three hundredths percent;
33 (h-1) commodities industry for certified veteran-owned business enter-
34 prises: a percentage to be determined by the disparity study described
35 in subdivision one of section three hundred twelve-a of this article;
36 (i) overall agency total dollar value of procurement for certified
37 minority-owned business enterprises: sixteen and fifty-three hundredths
38 percent;
39 (j) overall agency total dollar value of procurement for certified
40 women-owned business enterprises: twelve and thirty-nine hundredths
41 percent; [and]
42 (j-1) overall agency total dollar value of procurement for certified
43 veteran-owned business enterprises: a percentage to be determined by
44 the disparity study described in subdivision one of section three
45 hundred twelve-a of this article;
46 (k) overall agency total dollar value of procurement for certified
47 minority, women-owned business enterprises: twenty-eight and ninety-two
48 hundredths percent; and
49 (l) overall agency total dollar value of procurement for certified
50 minority, women, veteran-owned business enterprises: a percentage to be
51 determined by the disparity study described in subdivision one of
52 section three hundred twelve-a of this article.
53 1-a. The director shall ensure that each state agency has been
54 provided with a copy of the two thousand ten disparity study and there-
55 after the two thousand seventeen disparity study.
A. 3971 7
1 1-b. Each agency shall develop and adopt agency-specific goals based
2 on the findings of the two thousand ten disparity study and thereafter
3 the two thousand eighteen disparity study.
4 2. The director shall promulgate rules and regulations pursuant to the
5 goals established in subdivision one of this section that provide meas-
6 ures and procedures to ensure that certified minority [and women-owned],
7 women and veteran-owned businesses shall be given the opportunity for
8 maximum feasible participation in the performance of state contracts and
9 to assist in the agency's identification of those state contracts for
10 which minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned certified
11 businesses may best bid to actively and affirmatively promote and assist
12 their participation in the performance of state contracts so as to
13 facilitate the agency's achievement of the maximum feasible portion of
14 the goals for state contracts to such businesses.
15 2-a. The director shall promulgate rules and regulations that will
16 accomplish the following:
17 (a) provide for the certification and decertification of minority [and
18 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises for all agen-
19 cies through a single process that meets applicable requirements;
20 (b) require that each contract solicitation document accompanying each
21 solicitation set forth the expected degree of minority [and
22 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise participation
23 based, in part, on:
24 (i) the potential subcontract opportunities available in the prime
25 procurement contract; and
26 (ii) the availability, as contained within the study, of certified
27 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
28 to respond competitively to the potential subcontract opportunities;
29 (c) require that each agency provide a current list of certified
30 minority, women and veteran-owned business enterprises to each prospec-
31 tive contractor;
32 (d) allow a contractor that is a certified [minority-owned or women-
33 owned] minority, women or veteran-owned business enterprise to use the
34 work it performs to meet requirements for use of certified [minority-
35 owned or women-owned] minority, women or veteran-owned business enter-
36 prises as subcontractors;
37 (e) provide for joint ventures, which a bidder may count toward meet-
38 ing its minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
39 enterprise participation;
40 (f) consistent with subdivision six of this section, provide for
41 circumstances under which an agency may waive obligations of the
42 contractor relating to minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
43 owned business enterprise participation;
44 (g) require that an agency verify that minority [and women-owned],
45 women and veteran-owned business enterprises listed in a successful bid
46 are actually participating to the extent listed in the project for which
47 the bid was submitted;
48 (h) provide for the collection of statistical data by each agency
49 concerning actual minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
50 business enterprise participation; and
51 (i) require each agency to consult the most current disparity study
52 when calculating agency-wide and contract specific participation goals
53 pursuant to this article.
54 3. Solely for the purpose of providing the opportunity for meaningful
55 participation by certified businesses in the performance of state
56 contracts as provided in this section, state contracts shall include
A. 3971 8
1 leases of real property by a state agency to a lessee where: the terms
2 of such leases provide for the construction, demolition, replacement,
3 major repair or renovation of real property and improvements thereon by
4 such lessee; and the cost of such construction, demolition, replacement,
5 major repair or renovation of real property and improvements thereon
6 shall exceed the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. Reports to the
7 director pursuant to section three hundred fifteen of this article shall
8 include activities with respect to all such state contracts. Contracting
9 agencies shall include or require to be included with respect to state
10 contracts for the acquisition, construction, demolition, replacement,
11 major repair or renovation of real property and improvements thereon,
12 such provisions as may be necessary to effectuate the provisions of this
13 section in every bid specification and state contract, including, but
14 not limited to: (a) provisions requiring contractors to make a good
15 faith effort to solicit active participation by enterprises identified
16 in the directory of certified businesses provided to the contracting
17 agency by the office; (b) requiring the parties to agree as a condition
18 of entering into such contract, to be bound by the provisions of section
19 three hundred sixteen of this article; and (c) requiring the contractor
20 to include the provisions set forth in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
21 subdivision in every subcontract in a manner that the provisions will be
22 binding upon each subcontractor as to work in connection with such
23 contract. Provided, however, that no such provisions shall be binding
24 upon contractors or subcontractors in the performance of work or the
25 provision of services that are unrelated, separate or distinct from the
26 state contract as expressed by its terms, and nothing in this section
27 shall authorize the director or any contracting agency to impose any
28 requirement on a contractor or subcontractor except with respect to a
29 state contract.
30 4. In the implementation of this section, the contracting agency shall
31 (a) consult the findings contained within the disparity study evidencing
32 relevant industry specific availability of certified businesses;
33 (b) implement a program that will enable the agency to evaluate each
34 contract to determine the appropriateness of the goal pursuant to subdi-
35 vision one of this section;
36 (c) consider where practicable, the severability of construction
37 projects and other bundled contracts; and
38 (d) consider compliance with the requirements of any federal law
39 concerning opportunities for minority [and women-owned], women and
40 veteran-owned business enterprises which effectuates the purpose of this
41 section. The contracting agency shall determine whether the imposition
42 of the requirements of any such law duplicate or conflict with the
43 provisions hereof and if such duplication or conflict exists, the
44 contracting agency shall waive the applicability of this section to the
45 extent of such duplication or conflict.
46 5. (a) Contracting agencies shall administer the rules and regulations
47 promulgated by the director in a good faith effort to meet the maximum
48 feasible portion of the agency's goals adopted pursuant to this article
49 and the regulations of the director. Such rules and regulations: shall
50 require a contractor to submit a utilization plan after bids are opened,
51 when bids are required, but prior to the award of a state contract;
52 shall require the contracting agency to review the utilization plan
53 submitted by the contractor and to post the utilization plan and any
54 waivers of compliance issued pursuant to subdivision six of this section
55 on the website of the contracting agency within a reasonable period of
56 time as established by the director; shall require the contracting agen-
A. 3971 9
1 cy to notify the contractor in writing within a period of time specified
2 by the director as to any deficiencies contained in the contractor's
3 utilization plan; shall require remedy thereof within a period of time
4 specified by the director; shall require the contractor to submit peri-
5 odic compliance reports relating to the operation and implementation of
6 any utilization plan; shall not allow any automatic waivers but shall
7 allow a contractor to apply for a partial or total waiver of the minori-
8 ty [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise
9 participation requirements pursuant to subdivisions six and seven of
10 this section; shall allow a contractor to file a complaint with the
11 director pursuant to subdivision eight of this section in the event a
12 contracting agency has failed or refused to issue a waiver of the minor-
13 ity [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise
14 participation requirements or has denied such request for a waiver; and
15 shall allow a contracting agency to file a complaint with the director
16 pursuant to subdivision nine of this section in the event a contractor
17 is failing or has failed to comply with the minority [and women-owned],
18 women and veteran-owned business enterprise participation requirements
19 set forth in the state contract where no waiver has been granted.
20 (b) The rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to this subdivision
21 regarding a utilization plan shall provide that where enterprises have
22 been identified within a utilization plan, a contractor shall attempt,
23 in good faith, to utilize such enterprise at least to the extent indi-
24 cated. A contracting agency may require a contractor to indicate, within
25 a utilization plan, what measures and procedures he or she intends to
26 take to comply with the provisions of this article, but may not require,
27 as a condition of award of, or compliance with, a contract that a
28 contractor utilize a particular enterprise in performance of the
29 contract.
30 (c) Without limiting other grounds for the disqualification of bids or
31 proposals on the basis of non-responsibility, a contracting agency may
32 disqualify the bid or proposal of a contractor as being non-responsible
33 for failure to remedy notified deficiencies contained in the contrac-
34 tor's utilization plan within a period of time specified in regulations
35 promulgated by the director after receiving notification of such defi-
36 ciencies from the contracting agency. Where failure to remedy any noti-
37 fied deficiency in the utilization plan is a ground for disqualifica-
38 tion, that issue and all other grounds for disqualification shall be
39 stated in writing by the contracting agency. Where the contracting agen-
40 cy states that a failure to remedy any notified deficiency in the utili-
41 zation plan is a ground for disqualification the contractor shall be
42 entitled to an administrative hearing, on a record, involving all
43 grounds stated by the contracting agency. Such hearing shall be
44 conducted by the appropriate authority of the contracting agency to
45 review the determination of disqualification. A final administrative
46 determination made following such hearing shall be reviewable in a
47 proceeding commenced under article seventy-eight of the civil practice
48 law and rules, provided that such proceeding is commenced within thirty
49 days of the notice given by certified mail return receipt requested
50 rendering such final administrative determination. Such proceeding shall
51 be commenced in the supreme court, appellate division, third department
52 and such proceeding shall be preferred over all other civil causes
53 except election causes, and shall be heard and determined in preference
54 to all other civil business pending therein, except election matters,
55 irrespective of position on the calendar. Appeals taken to the court of
A. 3971 10
1 appeals of the state of New York shall be subject to the same prefer-
2 ence.
3 6. Where it appears that a contractor cannot, after a good faith
4 effort, comply with the minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
5 owned business enterprise participation requirements set forth in a
6 particular state contract, a contractor may file a written application
7 with the contracting agency requesting a partial or total waiver of such
8 requirements setting forth the reasons for such contractor's inability
9 to meet any or all of the participation requirements together with an
10 explanation of the efforts undertaken by the contractor to obtain the
11 required minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
12 enterprise participation. In implementing the provisions of this
13 section, the contracting agency shall consider the number and types of
14 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
15 located in the region in which the state contract is to be performed,
16 the total dollar value of the state contract, the scope of work to be
17 performed and the project size and term. If, based on such consider-
18 ations, the contracting agency determines there is not a reasonable
19 availability of contractors on the list of certified [business] busi-
20 nesses to furnish services for the project, it shall issue a waiver of
21 compliance to the contractor. In making such determination, the
22 contracting agency shall first consider the availability of other busi-
23 ness enterprises located in the region and shall thereafter consider the
24 financial ability of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
25 businesses located outside the region in which the contract is to be
26 performed to perform the state contract.
27 7. For purposes of determining a contractor's good faith effort to
28 comply with the requirements of this section or to be entitled to a
29 waiver therefrom the contracting agency shall consider:
30 (a) whether the contractor has advertised in general circulation
31 media, trade association publications, and [minority-focus and women-fo-
32 cus] minority-focused, women-focused and veteran-focused media and, in
33 such event, (i) whether or not certified minority [or women-owned],
34 women or veteran-owned businesses which have been solicited by the
35 contractor exhibited interest in submitting proposals for a particular
36 project by attending a pre-bid conference; and
37 (ii) whether certified businesses which have been solicited by the
38 contractor have responded in a timely fashion to the contractor's solic-
39 itations for timely competitive bid quotations prior to the contracting
40 agency's bid date; and
41 (b) whether there has been written notification to appropriate certi-
42 fied businesses that appear in the directory of certified businesses
43 prepared pursuant to paragraph (f) of subdivision three of section three
44 hundred eleven of this article; and
45 (c) whether the contractor can reasonably structure the amount of work
46 to be performed under subcontracts in order to increase the likelihood
47 of participation by certified businesses.
48 8. In the event that a contracting agency fails or refuses to issue a
49 waiver to a contractor as requested within twenty days after having made
50 application therefor pursuant to subdivision six of this section or if
51 the contracting agency denies such application, in whole or in part, the
52 contractor may file a complaint with the director pursuant to section
53 three hundred sixteen of this article setting forth the facts and
54 circumstances giving rise to the contractor's complaint together with a
55 demand for relief. The contractor shall serve a copy of such complaint
56 upon the contracting agency by personal service or by certified mail,
A. 3971 11
1 return receipt requested. The contracting agency shall be afforded an
2 opportunity to respond to such complaint in writing.
3 9. If, after the review of a contractor's minority [and women owned],
4 women and veteran-owned business utilization plan or review of a period-
5 ic compliance report and after such contractor has been afforded an
6 opportunity to respond to a notice of deficiency issued by the contract-
7 ing agency in connection therewith, it appears that a contractor is
8 failing or refusing to comply with the minority [and women-owned], women
9 and veteran-owned business participation requirements as set forth in
10 the state contract and where no waiver from such requirements has been
11 granted, the contracting agency may file a written complaint with the
12 director pursuant to section three hundred sixteen of this article
13 setting forth the facts and circumstances giving rise to the contracting
14 agency's complaint together with a demand for relief. The contracting
15 agency shall serve a copy of such complaint upon the contractor by
16 personal service or by certified mail, return receipt requested. The
17 contractor shall be afforded an opportunity to respond to such complaint
18 in writing.
19 § 8. Section 313-a of the executive law, as added by chapter 175 of
20 the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
21 § 313-a. Diversity practices of state contractors. The director shall
22 promulgate rules and regulations setting forth measures and procedures
23 to require all contracting agencies, where practicable, feasible and
24 appropriate, to assess the diversity practices of contractors submitting
25 bids or proposals in connection with the award of a state contract. Such
26 rules and regulations shall take into account: the nature of the labor,
27 services, supplies, equipment or materials being procured by the state
28 agency; the method of procurement required to be used by a state agency
29 to award the contract and minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
30 an-owned business utilization plans required to be submitted pursuant to
31 sections three hundred twelve and three hundred thirteen of this arti-
32 cle; and such other factors as the director deems appropriate or neces-
33 sary to promote the award of state contracts to contractors having sound
34 diversity practices. Such assessment shall not in any way permit the
35 automatic rejection of a bid or procurement contract proposal based on
36 lack of adherence to diversity practices. Each bid or proposal shall be
37 analyzed on an individual per bid or per proposal basis with the
38 contractor's diversity practices considered as only a part of a wider
39 consideration of several factors when deciding to award or decline to
40 award a bid or proposal. The director shall develop the rules and regu-
41 lations required hereunder only after consultation with the state
42 procurement council established by section one hundred sixty-one of the
43 state finance law.
44 § 9. Subdivisions 2 and 2-a of section 314 of the executive law,
45 subdivision 2 as added by chapter 261 of the laws of 1988 and subdivi-
46 sion 2-a as amended by chapter 175 of the laws of 2010, are amended to
47 read as follows:
48 2. For the purposes of this article, the office shall be responsible
49 for verifying businesses as being owned, operated, and controlled by
50 minority group members [or], women or veterans and for certifying such
51 verified businesses. The director shall prepare a directory of certified
52 businesses for use by contracting agencies and contractors in carrying
53 out the provisions of this article. The director shall periodically
54 update the directory.
55 2-a. (a) The director shall establish a procedure enabling the office
56 to accept New York municipal corporation certification verification for
A. 3971 12
1 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise
2 applicants in lieu of requiring the applicant to complete the state
3 certification process. The director shall promulgate rules and regu-
4 lations to set forth criteria for the acceptance of municipal corpo-
5 ration certification. All eligible municipal corporation certifications
6 shall require business enterprises seeking certification to meet the
7 following standards:
8 (i) have at least fifty-one percent ownership by a minority [or a
9 women-owned], women or veteran-owned enterprise and be owned by United
10 States citizens or permanent resident aliens;
11 (ii) be an enterprise in which the minority [and/or women-ownership],
12 women and/or veteran-ownership interest is real, substantial and contin-
13 uing;
14 (iii) be an enterprise in which the minority [and/or women-ownership],
15 women and/or veteran-ownership has and exercises the authority to
16 control independently the day-to-day business decisions of the enter-
17 prise;
18 (iv) be an enterprise authorized to do business in this state;
19 (v) be subject to a physical site inspection to verify the fifty-one
20 percent ownership requirement;
21 (vi) be owned by an individual or individuals, whose ownership,
22 control and operation are relied upon for certification, with a personal
23 net worth that does not exceed three million five hundred thousand
24 dollars, as adjusted annually for inflation according to the consumer
25 price index; and
26 (vii) be an enterprise that is a small business pursuant to subdivi-
27 sion twenty of section three hundred ten of this article.
28 (b) The director shall work with all municipal corporations that have
29 a municipal minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
30 enterprise program to develop standards to accept state certification to
31 meet the municipal corporation minority [and women-owned], women and
32 veteran-owned business enterprise certification standards.
33 (c) The director shall establish a procedure enabling the division to
34 accept federal certification verification for minority [and
35 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise applicants,
36 provided said standards comport with those required by the state minori-
37 ty [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business program, in lieu
38 of requiring the applicant to complete the state certification process.
39 The director shall promulgate rules and regulations to set forth crite-
40 ria for the acceptance of federal certification.
41 § 10. Subdivisions 3, 4, 5 and 7 of section 315 of the executive law,
42 subdivision 3 as amended and subdivisions 4, 5 and 7 as added by chapter
43 175 of the laws of 2010, are amended to read as follows:
44 3. Each contracting agency shall report to the director with respect
45 to activities undertaken to promote employment of minority group members
46 [and], women and veterans and promote and increase participation by
47 certified businesses with respect to state contracts and subcontracts.
48 Such reports shall be submitted periodically, but not less frequently
49 than annually, as required by the director, and shall include such
50 information as is necessary for the director to determine whether the
51 contracting agency and contractor have complied with the purposes of
52 this article, including, without limitation, a summary of all waivers of
53 the requirements of subdivisions six and seven of section three hundred
54 thirteen of this article allowed by the contracting agency during the
55 period covered by the report, including a description of the basis of
56 the waiver request and the rationale for granting any such waiver. Each
A. 3971 13
1 agency shall also include in such annual report whether or not it has
2 been required to prepare a remedial plan, and, if so, the plan and the
3 extent to which the agency has complied with each element of the plan.
4 4. The division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business
5 development shall issue an annual report which: (a) summarizes the
6 report submitted by each contracting agency pursuant to subdivision
7 three of this section; (b) contains such comparative or other informa-
8 tion as the director deems appropriate, including but not limited to
9 goals compared to actual participation of minority [and women-owned],
10 women and veteran-owned business enterprises in state contracting, to
11 evaluate the effectiveness of the activities undertaken by each such
12 contracting agency to promote increased participation by certified
13 minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned businesses with
14 respect to state contracts and subcontracts; (c) contains a summary of
15 all waivers of the requirements of subdivisions six and seven of section
16 three hundred thirteen of this article allowed by each contracting agen-
17 cy during the period covered by the report, including a description of
18 the basis of the waiver request and the contracting agency's rationale
19 for granting any such waiver; (d) describes any efforts to create a
20 database or other information storage and retrieval system containing
21 information relevant to contracting with minority [and women-owned],
22 women and veteran-owned business enterprises; and (e) contains a summary
23 of (i) all determinations of violations of this article by a contractor
24 or a contracting agency made during the period covered by the annual
25 report pursuant to section three hundred sixteen-a of this article and
26 (ii) the penalties or sanctions, if any, assessed in connection with
27 such determinations and the rationale for such penalties or sanctions.
28 Copies of the annual report shall be provided to the commissioner, the
29 governor, the comptroller, the temporary president of the senate, the
30 speaker of the assembly, the minority leader of the senate, the minority
31 leader of the assembly and shall also be made widely available to the
32 public via, among other things, publication on a website maintained by
33 the division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business develop-
34 ment.
35 5. Each agency shall include in its annual report to the governor and
36 legislature pursuant to section one hundred sixty-four of [the executive
37 law] this chapter its annual goals for contracts with minority-owned
38 [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises, the number of
39 actual contracts issued to minority-owned [and], women-owned and veter-
40 an-owned business enterprises; and a summary of all waivers of the
41 requirements of subdivisions six and seven of section three hundred
42 thirteen of this article allowed by the reporting agency during the
43 preceding year, including a description of the basis of the waiver
44 request and the rationale for granting such waiver. Each agency shall
45 also include in such annual report whether or not it has been required
46 to prepare a remedial plan, and, if so, the plan and the extent to which
47 the agency has complied with each element of the plan.
48 7. If it is determined by the director that any agency has failed to
49 act in good faith to implement the remedial action plan, pursuant to
50 subdivision six of this section within one year, the director shall
51 provide written notice of such a finding, which shall be publicly avail-
52 able, and direct implementation of remedial actions to:
53 (a) assure that sufficient and effective solicitation efforts to
54 women, veteran and minority-owned business enterprises are being made by
55 said agency;
A. 3971 14
1 (b) divide contract requirements, when economically feasible, into
2 quantities that will expand the participation of women, veteran and
3 minority-owned business enterprises;
4 (c) eliminate extended experience or capitalization requirements, when
5 programmatically and economically feasible, that will expand partic-
6 ipation by women, veteran and minority-owned business enterprises;
7 (d) identify specific proposed contracts as particularly attractive or
8 appropriate for participation by women, veteran and minority-owned busi-
9 ness enterprises with such identification to result from and be coupled
10 with the efforts of paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this subdivision;
11 and
12 (e) upon a finding by the director that an agency has failed to take
13 affirmative measures to implement the remedial plan and to follow any of
14 the remedial actions set forth by the director, and in the absence of
15 any objective progress towards the agency's goals, require some or all
16 of the agency's procurement, for a specified period of time, be placed
17 under the direction and control of another agency or agencies.
18 § 11. Section 316 of the executive law, as amended by chapter 175 of
19 the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
20 § 316. Enforcement. Upon receipt by the director of a complaint by a
21 contracting agency that a contractor has violated the provisions of a
22 state contract which have been included to comply with the provisions of
23 this article or of a contractor that a contracting agency has violated
24 such provisions or has failed or refused to issue a waiver where one has
25 been applied for pursuant to subdivision six of section three hundred
26 thirteen of this article or has denied such application, the director
27 shall attempt to resolve the matter giving rise to such complaint. If
28 efforts to resolve such matter to the satisfaction of all parties are
29 unsuccessful, the director shall refer the matter, within thirty days of
30 the receipt of the complaint, to the division's hearing officers. Upon
31 conclusion of the administrative hearing, the hearing officer shall
32 submit to the director his or her decision regarding the alleged
33 violation of the contract and recommendations regarding the imposition
34 of sanctions, fines or penalties. The director, within ten days of
35 receipt of the decision, shall file a determination of such matter and
36 shall cause a copy of such determination along with a copy of this arti-
37 cle to be served upon the contractor by personal service or by certified
38 mail return receipt requested. The decision of the hearing officer shall
39 be final and may only be vacated or modified as provided in article
40 seventy-eight of the civil practice law and rules upon an application
41 made within the time provided by such article. The determination of the
42 director as to the imposition of any fines, sanctions or penalties shall
43 be reviewable pursuant to article seventy-eight of the civil practice
44 law and rules. The penalties imposed for any violation which is premised
45 upon either a fraudulent or intentional misrepresentation by the
46 contractor or the contractor's willful and intentional disregard of the
47 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned participation
48 requirement included in the contract may include a determination that
49 the contractor shall be ineligible to submit a bid to any contracting
50 agency or be awarded any such contract for a period not to exceed one
51 year following the final determination; provided however, if a contrac-
52 tor has previously been determined to be ineligible to submit a bid
53 pursuant to this section, the penalties imposed for any subsequent
54 violation, if such violation occurs within five years of the first
55 violation, may include a determination that the contractor shall be
56 ineligible to submit a bid to any contracting agency or be awarded any
A. 3971 15
1 such contract for a period not to exceed five years following the final
2 determination. The division of minority [and women's], women's and
3 veterans' business development shall maintain a website listing all
4 contractors that have been deemed ineligible to submit a bid pursuant to
5 this section and the date after which each contractor shall once again
6 become eligible to submit bids.
7 § 12. Section 316-a of the executive law, as added by chapter 175 of
8 the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
9 § 316-a. Prohibitions in contracts; violations. Every contracting
10 agency shall include a provision in its state contracts expressly
11 providing that any contractor who willfully and intentionally fails to
12 comply with the minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
13 participation requirements of this article as set forth in such state
14 contract shall be liable to the contracting agency for liquidated or
15 other appropriate damages and shall provide for other appropriate reme-
16 dies on account of such breach. A contracting agency that elects to
17 proceed against a contractor for breach of contract as provided in this
18 section shall be precluded from seeking enforcement pursuant to section
19 three hundred sixteen of this article; provided however, that the
20 contracting agency shall include a summary of all enforcement actions
21 undertaken pursuant to this section in its annual report submitted
22 pursuant to subdivision three of section three hundred fifteen of this
23 article.
24 § 13. Section 317 of the executive law, as added by chapter 261 of the
25 laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows:
26 § 317. Superseding effect of article with respect to state law. The
27 provisions of this article shall supersede any other provision of state
28 law, which expressly implements or mandates an equal employment opportu-
29 nity program or a program for securing participation by minority [and
30 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises, concerning
31 action to be taken by any party to a state contract, to which the
32 provisions of this article apply; provided, however, that the provisions
33 of any state law, not as hereinabove superseded, which expressly imple-
34 ment or mandate such programs shall remain unimpaired by the provisions
35 of this article, except that the provisions of any such law shall be
36 construed as if the provisions of subdivisions five, six, seven and
37 eight of section three hundred thirteen and section three hundred
38 sixteen of this article were fully set forth therein and made applicable
39 only to complaints of violations under such provisions of law occurring
40 on or after September first, nineteen hundred eighty-eight; provided,
41 further, that nothing contained in this article shall be construed to
42 limit, impair, or otherwise restrict any state agency's authority or
43 discretionary power in effect prior to the enactment of this article to
44 establish or continue, by rule, regulation or resolution, an equal
45 opportunity program or a program for securing participation of minority
46 [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises with
47 regard to banking relationships, the issuance of insurance policies or
48 contracts for the sale of bonds, notes or other securities; and,
49 provided further, that nothing contained in the immediately preceding
50 proviso shall be construed to create, impair, alter, limit, modify,
51 enlarge, abrogate or restrict any agency's authority or discretionary
52 power with respect to an equal opportunity program or a program for
53 securing participation of minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
54 an-owned enterprises.
55 § 14. Section 4-a of the executive law, as added by chapter 175 of the
56 laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 16
1 § 4-a. Chief diversity officer. A chief diversity officer for the
2 state shall be appointed by the governor and shall receive a salary to
3 be fixed by the governor within the amount appropriated therefor. The
4 chief diversity officer's responsibilities shall include the following:
5 1. Advise and assist the governor in formulating policies relating to
6 workforce diversity and minority [and], women's and veterans' business
7 enterprises;
8 2. Work with the director of the division of minority [and], women's
9 and veterans' business development to prepare an annual plan for ensur-
10 ing full compliance with article [fifteen-a of the executive law]
11 fifteen-A of this chapter by state agencies and the use of diversity
12 practices by such agencies;
13 3. Advise the governor and the agencies regarding any measures neces-
14 sary to ensure full compliance with article [fifteen-a] fifteen-A of
15 this chapter and use of diversity practices by state public authorities;
16 4. Serve as a member of the state procurement council established
17 under section one hundred sixty-one of the state finance law;
18 5. Serve as the governor's liaison with organizations representing
19 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
20 and other organizations related to diversity in the state workforce and
21 in state contracting;
22 6. Serve as the governor's liaison to the small business advisory
23 council for issues related to the creation of a diverse workforce and
24 state procurement practices relating to minority [and women-owned],
25 women and veteran-owned business enterprises;
26 7. Review and consult with the director of minority [and], women's and
27 veterans' business development regarding policies relating to minority
28 [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise contract
29 specialists at state agencies; and
30 8. Engage in other actions assigned to him or her by the governor
31 relating to diversity in hiring or promotion of the state workforce and
32 in encouraging diversity practices and compliance with article
33 [fifteen-a] fifteen-A of this chapter in procurement.
34 § 15. The article heading of article 4-A of the economic development
35 law, as added by chapter 55 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as
36 follows:
37 DIVISION OF MINORITY [AND], WOMEN'S AND VETERANS' BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
38 § 16. Section 115 of the economic development law, as added by chapter
39 55 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows:
40 § 115. Definitions. As used in this article, the following terms shall
41 have the following meanings:
42 1. "Division" shall mean the division of minority [and], women's and
43 veterans' business development created by this article.
44 2. "Technical assistance" shall mean assistance and services designed
45 to improve the efficiency, effectiveness and viability of a minority [or
46 women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprise, including, but
47 not limited to, management assistance, problem solving, the development
48 of business and marketing plans, market analysis, financial planning,
49 regulatory compliance, safety and security measures, export assistance,
50 procurement assistance, application assistance, state program assist-
51 ance, referral to private and public financing sources, contracting
52 assistance, and other forms of assistance which the commissioner deems
53 necessary and appropriate.
54 § 17. Section 116 of the economic development law, as added by chapter
55 55 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 17
1 § 116. Office of minority [and], women's and veterans' business devel-
2 opment; transfer. All the functions and powers possessed by and all the
3 obligations and duties of the governor's office of minority [and],
4 women's and veterans' business development office, created and estab-
5 lished in the executive law [pursuant to and by chapter two hundred
6 sixty-one of the laws of nineteen hundred eighty-eight], are hereby
7 transferred and assigned to, assumed by and devolved upon the department
8 of economic development.
9 § 18. Section 117 of the economic development law, as added by chapter
10 55 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows:
11 § 117. Division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business
12 development. There is hereby created within the department of economic
13 development a division of minority and [women-owned], women and veter-
14 an-owned business development. The director of such division shall be
15 appointed by the governor, shall report directly to the commissioner on
16 the activities of the division, and shall hold office at the pleasure of
17 the commissioner. The commissioner may appoint such officers, employees,
18 agents, consultants and special committees as he or she may deem neces-
19 sary to carry out the provisions of this article and prescribe their
20 duties.
21 § 19. Section 118 of the economic development law, as added by chapter
22 55 of the laws of 1992 and subdivision 7 as further amended by section
23 15 of part GG of chapter 63 of the laws of 2000, is amended to read as
24 follows:
25 § 118. Power and duties. In addition to the power and duties conferred
26 by section one hundred sixteen of this article, the division shall have
27 the additional power and duty to:
28 1. Coordinate with all state agencies performing functions affecting
29 the operations of minority [business enterprises, and women-owned],
30 women and veteran-owned business enterprises, and veteran-owned business
31 enterprises as such terms are defined in section two hundred ten of this
32 chapter;
33 2. Receive complaints and inquiries of operators of minority [and
34 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises and refer
35 them to the appropriate federal, state or local agency for appropriate
36 action on such complaints;
37 3. Solicit recommendations from the operators of minority [and women-
38 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises for improving
39 existing state programs and refer such recommendations to the governor,
40 the legislature and appropriate state agencies or authorities;
41 4. Advise and make recommendations to the commissioner and the legis-
42 lature on matters affecting the minority [and women-owned], women or
43 veteran-owned business enterprises of the state and promote and encour-
44 age the protection of the legitimate interests of minority [and women-
45 owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises within the state;
46 5. Conduct investigations, research, studies and analyses of matters
47 affecting the interests of minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
48 an-owned business enterprises;
49 6. Study the implementation of the laws affecting minority [and
50 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises and recommend
51 to the commissioner new laws and amendments of laws for the benefit of
52 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enter-
53 prises; and review pending legislation affecting minority [and women-
54 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises and report its
55 findings to the commissioner;
A. 3971 18
1 7. Provide technical assistance and information to minority [and
2 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises in the state
3 on economic development programs administered by the department, includ-
4 ing, but not limited to: (a) the empire zones program, established
5 pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, (b) the
6 industrial effectiveness program, established pursuant to article seven
7 of this chapter, (c) the economic development skills training program,
8 established pursuant to article eight of this chapter, and (d) the
9 entrepreneurial assistance program, established pursuant to article nine
10 of this chapter;
11 8. Provide technical assistance and information to minority [and
12 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises in the state
13 on economic development programs administered by agencies other than the
14 department, including, but not limited to programs administered by the
15 urban development corporation, the job development authority and the
16 science and technology foundation;
17 9. Be responsible for conducting minority [and women-owned], women and
18 veteran-owned business enterprise assistance programs and for coordinat-
19 ing the activities of all other state agencies acting within the scope
20 of this section; and
21 10. Carry out the activities to implement the minority [and women-
22 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise assistance programs,
23 to the extent practicable, within amounts appropriated therefor by;
24 (a) collecting and maintaining information identifying certified
25 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
26 within New York state;
27 (b) collecting, maintaining, and providing information to potential
28 users identifying existing contracting and procurement opportunities
29 within and outside New York state;
30 (c) maintaining, providing and marketing a compilation of existing
31 programs providing assistance for minority [and women-owned], women and
32 veteran-owned business enterprises;
33 (d) identifying special needs and problems facing minority [and
34 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises within New
35 York state;
36 (e) contacting institutions, organizations and commercial enterprises
37 that are potential consumers of minority [and women-owned], women and
38 veteran-owned business products and services; urging their expanded
39 consumption of such goods and services;
40 (f) facilitating the establishment of minority [and women-owned],
41 women and veteran-owned business enterprises; and
42 (g) providing information concerning local and regional opportunities
43 for minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enter-
44 prises.
45 § 20. Subdivisions 1, 3 and 6 of section 120 of the economic develop-
46 ment law, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 361 of the laws of 2009
47 and subdivisions 3 and 6 as added by chapter 55 of the laws of 1992, are
48 amended to read as follows:
49 1. There is hereby created in the division of minority [and], women's
50 and veterans' business development a minority [and women-owned], women
51 and veteran-owned business enterprise advisory board. The board shall
52 consist of twelve members to be appointed by the governor. The governor
53 shall designate a chairperson from the members of the advisory board, to
54 serve as such at the pleasure of the governor. In appointing the members
55 of the advisory board the governor shall ensure that six of the members
56 are individuals who are currently involved in the ownership and/or oper-
A. 3971 19
1 ation of a minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business
2 enterprise or who have extensive experience in minority [and women-
3 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise ownership and/or
4 operation, and that at least two of the members are individuals repres-
5 enting banking, community development financial, insurance or surety
6 bonding institutions.
7 3. The advisory board shall meet regularly at least one time in each
8 year. Special meetings may be called by its chairperson and shall be
9 called by the chairperson at the request of the director of the division
10 of minority [and], women's and veterans' business development.
11 6. The board shall have the power and duty to:
12 (a) advise the commissioner in carrying out the functions, powers and
13 duties of the division, as set forth in this article;
14 (b) advise the commissioner, the governor, and the legislature
15 concerning recommended legislation necessary to foster and promote the
16 prosperity, expansion and development of minority [and women-owned],
17 women and veteran-owned business enterprises within the state;
18 (c) advise the commissioner, the governor, and the legislature
19 concerning existing laws, rules, regulations and practices of state
20 agencies which are counter-productive or inimical to the prosperity,
21 expansion and development of minority [and women-owned], women and
22 veteran-owned business enterprises within the state;
23 (d) advise the commissioner, the governor, and the legislature
24 concerning the development of inter-governmental cooperation among agen-
25 cies of the federal, state and local governments and cooperation between
26 private industry and government so as to assure the optimum development
27 of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enter-
28 prises; and
29 (e) serve as a catalyst for creating and maintaining a minority [and
30 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise consciousness
31 in New York state.
32 (f) establish procedures for making annual awards to be known as "New
33 York State Minority [and Women-Owned], Women and Veteran-Owned Business
34 Excelsior Awards". These non-monetary awards shall be given in recogni-
35 tion of unusual performance by persons, firms and organizations which
36 are engaged in the operation of a New York state minority [and women-
37 owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise or which are engaged
38 in activities to assist minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
39 owned business enterprises in the state. The board may nominate up to
40 five award winners annually and forward such names to the governor for
41 consideration. The governor may designate award winners from these nomi-
42 nees. Current members of the advisory board are not eligible as nomi-
43 nees.
44 § 21. Section 210 of the economic development law is amended by adding
45 a new subdivision 7 to read as follows:
46 7. "Veteran-owned business enterprise" shall mean any business enter-
47 prise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the case of
48 a publicly owned business at least fifty-one per centum of the stock of
49 which is owned by, citizens or permanent resident aliens who are veter-
50 ans where such ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing
51 and where such persons have the authority to independently control the
52 day-to-day business decisions of the entity.
53 § 22. Paragraph (h) of subdivision 6 of section 133 of the economic
54 development law, as amended by chapter 491 of the laws of 2013, is
55 amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 20
1 (h) advise the commissioner on recommendations for the selection of a
2 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise
3 statewide advocate as set forth by section three hundred eleven-a of the
4 executive law; and
5 § 23. Subdivision 1 of section 231 of the economic development law, as
6 amended by chapter 352 of the laws of 2009, is amended to read as
7 follows:
8 1. The department, through its regional offices, is authorized: (a) to
9 serve as a center for information regarding economic development
10 resources available from state, federal and local agencies; (b) to
11 provide outreach to businesses, with attention to small and medium-sized
12 businesses, including minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
13 owned business enterprises, for financial and technical assistance
14 offered by state economic development agencies, authorities, or other
15 economic entities; (c) to serve as a regional center to accept applica-
16 tions for state economic development programs; (d) to coordinate the
17 economic development programs and activities of state agencies and
18 authorities within each region including, but not limited to, outreach
19 to businesses, technical assistance services, skills training assist-
20 ance, sharing of information, strategic economic development plans and
21 programs, to provide or arrange for assistance in compliance with feder-
22 al, state, and local rules, regulations, permits, and licenses, and
23 other measures to enhance regional economic development and eliminate
24 duplication of services; (e) to provide or arrange for assistance to
25 persons, firms, agencies, partnerships or corporations, either public or
26 private, in applying for assistance from state economic development
27 programs or for necessary licenses and permits or seeking to comply with
28 federal, state and local rules and regulations; (f) to review and
29 comment, within their knowledge and expertise, with respect to applica-
30 tions for state assistance in a timely manner and form prescribed by the
31 commissioner; (g) to distribute literature and marketing material
32 describing the facilities, advantages and attractions of the region for
33 business; (h) to provide economic development information, planning
34 services and technical assistance to counties and municipalities within
35 the region; (i) to provide information and assistance in the certif-
36 ication of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
37 enterprises; (j) to provide or arrange for assistance to private sector
38 employers, whether operating for profit or not for profit, and to organ-
39 izations and associations of such employers in developing and implement-
40 ing innovative and flexible employee compensation, assistance and bene-
41 fit programs to enhance competitiveness and meet emerging demographic
42 and market conditions; and (k) to provide information and assistance to
43 small businesses on environmental compliance requirements of federal and
44 state law and pollution prevention opportunities in furtherance of poli-
45 cies and programs established in article twenty-eight of the environ-
46 mental conservation law and in coordination with the pollution
47 prevention and environmental compliance coordinating council established
48 in article twenty-eight of the environmental conservation law, including
49 programs operated by the department, the department of environmental
50 conservation or other state or local agencies from which technical
51 assistance, or loans, grants or other financial assistance for compli-
52 ance and pollution prevention may be obtained; and in providing such
53 information and assistance, to promote pollution prevention approaches.
54 § 24. Paragraph (i) of subdivision 3 of section 22-c of the state
55 finance law, as amended by section 1 of part O of chapter 59 of the laws
56 of 2009, is amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 21
1 (i) An explanation of any actions proposed to be taken to achieve
2 increased opportunity for meaningful participation in the performance of
3 state contracts by minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
4 business enterprises in accordance with article fifteen-A of the execu-
5 tive law, including a compliance report to be submitted by July first of
6 each year commencing with the two thousand five--two thousand six fiscal
7 year and for each subsequent year thereafter that includes: all the
8 items of information required in accordance with regulations promulgated
9 by the director of the division of minority [and], women's and veterans'
10 business development in the department of economic development under
11 article fifteen-A of the executive law; goals for participation by
12 certified minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business
13 enterprises for such fiscal year; and a description of the types of
14 expenditures, projects or contracts.
15 § 25. Paragraphs c and d of subdivision 2 of section 5 of the state
16 finance law, as added by chapter 171 of the laws of 2010, are amended to
17 read as follows:
18 c. Within the discretion of the deferred compensation board and in
19 accordance with and subject to its fiduciary duty and obligations to the
20 deferred compensation plan for state employees and to the members and
21 beneficiaries of such plan and such other investment limitations as may
22 be prescribed by this chapter, the deferred compensation board is
23 authorized to establish an [MWBE] MWVBE asset management and financial
24 institution strategy including reasonable goals for utilization of
25 [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions and
26 [MWBE] MWVBE professional service firms, which shall include, but shall
27 not be limited to, the following objectives:
28 (i) conducting procurement procedures in a manner that will assure the
29 inclusion of [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers in any request for proposal or
30 search process for asset management services undertaken in accordance
31 with the rules and regulations and of the board;
32 (ii) subject to best execution policies, developing a strategy to (1)
33 conduct trades of public equity securities with [MWBE] MWVBE financial
34 institutions and (2) conduct trades of fixed-income securities through
35 [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions;
36 (iii) conducting procurement procedures in a manner that will assure
37 the inclusion of [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions and other [MWBE]
38 MWVBE professional service firms in procurements for services that
39 include accounting, banking, financial advisory, insurance, legal,
40 research, valuation and other financial and professional services that
41 are undertaken in accordance with the rules and regulations of the
42 board;
43 (iv) cooperating with other fiduciary controlled entities and state
44 agencies and offices to identify [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE]
45 MWVBE financial institutions and [MWBE] MWVBE professional service
46 firms.
47 As used in this section, the terms "[MWBE] MWVBE asset manager",
48 "[MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions", "[MWBE] MWVBE", "fiduciary-cont-
49 rolled entities" and "best execution" shall have the meanings specified
50 in section one hundred seventy-six of the retirement and social security
51 law.
52 d. The board is also authorized to:
53 (i) periodically provide notice of the existence of such strategy so
54 that [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions
55 and other [MWBE] MWVBE professional service firms are made aware of the
56 opportunities made available pursuant to this strategy;
A. 3971 22
1 (ii) within sixty days of the end of each fiscal year following the
2 effective date of this paragraph, the board shall report to the gover-
3 nor, legislature and the chief diversity officer of the state of New
4 York on the participation of [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE] MWVBE
5 financial institutions and [MWBE] MWVBE professional service providers
6 in investment and brokerage transactions with or as providers of
7 services for the deferred compensation plans, including a comparative
8 analysis of such activity relative to such activity with all asset
9 managers, financial institutions and professional service providers for
10 the relevant period and on the progress and the success of the efforts
11 undertaken during such period to achieve the goals of such strategy.
12 Each report shall be simultaneously published on the website of the
13 deferred compensation plans for not less than sixty days following its
14 release to the governor and the other recipients named above;
15 (iii) work with the other fiduciary-controlled entities to create a
16 database of such [MWBE] MWVBE entities; and
17 (iv) periodically, but not less than annually, hold a conference to
18 promote such strategy in conjunction with the other fiduciary-controlled
19 entities.
20 § 26. Subdivisions 4, 6 and 7 of section 176 of the retirement and
21 social security law, as added by chapter 171 of the laws of 2010, are
22 amended to read as follows:
23 4. The term "[MWBE] MWVBE asset manager" shall mean an asset manager
24 in any of the following asset classes: public equity or fixed income
25 securities, hedge funds, fund of hedge funds, private equity (including
26 venture capital), fund of private equity funds, real estate investment
27 funds, fund of real estate funds, or any other asset class for which an
28 applicable fiduciary-controlled entity engages external asset managers
29 that is (a) a [MWBE] MWVBE; and (b) a registered investment advisor or
30 exempt from such registration and (c) certified pursuant to the
31 provisions of subdivision three of section four hundred twenty-three-c
32 of this chapter.
33 6. The term "[MWBE] MWVBE" for the purpose of engaging in business
34 with the fiduciary-controlled entities covered by this section, means a
35 business enterprise, including without limitation, a sole proprietor-
36 ship, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability partnership,
37 limited liability company, corporation or other similar entity whether
38 domestic or foreign, that is:
39 (a)(i) at least fifty-one percent owned by (A) one or more minority
40 group members, or (B) one or more women, or (C) one or more veterans in
41 each case, who have significant experience in asset management, broker-
42 age, other financial services or related professional services such as
43 accounting, valuation or legal services, or (ii) substantially owned
44 and/or operated by women, veterans or minority group members who have
45 significant experience in asset management, brokerage, other financial
46 services or related professional services such as accounting, valuation
47 or legal services;
48 (b) an enterprise in which such minority [or], women or veteran owner-
49 ship or operation is real, substantial and continuing;
50 (c) an enterprise in which such minority [or], women or veteran owner-
51 ship or operation has and exercises the authority to control independ-
52 ently the day-to-day business decisions of the enterprise;
53 (d) an enterprise authorized to do business in this state; and
54 (e) an enterprise certified by the state comptroller pursuant to
55 section four hundred twenty-three-c of this chapter.
A. 3971 23
1 7. The term "[MWBE] MWVBE financial institution" shall mean (a) as it
2 relates to brokerage services, a registered broker dealer that is an
3 [MWBE] MWVBE certified pursuant to the provisions of subdivision three
4 of section four hundred twenty-three-c of this chapter and (b) as it
5 relates to any other financial services, an [MWBE] MWVBE certified
6 pursuant to the provisions of subdivision three of section four hundred
7 twenty-three-c of this chapter that provides banking, financial advi-
8 sory, insurance, financial research, valuation or other financial
9 services.
10 § 27. Section 423-c of the retirement and social security law, as
11 added by chapter 171 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
12 § 423-c. [MWBE] MWVBE asset management and financial institution stra-
13 tegy. 1. Within the discretion of the state comptroller and in accord-
14 ance with and subject to his or her fiduciary duties and obligations as
15 trustee of the common retirement fund and to the members, retirees and
16 beneficiaries of such fund and such other investment limitations as may
17 be prescribed by this chapter, the comptroller is authorized to estab-
18 lish an [MWBE] MWVBE asset management and financial institution strategy
19 including reasonable goals for utilization of [MWBE] MWVBE asset manag-
20 ers, [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions and [MWBE] MWVBE financial and
21 professional service firms, which strategy shall include, but shall not
22 be limited to, the following objectives:
23 (a) investing assets of the common retirement fund with [MWBE] MWVBE
24 asset managers;
25 (b) subject to best execution: (i) conducting trades of public equity
26 securities with [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions; and (ii) conducting
27 trades of fixed-income securities through [MWBE] MWVBE financial insti-
28 tutions;
29 (c) allocating investments of assets of the common retirement fund
30 either through: (i) direct investments in the equities and debt securi-
31 ties of [MWBEs] MWVBEs; or (ii) indirectly through special programs
32 involving [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers; and
33 (d) awarding contracts for accounting, banking, financial advisory,
34 insurance, legal, research, valuation and other financial and profes-
35 sional services to [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions and other [MWBE]
36 MWVBE professional service firms.
37 2. The comptroller is also authorized to: (a) periodically advertise
38 the existence of the strategy established in this section so that [MWBE]
39 MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE] MWVBE financial institutions and other
40 [MWBE] MWVBE professional service firms are made aware of the opportu-
41 nities made available pursuant to such strategy;
42 (b) within sixty days of the end of each fiscal year following the
43 effective date of this section, the state comptroller shall report to
44 the governor, legislature and the chief diversity officer of the state
45 of New York on the participation of [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers, [MWBE]
46 MWVBE financial institutions and [MWBE] MWVBE professional service
47 providers in investment and brokerage transactions with or as providers
48 of services for the common retirement fund, including a comparative
49 analysis of such activity relative to such activity with all asset
50 managers, financial institutions and professional service providers for
51 the relevant period and on the progress and success of the efforts
52 undertaken during such period to achieve the goals of such strategy.
53 Each report shall be simultaneously published on the website of the
54 common retirement fund for not less than sixty days following its
55 release to the governor and the other recipients named above;
A. 3971 24
1 (c) work with the other fiduciary-controlled entities to create a
2 database of such [MWBE] MWVBE entities; and
3 (d) periodically, but not less than annually, hold a conference to
4 promote such strategy in conjunction with the other fiduciary-controlled
5 entities.
6 3. (a) The state comptroller shall establish and adopt a certification
7 process and guidelines for the sole purpose of identification and
8 reporting on [MWBE] MWVBE firms providing asset management, brokerage,
9 or other financial or professional services as such term is defined in
10 subdivision six of section one hundred seventy-six of this chapter. Such
11 certification shall differentiate and the comptroller shall maintain
12 separate categories for [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers meeting the criteria
13 of subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of subdivision six of section one
14 hundred seventy-six of this chapter and [MWBE] MWVBE asset managers
15 meeting the criteria of subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of such
16 subdivision.
17 (b) Such certification process shall include, but need not be limited
18 to, a request for the following information relating to each managing
19 principal, principal, operating principal, chief financial officer,
20 operating vice-president, vice-president, partner, owner and employee
21 associated with a prospective [MWBE] MWVBE entity:
22 (i) title;
23 (ii) position;
24 (iii) ownership percentage;
25 (iv) ethnicity;
26 (v) gender; and
27 (vi) length of service.
28 § 28. Section 147 of the state finance law, as added by chapter 360 of
29 the laws of 2009, is amended to read as follows:
30 § 147. Mentor-protege program. 1. In every state agency, department
31 and authority which has let more than ten million dollars in service and
32 construction contracts in the prior fiscal year, the chief executive
33 officer of that agency, department or authority shall develop a mentor-
34 protege program to foster long-term relationships between approved
35 mentor firms, and small business concerns and minority [and
36 women-owned], women and veteran-owned businesses certified pursuant to
37 article fifteen-A of the executive law, in order to enhance the capabil-
38 ities of small and minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
39 business concerns, improve their success in contracting with the state
40 or receiving subcontracts under a state contract, and to create sources
41 of reliable contractors and subcontractors ready to perform larger jobs
42 and responsibilities. Participation in the program shall be voluntary
43 for both the mentor firm and the protege firm.
44 2. The chief executive officer of each agency, department or authori-
45 ty, in consultation with the division of minority [and], women's and
46 veterans' business development and the division for small-business shall
47 develop requirements for:
48 (a) approval of contractors participating in the program established
49 pursuant to subdivision one of this section, to be known, for the
50 purposes of such program, as "mentor firms". Mentor firms must demon-
51 strate commitment and ability to assist protege firms, including favora-
52 ble financial health, good character, and experience in contracting with
53 the state. Once approved, a mentor firm must annually certify that it
54 continues to possess good character and a favorable financial position.
55 Incentives for mentor firms to participate in the program may include:
56 (i) where contracts are awarded by best value, additional evaluation
A. 3971 25
1 points as specified in the request for proposal; and (ii) where protege
2 firms are certified minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
3 businesses, credit towards fulfillment of minority [and women-owned],
4 women and veteran-owned business participation requirements, including
5 without limitation additional credit towards fulfillment of minority
6 [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business subcontracting
7 participation goals based on costs incurred by a mentor firm in provid-
8 ing assistance to a certified minority [and women-owned], women and
9 veteran-owned business protege firm.
10 (b) approval for small and certified minority [and women-owned], women
11 and veteran-owned business concerns receiving assistance under the
12 program established pursuant to subdivision one of this section, to be
13 known, for the purposes of such program, as "protege firms". A protege
14 firm may have only one mentor at a time and may participate in the
15 mentor-protege program for a maximum of five years.
16 (c) a process by which each mentor firm, before providing assistance
17 to a protege firm under the program, shall enter into a mentor-protege
18 agreement regarding the assistance to be provided by the mentor firm,
19 for a period as determined by the chief executive officer of the agency,
20 department or authority. A mentor firm may provide a protege firm with
21 assistance and training in general business management; financial
22 management, engineering, safety and technical matters; bonding assist-
23 ance or bonding waivers; subcontracts; rent-free use of facilities
24 and/or equipment; joint venture arrangements; and any other assistance
25 as determined by the chief executive officer of the agency, department
26 or authority. Mentor-protege agreements shall be approved by the chief
27 executive officer of the agency, department or authority, and shall
28 provide that either party may terminate the agreement with thirty days
29 advance notice and notice to the chief executive officer. No determi-
30 nation of affiliation or control may be found between a protege firm and
31 its mentor firm based on the mentor-protege agreement or any assistance
32 provided pursuant to such agreement.
33 § 29. Subdivision 7 of section 2777 of the public authorities law, as
34 added by chapter 686 of the laws of 1993, is amended to read as follows:
35 7. It is hereby found and declared that it has been and remains the
36 policy of the state of New York to promote equal opportunity in employ-
37 ment for all persons, without discrimination on account of race, creed,
38 color, national origin, sex, age, disability or marital status, to
39 promote equality of economic opportunity for minority group members
40 [and], women and veterans, and business enterprises owned by them, and
41 to eradicate the effects of private and governmental discrimination
42 which has erected and continues to maintain barriers that unreasonably
43 impair access by minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
44 business enterprises to state contract opportunities.
45 Recent reviews and analyses of contracting in New York, including the
46 study by the division of minority [and], women's and veterans' business
47 development of the department of economic development entitled "Opportu-
48 nity Denied! A Study of Racial and Sexual Discrimination Related to
49 Government Contracting in New York State," confirm through direct
50 evidence of racial and sexual discrimination in and by New York state
51 sufficient to justify race and sex conscious remedies. For the purpose
52 of furthering the state's compelling interest in eradicating the effects
53 of racial and sexual discrimination therefore, it is necessary and prop-
54 er that article fifteen-A of the executive law, concerning participation
55 by minority group members [and], women and veterans and business enter-
A. 3971 26
1 prises owned by them, shall apply to the Albany county airport authori-
2 ty.
3 § 30. Subdivisions 3 and 6 of section 2879 of the public authorities
4 law, subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 564 of the laws of 1988, para-
5 graph (b) of subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 45 of the laws of 1994,
6 subparagraph (iv) of paragraph (b) of subdivision 3 as amended by chap-
7 ter 383 of the laws of 1994, paragraph (m) of subdivision 3 as added by
8 chapter 862 of the laws of 1990, paragraph (n) of subdivision 3 as
9 amended by chapter 531 of the laws of 1993, paragraphs (o) and (p) of
10 subdivision 3 as added by chapter 844 of the laws of 1992, subparagraph
11 (i) of paragraph (b) of subdivision 3 and subdivision 6 as amended,
12 paragraphs (f), (g), (h), (i) and (j) of subdivision 3 as added and
13 paragraphs (k), (l), (m), (n), (o) and (p) of subdivision 3 as relet-
14 tered by chapter 174 of the laws of 2010, are amended to read as
15 follows:
16 3. The guidelines approved by the corporation shall include, but not
17 be limited to the following:
18 (a) A description of the types of goods purchased, and for procurement
19 contracts for services, a description of those areas of responsibility
20 and oversight requiring the use of personal services and the reasons for
21 the use of personal services in such areas.
22 (b) Requirements regarding the selection of contractors, which shall
23 include provisions:
24 (i) for the selection of such contractors on a competitive basis, and
25 provisions relating to the circumstances under which the board may by
26 resolution waive competition, including, notwithstanding any other
27 provision of law requiring competition, the purchase of goods or
28 services from small business concerns or those certified as minority [or
29 women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises, or goods or
30 technology that are recycled or remanufactured, in an amount not to
31 exceed two hundred thousand dollars without a formal competitive proc-
32 ess;
33 (ii) describing when the award of procurement contracts shall require
34 approval of the board by resolution, provided that any contract involv-
35 ing services to be rendered over a period in excess of one year shall
36 require the approval of the board by resolution and an annual review of
37 the contract by the board;
38 (iii) setting forth responsibilities of contractors;
39 (iv) as used in this subparagraph, the term "professional firm" shall
40 be defined as any individual or sole proprietorship, partnership, corpo-
41 ration, association, or other legal entity permitted by law to practice
42 the professions of architecture, engineering or surveying.
43 The corporation shall not refuse to negotiate with a professional firm
44 solely because the ratio of the "allowable indirect costs" to direct
45 labor costs of the professional firm or the hourly labor rate in any
46 labor category of the professional firm exceeds a limitation generally
47 set by the corporation in the determination of the reasonableness of the
48 estimated cost of services to be rendered by the professional firm, but
49 rather the corporation should also consider the reasonableness of cost
50 based on the total estimated cost of the service of the professional
51 firm which should include, among other things, all the direct labor
52 costs of the professional firm for such services plus all "allowable
53 indirect costs," other direct costs, and negotiated profit of the
54 professional firm. "Allowable indirect costs" of a professional firm are
55 defined as those costs generally associated with overhead which cannot
56 be specifically identified with a single project or contract and are
A. 3971 27
1 considered reasonable and allowable under specific state contract or
2 allowability limits.
3 (c) An identification of those areas or types of contracts for which
4 minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises
5 may best bid so as to promote and assist participation by such enter-
6 prises and facilitate a fair share of the awarding of contracts to such
7 enterprises. For the purposes of this section, a minority business
8 enterprise means any business enterprise, including a sole proprietor-
9 ship, partnership or corporation that is:
10 (i) at least fifty-one percent owned by one or more minority group
11 members or in the case of a publicly-owned business at least fifty-one
12 percent of the common stock or other voting interests of which is owned
13 by one or more minority group members;
14 (ii) an enterprise in which the minority ownership is real, substan-
15 tial and continuing;
16 (iii) an enterprise in which the minority ownership has and exercises
17 the authority to control independently the day-to-day business decisions
18 of the enterprise; and
19 (iv) an enterprise authorized to do business in New York state, inde-
20 pendently owned and operated, and not dominant in its field.
21 (d) For the purposes of this section, a minority group member means a
22 United States citizen or permanent resident alien who is and can demon-
23 strate membership in one of the following groups:
24 (i) Black persons having origins in any of the Black African racial
25 groups not of Hispanic origin;
26 (ii) Hispanic persons of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Cuban,
27 Central or South American of either Indian or Hispanic origin, regard-
28 less of race;
29 (iii) Asian and Pacific Islander persons having origins in any of the
30 Far East, Southeast Asia, the Indian sub-continent or the Pacific
31 Islands; or
32 (iv) Native American persons having origins in any of the original
33 peoples of North America.
34 (e) For the purposes of this section, a women-owned business enter-
35 prise means a business enterprise, including a sole proprietorship,
36 partnership or corporation which is:
37 (i) at least fifty-one percent owned by one or more United States
38 citizens or permanent resident aliens who are women or in the case of a
39 publicly-owned business at least fifty-one percent of the common stock
40 or other voting interests of which is owned by United States citizens or
41 permanent resident aliens who are women;
42 (ii) an enterprise in which the ownership interest of women is real,
43 substantial and continuing;
44 (iii) an enterprise in which the women ownership has and exercises the
45 authority to control independently the day-to-day business decisions of
46 the enterprise; and
47 (iv) an enterprise authorized to do business in New York state, inde-
48 pendently owned and operated, and not dominant in its field.
49 (e-1) For the purposes of this section, a veteran-owned business
50 enterprise means a business enterprise, including a sole proprietorship,
51 partnership or corporation which is:
52 (i) at least fifty-one percent owned by one or more United States
53 citizens or permanent resident aliens who are veterans or in the case of
54 a publicly-owned business at least fifty-one percent of the common stock
55 or other voting interests of which is owned by United States citizens or
56 permanent resident aliens who are veterans;
A. 3971 28
1 (ii) an enterprise in which the ownership interest of veterans is
2 real, substantial and continuing;
3 (iii) an enterprise in which the veteran ownership has and exercises
4 the authority to control independently the day-to-day business decisions
5 of the enterprise; and
6 (iv) an enterprise authorized to do business in New York state, inde-
7 pendently owned and operated, and not dominant in its field.
8 (f) Requirements for the designation of one or more senior staff of
9 the corporation to oversee the corporation's programs established to
10 promote and assist: (i) participation by certified minority [or women-
11 owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises in the corporation's
12 procurement opportunities and facilitation of the award of procurement
13 contracts to such enterprises; (ii) the utilization of certified minori-
14 ty [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises as
15 subcontractors and suppliers by entities having procurement contracts
16 with the corporation; and (iii) the utilization of partnerships, joint
17 ventures or other similar arrangements between certified minority [and
18 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises and other
19 entities having procurement contracts with the corporation. Such staff
20 shall be familiar with the procurement of the types of construction,
21 financial, legal or professional services utilized by the corporation,
22 report directly to the corporation's executive director, president or
23 chief executive officer and either directly or through their designees
24 participate in the procurement process.
25 (g) Requirements for providing notice, in addition to any other notice
26 of procurement opportunities required by law, to professional and other
27 organizations that serve minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
28 owned business enterprises providing the types of services procured by
29 the corporation.
30 (h) Procedures for maintaining lists of qualified certified minority
31 [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises, includ-
32 ing professional firms that have expressed an interest in doing business
33 with the corporation and ensuring that such lists are updated regularly.
34 The corporation shall also consult the lists of certified minority [and
35 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises maintained by
36 the department of economic development pursuant to article fifteen-A of
37 the executive law.
38 (i) The establishment of appropriate goals for participation by minor-
39 ity [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned business enterprises in
40 procurement contracts awarded by the corporation and for the utilization
41 of minority [and women-owned], women or veteran-owned enterprises as
42 subcontractors and suppliers by entities having procurement contracts
43 with the corporation. Statewide numerical participation target goals
44 shall be established by each authority based on the findings of the two
45 thousand ten disparity study and thereafter the two thousand eighteen
46 disparity study.
47 (j) Requirements to conduct procurements in a manner that will enable
48 the corporation to achieve the maximum feasible portion of the goals
49 established pursuant to paragraph (i) of this subdivision and that elim-
50 inates barriers to participation by minority [and women-owned], women
51 and veteran-owned business enterprises in the corporation's procure-
52 ments. Such procurement requirements shall include the following:
53 (A) Measures and procedures to ensure that certified businesses shall
54 be given the opportunity for maximum feasible participation in the
55 performance of state contracts and to assist in the corporation's iden-
56 tification of those state contracts for which certified businesses may
A. 3971 29
1 best bid to actively and affirmatively promote and assist their partic-
2 ipation in the performance of state contracts so as to facilitate the
3 corporation's achievement of the maximum feasible portion of the goals
4 for state contracts to such businesses;
5 (B) Provisions designating the division of minority [and women-owned],
6 women and veteran-owned business development to certify and decertify
7 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
8 for all corporations through a single process that meets applicable
9 state and federal requirements;
10 (C) A requirement that each contract solicitation document accompany-
11 ing each solicitation set forth the expected degree of minority [and
12 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprise participation
13 based, in part, on:
14 I. the potential subcontract opportunities available in the prime
15 procurement contract; and
16 II. the availability of certified minority [and women-owned], women
17 and veteran-owned business enterprises to respond competitively to the
18 potential subcontract opportunities;
19 (D) A requirement that each corporation provide a current list of
20 certified minority business enterprises to each prospective contractor;
21 (E) Provisions relating to joint ventures, under which a bidder may
22 count toward meeting its minority business enterprise participation
23 goal, the minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
24 enterprise portion of the joint venture;
25 (F) Provisions under which the corporation may waive obligations of
26 the contractor relating to minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
27 an-owned business enterprise participation after a showing of good faith
28 efforts to comply with the requirements of this act pursuant to the
29 waiver provisions contained in subdivision six of section three hundred
30 thirteen of the executive law;
31 (G) A requirement that the corporation verify that minority [and
32 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises listed in a
33 successful bid are actually participating to the extent listed in the
34 project for which the bid was submitted;
35 (H) In the implementation of this section, the contracting corporation
36 shall:
37 I. consider, where practicable, the severability of construction
38 projects and other bundled contracts;
39 II. implement a program that will enable the corporation to evaluate
40 each contract to determine the appropriateness of the goal pursuant to
41 paragraph (i) of this subdivision;
42 III. consider compliance with the requirements of any federal law
43 concerning opportunities for minority [and women-owned], women and
44 veteran-owned business enterprises which effectuates the purpose of this
45 section; and
46 IV. consult the most recent disparity study pursuant to article
47 fifteen-A of the executive law.
48 (k) A listing of the types of provisions to be contained in procure-
49 ment contracts, including provisions concerning the nature and monitor-
50 ing of the work to be performed, the use of corporate supplies and
51 facilities, the use of corporate personnel and any other provisions.
52 (l) Provisions regarding procurement contracts which involve former
53 officers or employees of the corporation.
54 (m) Procedures regarding procurement contracts which are exempt from
55 the publication requirements of article four-C of the economic develop-
56 ment law.
A. 3971 30
1 (n) Policies to promote the participation by New York state business
2 enterprises and New York state residents in procurement contracts,
3 including, but not limited to:
4 (i) providing for the corporation to collect and to consult the spec-
5 ifications of New York state business enterprises in developing specifi-
6 cations for any procurement contract for the purchase of goods where
7 possible, practicable, feasible and consistent with open bidding, except
8 for procurement contracts for which the corporation would be expending
9 funds received from another state. The corporation shall, where feasi-
10 ble, make use of the stock item specification forms prepared by the
11 commissioner of general services, and where necessary, consult with the
12 commissioner of the office of general services, in developing such spec-
13 ifications and make such determinations; and
14 (ii) with the cooperation of the department of economic development
15 and through cooperative efforts with contractors, providing for the
16 notification of New York state business enterprises of opportunities to
17 participate as subcontractors and suppliers on procurement contracts let
18 by the corporation in an amount estimated to be equal to or greater than
19 one million dollars and promulgating procedures which will assure
20 compliance by contractors with such notification. Once awarded the
21 contract such contractors shall document their efforts to encourage the
22 participation of New York state business enterprises as suppliers and
23 subcontractors on procurement contracts equal to or greater than one
24 million dollars. Documented efforts by a successful contractor shall
25 consist of and be limited to showing that such contractor has (a) solic-
26 ited bids, in a timely and adequate manner, from New York state business
27 enterprises including certified minority [and women-owned], women and
28 veteran-owned business, or (b) contacted the New York state department
29 of economic development to obtain listings of New York state business
30 enterprises, or (c) placed notices for subcontractors and suppliers in
31 newspapers, journals and other trade publications distributed in New
32 York state, or (d) participated in bidder outreach conferences. If the
33 contractor determines that New York state business enterprises are not
34 available to participate on the contract as subcontractors or suppliers,
35 the contractor shall provide a statement indicating the method by which
36 such determination was made. If the contractor does not intend to use
37 subcontractors on the contract, the contractor shall provide a statement
38 verifying such intent; and
39 (iii) except for procurement contracts for which the corporation would
40 be expending funds received from another state, the corporation shall
41 include in all bid documents provided to potential bidders a statement
42 that information concerning the availability of New York state subcon-
43 tractors and suppliers is available from the New York state department
44 of economic development, which shall include the directory of certified
45 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned businesses, and it
46 is the policy of New York state to encourage the use of New York state
47 subcontractors and suppliers, and to promote the participation of minor-
48 ity [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned businesses where possi-
49 ble, in the procurement of goods and services; and
50 (iv) with the cooperation of the community services division of the
51 department of labor and through cooperative efforts with contractors,
52 providing for the notification of New York state residents of employment
53 opportunities arising in New York state out of procurement contracts let
54 by the corporation in an amount estimated to be equal to or greater than
55 one million dollars; and promulgating procedures which will assure
56 compliance by contractors with such notification by requiring contrac-
A. 3971 31
1 tors to submit post-award compliance reports documenting their efforts
2 to provide such notification through listing any such positions with the
3 community services division, or providing for such notification in such
4 manner as is consistent with existing collective bargaining contracts or
5 agreements; and
6 (v) including in each set of documents soliciting bids on procurement
7 contracts to let by the corporation a statement notifying potential
8 bidders located in foreign countries that the corporation may assign or
9 otherwise transfer offset credits created by such procurement contract
10 to third parties located in New York state; providing for the assignment
11 or other form of transfer of offset credits created by such procurement
12 contracts, directly or indirectly, to third parties located in New York
13 state, in accordance with the written directions of the commissioner of
14 economic development; and providing for the corporation to otherwise
15 cooperate with the department of economic development in efforts to get
16 foreign countries to recognize offset credits assigned or transferred to
17 third parties located in New York state created by such procurement
18 contracts; and
19 (vi) promulgating procedures which will assure compliance with the
20 federal equal employment opportunity act of 1972 (P.L. 92-261), as
21 amended, by contractors of the corporation.
22 (o) For the purposes of this section, a "New York state business
23 enterprise" means a business enterprise, including a sole proprietor-
24 ship, partnership, or corporation, which offers for sale or lease or
25 other form of exchange, goods which are sought by the corporation and
26 which are substantially manufactured, produced or assembled in New York
27 state, or services which are sought by the corporation and which are
28 substantially performed within New York state.
29 (p) For the purposes of this section, a "New York resident" means a
30 natural person who maintains a fixed, permanent and principal home
31 located within New York state and to which such person, whenever tempo-
32 rarily located, always intends to return.
33 6. Each corporation, as part of the guidelines established pursuant to
34 subdivision three of this section, shall establish policies regarding
35 the preparation of publicly available reports on procurement contracts
36 entered into by such corporation. Such policies shall provide, at the
37 minimum, for the preparation of a report no less frequently than annual-
38 ly, summarizing procurement activity by such corporation for the period
39 of the report, including a listing of all procurement contracts entered
40 into, all contracts entered into with New York state business enter-
41 prises and the subject matter and value thereof, all contracts entered
42 into with certified minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned
43 business enterprises and the subject matter and value thereof, all
44 referrals made and all penalties imposed pursuant to section three
45 hundred sixteen of the executive law, all contracts entered into with
46 foreign business enterprises, and the subject matter and value thereof,
47 the selection process used to select such contractors, all procurement
48 contracts which were exempt from the publication requirements of article
49 four-C of the economic development law, the basis for any such exemption
50 and the status of existing procurement contracts.
51 § 31. Section 6-129 of the administrative code of the city of New
52 York, as amended by local law number 1 of the city of New York for the
53 year 2013, paragraphs 14 and 15 of subdivision e as added by local law
54 number 113 of the city of New York for the year 2016, paragraph 1 of
55 subdivision g as amended by local law number 116 of the city of New York
56 for the year 2016, the opening paragraph of paragraph 1 of subdivision g
A. 3971 32
1 as seperately amended, paragraphs 2 and 5 of subdivision g, subparagraph
2 (h) of paragraph 1 and paragraph 3 of subdivision 1 as amended by local
3 law number 118 of the city of New York for the year 2016, subparagraphs
4 (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 and paragraph 4 of subdivision l as amended
5 by local law number 117 of the city of New York for the year 2016, and
6 subdivision s as added by local law number 114 of the city of New York
7 for the year 2016, is amended to read as follows:
8 § 6-129. Participation by minority-owned [and], women-owned and veter-
9 an-owned business enterprises and emerging business enterprises in city
10 procurement.
11 a. Programs established. There are hereby established a program, to be
12 administered by the department of small business services in accordance
13 with the provisions of this section, designed to enhance participation
14 by minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enter-
15 prises in city procurement and a program, also to be administered by
16 such department in accordance with the provisions of this section,
17 designed to enhance participation by emerging business enterprises in
18 city procurement.
19 b. Policy. It is the policy of the city to seek to ensure fair partic-
20 ipation in city procurement; and in furtherance of such policy to fully
21 and vigorously enforce all laws prohibiting discrimination, and to
22 promote equal opportunity in city procurement by vigorously enforcing
23 the city's contractual rights and pursuing its contractual remedies. The
24 program established pursuant to this section is intended to address the
25 impact of discrimination on the city's procurement process, and to
26 promote the public interest in avoiding fraud and favoritism in the
27 procurement process, increasing competition for city business, and
28 lowering contract costs.
29 c. Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following terms
30 shall have the following meaning:
31 (1) "Agency" means a city, county, borough, or other office, position,
32 administration, department, division, bureau, board or commission, or a
33 corporation, institution or agency of government, the expenses of which
34 are paid in whole or in part from the city treasury.
35 (2) "Agency chief contracting officer" means the individual to whom an
36 agency head has delegated authority to organize and supervise the agen-
37 cy's procurement activity.
38 (3) "Availability rate" means the percentage of business enterprises
39 within an industry classification that are owned by minorities, women,
40 veterans or individuals who are socially and economically disadvantaged
41 willing and able to perform agency contracts.
42 (4) "Bidder" means any person submitting a bid or proposal in response
43 to a solicitation for such bid or proposal from an agency.
44 (5) "Bidders list" or "proposers list" means a list maintained by an
45 agency that includes persons from whom bids or proposals can be solicit-
46 ed.
47 (6) "City" means the city of New York.
48 (7) "City chief procurement officer" means the individual to whom the
49 mayor has delegated authority to coordinate and oversee the procurement
50 activity of mayoral agency staff, including the agency chief contracting
51 officers and any offices that have oversight responsibility for procure-
52 ment.
53 (8) "Commercially useful function" means a real and actual service
54 that is a distinct and verifiable element of the work called for in a
55 contract. In determining whether an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE is performing a
A. 3971 33
1 commercially useful function, factors including but not limited to the
2 following shall be considered:
3 (a) whether it has the skill and expertise to perform the work for
4 which it is being utilized, and possesses all necessary licenses;
5 (b) whether it is in the business of performing, managing or supervis-
6 ing the work for which it has been certified and is being utilized; and
7 (c) whether it purchases goods and/or services from another business
8 and whether its participation in the contract would have the principal
9 effect of allowing it to act as a middle person or broker in which case
10 it may not be considered to be performing a commercially useful function
11 for purposes of this section.
12 (9) "Commissioner" shall mean the commissioner of small business
13 services.
14 (10) "Construction" means construction, reconstruction, demolition,
15 excavation, renovation, alteration, improvement, rehabilitation, or
16 repair of any building, facility, physical structure of any kind.
17 (11) "Contract" means any agreement, purchase order or other instru-
18 ment whereby the city is committed to expend or does expend funds in
19 return for goods, professional services, standard services, or
20 construction.
21 (12) "Contractor" means a person who has been awarded a contract by a
22 city agency.
23 (13) "Direct subcontractor" means a person who has entered into an
24 agreement with a contractor to provide services or perform work that is
25 required pursuant to a contract with a city agency.
26 (14) "Director" means an individual designated by the mayor to perform
27 the oversight functions of the director described in this section, who
28 either reports directly to the mayor or is a commissioner.
29 (15) "Directory" means a list prepared by the division of firms certi-
30 fied pursuant to section 1304 of the charter.
31 (16) "Division" shall mean the division of economic and financial
32 opportunity within the department of small business services.
33 (17) "EBE" means an emerging business enterprise certified in accord-
34 ance with section 1304 of the charter.
35 (18) "Geographic market of the city" means the following counties:
36 Bronx, Kings, New York, Queens, Richmond, Nassau, Putnam, Rockland,
37 Suffolk and Westchester within the State of New York; and Bergen,
38 Hudson, and Passaic within the state of New Jersey.
39 (19) "Goal" means a numerical target.
40 (20) "Graduate MBE," "graduate WBE," "graduate VBE," or "graduate EBE"
41 means an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE which shall have been awarded contracts by
42 one or more agencies within the past three years where the total city
43 funding from the expense and capital budgets for such contracts was
44 equal to or greater than fifty million dollars and whose size has
45 exceeded the size standards established for its industry by the United
46 States small business administration for three years.
47 (21) "Human services" means services provided to third parties,
48 including social services such as day care, foster care, home care,
49 homeless assistance, housing and shelter assistance, preventive
50 services, youth services, and senior centers; health or medical services
51 including those provided by health maintenance organizations; legal
52 services; employment assistance services, vocational and educational
53 programs; and recreation programs.
54 (22) "Indirect subcontractor" means a person who has entered into an
55 agreement with a direct subcontractor to provide services or perform
A. 3971 34
1 work that is required pursuant to the direct subcontractor's contract
2 with a contractor.
3 (23) "Industry classification" means one of the following classifica-
4 tions:
5 (a) construction;
6 (b) professional services;
7 (c) standard services; and
8 (d) goods.
9 (24) "Joint venture" means an association, of limited scope and dura-
10 tion, between two or more persons who have entered into an agreement to
11 perform and/or provide services required by a contract, in which each
12 such person contributes property, capital, effort, skill and/or know-
13 ledge, and in which each such person is entitled to share in the profits
14 and losses of the venture in reasonable proportion to the economic value
15 of its contribution.
16 (25) "MBE" means a minority-owned business enterprise certified in
17 accordance with section 1304 of the charter.
18 (26) "Minority group" means Black Americans; Asian Americans, and
19 Hispanic Americans, provided that the commissioner shall be authorized
20 to add additional groups to this definition upon a finding that there is
21 statistically significant disparity between the availability of firms
22 owned by individuals in such a group and the utilization of such firms
23 in city procurement.
24 (27) "Non-certified firm" means a business enterprise that has not
25 been certified as an MBE, WBE or EBE in accordance with section 1304 of
26 the charter or VBE.
27 (28) "Person" means any business, individual, partnership, corpo-
28 ration, firm, company, or other form of doing business.
29 (29) "Professional services" means services that require specialized
30 skills and the exercise of judgment, including but not limited to
31 accountants, lawyers, doctors, computer programmers and consultants,
32 architectural and engineering services, and construction management
33 services.
34 (30) "Qualified joint venture agreement" means a joint venture between
35 one or more MBEs, WBEs, VBEs, and/or EBEs and another person, in which
36 the percentage of profit or loss to which the certified firm or firms is
37 entitled or exposed for participation in the contract, as set forth in
38 the joint venture agreement, is at least 25% of the total profit or
39 loss.
40 (31) "Scope of work" means specific tasks required in a contract
41 and/or services or goods that must be provided to perform specific tasks
42 required in a contract.
43 (32) "Standard services" means services other than professional
44 services and human services.
45 (33) "Utilization rate" means the percentage of total contract expend-
46 itures expended on contracts or subcontracts with firms that are owned
47 by women, veterans, minorities, or individuals who are socially and
48 economically disadvantaged, respectively, in one or more industry clas-
49 sifications.
50 (34) "WBE" means a women-owned business enterprise certified in
51 accordance with section 1304 of the charter.
52 (35) "VBE" means a veteran-owned business enterprise.
53 d. Citywide goals. (1) The citywide contracting participation goals
54 for MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs, which may be met through awards of prime
55 contracts or subcontracts as described in subdivision j of this section,
56 shall be as follows:
A. 3971 35
1 For construction contracts:
2 Category: Participation goal:
3 Black Americans 8% of total annual
4 agency expenditures on such contracts
5 Asian Americans 8% of total annual agency
6 expenditures on such contracts
7 Hispanic Americans 4% of total annual agency
8 expenditures on such contracts
9 Women 18% of total annual agency
10 expenditures on such contracts
11 Veteransa percentage to be determined
12 by the commissioner in accordance
13 with the provisions of paragraph
14 four of this subdivision
15 Emerging 6% of total annual agency expenditures
16 on such contracts
17 For professional services contracts:
18 Category: Participation goal:
19 Black Americans 12% of total annual agency
20 expenditures on such contracts
21 Hispanic Americans 8% of total annual agency
22 expenditures on such contracts
23 Women 37% of total annual agency
24 expenditures on such contracts
25 Veteransa percentage to be determined by the
26 commissioner in accordance with the
27 provisions of paragraph four of this
28 subdivision
29 expenditures on such contracts
30 Emerging 6% of total annual agency expenditures
31 on such contracts
32 For standard services contracts:
33 Category: Participation goal:
34 Black Americans 12% of total annual agency
35 expenditures on such contracts
36 Asian Americans 3% of total annual agency
37 expenditures on such contracts
38 Hispanic Americans 6% of total annual agency
39 expenditures on such contracts
40 Women 10% of total annual agency
41 expenditures on such contracts
42 Veteransa percentage to be determined by the
43 commissioner in accordance with the
44 provisions of paragraph four of this
45 subdivision
46 Emerging 6% of total annual agency expenditures
47 on such contracts
48 For goods contracts under one hundred thousand dollars:
49 Category: Participation goal:
50 Black Americans 7% of total annual agency
51 expenditures on such contracts
52 Asian Americans 8% of total annual agency
53 expenditures on such contracts
54 Hispanic Americans 5% of total annual agency
55 expenditures on such contracts
56 Women 25% of total annual agency
A. 3971 36
1 expenditures on such contracts
2 Veteransa percentage to be determined by the
3 commissioner in accordance with the
4 provisions of paragraph four of this
5 subdivision
6 Emerging 6% of total annual agency expenditures
7 on such contracts
8 (2) (a) The division and the city chief procurement officer shall
9 develop a citywide utilization plan for procurements of goods.
10 (b) Agencies shall develop agency utilization plans pursuant to subdi-
11 vision g of this section. The citywide goals shall not be summarily
12 adopted as goals for all annual agency utilization plans; rather, goals
13 for such plans may be set at levels higher, lower, or the same as the
14 citywide goals, subject to the approval of the commissioner as described
15 in paragraph three of subdivision g of this section. When setting its
16 goals, each agency shall consider the citywide goals, the size and
17 nature of its own procurement portfolio, and the availability of MBEs,
18 WBEs, VBEs and EBEs with the capacity to perform the specific types and
19 scale of work for which the agency anticipates it will solicit procure-
20 ments during the year. Agencies shall seek to ensure substantial
21 progress toward the attainment of each of these goals in as short a time
22 as practicable.
23 (3) The citywide goals shall not be summarily adopted as goals for
24 individual procurements; rather, as set forth in subdivision i of this
25 section, goals for such procurements may be set at levels higher, lower,
26 or the same as the citywide goals. In setting such goals, each agency
27 shall take into account the citywide goals and the agency's annual
28 utilization plan, the size and nature of the procurement, and the avail-
29 ability of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs with the capacity to perform the
30 specific types and scale of work involved in its procurements.
31 (4) (a) No later than 2015, the commissioner, in consultation with the
32 city chief procurement officer, shall, for each industry classification
33 and each minority group, review and compare the availability rates of
34 firms owned by minorities [and], women and veterans to the utilization
35 rates of such firms in agency contracts and direct subcontracts, and
36 shall on the basis of such review and any other relevant information,
37 where appropriate, revise by rule the citywide participation goals set
38 forth in this subdivision and determine appropriate contracting percent-
39 age goals for veterans. In making such revision, the commissioner shall
40 consider the extent to which discrimination continues to have an impact
41 on the ability of minorities [and], women and veterans to compete for
42 city contracts and subcontracts. The commissioner shall submit the
43 results of such review and any proposed revisions to the participation
44 goals to the speaker of the council at least sixty days prior to
45 publishing a proposed rule that would revise participation goals. Such
46 review shall thereafter be conducted at least once every two years.
47 (b) No later than 2015, the commissioner shall review information
48 collected by the department to determine the availability and utiliza-
49 tion of EBEs, and shall on the basis of such review and any other rele-
50 vant information, where appropriate, revise by rule the citywide partic-
51 ipation goals set forth in this subdivision and include veterans in such
52 goals. Such revised goals shall be set at a level intended to assist in
53 overcoming the impact of discrimination on such businesses. Such review
54 shall be conducted in 2015 and at least once every two years thereafter.
55 e. Responsibilities of the division.
A. 3971 37
1 (1) The division shall create and maintain and periodically update
2 directories by industry classification of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs
3 which it shall supply to all agencies, post on its website and on other
4 relevant city websites and make available for dissemination and/or
5 public inspection at its offices and other locations within each
6 borough.
7 (2) The division shall make its resources available to assist agencies
8 and contractors in (i) determining the availability of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs
9 and EBEs to participate in their contracts as prime contractors and/or
10 subcontractors; and (ii) identifying opportunities appropriate for
11 participation by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in contracts.
12 (3) The division shall develop and maintain relationships with organ-
13 izations representing contractors, including MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs,
14 and solicit their support and assistance in efforts to increase partic-
15 ipation of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in city procurement.
16 (4) The division shall coordinate with city and state entities that
17 maintain databases of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs and work to enhance city
18 availability data and directories.
19 (5) The division shall keep agency M/WBE and VBE officers informed of
20 conferences, contractor fairs, and other services that are available to
21 assist them in pursuing the objectives of this section.
22 (6) The division shall conduct, coordinate and facilitate technical
23 assistance and educational programs for MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs and
24 other contractors designed to enhance participation of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs
25 and EBEs in city procurement. The division shall further develop a
26 clearinghouse of information on programs and services available to MBEs,
27 WBEs, VBEs and EBEs. The division shall conduct meetings with MBEs,
28 WBEs, VBEs and EBEs to discuss what agencies look for in evaluating bids
29 and proposals. The division shall also educate prime contractors on
30 opportunities to partner or subcontract with certified MBEs, WBEs, VBEs
31 and EBEs.
32 (7) The division shall develop standardized forms and reporting docu-
33 ments for agencies and contractors to facilitate the reporting require-
34 ments of this section.
35 (8) The division shall direct and assist agencies in their efforts to
36 increase participation by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in any city-operated
37 financial, technical, and management assistance program.
38 (9) The division shall study and recommend to the commissioner methods
39 to streamline the M/WBE, VBE and EBE certification process.
40 (10) Each fiscal year the division, in consultation with the city
41 chief procurement officer, shall audit at least 5% of all open contracts
42 for which contractor utilization plans have been established in accord-
43 ance with subdivision i of this section and 5% of all contracts awarded
44 to MBEs, WBEs, VBEs, and EBEs to assess compliance with this section.
45 All solicitations for contracts for which contractor utilization plans
46 are to be established shall include notice of potential audit.
47 (11) The division shall assist agencies in identifying and seeking
48 ways to reduce or eliminate practices such as bonding requirements or
49 delays in payment by prime contractors that may present barriers to
50 competition by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs.
51 (12) The division shall encourage prime contractors to enter joint
52 venture agreements with MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs.
53 (13) (a) The division shall, upon reviewing applications for certif-
54 ication and recertification, determine whether a firm qualifies as a
55 graduate MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE.
A. 3971 38
1 (b) The division shall promulgate regulations establishing a process
2 by which a certified MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE may challenge a determination
3 that it qualifies as a graduate MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE.
4 (c) At any time more than two years after the division has determined
5 that a firm qualifies as a graduate MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE, the firm may
6 apply to have such designation lifted. The division shall lift the
7 designation if the firm demonstrates that it has been below the size
8 standards established by the United States small business administration
9 for its industry for a period of two years or more.
10 (14) The division, in consultation with the city chief procurement
11 officer, shall conduct, coordinate and facilitate mandatory trainings
12 for agency chief contracting officers and agency M/WBE and VBE officers
13 to assist such officers in pursuing the objectives of this section. Each
14 agency chief contracting officer shall undergo such training on or
15 before the ninetieth day after he or she becomes an agency chief
16 contracting officer, and every two years thereafter. Each agency M/WBE
17 and VBE officer shall undergo such training on or before the ninetieth
18 day after he or she becomes an agency M/WBE and VBE officer pursuant to
19 subdivision [(f)] f of this section, and every two years thereafter.
20 Agency chief contracting officers and M/WBE and VBE officers that have
21 already undergone such training within the two years prior to the effec-
22 tive date of the local law that added this paragraph will be determined
23 to be in compliance with the initial training required pursuant to this
24 paragraph. The city chief procurement officer will report to the speaker
25 of the council on an annual basis, and shall post on the City's website,
26 information regarding each agency's compliance with this paragraph.
27 (15) The city shall include on its website a list of city agencies,
28 with the contact information for the M/WBE and VBE officer of each city
29 agency and information about whether the agency's staff have been
30 trained as required by paragraph [14] fourteen of this subdivision.
31 f. Responsibilities of agency M/WBE and VBE officers. Each agency head
32 shall designate a deputy commissioner or other executive officer to act
33 as the agency M/WBE and VBE officer who shall be directly accountable to
34 the agency head concerning the activities of the agency in carrying out
35 its responsibilities pursuant to this section, including the responsi-
36 bilities relating to EBE participation. The duties of the M/WBE and VBE
37 officer shall include, but not be limited to:
38 (1) creating the agency's utilization plan in accordance with subdivi-
39 sion g of this section;
40 (2) acting as the agency's liaison with the division;
41 (3) acting as a liaison with organizations and/or associations of
42 MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs, informing such organizations and/or associ-
43 ations of the agency's procurement procedures, and advising them of
44 future procurement opportunities;
45 (4) ensuring that agency bid solicitations and requests for proposals
46 are sent to MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in a timely manner, consistent
47 with this section and rules of the procurement policy board;
48 (5) referring MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs to technical assistance
49 services available from agencies and other organizations;
50 (6) reviewing requests for waivers and/or modifications of partic-
51 ipation goals and contractor utilization plans in accordance with para-
52 graphs 11 and/or 12 of subdivision i of this section;
53 (7) working with the division and city chief procurement officer in
54 creating directories as required pursuant to subdivision k of this
55 section. In fulfilling this duty, the agency M/WBE and VBE officer shall
56 track and record each contractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE and
A. 3971 39
1 each subcontractor hired pursuant to such officer's agency contracts
2 that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE, and shall share such information with
3 the director, the commissioner, and the city chief procurement officer;
4 (8) for contracts for which contractor utilization plans have been
5 established pursuant to subdivision i of this section, monitoring each
6 contractor's compliance with its utilization plan by appropriate means,
7 which shall include, but need not be limited to, job site inspections,
8 contacting MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs identified in the plan to confirm
9 their participation, and auditing the contractor's books and records;
10 (9) monitoring the agency's procurement activities to ensure compli-
11 ance with its agency utilization plan and progress towards the partic-
12 ipation goals as established in such plan;
13 (10) providing to the city chief procurement officer information for
14 the reports required in subdivision l of this section and providing any
15 other plans and/or reports required pursuant to this section or
16 requested by the director and/or the city chief procurement officer; and
17 (11) participating in meetings required pursuant to subdivision m of
18 this section.
19 g. Agency utilization plans.
20 (1) Beginning May 15, 2006, and on July 31 of each year thereafter,
21 each agency which, during the fiscal year which ended on June 30 of the
22 preceding fiscal year, has made procurements in excess of five million
23 dollars, without counting procurements that are exempt pursuant to para-
24 graph two of subdivision q of this section, shall submit an agency
25 utilization plan for the fiscal year commencing in July of the year when
26 such plan is to be submitted to the commissioner. Upon approval by the
27 commissioner, such plan shall be submitted to the speaker of the coun-
28 cil, and shall be published on the City's website. Each such plan shall,
29 at a minimum, include the following:
30 (a) the agency's participation goals for MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs for
31 the year, provided however, that when setting its goals, each agency
32 shall consider the citywide goals, the size and nature of its own
33 procurement portfolio (excluding contracts described in paragraph two of
34 subdivision q of this section), and the availability of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs
35 and EBEs with the capacity to perform the specific types and scale of
36 work for which the agency anticipates it will solicit procurements
37 during the year;
38 (b) An explanation for any agency goal that is different than the
39 participation goal for the relevant group and industry classification as
40 determined pursuant to subdivision d of this section;
41 (c) A list of the names and titles of agency personnel responsible for
42 implementation of the agency utilization plan;
43 (d) Methods and relevant activities proposed for achieving the agen-
44 cy's participation goals; and
45 (e) Any other information which the agency or the commissioner deems
46 relevant or necessary.
47 (2) An agency utilization plan shall set forth specific participation
48 goals for MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs for purchases of professional
49 services, standard services, construction and goods. When setting its
50 goals for such purchases, in addition to the factors set forth in para-
51 graph (1) of this subdivision, each agency shall specifically consider
52 the potential for such purchases to provide opportunities for MBEs,
53 WBEs, VBEs and EBEs to develop greater capacity, thereby increasing
54 competition for city procurements.
55 (3) An agency utilization plan may be amended from time to time to
56 reflect changes in the agency's projected expenditures or other relevant
A. 3971 40
1 circumstances and resulting changes in such agency's participation
2 goals. Such amendments shall be submitted to the commissioner, the city
3 chief procurement officer and the speaker of the council at least thirty
4 days prior to implementation.
5 (4) Prior to approving individual agency utilization plans, the
6 commissioner, in consultation with the city chief procurement officer,
7 shall consider whether such plans viewed in the aggregate establish any
8 goals exceeding the corresponding citywide goals set forth in subdivi-
9 sion d of this section. If any aggregated goals are found to exceed the
10 corresponding citywide goal, the commissioner shall require agencies to
11 adjust their goals so that plans, viewed in the aggregate, do not estab-
12 lish goals exceeding the citywide goals. Nothing in this paragraph shall
13 be construed to limit the awards of contracts and subcontracts that may
14 be made to MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs without using goals.
15 (5) The commissioner, in consultation with the city chief procurement
16 officer, shall, no later than June 30 of each year, publish on the divi-
17 sion's website a plan and schedule for each agency detailing the antic-
18 ipated contracting actions for the upcoming fiscal year that form the
19 basis for the agency utilization plan of each such agency. The plan and
20 schedule shall include information specific to each prospective invita-
21 tion for bids, request for proposal, or other solicitation, including,
22 but not limited to, the specific type and scale of the services and/or
23 goods to be procured, the term of the proposed contract, the method of
24 solicitation the agency intends to utilize, and the anticipated fiscal
25 year quarter of the planned solicitation.
26 h. Achieving agency participation goals.
27 (1) Each agency head shall be directly accountable for the goals set
28 forth in his or her agency's utilization plan.
29 (2) Each agency shall make all reasonable efforts to meet the partic-
30 ipation goals established in its agency utilization plan. Agencies
31 shall, at a minimum, use the following methods to achieve participation
32 goals:
33 (a) Agencies shall engage in outreach activities to encourage MBEs,
34 WBEs, VBEs and EBEs to compete for all facets of their procurement
35 activities, including contracts awarded by negotiated acquisition, emer-
36 gency and sole source contracts, and each agency shall seek to utilize
37 MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs for all types of goods, services and
38 construction they procure.
39 (b) Agencies shall encourage eligible businesses to apply for certif-
40 ication as MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs and inclusion in the directories of
41 MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs. Agencies shall also encourage MBEs, WBEs,
42 VBEs and EBEs to have their names included on their bidders lists, seek
43 pre-qualification where applicable, and compete for city business as
44 contractors and subcontractors. Agencies are encouraged to advertise
45 procurement opportunities in general circulation media, trade and
46 professional association publications and small business media, and
47 publications of minority [and], women's and veterans' business organiza-
48 tions, and send written notice of specific procurement opportunities to
49 minority [and], women's and veterans' business organizations.
50 (c) All agency solicitations for bids or proposals shall include
51 information referring potential bidders or proposers to the directories
52 of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs prepared by the division.
53 (d) In planning procurements, agencies shall consider the effect of
54 the scope, specifications and size of a contract on opportunities for
55 participation by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs.
A. 3971 41
1 (e) Prior to soliciting bids or proposals for contracts valued at over
2 ten million dollars, other than contracts for capital projects valued at
3 over twenty-five million dollars and contracts that are exempt pursuant
4 to paragraph two of subdivision q of this section, an agency shall
5 submit the bid or proposal to the city chief procurement officer for a
6 determination whether it is practicable to divide the proposed contract
7 into smaller contracts and whether doing so will enhance competition for
8 such contracts among MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs and other potential
9 bidders or proposers. If the city chief procurement officer determines
10 that it is both practicable and advantageous in light of cost and other
11 relevant factors to divide such contracts into smaller contracts, then
12 he or she shall direct the agency to do so.
13 (f) Agencies shall examine their internal procurement policies, proce-
14 dures and practices and, where practicable, address those elements, if
15 any, that may negatively affect participation of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and
16 EBEs in city procurement.
17 i. Participation goals for contracts for construction and professional
18 and standard services.
19 (1) Prior to issuing the solicitation of bids or proposals for indi-
20 vidual contracts, agencies shall establish participation goals for MBEs,
21 WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs. Such goals may be greater than, less than or the
22 same as the relevant citywide goal or goals established pursuant to
23 subdivision d of this section. Taking into account the factors listed in
24 this subdivision, an agency may establish a goal for a procurement that
25 may be achieved by a combination of prime contract and subcontract
26 dollars, a combination of construction and services performed pursuant
27 to the contract, and/or a combination of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs.
28 Alternatively, an agency may establish specific goals for particular
29 types of services, and/or goals for particular types of certified firms.
30 In determining the participation goals for a particular contract, an
31 agency shall consider the following factors:
32 (a) the scope of work;
33 (b) the availability of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs able to perform the
34 particular tasks required in the contract;
35 (c) the extent to which the type and scale of work involved in the
36 contract present prime contracting and subcontracting opportunities for
37 amounts within the capacity of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs;
38 (d) the agency's progress to date toward meeting its annual partic-
39 ipation goals through race-neutral, gender-neutral and other means, and
40 the agency's expectations as to the effect such methods will have on
41 participation of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in the agency's future
42 contracts; and
43 (e) any other factors the contracting agency deems relevant.
44 (2) A contracting agency shall not be required to establish partic-
45 ipation goals for
46 (i) procurements described in subdivision q of this section; or
47 (ii) when the agency has already attained the relevant goal in its
48 annual utilization plan, or expects that it will attain such goal with-
49 out the use of such participation goals.
50 (3) For each contract in which a contracting agency has established
51 participation goals, such agency shall state in the solicitation for
52 such contract that bidders and/or proposers shall be required to agree
53 as a material term of the contract that the contractor shall meet the
54 participation goals unless such goals are waived or modified by the
55 agency in accordance with this section. A contractor that is an MBE,
56 WBE, VBE or EBE shall be permitted to count its own participation toward
A. 3971 42
1 fulfillment of the relevant participation goal, provided that the value
2 of such a contractor's participation shall be determined by subtracting
3 from the total value of the contract any amounts that the contractor
4 pays to direct subcontractors. A contractor that is a qualified joint
5 venture shall be permitted to count a percentage of its own partic-
6 ipation toward fulfillment of the relevant participation goal. The value
7 of such a contractor's participation shall be determined by subtracting
8 from the total value of the contract any amounts that the contractor
9 pays to direct subcontractors, and then multiplying the remainder by the
10 percentage to be applied to total profit to determine the amount to
11 which an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE is entitled pursuant to the joint venture
12 agreement. Notwithstanding any provision of this paragraph to the
13 contrary, a contractor's achievement of participation goals shall be
14 determined as described in paragraph two of subdivision j of this
15 section.
16 (4) For each contract in which participation goals are established,
17 the agency shall include in its solicitation and/or bidding materials a
18 referral to the directories prepared by the division pursuant to this
19 section.
20 (5) For each contract for which participation goals are established,
21 the contractor shall be required to submit with its bid or proposal a
22 contractor utilization plan indicating:
23 (a) whether the contractor is an MBE, WBE, VBE, EBE, or a qualified
24 joint venture;
25 (b) the percentage of work it intends to award to direct subcontrac-
26 tors; and
27 (c) in cases where the contractor intends to award direct subcon-
28 tracts, a description of the type and dollar value of work designated
29 for participation by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs, and the time frames
30 in which such work is scheduled to begin and end.
31 When the contractor utilization plan indicates that the bidder or
32 proposer does not intend to meet the participation goals, the bid or
33 proposal shall not be deemed responsive unless the agency has granted a
34 pre-award request for change pursuant to paragraph 11 of this subdivi-
35 sion.
36 (6) (a) For each contract for which a contractor utilization plan has
37 been submitted, the contracting agency shall require that within thirty
38 days of the issuance of notice to proceed, and at least once per year
39 thereafter, the contractor submit a list of persons to which it intends
40 to award subcontracts within the next twelve months. In the event that a
41 contracting agency disapproves a contractor's selection of a subcontrac-
42 tor or subcontractors, the contracting agency shall allow such contrac-
43 tor a reasonable time to propose alternate subcontractors.
44 (b) The contracting agency may also require the contractor to report
45 periodically about the contracts awarded by its direct subcontractors to
46 indirect subcontractors.
47 (7) For each contract for which a contractor utilization plan has been
48 submitted, the contractor shall, with each voucher for payment, and/or
49 periodically as the agency may require, submit statements, certified
50 under penalty of perjury, which shall include, but not be limited to,
51 the total amount the contractor paid to its direct subcontractors, and,
52 where applicable pursuant to subparagraph (1) of paragraph (1) of subdi-
53 vision j of this section, the total amount direct subcontractors paid to
54 indirect subcontractors, the names, addresses and contact numbers of
55 each MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE hired as a subcontractor by the contractor or
56 any of the contractor's direct subcontractors, as well as the dates and
A. 3971 43
1 amounts paid to each MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE. The contractor shall also
2 submit, along with its voucher for final payment, the total amount it
3 paid to subcontractors, and, where applicable pursuant to subparagraph
4 (1) of paragraph (1) of subdivision j of this section, the total amount
5 its direct subcontractors paid directly to their indirect subcontrac-
6 tors; and a final list, certified under penalty of perjury, which shall
7 include the name, address and contact information of each subcontractor
8 that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE, the work performed by, and the dates
9 and amounts paid to each.
10 (8) If payments made to, or work performed by, MBEs, WBEs, VBEs or
11 EBEs are less than the amount specified in the contractor's utilization
12 plan, the agency shall take appropriate action in accordance with subdi-
13 vision o of this section, unless the contractor has obtained a modifica-
14 tion of its utilization plan pursuant to paragraph 12 of this subdivi-
15 sion.
16 (9) When advertising a solicitation for bids or proposals for a
17 contract for which a participation goal has been established, agencies
18 shall include in the advertisement a general statement that the contract
19 will be subject to participation goals for MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs.
20 (10) In the event that a contractor with a contract that includes a
21 contractor utilization plan submits a request for a change order the
22 value of which exceeds the greater of ten percent of such contract or
23 $500,000, the agency shall review the scope of work for the contract,
24 and the scale and types of work involved in the change order, and deter-
25 mine whether the participation goals should be modified.
26 (11) Requests from bidders or proposers for changes in participation
27 goals.
28 (a) A bidder or proposer may request that an agency change the partic-
29 ipation goal or goals established for the procurement on the grounds
30 that goals are unreasonable in light of the availability of certified
31 firms to perform the services required, or by demonstrating that it has
32 legitimate business reasons for proposing a lower level of subcontract-
33 ing in its utilization plan.
34 (b) If the contracting agency determines that the participation goals
35 established for the procurement are unreasonable in light of the avail-
36 ability of certified firms to perform the services required, it shall
37 revise the solicitation and extend the deadline for bids and proposals.
38 (c) Subject to subparagraph (d) of this paragraph, the contracting
39 agency may grant a full or partial waiver of the participation goals to
40 a bidder or proposer who demonstrates that it has legitimate business
41 reasons for proposing the level of subcontracting in its utilization
42 plan. The contracting agency shall make its determination in light of
43 factors that shall include, but not be limited to, whether the bidder or
44 proposer has the capacity and the bona fide intention to perform the
45 contract without any subcontracting, or to perform the contract without
46 awarding the amount of subcontracts represented by the participation
47 goals. In making such determination, the agency may consider whether the
48 utilization plan is consistent with past subcontracting practices of the
49 bidder or proposer, whether the bidder or proposer has made efforts to
50 form a joint venture with a certified firm, and whether the bidder or
51 proposer has made good faith efforts to identify portions of the
52 contract that it intends to subcontract. The city chief contracting
53 officer shall notify the council of any such waiver granted with respect
54 to a registered contract in the quarterly report required pursuant to
55 subdivision 1 of this section.
A. 3971 44
1 (d) The agency M/WBE and VBE officer shall provide written notice of
2 requests for a full or partial waiver of the participation goals to the
3 division and the city chief procurement officer and shall not approve
4 any such request without the approval of the city chief procurement
5 officer, provided that the city chief procurement officer, upon adequate
6 assurances of an agency's ability to administer its utilization plan in
7 accordance with the provisions of this section, may determine that
8 further approval from the city chief procurement officer is not required
9 with respect to such requests for an agency's contracts or particular
10 categories of an agency's contracts. The city chief procurement officer
11 shall notify the speaker of the council in writing in the quarterly
12 report required pursuant to subdivision 1 of this section following the
13 registration of a contract for which a request for a full or partial
14 waiver of a participation goal was granted, provided that where an agen-
15 cy has been authorized to grant waivers without approval of the chief
16 procurement officer, such notice shall be provided to the speaker of the
17 council by the agency. Such notification shall include, but not be
18 limited to, the name of the contractor, the original participation goal,
19 the waiver request, including all documentation, and an explanation for
20 the approval of such request.
21 (12) Modification of utilization plans at contractor's request or
22 agency's initiative. (a) A contractor may request modification of its
23 utilization plan after the award of a contract. Subject to subparagraph
24 (b) of this paragraph, an agency may grant such request if it determines
25 that such contractor has established, with appropriate documentary and
26 other evidence, that it made all reasonable, good faith efforts to meet
27 the goals set by the agency for the contract. In making such determi-
28 nation, the agency shall consider evidence of the following efforts, as
29 applicable, along with any other relevant factors:
30 (i) The contractor advertised opportunities to participate in the
31 contract, where appropriate, in general circulation media, trade and
32 professional association publications and small business media, and
33 publications of minority [and], women's and veterans' business organiza-
34 tions;
35 (ii) The contractor provided notice of specific opportunities to
36 participate in the contract, in a timely manner, to minority [and],
37 women's and veterans' business organizations;
38 (iii) The contractor sent written notices, by certified mail or
39 facsimile, in a timely manner, to advise MBEs, WBEs, VBEs or EBEs that
40 their interest in the contract was solicited;
41 (iv) The contractor made efforts to identify portions of the work that
42 could be substituted for portions originally designated for partic-
43 ipation by MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs in the contractor utilization
44 plan, and for which the contractor claims an inability to retain MBEs,
45 WBEs, VBEs or EBEs;
46 (v) The contractor held meetings with MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs
47 prior to the date their bids or proposals were due, for the purpose of
48 explaining in detail the scope and requirements of the work for which
49 their bids or proposals were solicited;
50 (vi) The contractor made efforts to negotiate with MBEs, WBEs, VBEs
51 and/or EBEs as relevant to perform specific subcontracts, or act as
52 suppliers or service providers;
53 (vii) Timely written requests for assistance made by the contractor to
54 the agency M/WBE and VBE liaison officer and to the division; and
55 (viii) Description of how recommendations made by the division and the
56 contracting agency were acted upon and an explanation of why action upon
A. 3971 45
1 such recommendations did not lead to the desired level of participation
2 of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and/or EBEs.
3 (b) The agency M/WBE and VBE officer shall provide written notice of
4 requests for such modifications to the division and the city chief
5 procurement officer and shall not approve any such request for modifica-
6 tion without the approval of the city chief procurement officer,
7 provided that the city chief procurement officer, upon adequate assur-
8 ances of an agency's ability to administer its utilization plan in
9 accordance with the provisions of this section, may determine that
10 further approval from the city chief procurement officer is not required
11 with respect to such requests for an agency's contracts or particular
12 categories of an agency's contracts. The city chief procurement officer,
13 shall notify the speaker of the council in writing within seven days of
14 the approval of a request for modification of a utilization plan,
15 provided that where an agency has been authorized to grant modifications
16 without approval of the chief procurement officer, such notice shall be
17 provided to the speaker of the council by the agency. Such notification
18 shall include, but not be limited to, the name of the contractor, the
19 original utilization plan, the modification request, including all
20 documentation, and an explanation for the approval of such request.
21 (c) An agency may modify the participation goals established for a
22 procurement when the scope of the work has been changed by the agency in
23 a manner that affects the scale and types of work that the contractor
24 indicated in its contractor utilization plan would be awarded to subcon-
25 tractors.
26 (d) The agency M/WBE and VBE officer shall provide written notice to
27 the contractor of its determination that shall include the reasons for
28 such determination.
29 (13) For each contract in which a contracting agency has established
30 participation goals, the agency shall evaluate and assess the contrac-
31 tor's performance in meeting each such goal. Such evaluation and assess-
32 ment shall be a part of the contractor's overall contract performance
33 evaluation required pursuant to section 333 of the charter.
34 j. Determining credit for MBE, WBE, VBE and EBE participation.
35 (1) An agency's achievement of its annual goals shall be calculated as
36 follows:
37 (a) The dollar amount that an agency has paid or is obligated to pay
38 to a prime contractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE, reduced by the
39 dollar amount the contractor has paid or is obligated to pay its direct
40 subcontractors upon their completion of work, shall be credited toward
41 the relevant goal. Where an agency has paid or is obligated to pay a
42 prime contractor that is both an MBE and a WBE, such amount shall be
43 credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or the goal for WBEs. Where
44 an agency has paid or is obligated to pay a prime contractor that is
45 both an MBE or WBE and a VBE, such amount shall be credited toward the
46 relevant goal for MBEs or WBEs, as applicable, or the goal for VBEs.
47 (b) Except as provided in subparagraph (c) of this paragraph, the
48 total dollar amount that a prime contractor of an agency has paid or is
49 obligated to pay to a direct subcontractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or
50 EBE shall be credited toward the relevant goal. Where such a contractor
51 has paid or is obligated to pay a direct subcontractor that is both an
52 MBE and a WBE, such amount shall be credited toward the relevant goal
53 for MBEs or the goal for WBEs. Where such a contractor has paid or is
54 obligated to pay a direct subcontractor that is both an MBE or WBE and a
55 VBE, such amount shall be credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or
56 WBEs, as applicable, or the goal for VBEs.
A. 3971 46
1 (c) In the case of contracts of the types identified pursuant to
2 subparagraph (l) of this paragraph, the total dollar amount that a prime
3 contractor of an agency has paid or is obligated to pay a direct subcon-
4 tractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE, reduced by the dollar amount
5 the direct subcontractor has paid or is obligated to pay its indirect
6 subcontractors upon completion of work, shall be credited toward the
7 relevant goal. Where such a contractor has paid or is obligated to pay a
8 direct contractor that is both an MBE and a WBE, such amount shall be
9 credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or the goal for WBEs. Where
10 such contractor has paid or is obligated to pay a direct contractor that
11 is both an MBE or WBE and a VBE, such amount shall be credited toward
12 the relevant goal for MBEs or WBEs, as applicable, or the goal for VBEs.
13 (d) In the case of contracts of the types identified pursuant to
14 subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, the total dollar amount that a
15 direct subcontractor of the prime contractor has paid or is obligated to
16 pay to an indirect subcontractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE shall
17 be credited toward the relevant goal. Where such a contractor has paid
18 or is obligated to pay an indirect contractor that is both an MBE and a
19 WBE, such amount shall be credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or
20 the goal for WBEs. Where such a contractor has paid or is obligated to
21 pay a direct contractor that is both an MBE or WBE and a VBE, such
22 amount shall be credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or WBEs, as
23 applicable, or the goal for VBEs.
24 (e) For requirements contracts, credit shall be given for the actual
25 dollar amount paid under the contract.
26 (f) Where one or more MBEs, WBEs, VBEs or EBEs is participating in a
27 qualified joint venture, the amounts that the joint venture is required
28 to pay its direct subcontractors shall be subtracted as provided in
29 subparagraph (a) of this paragraph, and then a percentage of the remain-
30 ing dollar amount of the contract equal to the percentage of total
31 profit to which MBEs, WBEs, VBEs or EBEs are entitled pursuant to the
32 joint venture agreement shall be credited toward the relevant goal.
33 Where such a participant in a joint venture is both an MBE and a WBE,
34 such amount shall be credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or the
35 goal for WBEs. Where such a contractor has paid or is obligated to pay
36 a direct contractor that is both an MBE or WBE and a VBE, such amount
37 shall be credited toward the relevant goal for MBEs or WBEs, as applica-
38 ble, or the goal for VBEs.
39 (g) No credit shall be given for participation in a contract by an
40 MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE that does not perform a commercially useful func-
41 tion.
42 (h) No credit shall be given for the participation in a contract by
43 any company that has not been certified as an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE in
44 accordance with section 1304 of the charter.
45 (i) In the case of a contract for which the contractor is paid on a
46 commission basis, the dollar amount of the contract may be determined on
47 the basis of the commission earned or reasonably anticipated to be
48 earned under the contract.
49 (j) No credit shall be given to a contractor for participation in a
50 contract by a graduate MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE.
51 (k) The participation of a certified company shall not be credited
52 toward more than one participation goal.
53 (1) The city chief procurement officer may identify types of contracts
54 where payments to indirect subcontractors shall be credited toward the
55 relevant participation goals.
A. 3971 47
1 (2) A contractor's achievement of its participation goals established
2 in its utilization plan shall be calculated as follows:
3 (a) A contractor's use of direct subcontractors and their indirect
4 subcontractors toward achievement of each goal established in its utili-
5 zation plan shall be calculated in the same manner as described for
6 calculating the achievement of agency utilization goals as described in
7 paragraph (1) of this subdivision, except that a contractor's use of a
8 subcontractor that is both an MBE and a WBE, or is an MBE or WBE and
9 also a VBE, shall not be credited toward the contractor's achievement of
10 more than one goal;
11 (b) A contractor that is an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE shall be permitted to
12 count its own participation toward fulfillment of the relevant partic-
13 ipation goal, provided that the value of such a contractor's partic-
14 ipation shall be determined by subtracting from the total value of the
15 contract any amounts that the contractor pays to direct subcontractors,
16 and provided further that a contractor that is both an MBE and a WBE, or
17 is an MBE or WBE and also a VBE, shall not be credited for its partic-
18 ipation toward more than one goal;
19 (c) No credit shall be given to the contractor for the participation
20 of a company that is not certified in accordance with section 1304 of
21 the charter before the date that the subcontractor completes the work
22 under the subcontract.
23 (d) A contractor that is a qualified joint venture shall be permitted
24 to count a percentage of its own participation toward fulfillment of the
25 relevant participation goal. The value of such a contractor's partic-
26 ipation shall be determined by subtracting from the total value of the
27 contract any amounts that the contractor pays to direct subcontractors,
28 and then multiplying the remainder by the percentage to be applied to
29 total profit to determine the amount to which an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE is
30 entitled pursuant to the joint venture agreement; provided that where
31 such a participant in a joint venture is both an MBE and a WBE, or is an
32 MBE or a WBE and also a VBE, such amount shall not be credited toward
33 more than one goal.
34 k. Small purchases.
35 Whenever an agency solicits bids or proposals for small purchases
36 pursuant to section three hundred fourteen of the charter, the agency
37 shall maintain records identifying the MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs it
38 solicited, which shall become part of the contract file.
39 l. Compliance reporting.
40 (1) The city chief procurement officer, in consultation with the divi-
41 sion, shall prepare and submit quarterly reports to the speaker of the
42 council as described in this section. Preliminary reports containing
43 information for the fiscal year in progress shall be submitted to the
44 speaker of the council by January first, April first, and July first of
45 each year, and a final report containing information for the preceding
46 fiscal year shall be submitted to the speaker of the council by October
47 first of each year. The reports, which shall also be posted on the divi-
48 sion's website, shall contain the following information, disaggregated
49 by agency:
50 (a) the number and total dollar value of contracts awarded, disaggre-
51 gated by industry classification, size of contract and status as MBE,
52 WBE, VBE, EBE, or non-certified firm, and further disaggregated by
53 minority and gender group, and the number and dollar value of such
54 contracts that were awarded to firms that are certified both as MBEs and
55 WBEs, or as an MBE or WBE and also a VBE, including but not limited to,
56 contracts valued at or below the micropurchase limit as set forth in the
A. 3971 48
1 rules of the procurement policy board in paragraph (ii) of subdivision
2 (c) of section 3-08 of title 9 of the rules of the city of New York,
3 contracts valued above the micropurchase limit but at or below the small
4 purchase limit as defined in the rules of the procurement policy board
5 in subdivision (a) of section 3-08 of title 9 of the rules of the city
6 of New York, contracts valued above the small purchase limit and at or
7 below one million dollars, contracts valued above one million dollars
8 and at or below five million dollars, contracts valued above five
9 million dollars and at or below twenty five million dollars, and
10 contracts valued above twenty five million dollars;
11 (b) for those contracts for which an agency set participation goals in
12 accordance with subdivision i of this section:
13 (i) the number and total dollar value of such contracts that were
14 awarded to qualified joint ventures and the total dollar amount attri-
15 buted to the MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE joint venture partners, disaggregated
16 by minority and gender group, size of contract and industry classifica-
17 tion, and the number and dollar value of such contracts that were
18 awarded to firms that are certified both as MBEs and WBEs, or as an MBE
19 or WBE and also a VBE;
20 (ii) The number and total dollar value of subcontracts approved during
21 the reporting period that were entered into pursuant to contracts for
22 which participation requirements under this section have been estab-
23 lished (including both contracts awarded during the current reporting
24 period and those awarded in earlier reporting periods that remain open
25 during the current reporting period), and the number and total dollar
26 amount of such subcontracts awarded to MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs, disag-
27 gregated by minority and gender group, size of subcontract and industry
28 classification, and the number and dollar value of such subcontracts
29 that were awarded to firms that are certified both as MBEs and WBEs, or
30 as an MBE or WBE and also a VBE;
31 (iii) a list of the requests for full or partial waivers of partic-
32 ipation requirements for such contracts made pursuant to paragraph 11 of
33 subdivision i of this section and the determinations made with respect
34 to such requests, and the number and dollar amount of those contracts
35 for which such waivers were granted, disaggregated by industry classi-
36 fication; and
37 (iv) a list of the requests for modification of participation require-
38 ments for such contracts made pursuant to paragraph 12 of subdivision i
39 of this section and the determinations made with respect to such
40 requests, and the number and dollar amount of those contracts for which
41 such modifications were granted, disaggregated by industry classifica-
42 tion;
43 (c) a detailed list of each complaint received pursuant to paragraph 1
44 of subdivision o of this section which shall, at a minimum, include the
45 nature of each complaint and the action taken in investigating and
46 addressing such complaint including whether and in what manner the
47 enforcement provisions of subdivision o of this section were invoked and
48 the remedies applied;
49 (d) a detailed list of all non-compliance findings made pursuant to
50 paragraph 4 of subdivision o of this section and actions taken in
51 response to such findings;
52 (e) the number of firms certified or recertified in accordance with
53 section 1304 of the charter during the six months immediately preceding
54 such report;
A. 3971 49
1 (f) the number and percentage of contracts audited pursuant to
2 [section] paragraph 10 of subdivision e of this section and a summary of
3 the results of each audit.
4 (g) a summary of efforts to reduce or eliminate barriers to competi-
5 tion as required pursuant to paragraph 11 of subdivision e of this
6 section;
7 (h) a list of all solicitations submitted to the city chief procure-
8 ment officer pursuant to subparagraph e of paragraph 2 of subdivision h
9 of this section, and a detailed explanation of the determination made
10 regarding each such submission; and
11 (i) any other information as may be required by the director and/or
12 the commissioner.
13 (2) The annual reports submitted in October shall, in addition,
14 contain a determination made by the director and the commissioner, as to
15 whether each agency has made substantial progress toward achieving its
16 utilization goals and whether the city has made substantial progress
17 toward achieving the citywide goals established pursuant to subdivision
18 d of this section.
19 (3) If an agency that has submitted an agency utilization plan pursu-
20 ant to subdivision g of this section fails to achieve its utilization
21 goal, the agency head shall prepare and submit to the director, the
22 commissioner, the city chief procurement officer, and the speaker of the
23 council by January 31 a performance improvement plan which shall
24 describe in detail the efforts such agency intends to undertake to
25 increase M/WBE and VBE participation.
26 (4) The data that provide the basis for the reports required by this
27 subdivision shall be made available electronically to the council in a
28 non-proprietary format that permits automated processing at the time the
29 reports are submitted.
30 m. Agency compliance.
31 (1) Each agency shall submit to the commissioner and the city chief
32 procurement officer such information as is necessary for the city chief
33 procurement officer to complete his or her reports as required in subdi-
34 vision l of this section. The director, the commissioner, and the city
35 chief procurement officer shall review each agency's submissions. The
36 director shall convene the agency M/WBE and VBE officers for those agen-
37 cies that have submitted utilization plans pursuant to subdivision g of
38 this section as often as the director deems necessary, but no less
39 frequently than once per quarter, in order to have agency M/WBE and VBE
40 officers (i) discuss the results of the reports required in subdivision
41 1 of this section; (ii) offer detailed information concerning their
42 effectuation of their performance improvement plans and any additional
43 efforts undertaken to meet goals established in agency utilization
44 plans; (iii) share the practices that have yielded successes in increas-
45 ing M/WBE and VBE participation; and (iv) devise strategic plans to
46 improve the performance of those failing to meet goals established in
47 agency utilization plans. No less frequently than twice per year, agency
48 heads for those agencies that have submitted utilization plans pursuant
49 to subdivision g of this section shall join such quarterly meetings.
50 Whenever it has been determined that an agency is not making adequate
51 progress toward the goals established in its agency utilization plan,
52 the director, the commissioner, and the city chief procurement officer
53 shall act to improve such agency's performance, and may take any of the
54 following actions:
55 (a) require the agency to submit more frequent reports about its
56 procurement activity;
A. 3971 50
1 (b) require the agency to notify the director, the commissioner, and
2 the city chief procurement officer, prior to solicitation of bids or
3 proposals for, and/or prior to award of, contracts in any category where
4 the agency has not made adequate progress toward achieving its utiliza-
5 tion goals;
6 (c) reduce or rescind contract processing authority delegated by the
7 mayor pursuant to sections 317 and 318 of the charter; and
8 (d) any other action the director, the commissioner, and the city
9 chief procurement officer deem appropriate.
10 (2) Noncompliance. Whenever the director, the city chief procurement
11 officer, or the commissioner finds that an agency has failed to comply
12 with its duties under this section, he or she shall attempt to resolve
13 such noncompliance informally with the agency head. In the event that
14 the agency fails to remedy its noncompliance after such informal
15 efforts, the director and the city chief procurement officer shall
16 submit such findings in writing to the mayor and the speaker of the
17 council, and the mayor shall take appropriate measures to ensure compli-
18 ance.
19 (3) Failure by an agency to submit information required by the direc-
20 tor, the division, or the city chief procurement officer, in accordance
21 with this section, including but not limited to the utilization plan
22 required pursuant to subdivision g of this section, shall be deemed
23 noncompliance.
24 n. Pre-qualification. An agency establishing a list of pre-qualified
25 bidders or proposers may deny pre-qualification to prospective contrac-
26 tors who fail to demonstrate in their application for pre-qualification
27 that they have complied with applicable federal, state and local
28 requirements for participation of MBEs, WBEs, VBEs and EBEs in procure-
29 ments. A denial of pre-qualification may be appealed pursuant to appli-
30 cable procurement policy board rules.
31 o. Enforcement.
32 (1) Any person who believes that a violation of the requirements of
33 this section, rules promulgated pursuant to its provisions, or any
34 provision of a contract that implements this section or such rules,
35 including, but not limited to, any contractor utilization plan, has
36 occurred may submit a complaint in writing to the division, the city
37 chief procurement officer and the comptroller. The division shall
38 promptly investigate such complaint and determine whether there has been
39 a violation.
40 (2) Any complaint alleging fraud, corruption or other criminal behav-
41 ior on, the part of a bidder, proposer, contractor, subcontractor or
42 supplier shall be referred to the commissioner of the department of
43 investigation.
44 (3) Contract award.
45 (a) When an agency receives a protest from a bidder or proposer
46 regarding a contracting action that is related to this section, the
47 agency shall send copies of the protest and any appeal thereof, and any
48 decisions made on the protest or such appeal, to the division and the
49 comptroller.
50 (b) Whenever a contracting agency has determined that a bidder or
51 proposer has violated this section, or rules promulgated pursuant to its
52 provisions, the agency may disqualify such bidder or proposer from
53 competing for such contract and the agency may revoke such bidder's or
54 proposer's prequalification status.
55 (4) Contract administration.
A. 3971 51
1 (a) For each contract for which participation requirements have been
2 established under this section, at least once annually during the term
3 of such contract, the contracting agency shall review the contractor's
4 progress toward attainment of its utilization plan, including but not
5 limited to, by reviewing the percentage of work the contractor has actu-
6 ally awarded to MBE, WBE, VBE and/or EBE subcontractors and the payments
7 the contractor has made to such subcontractors.
8 (b) Whenever an agency believes that a contractor or a subcontractor
9 is not in compliance with this section, rules promulgated pursuant to
10 its provisions or any provision of a contract that implements this
11 section, including, but not limited to any contractor utilization plan,
12 the agency shall send a written notice to the city chief procurement
13 officer, the division and the contractor describing the alleged noncom-
14 pliance and offering the contractor an opportunity to be heard. The
15 agency shall then conduct an investigation to determine whether such
16 contractor or subcontractor is in compliance.
17 (c) In the event that a contractor has been found to have violated
18 this section, rules promulgated pursuant to its provisions, or any
19 provision of a contract that implements this section, including, but not
20 limited to any contractor utilization plan, the contracting agency
21 shall, after consulting with the city chief procurement officer and the
22 division, determine whether any of the following actions should be
23 taken:
24 (i) enter an agreement with the contractor allowing the contractor to
25 cure the violation;
26 (ii) revoke the contractor's pre-qualification to bid or make
27 proposals for future contracts;
28 (iii) make a finding that the contractor is in default of the
29 contract;
30 (iv) terminate the contract;
31 (v) declare the contractor to be in breach of contract;
32 (vi) withhold payment or reimbursement;
33 (vii) determine not to renew the contract;
34 (viii) assess actual and consequential damages;
35 (ix) assess liquidated damages or reduction of fees, provided that
36 liquidated damages may be based on amounts representing costs of delays
37 in carrying out the purposes of the program established by this section,
38 or in meeting the purposes of the contract, the costs of meeting utili-
39 zation goals through additional procurements, the administrative costs
40 of investigation and enforcement, or other factors set forth in the
41 contract;
42 (x) exercise rights under the contract to procure goods, services or
43 construction from another contractor and charge the cost of such
44 contract to the contractor that has been found to be in noncompliance;
45 or
46 (xi) take any other appropriate remedy.
47 (5) To the extent available pursuant to rules of the procurement poli-
48 cy board, a contractor may seek resolution of a dispute regarding a
49 contract related to this section. The contracting agency shall submit a
50 copy of such submission to the division.
51 (6) Whenever an agency has reason to believe that an MBE, WBE, VBE or
52 EBE is not qualified for certification, or is participating in a
53 contract in a manner that does not serve a commercially useful function,
54 or has violated any provision of this section, the agency shall notify
55 the commissioner who shall determine whether the certification of such
56 business enterprise should be revoked.
A. 3971 52
1 (7) Statements made in any instrument submitted to an agency pursuant
2 to these rules shall be submitted under penalty of perjury and any false
3 or misleading statement or omission shall be grounds for the application
4 of any applicable criminal and/or civil penalties for perjury. The
5 making of a false or fraudulent statement by an MBE, WBE, VBE or EBE in
6 any instrument submitted pursuant to these rules shall, in addition, be
7 grounds for revocation of its certification.
8 (8) A contractor's record in implementing its contractor utilization
9 plan shall be a factor in the evaluation of its performance. Whenever a
10 contracting agency determines that a contractor's compliance with a
11 contractor utilization plan has been unsatisfactory, the agency shall,
12 after consultation with the city chief procurement officer, file an
13 advice of caution form for inclusion in VENDEX as caution data.
14 p. Procurements by elected officials and the council.
15 (1) In the case of procurements by independently elected city offi-
16 cials other than the mayor, where these rules provide for any action to
17 be taken by the director or the city chief procurement officer, such
18 action shall instead be taken by such elected officials.
19 (2) In the case of procurements by the council, where these rules
20 provide for any action to be taken by the director or the city chief
21 procurement officer, such action shall instead be taken by the speaker
22 of the council.
23 q. Applicability. Agencies shall not be required to apply partic-
24 ipation requirements to the following types of contracts:
25 (1) those subject to federal or state funding requirements which
26 preclude the city from imposing the requirements of this subdivision;
27 (2) those subject to federal or state law participation requirements
28 for MBEs, WBEs, disadvantaged business enterprises, VBEs, and/or EBEs;
29 (3) contracts between agencies;
30 (4) procurements made through the United States general services
31 administration or another federal agency, or through the New York state
32 office of general services or another state agency, or any other govern-
33 mental agency.
34 (5) emergency procurements pursuant to section three hundred fifteen
35 of the charter;
36 (6) sole source procurements pursuant to section three hundred twen-
37 ty-one of the charter;
38 (7) contracts for human services; and
39 (8) contracts awarded to not-for-profit organizations.
40 r. Comptroller. The comptroller shall randomly examine contracts for
41 which contractor utilization plans are established to assess compliance
42 with such plans. All solicitations for contracts for which contractor
43 utilization plans are to be established shall include notice of poten-
44 tial comptroller examinations.
45 s. Advisory board. There shall be an advisory board to enhance
46 procurement opportunities for minority [and women-owned businesses],
47 woman and veteran-owned businesses.
48 (1) Such board shall consist of a chair appointed by the mayor and no
49 fewer than ten members, all of whom shall be appointed by the mayor and
50 shall serve at the pleasure of the mayor.
51 (2) Such board shall:
52 (a) Advise the mayor on M/WBE and VBE issues and on methods to
53 increase M/WBE and VBE participation in city procurement;
54 (b) Provide information to firms owned by women and minority group
55 members about programs and opportunities for M/WBEs and VBEs in order to
A. 3971 53
1 increase participation by such firms in city contracting, and encourage
2 them to become certified as M/WBEs and VBEs; and
3 (c) Educate relevant stakeholders and constituencies in order to
4 support the city's efforts to increase M/WBE and VBE opportunities
5 through regulatory and legislative measures.
6 (3) The chair of the board may direct the board to gather or dissem-
7 inate information and convene meetings in order to improve information
8 sharing about M/WBE and VBE issues and opportunities and to develop and
9 provide advice.
10 § 32. Paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subdivision 12 of section 3.07 of
11 the arts and cultural affairs law, as amended by chapter 255 of the laws
12 of 1988, are amended to read as follows:
13 (a) All contracts for design, construction, services and materials
14 pursuant to this section of whatever nature and all documents soliciting
15 bids or proposals therefor shall contain or make reference to the
16 following provisions:
17 (i) That the contractor will not discriminate against employees or
18 applicants for employment because of race, creed, color, national
19 origin, sex, age, disability, or marital status, and will undertake or
20 continue existing programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority
21 group persons [and], women and veterans are afforded equal opportunity
22 without discrimination. Such programs shall include, but not be limited
23 to, recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion, upgrading,
24 demotion, transfer, layoff, termination, rates of pay or other forms of
25 compensation, and selection for training and retraining, including
26 apprenticeship and on-the-job training;
27 (ii) That the contractor shall request any employment agency, labor
28 union, or authorized representative of workers with which it has a
29 collective bargaining or other agreement or understanding and which is
30 involved in the performance of the contract to furnish a written state-
31 ment that it will not discriminate because of race, creed, color,
32 national origin, sex, age, disability or marital status and it will
33 cooperate in the implementation of the contractor's obligations here-
34 under;
35 (iii) That the contractor will state, in any solicitations or adver-
36 tisements for employees placed by or on behalf of the contractor in the
37 performance of the contract, that all qualified applicants will be
38 afforded equal employment opportunity without discrimination because of
39 race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability or marital
40 status;
41 (iv) That the contractor will include the provisions of subparagraphs
42 (i) through (iii) of this paragraph in every subcontract or purchase
43 order in such a manner that such provisions will be binding upon each
44 subcontractor or vendor as to its work in connection with the contract
45 with the agency.
46 (b) The council shall establish appropriate measures, procedures and
47 guidelines to ensure that contractors and subcontractors undertake mean-
48 ingful programs to employ and promote qualified minority group members
49 [and], women and veterans. Such procedures may require after notice in
50 a bid solicitation, the submission of a minority [and], women and veter-
51 ans workforce utilization program prior to the award of any contract, or
52 at any time thereafter, and may require the submission of compliance
53 reports relating to the operation and implementation of any workforce
54 utilization program adopted hereunder. The council may take appropriate
55 action, including the impositions of sanctions for non-compliance to
A. 3971 54
1 effectuate the provisions of this subdivision and the monitoring of
2 compliance with this subdivision.
3 (c) (i) In the performance of projects pursuant to this section,
4 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
5 shall be given the opportunity for meaningful participation. For
6 purposes hereof, minority business enterprise shall mean any business
7 enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the
8 case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the
9 stock or other voting interest is owned by citizens or permanent resi-
10 dent aliens who are Black, Hispanic, Asian, American Indian, Pacific
11 Islander, or Alaskan native, and such ownership interest is real,
12 substantial and continuing and has the authority to independently
13 control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at least one
14 year; [and] women-owned business enterprise shall mean any business
15 enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the
16 case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the
17 stock to other voting interests of which is owned by citizens or perma-
18 nent resident aliens who are women, and such ownership interest is real,
19 substantial and continuing and has the authority to independently
20 control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at least one
21 year and veteran-owned business enterprise shall mean any business
22 enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the
23 case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one percentum of the
24 stock to other voting interests of which is owned by citizens or perma-
25 nent resident aliens who are veterans, and such ownership interest is
26 real, substantial and continuing and has the authority to independently
27 control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at least one
28 year.
29 The provisions of this subdivision shall not be construed to limit the
30 ability of any minority business enterprise to bid on any contract.
31 (ii) In order to implement the requirements and objectives of this
32 section, the council shall request, as appropriate, the assistance of
33 other state agencies to monitor the contractors' compliance with
34 provisions hereof, provide assistance in obtaining competing qualified
35 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
36 to perform contracts proposed to be awarded, and take other appropriate
37 measures to improve the access of minority [and women-owned], women and
38 veteran-owned business enterprises to these contracts.
39 § 33. Subdivision 33 of section 454 of the banking law, as amended by
40 chapter 679 of the laws of 2003, is amended to read as follows:
41 33. Notwithstanding any other provision of this article to the contra-
42 ry, to participate in the minority - [and women-owned], women - and
43 veteran-owned business development and lending program[, as established
44 in section 16-c of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, consti-
45 tuting the urban development corporation act,] to the extent that such
46 program allows participation by credit unions.
47 § 34. Section 52-0113 of the environmental conservation law, as added
48 by chapter 512 of the laws of 1986, is amended to read as follows:
49 § 52-0113. Minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
50 enterprise program.
51 1. a. In the performance of projects pursuant to this article minority
52 [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises shall be
53 given the opportunity for meaningful participation. The department or
54 the office shall establish measures and procedures to secure meaningful
55 participation and identify those contracts and items of work for which
56 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
A. 3971 55
1 may best bid to actively and affirmatively promote and assist their
2 participation in the projects, so as to facilitate the award of a fair
3 share of contracts to such enterprises; provided, however, that nothing
4 in this article shall be construed to limit the ability of the depart-
5 ment or office to assure that qualified minority [and women-owned],
6 women and veteran-owned business enterprises may participate in the
7 program. For purposes hereof, minority business enterprise shall mean
8 any business enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by,
9 or in the case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per
10 centum of the stock of which is owned by citizens or permanent resident
11 aliens who are Black, Hispanic, Asian or American Indian, Pacific Islan-
12 der or Alaskan natives and such ownership interest is real, substantial
13 and continuing and have the authority to independently control the day
14 to day business decisions of the entity for at least one year; [and]
15 women-owned business enterprise shall mean any business enterprise which
16 is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the case of a publicly
17 owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the stock of which is
18 owned by citizens or permanent resident aliens who are women, and such
19 ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing and have the
20 authority to independently control the day to day business decisions of
21 the entity for at least one year and veteran-owned business enterprise
22 shall mean any business enterprise which is at least fifty-one per
23 centum owned by, or in the case of a publicly owned business, at least
24 fifty-one per centum of the stock of which is owned by citizens or
25 permanent resident aliens who are veterans, and such ownership interest
26 is real, substantial and continuing and have the authority to independ-
27 ently control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at
28 least one year.
29 The provisions of this paragraph shall not be construed to limit the
30 ability of any minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned busi-
31 ness enterprise to bid on any contract.
32 b. In the implementation of this section, the department or the office
33 shall consider compliance by any contractor with the requirements of any
34 federal, state, or local law concerning minority [and women-owned],
35 women and veteran-owned business enterprises, which may effectuate the
36 requirements of this section. If the department or the office determines
37 that by virtue of the imposition of the requirements of any such law, in
38 respect to capital project contracts, the provisions thereof duplicate
39 or conflict with such law, the department may waive the applicability of
40 this section to the extent of such duplication or conflict.
41 c. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to require that overall
42 state and federal requirements for participation of minority [and
43 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises in programs
44 authorized under this article be applied without regard to local circum-
45 stances to all projects or in all communities.
46 2. In order to implement the requirements and objectives of this
47 section, the department and the office shall establish procedures to
48 monitor the contractors' compliance with provisions hereof, provide
49 assistance in obtaining competing qualified minority [and women-owned],
50 women and veteran-owned business enterprises to perform contracts
51 proposed to be awarded, and take other appropriate measures to improve
52 the access of minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned busi-
53 ness enterprises to these contracts.
54 § 35. Section 957 of the general municipal law is amended by adding a
55 new subdivision (u) to read as follows:
A. 3971 56
1 (u) "Veteran-owned business enterprise" shall have the same meaning
2 as provided in section three hundred ten of the executive law.
3 § 36. Subdivisions (a), (g) and (t) of section 959 of the general
4 municipal law, subdivision (a) as amended by section 2 of part R of
5 chapter 57 of the laws of 2010 and subdivisions (g) and (t) as amended
6 by section 3 of part S1 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2009, are amended
7 to read as follows:
8 (a) After consultation with the director of the budget, the commis-
9 sioner of labor, and the commissioner of taxation and finance, promul-
10 gate regulations, which, notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary
11 in the state administrative procedure act, may be adopted on an emergen-
12 cy basis, governing (i) criteria of eligibility for empire zone desig-
13 nation, provided, however, that such criteria be approved by the direc-
14 tor of the budget; (ii) the application process; (iii) the certification
15 by the commissioner as to the eligibility of business enterprises for
16 benefits referred to in section nine hundred sixty-six of this article,
17 which shall be governed by criteria including, but not limited to: (1)
18 whether the business enterprise, if certified, is reasonably likely to
19 create new employment or prevent a loss of employment in the zone, (2)
20 whether such new employment opportunities will be for individuals who
21 will perform a substantial part of their employment activities in the
22 zone, (3) whether certification will have the undesired effect of caus-
23 ing individuals to transfer from existing employment with another busi-
24 ness enterprise to similar employment with the business enterprise so
25 certified, and transferring existing employment from one or more other
26 municipalities, towns or villages in the state, or transferring existing
27 employment from one or more other businesses in the zone, (4) whether
28 such enterprise is likely to enhance the economic climate of the zone,
29 (5) whether the commissioner of labor establishes that such business
30 enterprise, during the three years preceding the submission of an appli-
31 cation for certification, has engaged in a substantial violation or a
32 pattern of violations of laws regulating unemployment insurance, workers
33 compensation, public work, child labor, employment of minorities [and
34 women], women and veterans, safety and health, or other laws for the
35 protection of workers as determined by final judgment of a judicial or
36 administrative proceeding; (6) whether such business meets the require-
37 ments of the cost benefit analysis as established in paragraph (p) of
38 section nine hundred fifty-seven of this article, and (7) if the commis-
39 sioner of labor establishes that the business enterprise has been found
40 in a criminal proceeding to have violated, in the previous three years,
41 any of the laws referred to in subparagraph five of this paragraph or
42 regulations promulgated pursuant to such laws, the conditions of any
43 permit issued thereunder, or similar statute, regulation, order or
44 permit condition of any other government agency, foreign or domestic,
45 such business shall not be certified; provided, however, that a business
46 enterprise that has shifted its operations, or some portions thereof,
47 from an area within New York state not designated as an empire zone or
48 zone equivalent area to an area so designated shall not be certified to
49 receive such benefits except where such shift is entirely within a muni-
50 cipality and has been approved by the local governing body of such muni-
51 cipality or in situations where it has been established, after a public
52 hearing, that extraordinary circumstances exist which warrant the relo-
53 cation of a business, in whole or part, into an empire zone or a zone
54 equivalent area from another municipality and the municipality from
55 which the business is relocating approves of such relocation; or where
56 such shift in operations is from a business incubator facility operated
A. 3971 57
1 by a municipality or by a public or private not-for-profit entity which
2 provides space and business support services to newly established firms;
3 and (iv) the decertification by the commissioner, upon the recommenda-
4 tion of the commissioner of labor, so as to revoke the certification of
5 business enterprises for benefits referred to in section nine hundred
6 sixty-six of this article with respect to an empire zone or zone equiv-
7 alent area upon a finding that the business enterprise has committed
8 substantial violations of laws for the protection of workers including
9 all federal, state and local labor laws, rules or regulations; and (v)
10 the decertification by the commissioner so as to revoke the certif-
11 ication of business enterprises for benefits referred to in section nine
12 hundred sixty-six of this article with respect to an empire zone or zone
13 equivalent area upon a finding of any one of the following: (1) the
14 business enterprise made material misrepresentations of fact on its
15 application for certification or in any of its business annual reports,
16 or the business enterprise failed to disclose facts in its application
17 for certification that would constitute grounds for not issuing a
18 certification; (2) the business enterprise has failed to construct,
19 expand, rehabilitate or operate or invest in its facility substantially
20 in accordance with the representations contained in its application for
21 certification; (3) the business enterprise has failed to create new
22 employment or prevent a loss of employment in the empire zone or zone
23 equivalent area; (4) where applicable, the business enterprise has
24 failed to submit an annual report after it has applied for zone tax
25 benefits or program assistance based on new hires or investments or
26 failed to submit other information when due; (5) the business enter-
27 prise, if first certified pursuant to this article prior to the first
28 day of August, two thousand two, caused individuals to transfer from
29 existing employment with another business enterprise with similar owner-
30 ship and located in New York state to similar employment with the certi-
31 fied business enterprise or if the enterprise acquired, purchased,
32 leased, or had transferred to it real property previously owned by an
33 entity with similar ownership, regardless of form of incorporation or
34 organization; (6) the business enterprise has failed to provide economic
35 returns to the state in the form of total remuneration to its employees
36 (i.e. wages and benefits) and investments in its facility greater in
37 value to the tax benefits the business enterprise used and had refunded
38 to it; or (7) the business enterprise has changed ownership or moved its
39 operations out of the empire zone; said regulations shall provide that
40 whenever any business enterprise is decertified with respect to an
41 empire zone: (A) the date determined to be the earliest event constitut-
42 ing grounds for revoking certification shall be the effective date of
43 decertification; (B) its certified single enterprise, if any, may also
44 be decertified; and (C) the commissioner shall notify the commissioner
45 of taxation and finance that such decertification has occurred, and such
46 notification should include the effective date of such decertification
47 and the zone or zone equivalent area to which such decertification
48 applies; with respect to any business enterprise whose certification has
49 been revoked pursuant to subparagraph five or six of this paragraph,
50 that revocation (I) will be effective for a taxable year beginning on or
51 after January first, two thousand eight and before January first, two
52 thousand nine and for subsequent taxable years, unless the business
53 enterprise is subsequently re-certified pursuant to part 11 of title 5
54 of the New York state codes, rules and regulations for a business enter-
55 prise for which a review is required to be conducted pursuant to subdi-
56 vision (w) of this section in calendar year two thousand nine, and (II)
A. 3971 58
1 thereafter will be effective for the taxable year during which the
2 commissioner makes his or her determination (prior to any appeal) to
3 revoke the certification of a business enterprise and for subsequent
4 taxable years;
5 (g) Coordinate, with the local empire zone administrative board and
6 state agencies and authorities, the provision of business development
7 programs and services for each empire zone in order to stimulate the
8 creation and development of new small businesses, including new small
9 minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enter-
10 prises, and may request and shall receive from any department, division,
11 board, bureau, commission, agency or public authority of the state such
12 assistance as may be necessary;
13 (t) Coordinate with the urban development corporation the creation of
14 a special category of assistance for zones within the regional economic
15 development partnership program, which will make available economic
16 development assistance grants for zone programs and activities, includ-
17 ing, but not limited to, planning, service coordination, and local
18 institutional capacity building for human resource development necessary
19 for economic revitalization; planning and development of small business
20 incubators; job placement and preparedness programs for zones residents;
21 education and training programs for zone businesses; child care programs
22 and projects supportive of business development; technical assistance
23 for minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business devel-
24 opment; training for zone officials; business and tourism development
25 and marketing programs; and other innovative programs and activities in
26 support of economic and community development within the zones;
27 § 37. Paragraphs (iii) and (xii) of subdivision (a) of section 963 of
28 the general municipal law, as amended by chapter 708 of the laws of 1993
29 and further amended by section 15 of part GG of chapter 63 of the laws
30 of 2000, are amended to read as follows:
31 (iii) undertake efforts to ensure meaningful participation by minori-
32 ty-owned [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
33 in empire zone activities;
34 (xii) provide within the zone, or contract with a new or existing
35 community-based local development corporation or entity to provide,
36 strategic economic development planning for the zone, marketing and
37 promotion of the zone, assistance to companies in applying for available
38 benefits, preparation of applications for financing assistance and other
39 technical assistance services; coordination of the delivery of state and
40 local programs within the zones; and operation of such other economic
41 development assistance programs in furtherance of the empire zone devel-
42 opment plan as may be appropriate. Provided, however, within the amount
43 appropriated therefor and allocated by the director of the budget, the
44 commissioner, through annual administrative contracts, shall, to the
45 maximum extent feasible, make equally available financial support,
46 through contracts or other means, to assist with the administrative
47 expenses of the local zone administrative bodies or community-based
48 development organizations. No funds shall be made available for this
49 purpose unless the amount to be provided has been matched by private or
50 governmental sources, other than state sources, in amounts at least
51 equalling that to be provided by the state. Such matching funds shall be
52 earmarked and used exclusively for the local administration of the zone
53 program or for activities of the zone program. At least fifty percent of
54 such matching funds shall be in cash, provided that the commissioner may
55 waive this requirement for communities with populations of twenty-five
56 thousand or less, and provided, further, that any amounts appropriated
A. 3971 59
1 for minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business devel-
2 opment within the zones shall be distributed by the commissioner pursu-
3 ant to a competitive proposal solicitation process.
4 § 38. Subdivision (c) of section 964 of the general municipal law, as
5 amended by chapter 708 of the laws of 1993 and further amended by
6 section 15 of part GG of chapter 63 of the laws of 2000, is amended to
7 read as follows:
8 (c) Each empire zone capital corporation shall, to the maximum extent
9 feasible, undertake measures and procedures to ensure meaningful partic-
10 ipation by minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business
11 enterprises in the activities and investments of such corporation. Each
12 such corporation shall additionally, to the maximum extent feasible,
13 undertake measures and procedures to ensure meaningful participation by
14 locally owned business enterprises in the activities and investments of
15 such corporation.
16 § 39. Subparagraph 7 of paragraph f of subdivision 3 of section 970-r
17 of the general municipal law, as amended by section 1 of part F of chap-
18 ter 577 of the laws of 2004, is amended to read as follows:
19 (7) the financial commitments the applicant will make to the brown-
20 field opportunity area for activities including, but not limited to,
21 marketing of the area for business development, human resource services
22 for residents and businesses in the brownfield opportunity area, and
23 services for small [and], minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
24 an-owned businesses.
25 § 40. Section 3 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
26 constituting the New York state urban development corporation act, is
27 amended by adding a new subdivision 31 to read as follows:
28 (31) "Veteran business enterprise". A business enterprise which is at
29 least fifty-one percent owned, or in the case of a publicity-owned busi-
30 ness at least fifty-one percent of the common stock or other voting
31 interests of which is owned, by United States citizens or permanent
32 resident aliens who are veterans, regardless of race or ethnicity, and
33 such ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing and such
34 veterans have and exercise the authority to independently control the
35 day to day business decisions of the enterprises.
36 § 41. The second undesignated paragraph of subdivision 1 of section 12
37 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New
38 York state urban development corporation act, as added by section 1 of
39 part EE of chapter 60 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as
40 follows:
41 The empire state new market corporation, a community development enti-
42 ty certified by the United States Department of the Treasury Community
43 Development Financial Institutions Fund and a corporate subsidiary of
44 the corporation, by resolution, may direct any of its directors, offi-
45 cers, or employees to form limited liability companies pursuant to
46 section 203 of the limited liability company law for the sole purpose of
47 certifying and performing as community development entities that would
48 be eligible to receive an allocation of tax credits under the new
49 markets tax credit program. No limited liability company formed pursu-
50 ant to this section shall merge or consolidate. Each limited liability
51 company shall act solely in relation to projects selected by the corpo-
52 ration, or a corporate subsidiary of the corporation. Each limited
53 liability company shall be empowered to receive an allocation of tax
54 credits from a federal allocation to the corporation, or a corporate
55 subsidiary of the corporation, under the new markets tax credit program
56 and to do any other act or things incidental to or connected with the
A. 3971 60
1 foregoing purposes or in advancement thereof. The corporation, or a
2 corporate subsidiary of the corporation, shall be the managing member of
3 each limited liability company created by the corporation. In determin-
4 ing which projects to allocate tax credits to under the new markets tax
5 credit program, the corporation shall prioritize projects demonstrating
6 one or more of the following goals or benefits: (a) creating or retain-
7 ing jobs in low income communities; (b) increasing the provision of
8 goods and services for low income community residents which would other-
9 wise not be available at the same price or quality; (c) supporting
10 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned or controlled busi-
11 nesses; (d) expanding housing opportunities for low income community
12 persons; (e) supporting environmentally sustainable outcomes; and (f)
13 supporting efforts that otherwise benefit low income community residents
14 by leveraging further investment in their communities. Provided
15 further, such projects shall be limited to projects that would be
16 authorized under this act and shall be subject to approval by the board
17 of the urban development corporation. The corporation shall publish
18 information regarding the process used to select projects to receive the
19 new markets tax credits and provide a copy to the temporary president of
20 the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority leader of the
21 senate and the minority leader of the assembly. The corporation shall
22 strive for regional diversity in the allocation of tax credits under the
23 new markets tax credit program. The corporation shall include in the
24 information required to be submitted annually in accordance with the
25 provisions of subdivision 1 of section 2800 of the public authorities
26 law information regarding assistance provided by it or its subsidiary
27 under the new markets tax credit program, and shall provide financial
28 information with respect to any subsidiary administering the program in
29 the corporation's financial reports, including its certified audited
30 financial statements.
31 § 42. Paragraph (c) of subdivision 9 of section 16-a of section 1 of
32 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
33 development corporation act, as amended by chapter 477 of the laws of
34 2002, is amended to read as follows:
35 (c) of minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned enterprises
36 or enterprises owned by dislocated workers, such workers as defined in
37 the Workforce Investment Act (P.L. 105-220); and
38 § 43. Section 16-c of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
39 constituting the New York state urban development corporation act, as
40 added by chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, subdivision 1 as amended by
41 section 1 of part AA of chapter 55 of the laws of 2014, and subpara-
42 graphs (i) and (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 as further amended
43 by section 15 of part GG of chapter 63 of the laws of 2000, is amended
44 to read as follows:
45 § 16-c. Minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business
46 development and lending program.
47 (1) Minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business
48 development and lending program. (a) There is hereby created a minori-
49 ty- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business development and
50 lending program for the purpose of providing financial and technical
51 assistance to minority [and women-entrepreneurs], women and veteran
52 entrepreneurs.
53 (b) For the purposes of this section the following words or terms
54 shall mean as follows:
55 (i) "minority-owned business enterprise" or "minority-owned business"
56 shall mean the same as "minority business enterprise" as defined in
A. 3971 61
1 subdivision three of section two hundred ten of the economic development
2 law.
3 (ii) "women-owned business enterprise" or "women-owned business" shall
4 mean the same as "women-owned business enterprise" as defined in subdi-
5 vision five of section two hundred ten of the economic development law.
6 (iii) "veteran-owned business enterprise" or "veteran-owned business"
7 shall mean the same as "veteran-owned business enterprise" as defined in
8 subdivision seven of section two hundred ten of the economic development
9 law.
10 (iv) "incubator" shall mean a facility providing low-cost space, tech-
11 nical assistance and support services, including, but not limited to,
12 central services shared by tenants of the facility, to minority- [and
13 women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business enterprises.
14 (c) Assistance shall not be provided under this section for:
15 (i) the purchase or rehabilitation of real property for speculative
16 purposes;
17 (ii) payment of any tax or employee benefit arrearage;
18 (iii) residential construction, renovation or development
19 construction, except for assistance to minority [and], women and veteran
20 contractors under subdivision four of this section;
21 (iv) educational institutions and proprietary education firms, except
22 licensed child care facilities;
23 (v) hospitals or residential health care facilities;
24 (vi) overnight lodging facilities;
25 (vii) refinancing of debt or equity invested in an enterprise or
26 project.
27 (d) The corporation is authorized to:
28 (i) establish programs in conjunction with locally, and community
29 based entities to decentralize lending for small loans and loans to
30 start up minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned busi-
31 nesses;
32 (ii) establish a comprehensive program for minority [and], women and
33 veteran contractors, which may include assistance through loans, bonding
34 assistance and technical assistance;
35 (iii) establish a program to provide loans to established minority-
36 [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses and for minority-
37 [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses, including loans
38 to such businesses seeking to acquire or expand a franchise;
39 (iv) provide loan guarantees to financial institutions and make linked
40 deposits into federally and state chartered credit unions for the
41 purpose of encouraging private financial institutions to make loans to
42 minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses;
43 (v) establish a program to create incubators to assist small and high
44 risk minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses to
45 grow and prosper;
46 (vi) promote equity investment in minority- [and women-owned], women-
47 and veteran-owned businesses; [and]
48 (vii) establish a comprehensive technical assistance program in coop-
49 eration with the department of economic development to assist minority-
50 [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses and potential
51 [minority and women-entrepreneurs] minority-, women- and veteran-entre-
52 preneurs; and
53 (viii) notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, establish
54 a minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business invest-
55 ment fund to provide critical financial support to foster the develop-
56 ment of new and emerging ideas and products of minority- [and women-
A. 3971 62
1 owned], women- and veteran-owned business enterprises as well as to
2 promote the long-term financial performance and success of early stage
3 enterprises that are minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-
4 owned start-ups. The selection of an eligible applicant and beneficiary
5 companies for the minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned
6 business investment fund shall be selected by the process established
7 pursuant to subdivisions two through four of section sixteen-u of this
8 act. Minority- [or women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business
9 enterprises who participate in such minority- [and women-owned], women-
10 and veteran-owned business investment fund under this subdivision shall
11 not be precluded from qualifying for any other assistance, grant or loan
12 made available from the state.
13 (2) Minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund. For
14 the purpose of establishing programs in conjunction with locally and
15 community based entities to decentralize lending for small loans and
16 loans to start up minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned
17 businesses, the corporation shall establish minority [and], women and
18 veteran revolving loan trust fund accounts and related administrative
19 expenses trust fund accounts.
20 (a) Each minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund
21 account shall be administered by one or more of the following types of
22 entities that provide services to community businesses and have as one
23 of their primary purposes the provision of services and assistance to
24 minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses:
25 (i) empire zone capital corporations established pursuant to section
26 nine hundred sixty-four of the general municipal law;
27 (ii) community-based local development corporations or industrial
28 development agencies that serve a municipality in which an empire zone
29 has been established pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general
30 municipal law and have as their primary purpose assistance to minority-
31 [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses located or to be
32 located in such empire zone; or
33 (iii) local and community development corporations, industrial devel-
34 opment agencies, or other not-for-profit entities, representative of the
35 community.
36 (b) To be eligible to administer a minority [and], women and veteran
37 revolving loan trust fund account, the entity must also: (i) have staff
38 with sufficient expertise to analyze applications for financial assist-
39 ance, to regularly monitor financial assistance to clients, and to
40 provide management or technical assistance to clients; and (ii) have
41 established a loan committee composed of six or more persons experienced
42 in business management, commercial lending or in the operation of a
43 for-profit business, at least one-half of whom shall be experienced in
44 commercial lending, at least [one-third] one-quarter of whom shall be
45 minority persons and at least [one-third] one-quarter of whom shall be
46 women and at least one-quarter of whom shall be veterans. Such loan
47 committee shall review every application, determine the feasibility of
48 the proposed project and the likelihood of repayment of the requested
49 financing and shall recommend to the governing body of the entity such
50 action on the application as the loan committee deems appropriate. The
51 corporation shall identify entities eligible to administer minority and
52 women revolving loan trust fund accounts through a competitive statewide
53 request for proposal process.
54 (c) Any entity selected to administer a minority [and], women and
55 veteran revolving loan trust fund account shall be eligible to draw
56 funds from the account as needed to provide the following types of
A. 3971 63
1 financial assistance to minority- [and women-owned], women- and veter-
2 an-owned businesses upon certification to and acceptance by the corpo-
3 ration that such assistance complies with rules and regulations promul-
4 gated by the corporation: (i) working capital loans, provided that the
5 amount of the loan does not exceed thirty-five thousand dollars and the
6 term of the loan does not exceed five years; and (ii) loans for the
7 acquisition and/or improvement of real property and for the acquisition
8 of machinery and equipment provided that the amount of the loan does not
9 exceed fifty thousand dollars and the term of the loan does not exceed
10 the useful life of the equipment or property.
11 (d) (i) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the
12 corporation may establish an administrative expenses trust fund account
13 for the benefit of each entity selected to administer a minority [and],
14 women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account. The initial deposit
15 of funds to an administrative expenses trust fund account shall be an
16 amount determined by the corporation but shall not exceed twenty-five
17 thousand dollars.
18 (ii) An entity selected to administer a minority [and], women and
19 veteran revolving loan trust fund account may use the funds in the
20 administrative expenses trust fund account for costs incurred by it in
21 the start up and administration of the financial assistance program
22 authorized pursuant to this subdivision.
23 (iii) The corporation shall deposit into each administrative expenses
24 trust fund account:
25 (A) all income earned from the moneys on deposit in the corresponding
26 minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account
27 during the first year of the entity's administration of said account;
28 and
29 (B) beginning with its second year in administering a minority [and],
30 women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account, said amounts may be
31 used for costs incurred by the entity in administering the minority
32 [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account; and
33 (C) repayments of interest on loans made from the corresponding minor-
34 ity [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account.
35 (iv) Funds from the administrative expenses trust fund account may be
36 used for costs incurred at any time by an administering entity in its
37 administration of a minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan
38 trust fund account pursuant to this section.
39 (v) Funds deposited in an administrative expenses trust fund account
40 shall be disbursed by the corporation to the entity that administers the
41 corresponding minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust
42 fund account on a periodic basis and shall be expended by the entity in
43 accordance with an annual budget and any updates of same, approved by
44 the corporation.
45 (e) Any entity selected to administer a minority [and], women and
46 veteran revolving loan trust fund account shall pay to the corporation
47 for deposit any repayments received in connection with financial assist-
48 ance provided from its account. Payments consisting of the repayment of
49 the principal amount of a loan shall be deposited by the corporation
50 into the minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund
51 account from which the loan was made. The interest earned by the corpo-
52 ration from the investment of moneys in each minority [and], women and
53 veteran revolving loan trust fund account during and after the second
54 year of a selected entity's administration of said account shall be
55 deposited by the corporation into the corresponding minority [and],
56 women and veteran revolving loan trust fund account and used to provide
A. 3971 64
1 the financial assistance to minority- [and women-owned], women- and
2 veteran-owned businesses as authorized pursuant to this section.
3 (f) The provisions of subdivisions eight, nine, and fourteen through
4 nineteen of section sixteen-a of this act pertaining to the regional
5 revolving loan trust fund shall also be applicable to the minority
6 [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund, provided that: where
7 the term "regional corporation" appears therein it shall be interpreted
8 to mean an entity selected to administer a minority [and], women and
9 veteran revolving loan trust fund account, and "regional revolving loans
10 trust fund" shall mean a minority [and], women and veteran revolving
11 loan trust fund, and where the term "this section" appears therein it
12 shall mean this section sixteen-c.
13 (g) The corporation may provide funds from an appropriation for the
14 minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business develop-
15 ment and lending program to any entity selected to administer a minority
16 [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund for the purposes of
17 recapitalizing such account and the entity's corresponding administra-
18 tive expenses trust fund account following an evaluation by the corpo-
19 ration of the entity's administration and use of such accounts.
20 (h) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the corpo-
21 ration shall establish a minority [and], women and veteran revolving
22 loan trust fund to pay into such fund any moneys made available to the
23 corporation for such fund from any source, including moneys appropriated
24 by the state and any income earned by, or increment to, the account due
25 to the investment thereof, or any repayment of moneys advanced from the
26 fund. The corporation shall not commingle the moneys of such fund with
27 any moneys held in trust by the corporation, except for investment
28 purposes.
29 (3) Micro-loan program. (a) For the purposes of this subdivision
30 "micro-loan" shall mean a loan of under seven thousand five hundred
31 dollars.
32 (b) The corporation shall, pursuant to requests for proposals, enter
33 into agreements for other types of locally, community or regionally
34 administered loan programs than those set forth in subdivision two of
35 this section, including micro-loan programs to be administered by local
36 development corporations, local industrial development organizations,
37 municipalities and not-for-profit organizations, to provide micro-loans
38 to small and high risk minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-
39 owned businesses located within their respective service areas, provided
40 that loan review committees are established by such administering enti-
41 ty, including women, veterans and minority persons experienced in busi-
42 ness management, business development, commercial lending, entrepreneur-
43 ship, or in the operation of a for-profit business.
44 (c) Agreements entered into pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subdivi-
45 sion shall be governed by paragraphs (d) through (h) of subdivision two
46 of this section, and minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan
47 trust fund accounts and administrative expenses trust fund accounts
48 shall be established in a similar fashion for entities selected to
49 administer micro-loan funds pursuant to this subdivision.
50 (4) Minority [and], women and veteran contracting program. For the
51 purpose of establishing a comprehensive program to assist minority
52 [and], women and veteran contractors, the corporation may provide loans,
53 loan guarantees, technical assistance and bonding assistance, the corpo-
54 ration may enter into cooperative agreements with cities, counties,
55 municipalities, authorities, agencies, federally and state chartered
A. 3971 65
1 credit unions in New York state and federally insured banking organiza-
2 tions and financial institutions for such purposes.
3 (a) To be eligible for a contractor loan, the borrower must have
4 either (i) a construction contract with, or a contract to provide goods
5 or services to, a governmental entity or authority, (ii) a subcontract
6 on a government-sponsored construction contract, (iii) a contract or
7 subcontract on a government sponsored residential project, or (iv) a
8 contract or subcontract on a construction project previously approved by
9 the corporation pursuant to section ten of this act.
10 (b) The corporation shall provide technical assistance specifically
11 oriented to [minority and women-owned] minority-, women- and veteran-
12 owned government contractors as part of its comprehensive technical
13 assistance program.
14 (c) The corporation is authorized to provide assistance through the
15 creation of, or assistance to, a minority [and], women and veteran bond-
16 ing guarantee program to enable minority [and], women and veteran
17 contractors and subcontractors to meet payment or performance bonding
18 requirements.
19 (i) Through such program, assistance in the form of working capital
20 loans and loan guarantees pursuant to subdivision six of this section
21 may also be provided to minority [and], women and veteran contractors
22 and subcontractors who have secured contracts by participating in the
23 program.
24 (ii) The corporation shall either establish criteria for the bonding
25 guarantee program and for any required escrow funds which shall include
26 detailed provisions for eligibility; or if the corporation is providing
27 assistance to a program other than one established by the corporation,
28 review and approve the criteria established for such other program.
29 (5) Direct financial assistance for minority- [and women-owned],
30 women- and veteran-owned businesses. For the purpose of establishing a
31 program to provide direct financial assistance to minority- [and women-
32 owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses, the corporation is author-
33 ized to provide assistance in the form of:
34 (a) Business development loans and loan guarantees pursuant to subdi-
35 vision six of this section to eligible enterprises for the acquisition
36 or improvement of real property, machinery, equipment or working capi-
37 tal, provided that to be eligible for a business development loan, the
38 borrowers must have been in business for at least three years and
39 provided that the loans must be in an amount equal to or in excess of
40 fifty thousand dollars;
41 (b) Franchise loans to eligible enterprises seeking to acquire or
42 expand franchises of nationally recognized corporations, provided that
43 disbursements by the corporation of such loans shall be conditioned on
44 obtaining such franchises;
45 (c) Equity assistance for eligible [minority and women-owned] minori-
46 ty-, women- and veteran-owned enterprises to match equity contributions
47 to such enterprises by financial institutions and community development
48 equity capital funds, provided, however, that such assistance shall be
49 targeted to start-up and early stage enterprises in the manufacturing,
50 retail and service sectors located in economically distressed areas.
51 (6) Deposits and loan guarantees. For the purpose of encouraging
52 private financial institutions to make loans to eligible enterprises
53 pursuant to this section for any of the eligible projects pursuant to
54 subdivisions four and five of this section, the corporation is author-
55 ized to:
A. 3971 66
1 (a) Make linked deposits of funds into federally and state chartered
2 credit unions in New York state, in order to encourage such organiza-
3 tions to make small loans to [minority and women-owned] minority-,
4 women- and veteran-owned businesses; and
5 (b) Provide loan guarantees to private financial institutions for
6 loans made to eligible minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-
7 owned businesses pursuant to this subdivision for eligible projects,
8 provided that the guarantee shall be at least fifty percent backed by
9 funds of the corporation. Any such loan guaranteed by the corporation
10 shall be made to borrowers that are approved by the corporation and
11 substantially meet the underwriting criteria the credit union or finan-
12 cial institution customarily applies to similar borrowers for similar
13 loans supported by similar guarantees, and no guaranteed loan funds
14 shall be disbursed until the corporation has received, reviewed and
15 concurred, in writing, with the recommendation of the credit union or
16 banking or financial institution to make a loan.
17 (7) Minority [and], women and veteran small business incubator
18 program. (a) The corporation shall establish a minority [and], women and
19 veteran small business incubator program for the purpose of providing
20 financial support for the creation of incubators to nurture [minority
21 and women-owned] minority-, women- and veteran-owned business enter-
22 prises with growth potential.
23 (b) Under this subdivision the corporation is authorized to provide
24 low-interest loans and grants for construction financing and permanent
25 financing of up to seventy-five percent of project costs up to a maximum
26 of six hundred fifty thousand dollars per project, provided that the
27 total amount of grant assistance provided pursuant to this paragraph
28 shall not exceed twenty percent of an appropriation provided for the
29 purposes of this section.
30 (c) Incubator projects eligible for such assistance shall involve the
31 renovation or reconstruction of existing facilities or the acquisition
32 of equipment, except that construction shall be allowable in cases in
33 which an applicant can demonstrate to the satisfaction of the corpo-
34 ration that an existing facility is unavailable in the area to be served
35 by the new incubator facility.
36 (d) Incubator projects are not eligible to receive loans for the
37 purpose of covering operating costs or supplying incubator support
38 services, except that incubators in their first eighteen months of oper-
39 ation may receive one-time grants not to exceed forty thousand dollars,
40 which costs may include administrative costs of employing a resident
41 administrator/advisor to the incubator, provided that the corporation
42 shall not expend a sum greater than two hundred fifty thousand dollars
43 in any one state fiscal year, or so much as may be specifically appro-
44 priated for this purpose.
45 (e) Eligible incubator projects shall be required to demonstrate to
46 the corporation's satisfaction:
47 (i) public or private support and involvement sufficient to complete
48 the renovation of existing facilities or the construction of new facili-
49 ties and the acquisition of equipment;
50 (ii) significant community support for the project;
51 (iii) the existence of prospective tenants for such incubator space;
52 (iv) demand for such incubator space, which may include evidence of
53 the unavailability of suitable space for prospective tenants at appro-
54 priate rental or lease costs in the community in which such prospective
55 tenants are located; and
A. 3971 67
1 (v) the inability of the project to occur without financial assistance
2 from the corporation.
3 (f) The corporation shall establish criteria for eligibility for fund-
4 ing for incubator projects, including but not limited to the following:
5 (i) the project must be designed to provide low-cost space and support
6 services to incubator tenants, coordination with other sources of
7 assistance and flexible leasing arrangements for tenants;
8 (ii) the project sponsors must provide a management plan and a busi-
9 ness plan for operating the incubator satisfactory to the corporation;
10 and
11 (iii) the project gives preference for incubator space and assistance
12 to minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses
13 which currently receive, or have received, assistance from the corpo-
14 ration pursuant to this section and to incubator projects proposed to be
15 located in economically distressed areas.
16 (8) Minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business
17 technical assistance program. (a) The corporation shall establish a
18 comprehensive technical assistance program within the minority [and],
19 women and veteran business development office, in cooperation with the
20 department of economic development's division of minority- [and women-
21 business], women- and veteran-business development established pursuant
22 to article four-A of the economic development law, to provide technical
23 assistance to minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned
24 business enterprises and to prospective minority- [and women-business],
25 women- and veteran-business entrepreneurs through third party service
26 providers, which assistance shall include, but not be limited to: (i)
27 technical assistance in development and execution of business plans,
28 including the formation of, acquisition of, management of, or diversifi-
29 cation of a minority- [or women-owned], women- or veteran-owned business
30 enterprise; (ii) technical assistance with applications for obtaining
31 funds from public and private financing sources; (iii) technical assist-
32 ance in the development of a working capital budget; (iv) referrals to
33 other providers of technical assistance to minority- [and women-owned],
34 women- and veteran-owned businesses and minority [and], women and veter-
35 an entrepreneurs, where appropriate, including the entrepreneurial
36 assistance program established pursuant to article nine of the economic
37 development law; and (v) technical assistance through education programs
38 directed primarily at women , veteran and minority entrepreneurs.
39 (b) Technical assistance may be provided through direct corporate
40 support, through grants to or contracts with service providers or
41 governmental entities, and minority- [and women-owned], women- and
42 veteran-owned business enterprises and individuals.
43 (9) Priorities. The corporation shall give priority to applications
44 for assistance pursuant to this section in which the business seeking
45 such assistance indicates a commitment to first consider persons eligi-
46 ble to participate in federal job training partnership act (P.L. 97-300)
47 programs.
48 (10) Non-application of certain provisions. The provisions of section
49 ten and subdivision two of section sixteen of this act shall not apply
50 to assistance or projects authorized pursuant to this section.
51 (11) Rules and regulations. The corporation shall, assisted by the
52 commissioner of economic development and in consultation with the
53 department of economic development, promulgate rules and regulations in
54 accordance with the state administrative procedure act. Such rules and
55 regulations shall be consistent with the program plan required by subdi-
56 vision nineteen of section one hundred of the economic development law.
A. 3971 68
1 No funds shall be disbursed under this program until such rules and
2 regulations have been reviewed and approved by the corporation. All
3 assistance and projects funded under this program shall be funded in
4 accordance with the rules and regulations in effect on the date the
5 completed application for such assistance shall be received by the
6 corporation.
7 (12) Minority [and], women and veteran business development and lend-
8 ing account. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the
9 corporation shall establish within the treasury of the corporation a
10 minority [and], women and veteran business development and lending
11 account, and shall pay into such account any moneys which may be made
12 available to the corporation for this purpose from any source including,
13 but not limited to, moneys appropriated by the state and any repayment
14 of principal and interest on loans made by the corporation pursuant to
15 the minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business
16 development and lending program. Funds in the minority [and], women and
17 veteran business development and lending account, including funds from
18 the repayment of principal and interest on loans made by the corpo-
19 ration, may be used for any form of assistance authorized hereunder. The
20 amounts deposited in the minority [and], women and veteran business
21 development and lending account may not be interchanged with any other
22 account, but may be commingled with any other account for investment
23 purposes. All loans disbursed by the corporation shall be repaid into
24 the account. The corporation shall enter into a written agreement with
25 the director of the budget for repayment, to the state comptroller to
26 the credit of the capital projects fund, of all moneys in the account
27 after a period of time to be determined by the corporation and the
28 director of the budget. The corporation shall transfer to the minority
29 [and], women and veteran business development and lending account: all
30 moneys appropriated or reappropriated by New York state for the minority
31 [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund that have not been
32 committed prior to the effective date of the appropriation for the
33 program in the current fiscal year, or become uncommitted subsequent to
34 the effective date of the program's appropriation for the current fiscal
35 year; and all repayments of principal and interest on loans made by the
36 corporation which are currently on deposit in, or payable to, the minor-
37 ity [and], women and veteran business development and lending account.
38 (13) Standardization. The corporation shall streamline the review and
39 approval process for projects and wherever possible standardize all
40 relevant attendant documentation and legal documents.
41 (14) Approval cycle. The corporation shall approve eligible loans or
42 grants on at least a four-month cycle and shall give priority consider-
43 ation to the comparative degree of economic distress within the areas in
44 which the project is located. Other factors to be considered by the
45 corporation shall include the impact of the project on the employment
46 and economic condition of the community and the financial feasibility of
47 the project.
48 (15) Repayment. Notwithstanding the provisions of section forty-a of
49 the state finance law and any other general or special law, no written
50 agreement under this program shall require repayment at any time or on
51 any terms inconsistent with the provisions of this act or the New York
52 state project finance agency act; except, however, that the corporation
53 may make grants to projects using funds appropriated for this purpose
54 and that the repayment provision may not apply to such grants.
55 (16) Reports. The chairman of the corporation shall submit to the
56 director of the budget, the speaker of the assembly and the temporary
A. 3971 69
1 president of the senate an evaluation of the effectiveness of the
2 program prepared by an entity independent of the corporation. The corpo-
3 ration shall select the program evaluator through a request for proposal
4 process. Such evaluation shall determine whether the assistance provided
5 has enhanced the economic condition of assisted companies or communi-
6 ties, and shall make recommendation for improvements which would make
7 the program more effective. Such evaluation shall be submitted by
8 September first, nineteen hundred ninety-five and September first every
9 two years thereafter.
10 § 44. Subparagraphs (viii) and (x) of paragraph (e) of subdivision 7
11 of section 16-d of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, consti-
12 tuting the New York state urban development corporation act, as added by
13 chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, are amended to read as follows:
14 (viii) export, marketing, procurement and subcontracting assistance to
15 small and medium-sized industrial firms, including minority- [and
16 women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses, and to flexible manu-
17 facturing networks, and programs to assist regional and multi-county
18 business marketing and procurement programs;
19 (x) business planning, management assistance and counseling, and
20 financial packaging assistance to small and medium-sized industrial
21 firms, including minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned
22 businesses, flexible manufacturing networks, and new enterprises and
23 small businesses, including the establishment of neighborhood-based
24 business service centers designed to deliver comprehensive technical
25 assistance to new and small businesses in specific communities and
26 neighborhoods;
27 § 45. Subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (h) of subdivision 7 of section
28 16-d of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
29 New York state urban development corporation act, as added by chapter
30 169 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read as follows:
31 (ii) support for business development projects of women, members of
32 minority groups, veterans or dislocated workers;
33 § 46. Clause (B) of subparagraph (i) of paragraph (h) of subdivision 8
34 of section 16-d of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, consti-
35 tuting the New York state urban development corporation act, as added by
36 chapter 169 of the laws of 1994 and as further amended by section 15 of
37 part GG of chapter 63 of the laws of 2000, is amended to read as
38 follows:
39 (B) community based local development corporations, industrial devel-
40 opment agencies, or other not-for-profit entities which serve a munici-
41 pality in which an empire zone has been established and which, as one of
42 their primary purposes, provide services and assistance to business
43 enterprises located or to be located in such empire zone, including
44 minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses;
45 § 47. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 14 of section 16-d of section 1 of
46 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
47 development corporation act, as added by chapter 169 of the laws of
48 1994, is amended to read as follows:
49 (b) Submit to the director of the budget, the speaker of the assembly
50 and the temporary president of the senate an evaluation of the effec-
51 tiveness of the urban and community development program prepared by an
52 entity independent of the corporation. The corporation shall select the
53 program evaluator through a request for proposal process. Such evalu-
54 ation shall discuss the variety and types of programs supported by the
55 corporation under this program; and, as appropriate, the extent to which
56 the program has served to create and maintain jobs; the extent to which
A. 3971 70
1 the program has helped to increase the vitality of local communities;
2 the extent to which the program is coordinated with other related state
3 and local assistance programs; the extent to which the program serves
4 minorities [and], women and veterans; the extent to which the program
5 serves urban and rural areas; the extent to which the program serves
6 economically distressed and highly distressed areas; the extent to which
7 the program has helped to increase the capacity of local governments and
8 organizations to undertake economic development activities; and such
9 other components as the commissioner of economic development shall deem
10 appropriate; and shall make recommendations for improvements which would
11 make the program more effective. Such evaluation shall be submitted by
12 September first, nineteen hundred ninety-five and by September first
13 every two years thereafter.
14 § 48. Paragraph (h) of subdivision 1 of section 16-e of section 1 of
15 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
16 development corporation act, as added by chapter 169 of the laws of
17 1994, is amended to read as follows:
18 (h) "Revolving loan fund account grants" shall include: (i) grants to
19 provide the local match for federally funded community-based loan funds;
20 (ii) grants to capitalize and recapitalize regional revolving loan trust
21 fund accounts pursuant to section sixteen-a of this act; and (iii)
22 grants to recapitalize minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan
23 trust fund accounts established pursuant to section sixteen-c of this
24 act.
25 § 49. Subparagraph (i) of paragraph (c) of subdivision 5 of section
26 16-e of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
27 New York state urban development corporation act, as added by chapter
28 169 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read as follows:
29 (i) business development by women, minorities, veterans or unemployed
30 persons;
31 § 50. Subparagraphs (vi) and (ix) of paragraph (c) of subdivision 10
32 of section 16-e of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, consti-
33 tuting the New York state urban development corporation act, as added by
34 chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, are amended to read as follows:
35 (vi) management and procurement assistance to small business, includ-
36 ing minority- [and women-owned], women- and veteran-owned businesses;
37 (ix) assistance to expand the capacity of existing entities adminis-
38 tering minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan funds to deliver
39 services;
40 § 51. Subdivision 13 of section 16-e of section 1 of chapter 174 of
41 the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban development
42 corporation act, as added by chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, is amended
43 to read as follows:
44 (13) Regional loan fund account grants. Assistance from this program
45 may be provided for grants of up to five hundred thousand dollars to
46 capitalize, and up to two hundred thousand dollars to recapitalize,
47 regional revolving loan trust fund accounts established pursuant to
48 section sixteen-a of this act and up to two hundred thousand dollars to
49 recapitalize minority [and], women and veteran revolving loan trust fund
50 accounts established pursuant to section sixteen-c of this act; and up
51 to two hundred thousand dollars to provide the local match for appropri-
52 ately federally-financed community-based loan funds.
53 § 52. Paragraph (d) of subdivision 18 of section 16-e of section 1 of
54 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
55 development corporation act, as added by chapter 169 of the laws of
56 1994, is amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 71
1 (d) The participation of minority- [and women-owned], women- and
2 veteran-owned businesses;
3 § 53. Subdivision 1 of section 16-f of section 1 of chapter 174 of
4 the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban development
5 corporation act, as added by chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, is amended
6 to read as follows:
7 (1) Program created. There is hereby created a state bonding guaran-
8 tee assistance program to enable small businesses, and minority-owned
9 [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises, certified as
10 a minority-owned [or], women-owned or veteran-owned business enterprise
11 pursuant to article fifteen-A of the executive law, to meet payment
12 and/or performance bonding requirements by providing additional finan-
13 cial backing needed to induce a surety company to issue a bond for
14 construction projects, including but not limited to, government spon-
15 sored, transportation related construction projects. For purposes of
16 this section, the term small business shall have the same meaning as
17 defined in section one hundred thirty-one of the economic development
18 law. Such program shall give preference to minority-owned [and], women-
19 owned and veteran-owned business enterprises and shall:
20 (a) Make available funds to surety companies providing bonds to small
21 businesses and [minority- owned or] minority-owned, women-owned or
22 veteran-owned business enterprises in an amount equal to a percentage
23 not to exceed fifty percent of the face value of bonds issued by the
24 surety.
25 (b) Provide technical assistance in completing bonding applications
26 for small businesses and minority-owned [or], women-owned or veteran-
27 owned business enterprises seeking to become eligible for bonding in
28 preparation for bidding on construction projects, including transporta-
29 tion related projects. The corporation shall provide and may refer such
30 businesses to the department of economic development for technical
31 assistance as such businesses may need, including but not limited to:
32 (i) a review of the applicants' market and business competitive strat-
33 egy;
34 (ii) consultation and review of the development and planned implemen-
35 tation of a working capital budget;
36 (iii) assistance with applications for the receipt of funding from
37 other financial sources and providing referrals to other appropriate
38 public and private sources of financing; and
39 (iv) assistance from the regional offices of the department of econom-
40 ic development, pursuant to article eleven of the economic development
41 law, and the entrepreneurial assistance program, pursuant to article
42 nine of such law, and any other such program receiving state funds from
43 this act or the department of economic development or any other state
44 agency that is intended to provide technical assistance to small busi-
45 nesses and minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned small
46 business enterprises.
47 § 54. Intentionally omitted.
48 § 55. Subparagraph (i) of paragraph (c) of subdivision 2 of section
49 16-k of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
50 New York state urban development corporation act, as amended by chapter
51 103 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:
52 (i) provide a plan to the corporation or its agent for the marketing
53 of the capital access program to small businesses, including those in
54 highly distressed areas and to minority- [and], women-owned and veter-
55 an-owned businesses, with appropriate lending objectives identified by
56 the financial institution for such areas and businesses;
A. 3971 72
1 § 56. Subparagraph (i) of paragraph (e) of subdivision 2 of section
2 16-l of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
3 New York state urban development corporation act, as added by chapter
4 471 of the laws of 2001, is amended to read as follows:
5 (i) innovative activities and programs designed to encourage value-ad-
6 ded small business development and growth in rural areas, including
7 cottage and crafts industries; group marketing of local products;
8 women-owned industries; veteran-owned industries; natural resources
9 development; and tourism. Such activities and programs shall also
10 include projects pertaining to agriculture and agribusiness development
11 to stimulate the development and implementation of new and alternative
12 production, processing, storage, distribution and marketing technologies
13 and improvements for New York food, agricultural and forest products.
14 Projects promoting strengthened farm management practices shall also be
15 eligible for assistance;
16 § 57. Paragraph (g) of subdivision 1 of section 16-m of section 1 of
17 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
18 development corporation act, as added by section 1 of part N of chapter
19 84 of the laws of 2002, is amended to read as follows:
20 (g) Assistance to local or regional organizations to facilitate
21 financing for small- and medium-sized business, including minority-
22 [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises through flexi-
23 ble financing programs, including, but not limited to, loan loss reserve
24 and revolving loan programs, working capital loans, working capital loan
25 guarantees, or other flexible financing programs that leverage tradi-
26 tional financing;
27 § 58. Subparagraph (i) of paragraph (e) of subdivision 7 of section
28 16-o of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
29 New York state urban development corporation act, as added by chapter
30 186 of the laws of 2007, is amended to read as follows:
31 (i) provide jobs for low income people or are owned by low income
32 people, women, veterans or minority entrepreneurs; or
33 § 59. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 of section 16-q of section 1 of
34 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
35 development corporation act, as added by section 2 of part QQ of chapter
36 57 of the laws of 2008, is amended to read as follows:
37 (b) Support for the attraction or expansion of a business, including,
38 but not limited to, those primarily engaged in activities identified as
39 a strategic industry, and minority-owned [and], women-owned and veter-
40 an-owned business enterprises as defined by subdivisions (c) and (g) of
41 section nine hundred fifty-seven of the general municipal law.
42 § 60. Subdivisions 3 and 11 of section 16-t of section 1 of chapter
43 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban develop-
44 ment corporation act, subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 254 of the
45 laws of 2016 and subdivision 11 as amended by section 1 of part II of
46 chapter 59 of the laws of 2013, are amended to read as follows:
47 3. Program loans to small businesses and micro-businesses shall be
48 targeted and marketed to [minority and women-owned] minority-, women-
49 and veteran-owned enterprises and other small businesses and micro-busi-
50 nesses that are having difficulty accessing traditional credit markets.
51 Program loans to small businesses and micro-businesses shall be used for
52 the creation and retention of jobs, as defined by the corporation,
53 including: (a) working capital; (b) the acquisition and/or improvement
54 of real property; (c) the acquisition of machinery and equipment, prop-
55 erty or improvement; or (d) the refinancing of debt obligations. There
56 shall be two categories of loans to small businesses and micro-business-
A. 3971 73
1 es: a micro loan that shall have a principal amount that is less than
2 twenty-five thousand dollars and a regular loan that shall have a prin-
3 cipal amount not less than twenty-five thousand dollars. Prior to
4 receiving program funds, the lending organization must certify to the
5 corporation that such loan complies with this section and rules and
6 regulations promulgated for the program and that the lending organiza-
7 tion has performed its obligations pursuant to and is in compliance with
8 this section, the program rules and regulations and all agreements
9 entered into between the corporation and the lending organization. The
10 program funds amount used by the lending organization to fund a program
11 applicant loan shall not be more than fifty percent of the principal
12 amount of such loan. The program funds amount used by the lending organ-
13 ization to fund a program applicant loan shall not be greater than one
14 hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars. Minority- [and women-owned],
15 women- and veteran-owned business enterprises and other small businesses
16 or micro-businesses who access such program loans under this subdivision
17 shall not be precluded from accessing such short-term financing loans
18 provided under subdivision eleven of this section.
19 11. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this section, the
20 corporation may provide at least five hundred thousand dollars in
21 program funds pursuant to this section to lending organizations for the
22 purpose of making short-term financing available to minority- [and
23 women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business enterprises and other
24 small businesses performing contracts to provide construction or profes-
25 sional services for state procurement purposes. Such loans shall be used
26 to underwrite the cost of labor, materials, and equipment directly asso-
27 ciated with (1) the contract being financed or (2) a contract that has
28 been satisfied for which the business is awaiting payment from the
29 state. The program funds amount used by the lending organization to fund
30 a program applicant loan shall not be more than eighty percent of the
31 principal amount of such loan. The program funds amount used by the
32 lending organization to fund a program applicant loan shall not be
33 greater than one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars. Minority- [and
34 women-owned], women- and veteran-owned business enterprises and other
35 small businesses who access such short-term financing loans under this
36 subdivision shall not be precluded from accessing such program loans
37 provided under subdivision three of this section.
38 § 61. Subparagraph (xvi) of paragraph (b) of subdivision 2 of section
39 16-v of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the
40 New York state urban development corporation act, as added by section 1
41 of part C of chapter 59 of the laws of 2013, is amended to read as
42 follows:
43 (xvi) a plan to recruit minority- [and women-owned], women- and veter-
44 an-owned businesses for location and participation with the incubator
45 program.
46 § 62. Paragraph 1 of subdivision (c) of section 30 of section 1 of
47 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
48 development corporation act, as amended by chapter 732 of the laws of
49 1990, is amended to read as follows:
50 (1) In addition to any other requirements imposed by the act or other-
51 wise regarding evaluations of programs administered by the corporation,
52 each evaluation shall include an analysis of the job creation effect of
53 such program, the number of small businesses that received assistance,
54 the number of [minority and women-owned] minority-, women- and veteran-
55 owned firms that received assistance, the number of projects undertaken
A. 3971 74
1 in distressed and highly distressed communities, and, if applicable, the
2 repayment experience of borrowers of funds from the corporation.
3 § 63. Paragraph 2 of subdivision (e) of section 30-a of section 1 of
4 chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban
5 development corporation act, as added by section 2 of part M1 of chapter
6 62 of the laws of 2003, is amended to read as follows:
7 (2) require projects to be financed out of the empire state economic
8 development fund be approved generally in amounts which are proportional
9 to amounts appropriated for the urban and community development program,
10 and the [minority and women-owned] minority-, women and veteran-owned
11 business development and lending program;
12 § 64. Section 38 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
13 constituting the New York state urban development corporation act, as
14 amended by chapter 169 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read as
15 follows:
16 § 38. Small business and minority-owned [and], women-owned and veter-
17 an-owned business enterprises transportation capital assistance and
18 guaranteed loan program. 1. To provide financial assistance to small
19 business and minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned busi-
20 ness enterprises engaged in government sponsored, transportation related
21 construction projects, the corporation shall establish a small business
22 and minority-owned [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enter-
23 prise transportation capital assistance revolving loan fund which shall
24 provide loans or loan guarantees to small business and minority-owned
25 [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises. For purposes
26 of this section: (a) the term small business shall have the same meaning
27 as defined in section one hundred thirty-one of the economic development
28 law and (b) the term project shall mean a project of state agency or
29 authority that sponsors transportation related construction projects and
30 participates in this program and any definition of project contained
31 elsewhere in this act shall not apply.
32 2. Such loans, or loan guarantees for loans made by federally and
33 state chartered credit institutions, financial institutions, and feder-
34 ally insured banking organizations to small business and minority-owned
35 [and], women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises, shall be used
36 to (a) enable such businesses, through the acquisition, leasing or
37 improvement of real property, machinery or equipment, or through the
38 provision of working capital to secure service, commodity or
39 construction contracts; (b) restore working capital to such businesses
40 which have successfully completed work under a contract but whose
41 liquidity has been adversely affected by problems resulting from delayed
42 payments; and (c) ensure the completion of the work associated with a
43 governmental service, commodity or construction contract in order to
44 prevent default on such contract.
45 3. (a) To be eligible for such loans or loan guarantees (i) a minori-
46 ty-owned [or], women-owned or veteran-owned business enterprise must be
47 certified as a minority-owned [or], women-owned or veteran-owned busi-
48 ness enterprise pursuant to article 15-A of the executive law; and (ii)
49 a small business or a minority-owned [or], women-owned or veteran-owned
50 business enterprise shall have a contract or sub-contract to provide
51 goods or services related to a government sponsored, transportation
52 related construction project.
53 (b) Only such business enterprises referred to the corporation by a
54 written application of a state agency or authority that sponsors trans-
55 portation related construction projects shall be eligible for program
56 assistance. Such assistance shall be provided to such an enterprise only
A. 3971 75
1 in connection with its performance as a contractor or sub-contractor on
2 a specific transportation related project of the referring agency or
3 authority. In order for such an agency or authority to refer such enter-
4 prises to the corporation, such agency or authority shall enter into a
5 master agreement with the corporation covering procedures and require-
6 ments for providing program assistance. The corporation shall determine
7 whether or not to approve such an agency's or authority's written appli-
8 cation for program assistance to such a business within twenty business
9 days of the corporation's receipt of such application. If it approves
10 the application, the corporation will provide assistance pursuant to the
11 applicable master agreement.
12 4. The corporation shall give preference to minority-owned [and],
13 women-owned and veteran-owned business enterprises in making such loans
14 and loan guarantees and shall establish such other criteria as it may
15 deem necessary for this program and for any required amount that shall
16 be held in reserve for any guarantees made under this program.
17 5. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, general, special
18 or local, including pursuant to capital projects budget appropriations
19 or reappropriations, where applicable, the corporation is hereby author-
20 ized to enter into such agreements as may be necessary for the operation
21 and administration of a small business and minority-owned [and], women-
22 owned and veteran-owned business enterprises transportation capital
23 assistance and guaranteed loan program.
24 6. The corporation is authorized to establish a revolving loan fund
25 account into which funds may be received and from which funds may be
26 expended for the aforementioned purposes.
27 7. The provisions of section ten and subdivision two of section
28 sixteen of this act shall not apply to assistance provided under this
29 program.
30 § 65. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 9-a of section 1 of
31 chapter 359 of the laws of 1968, constituting the facilities development
32 corporation act, as added by chapter 58 of the laws of 1987, is amended
33 to read as follows:
34 (a) The contractor will not discriminate against employees or appli-
35 cants for employment because of race, creed, color, national origin,
36 sex, age, disability, or marital status, and will undertake or continue
37 existing programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group
38 persons [and], women and veterans are afforded equal opportunity without
39 discrimination. Such programs shall include, but not be limited to,
40 recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion, upgrading, demotion,
41 transfer, layoff, termination, rates of pay or other forms of compen-
42 sation, and selections for training or retraining, including apprentice-
43 ship and on-the-job training.
44 § 66. Section 9-b of section 1 of chapter 359 of the laws of 1968,
45 constituting the facilities development corporation act, as added by
46 chapter 58 of the laws of 1987, is amended to read as follows:
47 § 9-b. Minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
48 enterprise program. 1. (a) Minority [and women-owned], women and veter-
49 an-owned business enterprises shall be given the opportunity for mean-
50 ingful participation in all contracts executed by the corporation pursu-
51 ant to the provisions of this act other than contracts the cost of which
52 is borne solely by a municipality or municipalities. The corporation
53 shall establish measures and procedures to secure meaningful partic-
54 ipation and identify those contracts and items of work for which minori-
55 ty [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises may
56 best bid to actively and affirmatively promote and assist their partic-
A. 3971 76
1 ipation in the projects, so as to facilitate the award of a fair share
2 of contracts to such enterprises; provided, however, that nothing in
3 this act shall be construed to limit the ability of the corporation to
4 assure that qualified minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
5 owned business enterprises may participate in the program. For purposes
6 hereof, minority business enterprise shall mean any business enterprise
7 which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the case of a
8 publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the stock of
9 which is owned by citizens or permanent resident aliens who are Black,
10 Hispanic, Asian or American Indian, Pacific Islander or Alaskan natives
11 and such ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing and have
12 the authority to independently control the day to day business decisions
13 of the entity for at least one year; and women-owned business enterprise
14 shall mean any business enterprise which is at least fifty-one per
15 centum owned by, or in the case of a publicly owned business, at least
16 fifty-one per centum of the stock of which is owned by citizens or
17 permanent resident aliens who are women, and such ownership interest is
18 real, substantial and continuing and have the authority to independently
19 control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at least one
20 year; and veteran-owned business enterprise shall mean any business
21 enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the
22 case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the
23 stock of which is owned by citizens or permanent resident aliens who are
24 veterans, and such ownership interest is real, substantial and continu-
25 ing and have the authority to independently control the day to day busi-
26 ness decisions of the entity for at least one year.
27 The provisions of this paragraph shall not be construed to limit the
28 ability of any minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned busi-
29 ness enterprise to bid on any contract.
30 (b) In the implementation of this section, the corporation shall
31 consider compliance by any contractor with the requirements of any
32 federal, state, or local law concerning minority [and women-owned],
33 women or veteran-owned business enterprises, which may effectuate the
34 requirements of this section. If the corporation determines that by
35 virtue of the imposition of the requirements of any such law, in respect
36 to contracts, the provisions thereof duplicate or conflict with this
37 section, the corporation may waive the applicability of this section to
38 the extent of such duplication or conflict.
39 (c) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to require that overall
40 state and federal requirements for participation of minority [and
41 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises in programs
42 authorized under this act be applied without regard to local circum-
43 stances to all projects or in all communities.
44 2. In order to implement the requirements and objectives of this
45 section, the corporation shall establish procedures to monitor the
46 contractors' compliance with provisions hereof, provide assistance in
47 obtaining competing qualified minority [and women-owned], women and
48 veteran-owned business enterprises to perform contracts proposed to be
49 awarded, and take other appropriate measures to improve the access of
50 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
51 to these contracts.
52 § 67. Paragraph a of subdivision 1 of section 16-a of section 1 of
53 chapter 392 of the laws of 1973, constituting the New York state medical
54 care facilities finance agency act, as added by chapter 58 of the laws
55 of 1987, is amended to read as follows:
A. 3971 77
1 a. The contractor will not discriminate against employees or appli-
2 cants for employment because of race, creed, color, national origin,
3 sex, age, disability, or marital status, and will undertake or continue
4 existing programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group
5 persons [and], women and veterans are afforded equal opportunity without
6 discrimination. Such programs shall include, but not be limited to,
7 recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion, upgrading, demotion,
8 transfer, layoff, termination, rates of pay or other forms of compen-
9 sation, and selections for training or retraining, including apprentice-
10 ship and on-the-job training.
11 § 68. Section 16-b of section 1 of chapter 392 of the laws of 1973,
12 constituting the New York state medical care facilities finance agency
13 act, as added by chapter 58 of the laws of 1987, is amended to read as
14 follows:
15 § 16-b. Minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
16 enterprise program. 1. a. In the performance of projects pursuant to
17 this act minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business
18 enterprises shall be given the opportunity for meaningful participation.
19 The agency shall establish measures and procedures to secure meaningful
20 participation and identify those contracts and items of work for which
21 minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises
22 may best bid to actively and affirmatively promote and assist their
23 participation in the projects, so as to facilitate the award of a fair
24 share of contracts to such enterprises; provided, however, that nothing
25 in this act shall be construed to limit the ability of the agency to
26 assure that qualified minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-
27 owned business enterprises may participate in the program. For purposes
28 hereof, minority business enterprise shall mean any business enterprise
29 which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the case of a
30 publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the stock of
31 which is owned by citizens or permanent resident aliens who are Black,
32 Hispanic, Asian or American Indian, Pacific Islander or Alaskan natives
33 and such ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing and have
34 the authority to independently control the day to day business decisions
35 of the entity for at least one year; and women-owned business enterprise
36 shall mean any business enterprise which is at least fifty-one per
37 centum owned by, or in the case of a publicly owned business, at least
38 fifty-one per centum of the stock of which is owned by citizens or
39 permanent resident aliens who are women, and such ownership interest is
40 real, substantial and continuing and have the authority to independently
41 control the day to day business decisions of the entity for at least one
42 year; and veteran-owned business enterprise shall mean any business
43 enterprise which is at least fifty-one per centum owned by, or in the
44 case of a publicly owned business, at least fifty-one per centum of the
45 stock of which is owned by citizens or permanent resident aliens who are
46 veterans and such ownership interest is real, substantial and continuing
47 and have the authority to independently control the day to day business
48 decisions of the entity for at least one year.
49 The provisions of this paragraph shall not be construed to limit the
50 ability of any minority [or women-owned], women or veteran-owned busi-
51 ness enterprise to bid on any contract.
52 b. In the implementation of this section, the agency shall consider
53 compliance by any contractor with the requirements of any federal,
54 state, or local law concerning minority [and women-owned], women and
55 veteran-owned business enterprises, which may effectuate the require-
56 ments of this section. If the department or the office determines that
A. 3971 78
1 by virtue of the imposition of the requirements of any such law, in
2 respect to contracts, the provisions thereof duplicate or conflict with
3 this act, the agency may waive the applicability of this section to the
4 extent of such duplication or conflict.
5 c. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to require that overall
6 state and federal requirements for participation of minority [and
7 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises in programs
8 authorized under this act be applied without regard to local circum-
9 stances to all projects or in all communities.
10 2. In order to implement the requirements and objectives of this
11 section, the agency shall establish procedures to monitor the contrac-
12 tors' compliance with provisions hereof, provide assistance in obtaining
13 competing qualified minority [and women-owned], women and veteran-owned
14 business enterprises to perform contracts proposed to be awarded, and
15 take other appropriate measures to improve the access of minority [and
16 women-owned], women and veteran-owned business enterprises to these
17 contracts.
18 § 69. This act shall take effect on the sixtieth day after it shall
19 have become a law; provided however,
20 a. the amendments to article 15-A of the executive law made by
21 sections one-a, two, three, three-a, four, five, six, seven, eight,
22 nine, ten, eleven, twelve and thirteen of this act shall not affect the
23 expiration of such article and shall expire therewith;
24 b. that if local law 113 for the year 2016 shall not have taken effect
25 on or before such date, then the amendments to paragraphs (14) and (15)
26 of subdivision e of section 6-129 of the administrative code of the city
27 of New York made by section thirty-one of this act shall take effect on
28 the same date and in the same manner as such local law for the year 2016
29 takes effect;
30 c. the amendments to the second undesignated paragraph of subdivision
31 1 of section 12 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968, consti-
32 tuting the New York state urban development corporation act, made by
33 section forty-one of this act shall not affect the expiration and repeal
34 of such paragraph and shall be deemed to expire and be repealed there-
35 with; and
36 d. the amendments to paragraph (g) of subdivision 1 of section 16-m of
37 section 1 of chapter 179 of the laws of 1968, constituting the New York
38 state urban development corporation act, made by section fifty-seven of
39 this act shall not affect the expiration of such paragraph and shall be
40 deemed to expire therewith.