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A07513 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         7513--C
 
                               2015-2016 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                      May 14, 2015
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by M. of A. PEOPLES-STOKES -- (at request of the State Comp-
          troller) -- read once and referred to the  Committee  on  Governmental
          Operations -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as
          amended  and recommitted to said committee -- again reported from said
          committee with amendments, ordered reprinted as amended and  recommit-
          ted  to  said  committee  --  again  reported from said committee with
          amendments, ordered reprinted  as  amended  and  recommitted  to  said
          committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the state finance law, in relation to allowing the state
          comptroller  to  excuse  non-material  deviations in a procurement; in
          relation to participation by state agencies in a system  used  by  the
          comptroller  to compile vendor responsibility information; in relation
          to  defining  information  technology  for  procurement  purposes;  in
          relation  to  authorizing  the  commissioner  of the office of general
          services and state agencies to develop alternative procurement methods
          not otherwise  authorized  by  law  under  certain  circumstances;  in
          relation to authorizing competitive negotiation concluding with a best
          and  final  offer; in relation to clarifying the use of best and final
          offers for invitations for bids and requests for proposals for  goods,
          services  and  technology; in relation to providing unsuccessful offe-
          rors a reasonable opportunity for debriefing; in relation to  increas-
          ing  the  threshold  for construction bonds; in relation to clarifying
          the use of contracts let by another governmental agency;  in  relation
          to reports on centralized contracts; and in relation to increasing the
          threshold  for  the  state comptroller's approval of certain contracts
          and clarifying the valuation of non-cash contracts by the state  comp-
          troller
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Subdivision 12 of section 163 of the state finance law,  as
     2  added by chapter 83 of the laws of 1995, is amended to read as follows:
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD09149-11-5

        A. 7513--C                          2
 
     1    12.  Review  by  the  office  of  the state comptroller. Review by the
     2  office of the state comptroller shall be in accordance with section  one
     3  hundred  twelve  of  this  chapter.  If  the  contracting agency has not
     4  complied with one or more provisions of this article,  the  state  comp-
     5  troller may approve the awarded contract if:
     6    a. the contracting agency determines and certifies, based on clear and
     7  convincing evidence, that the noncompliance was a non-material deviation
     8  from  one  or  more provisions of this article. For the purposes of this
     9  subdivision "non-material deviation" shall mean that such  noncompliance
    10  did  not prejudice or favor any vendor or potential vendor, such noncom-
    11  pliance did not substantially affect the  fairness  of  the  competitive
    12  process, and that a new procurement would not be in the best interest of
    13  the  state.   Such determination by the contracting agency and the state
    14  comptroller shall be documented in the procurement record; and
    15    b. the state comptroller concurs in such determination.
    16    § 2. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 163-c to
    17  read as follows:
    18    § 163-c. Vendor responsibility; online system participation. 1.  Defi-
    19  nitions. As used in this section the  following  terms  shall  have  the
    20  following meanings:
    21    a.  "Enrollment"  shall  mean  the establishment of an online services
    22  account with the state comptroller, including, but not limited  to,  the
    23  creation  of  a  unique  user  identification  and  password. Enrollment
    24  provides a user access to the system.
    25    b. "Online services" shall mean the services  provided  electronically
    26  and  securely  by  the  state  comptroller for the benefit of New York's
    27  customers, clients and business partners. Such online  services  may  be
    28  expanded and enhanced as technology allows.
    29    c.  "State  agency"  or  "state agencies" shall mean all state depart-
    30  ments, boards, commissions, offices or institutions. Such term shall not
    31  include the legislature or the judiciary.
    32    d. "State contract" or "contract" shall mean and include  any  written
    33  agreement  for the acquisition of goods, services or construction of any
    34  kind between a vendor and a state agency,  or  a  written  agreement  or
    35  other  instrument  wherein  a  state agency agrees to give consideration
    36  other than the payment of money as contemplated in subdivision three  of
    37  section one hundred twelve of this chapter.
    38    e.  "Subcontractor"  shall  mean  an  individual, sole proprietorship,
    39  partnership, joint venture or corporation, which is engaged in a subcon-
    40  tract by a vendor pursuant to a state contract and such  subcontract  is
    41  valued  at one hundred thousand dollars or more and is known at the time
    42  of the award of the state contract to the vendor.
    43    f.  "System"  shall  mean  the  on-line  software,  data  and  related
    44  resources maintained by the comptroller to compile vendor responsibility
    45  information.
    46    g. "Terms of service" shall mean the terms and conditions developed by
    47  the  state  comptroller  and  agreed to by each authorized user prior to
    48  gaining access to online services.   Terms of service  shall  include  a
    49  description  of  the  services, obligations of the state comptroller and
    50  the authorized user, a description of the  state  comptroller's  privacy
    51  policy,  authorized  user  code  of conduct, and indemnity for the state
    52  comptroller and the state of New York. Terms of service are  subject  to
    53  change  as  prescribed  by the state comptroller.   Authorized users may
    54  view changes via the state comptroller's internet site.

        A. 7513--C                          3
 
     1    h. "Vendor" shall include  any  person,  partnership,  corporation  or
     2  limited  liability  company  or  any  business entity bidding on a state
     3  procurement or otherwise awarded a state contract.
     4    i.  "Vendor  responsibility" shall mean that a vendor has the capacity
     5  to fully perform the terms of a contract and the integrity and  business
     6  ethics  to justify an award of public dollars. A determination of vendor
     7  responsibility shall include consideration of factors including, but not
     8  limited to, financial  and  organizational  capacity,  legal  authority,
     9  integrity and past performance on governmental contracts.
    10    2. a. State agencies shall enroll with the state comptroller to access
    11  the  system maintained by the comptroller to compile vendor responsibil-
    12  ity information. State agencies shall agree to and abide by the terms of
    13  service for such system as the state comptroller deems necessary.
    14    b. For each contract or subcontract between a vendor and a subcontrac-
    15  tor where, pursuant to law or by direction of the state agency,  disclo-
    16  sure for vendor responsibility is required, the state agency shall:
    17    (i) provide notice to vendors bidding for procurements administered by
    18  the  state agency that any vendor and subcontractor, submitting a vendor
    19  responsibility questionnaire shall do so via the  system  maintained  to
    20  compile vendor responsibility information;
    21    (ii) provide vendors with instructions on how to electronically access
    22  the  system  and provide contact information for assistance with enroll-
    23  ment. This information shall be made available prior to  the  time  when
    24  vendors are required to submit disclosure for vendor responsibility; and
    25    (iii) access the system to obtain and evaluate any data submitted by a
    26  vendor  proposed  for  contract  award.  State agencies shall ensure the
    27  submission filed by the vendor meets such system's timeliness standards.
    28  Such provisions apply regardless of whether the contract is  subject  to
    29  pre-review and approval by the state comptroller.
    30    c.  For  contracts  where vendor disclosure is not otherwise required,
    31  the state agency at its  discretion,  may  require  vendors  bidding  on
    32  procurements,  and/or  subcontractors, to submit a vendor responsibility
    33  questionnaire via the system. Nothing contained in this paragraph  shall
    34  be construed to alter the existing authority of the state comptroller to
    35  require  the  submission  of  a  vendor  responsibility questionnaire in
    36  conjunction with his or her duty to review and approve  state  contracts
    37  prior to such contracts becoming effective.
    38    d.  State  agencies shall provide access to the system to users within
    39  their organization, as deemed appropriate by the head of the state agen-
    40  cy or his or her designee. State agency users provided with such  access
    41  shall  be  those individuals, who, as part of their official job duties,
    42  are required to assess and/or review vendor responsibility for the agen-
    43  cy's contracts.
    44    § 3. Subdivisions 7 and 10 of section 160 of the  state  finance  law,
    45  subdivision  7  as  amended by section 30 of part L of chapter 55 of the
    46  laws of 2012 and subdivision 10 as added by chapter 83 of  the  laws  of
    47  1995, are amended to read as follows:
    48    7.  "Service"  or  "services" means the performance of a task or tasks
    49  and may include a material good or a quantity  of  material  goods,  and
    50  which is the subject of any purchase or other exchange. For the purposes
    51  of  this  article,  information  technology  shall  be deemed a service.
    52  Services, as defined in this article, shall not apply to those contracts
    53  for architectural, engineering or surveying services, or those contracts
    54  approved in accordance with article eleven-B of this chapter.
    55    10. "[Technology] Information technology" means either  a  good  or  a
    56  service or a combination thereof, [that results in a technical method of

        A. 7513--C                          4

     1  achieving  a  practical purpose or in improvements in productivity] used
     2  in the application of any computer or electronic  information  equipment
     3  or  interconnected  system  that  is  used  in the acquisition, storage,
     4  manipulation,  management, movement, control, display, switching, inter-
     5  change, transmission, or reception of data including,  but  not  limited
     6  to,  hardware,  software, firmware, programs, systems, networks, infras-
     7  tructure, media, and related material used to  automatically  and  elec-
     8  tronically  collect,  receive, access, transmit, display, store, record,
     9  retrieve, analyze,  evaluate,  process,  classify,  manipulate,  manage,
    10  assimilate,  control,  communicate,  exchange, convert, converge, inter-
    11  face, switch, or disseminate data of any kind  or  form.  Goods  may  be
    12  either new or used.
    13    §  4.  Paragraphs g and i of subdivision 2 of section 161 of the state
    14  finance law, as added by chapter 83 of the laws of 1995, are amended  to
    15  read as follows:
    16    g.  Consult  with and advise the commissioner on strategic information
    17  technology investments that will facilitate  electronic  access  to  the
    18  terms  and  conditions  of existing procurement contracts, promote elec-
    19  tronic commerce including, but  not  limited  to,  payment  to  vendors,
    20  promote  and  enhance  the efficiency of the procurement of products and
    21  services by or for state agencies and produce  useful  information  that
    22  supports state procurement operations, management, analysis and decision
    23  making including, but not limited to, data concerning the status and use
    24  of  procurement contracts and the number and type of contracts and award
    25  recipients;
    26    i. Establish and, from time to time, amend guidelines for the procure-
    27  ment of services and  information  technology  in  accordance  with  the
    28  provisions  of  this  article. Such guidelines shall ensure the wise and
    29  prudent use of public money in the best interest of the taxpayers of the
    30  state; guard against favoritism, improvidence, extravagance,  fraud  and
    31  corruption;  and  ensure that service contracts are awarded on the basis
    32  of best value, including, but not limited to,  the  following  criteria:
    33  quality, cost, and efficiency;
    34    §  5. Paragraph k of subdivision 1 and subdivisions 6 and 7 of section
    35  163 of the state finance law, paragraph k of subdivision 1 as  added  by
    36  section 36 of part L of chapter 55 of the laws of 2012, subdivision 6 as
    37  amended  by  section  1  of part P of chapter 55 of the laws of 2013 and
    38  subdivision 7 as amended by section 10 of part L of chapter  55  of  the
    39  laws of 2012, are amended to read as follows:
    40    k.  "Authorized  user"  or  "non-state agency purchaser" means (i) any
    41  officer, body or agency of the state or of a political subdivision or  a
    42  district therein, or fire company or volunteer ambulance service as such
    43  are defined in section one hundred of the general municipal law, to make
    44  purchases  of  commodities,  services and information technology through
    45  the office of general services' centralized contracts, pursuant  to  the
    46  provisions  of  section  one  hundred four of the general municipal law;
    47  (ii) any county extension service association as authorized under subdi-
    48  vision eight of section two hundred twenty-four of the county law; (iii)
    49  any association or other entity as specified in and in  accordance  with
    50  section  one hundred nine-a of the general municipal law; (iv) any asso-
    51  ciation, consortium or group of privately owned or municipal, federal or
    52  state owned or operated hospitals, medical schools, other health related
    53  facilities or voluntary ambulance services, which have  entered  into  a
    54  contract  and made mutual arrangements for the joint purchase of commod-
    55  ities, services and information technology pursuant to  section  twenty-
    56  eight  hundred three-a of the public health law; (v) any institution for

        A. 7513--C                          5
 
     1  the instruction of the deaf or of the blind listed in section  forty-two
     2  hundred  one  of the education law; (vi) any qualified non-profit-making
     3  agency for the blind approved by the commissioner of the office of chil-
     4  dren  and  family  services  or  the  office of temporary and disability
     5  assistance; (vii) any qualified charitable non-profit-making agency  for
     6  the  severely disabled approved by the commissioner of education; (viii)
     7  any hospital or residential health care facility as defined  in  section
     8  twenty-eight  hundred  one  of  the  public health law; (ix) any private
     9  not-for-profit mental hygiene facility as defined in section 1.03 of the
    10  mental hygiene law; (x) any public authority or  public  benefit  corpo-
    11  ration  of  the  state, including the port authority of New York and New
    12  Jersey and the interstate  environmental  commission;  (xi)  any  public
    13  library,   association  library,  library  system,  cooperative  library
    14  system, the New York Library Association, and the New York State Associ-
    15  ation of Library Boards or any other  library  except  those  which  are
    16  operated  by  for profit entities; (xii) any other association or entity
    17  as specified in state law, to make purchases  of  commodities,  services
    18  and  information  technology  through  the  office  of general services'
    19  centralized contracts. Such qualified non-profit-making agencies for the
    20  blind and severely disabled may make  purchases  from  the  correctional
    21  industries program of the department of corrections and community super-
    22  vision subject to rules pursuant to the correction law.
    23    6. Discretionary buying thresholds. Pursuant to guidelines established
    24  by the state procurement council: the commissioner may purchase services
    25  and  commodities in an amount not exceeding eighty-five thousand dollars
    26  without a  formal  competitive  process;  state  agencies  may  purchase
    27  services  and  commodities  in  an  amount  not exceeding fifty thousand
    28  dollars without a formal competitive process;  and  state  agencies  may
    29  purchase  commodities  or services from small business concerns or those
    30  certified pursuant to article fifteen-A of the executive law, or commod-
    31  ities or information technology that are recycled or remanufactured,  or
    32  commodities  that  are  food,  including  milk and milk products, grown,
    33  produced or harvested in New York state in an amount not  exceeding  two
    34  hundred thousand dollars without a formal competitive process.
    35    7. Method of procurement. Consistent with the requirements of subdivi-
    36  sions  three and four of this section, state agencies shall select among
    37  permissible methods of procurement including, but  not  limited  to,  an
    38  invitation for bid, request for proposals or other means of solicitation
    39  pursuant  to  guidelines  issued by the state procurement council. State
    40  agencies may accept bids  electronically  including  submission  of  the
    41  statement of non-collusion required by section one hundred thirty-nine-d
    42  of  this  chapter  and,  starting  April first, two thousand twelve, and
    43  ending March thirty-first, two thousand  fifteen,  may,  for  commodity,
    44  service   and   information   technology  contracts  require  electronic
    45  submission as the sole method for the submission of bids for the  solic-
    46  itation.  State  agencies  shall undertake no more than eighty-five such
    47  electronic bid solicitations, none of which shall be  reverse  auctions,
    48  prior  to April first, two thousand fifteen. In addition, state agencies
    49  may conduct up to twenty  reverse  auctions  through  electronic  means,
    50  prior to April first, two thousand fifteen. Prior to requiring the elec-
    51  tronic  submission of bids, the agency shall make a determination, which
    52  shall  be  documented  in  the  procurement  record,   that   electronic
    53  submission  affords  a fair and equal opportunity for offerers to submit
    54  responsive offers. Within thirty days of the completion of  the  eighty-
    55  fifth  electronic  bid  solicitation,  or  by  April first, two thousand
    56  fifteen, whichever is earlier, the commissioner shall prepare  a  report

        A. 7513--C                          6
 
     1  assessing  the  use  of  electronic submissions and make recommendations
     2  regarding future use of this procurement  method.  In  addition,  within
     3  thirty  days  of the completion of the twentieth reverse auction through
     4  electronic  means, or by April first, two thousand fifteen, whichever is
     5  earlier, the commissioner shall prepare a report assessing  the  use  of
     6  reverse  auctions  through  electronic  means  and  make recommendations
     7  regarding future use of this procurement method. Such reports  shall  be
     8  published on the website of the office of general services. Except where
     9  otherwise  provided by law, procurements shall be competitive, and state
    10  agencies shall conduct formal competitive procurements  to  the  maximum
    11  extent  practicable.  State agencies shall document the determination of
    12  the method of procurement and the basis  of  award  in  the  procurement
    13  record.  Where  the  basis  for award is the best value offer, the state
    14  agency shall document, in the procurement record and in advance  of  the
    15  initial receipt of offers, the determination of the evaluation criteria,
    16  which  whenever  possible,  shall be quantifiable, and the process to be
    17  used in the determination of best value and  the  manner  in  which  the
    18  evaluation process and selection shall be conducted.
    19    §  6.  Paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision  2  of section 112 of the state
    20  finance law, as amended by section 18 of part L of  chapter  55  of  the
    21  laws of 2012, is amended to read as follows:
    22    (a)  Before  any contract made for or by any state agency, department,
    23  board, officer, commission, or institution, except the office of general
    24  services, shall be executed or become effective, whenever such  contract
    25  exceeds  fifty  thousand  dollars in amount and before any contract made
    26  for or by the office of general services shall  be  executed  or  become
    27  effective,  whenever  such contract exceeds eighty-five thousand dollars
    28  in amount, it shall first be approved by the comptroller  and  filed  in
    29  his  or  her  office,  with  the exception of contracts established as a
    30  centralized  contract  through  the  office  of  general  services  [and
    31  purchase  orders  or  other  procurement  transactions issued under such
    32  centralized contracts] that were not  awarded  pursuant  to  subdivision
    33  sixteen  of  section one hundred sixty-three of this chapter.  The comp-
    34  troller shall  make  a  final  written  determination  with  respect  to
    35  approval  of  such contract within ninety days of the submission of such
    36  contract to his or her office unless the comptroller  shall  notify,  in
    37  writing,  the  state  agency, department, board, officer, commission, or
    38  institution, prior to the expiration of the ninety day period,  and  for
    39  good  cause, of the need for an extension of not more than fifteen days,
    40  or a reasonable period of time agreed to by such state  agency,  depart-
    41  ment,  board, officer, commission, or institution and provided, further,
    42  that such written determination or extension shall be made part  of  the
    43  procurement record pursuant to paragraph f of subdivision one of section
    44  one hundred sixty-three of this chapter.
    45    §  7.  Section 163 of the state finance law is amended by adding a new
    46  subdivision 16 to read as follows:
    47    16. Alternative procurement methods for the  acquisition  of  non-con-
    48  struction  related  commodities, services and information technology. a.
    49  When the commissioner or a state agency determines that  it  is  in  the
    50  best  interest  of the state to develop a procurement method not author-
    51  ized by this section for non-construction related commodities,  services
    52  and  information  technology, the commissioner or state agency is hereby
    53  authorized to develop and use such method for a specific contract award.
    54  Such determination shall be made in writing and shall include documenta-
    55  tion for the procurement record that such alternative procurement  meth-
    56  od:  (i) would serve the interest of the state better than other methods

        A. 7513--C                          7
 
     1  currently available under this section; (ii) can be applied on a compet-
     2  itive, fair and equitable basis; and (iii) contains an appropriate eval-
     3  uation methodology that considers both cost and  qualitative  evaluation
     4  factors.    Such  alternative procurement method shall be subject to all
     5  other applicable provisions of this section. The commissioner or a state
     6  agency may not undertake an alternative  procurement  method  until  the
     7  comptroller  has  determined  that  the proposed alternative procurement
     8  method is in the best interest of the state; can be applied on a compet-
     9  itive, fair and equitable basis; and utilizes an appropriate  evaluation
    10  methodology that considers both cost and qualitative evaluation factors.
    11    b.  When  using  an  alternative procurement method authorized by this
    12  subdivision, the commissioner or agency shall include in  its  solicita-
    13  tion  a detailed description of the proposed method of award. In advance
    14  of the initial receipt of offers or  bids,  the  commissioner  or  state
    15  agency shall determine and document in the procurement record the evalu-
    16  ation  criteria  and  process  to  be  used  in the determination of the
    17  specific contract award and the process  by  which  the  evaluation  and
    18  selection  shall be conducted. In addition to the requirements set forth
    19  in paragraph g of subdivision nine  of  this  section,  the  procurement
    20  record  shall  document  the  basis upon which the agency has determined
    21  that potential vendors will be able to respond with viable bids to  such
    22  alternative procurement.
    23    c. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision five of section three
    24  hundred  fifty-five  of  the  education  law  to the contrary or section
    25  sixty-two hundred eighteen of the education  law,  before  any  contract
    26  awarded  under  this  section  which  exceeds  fifty thousand dollars in
    27  amount becomes effective it must be  approved  by  the  comptroller  and
    28  filed in his or her office.
    29    d.  For each procurement awarded pursuant to this section, the commis-
    30  sioner or state agency shall submit to the governor, the comptroller and
    31  the heads of the fiscal committees of each house of the  state  legisla-
    32  ture  no  later  than the mid-point of the initial term of the resultant
    33  contract a report assessing the validity of the procurement  method  and
    34  comparing  its  results  to  procurement  methods  for  commodities  and
    35  services or information technology.
    36    § 8. Section 163 of the state finance law is amended by adding  a  new
    37  subdivision 17 to read as follows:
    38    17. Competitive negotiation. a. Where the basis of award is best value
    39  and  after  completing an initial evaluation and scoring, a state agency
    40  may choose to either make an award to the best value offerer pursuant to
    41  subdivision four of this section or undertake  competitive  negotiations
    42  with  all  offerers  of  proposals  susceptible  of  being  selected for
    43  contract award, so long as the agency reserves the right to conduct such
    44  competitive negotiations in the solicitation.  The negotiations shall be
    45  conducted as provided in paragraph d of this subdivision.
    46    b. Competitive negotiation may only be used where:
    47    (i) at least two offerers are deemed susceptible of being selected for
    48  contract award;
    49    (ii) in the event that the solicitation includes optional  components,
    50  the  solicitation  shall  require all offerers to provide a proposal for
    51  all options or otherwise be deemed nonresponsive; and
    52    (iii) the agency has determined that use  of  competitive  negotiation
    53  will  maximize  the  agency's ability to obtain best value, based on the
    54  agency's need and the specifications set forth in the solicitation.
    55    c. The agency must document in the procurement record and  in  advance
    56  of the initial receipt of offers:

        A. 7513--C                          8
 
     1    (i)  the  methodology,  which  shall  be  quantifiable  and based on a
     2  comparison of the proposals' price and technical  merit,  that  will  be
     3  employed  to  arrive  at  a  competitive range that will determine which
     4  proposals are to be considered susceptible to award; and
     5    (ii)  a  fair and impartial negotiation procedure, formulated with the
     6  goal of ensuring sustained competition until an award  is  rendered  and
     7  obtaining the best value for the state.
     8    d.  The  agency  shall  conduct  written or oral negotiations with all
     9  responsible offerers who submit proposals in the competitive  range.  In
    10  the course of such negotiations, the agency shall:
    11    (i)  advise  the offerer of ways in which its proposal may be improved
    12  so that the offerer is given an opportunity to better meet the  agency's
    13  needs;
    14    (ii) clarify any uncertainties, ambiguities or non-material deviations
    15  in the proposal;
    16    (iii)  advise  the offerer of any technical components in its proposal
    17  that may not be necessary  to  satisfy  the  agency's  requirements  and
    18  request modifications as appropriate;
    19    (iv)  provide the offerer a reasonable opportunity to submit any cost,
    20  technical or other revisions to its proposal in response to issues iden-
    21  tified during negotiations; and
    22    (v) document any oral negotiations for the procurement record.
    23    e. Negotiations may be tailored to each offerer's  proposal  provided,
    24  however,  such  negotiations shall be conducted with each offerer within
    25  the competitive range  without  disclosing  information  concerning  any
    26  other  offerers' proposals or the evaluation process. Negotiations shall
    27  culminate in a technical solution from each offerer remaining within the
    28  competitive range that is deemed acceptable to meet the agency's need as
    29  set forth in the  solicitation.  After  discussion  of  these  technical
    30  solutions  is completed, the agency shall solicit a best and final price
    31  proposal from all offerers within the competitive range.  The  best  and
    32  final  price solicitation shall ensure that all offerers are afforded an
    33  equal opportunity to respond within a specified period of time.
    34    f. Where an  agency  chooses  to  undertake  competitive  negotiations
    35  instead  of  making  a  best value award after an initial evaluation and
    36  scoring, the final award shall be made to the lowest responsible offerer
    37  after receiving a best and final price on a revised acceptable proposal.
    38    § 9. Subdivision 9 of section 163 of the state finance law is  amended
    39  by adding a new paragraph c-1 to read as follows:
    40    c-1.  Where a state agency determines that non-material changes to the
    41  specifications as set forth in the solicitation would  be  in  the  best
    42  interest  of the state and, when provided for in the solicitation, state
    43  agencies may request best and final offers, which shall  be  in  writing
    44  and  solicited  in  the  same  manner from all offerers determined to be
    45  susceptible of being selected for contract award,  with  the  intent  of
    46  allowing  an offerer to revise its cost; provided, however, that a state
    47  agency may not make a modification to the solicitation if such modifica-
    48  tion would prejudice  any  bidder  or  potential  bidder  and,  provided
    49  further, that no best and final offer may be accepted or considered by a
    50  state  agency  unless such best and final offer is submitted in response
    51  to a request by the state agency.
    52    § 9-a. Paragraph c of subdivision  9  of  section  163  of  the  state
    53  finance  law,  as amended by chapter 137 of the laws of 2008, is amended
    54  to read as follows:
    55    c. Where provided in the  solicitation,  state  agencies  may  require
    56  clarification  from offerers for purposes of assuring a full understand-

        A. 7513--C                          9
 
     1  ing of responsiveness to the solicitation requirements.  Where  provided
     2  for  in  the  solicitation, revisions may be permitted from all offerers
     3  determined to be susceptible of being selected for contract award, prior
     4  to  award.  Offerers  shall  be  accorded  fair and equal treatment with
     5  respect to their opportunity for discussion and revision of  offers.  [A
     6  state agency shall, upon request, provide a debriefing to any unsuccess-
     7  ful  offerer  that  responded to a request for proposal or an invitation
     8  for bids, regarding the reasons that the proposal or  bid  submitted  by
     9  the  unsuccessful offerer was not selected for an award. The opportunity
    10  for an unsuccessful offerer to seek a debriefing shall be stated in  the
    11  solicitation,  which  shall  provide  a reasonable time for requesting a
    12  debriefing.]
    13    § 9-b. Subdivision 9 of section  163  of  the  state  finance  law  is
    14  amended by adding a new paragraph h to read as follows:
    15    h. (i) Within fifteen days of the selection of a successful offeror by
    16  a state agency and prior to the submission for approval of a contract to
    17  the  office  of the state comptroller if that contract is subject to the
    18  approval of the comptroller, all unsuccessful offerors shall be  advised
    19  in  writing  of  the  completion of the selection process and that their
    20  offer was not selected for this award. This notice  shall  disclose  the
    21  identity of the successful offeror.
    22    (ii)  For  any  contract  established as a centralized contract by the
    23  office of general services, within fifteen  days  of  selection  of  the
    24  successful  offeror  by the office of general services, all unsuccessful
    25  offerors shall be advised of the completion of the selection process and
    26  that their offer was not selected for award. This notice shall  disclose
    27  the identity of the successful offeror.
    28    (iii)  The opportunity for an unsuccessful offeror that responded to a
    29  request for proposals or an invitation for bids  to  seek  a  debriefing
    30  shall  be  stated  in  the request for proposals or invitation for bids,
    31  which shall provide a reasonable time for requesting a debriefing.
    32    (iv) The state agency, upon the  timely  request  of  an  unsuccessful
    33  offeror,  shall  provide  a reasonable opportunity for a discussion with
    34  agency personnel who were involved in and are  knowledgeable  about  the
    35  procurement evaluation process. Such debriefing, shall include, but need
    36  not be limited to: (A) the reasons that the proposal or bid submitted by
    37  the unsuccessful offeror was not selected for award; (B) the qualitative
    38  and  quantitative analysis employed by the agency in assessing the rela-
    39  tive merits of the offers; (C) the application of each of the  selection
    40  criteria  to  the  unsuccessful  offeror's  proposal or bid; and (D) the
    41  reasons for the selection of the winning proposal or bid. Such personnel
    42  shall also provide, to the extent practicable, advice  and  guidance  to
    43  the  unsuccessful  offeror  concerning methods of improving proposals or
    44  bids by such offeror.
    45    § 10. Intentionally omitted.
    46    § 11. Intentionally omitted.
    47    § 12. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 137 of the  state  finance  law,
    48  subdivision  1 as separately amended by section 17 of part MM of chapter
    49  57 and chapter 619 of the laws of 2008 and subdivision 2 as  amended  by
    50  chapter 137 of the laws of 1985, are amended to read as follows:
    51    1. (a) In addition to other bond or bonds, if any, required by law for
    52  the  completion of a work specified in a contract for the prosecution of
    53  a public improvement for the state of New York a municipal  corporation,
    54  a  public benefit corporation or a commission appointed pursuant to law,
    55  or in the absence of any such requirement, the comptroller  may  or  the
    56  other  appropriate  official,  respectively,  shall nevertheless require

        A. 7513--C                         10
 
     1  prior to the approval of any such contract a  bond  guaranteeing  prompt
     2  payment  of  moneys  due to all persons furnishing labor or materials to
     3  the contractor or any subcontractors in  the  prosecution  of  the  work
     4  provided for in such contract. Whenever a municipal corporation issues a
     5  permit  subject  to  compliance  with  section two hundred twenty of the
     6  labor law, such permittee or its contractor or subcontractors furnishing
     7  workers shall post a payment bond subject to  this  section.  [Provided,
     8  however, that]
     9    (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph a of this subdivision,
    10  all  performance  bonds  and payment bonds may, at the discretion of the
    11  head of the state agency, public benefit corporation or  commission,  or
    12  his  or  her  designee,  be  dispensed with for the completion of a work
    13  specified in a contract for the prosecution of a public improvement  for
    14  the  state  of New York for which bids are solicited where the aggregate
    15  amount of the contract is  under  [one]  two  hundred  thousand  dollars
    16  [and];  provided  [further],  that  in  a case where the contract is not
    17  subject to the multiple  contract  award  requirements  of  section  one
    18  hundred  thirty-five of this article, such requirements may be dispensed
    19  with where the head of the state agency, public benefit  corporation  or
    20  commission finds it to be in the public interest and where the aggregate
    21  amount of the contract awarded or to be awarded is less than two hundred
    22  thousand  dollars.  Provided further, that in a case where a performance
    23  or payment bond is dispensed with, twenty per  centum  may  be  retained
    24  from  each  progress  payment or estimate until the entire contract work
    25  has been completed and accepted, at which time the  head  of  the  state
    26  agency,  public  benefit  corporation  or  commission shall, pending the
    27  payment of the final estimate, pay not to exceed seventy-five per centum
    28  of the amount of the retained percentage.
    29    2. A copy of such payment bond shall be kept in the office of the head
    30  of the department or bureau having charge of the public  improvement  in
    31  connection  with  which the bond was given and a copy shall also be kept
    32  in the office of the comptroller [or other appropriate  official];  such
    33  copies shall be open to public inspection.
    34    §  13.  Paragraph  e  of  subdivision  10  of section 163 of the state
    35  finance law, as amended by chapter 137 of the laws of 2008,  is  amended
    36  to read as follows:
    37    e. The commissioner may authorize purchases required by state agencies
    38  or other authorized purchasers by letting a contract pursuant to a writ-
    39  ten  agreement, or by approving the use of a contract let by any depart-
    40  ment, agency or instrumentality of the United States  government  and/or
    41  any department, agency, office, political subdivision or instrumentality
    42  of  any  state or states. A state agency purchaser shall document in the
    43  procurement record its rationale for the use of a contract  let  by  any
    44  department, agency or instrumentality of the United States government or
    45  any department, agency, office, political subdivision or instrumentality
    46  of any other state or states. Such rationale shall include, but need not
    47  be  limited to, a determination of need, a consideration of the procure-
    48  ment method by which the contract was awarded, an analysis  of  alterna-
    49  tive  procurement  sources  including  an  explanation why a competitive
    50  procurement or the use of a centralized contract let by the commissioner
    51  is not in the best interest of the  state,  and  the  reasonableness  of
    52  cost. The authority to use a contract let by another governmental entity
    53  pursuant  to  this  paragraph  is intended to benefit the state by using
    54  contracts in place that provide for the same service or commodity sought
    55  by a state agency at a price determined to be reasonable  by  the  state
    56  agency.  Such  contracts  are not intended to be used primarily to avoid

        A. 7513--C                         11
 
     1  competitive bidding. Use of multiple award contracts  pursuant  to  this
     2  paragraph  shall  follow  the same basis of selection among the multiple
     3  awardees as was prescribed  by  the  original  contracting  governmental
     4  entity.
     5    §  14.  Subdivision  15  of  section  163  of the state finance law is
     6  amended by adding a new paragraph d to read as follows:
     7    d. In addition to other reports  required  by  this  subdivision,  the
     8  commissioner  of  general services shall prepare a report on the savings
     9  achieved from  all  contracts  established  as  a  centralized  contract
    10  through  the  office  of  general services pursuant to this section, the
    11  impact  of  such  contracts  on  small,  minority  and  women-owned  and
    12  service-disabled  veteran-owned business enterprises, and the effective-
    13  ness of such contracts in fulfilling the purchasing needs of all author-
    14  ized users of such contracts.  Such report shall be  submitted  by  such
    15  commissioner  to  the  governor, the state comptroller, and the heads of
    16  the fiscal committees of each house of the state  legislature  no  later
    17  than January fifteenth, two thousand sixteen, and thereafter annually on
    18  or before such date.
    19    §  15.  Subdivision  3  of  section  112  of the state finance law, as
    20  amended by chapter 319 of the laws  of  1992,  is  amended  to  read  as
    21  follows:
    22    3.  A  contract  or  other  instrument wherein the state or any of its
    23  officers, agencies, boards or commissions agrees to give a consideration
    24  other than the payment of money, when the value or reasonably  estimated
    25  value  of such consideration exceeds [ten] twenty-five thousand dollars,
    26  shall not become a valid enforceable contract unless  such  contract  or
    27  other instrument shall first be approved by the comptroller and filed in
    28  his office. For purposes of this subdivision, where consideration cannot
    29  be determined in terms of monetary value, it shall be valued in terms of
    30  intrinsic value.
    31    §  16.  This  act  shall  take  effect immediately; provided, however,
    32  section two of this act shall take effect on the one  hundred  eightieth
    33  day  after  it shall have become a law; provided, further, however, that
    34  the provisions of  sections  one,  five,  seven,  eight,  nine,  nine-a,
    35  nine-b, thirteen and fourteen of this act shall apply to any procurement
    36  initiated  on  or  after  such date; provided, further however, that the
    37  amendments to section 163 of the state finance law made by sections one,
    38  five, seven, eight, nine, nine-a, nine-b, thirteen and fourteen of  this
    39  act  shall not affect the repeal of such section as provided in subdivi-
    40  sion 5 of section 362 of chapter 83 of the laws of 1995, as amended, and
    41  shall be deemed repealed therewith.
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