Bill Text: MI SB0702 | 2013-2014 | 97th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: State financing and management; purchasing; use of bid scorecards system for certain procurement contracts awarded; require. Amends secs. 261 & 268 of 1984 PA 431 (MCL 18.1261 & 18.1268).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 8-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-12-03 - Referred To Committee On Appropriations [SB0702 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2013-SB0702-Introduced.html
SENATE BILL No. 702
December 3, 2013, Introduced by Senators COLBECK, NOFS, PROOS, GREEN, CASWELL, BRANDENBURG, MARLEAU and BOOHER and referred to the Committee on Appropriations.
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431, entitled
"The management and budget act,"
by amending sections 261 and 268 (MCL 18.1261 and 18.1268), section
261 as amended by 2012 PA 555 and section 268 as amended by 2007 PA
183.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 261. (1) The department shall provide for the purchase
of, the contracting for, and the providing of supplies, materials,
services, insurance, utilities, third party financing, equipment,
printing, and all other items as needed by state agencies for which
the legislature has not otherwise expressly provided. If consistent
with federal statutes, in all purchases made by the department, all
other things being equal, preference shall be given to products
manufactured or services offered by Michigan-based firms or by
facilities with respect to which the operator is designated as a
clean corporate citizen under part 14 of the natural resources and
environmental protection act, 1994 PA 451, MCL 324.1401 to
324.1427. The department shall solicit competitive bids from the
private sector whenever practicable to efficiently and effectively
meet the state's needs. The department shall first determine that
competitive solicitation of bids in the private sector is not
appropriate before using any other procurement method for an
acquisition.
(2) The department shall make all discretionary decisions
concerning the solicitation, award, amendment, cancellation, and
appeal of state contracts.
(3) The department shall utilize competitive solicitation for
all purchases authorized under this act unless 1 or more of the
following apply:
(a) Procurement of goods or services is necessary for the
imminent protection of public health or safety or to mitigate an
imminent threat to public health or safety, as determined by the
director or his or her designated representative.
(b) Procurement of goods or services is for emergency repair
or construction caused by unforeseen circumstances when the repair
or construction is necessary to protect life or property.
(c) Procurement of goods or services is in response to a
declared state of emergency or state of disaster under the
emergency management act, 1976 PA 390, MCL 30.401 to 30.421.
(d) Procurement of goods or services is in response to a
declared state of emergency under 1945 PA 302, MCL 10.31 to 10.33.
(e) Procurement of goods or services is in response to a
declared state of energy emergency under 1982 PA 191, MCL 10.81 to
10.89.
(f) Procurement of goods or services is within a state
agency's purchasing authority delegated under subsection (4), and
the state agency has established policies or procedures approved by
the department to ensure that goods or services are purchased by
the state agency at fair and reasonable prices.
(4) The department may delegate its procurement authority to
other state agencies within dollar limitations and for designated
types of procurements. The department may withdraw delegated
authority upon a finding that a state agency did not comply with
departmental procurement directives.
(5) The department may enter into lease purchases or
installment purchases for periods not exceeding the anticipated
useful life of the items purchased unless otherwise prohibited by
law.
(6) The department shall issue directives for the procurement,
receipt, inspection, and storage of supplies, materials, and
equipment, and for printing and services needed by state agencies.
The department shall provide standard specifications and standards
of performance applicable to purchases.
(7) The department may enter into a cooperative purchasing
agreement with 1 or more other states or public entities for the
purchase of goods, including, but not limited to, recycled goods,
and services necessary for state programs.
(8)
In awarding a contract under this section, the department
shall
give a preference of up to 10% of the amount of the contract
to
a qualified disabled veteran. If the qualified disabled veteran
otherwise
meets the requirements of the contract solicitation and
with
the preference is the lowest bidder, the department shall
enter
into a procurement contract with the qualified disabled
veteran
under this act. If 2 or more qualified disabled veterans
are
the lowest bidders on a contract, all other things being equal,
the
qualified disabled veteran with the lowest bid shall be awarded
the
contract under this act.
(9)
It is the goal of the department to award each year not
less
than 5% of its total expenditures for construction, goods, and
services
to qualified disabled veterans. The department may count
toward
its 5% yearly goal described in this subsection that portion
of
all procurement contracts in which the business entity that
received
the procurement contract subcontracts with a qualified
disabled
veteran. Each year, the department shall report to each
house
of the legislature on all of the following for the
immediately
preceding 12-month period:
(a)
The number of qualified disabled veterans who submitted a
bid
for a state procurement contract.
(b)
The number of qualified disabled veterans who entered into
procurement
contracts with this state and the total value of those
procurement
contracts.
(c)
Whether the department achieved the goal described in this
subsection.
(d)
The recommendations described in subsection (10).
(10)
Each year, the department shall review the progress of
all
state agencies in meeting the 5% goal with input from statewide
veterans
service organizations and from the business community,
including
businesses owned by qualified disabled veterans, and
shall
make recommendations to each house of the legislature
regarding
continuation, increases, or decreases in the percentage
goal.
The recommendations shall be based upon the number of
businesses
that are owned by qualified disabled veterans and on the
continued
need to encourage and promote businesses owned by
qualified
disabled veterans.
(11)
To assist the department in reaching the goal described
in
subsection (9), the governor shall recommend to the legislature
changes
in programs to assist businesses owned by qualified
disabled
veterans.
(12)
As used in this section:
(a)
"Qualified disabled veteran" means a business entity that
is
51% or more owned by 1 or more veterans with a service-connected
disability.
(b)
"Service-connected disability" means a disability incurred
or
aggravated in the line of duty in the active military, naval, or
air
service as described in 38 USC 101(16).
(c)
"Veteran" means a person who served in the army, air
force,
navy, marine corps, or coast guard and who was discharged or
released
from his or her service with an honorable or general
discharge.
(8) Beginning October 1, 2014, the department and all state
agencies that have had procurement authority delegated to them by
the department shall award contracts they award under this section
with an expected contract award of $100,000.00 or more by using a
bid scorecard system that tallies contract bids based on technical
and critical performance requirements, cost evaluation, and labor
evaluation. The bid scorecard system shall provide for all of the
following:
(a) The technical and critical performance standards shall be
numerical and verifiable and shall count for 10% of the points on
the bid scorecard.
(b) The cost evaluation shall be based on the bid price and
shall count for 70% of the points on the bid scorecard.
(c) The labor evaluation shall count for 20% of the points on
the bid scorecard, with up to 1/2 of those points awarded for
employees who are veterans or qualified disabled veterans and up to
1/2 of those points awarded for employees who are residents of this
state.
(d) The scope of the labor evaluation shall include prime
contracting agents and any other business that will fulfill
contract delivery requirements as a subcontractor to a prime
contractor.
(9) The bid scorecard system described in subsection (8) shall
also provide that if any change is made to the evaluation criteria
in a request for proposal, then the department or the state agency
that had procurement authority delegated to it shall simultaneously
communicate those changes to all bidders on that contract and shall
also simultaneously communicate any responses to an inquiry from an
individual bidder to all bidders on that contract.
(10) As long as the bidder meets the minimum bid requirements
as determined by the department, the department shall award the
contract to the bidder with the highest point tally described in
subsection (8) as determined by the department.
(11) The department shall develop automation tools to assist
in the application of the bid scorecard system described in
subsection (8) and shall make the bid scorecard system available to
the public on the department's internet website.
Sec. 268. (1) A bidder for a state contract is a Michigan
business for the purposes of this section if it certifies that it
has done any of the following during the 12 months immediately
preceding the bid deadline or for the period the business has been
in existence, if the business is newly established within the 12
months immediately preceding the bid deadline:
(a)
Filed a Michigan single business tax return or Michigan
business
tax return showing a portion or all
of the income tax base
allocated or apportioned to the state of Michigan pursuant to the
former
single business tax act, 1975 PA 228, or the Michigan
business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1101 to 208.1601, or the
income tax act of 1967, 1967 PA 281, MCL 206.1 to 206.713.
(b) Filed a Michigan income tax return showing income
generated in or attributed to the state of Michigan.
(c) Withheld Michigan income tax from compensation paid to the
bidder's owners and remitted the tax to the department of treasury.
(2) The filing or withholding shall be more than a nominal
filing for the purpose of gaining the status of a Michigan
business, but shall indicate a significant business presence in the
state, considering the size of the business and the nature of its
activities.
(3) A bidder certifying that it meets the criteria for a
Michigan
business listed in subsections (1), and (2), and (12)
shall authorize the department of treasury to verify that the
bidder has or has not met 1 of the 3 criteria in subsection (1).
This authorization shall permit the department of treasury to
disclose the verifying information to the procuring agency in
accordance with the procedures established by section 28 of 1941 PA
122, MCL 205.28.
(4) Only a bidder that has certified that it is a Michigan
business is entitled to have the department apply a reciprocal
preference in its favor against a business that submits a bid from
a state which applies a preference law against out-of-state
bidders. A bidder that does not certify that it is a Michigan
business shall indicate in its bid the state in which it maintains
its principal place of business for the purpose of applying that
state's preference law against the bidder.
(5) If the low bid for a state procurement exceeds $100,000.00
and is from a business located in a state which applies a
preference law against out-of-state businesses, the department
shall prefer a bid from a Michigan business in the same manner in
which the out-of-state bidder would be preferred in its home state.
(6) The department shall compile a list of states that give
preference to in-state bidders and the extent of the preference and
shall update the list at least annually. An agency may rely on this
compilation in implementing the provisions of this act without
incurring liability to any bidder.
(7) A bidder waives any entitlement to claim a preference
under this act if the bidder has not certified in its bid that the
bidder is a Michigan business and has not authorized the department
of treasury to release information necessary to verify the
entitlement.
(8) A bidder shall not fraudulently certify that it is a
Michigan business under this act or falsely indicate the state in
which it has its principal place of business for the purpose of
avoiding application of the reciprocal preference.
(9)
A business that purposefully or willfully submits a false
certification
that it is a Michigan business or falsely indicates
the
state in which it has its principal place of business is guilty
of
a felony, punishable by a fine of not less than $25,000.00.any
other false information in support of a bid is responsible for a
civil violation, and the department shall impose a civil fine
against that entity in an amount equal to 10% of the contract value
in which the false certification or false information was made.
(10) Two years after October 1, 1988, the department shall
review the costs and consequences of implementing this section. The
department shall solicit input from the business community and from
state agencies receiving procurements affected by the provisions of
this section, and shall make recommendations to the legislature
regarding continuation or modification of this section.
(11) This section shall not apply to any procurement if the
provisions of this section would conflict with federal statute.
(12) Beginning October 1, 2014, before a bidder is eligible to
be certified a Michigan business and before a bidder is eligible to
bid for a state contract, the bidder shall disclose to the
department all of the following:
(a) The number and percentage of its employees who work more
than 20 hours per week and who have been employed by that business
for the immediate and preceding 90-day period who are residents of
this state.
(b) The percentage of its employees who work more than 20
hours per week and who have been employed by that business for the
immediate and preceding 90-day period who are veterans.
(c) The percentage of its employees who work more than 20
hours per week and who have been employed by that business for the
immediate and preceding 90-day period who are qualified disabled
veterans.
(13) Beginning October 1, 2014, the department shall maintain
a list of all Michigan businesses certified under this section on
the department's internet website.
(14) As used in this section:
(a) "Service-connected disability" means a disability incurred
or aggravated in the line of duty in the active military, naval, or
air service as described in 38 USC 101(16).
(b) "Veteran" means a person who served in the army, air
force, navy, marine corps, or coast guard and who was discharged or
released from his or her service with an honorable or general
discharge.