DAR File No. 40567

This rule was published in the July 15, 2016, issue (Vol. 2016, No. 14) of the Utah State Bulletin.


Administrative Services, Purchasing and General Services

Rule R33-7

Request for Proposals

Notice of Proposed Rule

(Amendment)

DAR File No.: 40567
Filed: 06/30/2016 02:14:01 PM

RULE ANALYSIS

Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:

The purpose of this rule is to address the request for proposals, and the process which shall be conducted in accordance with the requirements set forth in Sections 63G-6a-701 through 63G-6a-711 of the Utah Procurement Code.

Summary of the rule or change:

Section R33-7-103a was added to provide further clarification regarding the Multiple Stage Cost Qualification RFP process. Additionally, Sections R33-7-401, R33-7-403, and R33-7-503 were deleted, Section R33-7-402 was amended to address the rejection of late proposals and the delivery and time requirements, and Section R33-7-502 was amended to address the voluntary withdrawal of a proposal. Section R33-7-703 was also amended to add clarification regarding non-priced technical criteria.

State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:

  • Title 63G, Chapter 6a

Anticipated cost or savings to:

the state budget:

Any anticipated cost or savings to the state budget, based on the changes to this rule, cannot be measured. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process. It is impossible to determine what businesses may or may not qualify, or may or may not participate in the RFP process. Thus, it is impossible to determine what impact, if any, there may be on the state budget. Therefore, there are no anticipated costs or savings that this rule may have on the state budget.

local governments:

Any anticipated cost or savings to local government, based on the changes to this rule, cannot be measured. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process. It is impossible to determine what businesses may or may not qualify, or may or may not participate in the RFP process. Thus, it is impossible to determine what impact, if any, there may be on local government.

small businesses:

There are no anticipated cost or savings to small businesses. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process, and do not prevent any small businesses from participation in the process. Therefore, there are no anticipated costs or savings that this rule may have on small businesses.

persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local governmental entities:

There are no anticipated cost or savings to persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local government entities. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process, and do not prevent any persons from participation in the process. Therefore, there are no anticipated costs or savings that this rule may have on persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local government entities.

Compliance costs for affected persons:

There are no anticipated compliance costs for affected persons. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process, and do not require compliance cost.

Comments by the department head on the fiscal impact the rule may have on businesses:

There are no anticipated fiscal impacts that this rule may have on businesses. The changes to this rule address the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process, and do not prevent any businesses from participation in the process. Therefore, there are no anticipated fiscal impacts that this rule may have on businesses.

Kimberly Hood, Executive Director

The full text of this rule may be inspected, during regular business hours, at the Office of Administrative Rules, or at:

Administrative Services
Purchasing and General Services
Room 3150 STATE OFFICE BLDG
450 N STATE ST
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84114-1201

Direct questions regarding this rule to:

  • Alan Bachman at the above address, by phone at 801-538-3105, by FAX at 801-538-3313, or by Internet E-mail at abachman@utah.gov
  • Kent Beers at the above address, by phone at 801-538-3143, by FAX at 801-538-3882, or by Internet E-mail at kbeers@utah.gov

Interested persons may present their views on this rule by submitting written comments to the address above no later than 5:00 p.m. on:

08/15/2016

This rule may become effective on:

08/22/2016

Authorized by:

Jared Gardner, Chair, Procurement Policy Board

RULE TEXT

R33. Administrative Services, Purchasing and General Services.

R33-7. Request for Proposals.

R33-7-101. Conducting the Request for Proposals Standard Procurement Process.

Request for Proposals shall be conducted in accordance with the requirements set forth in Sections 63G-6a-701 through 63G-6a-711, Utah Procurement Code. All definitions in the Utah Procurement Code shall apply to this Rule unless otherwise specified in this Rule. This administrative rule provides additional requirements and procedures and must be used in conjunction with the Procurement Code.

 

R33-7-102. Content of the Request for Proposals.

(1) In addition to the requirements set forth under Section 63G-6a-703, the request for proposals solicitation shall include:

(a) a description of the format that offerors are to use when submitting a proposal including any required forms; and

(b) instructions for submitting price.

(2) The conducting procurement unit is responsible for all content contained in the request for proposals solicitation documents, including:

(a) reviewing all schedules, dates, and timeframes;

(b) approving content of attachments;

(c) providing the issuing procurement unit with redacted documents, as applicable;

(d) assuring that information contained in the solicitation documents is public information; and

(e) understanding the scope of work, all evaluation criteria, requirements, factors, and formulas to be used in determining the scoring of proposals; and

(f) for executive branch procurement units the requirements of Section 63G-6a-[402]110(6).

 

R33-7-103. Multiple Stage RFP Process.

(1) In addition to the requirements set forth under Section 63G-6a-710, the multiple stage request for proposals solicitation shall include:

(a) a description of the stages and the criteria and scoring that will be used to evaluate proposals at each stage; and

(b) the methodology used to determine which proposals shall be disqualified from additional stages.

 

R33-7-103a. Multiple Stage Cost Qualification RFP Process.

Section 63G-6a-710 authorizes procurement units to use a multiple stage RFP process. This Rule sets forth the process for issuing a multiple stage RFP process where cost is evaluated prior to the technical requirements. The concept behind this "multiple stage cost qualification RFP process" is that for certain types of procurements, a procurement unit may not want to spend time evaluating the technical responses of proposals with cost estimates that exceed the stated budget or significantly exceed the lowest cost proposal. Statute does not restrict the number of stages that may occur in a multiple stage RFP, the number or type of criteria that may be used to evaluate proposals or the sequencing of when evaluation criteria must be evaluated. However, statute does place restrictions on procedures such as separating cost, when the evaluation committee can and cannot change scores, issuing a justification statement and, if applicable, conducting a cost-benefit analysis, and so on. The instructions contained in this multiple stage cost qualification RFP process comply with all provisions set forth in Utah Code Title 63G-6a, Part 7 and associated Rule R33-7.

(1) Definitions:

(a) "Multiple stage cost qualification RFP process" means a multiple stage RFP process in which cost proposals are evaluated prior to the evaluation of technical criteria and are used to reject offerors based on established cost criteria.

(b) "Maximum cost differential percentage threshold" is a cost ceiling that is established by the conducting procurement unit that an offeror's cost proposal must not exceed or the offeror's proposal will be rejected and the offeror will not be allowed to proceed to a subsequent stage. The maximum cost differential percentage threshold may be based on the following:

(i) The lowest cost proposal submitted;

(ii) The conducting procurement's stated budget; or

(iii) A combination of (i) and (ii).

(2) The chief procurement officer or head of procurement unit with independent procurement authority may issue a multiple stage RFP where cost is used to qualify offerors for subsequent stages or to narrow the number of offerors that will move on to subsequent stages in accordance with the requirements set forth in Utah Code 63G-6a, Part 7 and Rule R33-7.

(3) When using the multiple stage cost qualification RFP process the conducting procurement unit shall establish and include in the RFP:

(a) The minimum mandatory pass or fail requirements that proposals must meet in stage one in order to move on to stage two;

(b) The maximum cost differential percentage threshold that proposals must not exceed in stage two in order to move on to stage three;

(c) The technical criteria and a score threshold that proposals must meet in stage three in order to be eligible to move on to stage four; and

(d) If applicable, the total combined score threshold in stage four that proposals must meet to determine best value and be eligible for contract award.

(4) Except as provided in Section 63G-6a-707(8), the following process shall be used to evaluate proposals and award a contract under this multiple stage process:

(a) During stage one, an individual assigned by the conducting procurement unit shall evaluate each offeror's proposal in response to the minimum mandatory pass or fail requirements set forth in the RFP:

(i) Offerors with proposals that do not meet the mandatory minimum pass or fail requirements shall be rejected and are not allowed to move on to subsequent stages and are not eligible to receive a contract award;

(ii) Offerors with proposals that meet the mandatory minimum pass or fail requirements shall be deemed qualified to move on to stage two;

(b) During stage two, the issuing procurement unit shall assign an individual, who is not a member of the evaluation committee, to evaluate the cost proposals of offerors qualified in stage one in response to the cost criteria and maximum cost differential percentage threshold set forth in the RFP.

(i) The individual assigned by the issuing procurement unit to evaluate cost proposals shall do so outside the presence of the evaluation committee and shall not share the cost proposals or the results of the cost proposal evaluations with the evaluation committee until all technical scoring is completed in stage three;

(ii) Offerors with cost proposals that exceed the maximum cost differential percentage threshold shall be rejected, not allowed to move on to subsequent stages, and not eligible to receive a contract award;

(iii) Offerors with cost proposals that do not exceed the maximum cost differential percentage threshold shall be deemed qualified to move on to stage three;

(iv) Cost shall be evaluated in accordance with Section 63G-6a-707(5)(b)(i); and

(v) A cost score shall be calculated based on the cost formula set forth in the RFP for each proposal identified in Subsection (3)(b)(iii) of this Rule;

(c) During stage three, the evaluation committee shall score the proposal of each offeror qualified in stage two, in response to the technical evaluation criteria set forth in the RFP, without having access to any information relating to the cost or the scoring of the cost. Technical criteria shall be scored in accordance with Section R33-7-704 or rules established by the applicable rulemaking authority;

(d) During stage four, the individual assigned by the issuing procurement unit, who is not a member of the evaluation committee, shall add the cost scores to the evaluation committee's final recommended technical scores to derive the total combined score for each proposal in accordance with the process set forth in Section 63G-6a-707(5)(a) through (c);

(e) In order to determine best value to the procurement unit, the evaluation committee shall prepare a justification statement and, if applicable, a cost-benefit analysis, in accordance with Section 63G-6a-708 and 709; and

(f) A contract may be awarded to the offeror with the proposal having the highest total combined score, or multiple contracts may be awarded to offerors with proposals meeting the total combined score threshold set forth in the RFP, in accordance with Section 63G-6a-709.

(5) Maximum cost differential percentage thresholds include the following examples:

(a) Lowest Cost Proposal Example: The maximum cost differential percentage threshold is within 10% above the lowest cost proposal:

(i) Offerors with cost proposals that exceed 10% above the proposal with the lowest cost will be rejected. Offerors with cost proposals that do not exceed 10% above the proposal with the lowest cost will move on to the subsequent stage;

(b) Stated Budget Example: The maximum cost differential percentage threshold is within 5% above the conducting procurement unit's stated project budget:

(i) Offerors with cost proposals that exceed 5% above the stated budget will be rejected. Offerors with cost proposals that do not exceed 5% above the stated budget will move on to the subsequent stage; and

(a) Combination Lowest Cost Proposal and Stated Budget Example: the maximum cost differential percentage threshold is within 8% above the lowest cost proposal and within 2% above the conducting procurement unit's stated project budget:

(i) Offerors with cost proposals that exceed 8% above the proposal with the lowest cost will be rejected and offerors with cost proposals that exceed 2% above the stated budget will be rejected. Offerors with cost proposals that do not exceed 8% above the proposal with the lowest cost and do not exceed 2% above the stated budget will move on to the subsequent stage.

(6) Additional multiple stage RFP processes may be developed and used to cover the wide range of different procurements that public entities encounter, provided the processes comply with the requirements set forth in the Utah Procurement Code and Title R33.

 

R33-7-106. Notification.

(1) A person who complies with [Rule]Section R33-7-105 shall be notified by the procurement unit prior to the public release of any information for which a claim of confidentiality has been asserted.

(2) Except as provided by court order, the procurement unit to whom the request for a record is made under GRAMA, may not disclose a record claimed to be protected under [Rule]Section R33-7-105 but which the procurement unit or State Records Committee determines should be disclosed until the period in which to bring an appeal expires or the end of the appeals process, including judicial appeal, is reached. [This Rule]Section R33-7-106 does not apply where the claimant, after notice, has waived the claim by not appealing or intervening before the State Records Committee. To the extent allowed by law, the parties to a dispute regarding the release of a record may agree in writing to an alternative dispute resolution process.

(3) Any allowed disclosure of public records submitted in the request for proposal process will be made only after the selection of the successful offeror(s) has been made public in compliance with Section 63G-6a-709.5.

 

[ R33-7-401. Modification or Withdrawal of Proposal Prior to Deadline.

A proposals may be modified or withdrawn prior to the established due date and time for responding.]

 

R33-7-402. [Proposals and Modifications, Delivery and Time Requirements.]Rejection of Late Proposals -- Delivery and Time Requirements.

[Except as provided in Rule R33-7-402(3), the following shall apply:

(1) proposals and modifications to a proposal submitted electronically or by physical delivery, after the established due date and time, will not be accepted for any reason.](1) Except as provided in Subsection (4), an issuing procurement unit may not accept a proposal after the time for submission of a proposal has expired as set forth in Section 63G-6a-704(2).

(2) When submitting a proposal [or modification to a proposal ]electronically, offerors must allow sufficient time to complete the online forms and upload documents. The solicitation will end at the closing time posted in the electronic system. If an offeror is in the middle of uploading a proposal when the closing time arrives, the [system]procurement unit [should]will stop the process and the proposal [or modification to a proposal ]will not be accepted.

(3) When submitting a proposal [or modification to a proposal ]by physical delivery (U.S. Mail, courier service, hand-delivery, or other physical means) offerors are solely responsible for meeting the deadline. Delays caused by a delivery service or other physical means will not be considered as an acceptable reason for a proposal [or modification to a proposal ]being late.

(a) All proposals [or modifications to proposals ]received by physical delivery will be date and time stamped by the procurement unit.

(4) To the extent that an error on the part of the procurement unit or an employee of a procurement unit results in a proposal [or modification to a proposal ]not being received by the established due date and time, the proposal [or modification to a proposal ]shall be accepted as being on time.

 

[ R33-7-403. Errors in Proposals.

The following shall apply to the correction or withdrawal of an unintentionally erroneous proposal, or the cancellation of an award or contract that is based on an unintentionally erroneous proposal. A decision to permit the correction or withdrawal of a proposal or the cancellation of an award or a contract shall be supported in a written document, signed by the chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority.

(1) Mistakes attributed to an offeror's error in judgment may not be corrected.

(2) Unintentional errors not attributed to an offeror's error in judgment may be corrected if it is in the best interest of the procurement unit and correcting the error maintains the fair treatment of other offerors.

(a) Examples include:

(i) missing signatures,

(ii) missing acknowledgement of an addendum;

(iii) missing copies of professional licenses, bonds, insurance certificates, provided that copies are submitted by the deadline established by the chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority to correct this mistake;

(iv) typographical errors;

(v) mathematical errors not affecting the total proposed price; or

(vi) other errors deemed by the chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority to be immaterial or inconsequential in nature.

(3) Unintentional errors discovered after the award of a contract may only be corrected if, after consultation with the chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority and the attorney general's office or other applicable legal counsel, it is determined that the correction of the error does not violate the requirements of the Utah Procurement Code or these administrative rules.]

 

R33-7-502. Voluntary Withdrawal of a Proposal. [ Correction or Withdrawal of Proposal. ]

[(1) In the event an offeror submits a proposal that on its face appears to be impractical, unrealistic or otherwise in error, the chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority may contact the offeror to either confirm the proposal, permit a correction of the proposal, or permit the withdrawal of the proposal, in accordance with Section 63G-6a-706.

(2) Offerors may not correct errors, deficiencies, or incomplete responses in a proposal that has been determined to be not responsible, not responsive, or that does not meet the mandatory minimum requirements stated in the request for proposals in accordance with Section 63G-6a-704.]An offeror may voluntarily withdraw a proposal at any time before a contract is awarded with respect to the RFP for which the proposal was submitted provided the offeror is not engaged in any type of bid rigging, collusion or other anticompetitive practice made unlawful under other applicable law.

 

[ R33-7-503. Interviews and Presentations.

(1) Interviews and presentations may be held as outlined in the RFP.

(2) Offerors invited to interviews or presentations shall be limited to those offerors meeting minimum requirements specified in the RFP.

(3) Representations made by the offeror during interviews or presentations shall become an addendum to the offeror's proposal and shall be documented. Representations must be consistent with the offeror's original proposal and may only be used for purposes of clarifying or filling in gaps in the offeror's proposal.

(4) The chief procurement officer or head of a procurement unit with independent procurement authority shall establish a date and time for the interviews or presentations and shall notify eligible offerors of the procedures. Interviews and presentations will be at the offeror's expense.]

 

R33-7-601. Best and Final Offers.

Best and Final Offers shall be conducted in accordance with the requirements set forth in Section 63G-6a-707.5, or the Utah Procurement Code. Rule R33-7[This administrative rule] provides additional requirements and procedures and must be used in conjunction with the Procurement Code.

(1) The best and final offers (BAFO) process is an optional step in the evaluation phase of the request for proposals process in which offerors are requested to modify their proposals.

(a) An evaluation committee may request best and final offers when:

(i) no single proposal addresses all the specifications;

(ii) all or a significant number of the proposals received are unclear and the evaluation committee requires further clarification;

(iii) additional information is needed in order for the evaluation committee to make a decision;

(iv) the differences between proposals in one or more categories are too slight to distinguish;

(v) all cost proposals are too high or over the budget;

(vi) multiple contract awards are necessary to achieve regional or statewide coverage for a procurement item under an RFP and there are insufficient cost proposals within the budget to award the number of contracts needed to provide regional or statewide coverage.

(2) Only offerors meeting the minimum qualifications or scores described in the RFP are eligible to respond to best and final offers.

(3) Proposal modifications submitted in response to a request for best and final offers may only address the specific issues and/or sections of the RFP described in the request for best and final offers.

(a) Offerors may not use the best and final offers process to correct deficiencies in their proposals not addressed in the request for best and final offers issued by the procurement unit.

(4) When a request for best and final offers is issued to reduce cost proposals, offerors shall submit itemize cost proposals clearly indicating the tasks or scope reductions that can be accomplished to bring costs within the available budget.

(a) The cost information of one offeror may not be disclosed to competing offerors during the best and final offers process and further, such cost information shall not be shared with other offerors until the contract is awarded.

(b) A procurement unit shall ensure that auction tactics are not used in the discussion process, including discussing and comparing the costs and features of other proposals.

(5) The best and final offers process may not be conducted as part of the contract negotiation process. It may only be conducted during the evaluation phase of the RFP process.

(6) A procurement unit may not use the best and final offers process to allow offerors a second opportunity to respond to the entire request for proposals.

(7) If a proposal modification is made orally during the interview or presentation process, the modification must be confirmed in writing.

(8) A request for best and final offers issued by a procurement unit shall:

(a) comply with all public notice requirements provided in Section 63G-6a-[406]112;

(b) include a deadline for submission that allows offerors a reasonable opportunity for the preparation and submission of their responses;

(c) indicate how proposal modifications in response to a request for best and final offers will be evaluated;

(9) If an offeror does not submit a best and final offer, its immediately previous proposal will be considered its best and final offer;

(10) Unsolicited best and final offers will not be accepted from offerors.

 

R33-7-703. Evaluation Committee Procedures for Scoring Non-Priced Technical Criteria. [ Other Than Cost. ]

[(1)(a) In accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-704, the conducting procurement unit shall conduct an initial review of any applicable pass/fail minimum requirements set forth in the RFP to determine whether proposals are responsive and responsible or in violation of the Utah Procurement Code prior to submitting proposals to the evaluation committee. Examples of pass/fail minimum requirements include:

(i) Timeliness of receipt of proposals

(ii) Qualifications;

(iii) Certifications;

(iv) Licensing;

(v) Experience;

(vi) Compliance with State or Federal regulations;

(vii) Services provided;

(viii) Product availability;

(ix) Equipment;

(x) Other pass/fail minimum requirements set forth in the RFP.

(b) The evaluation committee may not evaluate proposals deemed non-responsive, nonresponsible or disqualified for violations of the Utah Procurement Code under (1)(a).

(c) In accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-704, an evaluation committee may, after the initial pass/fail review by the conducting procurement unit or at any time during the RFP process, reject a proposal if it is determined that the person submitting the proposal is not responsible or the proposal is not responsive.

(2) In accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-707, the evaluation committee shall evaluate each responsive and responsible proposal that has not been disqualified from consideration under the provisions of this chapter, using the criteria described in the request for proposals using the following procedures:

(a) Prior to the scoring of proposals, a procurement officer from the issuing procurement unit will meet with the evaluation committee and any staff that will have access to the proposals to:

(i) discuss the evaluation and scoring process to ensure that each committee member has a clear understanding of the scoring process and how points will be assigned;

(ii) discuss requirements regarding conflicts of interests, the appearance of impropriety, and the importance of confidentiality;

(iv) discuss the scoring sheet and evaluation criteria set forth in the RFP; and

(v) provide a copy of Administrative Rule R33-7-703 to the evaluation committee and any staff that will have access to the proposals.

(b) Once the proposals have been received and it is clear which offerors are involved in the RFP process, all members of the evaluation committee must sign a written statement certifying that they do not have a conflict of interest as set forth in Utah Code 63G-6a-707 and administrative rule R33-24-107

(3) Unless an exception is authorized by the head of the issuing procurement unit, in order to avoid cost influencing the evaluation committee's scoring of non-price criteria, in accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-707, costs may not be revealed to the evaluation committee until after the committee has finalized its scoring on all other technical non-price criteria in the RFP.

(4) After receipt of proposals, each committee member shall independently, as described in R33-7-705, read and score each proposal based on the technical non-price criteria set forth in the RFP to assess the completeness, quality, and desirability of each proposal.

(a) proposals must be evaluated solely on the stated criteria listed in the RFP.

(i) past performance ratings and references may be considered if listed as evaluation criteria in the RFP;

(ii) personal bias based on prior experience with a procurement item or the offeror cannot be considered in scoring proposals, except as provided in the RFP;

(iii) personal favoritism for a vendor or bias against a vendor cannot be considered in scoring proposals; and

(iv) subsections (ii) and (iii) shall not be construed to prevent a committee member from having a bias based on their review of a proposal in regard to the criteria in the solicitation. Evaluators are encouraged to request technical support from the conducting procurement unit or the issuing procurement unit when conducting their independent assessments and scoring.

(b) any request for technical support shall be submitted in writing to the conducting procurement unit or the issuing procurement unit.

(c) After the proposals have been evaluated and scored by individual committee members, the entire committee shall meet to discuss the proposals, if applicable conduct interviews, resolve any factual disagreements, and arrive at the final scoring. All committee members must be present to take any official action.

(i) If a committee member does not attend an evaluation committee meeting, the member shall be removed from the evaluation committee and the remainder of the committee may proceed with the evaluation, provided there are at least three evaluation committee members remaining.

(d) During committee discussions, each member may change their initial scoring. If additional information or clarification is needed from an offeror, the committee may, with approval by the issuing procurement unit, request information or clarification from an offeror. Such request will only be approved if it can be done in a manner that is fair to all offerors.

(e) At any time during the evaluation process, the evaluation committee may, with the approval of the issuing procurement unit, request best and final offers from responsible and responsive offerors and evaluate those offers in accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-708 and Administrative Rule R33-7-601.

(5) The evaluation committee may tally the final scores for criteria other than cost to arrive at a consensus score by the following methods:

(a) total of all of the points given by individual committee members; or

(b) an average of the individual scores.

(c) The evaluation committee shall turn in a completed sheet, signed and dated by each evaluation committee member.

(6) The evaluation committee shall submit its final recommended scores for all criteria other than cost to the issuing procurement unit.

(7) The issuing procurement unit shall follow the procedures set forth in Utah Code 63G-6a-707(5) pertaining to the following:

(a) reviewing the evaluation committee's final recommended scores for each proposal for all criteria other than cost;

(b) scoring cost based on the applicable scoring formula; and

(c) calculating the total combined score for each responsive and responsible proposal.

(8) The evaluation committee and the conducting procurement unit shall prepare the cost justification statement and any applicable cost-benefit analysis in accordance with Utah Code 63G-6a-708.

(9) The issuing procurement unit's role as a non-voting member of the evaluation committee will be to facilitate the evaluation process within the guidelines of the Utah procurement code and administrative rule.

(10) The issuing procurement unit may replace any member on the committee or reconstitute the committee in any way the issuing procurement unit deems appropriate to cure any impropriety. If the impropriety cannot be cured by replacing a member, then a new committee may be appointed or the procurement cancelled.]Evaluation committee members, employees of procurement units, and any other person involved in an RFP evaluation process are required to review Utah Code Title 63G-6a, Parts 7 and 24; and Section R33-7-703 prior to participating in the evaluation process.

(1)(a) In accordance with Section 63G-6a-704, the conducting procurement unit may conduct a review of proposals to determine if:

(i) the person submitting the proposal is responsible;

(ii) the proposal is responsive; and

(iii) the proposal meets the mandatory minimum requirements set forth in the RFP.

(b) An evaluation committee may not evaluate proposals deemed non-responsive, not responsible or not meeting the mandatory minimum requirements of the RFP.

(2)(a) Prior to the evaluation and scoring of proposals, an employee from the issuing procurement unit will meet with the evaluation committee, staff members of the conducting procurement unit, and any other person involved in the procurement process that may have access to the proposals to:

(i) Explain the evaluation and scoring process;

(ii) Discuss requirements and prohibitions pertaining to:

(A) socialization with vendors as set forth in Section R33-24-104;

(B) financial conflicts of interest as set forth in Section R33-24-205;

(C) personal relationships, favoritism, or bias as set forth in Section R33-24-106;

(D) disclosing confidential information contained in proposals or the deliberations and scoring of the evaluation committee; and

(E) ethical standards for an employee of a procurement unit involved in the procurement process as set forth in Section R33-24-108.

(iii) review the scoring sheet and evaluation criteria set forth in the RFP; and

(iv) provide a copy of Section R33-7-703 to the evaluation committee, employees of the procurement unit involved in the procurement, and any other person that will have access to the proposals.

(b) Prior to participating in any phase of the RFP process, all members of the evaluation committee must sign a written statement certifying that they do not have a conflict of interest as set forth in Section 63G-6a-707 and Section R33-24-107.

(i) At each stage of the procurement process, the conducting procurement unit is required to ensure that evaluation committee members, employees of the procurement unit and any other person participating in the procurement process:

(A) do not have a conflict of interest with any of the offerors;

(B) do not contact or communicate with an offeror concerning the procurement outside the official procurement process; and

(C) conduct or participate in the procurement process in a manner that ensures a fair and competitive process and avoids the appearance of impropriety.

(3) Unless an exception is authorized by the head of the issuing procurement unit, the evaluation committee is prohibited from knowing, or having access to, any information relating to the cost, or the scoring of the cost, of a proposal until after the evaluation committee has finalized its scoring of non-price technical criteria for each proposal and submitted those scores to the issuing procurement unit as set forth in Section 63G-6a-707.

(4)(a) In accordance with Section 63G-6a-707, the conducting procurement unit shall appoint an evaluation committee to evaluate each responsive and responsible proposal that has not been rejected from consideration under the provisions of the Utah Procurement Code, using the criteria described in the RFP.

(b) Using the provisions set forth in Section R33-7-705, the evaluation committee shall exercise independent judgement in the evaluation and scoring of the non-priced technical criteria in each proposal.

(c) Proposals must be evaluated solely on the criteria listed in the RFP. The evaluation committee shall assess each proposal's completeness, accuracy, and capability of meeting the technical criteria listed in the RFP.

(d) The evaluation committee may receive assistance from an expert or consultant authorized by the conducting procurement unit in accordance with the provisions set forth in Section 63G-6a-707(4).

(e) The evaluation committee may enter into discussions, conduct interviews with, or attend presentations by responsible offerors with responsive proposals that meet the mandatory minimum requirements of the RFP for the purpose of clarifying information contained in proposals in accordance with the provisions set forth in Section 63G-6a-707(5).

(5) After each proposal has been independently evaluated by each member of the evaluation committee, each committee member independently shall assign a preliminary draft score for each proposal for each of the non-priced technical criteria listed in the RFP.

(a) After completing the preliminary draft scoring of the non-priced technical criteria for each proposal, the evaluation committee shall enter into deliberations to:

(i) review each evaluation committee member's preliminary draft scores;

(ii) resolve any factual disagreements;

(iii) modify their preliminary draft scores based on their updated understanding of the facts; and

(iv) derive the committee's final recommended consensus score for the non-priced technical criteria of each proposal.

(b) During the evaluation process, the evaluation committee may make a recommendation to the conducting procurement unit that a proposal be rejected for being non-responsive, not responsible, not meeting the mandatory minimum requirements, or not meeting any applicable minimum score threshold.

(c) If an evaluation committee member does not attend an evaluation committee meeting, the meeting may be canceled and rescheduled.

(d) In order to score proposals fairly, an evaluation committee member must be present at all evaluation committee meetings and must review all proposals, including if applicable oral presentations. If an evaluation committee member fails to attend an evaluation committee meeting or leaves a meeting early or fails for any reason to fulfill the duties and obligations of a committee member, that committee member shall be removed from the committee. The remainder of the evaluation committee members may proceed with the evaluation, provided there are at least three evaluation committee members remaining.

(i) Attendance or participation on an evaluation committee via electronic means such as a conference call, a webcam, an online business application, or other electronic means is permissible.

(6)(a) The evaluation committee shall derive its final recommended consensus score for the non-priced technical criteria of each proposal using the following methods:

(i) the total of each individual evaluation committee member's scores for each proposal shall be the consensus score for the evaluation committee; or

(ii) an average of each individual evaluation committee member's scores for each proposal shall be the consensus score for the evaluation committee.

(b) The evaluation committee shall submit its final score sheet, signed and dated by each committee member, to the issuing procurement unit for review.

(7) The evaluation committee may not change its consensus final recommended scores of the non-priced technical criteria for each proposal after the scores have been submitted to the issuing procurement unit, unless the issuing procurement unit authorizes that a best and final offer process to be conducted under the provisions set forth in Section 63G-6a-707.5 and Section R33-7-601.

(8) In accordance with Section 63G-6a-707, the issuing procurement unit shall:

(a) review the evaluation committee's final recommended scores for each proposal's non-priced technical criteria and correct any errors, scoring inconsistencies, and reported noncompliance with this chapter or cancel the solicitation in accordance with Sections 63G-6a-106(4) or 63G-6a-303(3).

(b) score the cost of each proposal based on the applicable scoring formula; and

(c) calculate the total combined score for each proposal.

(9) The evaluation committee may, with approval from the issuing procurement unit, request best and final offers from responsible offerors who have submitted responsive proposals that meet the minimum qualifications, evaluation criteria, or applicable score thresholds identified in the RFP, under the circumstances set forth in Section 63G-6a-707.5 and Section R33-7-601.

(10) The evaluation committee and the conducting procurement unit shall prepare a justification statement and any applicable cost-benefit analysis in accordance with Section 63G-6a-708.

(11) The issuing procurement unit's role as a non-scoring member of the evaluation committee will be to facilitate the evaluation process within the guidelines of the Utah Procurement Code and applicable Rules.

(12)(a) The head of the issuing procurement unit may remove a member of an evaluation committee for:

(i) having a conflict of interest or the appearance of a conflict of interest with a person responding to a solicitation;

(ii) having an unlawful bias or the appearance of unlawful bias for or against a person responding to a solicitation;

(iii) having a pattern of arbitrary, capricious, or clearly erroneous scores that are unexplainable or unjustifiable;

(iv) having inappropriate contact or communication with a person responding to a solicitation;

(v) socializing inappropriately with a person responding to a solicitation;

(vi) engaging in any other action or having any other association that causes the head of the issuing procurement unit to conclude that the individual cannot fairly evaluate a solicitation response; or

(vii) any other violation of a law, rule, or policy.

(b) The head of the issuing procurement unit may reconstitute an evaluation committee in any way deemed appropriate to correct an impropriety described in Subsection (12)(a). If an impropriety cannot be cured by replacing a member, the head of the issuing procurement unit may appoint a new evaluation committee, cancel the procurement or cancel and reissue the procurement.

 

R33-7-802. Publicizing Awards.

(1) In addition to the requirements of Section 63G-6a-709.5, the following shall be disclosed after receipt of a GRAMA request and payment of any lawfully enacted and applicable fees:

(a) the contract(s) entered into as a result of the selection and the successful proposal(s), except for those portions that are to be non-disclosed under [Rule]Section R33-7-105;

(b) the unsuccessful proposals, except for those portions that are to be non-disclosed under [Rule]Section R33-7-105;

(c) the rankings of the proposals;

(d) the names of the members of any selection committee (reviewing authority);

(e) the final scores used by the selection committee to make the selection, except that the names of the individual scorers shall not be associated with their individual scores or rankings.

(f) the written justification statement supporting the selection, except for those portions that are to be non-disclosed under [Rule]Section R33-7-105.

(2) After due consideration and public input, the following has been determined by the Procurement Policy Board to impair governmental procurement proceedings or give an unfair advantage to any person proposing to enter into a contract or agreement with a governmental entity, and will not be disclosed by the governmental entity at any time to the public including under any GRAMA request:

(a) the names of individual scorers/evaluators in relation to their individual scores or rankings;

(b) any individual scorer's/evaluator's notes, drafts, and working documents;

(c) non-public financial statements; and

(d) past performance and reference information, which is not provided by the offeror and which is obtained as a result of the efforts of the governmental entity. To the extent such past performance or reference information is included in the written justification statement; it is subject to public disclosure.

 

KEY: government purchasing, request for proposals, standard procurement process

Date of Enactment or Last Substantive Amendment: [August 7, 2015]2016

Notice of Continuation: July 8, 2014

Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted Law: 63G-6a

 


Additional Information

More information about a Notice of Proposed Rule is available online.

The Portable Document Format (PDF) version of the Bulletin is the official version. The PDF version of this issue is available at https://rules.utah.gov/publicat/bull-pdf/2016/b20160715.pdf. The HTML edition of the Bulletin is a convenience copy. Any discrepancy between the PDF version and HTML version is resolved in favor of the PDF version.

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For questions regarding the content or application of this rule, please contact Alan Bachman at the above address, by phone at 801-538-3105, by FAX at 801-538-3313, or by Internet E-mail at abachman@utah.gov; Kent Beers at the above address, by phone at 801-538-3143, by FAX at 801-538-3882, or by Internet E-mail at kbeers@utah.gov.  For questions about the rulemaking process, please contact the Office of Administrative Rules.