CC Resolution 2023-008 Purchasing & Contracting PolicyRESOLUTION NO. 2023 — 008
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
LA QUINTA, CALIFORNIA, ADOPTING A PURCHASING
AND CONTRACTING POLICY
WHEREAS, purchasing and contracting policies provide a guideline to city
employees for purchasing and contracting for goods, services and projects to support,
enhance and supplement city operations, and
WHEREAS, purchasing and contracting policies provide transparency and
consistency, and
WHEREAS, purchasing and contracting policies enable the Finance department
to maintain a system of financial controls for the efficient use and expenditure of public
funds.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of
La Quinta, California, as follows:
SECTION 1. Resolution No. 2019-021 adopted on June 18, 2019, is hereby repealed,
and this Resolution supersedes all prior Purchasing and Contracting Policies adopted by
Council.
SECTION 2. The purchasing and contracting policy attached hereto as Exhibit A and
incorporated herein by reference shall govern the purchase of city supplies, goods,
equipment, services and construction projects.
SECTION 3. This policy, as applicable, shall constitute the procedures and rules
governing the solicitation of bids and award of contracts for public works projects pursuant
to Chapter 3.12, and shall constitute the procedures and rules governing the solicitation
and selection of firms for services pursuant to Chapter 3.12, of the La Quinta Municipal
Code.
SECTION 4. Severability. If any provision of this Resolution or the application thereof to
any person or circumstance is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions
or applications of this Resolution which can be given effect without the invalid provision
or application, and to this end the provisions of this Resolution are severable. The City
Council hereby declares that it would have adopted this Resolution irrespective of the
invalidity of any particular portion thereof.
SECTION 5. This Resolution shall become effective upon adoption. The Purchasing and
Contracting Policy adopted by this Resolution shall go into effect immediately.
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
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PASSED, APPROVED, and ADOPTED at a regular meeting of the La Quinta City
Council held on this 18th day of April, 2023, by the following vote:
AYES: Councilmembers Fitzpatrick, McGarrey, Sanchez, and Mayor Evans
NOES: None
ABSTAIN: None
ABSENT: Councilmember Pena
ATTEST:
MONIKA RADVA. City Clerk
City of La Quinta, California
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
WILLIAM H. IHRKE, City Attorney
City of La Quinta, California
LINDA EVANS, Mayor
City of La Quinta, California
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 3 of 24
CITY OF LA QUINTA, CALIFORNIA
PURCHASING AND CONTRACTING POLICY
EXHIBIT A
I. GENERAL RULES; EXCEPTIONS
This Purchasing and Contracting Policy (Policy) shall apply for the solicitation and
selection of all purchases and contracts within the City of La Quinta (City). Any exceptions
to this Policy must be approved by the City Council (Council). The Council may, by
majority vote and in accordance with its fiduciary responsibilities, approve expenditures
of any amount, for any length of term, not otherwise inconsistent with any applicable law.
A. ADMINISTRATIVE GUIDELINES
1. Vendor Limit. Combined purchases cannot exceed $50,000 per vendor, per fiscal
year except with Council approval and in the case of major expenditures, in which a
vendor has participated in a public formal bidding process.
2. Contract Limit. In addition, multiyear agreements in excess of $50,000 as an
aggregate total per vendor will require Council approval. The aggregate total is
determined by the maximum total dollar value that may be awarded over the duration
of the contract, including option years.
3. Change Orders or Amendments. A change order or amendment is a change in a
contract term, other than as specifically provided for in the contract, that authorizes
or necessitates any increase or decrease of the cost of the contract or in the time of
completion. Change orders that alter the amount of the contract must be authorized
by Directors, City Manager, or Council depending on the amount as referenced in
section II Expenditure Categories of this policy. A valid written request for a change
order or amendment must meet the following criteria:
a. the change was not reasonably foreseeable at the time that the contract was
signed;
b. the change must be relevant to the original contract; and
c. the change is authorized by the contract provisions and in the best interest
of the City.
4. Conflict of Interest. No employee, officer, Councilmember, or agent shall participate
in the selection, award, or administration of a contract if he or she has a real or
apparent conflict of interest. Such a conflict of interest would arise when the
employee, officer, Councilmember, agent, or any member of his or her immediate
family, his or her partner, or an organization which employs or is about to employ
any of the parties indicated, herein, has a financial or other interest in or a tangible
personal benefit from a firm considered for a contract.
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Nothing in this Policy does or is to be construed as limiting the applicability of any
other federal, state, or local laws and regulations governing prohibitions against
financial conflicts of interest, including but not limited to the Political Reform Act
(Government Code Section 81000 et seq.) and implementing regulations from the
Fair Political Practices Commission (Title 2, Section 18110 et seq., of the California
Code of Regulations), and Government Code Sections 1090-1999 and 1126. All
such laws and regulations shall apply to every employee, officer, Councilmember,
and agent of the City.
5. Vendor Gifts and Gratuities. No employee shall receive or agree to receive any
compensation, reward, or gift from any vendor related to the conduct of the City's
business, subject to the guidelines in the California Code of Regulations and the City's
Personnel Policy §2.2.
6. Local Vendors. Purchasing goods and services from local vendors which stimulate
the local economy is encouraged but not required.
7. Green Purchasing Practices. The City is committed to Green Purchasing practices
in obtaining goods and services. The City shall consider environmentally preferable
products that contain recyclable material when appropriate. Nothing in this policy
requires the procurement of products that do not adequately perform their intended
use, requires procurement that excludes adequate competition, or requires the
procurement of products that are unavailable at a reasonable price or at a
reasonable time. An environmentally preferable product means a product that meets
any of the following criteria:
a. is durable, repairable, reusable, or recyclable;
b. has minimal packaging, toxic content, or chemical -hazard potential;
c. is resource or energy efficient in any or all phases of its manufacture, use,
or disposal;
d. its use or disposal minimizes or eliminates the City's potential environmental
liability;
e. contains post -consumer (recycled) material; or
f. contains recovered organic waste product.
The City shall purchase recycled -content paper products, printing and writing paper
if fitness and quality are equal to that of non -recycled items and whenever the total
cost is the same or lesser than the non -recycled items or whenever the total cost is
no more than 10% of the total. Recycled content paper products, printing and writing
paper shall consist of at least 30%, by fiber weight, post -consumer fiber per SB 1383.
8. Payment Terms. The City's standard payment terms are Net 30, meaning a
payment should be issued to the vendor no later than thirty days after the invoice
date, unless the City and vendor have agreed to alternate terms.
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9. In no instances should purchases be split or divided in such a manner to
circumvent policy process and limits.
10. If any provision of this policy is not followed by departments, a procurement exemption
form must be completed and reviewed by the City Manager or their designee.
11. Violations of this policy may result in disciplinary action up to and including dismissal,
subject to the applicable due process as prescribed in the City's Personnel Policies and
Procedures.
12.The requisition process should be initiated as soon as the needs are known, and
purchase orders must be created before services or goods are acquired. Vendors should
be provided with the PO number when ordering and PO numbers should appear on the
vendor invoicing when feasible.
13. Purchase orders may be issued regardless of the amount when required by the
vendor, or when the complexity of contract demands a formal document for clarity.
II. EXPENDITURE CATEGORIES
Purchases, which include those made by purchase order (PO), written agreement,
amendment or change order that require city expenditures, are classified into five
categories based on the anticipated expenditure amount. Each category establishes an
authorization level, procurement method, and maximum term, which shall apply unless
specifically exempted in accordance with this Policy.
A. Expenditures of $50 or less (petty cash)
B. Expenditures of $51 to $5,000 (operational)
C. Expenditures of $5,001 to $15,000 (minor)
D. Expenditures of $15,001 to $50,000 (intermediate)
E. Expenditures over $50,000 (major)
The following definitions reference terms in sections A-E below:
1. The "Initial Term" shall be either (i) a term under the contract or PO not to exceed
one year, or (ii) a term longer than one year but not to exceed the maximum
number of years authorized under the "Term Limit" section, as long as the contract
includes a continuing obligation for performance by a contracting party and the City
has an obligation for payment only for the services actually performed and
accounted for by invoice or other monthly or regular periodic documentation
acceptable to the City. Under any contract or PO, either the contracting party or
City may terminate the contract or PO prior to the expiration of the Initial Term for
the other party's nonperformance.
2. "Informal" bid/proposal means tangible proof. i.e. written, e-mail, or other casual
medium. Departments shall document attempts to receive bids.
3. The city's templates for contracts, agreements, amendments and change orders
shall be used for category D and E purchases. The City Manager may allow for
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
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modifications of these templates or use of other contracts, agreements,
amendments and change orders, or may require use of city templates for category
B and C purchases when the City Manager determines it is prudent due to the level
of risk exposure to the city, the need to provide detail on complex scope of work,
or any other reason s/he believes to be in the best interest of the City. To meet
prevailing wage requirements, any maintenance or repair project over $15,000 or
construction project over $25,000 will require a written contract.
4. Designee is someone who is given signing authority by Department Director or
City Manager to authorize expenditures. Signature authorization form must be on
file to authorize designee signing authority.
A. EXPENDITURES OF $50 OR LESS
Authorization: Department Director, who may delegate to a Department designee
Procurement: No bids or PO necessary; petty cash advances or reimbursement
Term Limit: N/A
Note: These transactions take the place of ordinary ongoing purchases and shall
be limited in use.
A cash disbursement or reimbursement may be obtained from the Finance Department
and must not exceed $50 per item or combined purchase. A petty cash request form shall
be completed and signed by the Department Director or designee before submittal. The
form shall include the date, description of the item to be purchased, and account number.
Petty cash amounts will be advanced to accommodate miscellaneous minor expenditure
amounts of $50 or less and for which normal payment provisions are not practical. The
Finance department will periodically audit petty cash expenditures as to form and
regulations and may confirm purchases.
B. EXPENDITURES OF $51 to $5,000 DURING THE INITIAL TERM
Authorization: Department Director, who may delegate to a Department designee.
Procurement: No PO necessary; 3 informal bids/proposals whenever possible
Term Limit: 3 years plus one 3-year extension
C. EXPENDITURES OF $5,001 to $15,000 DURING THE INITIAL TERM
Authorization: Department Director or delegated by Director with confirmation from
City Manager
Procurement: PO required plus 3 written informal bids/proposals; City contract is
recommended
Term Limit: 3 years plus one 3-year extension
D. EXPENDITURES OF $15,001 to $50,000 DURING THE INITIAL TERM
Authorization: City Manager
Procurement: PO required plus 3 written informal bids/proposals plus City contract
Term Limit: 3 years plus one 3-year extension
Purchase Orders between $25,000 and $50,000 are reviewed by City Council on a
quarterly basis on the Demand Register Report.
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
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E. EXPENDITURES OVER $50,000
Authorization: City Council
Procurement: PO required plus formal bids/proposals plus City contract
Term Limit: no limit, any term approved by majority vote of the Council
III. PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES - MAJOR EXPENDITURES (over $50,000)
A. FORMAL BIDS FOR MAJOR PUBLIC WORKS PROJECTS AND MAJOR
SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT PURCHASES. Major public works projects and supplies
and equipment as referenced in Chapter 3.12 of the La Quinta Municipal Code, are
defined as purchases and projects having an actual or estimated value of greater than
fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). The solicitation and selection of bids and award of
contracts shall comply with Section 3.12.030 of the La Quinta Municipal Code (public
works contracts), and this Policy, and shall be administered through each City
Department, according to the following procedures:
1. Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids (the "invitation") shall be published in a
newspaper, electronic bulletin board or online submission source, City website, or
other generally recognized source of local public works contract information, at least
ten days prior to the date of the opening of bids, or as required by California Public
Contract Code §20164 and §22032. Invitations shall include general descriptions of
the work to be performed, the time and place of the opening of bids, the place where
bidders may obtain bid documents, the amount of bid security required, and the
amount and nature of performance and labor materials security that will be required.
2. Form of bids. Bids conforming to the requirements of the invitation shall be
submitted to the Department Director (the "Director") in sealed packages or by other
means which will prevent the divulging of bids prior to the stated time for opening of
bids, all as specified in the invitation or the bid documents. Unopened bids should
be clearly marked or otherwise identifiable as bids for the project to which they apply.
3. Bid security for public works projects. Bids for public works projects shall be
accompanied by cash, cashier's check, certified check, surety bond, or other form
of security stated in the invitation or bid documents, in a sum equal to at least ten
percent (10%) of the amount of the bid.
4. Opening of bids. At the time and place stated in the invitation, the bids shall be
publicly opened and announced. The bid amounts shall be tabulated, and the
tabulation shall be available for public inspection at the City Department during
regular business hours for a period of not less than thirty (30) calendar days after
the bid opening.
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5. Review of bids. The Director or designee shall review all bids received for
completeness, accuracy, responsiveness to the invitation and the bid documents,
and the City's experience with or knowledge of the qualification and reliability of each
bidder and shall prepare a recommendation to the City Council. Written amounts
shall take precedence over associated numeric amounts. Mathematical errors, if
found, shall be corrected and shall not disqualify a bid. The corrected total shall be
the bid amount considered in determining the lowest responsible bidder and shall
be the contract amount awarded if the bid is selected.
6. Award of contract. Contracts shall be awarded by the City Council to the lowest
responsible bidder. Determination of the lowest responsible bidder shall be at the
sole discretion of the City Council pursuant to findings and recommendations
presented by the Director or designee at the time of the award of contract.
7. Equal bids. If two or more equal low bids are received, the City Council may award
the contract to any one of the equal low bidders by the following:
a. Select one bid; or
b. Reject all bids and re -solicit for bids; or
c. Reject all bids and authorize negotiated agreement if consistent with federal
and state laws; or
d. Select one bid, which is the most responsible bidder; or
e. Take any other action that the City Council deems to serve the best interest
of the City.
8. No bids. When no bids are received from responsible firms, the City Council may
accomplish the project in any manner it sees fit.
9. Rejection of bids. The City Council may reject any or all bids presented and may
then direct that the project be re -advertised, may authorize negotiation of a contract
with one or more responsible firms, or may resolve that the project can be performed
more economically by City forces, day labor, time and materials contract, or other
method.
10. Execution of contract. The successful bidder shall execute the contract and furnish
required performance security and labor and materials security when required
pursuant to the bid document.
11. Forfeiture of bid security for public works projects. If the successful bidder fails to
execute the contract and furnish security within the stated time, and said failure is
not primarily due to actions or omissions of the City or to acts of god, the bidder shall
forfeit the bid security provided. The City Council may then consider the bid of the
next lowest responsible bidder.
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12. Release of bid security for public works projects. Bidders are entitled to the return
of their bid security unless forfeited as provided herein. The City shall retain all bid
security until a contract has been executed or until the City Council rejects all bids
at which time all bid security not forfeited shall be returned to the appropriate bidders.
13. Disposition of forfeited bid security for public works projects. The City shall retain
forfeited bid security until a contract is awarded to another firm or the project is
cancelled. The City shall retain an amount equal to the difference between the
forfeiting firm's bid and the new contract amount, if any, and an additional amount
equal to administrative and other costs incurred as a result of the failure of the
forfeiting bidder to enter into a contract and provide required security, and shall
return any remaining amount of the bid security to the forfeiting bidder.
14. Performance security and labor and materials security for public works projects. The
bidder to whom the contract is awarded (the "successful bidder") shall furnish
performance security and labor and materials security in amounts specified in the
Invitation or Bid Documents.
B. FORMAL PROPOSALS FOR MAJOR PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL
SERVICES. Major professional and technical services are defined as services having an
actual or estimated value of greater than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). The solicitation
and selection of proposals and award of contracts shall comply with Section 3.12.020 of
the La Quinta Municipal Code (service contracts), and this Policy, and shall be
administered through each City Department, according to the following procedures:
1. Maintenance and Repair Services. Services intended to preserve and/or restore a
public work to a clean, safe, efficient, and/or continually usable condition.
Maintenance and repair services include, but are not limited to: carpentry, electrical,
painting, plumbing, glazing, and other craftwork to preserve a facility in the condition
for which it was intended; repairs, cleaning and other operations on machinery and
other equipment permanently attached to a facility as fixtures; the mowing, pruning,
and trimming of lawns, grass, trees, shrubs, bushes and hedges; and the regular
removal or relocation of by-products or waste products accumulated at City facilities
as the result of ongoing environmental processes.
2. The City Manager shall approve the preparation and release of all Requests for
Proposals (RFP) and Requests for Qualifications (RFQ).
3. City staff shall determine, based on professional judgment, whether an RFP or an
RFQ process best suits its needs and City staff, or a city -authorized consultant, shall
prepare the RFP/RFQ document.
4. City staff, or a city -authorized consultant, or both shall prepare a list of suitable firms
from known registries, professional organizations, and/or any other source.
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5. City staff shall issue the RFP/RFQ to suitable firms, and may also advertise for
competitive proposals. The RFP/RFQ should be included in the requisition.
6. City staff shall form a selection committee, which may include private consultants,
to review the RFPs/RFQs received, and the selection committee may conduct
interviews and/or hold discussions with proposing firms.
7. The selection committee shall rank the proposing firms according to the criteria
specified in LQMC Section 3.12.020 (service contracts) and City staff shall notify
firms of their position in the ranking. For design -build projects, the selection
committee may also take into account the criteria for selection of public works
contacts specified in LQMC Section 3.12.030.
8. City staff, or a City -authorized consultant, shall negotiate with the top -ranked firm to
arrive at mutually acceptable contract terms.
9. City staff, or its authorized consultant shall terminate negotiations and begin
negotiations with the next -ranked firm if an agreement cannot be reached and
continue this process until negotiations are successfully concluded or until the list of
qualified firms submitting proposals is exhausted and an agreement cannot be
reached.
10. The Council shall award or reject the contract negotiated by City staff.
IV. PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES — NON -MAJOR EXPENDITURES ($50,000 &
under
INFORMAL BIDS OR PROPOSALS - Intermediate, Minor, and Operational Expenditure
category projects, including minor public works projects, supplies, goods, equipment and
minor services as referenced in Chapter 3.12 of the La Quinta Municipal Code, are
defined as projects having an actual or estimated value of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000)
or less. The solicitation and selection of bids and award of contracts shall comply with
Section 3.12.030 of the La Quinta Municipal Code (public works projects), Section
3.12.020 of the La Quinta Municipal Code (service contracts), and this Policy, and shall
be administered through each City Department, according to the following procedures:
1. Informal bids shall be obtained as dictated by this Policy from the open market and
a written record of informal bids shall be kept with the related PO. If applicable, the
RFP/RFQ should be included in the requisition.
2. Bid security. Security and labor and material security shall conform to the
requirements for major public works projects but may be modified or waived by the
City staff person authorized to make the purchase if warranted and in the best
interest of the City.
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Purchasing and Contracting Policy
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3. Execution and Award of Contracts. The City Council may award contracts, or the
City Manager, or designated City Director, or staff personnel may award and execute
contracts, set forth in Categories A, B, C or D of Section II above, and may waive
competitive bidding requirements if in the best interest of the City, provided there are
unencumbered appropriations in the fund accounts against which the expenses are
to be charged.
V. EXEMPTION TO ANY PROCUREMENT METHOD
Justification for exemption to any required procurement method may be submitted to the
City Manager or in the case of a major expenditure, to the City Council under the following
circumstances:
a. Sole -source or select -source purchase. When determining if a purchase is sole or
select source, rationale and/or proof must be provided in the purchase requisition
as follows:
• Demonstrate the need for a brand name product, such as to ensure
compatibility with other city products and equipment. For example
standardization of fleet inventory (select -source).
• Detail the need to add to an original scope of work (Change Order) because
the original source is the only reasonable one to provide the additional goods,
construction work or service needed (select -source).
• Demonstrate that only one manufacturer or vendor makes and/or sells the
required equipment (sole -source).
• Select source form must be completed and attached to requisition.
b. State, County, or other public agency (such as a joint powers authority (JPA) or
utility) cooperative purchasing program or contracts utilizing funding or other
participation from agencies which require conformance with state, federal or other
contracting regulations.
c. The City may not require a contract for goods or equipment purchases but should
assess the risk exposure related to the purchase and upon determination or real
risk to persons or property require insurance and indemnification from the vendor.
Determination that a written contract is not required does not exempt the purchase
from all other purchasing procedures, including the formal bid process.
d. Emergency purchases made necessary by an immediate threat to life or property
or a substantial disruption of a vital public service.
• In advance of any local emergency, the City seeks to retain a list of available
local businesses willing to provide necessary supplies, materials, equipment,
services, food, care or shelter to the City through the Office of Emergency
Management. Once the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) is activated,
these memorandums will be activated.
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• In the event of an emergency, the City Manager or designee may make
immediate purchases of goods and services. Emergency purchases include
any purchase required to prevent imminent danger or to prevent or mitigate
the loss or impairment of life, health, property, or essential public services.
Every effort shall be made to obtain advance approvals or to obtain approvals
as soon as possible following the purchase.
• The City is not required to engage in either formal or informal competitive
bidding in an emergency. The City Council delegates to the City Manager and
his/her designee the authority to waive any procedures in the Policy that are
not statutorily mandated when making emergency purchase of supplies,
equipment, materials or services.
• The Council shall ratify emergency suspension of procedures at the next
properly noticed Council meeting following the emergency procurement and
consider whether further suspension of procedures is required to abate the
impacts of the emergency.
e. The awarding officer(s) may waive irregularities in formal or informal bids received
provided that it is in the best interest of the City to do so, and it does not result in
unfair advantage to any bidder.
f. The Council may authorize the award and execution of contracts without
competitive bidding provided that such award is in the best interest of the City, or
of the public health, safety and welfare.
g.
The following disbursements are exempt from purchase order requirements
i) Utility services
ii) Disbursements to public agencies for which the City collects fees on behalf of
that agency
iii) Intergovernmental Memorandums of Understanding
VI. CITY CREDIT CARD ISSUANCE AND USE
A. Authorization and Acknowledgement. Approval to use, issue and revoke a City
credit card is at the discretion of the City Manager. Unless otherwise authorized by the
City Manager, City credit cards shall have a credit limit of up to $5,000. The City Manager
shall have the authority to set credit limits on a case -by -case basis. City credit cards may
be issued in the name of a designee ("Authorized User") and/or the City of La Quinta.
City credit cards shall be kept by the Finance Department, City Manager's Office, and/or
Authorized User for safekeeping and prudence. Authorized users by the City Manager
must be City employees. All general City credit cards shall be kept by the Finance
Department and employees may check general City credit cards in and out, but are
encouraged to limit usage only when necessary. All City credit cards shall be returned to
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the Finance Department, the City Manager's Office, and/or Authorized User named on
the City credit card in a timely manner after use.
Use of City credit cards shall follow all other purchasing guidelines in this policy.
A User Agreement for City -Issued Credit Card form is to be completed and signed by the
cardholder for all City credit cards that are issued to Authorized User acknowledging
his/her understanding of the policies and procedures for the use of the City credit card
and acknowledging the receipt of the City credit card(s). A copy is given to the employee
and the original is maintained in the employee personnel file.
B. Appropriate City Credit Card Use. City credit cards may be used for the following:
1. Traveling on City business in accordance with the City's Personnel Policy.
2. A single purchase which does not exceed $5,000 including split transactions or online
transactions that require immediate payment;
3. Purchasing goods and services from vendors where use of another payment method
is not practical, such as the case with many internet purchases in which no actual
storefront exists;
4. Securing reservations and locations for City activities, meetings and conferences,
community events, honoree luncheons, marketing promotions, and sales missions;
5. Paying for meals in conjunction with official City business such as meetings with City
Council, developers, consultants, or interview panels.
C. Inappropriate City Credit Card Use. City credit cards shall not be used for the
following:
1. Cash advances, money orders, wire transfers, international purchases that require a
currency conversion from the U.S. Dollar, etc.;
2. Routine gasoline purchases, gas cards must be used for these purchases;
3. Alcoholic beverages, tobacco products, prescription drugs and Cannabis
4. Political or religious organizations;
5. Firearms or ammunition;
6. Personal gifts including gift cards, flowers, etc.;
7. Long-term rentals or lease agreements;
8. Heavy-duty machinery that requires a maintenance agreement;
9. Use of the City credit card is not intended to replace effective procurement planning
which enables volume discounts or to circumvent established competitive purchasing
procedures. This means no purchases for goods or services should be made that
would otherwise require competitive bidding or a purchase order, and purchases may
not be split to circumvent the purchase thresholds established herein.
10. Employees shall not use City credit cards for personal expenses. Charging personal
items, services, entertainment or expenses of any kind on City credit cards is a misuse
of City funds and a serious breach of City's ethics policy. Doing so will result in
disciplinary action, up to and including termination. Employees should use care in
selecting between using their business and personal credit cards;
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11. Any other purchases which would be prohibited under any other City policy or
directive.
D. Travel, Meetings, & Conferences. The uses of the City credit card for travel, local
meetings, and conferences shall at all times comply with the standards and practices set
forth within the City Personnel Policy. All City credit card charges must be supported by
detailed charge receipts and submitted on an expense report to the Finance Department
upon return from a business trip.
E. Obtaining Goods and Services. Authorized purchases may be made in person, via
approved internet site, or by telephone. Authorized Users must require vendors to itemize
the receipt/invoice. An itemized receipt/invoice consists of the following information:
• Date of purchase
• Detailed description of goods or services purchased
• Price per item
• Amount of sales tax and total amount
• Shipping charges, if any
Upon completing the credit card transaction, the employee shall submit the itemized
receipt with appropriate account numbers to the Finance Department, City Manager's
Office, and/or Authorized User. The Finance Department will review all instances of lost
receipts and repeated occurrences may result in suspension of your assigned City credit
card.
F. Monthly Statement. During the month as charges are made, Authorized Users or
assigned card administrators shall keep track of all charges and receipts. Authorized
Users are responsible to review and reconcile monthly credit card statements. At the end
of a billing cycle, once reconciled, the Authorized User or assigned card administrator will
attach the supporting detailed charge receipts and related invoices to the monthly credit
card statement and submit to the Finance Department within five (5) working days of
receipt of statement. Falsification of receipts will subject the employee to disciplinary
action, up to and including termination of employment. The Finance Director reserves the
right to review each credit card statement and determine if the expenses were purchased
in accordance with the City policy.
G. Disputed Charges. Authorized Users are responsible for ensuring that the vendor,
the issuing bank, and the Finance Director are notified immediately of any disputed
charges. Authorized Users will be responsible for resolving the disputed charge directly
with the credit card company.
H. Returned Items. If items purchased with the credit card are found defective or the
repair or services faulty, the cardholder has the responsibility to return the item to the
merchant for replacement or credit to the card. Cash refunds or store credit will not be
permitted.
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 15 of 24
I. Timely Payment. Based on the statement cycle date, the Finance Department will
ensure timely payments. Credit card charges will be paid once reconciled by the
Authorized Users and approved by the Finance Department.
To avoid late fees and finance charges, the Finance Department reserves the option to
pay all credit card charges, even if supporting documentation is not yet received. When
subsequently received, the supporting documentation will be retroactively reconciled to
the payment.
J. Lost or Stolen Cards. Authorized Users are responsible for ensuring that the issuing
bank and the Finance Department are notified immediately if the card is lost or stolen.
Failure to do so may result in holding the Authorized User responsible for any fraudulent
use of the card.
K. Disciplinary Action. The Human Resources Department is responsible for all
disciplinary action surrounding misuse of cards, including cancellation of card privileges.
L. Surrender upon Request or Separation. The City credit card will be immediately
surrendered upon separation from City employment, retirement, termination or upon
request of the City Manager. Use of the credit card for any purpose after its surrender is
prohibited.
FEDERALLY FUNDED PROCUREMENTS
This section pertains to federal -funded projects and purchases.
VII. GENERAL PROCUREMENT STANDARDS
A. Code of Conduct. As representatives of the City, all employees are expected to
conduct themselves in a professional and ethical manner, maintaining high standards
of integrity and the use of good judgement. Employees are expected to be principled
in their business interactions and act in good faith with individuals both inside and
outside the City. The following Code of Conduct shall govern the performance,
behavior and actions of the City, including employees, directors, appointed or elected
officials, volunteers, or agents who are engaged in any aspect of procurement,
including, but not limited to, purchasing goods and services, awarding contracts and
grants, and the administration and supervision of contracts:
1. No employee, director, appointed or elected official, volunteer, or agent of the City
shall participate in the selection, award, or administration of contracts supported by a
federal award if a conflict of interest is real or apparent to a reasonable person.
2. Conflicts of interest may arise when any employee, officer, or agent of the City, any
member of his or her immediate family, his or her partner, or an organization which
employs or is about to employ any of the parties indicated herein, has a real or
apparent financial or other interest in or a tangible personal benefit form a firm
considered for the contract.
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Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 16 of 24
3. No employee, director, appointed or elected official, volunteer, or agent of the City
shall do business with, award contracts to, or show favoritism toward a member of his
or her immediate family, spouse's family, or to any company, vendor, contractor, or
parties to subcontractors who either employ or has any relationship to a family
member; or award a contract or bid which violates the spirit or intent of federal, state
and local procurement laws and policies established to maximize free and open
competition among qualified vendors.
4. The City's employees, directors, appointed or elected officials, volunteers, or agents
shall neither solicit nor accept gratuities, favors, gifts, consulting fees, trips, or anything
having a monetary value in excess of twenty-five dollars ($25.00) from a vendor,
potential vendor, family or employees of a vendor, contractor or parties to
subcontractors.
5. Disciplinary measures for violations of the Code of Conduct by employees, directors,
appointed or elected officials, volunteers, or agents who are engaged in any aspect of
procurement, including, but not limited to, purchasing goods and services, awarding
contracts and grants, and the administration and supervision of contracts could result
in disciplinary action, up to and including Dismissal, subject to the applicable due
process as prescribed in the City's Personnel Policies and Procedures.
B. Solicitation Procedures
1. Acquisition of unnecessary or duplicative items must be avoided. Consideration
should be given to consolidating or dividing procurements to obtain a more economical
purchase. When appropriate, an analysis will be made of lease versus purchase
alternatives, and any other appropriate analysis to determine the most economical
approach.
2. To foster greater economy and efficiency, and in accordance with efforts to promote
cost-effective use of shared services, the City shall enter into state and local
intergovernmental agreements or inter -entity agreements where appropriate for
procurement or use of common or shared goods and services.
3. Procuring federal excess and surplus property in lieu of purchasing new equipment
and property whenever such use is feasible and reduces project costs shall be utilized.
4. Value engineering clauses may be used in contracts for construction projects of
sufficient size to offer reasonable opportunities for cost reductions. Value engineering
is a systematic and creative analysis of each contract item or task to ensure that its
essential function is provided at the overall lower cost.
5. Contracts shall only be awarded to responsible contractors possessing the ability to
perform successfully under the terms and conditions of a proposed procurement.
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Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 17 of 24
Consideration will be given to such matters as contractor integrity, compliance with
public policy, record of past performance, and financial and technical resources.
6. Records will be maintained sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These
records will include, but are not necessarily limited to the following: rationale for the
method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection,
and the basis for the contract price. The City Clerk will be the repository for said
records and shall be maintained for period of no less than seven (7) years.
7. Time and material type contracts (open-ended) may be used only after a
determination that no other contract is suitable. Time and material type contract
means a contract where the cost to the City is the sum of the actual cost of materials
and direct labor hours charged at fixed hourly rates that reflect wages, general and
administrative expense, and profit. Each time and material contract will set a ceiling
price that the contractor exceeds at its own risk. A higher degree of oversight is
required in order to obtain reasonable assurance that the contractor is using efficient
methods and effective cost controls.
6. The City alone will be responsible, in accordance with good administrative practice
and sound business judgment, for the settlement of all contractual and administrative
issues arising out of procurements. These issues include, but are not limited to, source
evaluation, protests, disputes, and claims. These standards do not relieve the City of
any contractual responsibilities under its contracts. The federal awarding agency will
not substitute its judgment for that of the City unless the matter is primarily a federal
concern. Violations of law will be referred to the local, state, or federal authority having
proper jurisdiction.
C. Competition
1. All procurement transactions must be conducted in a manner providing full and open
competition. In order to ensure objective contractor performance and eliminate unfair
competitive advantage, contractors that develop or draft specifications, requirements,
statements of work, and invitations for bids or requests for proposals will be excluded
from competing for such procurements. Some of the situations considered to be
restrictive of competition include, but are not limited to:
a. Placing unreasonable requirements on firms in order for them to qualify to
do business;
b. Requiring unnecessary experience and excessive bonding;
c. Noncompetitive pricing practices between firms or between affiliated
companies;
d. Noncompetitive contracts to consultants that are on retainer contracts;
e. Organizational conflicts of interest;
f. Specifying only a brand name product instead of allowing an equal product
to be offered and describing the performance or other relevant requirements
of the procurement; and
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 18 of 24
g. Any arbitrary action in the procurement process.
2. Procurements shall be conducted in a manner that prohibits the use of statutorily or
administratively imposed state or local geographical preferences in the evaluation of
bids or proposals, except in those cases where applicable federal statutes expressly
mandate or encourage geographic preference. Nothing in this section preempts state
licensing laws. When contracting for architectural and engineering (A/E) services,
geographic location may be a selection criterion provided its application leaves an
appropriate number of qualified firms, given the nature and size of the project, to
compete for the contract.
3. All solicitations will incorporate a clear and accurate description of the technical
requirements for the material, product, or service to be procured. Such description
must not, in competitive procurements, contain features which unduly restrict
competition. The description may include a statement of the qualitative nature of the
material, product or service to be procured and, when necessary, must set forth those
minimum essential characteristics and standard to which it must conform if it is to
satisfy its intended use. Detailed product specifications should be avoided if at all
possible. When it is impractical or uneconomical to make a clear and accurate
description of the technical requirements, a brand name or equivalent description may
be used as a means to define the performance or other relevant requirements of
procurement. The specific features of the named brand which must be met by offers
must be clearly stated.
4. Bids and proposals shall identify all the requirements which the offerors must fulfill
and all other factors to be used in evaluation bids or proposals
D. Methods of Procurement. In addition to the City's purchasing policy approval limits,
one of the following methods should be used:
1. Micro -purchase: Purchases where the aggregate dollar amount does not exceed
the current limitation set by the Federal Acquisition Regulation at 48 CFR Subpart 2.1,
where this threshold is periodically adjusted for inflation.
2. Small purchase: Purchases up to the Simplified Acquisition threshold. Informal
purchasing procedures are acceptable, but price or rate quotes must be obtained from
an adequate number of sources.
3. Sealed bid: Purchases over the Simplified Acquisition threshold. Under this purchase
method, formal solicitation is required, and the fixed price (lump sum or unit price) is
awarded to the responsible bidder who conformed to all material terms and is the
lowest in price. This method is the preferred procurement method for construction
contracts, if the following conditions apply:
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 19 of 24
a. A complete, adequate, and realistic specification or purchase description is
available;
b. Two or more responsible bidders are willing and able to compete effectively for
the business, and,
c. The procurement lends itself to a firm fixed price contract and the selection of
the successful bidder can be made principally based on price.
If this method is used, the following requirements shall apply:
d. The invitation for bids will be publicly advertised and bids must be solicited from
an adequate number of known suppliers, providing them sufficient response
time prior to the date for opening the bids;
e. The invitation for bids, which will include any specifications and pertinent
attachments, must define the terms or services in order for the bidder to
properly respond;
f. All bids will be publicly opened at the time and place prescribed in the invitation
for bids;
g. A firm fixed price contract award will be made in writing to the lowest responsive
and responsible bidder. Where specified in bidding documents, factors such as
discounts will only be used in determining which bid is lowest. Payment
discounts will only be used to determine the low bid when prior experience
indicates that such discounts are usually taken advantage of; and
h. Any or all bids may be rejected if there is a sound documented reason.
4. Competitive proposals: Purchases over the Simplified Acquisition. This procurement
method requires formal solicitation, fixed -price or cost -reimbursement contracts, and is
used when sealed bids are not appropriate. The contract should be awarded to the
responsible firm whose proposal is most advantageous to the program, with price being
one of the various factors. If this method is used, the following requirements apply:
a. Requests for proposals must be publicized and identify all evaluation factors
and their relative importance. Any response to publicized requests for
proposals must be considered to the maximum extent practical;
b. Proposals must be solicited from an adequate number of qualified sources;
c. The methods for conducting technical evaluations of the proposals received
and for selecting recipients may include, but not limited to: oral interviews,
references, past performance, availability to perform work, and certifications
as determined by project scope.
d. Any response that takes exception to any mandatory items in this proposal
process may be rejected and not considered;
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Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 20 of 24
e. Contracts must be awarded to the responsible firm whose proposal is most
advantageous to the program, with price and other factors considered; and,
f. Competitive proposal procedures may be used for qualifications -based
procurement of architectural/engineering (A/E) professional services
whereby competitors' qualifications are evaluated and the most qualified
competitor is selected, subject to negotiation of fair and reasonable
compensation. The method, where price is not used as a selection factor,
can only be used in procurement of A/E professional services. It cannot be
used to purchase other types of services, though A/E firms are a potential
source to perform the proposed effort.
5. Noncompetitive proposals: Also known as sole -source procurement, this may be
appropriate only when one or more of the following criteria are met:
a. The item is available only from a single source;
b. The public exigency or emergency for the requirement will not permit a
delay resulting from competitive solicitation;
c. The Federal awarding agency or pass -through entity expressly authorizes
noncompetitive proposals in response to a written request from the non-
federal entity; or
d. After solicitation of a number of sources, competition is determined
inadequate.
E. Contract Cost and Price. A cost or price analysis shall be performed in connection
with every procurement action in excess of the Simplified Acquisition threshold, including
contract modifications. The method and degree of analysis is dependent on the facts
surrounding the particular procurement situation, but as a starting point, independent
estimates shall be made prior to receiving bids and proposals.
1. Profit shall be negotiated as a separate element of the price for each contract in which
there is a no price competition and in all cases where cost analysis is performed. To
establish a fair and reasonable profit, consideration must be given to the complexity of
the work to be performed, the risk borne by the contractor, the contractor's investment,
the amount of subcontracting, the quality of its record of past performance, and industry
profit rates in the surrounding geographical area for similar work.
2. Costs or prices based on estimated costs for contracts under the federal award are
allowable only to the extent that costs incurred or cost estimates included in negotiated
prices would be allowable for the City under Subpart E- Cost Principles of Part 200-
Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards.
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 21 of 24
3. The cost plus a percentage of cost and percentage of construction cost methods of
contracting shall be used.
F. Federal Awarding Agency or Pass -Through Entity Review.
1. The City shall make available, upon request of the federal awarding agency or pass -
through entity, technical specifications on proposed procurements where the federal
awarding agency or pass -through entity believes such review is needed to ensure that
the item or service specified is the one being proposed for acquisition. This review
generally will take place prior to the time the specification is incorporated into a solicitation
document. However, if the City desires to have the review accomplished after a
solicitation has been developed, the Federal awarding agency or pass -through entity may
still review the specifications, with such review usually limited to the technical aspects of
the proposed purchase.
2. The City will make available upon request, for the Federal awarding agency or pass -
through entity pre -procurement review, procurement documents, such as requests for
proposals or invitations for bids, or independent cost estimates, when:
a. Procurement procedures or operations fails to comply with the procurement
standards in this part;
b. The procurement is expected to exceed the Simplified Acquisition Threshold and
is to be awarded without competition or only one bid or offer is received in response
to a solicitation;
c. The procurement, which is expected to exceed the Simplified Acquisition
Threshold, specifies a "brand name" product;
d. The proposed contract is more than the Simplified Acquisition Threshold and is to
be awarded to other than the apparent low bidder under a sealed bid procurement;
or
e. A proposed contract modification changes the scope of a contract or increases the
contract amount by more than the Simplified Acquisition Threshold.
3. The City is exempt from the pre -procurement review in paragraph 2 of this section if
the federal awarding agency or pass -through entity determines that its procurement
systems comply with the standards of this part.
4. The City may request that its procurement system be reviewed by the federal awarding
agency or pass -through entity to determine whether its system meets these standards in
order for its system to be certified. Generally, these reviews must occur where there is
continuous high -dollar funding, and third -party contracts are awarded on a regular basis;
5. The City may self -certify its procurement system. Such self -certification must not limit
the federal awarding agency's right to survey the system. Under a self -certification
procedure, the federal awarding agency may rely on written assurances from the City that
it is complying with these standards. The City must cite specific policies, procedures,
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Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 22 of 24
regulations, or standards as being in compliance with these requirements and have its
system available for review.
G. Bonding Requirements. For construction or facility improvement contracts or
subcontracts exceeding the Simplified Acquisition Threshold the federal awarding or
pass -through entity may accept the bonding policy and requirements of the City provided
that the federal awarding agency or pass -through entity has made a determination that
the federal interest is adequately protected. If such a determination has not been made,
the minimum requirements must be as follows:
1. A bid guarantee from each bidder equivalent to five percent (5%) of the bid price. The
bid guarantee must consist of a firm commitment such as a bid bond, certified check, or
other negotiable instrument accompanying a bid as assurance that the bidder will, upon
acceptance of the bid, execute such contractual documents as may be required within
the time specified;
2. A performance bond on the part of the contractor for 100 percent (100%) of the contract
price. A performance bond is one executed in connection with a contract to secure
fulfillment of all the contractor's obligations under such contract; and,
3. A payment bond on the part of the contractor for 100 percent (100%) of the contract
price. A payment bond is one executed in connection with a contract to assure payment
as required by law of all persons supplying labor and material in the execution of the work
provided for in the contract.
H. Contract Provisions. All federal funding source compliance provisions shall include
the following:
1. Equal Employment Opportunity- All contracts, when funded in whole or partly by
monies derived from the federal government (either directly or indirectly), shall contain a
provision requiring compliance with Equal Employment Opportunity.
2. Davis -Bacon Act- Applies to construction contracts in excess of $2,000. It requires
contracts to pay laborers and mechanics wages not less than the prevailing wage as
determined by the Secretary of Labor and must be required to pay wages not less than
once a week. Each bid solicitation published by the City must contain the current
prevailing wage determination. Any award of the contract must be conditioned on
contractor's acceptance of that wage determination and suspected or reported violations
of this act shall be immediately reported to the Federal awarding agency.
3. Copeland "Anti -Kickback" Act- Applies to construction contracts in excess of $2,000. It
prohibits kickbacks in construction contracts funded with Federal monies. Contractors and
subcontractors or subrecipients shall be prohibited from inducing any person employed
in the construction, completion, or repair of public work, to give up any part of the
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 23 of 24
compensation to which he or she is otherwise entitled and suspected or reported
violations shall be immediately reported to the Federal awarding agency.
4. Clean Air Act & Federal Water Pollution Control Act- Applies to contracts and sub
grants in excess of $150,000. Contractor shall be required to comply with all applicable
standards, orders or regulations issued pursuant to the Clean Air Act and the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act. Suspected or reported violations must be reported to the
Federal awarding agency and the Regional Office of the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
5. Debarment and Suspension- Contracts funded with federal grant monies may not be
awarded to contractors that have been debarred or suspended from receiving federal
monies pursuant to the System for Award Management (SAM).
6. Byrd Anti -Lobbying Amendment- Contractors that apply or bid for an award of $100,000
must certify that they will not and have not used federal funds to pay any person or
organization for influencing or attempting to influence an officer or employee of any
agency, a member of Congress, officer or employee of Congress, or an employee of a
member of Congress in connection with obtaining any Federal contract, grant or any other
award.
7. Any other detailed Federal contract provisions as described in 2 CFR 200 and in force
at the time of procurement shall apply.
I. Contracting with small and minority business, women's business enterprises,
and labor surplus area firms. All necessary affirmative steps will be taken to assure
that minority business, women's business enterprises, and labor surplus area firms are
used when possible. Affirmative steps include:
1. Placing qualified small and minority businesses and women's business enterprises on
solicitation lists;
2. Assuring that small and minority businesses and women's business enterprises are
solicited whenever they are potential sources;
3. Dividing total requirements, when economically feasible, into smaller tasks or quantities
to permit maximum participation by small and minority businesses and women's business
enterprises;
4. Establishing delivery schedules, where the requirement permits, which encourage
participation by small and minority businesses and women's business enterprises;
Resolution No. 2023 — 008
Purchasing and Contracting Policy
Adopted: April 18, 2023
Page 24 of 24
5. Using the services and assistance, as appropriate, of such organizations as the Small
Business Administration and the Minority Business Development Agency of the
Department of Commerce; and,
6. Requiring the prime contractor, if subcontracts are to be let, to take the affirmative steps
listed in paragraphs (1) through (5) of this section.