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The procedures here are issued to help clarify and
document the proper way to establish a personal service,
purchased service, or other contractual obligation other than
the purchase of goods. Changes in current State Law and
increasing liability issues make it essential that these
procedures are adopted in every department, by all university
personnel.
Personal Service: A personal service is
an expert service provided by an individual or company that
results in evaluations or recommendations, policies,
procedures, training, or similar planning document or tool.
For the purposes of this procedure, Personal Services are
subject to policies and law established for OFM's management
of State contracts for personal services.
Client Service: A personal service
provided directly to agency clients. RCW 39.29.006(2)
defines client services as: ... services provided directly
to agency clients including, but not limited to, medical
and dental services, employment and training programs,
residential care, and subsidized housing. Students may be
considered clients where the contractor provides direct
services to students such as counseling, guest lectures,
student workshops or entertainment services. The contractor
must be providing direct service to the client for the
service to be designated a client service. Direct service
means the contractor is in direct, face-to-face contact
with the individual clients as part of providing the client
service.
Purchased Service: A purchased service is
the purchase of a service that usually is associated with
specialized or crafts labor and is either ordinary
maintenance or in amounts less than those defined above as
"Public Works". For the purposes of this procedure, Purchased
Services are subject to policies and law established for the
State General Administration's purchase of goods and
services.
Employee: Washington State Employment
Security Department has revised the definition of an
employer/employee relationship. Except for honorariums (see
definition), if an individual is performing a personal
service and they do not have a business license, the
relationship is considered an employer/employee relationship.
Employee hires are performed through Personnel Action forms
available from the Personnel Office or the Provost Office for
academic hires.
Architectural and Engineering Services:
These professional services provide planning for Public Works
projects. Only the University Facilities Planning Department
may enter into these types of contractual services. For the
purposes of this procedure, these contracts are subject to
State Laws specific to these contracts and the procedures
detailed in this document do not apply.
Evidence of Competition: For the purposes
of this procedure, "evidence of competition" refers to the
documentation to support your investigation into alternative
sources of the personal service. A written solicitation
document should be used to obtain information from these
sources. See the requirements below and obtain a sample of a
solicitation document.
Formal Competition: For the purposes of
this procedure, formal competition refers to the process
conducted by the University Purchasing Department of issuing
a written Bid or Request for Proposal; establishing
evaluation criteria; advertising and mailing bids; and
scoring returned bids or proposals.
Sole Source Justification: For the
purposes of this procedure, sole source justification, as
defined by the Office of Financial Management (OFM), must
include the following:
A. Specific Problem or Need. Identify
and fully describe the specific problem, requirement or
need which the contract is intended to address, and which
makes the services necessary. Also include an explanation
as to how the agency determined the services are critical
or essential to agency responsibilities or operations
and/or whether the services are mandated or authorized by
the Legislature.
B. Other Public Resources. Explain what
effort has been taken to conclude: (a) that sufficient
staffing or expertise is not available within the agency to
perform the service, and (b) that other qualified public
resources are not available to perform the service more
efficiently or more cost effectively.
C. Competition Not Appropriate. Explain
how the agency concluded that competitive procurement was
not appropriate in this instance.
D. Sole Source Criteria. Include a
detailed explanation of the items below which are relevant
to the sole source decision:
(i) Unique nature of the service and/or the unique
qualifications, abilities or expertise of the contractor to
meet the agency needs. Unique service would be those which
are highly specialized or one-of-a-kind. However, other
factors which may be considered include past performance,
cost-effectiveness (learning curve) and/or follow-up nature
of the required services.
(ii) Any other special circumstances which may be relevant
such as confidential investigations, copyright
restrictions, or time constraints. If time constraints are
applicable, identify when the agency was on notice of the
need for the services, the entity that imposed the
constraints, explain the authority (if not obvious) of that
entity to impose them, and provide the timelines within
which work must be accomplished.
(iii) Sole availability in the location required. If the
proposed contractor is the only source available in the
geographical area, state the basis for this conclusion and
the rationale for limiting the size of the geographical
area selected.
E. Reasonableness of Costs. Since
competition was not used as the means for procurement,
explain how the agency concluded that the costs, fees or
rates negotiated are fair and reasonable. Either make a
comparison with comparable contracts, use the results of a
market survey or employ some other appropriate means
calculated to make such a determination.
If the contract is being filed based on a cumulative sole
source total of contracts awarded to the contractor in a
fiscal year, include the total amount of the other sole
source contracts and amendments awarded during the fiscal
year to this contractor.
F. Sole Source Advertisement. Sole
source contracts of $20,000 or more are required to be
advertised in either a statewide or regional newspaper.
Advertisements may also be published in other media as
appropriate. The advertising requirement is based on the
estimated contract amount, and is not a cumulative total of
sole source contracts with a contractor in a fiscal
year.
Include the name(s) of the newspaper(s) in which the
advertisement was published, the date(s) of the
advertisement(s) and the name(s) of those responding. If no
responses were received, please so indicate in the sole
source justification. If one or more responses are
received, explain how the agency concluded the contract is
appropriate for sole source award. List any other potential
contractors that were contacted through other means and
explain why these firms could not perform the services.
If the sole source contract is exempt from advertising,
clearly identify the basis for the exemption and include a
copy of the documentation which provides the authority for
the exemption, as applicable.
Dollar Amounts: For the purposes of this
procedure, specific dollar amounts refer to the value of the
contract, cumulatively, for any single 12 month period.
Public Works: These purchased services
result in construction or capital improvements to buildings
or properties, other than ordinary maintenance. Any project
by a single craft in excess of $10,000, or by multiple crafts
in excess of $25,000 is considered Public Works. Only the
University Facilities Management Department may enter into
these types of contractual services. For the purposes of this
procedure, these contracts are subject to State laws specific
to these contracts and the procedures detailed in this
document do not apply.
Civil Penalty for Violation of Policies:
A $300 civil penalty may be assessed to any individual who
knowingly violates the policies stated. The University will
be unable to pay for these penalties if incurred.
Authorization:
- Personal Services may only be contracted by submitting
a requisition to the Purchasing Department prior to
commencement of any work.
- Once a requisition is received, competition is obtained
and documented, contracts are filed with OFM and a Purchase
Order is created prior to work being performed.
-
Prior to procuring personal services valued at $5,000 or
more, OFM requires CWU to document the following:
- The service is critical to agency responsibities or
operations, or is mandated or authorized by the
Legislature;
- Sufficient staffing or expertise is not available
within the agency to perform the service; and
- Other qualified public resources are not available
to perform the service either more efficiently or cost
effectively.
Requirements for a signed two-way
contract: Any personal service contract in excess of
$500 should have a contract signed by both the authorized
University agent and the contractor. A standard
agreement form is available, which can be used for simple
contractual relationships.
Please note:
- Contracts must be approved by the purchasing office
before they are executed.
- Only certain individuals have been delegated signature
authority to contract for the University.
For more complex contracts, the Business
Services and Contracts Department can assist in contract
preparation.
Requirements for Competition:
| Dollar Threshold |
Competitive Process |
Personal Services Competitive
Procurement Major Activities |
| |
Sole Source |
If contracts are with sole source providers, a
written Sole Source Justification must be prepared (see
definition). |
| $1 - $4,999 |
Not Required |
- Seeking competition is always recommended, though
not required.
- Telephone calls can be made to firms or
individuals describing the service desired and
requesting price, schedule and qualifications to
perform.
- Contract is entered into upon selection of
contractor.
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$5,000
to
$19,999 |
Informal Competition
(Evidence of Competition) |
- Prepare written document/letter including at a
minimum: description of services required, project
schedule, request for consultant’s
qualifications, request for costs or fees and due
date for responses.
- Send to a minimum of three firms/individuals. May
be faxed to them and responses may be faxed to agency
to expedite processing.
- Evaluate responses and make award decision.
- Negotiate contract.
- Document for file: names of firms solicited;
information on firm’s responses; basis for
award decision; copy of contract.
|
$20,000
or
More
|
Formal Competition |
- Prepare formal solicitation document, e.g.,
Request for Proposals (RFP) or Request for
Qualifications/Quotations (RFQQ). Include all
requirements in order for proposer to understand what
the agency needs and how the agency will evaluate
responses.
- Publish legal notice in major daily newspaper in
Washington State to notify firms of upcoming
solicitation. Develop bidder’s list from firms
responding to notice, internal agency listing,
etc.
- Issue RFP or RFQQ.
- Conduct preproposal conference, if scheduled in
RFP or RFQQ, and issue minutes.
- Date and time stamp proposals received by due
date.
- Evaluate proposals strictly against what is set
forth in the RFP or RFQQ and score. Schedule oral
interviews, if required. Determine apparent
successful contractor.
- Notify successful and unsuccessful firms.
- Negotiate contract with apparent successful
contractor.
- Conduct debriefing conferences, if
requested.
- File contract with OFM (institutions of higher
education may not be required to file due to fund
source).
- Begin contract work.
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Requirements for Filing Contract with OFM for
Review and Approval:
| Procurement Type |
Dollar Threshold For Filing |
Funding Source |
OFM Review
or Approval |
Filing Period |
| Sole Source |
$5,000 to $19,999
$20,000 or more
|
State Funds
Non-State Funds
State Funds
Non-State Funds
|
OFM Review
Filing not required
OFM Approval
Filing not required
|
10-working day adv. filing
Report at end of fiscal year
10-working day adv. filing
Report at end of fiscal year
|
Competitive contracts and amendments
(not included in list below)
Competitive contracts and amendments
for: Management consulting, Org. Dev, Marketing,
Communications, Employee Training and Recruitment
|
$20,000 or more
$20,000 or more
|
State Funds
Non-State Funds
State Funds
Non-State Funds
|
OFM Review
Filing not required
OFM Approval
Filing not required
|
Work may start on or after day filed with
OFM
Report at end of FY
10-working day adv. filing
Report at end of fiscal year
|
| Amendments to competitive or sole
source contract that result in contract amount greater
than 50% of original value or which constitute a
substantial change in scope of work. |
$5,000 or more (contract, when amended, equals $5,000 or
more) |
State Funds
Non-State Funds |
OFM Approval
Filing not required |
10-working day adv. filing
Report at end of fiscal year |
| Emergency |
$5,000 or more |
State Funds
Non-State Funds |
OFM Review
Filing not required |
3-working days from date of execution or
start of work, whichever is sooner.
Report at end of FY |
Contracts Exempted from Competition and Filing
with OFM:
- Personal Service Contracts less than $5,000.
- Contracts for services performed for prices established
by published tariff.
- Interagency Agreements.
- Contracts necessary to provide collaborative research
when the contractor is approved by the granting
agency.
- Contracts for Client Services such as performances or
instruction for students.
- Engineering & Architectural Services.
Documentation Required:
- Requisition to authorize payment. This must reference
the provider's Federal Tax I.D. or their social security
number if not a company.
- Signed contracts if in excess of $500
- OFM Filing Sheet if required to be filed with OFM
- W-9 form if not already on file.
- Vendor invoice or State A-19 Invoice Voucher,
referencing the Purchase Order number must be submitted to
Accounts Payable to initiate any payment.
Honorariums are personal service
contracts and being the most prevalent, deserve special
attention in this procedure manual.
Definition: Honorariums are
personal service contracts with individuals
who are performing a one time service of limited duration
(less than one week). Honoraria individuals have an expertise but do not have a business license.
Individuals who have been CWU employees within the current calendar year cannot be paid honoraria. These individuals should be paid through Payroll instead. For the purposes of this procedure, honorariums are considered personal services under $500. Honoraria dollar amounts normally include ALL EXPENSES of the individuals being paid by this means.
Documentation:
- A Purchase Requisition must be
submitted prior to any work performed.
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- A Purchase Order will be issued by the Purchasing
Department.
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- To receive payment, a W-9 form must be submitted (or
previously on file with the University) with an Invoice
Voucher (A-19) which references the Purchase Order
Number.
Authorization: Purchased Services (except
for Public Works) may only be contracted by submitting a
requisition to the Purchasing Department prior to
commencement of any work.
Requirements for Competition:
- Any purchased service in excess of $3,300 but less than
$46,200 must have at least three quotes obtained by the
University Purchasing Department. These quotes may be
obtained by phone or fax.
-
- Any purchased service in excess of $46,200 must have
formal competition (see definition ).
Requirements for Liability Insurance: A
vendor or contractor is required to show proof of property,
professional, or general liability coverage, sufficient to
the University Business Services & Contracts Department,
prior to commencement of any work performed on University
property. This is required regardless of contractual
amount.
Requirements for Payment of Prevailing
Wage:
- Any Public Works contract.
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- Any installation requiring the services of skilled
trades personnel.
Exceptions to Payment of Prevailing
Wage:
- Work performed by the sole owners or their
spouses.
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- Work performed by any partner that owns at least 30% of
a partnership.
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- Work performed by any president, vice president, or
treasurer of a corporation that owns at least 30% of the
corporation.
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- Continuing and necessary ordinary maintenance (except
for janitorial services) such as maintenance agreements on
equipment.
Requirements for a signed two-way
contract: Any purchased service in excess of $500
should have a contract signed by both the authorized
University agent and the contractor. This may be waived in
cases where a Purchase order alone, by virtue of its
acceptance by the contractor, sufficiently establishes the
terms of payment and the deliverable consideration from the
contractor. This decision may only be made by the Director of
Business Services and Contracts.
Other types of contracts might include grants, leases,
maintenance, in-kind, interagency, revenue generating, or
similar contracts that do not fall under the
category of purchased goods, purchased service, or personal
service.
Authorization: Authorization for
signature authorities for these types of contracts may be
found in the University Policy manual, however, at minimum,
these contracts must be reviewed by the Director of Business
Services and Contracts.
Documentation: Documentation required
will depend if the contract is revenue generating or requires
payments by the University.
If there are any associated payments to be made by the
University, a Purchase Requisition will be required as well
as signed contracts. If it is a revenue generating contract,
signed contracts will be required.
Documentation is substantially the same for either
Purchased Services or Personal Services and will be
differentiated where necessary in this section.
Purchase Requisition: A Purchase
Requisition must be submitted to the Purchasing Department
which authorizes the expenditure. This must be submitted
prior to the commencement of any work. This is an
originating department responsibility.
Bid or RFP Document: A Bid or RFP will be
issued if necessary by the Purchasing Department (see
competitive requirements ). See the subsequent section of
this procedure which addresses the development of contracts
or bid documents. This is a joint originating department
and Purchasing department responsibility.
Signed Contract: Two original, signed
contracts must be obtained if the work is in excess of $500.
This may be developed on the University's Standard
Agreement Form available here, from Central Services, or
an otherwise approved contract form. The contract must be
reviewed and approved by the Business Services Department and
signed by the authorized University Agent appropriate for the
service or department requesting the service. See the
University Policy manual for signature authorities. See the
subsequent section of this procedure which addresses the
development of contracts or bid documents. The Business
Service Department will assist in preparing these documents.
This is a joint originating department and Purchasing
department responsibility.
OFM Personal Service Filing Face Sheet:
This document must be completed if the personal service
contract is required to be filed and approved by OFM at least
10 days prior to the commencement of any work (see list
of contracts requiring filing). It is available from the
Business Services department. This is a joint originating
department and Purchasing department responsibility.
Certificate of Insurance: Any
purchased service performed on campus cannot
commence until adequate proof of insurance is obtained and
approved by the Purchasing or Business Services department.
This is a Purchasing Department Responsibility.
Purchase Order: The University Purchasing
Department will issue a Purchase Order after receiving the
necessary documents above and a determination is made as to
who will perform the work.
Affidavits of Intent to Pay Prevailing Wage and
Affidavits of Payment of Prevailing Wage: These
documents are obtained from the Department of Labor and
Industry for Purchased Service contracts subject to
prevailing wage (see for requirements for prevailing
wage).This is a Purchasing Department
Responsibility.
Payment Documents: The following
documents are required to see that a provider is paid.
These documents are the joint responsibility of the
originating department and the provider.
W-9 Form: This form must be submitted
once (usually with first payment) for any personal
service provided.
A-19 Invoice Voucher or Vendor Invoice:
Payment cannot be made without some type of invoicing. For
Honorariums or other personal services provided by
individuals not customary with submitting invoices, an A-19
State of Washington Invoice Voucher is used. This form is
available from the accounting department section of the CWU forms webpage.
Originating Departments should assist individuals who are not
accustomed to invoicing for services to complete this form.
Departments that need assistance completing this form should
contact Accounts Payable.
The following is a general outline for establishing a
personal service or purchased service contract for consulting
or other professional services. Establishing an
RFP or a Contract should be the joint responsibility of the
Business Services Department and the Originating
Department.
Uncomplicated Contracts: For less complex
contracts hat have an easily defined task, completion time,
and payment schedule, the University has a Standard
Agreement Form which may be obtained here, or from
Central Services. This form has Standard terms and conditions
and spaces provided to complete the necessary parts of a
contract.
Complex Contracts: More complex contracts
that require more than one line descriptions of the task,
completion time, or payment schedule should follow the
guidelines below for establishing a contract. The
same steps apply to either preparing an RFP or preparing a
contract.
Questions in section I should be addressed
regardless of contract amount. Steps II through VI refer to
the competitive process.
1. Consider the structure you expect for the finished
service contract.
A. What work is expected to be accomplished
B. What type of final reports will be expected
C. If possible, what measure will there be to determine
completeness of the work.
D. What time-frame will the contractor have for completing
the work. Are there critical beginning or ending dates
involved.
E. What format do you expect the compensation to take, ie,
firm price for work performed; time and materials with a
not to exceed limitation; Published rate structures; other
(?)
F. What are the qualifications you require of the
consultant, ie, years of past experience?; 1, 2, 3, or more
references for work of similar scope and nature?; Special
licenses required?; background experience of any employees
who will be directly involved in the contract?
G. What type of insurance must the consultant have while
performing this work. The University Business Services and
Contracts Office should be consulted for proper types and
amounts of coverage.
H. Establish evaluation criteria to be used in reviewing
proposal responses from qualified consultants and who will
be evaluating these proposals.
2. Prepare responses to section 1, A-H, and send (e-mail)
to the Purchasing Office with a Purchase Requisition. This
will initiate the competitive process.
3. Solicitation of proposals from qualified consultants.
This will be done by the Purchasing office.
This process, from the date the Purchasing Dept. receives
information in section 1, is approximately 3 weeks.
- Preparation of a Request for Proposal based on
information provided by the department. Additional
(standard terms), if necessary, will be added to the
information provided by the department.
- Advertise our needs in the Seattle Daily Journal of
Commerce and any suggested trade journal will be done by
the Purchasing Department.
- Mail Requests to any known, qualified consultants.
4. Evaluation of proposals submitted.
- Grade or compare to evaluation criteria
established.
- Select consultant
5. Prepare a contract and acquire signatures and
approvals
- Consultant or Contractor Signature Approvals.
- Departmental Signature Approvals
- University Contracts Signature Approval
6. If over $5,000 for the fiscal year, contract may have
be sent to OFM for approval at least 10 days prior to when
work will commence if the contract is with a sole source
provider.
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