OPINION
The Supreme Court is called upon to decide who will remove the rubbish, or “black gold,” in the Town of Johnston. The intervening defendant, Rambone Disposal Services, Inc. (Rambone), appeals from a judgment in the Superior Court granting declaratory and injunctive relief and mandamus to the plaintiff, Coastal Recycling, Inc. (Coastal). The Superior Court’s decision effectively overturned a decision made by the Town Council (council) of the Town of Johnston (town) rejecting Coastal’s bid and recommending that Rambone be awarded the four-year refuse collection contract (contract) instead. Coastal alleges that after a series of private meetings between members of the council and representatives from Ram-bone, the council speciously overturned the decision of the town’s finance director and purchasing officer, Leo Fox (Fox), awarding the contract to Coastal. The trial justice determined that Fox had exclusive authority to award the contract and overturned the council’s decision. Rambone timely appealed and this Court granted its request to expedite the review. Upon careful consideration, we conclude that the trial justice misinterpreted the law and reverse his decision and remand this case back to the town for proceedings in accordance with this decision.
I
Facts and Travel
Until the fall of 2002, a curbside refuse and disposal company called New England Ecological Development, Inc. (NEED), had a contract with the town to remove all residential refuse. By September of 2002, NEED fell into financial trouble and was unable to abide by the terms of the contract. The town immediately began the search to fill the four-year contract to collect all residential refuse, recyclables, and yard waste. Meanwhile, the town awarded an interim contract to Rambone.
Although ten companies expressed interest in the contract, set to commence on July 1, 2003, only five companies submitted bids. The bid application was long and set forth many minimum requirements before a bid would be considered. For example, the bid application required that bidders supply an answer for every applicable blank line on the application and specified that the town would not be bound by oral interpretations of the meaning of any specifications given by town officers, employees or agents. In addition, bidders were required to submit a bid security 2 of 15 *713 percent of the value of their proposed bid, or $20,000, whichever was more, in the form of a certified check or a bank cashier’s or treasurer’s check or bid bond. The bidders also were required to submit a letter signed by an insurance or bonding company certifying that if the bidder were awarded the contract it would be covered by a performance bond. 3 Additionally, bidders were required to submit separate prices for “bulky waste collection,” recyclables collection, and yard waste collection.
The five bids were opened on October 16, 2002. Fox, as the town’s purchasing officer, reviewed the applications and researched the backgrounds of the two lowest bidders. Coastal submitted the lowest bid, $4,858,900, and Rambone submitted the second-lowest bid, $5,577,486. Fox determined that both contractors were “qualified, responsive and responsible bidders.” Fox sent a letter to Coastal informing the company that it had been awarded the contract, potentially subject to a town council decision made in the event of a “protest and public hearing brought by a competing bidder * * *.”
Shortly after the bids were opened, Rambone sent a letter to the town alerting it to several deficiencies in Coastal’s bid. Among other problems, Rambone noted that Coastal had failed to submit 15 percent of the value of its bid, $728,885, as bid security. Apparently relying on a conversation with Fox, Coastal had submitted a check for only $20,000. In addition, Coastal had failed to itemize its prices for refuse pickup and yard waste pickup for all four years. Furthermore, Coastal’s letter from an insurance company stating that it would execute a performance bond if Coastal’s bid were accepted was conditioned on Coastal’s projected financial situation for June 2003.
On March 5, 2003, Rambone wrote another letter detailing the deficiencies in Coastal’s application. He then met with members of the town council individually to give them the letters to discuss his concerns.
Noting that the council would be discussing the resolution to award the contract to Coastal on March 10, 2003, Ram-bone attended the town council meeting but did not participate. Coastal was unaware that issues regarding its bid would be discussed at the meeting and did not attend. At the meeting, Councilman Joseph A. Wells opined that because Coastal failed to meet all of the specifications set out in the bid application, Coastal’s bid should not be considered. After a brief discussion of Coastal’s application, including the failure to submit an appropriate bid security, the council moved to reject the resolution to award the contract to Coastal.
Once it was established at the hearing that the council would not accept the award to Coastal, confusion arose about what should next occur. Fox and Town Solicitor Louis A. DeSimone, Jr. (DeSi-mone) argued that although the council had authority to reject the bid, the council did not have the power to award the contract to another bidder. Conversely, the council was opposed to starting over and re-soliciting bids, as Fox suggested, and preferred to save resources by simply awarding the contract to the second “lowest, responsive, responsible bidder”: Ram-bone. After a long discussion, the council *714 voted unanimously to deny the resolution awarding the contract to Coastal and recommended that .the bid be awarded to Rambone.
When Coastal heard about the council’s decision it filed a complaint in the Superior Court against Fox, the town, and the council members. Coastal requested a declaratory judgment and a writ of mandamus directing Fox to award the bid to Coastal and an injunction prohibiting the defendants from awarding the contract to any other bidders. Rambone intervened as a defendant, arguing that Coastal was without standing to challenge the council’s decision and that the council’s decision “awarding” the contract to Rambone was proper.
The trial justice determined, in a bench decision, that pursuant to G.L.1956 chapter 55 of title 45, “[i]t is the Purchasing Officer who runs the show, so to speak, regarding the bidding process. The Town Council and other town officials have little or nothing to do with it.” He held that Fox “may execute at this point in time any necessary documents to bind the Town * * * in a contract as successfully bid for by Coastal * * *. [The council is] not to interfere with that in any way.” Rambone then filed a motion to stay the judgment while it appealed to this Court which the trial justice denied. Rambone timely appealed and filed motions to stay the Superior Court’s judgment and to expedite review. We granted both motions and heard oral arguments on May 10, 2004.
II
Discussion
It is well established that when reviewing the bidding process set forth in § 45-55-5, “the Judiciary will interfere with the award of a state or municipal contract only in the event that the awarding authority has ‘acted corruptly or in bad faith, or so unreasonably or so arbitrarily as to be guilty of a palpable abuse of discretion.’ ”
H.V. Collins Co. v. Tarro,
Section 8-38 of the Johnston Town Code states that the “finance director * * * shall perform the work of buying for the town, and shall, in accordance with this article, purchase or contract for all supplies, materials, equipment or work.” Section 9.6(3) of the Johnston Town Charter describes the town’s policy on competitive bidding and expressly states that “the purchasing authority may be directed by the [c]ouncil to reject any or all bids, and re-solicit bids * * * in the appropriate manner as prescribed above.” The bid application completed by both Coastal and Rambone, however, alerts bidding applicants that “[t]he Town Council -will award the Contract to the most qualified, responsive and responsible Bidder submitting the most advantageous bid to the Town.”
Coastal argues that § 45-55-3 delegates all authority to conduct open bidding and award municipal contracts to one purchasing officer or officers. Therefore, *715 according to Coastal’s argument, adopted by the trial justice, Fox, as the town’s purchasing officer, had sole authority to award the contract and the council was without power to review that decision. Coastal argues that the state statute preempts the town’s ordinance and charter and, thus, the provisions of the charter and bid application granting the council discretion to accept or reject the purchasing officer’s decision are a nullity. We disagree.
A state statute preempts municipal ordinances when either the language in the ordinance contradicts the language in the statute or when the Legislature has intended to “thoroughly occupy the field.”
Town of East Greenwich v. O’Neil,
The town’s policy of allowing the council to reject or accept any decision made by the purchasing officer, after the purchasing officer has followed the parameters set for accepting competitive bids, is wholly consistent with and supportive of the Legislature’s intent to make the bidding system consistent throughout the state. This is not the first time this court has been asked to interpret a municipality’s home rule charter in light of § 45-55-5.
See, e.g., H.V. Collins Co. v. Tarro,
We briefly turn to whether the council exercised “sound discretion” in rejecting Fox’s decision to award the contract to Coastal.
Gilbane Building Co. v. Board of Trustees of State Colleges,
The issue, therefore, is whether the council exercised sound discretion in re-lecting Fox’s award to Coastal and we conclude that it did. We have held that pursuant to municipal charters such as the town’s, municipal contracts can properly be awarded to a bidder “other than the lowest bidder when the awarding authority deems it in the public interest to do so.”
H.V. Collins Co.,
We are now presented with the same issue the council grappled with at its meeting: What happens now that the council has exercised its authority to reject Coastal’s bid? Section 9.6 of the town’s charter provides the answer, stating that “the purchasing authority may be directed by the [c]ouncil to reject any or all bids, and re-solicit bids * * * in the appropriate manner * * *.” Based on the plain language of the charter, it is clear that whether the council chooses to reject “any” bid or “all” bids the town then must re-solicit bids, following the process outlined in § 45-55-5, and Johnston’s Home Rule
*717
Charter, before a new bid can be accepted.
See In re Abby D.,
In this town, in accordance with its charter, the purchasing officer is authorized to oversee the bidding process and make recommendations to the council. The council then is permitted to reject any or all of the bids that the purchasing agent collects. If the council rejects any bids and the town would still like to fulfill the contract, then the purchasing officer is called upon again to solicit bids, and the process begins anew. Of course the town is free to amend its charter to provide other bid options for the council and for the purchasing officer.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the Superior Court and order the town to re-solicit bids pursuant to this decision. The record shall be remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. Bid security is used if a contractor whose bid is accepted fails to enter the contract and *713 the town is forced to employ the services of a higher bidder. The bid security is used to pay the difference between the two proposed bids so the town is no worse off if the contractor it originally selected does not do the job.
. A performance bond insures faithful performance in the full amount of the contract price.
. Although the trial justice suggested that the council’s decision was perhaps the result of alleged long-term friendships between Ram-bone and various council members, this im *716 plication was simply a "footnote” to his decision. The trial justice based his decision on his interpretation of the statute, concluding that "Fox has prerogatives and responsibilities mandated by the legislature. He * * * had the authority conferred on him by the legislature by virtue of his appointment as Purchasing Officer by the Town * * * to preside over the bidding process, to determine the lowest, responsive and responsible bidder, and then to seek to enter into a contract.” Coastal has not raised the issue of potential "corrupt or bad faith” conduct on the part of the council on appeal and we find no evidence of corruption on the record before us.
