(a) An entity that does business with the department is required to:
(1) disclose to the department in writing the existence of a conflict of interest involving an agreement between the entity and the department and adequately remedy the conflict:
- (A) before the effective date of the agreement; or
- (B) if the conflict of interest arises after the effective date of the agreement, within five working days after the date that the entity knows or should have known of the conflict;
- (2) adhere to all civil and criminal laws related to business;
- (3) maintain good standing with the comptroller, other state agencies, states, and agencies of the federal government with which the entity has had a business relationship;
(4) notify the department in writing within five working days after the date that the entity knows or should have known of the existence of, and must adequately address:
- (A) a conviction of a bidding crime, a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a charge of a bidding crime, a civil judgment for a bidding crime, or a public admission to a bidding crime, whether made by the entity or by an individual or other entity that acted on behalf of the entity;
- (B) a conviction of an offense indicating a lack of moral or ethical integrity, such as bribery or payment of kickbacks or secret rebates to agents of a governmental entity, if the offense reflects on the business practices of the entity;
- (C) debarment of the entity by the comptroller, another state agency, another state, or an agency of the federal government for a ground related to business integrity; or
(D) any behavior of the entity that seriously and directly affects the entity's responsibility to the department and that is also a violation of:
- (i) the law; or
- (ii) the department's rules that relate to the entity's dealing with the department.
(5) disclose to the department any discovery of credible evidence of:
- (A) a violation of a law involving fraud, bribery, or conflict of interest in connection with the award or performance of its contract;
- (B) a violation of this section on the part of a subcontractor or subprovider on its contract; or
- (C) an overpayment on its contract;
- (6) cooperate fully with the department or any other government agency responsible for audits, investigations, or corrective actions;
- (7) prohibit its employees who have access to non-public information by reason of performance on a department contract from using the information for personal gain; and
(8) refrain from committing acts indicating a lack of moral or ethical integrity and reflecting on the business practices of the entity, including:
- (A) offering, giving, or agreeing to give a benefit to a member of the commission or to a department employee;
- (B) submitting an offer below anticipated costs, with an expectation of either increasing the contract amount after award or recovering incurred losses by receiving follow-on contracts at artificially high prices;
- (C) disclosing or receiving bid or proposal information in exchange for a thing of value or to give anyone a competitive advantage in the award of a department contract;
- (D) retaliating against an employee for disclosing information to the department relating to a violation of law related to a department contract, including the competition for or negotiation of a contract;
- (E) knowingly entering into a subcontract with an entity that is suspended or debarred by the department;
- (F) making false or misleading statements in order to obtain a benefit, including falsifying or permitting misrepresentation of its qualifications; or
- (G) disposing of waste in an unauthorized area.
- (b) In this section, "bidding crime" means an act prohibited by state or federal law that involves fraud, conspiracy, collusion, perjury, or material misrepresentation with respect to a public contract, regardless of where the act was committed.
Source Note:The provisions of this §10.101 adopted to be effective January 6, 2011, 35 TexReg 11951; amended to be effective September 19, 2018, 43 TexReg 6000.