Wyo. Code R. 027-0003-3
Chapter 3: Procurement by Competitive Bidding, Competitive Negotiation, or Noncompetitive Negotiation
Effective Date: 04/28/2021 to Current
Rule Type: Current Rules & Regulations
Reference Number: 027.0003.3.04282021
Section 1. Authority. These rules are promulgated by the Wyoming State Construction Department, herein referred to as the Department, in accordance with W.S. 9-2-3004(c)(ii) and 9-23-105(e).
(a) This chapter applies to agency procurement of capital construction project materials and services using a process of competitive sealed bidding, competitive negotiation, or noncompetitive negotiation. This chapter does not apply to the procurement of professional services (Chapter 2 of these rules) or alternative design and construction delivery methods (Chapter 4 of these rules).
(b) The Department Director may authorize the use of federal procedures for military department procurements as allowed by W.S. 9-2-3006(a)(iv).
(a) The Department reserves the right to use procurement software and related technology to meet any of the requirements of this chapter, including but not limited to opening, noting, and time stamping receipt of bids.
(b) The Department Director may delegate the exercise of the Department's discretion to a procuring agency.
(a) A contract for capital construction project materials or services with an anticipated value of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or less shall be procured through competitive negotiation per Section 8 of this chapter and W.S. 9-2-3006.
(b) A contract for capital construction project materials or services with an anticipated value in excess of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) shall be procured through competitive sealed bidding per Sections 9 through 21 of this chapter and W.S. 9-2-3006.
(c) Paragraphs (a) and (b) shall not apply to a contract if:
(i) The contract is for professional services or alternative design and construction delivery methods;
(ii) The procuring agency obtains an approved bid waiver under Section 5 of this chapter;
(iii) The procuring agency is procuring the contract to respond to an emergency situation under Sections 5 and 6 of this chapter; or (iv) The procuring agency is paying for any of the following expenses of a capital construction project: utility fees; legally required permits, licenses, or other governmental approvals; or inter-fund transfers between state agencies.
(a) If the principal representative of a procuring agency determines that competitive negotiation is not feasible for a contract with an estimated value equal to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) or less, the contract may be let by noncompetitive negotiation under Section 7 of this chapter without a bid waiver from the Department or the Governor.
(b) If the principal representative of a procuring agency determines that competitive bidding is not feasible or practical for a contract with an estimated value in excess of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the principal representative may submit his or her written determination to the Department and seek approval for the contract to be let by competitive negotiation under Section 8 of this chapter. The Department Director may approve such a bid waiver in accordance with W.S. 9-2-3006(a)(iii) and the following:
(i) A principal representative’s written determination and request for approval of competitive negotiation shall be based on factors including, but not limited to:
(A) Whether the procuring agency attempted to advertise for competitive sealed bids, but was unsuccessful despite its good faith attempts under Section 12 of this chapter. If the procuring agency received one or more bids, the agency shall explain why the bids received were inadequate;
(B) Whether competitive sealed bidding is impractical or infeasible due to a lack of competition in the industry;
(C) Whether competitive sealed bidding is impractical or infeasible because only a small number of potential bidders are uniquely qualified for the work due to circumstances, geographic disparities, experience with the project, or proprietary techniques or technologies; or
(D) Whether competitive sealed bidding is impractical or infeasible due to time or other constraints that prevent completion of advertisement for competitive bids or any other requirements under this chapter.
(ii) Except as otherwise outlined in this chapter, the Department Director shall only approve bid waiver applications for competitive negotiation in limited circumstances, including but not limited to:
(A) Advertising or re-advertising the project for competitive sealed bid is not feasible or practical as determined by the procuring agency’s principal representative;
(B) A situation in which only one source is available for the capital construction project services or materials, whether due to residency requirement limitations or proprietary technology; or (C) An emergency situation necessitates the immediate start of work or an expedited return to normal state service operations and the immediate commencement of the work is necessary for those operations to resume and the procuring agency has complied with Section 6 of this chapter.
(iii) The Department shall have ten (10) business days to review the procuring agency's request and make a determination. The Department may request additional information to reach a determination, which shall pause the review time until the requested information has been submitted. If the requested information is not provided within five (5) business days, the Department may make a determination based on available information.
(c) If the principal representative of a procuring agency determines that competitive negotiation is not feasible or practical for a contract with an estimated value in excess of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00), the principal representative may submit their written determination to the Governor or the Governor's designee, and seek approval for the contract to be let by noncompetitive negotiation under Section 7 of this chapter. The Governor or the Governor's designee may approve such a bid waiver request in accordance with W.S. 9-2-3006(a)(iii). A principal representative's written determination and its request for noncompetitive negotiation shall be based on factors including, but not limited to:
(i) Whether the procuring agency initiated a competitive negotiation process but received an inadequate number of responses to its solicitations despite the agency's good faith attempts to secure bids or proposals as required in Section 8 of this chapter. If the procuring agency received one or more responses, the agency shall explain why the bids or proposals received were inadequate;
(ii) Whether competitive negotiation is not practical or feasible because of a lack of competition in the industry;
(iii) Whether competitive negotiation is not practical or feasible because a single entity is uniquely qualified for the work due to circumstances, geographic disparities, experience with the project, or proprietary techniques or technologies;
(iv) Whether an emergency necessitates the immediate start of work to continue, or expedite the return to, normal state service operations and the procuring agency has complied with Section 6 of this chapter regarding emergency contracting; or
(v) Whether a prototype agreement exists where the procuring agency may reuse previous designs.
(d) A procuring agency shall submit bid waiver applications on standard bid waiver forms adopted by the Department.
(e) Upon approval of a bid waiver by the Department Director, the Governor, or their designees, as applicable, the procuring agency may proceed to let the contract as stipulated in the bid waiver.
(a) A procuring agency experiencing an emergency situation may, in accordance with this section, procure services or materials without adhering to the notice, bid, and negotiation requirements in this chapter. The procuring agency shall document to the Department the emergency situation necessitating the procurement and an explanation of how and why it is necessary not to adhere to the notice, bid, and negotiation requirements in this chapter. When a procuring agency decides not to follow the notice, bid, or negotiation requirements due to an emergency situation, that agency is immediately subject to review by the Department Director.
(b) In the event that emergency work is initiated in response to an emergency situation, the procuring agency shall notify the Department by the next business day of any and all efforts undertaken by the procuring agency to obtain competition, and the emergency situation that justified reliance on this section. The procuring agency, not the Department, is responsible for any notification to Risk Management or other such agencies or entities as may be required by laws applicable to the procuring agency or emergency situation.
(i) For emergency work with an estimated value of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more, a bid waiver shall be submitted as soon as possible, as required by Section 5 of these rules, and shall be approved by the Governor or Governor's designee in accordance with Section 5(c).
(c) An emergency contract shall be limited to supplies, services, or construction items in such quantities as are necessary to address the emergency situation.
(d) The procuring agency shall seek to obtain as much competition as possible while letting an emergency contract. Approaches to increase competition may include:
(iv) Other methods that can be pursued while avoiding harm or risk of harm to the public health, safety, welfare, property, or impairing the ability of a public entity to function or perform required services.
Section 7. Noncompetitive negotiation. Non-competitive negotiations (sometimes also known as "sole-sourcing") may proceed when the procuring agency has:
(a) To initiate competitive negotiation, the procuring agency shall solicit not less than three (3) independent cost estimates or proposals. Per W.S. 9-2-3001(b)(iii), competitive negotiation may be conducted through a request for proposals process or any other similar competitive selection process.
(b) A competitive negotiation conducted using a request for proposal process shall comply with the following:
(i) The procuring agency shall issue a request for proposals shall be made to certified residents under W.S. 16-6-102 in a standard format consistent with Department policy and shall include:
(A) A description of the project scope, the required project timeline, and the desired deliverables;
(B) Submission procedures and content requirements for technical proposals; and
(C) Submission procedures and content requirements for the proposer’s estimated fee.
(ii) The procuring agency may interview proposers. The procuring agency shall keep a record of any such interviews.
(iii) The procuring agency may:
(A) Select the most qualified proposer, in consideration of all the information provided by the proposer, including the proposer’s estimated fees and applicable residency and preference requirements under W.S. 9-2-3006(a), 16-6-101 through 16-6-107, and 16-6-1001, for contract negotiations; or
(B) Reject all proposals. If the procuring agency opts to reject all proposals, it may:
(I) Exercise its discretion to repeat the process from the most appropriate step under the circumstances;
(II) Proceed to noncompetitive negotiation if the contract’s estimated value is equal to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or less and the procuring agency’s principal representative determines that competitive negotiation is not feasible; or
(III) Request a bid waiver under Section 5(c) of this chapter if the contract’s estimated value exceeds fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).
(iv) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(iii) of this section, if a contract’s estimated value was equal to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or less, but all proposals received contain estimated fees above fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the procuring agency may:
(A) Negotiate with proposers for the purpose of reducing the estimated fees below fifty thousand dollars ($50,000);
(B) Reject all proposals and advertise for competitive sealed bids per Section 12 of this chapter; or
(C) Request a bid waiver from the Department per Section 5 of this chapter.
(c) A competitive negotiation conducted using a lowest bid process shall comply with the following:
(i) A solicitation for bids shall be made to qualified resident contractors in a standard format consistent with Department policy that shall include the scope of desired work and the desired schedule or completion date. Solicitations shall clearly identify that materials or services that will be procured by competitive negotiation. The procuring agency shall determine the qualifications of bidders.
(ii) A solicitation for bids shall include a notification that the procuring agency’s acknowledgement of receipt of a bid does not constitute acceptance of the bid, and an invitation to negotiate does not guarantee that the bidder’s bid will be accepted or that the negotiations will result in a signed contract.
(iii) A solicitation shall require bidders to submit bids that include, at a minimum:
(A) A proposed work plan that demonstrates the bidder’s understanding of the requested work with a detail level commensurate with the scope outlined in the solicitation for bids;
(B) A comprehensive proposed cost estimate inclusive of all materials, labor, overhead, and profit anticipated to be necessary for the completion of the work outlined in the solicitation;
(C) A proposed timeline for the completion of work including major milestones;
(D) Proof of the bidder’s certification of residency per W.S. 16-6-102; and
(E) Bid security, if required.
(iv) The procuring agency shall negotiate with and let the contract to the lowest responsible bidder in accordance with any applicable residency and preference requirements under W.S. 9-2-3006(a), 16-6-101 through 16-6-107, and 16-6-1001. However, if the contract’s estimated value was equal to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or less, but all bids received are above fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the procuring agency may:
(A) Engage in negotiations with all bidders for the purpose of scope clarification, resulting in a cost below fifty thousand dollars ($50,000);
(B) Reject all bids and advertise for competitive sealed bids per Section 12 of this chapter; or
(C) Request a bid waiver from the Department per Section 5 of this chapter.
(a) In a competitive sealed bidding process, a procuring agency may, at its discretion, require all potential bidders to submit applications for prequalification prior to submitting bids on a project.
(b) Prequalification does not replace the use of evaluation criteria as allowed in Section 20(a) of this rule. A procuring agency may use prequalification in conjunction with the evaluation criteria even after prequalification has been completed.
(c) A call for prequalification applications shall be advertised, at a minimum, on the state procurement website for not less than two (2) consecutive weeks.
(d) To the extent applicable, based on the scope of work requested in the call for prequalification applications, an application for prequalification shall include, at a minimum:
(i) A signed affidavit stating the applicant’s willingness to comply with applicable laws and policies, which may or may not be unique to the project or procuring agency;
(ii) Proof of equipment, certifications, or experience specific to the scope of project work;
(iii) A workers compensation program certificate of good standing from the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services;
(iv) An unemployment insurance program certificate of good standing from the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services; and
(v) Proof of the applicant’s residency certification per W.S. 16-6-102, if applicable.
(a) Prequalification for a competitive sealed bid process shall be designated on a per-project basis. Designation of prequalification on one project shall not be construed as prequalification for any other project, nor shall prequalification on one project be accepted in lieu of required documentation for prequalification on another project.
(b) Upon completion of its review of all prequalification applications for a project, a procuring agency shall notify a prequalification applicant of the agency’s decision with regards to the applicant’s prequalification status, including the reason for the decision. The procuring agency shall also publish on the state procurement website a complete list of potential bidders that are prequalified to bid on the specified project.
(c) The decision to revoke a prequalification granted to a potential bidder is at the discretion of the procuring agency. A procuring agency shall follow the processes in Chapter 6, Section 4(c) of these rules if it revokes a potential bidder's prequalification.
(a) A potential bidder denied prequalification status after filing an application for prequalification status may request the procuring agency to review the application decision. The potential bidder shall file a written request for review to the procuring agency including:
(i) The name and address of the requesting potential bidder;
(ii) A brief explanation of why the potential bidder's prequalification application should be granted;
(iii) The statute, rule, or policy which the potential bidder believes was applied incorrectly or in error;
(iv) Any additional facts the potential bidder would like to be considered, including any relevant exhibits, evidence, or documents of substantiation to support a requested change in the prequalification outcome.
(b) Requests shall be submitted to the procuring agency and copied to the Department.
(c) The procuring agency shall acknowledge receipt of written review requests within three (3) business days of receipt.
(d) The procuring agency may request additional information as part of the review. If requested information is not provided within three (3) business days, the review may be completed without such information.
(e) The procuring agency shall provide written notice of any action taken in response to the review request, including a decision to take no action, within ten (10) business days and shall copy such notification to the Department.
(f) Notwithstanding the time limitations in subparts (c) and (e) above in this section, the procuring agency shall make every attempt to resolve review requests in a timely manner, but is not under obligation to resolve requests prior to bid filing deadlines when such timeline would put an undue burden on the procuring agency and detract from the execution of procuring agency operations.
(a) To initiate competitive sealed bidding for a project, a procuring agency that has not required bidder prequalification (as allowed under Sections 9 and 10 of this chapter) shall advertise a notice to submit bids for the project. The advertisement for bids shall be published on the state procurement website for not less than two (2) consecutive weeks. If the procuring agency opts to utilize an online bidding site to publish project estimates and plans, it shall provide to the Department a link to the bidding site that the Department shall include on the state procurement website. An advertisement for bids shall contain, at a minimum, the following information:
(i) The name of the procuring agency; (ii) A designated procurement point of contact with contact information; (iii) A description of the scope of the desired work; (iv) The location of the desired work; (v) An estimated project completion date; (vi) Procedures to submit bids; (vii) A request for multiple or alternate bids or life cycle analysis of materials, if such will be used; (viii) Methods to access plans and bid documents; (ix) Information regarding prebid meetings, if any, held at the discretion of the procuring agency; (x) Required bid security and bonding limits; (xi) Deadline to submit bids and bid opening information; and (xii) Sample contract and bidder affidavits.
(b) Because the Department does not maintain a bid advertising notification list, potential bidders are responsible for checking the advertising methods listed in this section.
(c) If the procuring agency already advertised a call for prequalification applications for the project under Section 9 of this chapter, the procuring agency is not required to publicly advertise the advertisement for bids under this section. Instead, the procuring agency shall provide the advertisement for bids to the prequalified bidders.
(a) After a notice to submit bids is published, a procuring agency may issue addenda to the bid advertisement to respond to a potential bidder's request for clarification under Section 14 of this chapter, or for the purpose of making changes or increasing the level of detail to the:
(i) Requested scope of work; (ii) Project completion date; (iii) Bid opening date; (iv) Qualification requirements; (v) Evaluation criteria; or (vi) Other requirements in the advertisement that may affect the ability of a bidder to make a full and complete bid.
(b) Addenda shall be posted to the original online bidding site listing and all known plan holders shall be notified of the addenda.
(c) Addenda shall be identified as such and must be acknowledged by bidders as part of the bid submission.
(d) Addenda posted within five (5) calendar days of the bid opening shall require an extension to the bid opening date.
(i) At the discretion of the Department Director, the procuring agency may opt not to extend the bid opening deadline if the addenda do not change the character of the advertisement for bids.
(ii) An addendum may be considered to change the character of an advertisement for bids if the addendum alters:
(A) The scope of work;
(B) The timeline to complete the identified scope of work; or
(C) Other portions of the original advertisement such that the advertisement, as amended with the addendum, substantively differs from the original advertisement issued by the procuring agency.
(a) A potential bidder may submit a written request for clarification from a procuring agency on the procuring agency's advertisement for bids. A potential bidder that directly contacts the procuring agency or its representatives shall be directed to the appropriate forum for posing questions.
(b) The procuring agency may, at its discretion, opt to provide such clarification so long as doing so would not restrict competition or provide an undue advantage to one or more potential bidders.
(i) If the procuring agency grants the request, the agency shall answer the potential bidder's questions in a written addendum issued in accordance with Section 13 of this chapter. If necessary, the procuring agency shall adjust the bid opening deadline in accordance with Section 13(d).
(ii) Only clarifications issued in accordance with this section shall be binding upon the procuring agency. Clarifying information provided at a prebid meeting shall not be considered binding on the procuring agency until the agency issues an addendum to the bid advertisement in accordance with Section 13 of this chapter.
(iii) In the event that one potential bidder may have been granted access to additional information about the bid advertisement, the procuring agency shall immediately release the information to other potential bidders in an addendum.
(c) If the procuring agency is unable or unwilling to provide the requested clarification, it shall respond to the requesting potential bidder in writing and explain its reasoning for refusing to provide the requested clarification.
(a) Any cost incurred to access and download plans shall be the responsibility of the potential bidder.
(b) The Department and procuring agencies do not coordinate with any third-party plan delivery companies, or so-called 'Plan Rooms.' Potential bidders are responsible for accessing plans directly from the location specified by the procuring agency to ensure accuracy and receipt of future addenda.
(a) A procuring agency may schedule prebid conferences and site visits for a project, and may designate a prebid conference or site visit as mandatory. Any bidder that fails to attend a mandatory prebid conference or mandatory site visit shall be ineligible to bid on that project.
(b) The procuring agency shall announce the time, date, and location of any prebid conference or site visit to all potential bidders in the bid advertisement or through an addendum to the bid advertisement. The procuring agency's announcement of a prebid conference or site visit shall state whether the prebid conference or site visit is mandatory.
(c) A prebid conference shall be held not less than two (2) business days after the bid advertising period has been completed per Section 12 of this chapter, but not less than ten (10) business days before bids are due. At the discretion of the Department, the above time frame may be increased based on the technicality or dollar amount of the project.
(d) The procuring agency may hold a prebid conference in the following formats at the procuring agency's discretion:
(i) In person;
(ii) Teleconference;
(iii) Webinar; or
(iv) Other electronic medium approved by the Department Director and made available to potential bidders by the procuring agency at its expense.
(e) For each prebid conference, the procuring agency shall maintain a record including, at a minimum:
(i) An attendance log including:
(A) Attendee name; (B) Attendee contact information; and (C) The entity each attendee represents.
(ii) Copies of documents distributed by the procuring agency to attendees; and
(iii) Any verbal modifications made to any of the bid advertisement documents, all of which shall be reduced to writing and released as an addendum to the bid advertisement in accordance with Section 13 of this chapter.
(f) The procuring agency may conduct prebid, in-person site visits at the site of the project being procured.
(a) Competitive sealed bids submitted under this chapter shall include:
(i) A bid, developed on forms provided by the Department, with all fields fully completed as specified on the forms, in dark ink or typed, and prepared electronically for upload; and
(ii) A signed affidavit from the bidder certifying:
(A) That bids have been developed independently; (B) No effort has been made to restrict competition; (C) The bidder is in receipt of all addenda; (D) The bidder's residency status per W.S. 16-6-102, if applicable; (E) The person signing the bid is authorized to represent the
organization for whom he or she is signing;
(F) The ownership and legal structure of the organization; and
(G) The bidder agrees to comply with all applicable regulations, policies, guidelines, and requirements that pertain to the capital construction project;
(iii) Bid security, as required by applicable statute and Section 18 of this chapter;
(iv) Documentation required by Subsection (b) of this section, if applicable; and
(v) Any other information required by the procuring agency in the bid advertisement or its addenda.
(b) If the procuring agency did not require prequalification applications for the project under Section 9 of this chapter, a competitive sealed bid shall also include:
(i) Proof of equipment, certifications, or experience specific to the scope of project work; (ii) A workers compensation program certificate of good standing from the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services; (iii) An unemployment insurance program certificate of good standing from the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services; and (iv) Proof of the applicant's residency certification per W.S. 16-6-102, if applicable.
(a) Bid security shall be:
(i) Provided by a bidder in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the contract value for a project valued over one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) per W. S. 9-2-3004(c)(iv)(A), or set at an amount determined at the discretion of the procuring agency as defined in Department policy for a project valued under one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) per W.S. 9-2-3004(c)(iv); and
(ii) Overseen and managed by the Department.
(b) Acceptable forms of bid security shall be limited to:
(i) A bid bond underwritten by a surety company licensed to issue bid bonds in the state of Wyoming; or
(ii) A bid deposit in the form of:
(A) A bank cashier's check made payable to the Treasurer of the State of Wyoming; or
(B) A bank certified check made payable to the Treasurer of the State of Wyoming.
(c) The Department shall hold bid securities until such time as a contract is awarded. Deposit of bid securities shall not be considered an award or guarantee of award.
(d) If the bidder's bid security is deficient in any way or if the bidder fails to submit a required form of bid security, the Department may request that the bidder who is not in compliance submit the required bid security by 5:00 p.m. of the next business day after such notice is provided by the Department. Failure to cure the deficiency or failure to submit the required form of bid security by that deadline shall make the bidder ineligible for consideration of award of the contract.
(a) Deadlines. Bidders are solely responsible for meeting the bid submission deadline.
(i) For bids submitted electronically, bidders shall allow sufficient time to complete online forms and upload documents. The bid submission period shall end at the posted closing time and bidders shall not be permitted to complete in-progress submissions after that time.
(ii) For bids submitted by physical delivery, delays caused by the bidder's delivery service shall not be an acceptable reason for a bid or modification being late. All bids or modifications sent by physical delivery shall be date and time stamped by the procuring agency upon receipt.
(b) Modifications. A bidder may submit a modification to their previously-submitted bid prior to the bid submission deadline. The procuring agency shall deny bid modifications submitted after the submission deadline. The waiver or correction of errors in a bid after the bid submission deadline shall be subject to Section 20(c) of this chapter.
(c) Withdrawals. A bidder may withdraw a previously-submitted bid prior to the bid submission deadline. For a bid withdrawn after the bid submission deadline, a procuring agency or the Department may pursue remedies against the bidder or bid security.
(a) Evaluation criteria. The procuring agency shall develop and use qualifications evaluation criteria for submitted bids to establish a reasonable certainty that the responsible low bidder can be expected to complete the work as proposed. Evaluation criteria may include but are not necessarily limited to a bidder's:
(x) References or other information on past project performance, including the experience of the procuring agency with that bidder or proposer.
(b) Price or quantity discrepancies in bids.
(i) In the case of a discrepancy between the unit price and the total price, the unit price will prevail.
(ii) In the case of a discrepancy between the price written in words and the price written in figures, the price written in words will prevail.
(iii) Quantities listed in the bid documents are to be considered as approximate and only to be used for the comparison of bids. Payment to the successful bidder will be made only for the actual quantities of work performed in accordance with the plans and specifications of the project. If upon the completion of the work, the actual quantities of work performed show either an increase or decrease from the quantities given in the estimate, the prices or costs set forth on a unit basis in the bid shall prevail.
(c) Bid irregularities.
(i) The procuring agency may work in conjunction with the Department to reject a bid that contains bid irregularities, or to resolve or waive bid irregularities, except that the Department and the procuring agency shall reject bids containing the following irregularities, as required by W.S 9-2-3006(e):
(A) Improper or missing signatures; or
(B) Lack legible numerical values.
(ii) A request to waive or correct an error in a bid, other than a bid irregularity, shall be subject to the following:
(A) Provided there is no change in bid pricing or cost, errors may be corrected if it is in the best interest of the State and correcting the mistake maintains the fair treatment of other bidders.
(iii) If the Department or the procuring agency opts to waive a required condition or accept bids missing information required by the bid advertisement or its addenda, the waiver shall apply to all bidders.
(a) Procedures after bid submission. Upon closure of the bid submission period, the Department or procuring agency shall:
(i) Note the date and time of receipt of all bids;
(ii) Open all bids in the presence of one or more witnesses, at the time and place designated in the bid advertisement;
(iii) Record each bid opened, including bidder name and bid total; (iv) Examine each bid for validity and completeness; (v) Prepare a summary of bids received; (vi) Apply the residency preference per W.S. 16-6-102(a); (vii) Publish a summary that includes the bidders and bid totals or the decision of the procuring agency to reject all bids; and
(viii) If applicable, notify the procuring agency that it may review and evaluate the submitted bids.
(b) Evaluation process. The procuring agency shall:
(i) Evaluate bids to determine which bidders are responsible in accordance with the evaluation criteria set forth in the advertisement for bids per Section 20(a) of this chapter;
(ii) Determine which bid, submitted by a responsible, qualified bidder, offers the lowest cost to the state; and
(iii) Draft a written recommendation to the Department specifying the apparent responsible, qualified low bidder including justification for that recommendation.
(c) Award of contract. The Department shall be the final authority on the award of a contract per W.S. 9-2-3004(c)(ii). The Department and procuring agency reserve the right to reject any and all bids. The contract shall be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder whose bid meets the requirements and criteria set forth in the advertisement for bids, subject to the considerations below:
(i) Award to multiple bidders. The procuring agency may, at its discretion, award portions of a single advertised project to multiple bidders when it is in the best interest of the State to do so.
(ii) Higher quality item. A contract may not be awarded to a bidder submitting a higher quality item than that designated in the invitation for bids or request for proposals, unless such bidder is also the lowest bidder as determined by value analysis or life-cycle cost formulas. The procuring agency shall not apply a value analysis or life cycle cost formula unless the call for bids clearly stated that such analysis or formula would be applied.
(iii) Tie bids. In the event of tie bids, the contract shall be awarded to the bidder most reasonably able to complete the work based on the evaluation criteria set forth in the advertisement for bids per Section 9 of these rules.
(iv) Single bid received. If, at the time of bid opening, only one bid has been received, the procuring agency may:
(A) Determine that the bid submitted is a fair price and that other entities had sufficient opportunity to bid, and award the contract to the single bidder; or
(B) Determine that the bid submitted is not at a fair price or that sufficient opportunity was not given to encourage multiple bids, and reject the bid. The procuring agency's decision to cancel the procurement or re-advertise the project for bids under this paragraph is subject to review by the Department Director at his or her discretion.
(v) Award to next lowest bidders. In the event the low bidder originally awarded the contract is unable to complete the work as bid, the procuring agency may award the contract to the second lowest bidder. If the second lowest bidder declines to accept the award, the procuring agency may:
(A) Offer the award to the next lowest bidder;
(B) Re-advertise for bids; or
(C) Cancel the advertisement for bids, pursuant to Section 22 of this chapter.
(d) Errors after award. Errors discovered in a successful bid after the award of a contract may only be corrected if, after consultation with the Department Director and the Attorney General's office, it is determined that the correction of the mistake does not violate the requirements of applicable laws. Any correction made under this subsection must be supported by a written determination signed by the Department Director.
(a) A procuring agency may cancel an advertisement for bids, subject to review by the Department Director.
(b) Grounds for cancelling a bid advertisement may include, but are not limited to:
(i) A change in circumstances such that the project is no longer required or funding is no longer available;
(ii) All bids received exceed available funding;
(iii) All responsible, qualified bids are at clearly unreasonable prices;
(iv) Reason to suspect collusion between bidders or submission of bids in bad faith;
(v) The advertisement did not provide for consideration of all factors of significance to the State; or
(vi) Proposed amendments to the advertisement are of sufficient impact that a new advertisement is desirable.
(c) Upon cancellation of an advertisement, notice of cancellation shall be distributed through the same means as the initial advertisement.
(a) A procuring agency may cancel the award of a contract, subject to review by the Department Director. A decision to cancel an award under this section shall be supported in a written document.
(b) Reasons for cancelling an award of a contract may include, but are not limited to: (i) Project is no longer required; (ii) Funding is no longer available; (iii) Reason to suspect collusion between bidders or submission of bids in bad faith; or (iv) The apparent low bidder is no longer able to complete the work as bid.
(c) Cancellation of an award of a contract does not require cancellation of the underlying bid advertisement for the project awarded.
(d) Cancellation of an award due to the fault of the bidder may result in the pursuit of remedies against the bidder or the bid security submitted.