Procurement, Management, and Administration of Engineering and Design Related Services, 53802-53814 [2012-21520]
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53802
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 171 / Tuesday, September 4, 2012 / Proposed Rules
305), Food and Drug Administration,
5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville,
MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ellen Anderson, Center for Food Safety
and Applied Nutrition (HFS–265), Food
and Drug Administration, 5100 Paint
Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740–
3835, 240–402–1309.
In a notice
published in the Federal Register on
December 20, 2011 (76 FR 78866), FDA
announced that a food additive petition
(FAP 1A4784) had been filed by Nexira,
c/o Keller and Heckman LLP, 1001 G St.
NW., Suite 500 West, Washington, DC
20001. The petition proposes to amend
the food additive regulations in
§ 172.780 Acacia (gum arabic) (21 CFR
172.780) to provide for the expanded
safe use of acacia gum (gum arabic) in
food.
Under 21 CFR 171.1(c)(H), either a
claim of categorical exclusion under 21
CFR 25.30 or § 25.32 (21 CFR 25.32) or
an environmental assessment under 21
CFR 25.40 is required to be submitted in
a food additive petition. A claim of
categorical exclusion under § 25.32(k)
was submitted with the petition, which
applies to substances added directly to
food that are intended to remain in food
through ingestion by consumers and
that are not intended to replace
macronutrients in food. The Agency
reviewed the claim of categorical
exclusion submitted by the petitioner
and stated in the original filing notice
its determination that, under § 25.32(k),
the proposed action was of a type that
does not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the human
environment, and therefore, neither an
environmental assessment nor an
environmental impact statement is
required.
However, upon further review of the
petition, the Agency has decided that
the food additive may act to replace
macronutrients in food and, therefore,
the categorical exclusion in § 25.32(k) is
not applicable for the proposed action.
The Agency informed the petitioner of
this decision, who subsequently
submitted an environmental assessment.
The potential environmental impact
of this petition is being reviewed. To
encourage public participation
consistent with regulations issued under
the National Environmental Policy Act
(40 CFR 1501.4(b)), the Agency is
placing the environmental assessment
submitted with the petition that is the
subject of this notice on public display
at the Division of Dockets Management
(see DATES and ADDRESSES) for public
review and comment.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Interested persons may submit to the
Division of Dockets Management (see
ADDRESSES) either electronic or written
comments regarding this document. It is
only necessary to send one set of
comments. Identify comments with the
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document. Received
comments may be seen in the Division
of Dockets Management between 9 a.m.
and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
FDA will also place on public display
any amendments to, or comments on,
the petitioner’s environmental
assessment without further
announcement in the Federal Register.
If, based on its review, the Agency finds
that an environmental impact statement
is not required, and this petition results
in a regulation, the notice of availability
of the Agency’s finding of no significant
impact and the evidence supporting that
finding will be published with the
regulation in the Federal Register in
accordance with 21 CFR 25.51(b).
Dated: August 28, 2012.
Dennis M. Keefe,
Director, Office of Food Additive Safety,
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.
[FR Doc. 2012–21639 Filed 8–31–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
23 CFR Part 172
[FHWA Docket No. FHWA–2012–0043]
RIN 2125–AF44
Procurement, Management, and
Administration of Engineering and
Design Related Services
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM); request for comments.
AGENCY:
The FHWA proposes to
update the regulations governing the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services directly related
to a highway construction project and
reimbursed with Federal-aid highway
program (FAHP) funding. The intent is
to make the regulations consistent with
prior changes in legislation and other
applicable regulations. These revisions
also address certain findings and
recommendations for the oversight of
consultant services contained in
national review and audit reports.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before November 5, 2012. Late
SUMMARY:
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comments will be considered to the
extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand deliver
comments to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Dockets Management
Facility, Room W12–140, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590, or submit electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov or fax
comments to (202) 493–2251. All
comments should include the docket
number that appears in the heading of
this document. All comments received
will be available for examination and
copying at the above address from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., e.t., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays. Those
desiring notification of receipt of
comments must include a selfaddressed, stamped postcard or you
may print the acknowledgment page
that appears after submitting comments
electronically. You may review DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (Volume 65, Number 70, Page
19477–78), or you may visit https://
dms.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Jon Obenberger, Preconstruction Team
Leader, FHWA Office of Program
Administration, (202) 366–2221, or via
email at jon.obenberger@dot.gov, or Mr.
Steven Rochlis, Attorney Advisor,
FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel,
(202) 366–1395, or via email at
steve.rochlis@dot.gov. Office hours for
the FHWA are from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
e.t., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access and Filing
This document and all comments
received may be viewed online through
the Federal eRulemaking portal at:
https://www.regulations.gov. The Web
site is available 24 hours each day, 366
days this year. Please follow the
instructions. Electronic submission and
retrieval help and guidelines are
available under the help section of the
Web site.
An electronic copy of this document
may also be downloaded by accessing
the Office of the Federal Register’s home
page at: https://www.archives.gov/
federal-register/, or the Government
Printing Office’s Web page at: https://
www.gpo.gov/fdsys.
Background
The FHWA proposes to modify
existing regulations for the
administration of engineering and
design related service contracts to
ensure consistency and compliance
with prior changes in authorizing
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 171 / Tuesday, September 4, 2012 / Proposed Rules
legislation codified in 23 U.S.C.
112(b)(2) and changes in other
applicable Federal regulations.
Proposed revisions will also address
certain findings contained in a 2008
U.S. Government Accountability Office
(GAO) review report (https://
www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-198)
regarding increased reliance on
consulting firms by State transportation
agencies (STAs) and a 2009 DOT Office
of Inspector General (OIG) audit report
(https://www.oig.dot.gov/library-item/
4710) regarding oversight of engineering
consulting firms’ indirect costs claimed
on Federal-aid grants. This rulemaking
does not otherwise impose any new
burdens on States, local public agencies,
or other grantees and subgrantees.
The primary authority for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services directly related
to a highway construction project and
reimbursed with FAHP funding is
codified in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2). On
November 30, 2005, the Transportation,
Treasury, Housing and Urban
Development, the Judiciary, the District
of Columbia, and Independent Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2006 (Pub. L. 109–
115, 119 Stat. 2396, HR 3058),
commonly referred to as the ‘‘2006
Appropriations Act,’’ was signed into
law. Section 174 of this Act amended 23
U.S.C. 112(b)(2) by removing the
provisions that permitted States to use
‘‘alternative’’ or ‘‘equivalent’’ State
qualifications-based selection
procedures and other procedures for
acceptance and application of
consultant indirect cost rates that were
enacted into State law prior to June 9,
1998.
Effective on the date of enactment of
the ‘‘2006 Appropriations Act,’’ States
and local public agencies could no
longer use alternative or equivalent
procedures. States and local public
agencies are required to procure
engineering and design related services
in accordance with the qualificationsbased selection procedures prescribed
in the Brooks Act (40 U.S.C. 1101 et
seq.) and to accept and apply consultant
indirect cost rates established by a
cognizant Federal or State agency in
accordance with the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) cost principles (48
CFR part 31). To comply with the
amendments to 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2), this
proposed rulemaking will remove all
references to alternative or equivalent
procedures.
In addition, the Civilian Agency
Acquisition Council and the Defense
Acquisition Regulations Council
published a final rule in the Federal
Register of August 30, 2010 (75 FR
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53129), and effective on October 1,
2010, raising the Federal simplified
acquisition threshold established in 48
CFR 2.101 of the FAR from $100,000 to
$150,000 to account for inflation using
the Consumer Price Index as required in
statute. The FHWA proposes to revise
the small purchase procedures section
to reflect this increase in the Federal
threshold.
The proposed revisions will also
address certain findings and
recommendations contained in the
aforementioned GAO review and OIG
audit reports, clarify existing
requirements to enhance consistency
and compliance with Federal laws and
regulations, and address evolutions in
industry practices regarding the
procurement, management, and
administration of consultant services.
Specific proposed revisions are
described in the section-by-section
analysis below.
Section-by-Section Discussion of the
Proposals
The FHWA proposes to revise 23 CFR
part 172—Administration of
Engineering and Design Related Service
Contracts as follows:
Title—Administration of Engineering
and Design Related Services Contracts
The title of this part would be
changed to Procurement, Management,
and Administration of Engineering and
Design Related Services to reflect the
range of requirements and Federal
interests associated with the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services addressed within
this part.
Section 172.1—Purpose and
Applicability
Section 172.1 would be amended to
clarify the applicability of the
requirements of this part for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services and the
requirements of the common grant rule
(49 CFR part 18) for procurement of
these and other consultant services
reimbursed with FAHP funding.
Section 172.3—Definitions
Section 172.3 would be amended to
clarify the definitions of ‘‘audit’’ and
‘‘cognizant agency’’ to provide
consistency with the FAR cost
principles (48 CFR part 31) and with
industry guidance established in the
American Association of State Highway
and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)
Uniform Audit and Accounting Guide,
2010 Edition (https://audit.
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transportation.org/Documents/2010_
Uniform_Audit_and_Accounting_
Guide.pdf). The definition of
‘‘competitive negotiation’’ would be
amended to remove references to State
alternative or equivalent procedures
prohibited by sec. 174 of the ‘‘2006
Appropriations Act.’’ The definitions of
‘‘contracting agencies’’ and ‘‘one-year
applicable accounting period’’ would be
amended to provide consistency with
other terminology of this part. The
definition of ‘‘engineering and design
related services’’ would be amended to
also include professional services of an
architectural or engineering nature as
defined by State law, consistent with
the Brooks Act and common grant rule
requirements. Definitions would be
added for the terms ‘‘contract,’’
‘‘contract modification,’’ ‘‘Federal cost
principles,’’ ‘‘fixed fee,’’ ‘‘scope of
work,’’ and ‘‘State transportation agency
(STA)’’ to clarify the meaning of each
within the context of the regulation. A
definition would also be added for
‘‘management role’’ to clarify the types
of services and roles performed by
consultants that require FHWA or direct
grantee approval.
Section 172.5—Methods of Procurement
This section would be redesignated as
sec. 172.7 and revised. The title would
be changed to Procurement Methods
and Procedures, to reflect the proposed
content which would address not only
methods of procurement, but also the
procurement requirements associated
with these methods.
The title of paragraph (a) would be
changed from procurement to
procurement methods, and would be
revised to specify the three currently
allowable procurement methods:
Competitive negotiation (qualificationsbased selection), small purchases, and
noncompetitive. The provisions of
subparagraph (a)(1) would be amended
to remove references to State alternative
or equivalent procedures prohibited by
sec. 174 of the ‘‘2006 Appropriations
Act.’’ Additional provisions would be
added to clarify the requirements and
expectations for solicitation; request for
proposal; evaluation factors; evaluation,
ranking, and selection; and negotiation
to ensure consistency and compliance
with the provisions of the Brooks Act as
required by 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A).
Subparagraph (a)(2) would be
amended to clarify the requirements for
use of small purchase procedures and
reflect the increase in the Federal
simplified acquisition threshold from
$100,000 to $150,000 (as specified in
the final rule published in the Federal
Register of August 30, 2010 (75 FR
53129)). Additional revisions would
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define the negotiation requirements for
small purchase procedures and clarify
the limitations on participation of FAHP
funding in contract costs exceeding the
established small purchase threshold.
The provisions of subparagraph (a)(3)
would be amended to define contract
negotiation requirements for
noncompetitive procurement
procedures and to remove references to
State alternative or equivalent
procedures prohibited by sec. 174 of the
‘‘2006 Appropriations Act.’’
Subparagraph (a)(4) would be
removed, as State alternative or
equivalent procedures are now
prohibited.
Paragraph (b) would be redesignated
as sec. 172.7(b)(2) and revised to clarify
the methods contracting agencies may
use to achieve Disadvantaged Business
Enterprise (DBE) participation on
engineering and design related services
contracts in accordance with the
requirements of 49 CFR part 26 and the
agency’s DBE program approved by
FHWA.
Paragraph (b) of the redesignated sec.
172.7 would be amended to reference
and clarify the applicability of various
title 23 and 49 procurement related
requirements, including the common
grant rule procurement provisions,
verification of suspension and
debarment actions, and prevention of
conflicts of interest. A requirement to
develop a written code of conduct
governing the performance of
contracting agency employees and
consultants is proposed to be included
within contracting agency written
policies, procedures, and contract
documents to ensure consistency with
the conflict of interest requirements
specified in 23 CFR 1.33 and the
common grant rule.
Information in paragraph (c) of the
existing sec. 172.5 would be transferred
to paragraph (b) of a new sec. 172.9
titled Contracts and Administration.
The proposed sec. 172.9(b) would
clarify the permitted and prohibited
methods of payment and requirements
associated with the use of lump sum
and cost reimbursement contract
payment methods, consistent with FAR
requirements and industry guidance
established in the AASHTO Guide for
Consultant Contracting, 2008 Edition.
Section 172.7—Audits
This section would be redesignated as
sec. 172.11 and revised. The title of this
section would be changed to Allowable
Costs and Oversight, and would address
requirements for the allowability of
contract cost and for providing
assurance of compliance with the
Federal cost principles.
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Paragraph (a) of the proposed sec.
172.11 would clarify consultant
requirements for accounting for costs,
maintaining adequate records, and
applying the FAR cost principles to
determine the allowability of costs.
Paragraph (b) of the proposed sec.
172.11 would clarify the requirements
for the allowability, acceptance, and
application of elements of contract cost
in accordance with the common grant
rule, FAR cost principles, and
requirements of 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2).
Subparagraph (b)(1) of the proposed sec.
172.11 would clarify requirements
regarding cognizance, acceptance, and
application of consultant indirect cost
rates consistent with applicable Federal
requirements and industry guidance
established in the AASHTO Uniform
Audit and Accounting Guide, 2010
Edition. Indirect cost rate requirements
are proposed to include subconsultant
rates since the Federal cost principles
also apply to subconsultant costs, the
qualifications of subconsultants are
considered under a qualifications-based
selection, and subconsultants may
perform a significant portion of the
contracted services. Subparagraph
(b)(1)(iii) would clarify the requirement
for STAs or other direct grantees to
perform an evaluation of a consultant’s
or subconsultant’s indirect cost rate
prior to acceptance and application of
the rate to a contract when the rate has
not been established by a cognizant
agency. This subparagraph would
permit STAs and other direct grantees to
follow a risk-based oversight process for
the evaluation performed to provide
assurance of indirect cost rate
compliance with the FAR cost
principles, as described in proposed
subparagraph (c)(2).
Information from paragraphs (b) and
(c) of the existing sec. 172.7 would be
transferred to subparagraph (b)(1) of the
proposed sec. 172.11 and revised to
remove references to other State
procedures prohibited by sec. 174 of the
‘‘2006 Appropriations Act.’’
Subparagraph (b)(2) of the proposed sec.
172.11 would clarify requirements for
establishment of consultant direct salary
or wage rates on contracts to ensure
compliance with qualifications-based
selection procurement requirements and
the reasonableness provisions of the
FAR cost principles. Subparagraph
(b)(3) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would
clarify requirements for the
determination of fixed fees or profit in
accordance with qualifications-based
selection procurement requirements and
industry practices. Subparagraph (b)(4)
of the proposed sec. 172.11 would
clarify the requirements for determining
the allowability of other direct contract
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costs in accordance with the Federal
cost principles.
Paragraph (c) of the proposed sec.
172.11 would clarify the responsibilities
for contracting agencies to provide
assurance of consultant cost compliance
with the FAR cost principles.
Subparagraph (c)(2) would permit STAs
and other direct grantees written
procedures to incorporate a risk-based
oversight process for providing
assurance of consultant cost compliance
with the Federal cost principles on
contracts administered by the grantee or
its subgrantees. This oversight process
would consist of risk assessment,
mitigation, and evaluation procedures
in support of the STA or other direct
grantee effectively allocating resources
to provide reasonable assurance of
consultant compliance with the FAR
cost principles.
Information in paragraph (a) of the
existing sec. 172.7, performance of
audits, would be transferred to
subparagraph (c)(2) of sec. 172.11 and
revised to remove references to other
State procedures prohibited by sec. 174
of the ‘‘2006 Appropriations Act.’’
Audits performed in accordance with
generally accepted government audit
standards to test compliance with the
FAR cost principles would be listed as
an evaluation procedure under an
established risk-based oversight process.
Subparagraph (c)(3) of the proposed
sec. 172.11 would require consultants to
certify to the contracting agency that
costs included within proposals to
establish indirect cost rates are
allowable in accordance with the FAR
cost principles prior to contracting
agency acceptance of the indirect cost
rates for application to contracts.
Implementation of this cost certification
requirement was a recommendation in
the aforementioned 2009 OIG Audit
Report, and is based on FHWA Order
4470.1A, FHWA Policy for Contractor
Certification of Costs in Accordance
with FAR to Establish Indirect Cost
Rates on Engineering and Design related
Services Contracts (https://
www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/
orders/44701a.htm).
Subparagraph (c)(4) of the proposed
sec. 172.11 would require contracting
agencies to pursue administrative,
contractual, or legal remedies as may be
appropriate when consultants
knowingly charge unallowable costs to
a FAHP funded contract.
Paragraph (d) of the existing sec.
172.7 would be redesignated as sec.
172.11(d) and revised to ensure
consistency of terminology within the
regulation.
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Section 172.9—Approvals
Information in this section would be
transferred to a new sec. 172.5, Program
Management and Oversight, a
redesignated sec. 172.7, Procurement
Methods and Procedures, and a new sec.
172.9, Contracts and Administration,
and revised for clarification to ensure
consistency with applicable Federal
laws and regulations.
Paragraph (a) of the existing sec. 172.9
would be redesignated as sec. 172.5(c)
and revised to clarify the requirements
for contracting agency written
procedures to ensure compliance with
existing Federal statutes and
regulations. A new paragraph (a) of sec.
172.5 would clarify STA or other direct
grantee responsibilities for management
of consultant services programs and
oversight of subgrantees. A new
paragraph (b) of sec. 172.5 would clarify
program level responsibilities of
subgrantees. A new paragraph (d) of sec.
172.5 would clarify a contracting
agency’s ability to adopt direct Federal
Government or other contracting
procedures and requirements which are
not in conflict with laws and regulations
applicable to the FAHP. Paragraph (e) of
sec. 172.5 proposes a 12-month period
from the effective date of a final rule for
contracting agencies to issue or update
current written procedures for review
and approval by the appropriate
oversight agency.
Information in subparagraph (a)(5) of
the existing sec. 172.9 would be
expanded under a new paragraph (d) of
a proposed sec. 172.9 titled Contracts
and Administration. This new
paragraph (d) would clarify
requirements for consultant monitoring
and oversight which include providing
a qualified, full-time, public employee
of the contracting agency in responsible
charge of each contract to ensure
compliance with the requirements of 23
U.S.C. 302(a) and evaluating a
consultant’s performance on a contract.
Paragraph (a) of the proposed sec.
172.9, Contracts and Administration,
would define the various contract types
and clarify the requirements associated
with the use of on-call or indefinite
delivery/indefinite quantity contracts in
a manner that is consistent with Federal
laws and regulations.
Paragraph (c) of the proposed sec.
172.9 would clarify the provisions
required to be incorporated into
engineering and design related services
contracts when FAHP funding is used to
ensure consistency and compliance
with applicable Federal laws and
regulations.
Paragraph (e) of the proposed sec.
172.9 would clarify the requirements
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associated with contract modifications
to ensure modifications are warranted,
properly scoped, and in compliance
with applicable Federal procurement
requirements.
Paragraph (b) of the existing sec. 172.9
would be redesignated as paragraph (f)
of the proposed sec. 172.9. Paragraph (c)
of the existing sec. 172.9 would be
removed since the oversight and
approval responsibility of contracts for
major projects, as specified in 23 U.S.C.
106(h), should be defined within the
stewardship and oversight agreements
that are established between individual
STAs and respective FHWA division
offices.
Paragraph (d) of the existing sec.
172.9 would be redesignated as sec.
172.7(b)(5) and revised to clarify
contracting agency responsibilities
associated with participation of FAHP
funding for consultants performing
services in a management role. These
revisions would ensure compliance
with applicable Federal requirements
regarding oversight, procurement,
conflicts of interest, and cost
allowability.
For ease of reference, the following
distribution table is provided:
Old section
172.1 .........................
172.3 .........................
Audit ..........................
Cognizant agency .....
Competitive negotiation.
Contract .....................
Contracting agencies
Contract modification
Engineering and design related services.
Federal cost principles.
Fixed fee ...................
Management role ......
One-year applicable
accounting period.
Scope of work ...........
State transportation
agency.
172.5(a) .....................
172.5(a)(1) ................
172.5(a)(2) ................
172.5(a)(3) ................
172.5(a)(4) ................
None ..........................
172.5(b) .....................
None ..........................
172.5(c) .....................
None ..........................
None ..........................
172.7(a)
172.7(b)
172.7(c)
172.7(d)
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.....................
.....................
.....................
.....................
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Old section
None ..........................
172.9(a) .....................
172.9(a)(5) ................
None ..........................
172.9(b) .....................
172.9(c) .....................
172.9(d) .....................
53805
New section
172.5(a) and (b)
Added.
172.5(c) Revised.
172.5(c)(11), (12),
and 172.9(d) Revised.
172.5(d) and (e)
Added.
172.9(f) Revised.
Removed.
172.7(b)(5) Revised.
Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Added.
Added.
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review), Executive Order
13563 (Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review), and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
The FHWA has determined that this
action does not constitute a significant
regulatory action within the meaning of
Executive Order 12866 or within the
meaning of DOT regulatory policies and
procedures. The proposed amendments
clarify and revise requirements for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services using FAHP
funding and directly related to a
construction project. Additionally, this
action complies with the principles of
Executive Order 13563. The proposed
changes to part 172 will provide
additional clarification, guidance, and
flexibility to stakeholders implementing
these regulations. After evaluating the
costs and benefits of these proposed
amendments, the FHWA anticipates that
the economic impact of this rulemaking
would be minimal. These changes are
not anticipated to adversely affect, in
any material way, any sector of the
economy. In addition, these changes
will not create a serious inconsistency
with any other agency’s action or
materially alter the budgetary impact of
any entitlements, grants, user fees, or
loan programs. It is anticipated that the
economic impact of this rulemaking will
be minimal; therefore, a full regulatory
evaluation is not necessary.
172.7(a) Revised.
172.7(a)(1) Revised.
172.7(a)(2) Revised.
172.7(a)(3) Revised.
Removed.
172.7(b) Added.
172.7(b)(2) Revised.
172.9(a) Added.
172.9(b)
172.9(c), (d), and (e)
Added.
172.11(a), (b), and (c)
Added.
172.11(c)(2) Revised.
172.11(b)(1) Revised.
172.11(b)(1) Revised.
172.11(d) Revised.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96–354, 5 U.S.C.
60l-612), the FHWA has evaluated the
effects of this proposed rule on small
entities, such as local governments and
businesses. Based on the evaluation, the
FHWA anticipates that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The proposed amendments
clarify and revise requirements for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services using FAHP
New section
172.1 Revised.
172.3 Revised.
Revised.
Revised.
Revised.
Added.
Revised.
Added.
Revised.
Added.
Added.
Added.
Revised.
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funding and directly related to a
construction project. After evaluating
the cost of these proposed amendments,
as required by changes in authorizing
legislation, other applicable regulations,
and industry practices, the FHWA
believes the projected impact upon
small entities which utilize FAHP
funding for consultant engineering and
design related services would be
negligible. Therefore, I certify that the
proposed action would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
This NPRM would not impose
unfunded mandates as defined by the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–4, March 22, 1995, 109
Stat. 48). The actions proposed in this
NPRM would not result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $143.1 million or more
in any one year (2 U.S.C. 1532). Further,
in compliance with the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, FHWA
will evaluate any regulatory action that
might be proposed in subsequent stages
of the proceeding to assess the effects on
State, local, and Tribal governments and
the private sector. Additionally, the
definition of ‘‘Federal Mandate’’ in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
excludes financial assistance of the type
in which State, local, or tribal
governments have authority to adjust
their participation in the program in
accordance with changes made in the
program by the Federal Government.
The FAHP permits this type of
flexibility.
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Executive Order 13132 (Federalism
Assessment)
This proposed action has been
analyzed in accordance with the
principles and criteria contained in
Executive Order 13132, dated August 4,
1999, and it has been determined that
this proposed action does not have a
substantial direct effect or sufficient
federalism implications on States that
would limit the policymaking discretion
of the States. Nothing in this proposed
rule directly preempts any State law or
regulation or affects the States’ ability to
discharge traditional State governmental
functions.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Federal agencies must obtain approval
from the Office of Management and
Budget for each collection of
information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations. This
proposed action does not contain a
collection of information requirement
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for the purpose of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501,
et seq.).
Actions and Interference with
Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights.
National Environmental Policy Act
The FHWA has analyzed this
proposed action for the purpose of the
National Environmental Policy Act (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and has determined
that this action would not have any
effect on the quality of the human and
natural environment because this rule
would merely establish the
requirements for the procurement,
management, and administration of
engineering and design related services
using FAHP funding and directly
related to a construction project.
Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform)
Executive Order 13175 (Tribal
Consultation)
The FHWA has analyzed this
proposed action under Executive Order
13175, dated November 6, 2000, and
believes that this proposed action would
not have substantial direct effects on
one or more Indian Tribes, would not
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian Tribal governments, and
would not preempt Tribal law. This
proposed rulemaking merely establishes
the requirements for the procurement,
management, and administration of
engineering and design related services
using FAHP funding and directly
related to a construction project. As
such, this proposed rule would not
impose any direct compliance
requirements on Indian Tribal
governments nor would it have any
economic or other impacts on the
viability of Indian Tribes. Therefore, a
Tribal summary impact statement is not
required.
Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects)
The FHWA has analyzed this
proposed action under Executive Order
13211, Actions Concerning Regulations
that Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use. We have
determined that this proposed action
would not be a significant energy action
under that order because any action
contemplated would not be likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
Therefore, the FHWA certifies that a
Statement of Energy Effects under
Executive Order 13211 is not required.
Executive Order 12630 (Taking of
Private Property)
The FHWA has analyzed this
proposed rule and has determined that
this proposed action would not affect a
taking of private property or otherwise
have taking implications under
Executive Order 12630, Governmental
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This action meets applicable
standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce
burden.
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
Children)
The FHWA has analyzed this
proposed action under Executive Order
13045, Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks, and certifies that this proposed
action would not cause an
environmental risk to health or safety
that may disproportionately affect
children.
Regulation Identification Number
A regulation identification number
(RIN) is assigned to each regulatory
action listed in the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulations. The Regulatory
Information Service Center publishes
the Unified Agenda in April and
October of each year. The RIN number
contained in the heading of this
document can be used to cross-reference
this action with the Unified Agenda.
List of Subjects in 23 CFR Part 172
Government procurement, Grant
programs-transportation, Highways and
roads.
Issued on: August 24, 2012.
Victor M. Mendez,
Administrator.
In consideration of the foregoing, the
FHWA proposes to amend part 172 of
title 23, Code of Federal Regulations, as
follows:
TITLE 23—HIGHWAYS
1. Revise Part 172 to read as follows:
PART 172–PROCUREMENT,
MANAGEMENT, AND
ADMINISTRATION OF ENGINEERING
AND DESIGN RELATED SERVICES
Sec.
172.1 Purpose and applicability.
172.3 Definitions.
172.5 Program management and oversight.
172.7 Procurement methods and
procedures.
172.9 Contracts and administration.
172.11 Allowable costs and oversight.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 106, 112, 114(a), 302,
315, and 402; 40 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.; 48 CFR
part 31; 49 CFR 1.48(b) and part 18.
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§ 172.1
Purpose and applicability.
This part prescribes the requirements
for the procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related services under 23 U.S.C.
112 and as supplemented by the
common grant rule (as specified in 49
CFR part 18). The requirements of the
common grant rule shall apply except
where inconsistent with the
requirements of this part and other laws
and regulations applicable to the
Federal-aid highway program (FAHP).
The requirements herein apply to
federally funded contracts for
engineering and design related services
for highway construction projects
subject to the provisions of 23 U.S.C.
112(a) and are issued to ensure that a
qualified consultant is obtained through
an equitable qualifications-based
selection procurement process, that
prescribed work is properly
accomplished in a timely manner, and
at fair and reasonable cost.
State transportation agencies (STAs)
(or other direct grantees) shall ensure
that subgrantees comply with the
requirements of this part and the
common grant rule.
Federally funded contracts for
services not defined as engineering and
design related, or for services not in
furtherance of a highway construction
project or activity subject to the
provisions of 23 U.S.C. 112(a), are not
subject to the requirements of this part
and shall be procured and administered
under the requirements of the common
grant rule and procedures applicable to
such activities.
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§ 172.3
Definitions.
As used in this part:
Audit means a formal examination, in
accordance with professional standards,
of a consultant’s accounting systems,
incurred cost records, and other cost
presentations to test the reasonableness,
allowability, and allocability of costs in
accordance with the Federal cost
principles (as specified in 48 CFR part
31).
Cognizant agency means any agency
described below that has performed an
audit in accordance with generally
accepted government auditing standards
to test compliance with the
requirements of the Federal cost
principles (as specified in 48 CFR part
31) and issued an audit report of the
consultant’s indirect cost rate, or any
described agency that has conducted a
review of an audit report and related
workpapers prepared by a certified
public accountant and issued a letter of
concurrence with the audited indirect
cost rate(s). A cognizant agency may be
any of the following:
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(1) Federal agency;
(2) State transportation agency of the
State where the consultant’s accounting
and financial records are located; or
(3) State transportation agency to
whom cognizance for the particular
indirect cost rate(s) of a consulting firm
has been delegated or transferred in
writing by the State transportation
agency identified in subparagraph (2) of
this definition.
Competitive negotiation means
qualifications-based selection
procurement procedures complying
with 40 U.S.C. 1101–1104, commonly
referred to as the Brooks Act.
Consultant means the individual or
firm providing engineering and design
related services as a party to a contract.
Contract means a procurement
contract or agreement between a
contracting agency and consultant
under a FAHP grant or subgrant and
includes any procurement subcontract
under a contract.
Contracting agencies means State
transportation agency or a procuring
agency of the State acting in conjunction
with and at the direction of the State
transportation agency, other direct
grantees, and all subgrantees that are
responsible for the procurement,
management, and administration of
engineering and design related services.
Contract modification means an
agreement modifying the terms or
conditions of an original or existing
contract.
Engineering and design related
services means:
(1) Program management,
construction management, feasibility
studies, preliminary engineering, design
engineering, surveying, mapping, or
architectural related services with
respect to a highway construction
project subject to 23 U.S.C. 112(a) (as
defined in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A)); and
(2) Professional services of an
architectural or engineering nature, as
defined by State law, which are required
to or may logically or justifiably be
performed or approved by a person
licensed, registered, or certified to
provide the services (as defined in 40
U.S.C. 1102(2)).
Federal cost principles means the cost
principles contained in 48 CFR part 31
of the Federal Acquisition Regulations
for determination of allowable costs of
commercial, for-profit entities (as
specified in 49 CFR 18.22(b)).
Fixed fee means a dollar amount
established to cover the consultant’s
profit and business expenses not
allocable to overhead.
Management role means acting on the
contracting agency’s behalf, subject to
review and oversight by agency officials,
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to perform management services such as
a program or project administration role
typically performed by the contracting
agency and necessary to fulfill the
duties imposed by title 23 U.S.C., other
Federal and State laws, and applicable
regulations.
One-year applicable accounting
period means the annual accounting
period for which financial statements
are regularly prepared by the consultant.
Scope of work means all services,
work activities, and actions required of
the consultant by the obligations of the
contract.
State transportation agency (STA)
means that department or agency
maintained in conformity with 23
U.S.C. 302 and charged under State law
with the responsibility for highway
construction (as defined in 23 U.S.C.
101); and that is authorized by the laws
of the State to make final decisions in
all matters relating to, and to enter into,
all contracts and agreements for projects
and activities to fulfill the duties
imposed by title 23 United States Code,
title 23 Code of Federal Regulations, and
other applicable Federal laws and
regulations.
§ 172.5 Program management and
oversight.
(a) STA responsibilities. STAs (or
other direct grantees) shall develop and
sustain organizational capacity and
provide the resources necessary for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related consultant services,
reimbursed in whole or in part with
FAHP funding (as specified in 23 U.S.C.
302(a)). Responsibilities shall include
the following:
(1) Preparing and maintaining written
policies and procedures for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related consultant services in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section;
(2) Establishing a procedure for
estimating staffing, resources, and costs
of needed consultant services and
associated agency oversight in support
of project authorization requests
submitted to FHWA for approval (as
specified in 23 CFR 630.106);
(3) Procuring, managing, and
administering engineering and design
related consultant services in
accordance with applicable Federal and
State laws, regulations, and approved
policies and procedures (as specified in
23 CFR 1.9(a)); and
(4) Administering subgrants in
accordance with State laws and
procedures (as specified in 49 CFR
18.37) and the requirements of 23 U.S.C.
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106(g)(4)). This shall include providing
oversight of the procurement,
management, and administration of
engineering and design related
consultant services by subgrantees to
assure compliance with applicable
Federal and State laws and regulations.
Nothing in this part shall be taken as
relieving the STA of its responsibility
under laws and regulations applicable
to the FAHP for the work performed
under any consultant agreement or
contract entered into by a subgrantee.
(b) Subgrantee responsibilities.
Subgrantees shall develop and sustain
organizational capacity and provide the
resources necessary for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related consultant services,
reimbursed in whole or in part with
FAHP funding (as specified in 23 U.S.C.
106(g)(4)(A)). Responsibilities shall
include the following:
(1) Adopting written policies and
procedures prescribed by the awarding
STA (or other direct grantee) for the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related consultant services in
accordance with applicable Federal and
State laws and regulations; or when not
prescribed, shall include:
(i) Preparing and maintaining its own
written policies and procedures in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section; or
(ii) Submitting documentation
associated with each procurement and
subsequent contract to the awarding
STA (or other direct grantee) for review
to assess compliance with applicable
Federal and State laws, regulations, and
the requirements of this part;
(2) Procuring, managing, and
administering engineering and design
related consultant services in
accordance with applicable Federal and
State laws, regulations, and approved
policies and procedures (as specified in
23 CFR 1.9(a)).
(c) Written policies and procedures.
The contracting agency shall prepare
and maintain written policies and
procedures for the procurement,
management, and administration of
engineering and design related
consultant services. The STA (or other
direct grantee) written policies and
procedures and all revisions shall be
approved by the FHWA. Written
policies and procedures prepared by
subgrantees shall be approved by the
awarding STA (or other direct grantee).
Any deviations from approved policies
and procedures shall require review by
FHWA, or the direct grantee as
appropriate, to assess compliance with
applicable requirements. These policies
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and procedures shall, as appropriate for
each method of procurement a
contracting agency proposes to use,
address the following items to assure
compliance with Federal and State laws,
regulations, and the requirements of this
part:
(1) Preparing a scope of work and
evaluation factors for the ranking/
selection of a consultant;
(2) Soliciting proposals from
prospective consultants;
(3) Preventing, identifying, and
mitigating conflicts of interest for
employees of both the contracting
agency and consultants (as specified in
23 CFR 1.33 and the requirements of
this part).
(4) Verifying suspension and
debarment actions and eligibility of
consultants (as specified in 49 CFR
18.35 and 2 CFR part 180);
(5) Evaluating proposals and the
ranking/selection of a consultant;
(6) Preparing an independent agency
estimate for use in negotiation with the
selected consultant;
(7) Selecting appropriate contract
type, payment method(s), and terms and
incorporating required contract
provisions, assurances, and
certifications in accordance with
§ 172.9;
(8) Negotiating a contract with the
selected consultant;
(9) Establishing elements of contract
costs, accepting indirect cost rate(s) for
application to contracts, and assuring
consultant compliance with the Federal
cost principles in accordance with
§ 172.11;
(10) Assuring consultant costs billed
are allowable in accordance with the
Federal cost principles and consistent
with the contract terms as well as the
acceptability and progress of the
consultant’s work;
(11) Monitoring the consultant’s work
and compliance with the terms,
conditions, and specifications of the
contract;
(12) Preparing a consultant’s
performance evaluation when services
are completed and using such
performance data in future evaluation
and ranking of consultant to provide
similar services;
(13) Closing-out a contract;
(14) Retaining adequate programmatic
and contract records (as specified in 49
CFR 18.42 and the requirements of this
part);
(15) Determining the extent to which
the consultant, which is responsible for
the professional quality, technical
accuracy, and coordination of services,
may be reasonably liable for costs
resulting from errors and omissions in
the work furnished under its contract;
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(16) Assessing administrative,
contractual, or legal remedies in
instances where consultants violate or
breach contract terms and conditions,
and providing for such sanctions and
penalties as may be appropriate; and
(17) Resolving disputes in the
procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and
design related consultant services.
(d) A contracting agency may formally
adopt, by statute or within approved
written policies and procedures as
specified in paragraph (c) of this
section, any direct Federal Government
or other contracting regulation,
standard, or procedure provided its
application does not conflict with the
provisions of 23 U.S.C. 112, the
requirements of this part, and other laws
and regulations applicable to the FAHP.
(e) Notwithstanding the foregoing, a
contracting agency shall have a
reasonable period of time, not to exceed
12 months from the effective date of this
rule unless an extension is granted for
unique or extenuating circumstances, to
issue or update current written policies
and procedures for review and approval
in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section and consistent with the
requirements of this part.
§ 172.7 Procurement methods and
procedures.
(a) Procurement methods. The
procurement of engineering and design
related services funded by FAHP funds
and directly related to a highway
construction project subject to the
provisions of 23 U.S.C. 112(a) shall be
conducted in accordance with one of
three methods: Competitive negotiation
(qualifications-based selection)
procurement, small purchase
procurement for small dollar value
contracts, and noncompetitive
procurement where specific conditions
exist allowing solicitation and
negotiation to take place with a single
consultant.
(1) Competitive negotiation
(qualifications-based selection). Except
as provided in (2) and (3) below,
contracting agencies shall use the
competitive negotiation method for the
procurement of engineering and design
related services when FAHP funds are
involved in the contract (as specified in
23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A)). The solicitation,
evaluation, ranking, selection, and
negotiation shall comply with the
qualifications-based selection
procurement procedures for
architectural and engineering services
codified under 40 U.S.C. 1101–1104,
commonly referred to as the Brooks Act.
In accordance with the requirements of
the Brooks Act, the following
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procedures shall apply to the
competitive negotiation procurement
method:
(i) Solicitation. The solicitation
process shall be by public
announcement, public advertisement, or
any other public forum or method that
assures qualified in-State and out-ofState consultants are given a fair
opportunity to be considered for award
of the contract. Procurement procedures
may involve a single step process with
issuance of a request for proposal (RFP)
to all interested consultants or a
multiphase process with issuance of a
request for statements or letters of
interest or qualifications (RFQ) whereby
responding consultants are ranked
based on qualifications and request for
proposals are then provided to three or
more of the most highly qualified
consultants. Minimum qualifications of
consultants to perform services under
general work categories or areas of
expertise may also be assessed through
a prequalification process whereby
statements of qualifications are
submitted on an annual basis.
Regardless of any process utilized for
prequalification of consultants or for an
initial assessment of a consultant’s
qualifications under an RFQ, a RFP
specific to the project, task, or service is
required for evaluation of a consultant’s
specific technical approach and
qualifications.
(ii) Request for proposal (RFP). The
RFP shall provide all information and
requirements necessary for interested
consultants to provide a response to the
RFP and compete for the solicited
services. The RFP shall:
(A) Provide a clear, accurate, and
detailed description of the scope of
work, technical requirements, and
qualifications of consultants necessary
for the services to be rendered. The
scope of work should detail the purpose
and description of the project, services
to be performed, deliverables to be
provided, estimated schedule for
performance of the work, and applicable
standards, specifications, and policies;
(B) Identify the requirements for any
discussions that may be conducted with
three (3) or more of the most highly
qualified consultants following
submission and evaluation of proposals;
(C) Identify evaluation factors
including their relative weight of
importance in accordance with
subparagraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section;
(D) Specify the contract type and
method(s) of payment to be utilized in
accordance with § 172.9;
(E) Identify any special provisions or
contract requirements associated with
the solicited services;
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(F) Require that submission of any
requested cost proposals or elements of
cost be in a concealed format and
separate from technical/qualifications
proposals as these shall not be
considered in the evaluation, ranking,
and selection phase; and
(G) Provide a schedule of key dates for
the procurement process and establish a
submittal deadline for responses to the
RFP which provides sufficient time for
interested consultants to receive notice,
prepare, and submit a proposal, which
except in unusual circumstances shall
be not less than 14 days from the date
of issuance of the RFP.
(iii) Evaluation factors. (A) Criteria
used for evaluation, ranking, and
selection of consultants to perform
engineering and design related services
must assess the demonstrated
competence and qualifications for the
type of professional services solicited.
These qualifications-based factors may
include, but are not limited to, technical
approach (e.g., project understanding,
innovative concepts or alternatives,
quality control procedures), work
experience, specialized expertise,
professional licensure, staff capabilities,
workload capacity, and past
performance.
(B) Price shall not be used as a factor
in the evaluation, ranking, and selection
phase. All price or cost related items
which include, but are not limited to,
cost proposals, direct salaries/wage
rates, indirect cost rates, and other
direct costs are prohibited from being
used as evaluation criteria.
(C) In-State or local preference shall
not be used as a factor in the evaluation,
ranking, and selection phase. State
licensing laws are not preempted by this
provision and professional licensure
within a jurisdiction may be established
as a requirement which attests to the
minimum qualifications and
competence of a consultant to perform
the solicited services.
(D) The following nonqualificationsbased evaluation criteria are permitted
under the specified conditions and
provided the combined total of these
criteria do not exceed a nominal value
of ten percent of the total evaluation
criteria to maintain the integrity of a
qualifications-based selection:
(1) A local presence may be used as
a nominal evaluation factor where
appropriate. This criteria shall not be
based on political or jurisdictional
boundaries and may be applied on a
project-by-project basis for contracts
where a need has been established for
a consultant to provide a local presence,
a local presence will add value to the
quality and efficiency of the project, and
application of this criteria leaves an
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appropriate number of qualified
consultants, given the nature and size of
the project. If a consultant outside of the
locality area indicates as part of a
proposal that it will satisfy the criteria
in some manner, such as establishing a
local project office, that commitment
shall be considered to have satisfied the
local presence criteria.
(2) The participation of qualified and
certified Disadvantaged Business
Enterprise (DBE) subconsultants may be
used as a nominal evaluation criteria
where appropriate in accordance with
49 CFR part 26 and a contracting
agency’s FHWA-approved DBE program.
(iv) Evaluation, ranking, and
selection. (A) Consultant proposals shall
be evaluated by the contracting agency
based on the criteria established and
published within the public solicitation.
(B) While the contract will be with the
prime consultant, proposal evaluations
shall consider the qualifications of the
prime consultant and any
subconsultants identified within the
proposal with respect to the scope of
work and established criteria.
(C) Following submission and
evaluation of proposals, the contracting
agency shall conduct interviews or other
types of discussions determined
appropriate for the project with at least
three of the most highly qualified
consultants to clarify the technical
approach, qualifications, and
capabilities provided in response to the
RFP. Discussion requirements shall be
specified within the RFP and should be
based on the size and complexity of the
project as defined in contracting agency
written policies and procedures (as
specified in § 172.5(c)). Discussions may
be written, by telephone, video
conference, or by oral presentation/
interview. Discussions following
proposal submission are not required
provided proposals contain sufficient
information for evaluation of technical
approach and qualifications to perform
the specific project, task, or service with
respect to established criteria.
(D) From the proposal evaluation and
any subsequent discussions which have
been conducted, the contracting agency
shall rank, in order of preference, at
least three consultants determined most
highly qualified to perform the solicited
services based on the established and
published criteria.
(E) Notification must be provided to
responding consultants of the final
ranking of the three most highly
qualified consultants.
(F) The contracting agency shall retain
acceptable documentation of the
solicitation, proposal, evaluation, and
selection of the consultant in
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accordance with the provisions of 49
CFR 18.42.
(v) Negotiation. (A) Independent
estimate. Prior to receipt or review of
the most highly qualified consultant’s
cost proposal, the contracting agency
shall prepare a detailed independent
estimate with an appropriate breakdown
of the work or labor hours, types or
classifications of labor required, other
direct costs, and consultant’s fixed fee
for the defined scope of work. The
independent estimate shall serve as the
basis for negotiation and ensuring the
consultant services are obtained at a fair
and reasonable cost.
(B) Elements of contract costs (e.g.,
indirect cost rates, direct salary or wage
rates, fixed fee, and other direct costs)
shall be established separately in
accordance with § 172.11.
(C) If concealed cost proposals were
submitted in conjunction with
technical/qualifications proposals, only
the cost proposal of the consultant with
which negotiations are initiated may be
considered. Concealed cost proposals of
consultants with which negotiations are
not initiated should be returned to the
respective consultant due to the
confidential nature of this data (as
specified in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(E)).
(D) The contracting agency shall
retain documentation of negotiation
activities and resources used in the
analysis of costs to establish elements of
the contract in accordance with the
provisions of 49 CFR 18.42. This
documentation shall include the
consultant cost certification and
documentation supporting the
acceptance of the indirect cost rate to be
applied to the contract (as specified in
§ 172.11(c)).
(2) Small purchases. The small
purchase method involves procurement
of engineering and design related
services where an adequate number of
qualified sources are reviewed and the
total contract costs do not exceed an
established simplified acquisition
threshold. Contracting agencies may use
the State’s small purchase procedures
which reflect applicable State laws and
regulations for the procurement of
engineering and design related services
provided the total contract costs do not
exceed the Federal simplified
acquisition threshold (as specified in 48
CFR 2.101). When a lower threshold for
use of small purchase procedures is
established in State law, regulation, or
policy, the lower threshold shall apply
to the use of FAHP funds. The following
additional requirements shall apply to
the small purchase procurement
method:
(i) The scope of work, project phases,
and contract requirements shall not be
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broken down into smaller components
merely to permit the use of small
purchase procedures.
(ii) A minimum of three consultants
are required to satisfy the adequate
number of qualified sources reviewed.
(iii) Contract costs may be negotiated
in accordance with State small purchase
procedures; however, the allowability of
costs shall be determined in accordance
with the Federal cost principles.
(iv) The full amount of any contract
modification or amendment that would
cause the total contract amount to
exceed the established simplified
acquisition threshold would be
ineligible for Federal-aid funding. The
FHWA may withdraw all Federal-aid
from a contract if it is modified or
amended above the applicable
established simplified acquisition
threshold.
(3) Noncompetitive. The
noncompetitive method involves
procurement of engineering and design
related services when it is not feasible
to award the contract using competitive
negotiation or small purchase
procurement methods. The following
requirements shall apply to the
noncompetitive procurement method:
(i) Contracting agencies may use their
own noncompetitive procedures which
reflect applicable State and local laws
and regulations and conform to
applicable Federal requirements.
(ii) Contracting agencies shall
establish a process to determine when
noncompetitive procedures will be used
and shall submit justification to, and
receive approval from, the FHWA before
using this form of contracting.
(iii) Circumstances under which a
contract may be awarded by
noncompetitive procedures are limited
to the following:
(A) The service is available only from
a single source;
(B) There is an emergency which will
not permit the time necessary to
conduct competitive negotiations; or
(C) After solicitation of a number of
sources, competition is determined to be
inadequate.
(iv) Contract costs may be negotiated
in accordance with contracting agency
noncompetitive procedures; however,
the allowability of costs shall be
determined in accordance with the
Federal cost principles.
(b) Additional procurement
requirements. (1) Common grant rule. (i)
STAs (or other direct grantees) and their
subgrantees must comply with
procurement requirements established
in State and local laws, regulations,
policies, and procedures which are not
addressed by or in conflict with
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applicable Federal laws and regulations
(as specified in 49 CFR 18.36).
(ii) When State and local procurement
laws, regulations, policies, or
procedures are in conflict with
applicable Federal laws and regulations,
contracting agencies must comply with
Federal requirements to be eligible for
Federal-aid reimbursement of the
associated costs of the services incurred
following FHWA authorization (as
specified in 49 CFR 18.4).
(2) Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(DBE) program. (i) Contracting agencies
shall give consideration to DBE
consultants in the procurement of
engineering and design related service
contracts subject to 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)
in accordance with 49 CFR part 26.
When DBE program participation goals
cannot be met through race-neutral
measures, additional DBE participation
on engineering and design related
services contracts may be achieved in
accordance with a contracting agency’s
FHWA approved DBE program through
either:
(A) Use of an evaluation criterion in
the qualifications-based selection of
consultants (as specified in
§ 172.7(a)(1)(iii)(D)); or
(B) Establishment of a contract
participation goal.
(ii) The use of quotas or exclusive setasides for DBE consultants is prohibited
(as specified in 49 CFR 26.43).
(3) Suspension and debarment.
Contracting agencies must verify
suspension and debarment actions and
eligibility status of consultants and
subconsultants prior to entering into an
agreement or contract in accordance
with 49 CFR 18.35 and 2 CFR part 180.
(4) Conflicts of interest. (i) Contracting
agencies shall maintain a written code
of standards of conduct governing the
performance of their employees engaged
in the award and administration of
engineering and design related services
contracts under this part and governing
the conduct and roles of consultants in
the performance of services under such
contracts to prevent, identify, and
mitigate conflicts of interest in
accordance with 23 CFR 1.33 and the
provisions of this subparagraph.
(ii) No employee, officer, or agent of
the contracting agency shall participate
in selection, or in the award or
administration of a contract supported
by Federal-aid funds if a conflict of
interest, real or apparent, would be
involved. Such a conflict arises when:
(A) The employee, officer, or agent;
(B) Any member of his or her
immediate family;
(C) His or her partner; or
(D) An organization which employs or
is about to employ, any of the above, has
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a financial or other interest in the
consultant selected for award.
(iii) The contracting agency’s officers,
employees, or agents shall neither
solicit nor accept gratuities, favors, or
anything of monetary value from
consultants, potential consultants, or
parties to subagreements. Contracting
agencies may establish dollar thresholds
where the financial interest is not
substantial or the gift is an unsolicited
item of nominal value.
(iv) Contracting agencies may provide
additional prohibitions relative to real,
apparent, or potential conflicts of
interest.
(v) To the extent permitted by State or
local law or regulations, such standards
of conduct shall provide for penalties,
sanctions, or other disciplinary actions
for violations of such standards by the
contracting agency’s officers,
employees, or agents, or by consultants
or their agents.
(5) Consultant services in
management roles. (i) When FAHP
funds participate in the contract, the
contracting agency shall receive
approval from the FHWA, or the direct
grantee as appropriate, before utilizing a
consultant to act in a management role
for the contracting agency, unless an
alternate approval procedure has been
approved. Use of consultants in
management roles does not relieve the
contracting agency of responsibilities
associated with the use of FAHP funds
(as specified in 23 U.S.C. 302(a) and 23
U.S.C. 106(g)(4)) and should be limited
to large projects or circumstances where
unusual cost or time constraints exist,
unique technical or managerial
expertise is required, and/or an increase
in contracting agency staff is not a
viable option.
(ii) Management roles may include,
but are not limited to, providing
oversight of an element of a highway
program, function, or service on behalf
of the contracting agency or may involve
managing or providing oversight of a
project, series of projects, and/or the
work of other consultants and
contractors on behalf of the contracting
agency. Contracting agency written
policies and procedures (as specified in
§ 172.5(c)) may further define allowable
management roles and services a
consultant may provide, specific
approval responsibilities, and associated
controls necessary to ensure compliance
with Federal requirements.
(iii) Use of consultants in
management roles requires appropriate
conflicts of interest standards as
specified in subparagraph (b)(4) of this
section and adequate contracting agency
staffing to administer and monitor the
management consultant contract (as
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specified in § 172.9(d)). A consultant
serving in a management role shall be
precluded from providing services on
projects, activities, or contracts under its
oversight.
(iv) FAHP funds shall not participate
in the costs of a consultant serving in a
management role where the consultant
was not procured in accordance with
Federal and State requirements (as
specified in 23 CFR 1.9(a)).
(v) Where benefiting more than a
single Federal-aid project, allocability of
consultant contract costs for services
related to a management role shall be
distributed consistent with the cost
principles applicable to the contracting
agency (as specified in 49 CFR 18.22(b)).
§ 172.9
Contracts and administration.
(a) Contract types. The types of
contracts which shall be used are: (1)
Project-specific. A contract between the
contracting agency and consultant for
the performance of services and defined
scope of work related to a specific
project or projects.
(2) Multiphase. A project-specific
contract where the defined scope of
work is divided into phases which may
be negotiated and authorized
individually as the project progresses.
(3) On-call or indefinite delivery/
indefinite quantity (IDIQ). A contract for
the performance of services for a
number of projects, under task or work
orders issued on an as-needed or on-call
basis, for an established contract period.
The procurement of services to be
performed under on-call or IDIQ
contracts must follow either competitive
negotiation or small purchase
procurement procedures (as specified in
§ 172.7). The solicitation and contract
provisions must address the following
requirements:
(i) Specify a reasonable maximum
length of contract period, including the
number and period of any allowable
contract extensions, which shall not
exceed 5 years;
(ii) Specify a maximum total contract
dollar amount which may be awarded
under a contract;
(iii) Include a statement of work,
requirements, specifications, or other
description to define the general scope,
complexity, and professional nature of
the services; and
(iv) If multiple consultants are to be
selected and multiple on-call or IDIQ
contracts awarded through a single
solicitation for specific services:
(A) Identify the number of consultants
that may be selected or contracts that
may be awarded from the solicitation;
and
(B) Specify the procedures the
contracting agency will use in
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competing and awarding task or work
orders among the selected, qualified
consultants. Task or work orders shall
not be competed and awarded among
the selected, qualified consultants on
the basis of costs under on-call or IDIQ
contracts for services procured with
competitive negotiation procedures.
Under competitive negotiation
procurement, each specific task or work
order shall be awarded to the selected,
qualified consultants:
(1) Through an additional
qualifications-based selection
procedure; or
(2) On a regional basis whereby the
State is divided into regions and
consultants are selected to provide oncall or IDIQ services for an assigned
region(s) identified within the
solicitation.
(b) Payment methods. (1) The method
of payment to the consultant shall be set
forth in the original solicitation,
contract, and in any contract
modification thereto. The methods of
payment shall be: Lump sum, cost plus
fixed fee, cost per unit of work, or
specific rates of compensation. A single
contract may contain different payment
methods as appropriate for
compensation of different elements of
work.
(2) The cost plus a percentage of cost
and percentage of construction cost
methods of payment shall not be used.
(3) The lump sum payment method
shall only be used when the contracting
agency has established the extent,
scope, complexity, character, and
duration of the work to be required to
a degree that fair and reasonable
compensation, including a fixed fee, can
be determined at the time of negotiation.
(4) When the method of payment is
other than lump sum, the contract shall
specify a maximum amount payable
which shall not be exceeded unless
adjusted by a contract modification.
(5) The specific rates of compensation
payment method provides for
reimbursement on the basis of direct
labor hours at specified fixed hourly
rates (including direct labor costs,
indirect costs, and fee or profit) plus any
other direct expenses or costs, subject to
an agreement maximum amount. This
payment method shall only be used
when it is not possible at the time of
procurement to estimate the extent or
duration of the work or to estimate costs
with any reasonable degree of accuracy
and should be limited to contracts or
components of contracts for specialized
or support type services where the
consultant is not in direct control of the
number of hours worked, such as
construction engineering and
inspection. Use of this payment method
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requires contracting agency
management and monitoring of the
consultant’s level of effort and
classification of employees used to
perform the contracted services.
(6) Contracting agencies may
withhold retainage from payments in
accordance with prompt pay
requirements (as specified in 49 CFR
26.29). When retainage is used, the
terms and conditions of the contract
must clearly define agency
requirements, including periodic
reduction in retention and the
conditions for release of retention.
(c) Contract provisions. Contracts
must include the following provisions:
(1) Administrative, contractual, or
legal remedies in instances where
consultants violate or breach contract
terms and conditions, and provide for
such sanctions and penalties as may be
appropriate (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(2) Termination for cause and for
convenience by the contracting agency
including the manner by which it will
be effected and the basis for settlement
(all contracts and subcontracts in excess
of $10,000);
(3) Notice of contracting agency
requirements and regulations pertaining
to reporting (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(4) Contracting agency requirements
and regulations pertaining to copyrights
and rights in data (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(5) Access by grantee, the subgrantee,
the FHWA, the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s Inspector General, the
Comptroller General of the United
States, or any of their duly authorized
representatives to any books,
documents, papers, and records of the
consultant which are directly pertinent
to that specific contract for the purpose
of making audit, examination, excerpts,
and transcriptions (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(6) Retention of all required records
for not less than 3 years after the
contracting agency makes final payment
and all other pending matters are closed
(all contracts and subcontracts);
(7) Lobbying certification and
disclosure (as specified in 49 CFR part
20) (all contracts and subcontracts
exceeding $100,000);
(8) Standard DOT Title VI Assurances
(DOT Order 1050.2) (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(9) Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(DBE) assurance (as specified in 49 CFR
26.13(b)) (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(10) Prompt pay requirements (as
specified in 49 CFR 26.29) (all contracts
and subcontracts);
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(11) Determination of allowable costs
in accordance with the Federal cost
principles (all contracts and
subcontracts);
(12) Contracting agency requirements
pertaining to consultant errors and
omissions (all contracts and
subcontracts); and
(13) Contracting agency requirements
pertaining to conflicts of interest (as
specified in 23 CFR 1.33 and the
requirements of this part) (all contracts
and subcontracts).
(d) Contract administration and
monitoring. (1) Responsible charge. A
full-time, public employee of the
contracting agency qualified to ensure
that the work delivered under contract
is complete, accurate, and consistent
with the terms, conditions, and
specifications of the contract shall be in
responsible charge of each contract or
project. While an independent
consultant may be procured to serve in
a program or project management role
(as specified in § 172.7(b)(5)) or to
provide technical assistance in review
and acceptance of engineering and
design related services performed and
products developed by other
consultants, a full-time, public
employee must be designated by the
contracting agency as being in
responsible charge. A public employee
may serve in responsible charge of
multiple projects and contracting
agencies may use multiple public
employees to fulfill monitoring
responsibilities. The public employee’s
responsibilities shall include:
(i) Administering inherently
governmental activities including, but
not limited to, contract negotiation,
contract payment, and evaluation of
compliance, performance, and quality of
services provided by consultant;
(ii) Being familiar with the contract
requirements, scope of services to be
performed, and products to be produced
by the consultant;
(iii) Being familiar with the
qualifications and responsibilities of the
consultant’s staff and evaluating any
requested changes in key personnel;
(iv) Scheduling and attending
progress and project review meetings,
commensurate with the magnitude,
complexity, and type of work, to ensure
the work is progressing in accordance
with established scope of work and
schedule milestones;
(v) Assuring consultant costs billed
are allowable in accordance with the
Federal cost principles and consistent
with the contract terms as well as the
acceptability and progress of the
consultant’s work;
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(vi) Evaluating and participating in
decisions for contract modifications;
and
(vii) Documenting contract
monitoring activities and maintaining
adequate contract records (as specified
in 49 CFR 18.42).
(2) Performance evaluation. The
contracting agency shall prepare a final
evaluation report of the consultant’s
performance on a contract. The report
should include, but not be limited to, an
evaluation of the timely completion of
work, adherence to contract scope and
budget, and quality of the work. The
consultant shall be provided a copy of
the report and shall be provided an
opportunity to provide written
comments to be attached to the report.
Additional interim performance
evaluations should be considered based
on the scope, complexity, and size of
the contract as a means to provide
feedback, foster communication, and
achieve desired changes or
improvements. Completed performance
evaluations should be archived for
consideration as an element of past
performance in the future evaluation of
the consultant to provide similar
services.
(e) Contract modification. (1) Contract
modifications are required for any
amendments to the terms of the existing
contract that change the cost of the
contract; significantly change the
character, scope, complexity, or
duration of the work; or significantly
change the conditions under which the
work is required to be performed.
(2) A contract modification shall
clearly define and document the
changes made to the contract, establish
the method of payment for any
adjustments in contract costs, and be in
compliance with the terms and
conditions of the contract and original
procurement.
(3) Contract modifications shall be
negotiated following the same
procedures as the negotiation of the
original contract.
(4) Only the type of services and work
included within the scope of services of
the original solicitation from which a
qualifications-based selection was made
may be added to a contract. Services
outside of the scope of work established
in the original request for proposal must
be procured under a new solicitation,
performed by contracting agency staff,
or performed under a different contract
established for the services desired.
(5) Overruns in the costs of the work
shall not automatically warrant an
increase in the fixed fee portion of a cost
plus fixed fee reimbursed contract.
Permitted changes to the scope of work
or duration may warrant consideration
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for adjustment of the fixed fee portion
of cost plus fixed fee or lump sum
reimbursed contracts.
(f) Contracts. Contracts and contract
settlements involving engineering and
design related services for projects that
have not been assumed by the State
under 23 U.S.C. 106(c), that do not fall
under the small purchase procedures (as
specified in § 172.7(a)(2)), shall be
subject to the prior approval by FHWA,
unless an alternate approval procedure
has been approved by FHWA.
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§ 172.11
Allowable costs and oversight.
(a) Allowable costs. (1) Costs or prices
based on estimated costs for contracts
shall be eligible for Federal-aid
reimbursement only to the extent that
costs incurred or cost estimates
included in negotiated prices are
allowable in accordance with the
Federal cost principles.
(2) Consultants shall be responsible
for accounting for costs appropriately
and for maintaining records, including
supporting documentation, adequate to
demonstrate that costs claimed have
been incurred, are allocable to the
contract, and comply with Federal cost
principles.
(b) Elements of contract costs. The
following requirements shall apply to
the establishment of the specified
elements of contract costs:
(1) Indirect cost rates. (i) Indirect cost
rates shall be updated on an annual
basis in accordance with the
consultant’s annual accounting period
and in compliance with the Federal cost
principles.
(ii) Contracting agencies shall accept
a consultant’s or subconsultant’s
indirect cost rate(s) established for a 1year applicable accounting period by a
cognizant agency that has:
(A) Performed an audit in accordance
with generally accepted government
auditing standards to test compliance
with the requirements of the Federal
cost principles and issued an audit
report of the consultant’s indirect cost
rate(s); or
(B) Conducted a review of an audit
report and related workpapers prepared
by a certified public accountant and
issued a letter of concurrence with the
related audited indirect cost rate(s).
(iii) When the indirect cost rate has
not been established by a cognizant
agency in accordance with
subparagraph (1)(ii) herein, a STA (or
other direct grantee) shall perform an
evaluation of a consultant’s or
subconsultant’s indirect cost rate prior
to acceptance and application of the rate
to contracts administered by the grantee
or its subgrantees. The evaluation
performed by STAs (or other direct
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grantees) to establish or accept an
indirect cost rate(s) shall provide
assurance of compliance with the
Federal cost principles and may consist
of the following:
(A) Performing an audit in accordance
with generally accepted government
auditing standards and issuing an audit
report;
(B) Reviewing and accepting an audit
report and related workpapers prepared
by a certified public accountant or
another STA;
(C) Establishing a provisional indirect
cost rate for the specific contract and
adjusting contract costs based upon an
audited final rate; or
(D) Conducting other evaluations in
accordance with a risk-based oversight
process as specified in subparagraph
(c)(2) of this section and within the
agency’s approved written policies and
procedures (as specified in § 172.5(c)).
(iv) A lower indirect cost rate may be
accepted for use on a contract if
submitted voluntarily by a consultant;
however, the consultant’s offer of a
lower indirect cost rate shall not be a
condition or qualification to be
considered for the work or contract
award.
(v) Once accepted in accordance with
subparagraphs (1)(ii)–(iv) herein,
contracting agencies shall apply such
indirect cost rate(s) for the purposes of
contract estimation, negotiation,
administration, reporting, and contract
payment and the indirect cost rate(s)
shall not be limited by administrative or
de facto ceilings of any kind.
(vi) A consultant’s accepted indirect
cost rate for its 1-year applicable
accounting period shall be applied to
contracts; however, once an indirect
cost rate is established for a contract, it
may be extended beyond the 1-year
applicable period, through the duration
of the specific contract, provided all
concerned parties agree. Agreement to
the extension of the 1-year applicable
period shall not be a condition or
qualification to be considered for the
work or contract award.
(vii) Disputed rates. If an indirect cost
rate established by a cognizant agency
in subparagraph (1)(ii) herein is in
dispute, the contracting agency does not
have to accept the rate. A contracting
agency may perform its own audit or
other evaluation of the consultant’s
indirect cost rate for application to the
specific contract, until or unless the
dispute is resolved. A contracting
agency may alternatively negotiate a
provisional indirect cost rate for the
specific contract and adjust contract
costs based upon an audited final rate.
Only the consultant and the parties
involved in performing the indirect cost
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audit may dispute the established
indirect cost rate. If an error is
discovered in the established indirect
cost rate, the rate may be disputed by
any prospective contracting agency.
(2) Direct salary or wage rates. (i)
Compensation for each employee or
classification of employee must be
reasonable for the work performed in
accordance with the Federal cost
principles.
(ii) To provide for fair and reasonable
compensation, considering the
classification, experience, and
responsibility of employees necessary to
provide the desired engineering and
design related services, contracting
agencies may establish consultant direct
salary or wage rate limitations or
‘‘benchmarks’’ based upon an objective
assessment of the reasonableness of
proposed rates performed in accordance
with the reasonableness provisions of
the Federal cost principles.
(iii) When an assessment of
reasonableness in accordance with the
Federal cost principles has not been
performed, contracting agencies shall
use and apply the consultant’s actual
direct salary or wage rates for
estimation, negotiation, administration,
and payment of contracts and contract
modifications.
(3) Fixed fee. (i) The determination of
the amount of fixed fee shall consider
the scope, complexity, contract
duration, degree of risk borne by the
consultant, amount of subcontracting,
and professional nature of the services
as well as the size and type of contract.
(ii) The establishment of fixed fee
shall be project or task order specific.
(iii) Fixed fees in excess of 15 percent
of the total direct labor and indirect
costs of the contract may be justified
only when exceptional circumstances
exist.
(4) Other direct costs. The Federal
cost principles shall be used in
determining the reasonableness,
allowability, and allocability of other
direct contract costs.
(c) Oversight. (1) Agency controls.
Contracting agencies shall provide
reasonable assurance that consultant
costs on contracts reimbursed in whole
or in part with FAHP funding are
allowable in accordance with the
Federal cost principles and consistent
with the contract terms considering the
contract type and payment method(s).
Contracting agency written policies,
procedures, contract documents, and
other controls (as specified in § 172.5(c)
and § 172.9) shall address the
establishment, acceptance, and
administration of contract costs to
assure compliance with the Federal cost
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principles and requirements of this
section.
(2) Risk-based analysis. The STAs (or
other direct grantees) may employ a
risk-based oversight process to provide
reasonable assurance of consultant
compliance with Federal cost principles
on FAHP funded contracts administered
by the grantee or its subgrantees. If
employed, this risk-based oversight
process shall be incorporated into STA
(or other direct grantee) written policies
and procedures (as specified in
§ 172.5(c)). In addition to ensuring
allowability of direct contract costs, the
risk-based oversight process shall
address the evaluation and acceptance
of consultant and subconsultant indirect
cost rates for application to contracts. A
risk-based oversight process shall
consist of the following:
(i) Risk assessments. Conducting and
documenting an annual assessment of
risks of noncompliance with the Federal
cost principles per consultant doing
business with the agency, considering
the following factors:
(A) Consultant’s contract volume
within the State;
(B) Number of States in which the
consultant operates;
(C) Experience of consultant with
FAHP contracts;
(D) History and professional
reputation of consultant;
(E) Audit history of consultant;
(F) Type and complexity of consultant
accounting system;
(G) Size (number of employees and/or
annual revenues) of consultant;
(H) Relevant experience of certified
public accountant performing audit of
consultant;
(I) Assessment of consultant’s internal
controls;
(J) Changes in consultant
organizational structure; and
(K) Other factors as appropriate.
(ii) Risk mitigation and evaluation
procedures. Allocating resources, as
considered necessary based on the
results of the annual risk assessment, to
provide reasonable assurance of
compliance with the Federal cost
principles through application of the
following types of risk mitigation and
evaluation procedures appropriate to
the consultant and circumstances:
(A) Audits performed in accordance
with generally accepted government
audit standards to test compliance with
the requirements of the Federal cost
principles;
(B) Certified public accountant or
other STA workpaper reviews;
(C) Desk reviews;
(D) Other analytical procedures;
(E) Consultant cost certifications in
accordance with subparagraph (c)(3)
herein; and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:15 Aug 31, 2012
Jkt 226001
(F) Training on the Federal cost
principles.
(iii) Documentation. Maintaining
adequate documentation of the riskbased analysis procedures performed to
support the allowability and acceptance
of consultant costs on FAHP funded
contracts.
(3) Consultant cost certification. (i)
Indirect cost rate proposals for the
consultant’s 1-year applicable
accounting period shall not be accepted
and no agreement shall be made by a
contracting agency to establish final
indirect cost rates, unless the costs have
been certified by an official of the
consultant as being allowable in
accordance with the Federal cost
principles. The certification
requirement shall apply to all indirect
cost rate proposals submitted by prime
and subconsultants for acceptance by a
STA (or other direct grantee).
(ii) Consultant official shall be an
individual executive or financial officer
of the consultant’s organization at a
level no lower than a Vice President or
Chief Financial Officer, or equivalent,
who has the authority to represent the
financial information utilized to
establish the indirect cost rate proposal
submitted for acceptance.
(iii) The certification of final indirect
costs shall read as follows:
Certificate of Final Indirect Costs
This is to certify that I have reviewed
this proposal to establish final indirect
cost rates and to the best of my
knowledge and belief:
1. All costs included in this proposal
(identify proposal and date) to establish
final indirect cost rates for (identify
period covered by rate) are allowable in
accordance with the cost principles of
the Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) of title 48, Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR), part 31; and
2. This proposal does not include any
costs which are expressly unallowable
under applicable cost principles of the
FAR of 48 CFR part 31.
Firm: lllllllllllllll
Signature: lllllllllllll
Name of Certifying Official: lllll
Title:
lllllllllllllll
Date of Execution: llllllllll
(4) Sanctions and penalties.
Contracting agency written policies,
procedures, and contract documents (as
specified in § 172.5(c) and § 172.9(c))
shall address the range of
administrative, contractual, or legal
remedies that may be assessed in
accordance with Federal and State laws
and regulations where consultants
violate or breach contract terms and
conditions. Where consultants
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
knowingly charge unallowable costs to
a FAHP funded contract:
(i) Contracting agencies shall pursue
administrative, contractual, or legal
remedies and provide for such sanctions
and penalties as may be appropriate;
and
(ii) Consultants are subject to
suspension and debarment actions (as
specified in 2 CFR part 180), potential
cause of action under the False Claims
Act (as specified in 32 U.S.C. 3729–
3733), and prosecution for making a
false statement (as specified in 18 U.S.C.
1020).
(d) Prenotification; confidentiality of
data. The FHWA, grantees, and
subgrantees of FAHP funds may share
audit information in complying with the
grantee’s or subgrantee’s acceptance of a
consultant’s indirect cost rates pursuant
to 23 U.S.C. 112 and this part provided
that the consultant is given notice of
each use and transfer. Audit information
shall not be provided to other
consultants or any other government
agency not sharing the cost data, or to
any firm or government agency for
purposes other than complying with the
grantee’s or subgrantee’s acceptance of a
consultant’s indirect cost rates pursuant
to 23 U.S.C. 112 and this part without
the written permission of the affected
consultants. If prohibited by law, such
cost and rate data shall not be disclosed
under any circumstance; however,
should a release be required by law or
court order, such release shall make
note of the confidential nature of the
data.
[FR Doc. 2012–21520 Filed 8–31–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
COMMISSION
29 CFR Part 1610
RIN 3046–AA90
Availability of Records
Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (‘‘EEOC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) proposes to revise its
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
regulations in order to implement the
Openness Promotes Effectiveness in our
National Government Act of 2007
(OPEN Government Act) and the
Electronic FOIA Act of 1996 (E–FOIA
Act); to reflect the reassignment of FOIA
responsibilities in the Commission’s
field offices from the Regional Attorneys
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\04SEP1.SGM
04SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 171 (Tuesday, September 4, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53802-53814]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-21520]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
23 CFR Part 172
[FHWA Docket No. FHWA-2012-0043]
RIN 2125-AF44
Procurement, Management, and Administration of Engineering and
Design Related Services
AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM); request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FHWA proposes to update the regulations governing the
procurement, management, and administration of engineering and design
related services directly related to a highway construction project and
reimbursed with Federal-aid highway program (FAHP) funding. The intent
is to make the regulations consistent with prior changes in legislation
and other applicable regulations. These revisions also address certain
findings and recommendations for the oversight of consultant services
contained in national review and audit reports.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before November 5, 2012. Late
comments will be considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand deliver comments to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Dockets Management Facility, Room W12-140, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590, or submit electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov or fax comments to (202) 493-2251. All
comments should include the docket number that appears in the heading
of this document. All comments received will be available for
examination and copying at the above address from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
e.t., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. Those desiring
notification of receipt of comments must include a self-addressed,
stamped postcard or you may print the acknowledgment page that appears
after submitting comments electronically. You may review DOT's complete
Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (Volume 65, Number 70, Page 19477-78), or you may visit https://dms.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Jon Obenberger, Preconstruction
Team Leader, FHWA Office of Program Administration, (202) 366-2221, or
via email at jon.obenberger@dot.gov, or Mr. Steven Rochlis, Attorney
Advisor, FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel, (202) 366-1395, or via email
at steve.rochlis@dot.gov. Office hours for the FHWA are from 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., e.t., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access and Filing
This document and all comments received may be viewed online
through the Federal eRulemaking portal at: https://www.regulations.gov.
The Web site is available 24 hours each day, 366 days this year. Please
follow the instructions. Electronic submission and retrieval help and
guidelines are available under the help section of the Web site.
An electronic copy of this document may also be downloaded by
accessing the Office of the Federal Register's home page at: https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/, or the Government Printing Office's
Web page at: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys.
Background
The FHWA proposes to modify existing regulations for the
administration of engineering and design related service contracts to
ensure consistency and compliance with prior changes in authorizing
[[Page 53803]]
legislation codified in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2) and changes in other
applicable Federal regulations. Proposed revisions will also address
certain findings contained in a 2008 U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) review report (https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-198)
regarding increased reliance on consulting firms by State
transportation agencies (STAs) and a 2009 DOT Office of Inspector
General (OIG) audit report (https://www.oig.dot.gov/library-item/4710)
regarding oversight of engineering consulting firms' indirect costs
claimed on Federal-aid grants. This rulemaking does not otherwise
impose any new burdens on States, local public agencies, or other
grantees and subgrantees.
The primary authority for the procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and design related services directly
related to a highway construction project and reimbursed with FAHP
funding is codified in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2). On November 30, 2005, the
Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary,
the District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act,
2006 (Pub. L. 109-115, 119 Stat. 2396, HR 3058), commonly referred to
as the ``2006 Appropriations Act,'' was signed into law. Section 174 of
this Act amended 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2) by removing the provisions that
permitted States to use ``alternative'' or ``equivalent'' State
qualifications-based selection procedures and other procedures for
acceptance and application of consultant indirect cost rates that were
enacted into State law prior to June 9, 1998.
Effective on the date of enactment of the ``2006 Appropriations
Act,'' States and local public agencies could no longer use alternative
or equivalent procedures. States and local public agencies are required
to procure engineering and design related services in accordance with
the qualifications-based selection procedures prescribed in the Brooks
Act (40 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.) and to accept and apply consultant
indirect cost rates established by a cognizant Federal or State agency
in accordance with the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) cost
principles (48 CFR part 31). To comply with the amendments to 23 U.S.C.
112(b)(2), this proposed rulemaking will remove all references to
alternative or equivalent procedures.
In addition, the Civilian Agency Acquisition Council and the
Defense Acquisition Regulations Council published a final rule in the
Federal Register of August 30, 2010 (75 FR 53129), and effective on
October 1, 2010, raising the Federal simplified acquisition threshold
established in 48 CFR 2.101 of the FAR from $100,000 to $150,000 to
account for inflation using the Consumer Price Index as required in
statute. The FHWA proposes to revise the small purchase procedures
section to reflect this increase in the Federal threshold.
The proposed revisions will also address certain findings and
recommendations contained in the aforementioned GAO review and OIG
audit reports, clarify existing requirements to enhance consistency and
compliance with Federal laws and regulations, and address evolutions in
industry practices regarding the procurement, management, and
administration of consultant services.
Specific proposed revisions are described in the section-by-section
analysis below.
Section-by-Section Discussion of the Proposals
The FHWA proposes to revise 23 CFR part 172--Administration of
Engineering and Design Related Service Contracts as follows:
Title--Administration of Engineering and Design Related Services
Contracts
The title of this part would be changed to Procurement, Management,
and Administration of Engineering and Design Related Services to
reflect the range of requirements and Federal interests associated with
the procurement, management, and administration of engineering and
design related services addressed within this part.
Section 172.1--Purpose and Applicability
Section 172.1 would be amended to clarify the applicability of the
requirements of this part for the procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and design related services and the
requirements of the common grant rule (49 CFR part 18) for procurement
of these and other consultant services reimbursed with FAHP funding.
Section 172.3--Definitions
Section 172.3 would be amended to clarify the definitions of
``audit'' and ``cognizant agency'' to provide consistency with the FAR
cost principles (48 CFR part 31) and with industry guidance established
in the American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials (AASHTO) Uniform Audit and Accounting Guide, 2010 Edition
(https://audit.transportation.org/Documents/2010_Uniform_Audit_and_Accounting_Guide.pdf). The definition of ``competitive negotiation''
would be amended to remove references to State alternative or
equivalent procedures prohibited by sec. 174 of the ``2006
Appropriations Act.'' The definitions of ``contracting agencies'' and
``one-year applicable accounting period'' would be amended to provide
consistency with other terminology of this part. The definition of
``engineering and design related services'' would be amended to also
include professional services of an architectural or engineering nature
as defined by State law, consistent with the Brooks Act and common
grant rule requirements. Definitions would be added for the terms
``contract,'' ``contract modification,'' ``Federal cost principles,''
``fixed fee,'' ``scope of work,'' and ``State transportation agency
(STA)'' to clarify the meaning of each within the context of the
regulation. A definition would also be added for ``management role'' to
clarify the types of services and roles performed by consultants that
require FHWA or direct grantee approval.
Section 172.5--Methods of Procurement
This section would be redesignated as sec. 172.7 and revised. The
title would be changed to Procurement Methods and Procedures, to
reflect the proposed content which would address not only methods of
procurement, but also the procurement requirements associated with
these methods.
The title of paragraph (a) would be changed from procurement to
procurement methods, and would be revised to specify the three
currently allowable procurement methods: Competitive negotiation
(qualifications-based selection), small purchases, and noncompetitive.
The provisions of subparagraph (a)(1) would be amended to remove
references to State alternative or equivalent procedures prohibited by
sec. 174 of the ``2006 Appropriations Act.'' Additional provisions
would be added to clarify the requirements and expectations for
solicitation; request for proposal; evaluation factors; evaluation,
ranking, and selection; and negotiation to ensure consistency and
compliance with the provisions of the Brooks Act as required by 23
U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A).
Subparagraph (a)(2) would be amended to clarify the requirements
for use of small purchase procedures and reflect the increase in the
Federal simplified acquisition threshold from $100,000 to $150,000 (as
specified in the final rule published in the Federal Register of August
30, 2010 (75 FR 53129)). Additional revisions would
[[Page 53804]]
define the negotiation requirements for small purchase procedures and
clarify the limitations on participation of FAHP funding in contract
costs exceeding the established small purchase threshold.
The provisions of subparagraph (a)(3) would be amended to define
contract negotiation requirements for noncompetitive procurement
procedures and to remove references to State alternative or equivalent
procedures prohibited by sec. 174 of the ``2006 Appropriations Act.''
Subparagraph (a)(4) would be removed, as State alternative or
equivalent procedures are now prohibited.
Paragraph (b) would be redesignated as sec. 172.7(b)(2) and revised
to clarify the methods contracting agencies may use to achieve
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) participation on engineering
and design related services contracts in accordance with the
requirements of 49 CFR part 26 and the agency's DBE program approved by
FHWA.
Paragraph (b) of the redesignated sec. 172.7 would be amended to
reference and clarify the applicability of various title 23 and 49
procurement related requirements, including the common grant rule
procurement provisions, verification of suspension and debarment
actions, and prevention of conflicts of interest. A requirement to
develop a written code of conduct governing the performance of
contracting agency employees and consultants is proposed to be included
within contracting agency written policies, procedures, and contract
documents to ensure consistency with the conflict of interest
requirements specified in 23 CFR 1.33 and the common grant rule.
Information in paragraph (c) of the existing sec. 172.5 would be
transferred to paragraph (b) of a new sec. 172.9 titled Contracts and
Administration. The proposed sec. 172.9(b) would clarify the permitted
and prohibited methods of payment and requirements associated with the
use of lump sum and cost reimbursement contract payment methods,
consistent with FAR requirements and industry guidance established in
the AASHTO Guide for Consultant Contracting, 2008 Edition.
Section 172.7--Audits
This section would be redesignated as sec. 172.11 and revised. The
title of this section would be changed to Allowable Costs and
Oversight, and would address requirements for the allowability of
contract cost and for providing assurance of compliance with the
Federal cost principles.
Paragraph (a) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify consultant
requirements for accounting for costs, maintaining adequate records,
and applying the FAR cost principles to determine the allowability of
costs.
Paragraph (b) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify the
requirements for the allowability, acceptance, and application of
elements of contract cost in accordance with the common grant rule, FAR
cost principles, and requirements of 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2). Subparagraph
(b)(1) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify requirements regarding
cognizance, acceptance, and application of consultant indirect cost
rates consistent with applicable Federal requirements and industry
guidance established in the AASHTO Uniform Audit and Accounting Guide,
2010 Edition. Indirect cost rate requirements are proposed to include
subconsultant rates since the Federal cost principles also apply to
subconsultant costs, the qualifications of subconsultants are
considered under a qualifications-based selection, and subconsultants
may perform a significant portion of the contracted services.
Subparagraph (b)(1)(iii) would clarify the requirement for STAs or
other direct grantees to perform an evaluation of a consultant's or
subconsultant's indirect cost rate prior to acceptance and application
of the rate to a contract when the rate has not been established by a
cognizant agency. This subparagraph would permit STAs and other direct
grantees to follow a risk-based oversight process for the evaluation
performed to provide assurance of indirect cost rate compliance with
the FAR cost principles, as described in proposed subparagraph (c)(2).
Information from paragraphs (b) and (c) of the existing sec. 172.7
would be transferred to subparagraph (b)(1) of the proposed sec. 172.11
and revised to remove references to other State procedures prohibited
by sec. 174 of the ``2006 Appropriations Act.'' Subparagraph (b)(2) of
the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify requirements for establishment
of consultant direct salary or wage rates on contracts to ensure
compliance with qualifications-based selection procurement requirements
and the reasonableness provisions of the FAR cost principles.
Subparagraph (b)(3) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify
requirements for the determination of fixed fees or profit in
accordance with qualifications-based selection procurement requirements
and industry practices. Subparagraph (b)(4) of the proposed sec. 172.11
would clarify the requirements for determining the allowability of
other direct contract costs in accordance with the Federal cost
principles.
Paragraph (c) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would clarify the
responsibilities for contracting agencies to provide assurance of
consultant cost compliance with the FAR cost principles. Subparagraph
(c)(2) would permit STAs and other direct grantees written procedures
to incorporate a risk-based oversight process for providing assurance
of consultant cost compliance with the Federal cost principles on
contracts administered by the grantee or its subgrantees. This
oversight process would consist of risk assessment, mitigation, and
evaluation procedures in support of the STA or other direct grantee
effectively allocating resources to provide reasonable assurance of
consultant compliance with the FAR cost principles.
Information in paragraph (a) of the existing sec. 172.7,
performance of audits, would be transferred to subparagraph (c)(2) of
sec. 172.11 and revised to remove references to other State procedures
prohibited by sec. 174 of the ``2006 Appropriations Act.'' Audits
performed in accordance with generally accepted government audit
standards to test compliance with the FAR cost principles would be
listed as an evaluation procedure under an established risk-based
oversight process.
Subparagraph (c)(3) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would require
consultants to certify to the contracting agency that costs included
within proposals to establish indirect cost rates are allowable in
accordance with the FAR cost principles prior to contracting agency
acceptance of the indirect cost rates for application to contracts.
Implementation of this cost certification requirement was a
recommendation in the aforementioned 2009 OIG Audit Report, and is
based on FHWA Order 4470.1A, FHWA Policy for Contractor Certification
of Costs in Accordance with FAR to Establish Indirect Cost Rates on
Engineering and Design related Services Contracts (https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/44701a.htm).
Subparagraph (c)(4) of the proposed sec. 172.11 would require
contracting agencies to pursue administrative, contractual, or legal
remedies as may be appropriate when consultants knowingly charge
unallowable costs to a FAHP funded contract.
Paragraph (d) of the existing sec. 172.7 would be redesignated as
sec. 172.11(d) and revised to ensure consistency of terminology within
the regulation.
[[Page 53805]]
Section 172.9--Approvals
Information in this section would be transferred to a new sec.
172.5, Program Management and Oversight, a redesignated sec. 172.7,
Procurement Methods and Procedures, and a new sec. 172.9, Contracts and
Administration, and revised for clarification to ensure consistency
with applicable Federal laws and regulations.
Paragraph (a) of the existing sec. 172.9 would be redesignated as
sec. 172.5(c) and revised to clarify the requirements for contracting
agency written procedures to ensure compliance with existing Federal
statutes and regulations. A new paragraph (a) of sec. 172.5 would
clarify STA or other direct grantee responsibilities for management of
consultant services programs and oversight of subgrantees. A new
paragraph (b) of sec. 172.5 would clarify program level
responsibilities of subgrantees. A new paragraph (d) of sec. 172.5
would clarify a contracting agency's ability to adopt direct Federal
Government or other contracting procedures and requirements which are
not in conflict with laws and regulations applicable to the FAHP.
Paragraph (e) of sec. 172.5 proposes a 12-month period from the
effective date of a final rule for contracting agencies to issue or
update current written procedures for review and approval by the
appropriate oversight agency.
Information in subparagraph (a)(5) of the existing sec. 172.9 would
be expanded under a new paragraph (d) of a proposed sec. 172.9 titled
Contracts and Administration. This new paragraph (d) would clarify
requirements for consultant monitoring and oversight which include
providing a qualified, full-time, public employee of the contracting
agency in responsible charge of each contract to ensure compliance with
the requirements of 23 U.S.C. 302(a) and evaluating a consultant's
performance on a contract.
Paragraph (a) of the proposed sec. 172.9, Contracts and
Administration, would define the various contract types and clarify the
requirements associated with the use of on-call or indefinite delivery/
indefinite quantity contracts in a manner that is consistent with
Federal laws and regulations.
Paragraph (c) of the proposed sec. 172.9 would clarify the
provisions required to be incorporated into engineering and design
related services contracts when FAHP funding is used to ensure
consistency and compliance with applicable Federal laws and
regulations.
Paragraph (e) of the proposed sec. 172.9 would clarify the
requirements associated with contract modifications to ensure
modifications are warranted, properly scoped, and in compliance with
applicable Federal procurement requirements.
Paragraph (b) of the existing sec. 172.9 would be redesignated as
paragraph (f) of the proposed sec. 172.9. Paragraph (c) of the existing
sec. 172.9 would be removed since the oversight and approval
responsibility of contracts for major projects, as specified in 23
U.S.C. 106(h), should be defined within the stewardship and oversight
agreements that are established between individual STAs and respective
FHWA division offices.
Paragraph (d) of the existing sec. 172.9 would be redesignated as
sec. 172.7(b)(5) and revised to clarify contracting agency
responsibilities associated with participation of FAHP funding for
consultants performing services in a management role. These revisions
would ensure compliance with applicable Federal requirements regarding
oversight, procurement, conflicts of interest, and cost allowability.
For ease of reference, the following distribution table is
provided:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Old section New section
------------------------------------------------------------------------
172.1..................................... 172.1 Revised.
172.3..................................... 172.3 Revised.
Audit..................................... Revised.
Cognizant agency.......................... Revised.
Competitive negotiation................... Revised.
Contract.................................. Added.
Contracting agencies...................... Revised.
Contract modification..................... Added.
Engineering and design related services... Revised.
Federal cost principles................... Added.
Fixed fee................................. Added.
Management role........................... Added.
One-year applicable accounting period..... Revised.
Scope of work............................. Added.
State transportation agency............... Added.
172.5(a).................................. 172.7(a) Revised.
172.5(a)(1)............................... 172.7(a)(1) Revised.
172.5(a)(2)............................... 172.7(a)(2) Revised.
172.5(a)(3)............................... 172.7(a)(3) Revised.
172.5(a)(4)............................... Removed.
None...................................... 172.7(b) Added.
172.5(b).................................. 172.7(b)(2) Revised.
None...................................... 172.9(a) Added.
172.5(c).................................. 172.9(b)
None...................................... 172.9(c), (d), and (e)
Added.
None...................................... 172.11(a), (b), and (c)
Added.
172.7(a).................................. 172.11(c)(2) Revised.
172.7(b).................................. 172.11(b)(1) Revised.
172.7(c).................................. 172.11(b)(1) Revised.
172.7(d).................................. 172.11(d) Revised.
None...................................... 172.5(a) and (b) Added.
172.9(a).................................. 172.5(c) Revised.
172.9(a)(5)............................... 172.5(c)(11), (12), and
172.9(d) Revised.
None...................................... 172.5(d) and (e) Added.
172.9(b).................................. 172.9(f) Revised.
172.9(c).................................. Removed.
172.9(d).................................. 172.7(b)(5) Revised.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), Executive Order
13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review), and DOT Regulatory
Policies and Procedures
The FHWA has determined that this action does not constitute a
significant regulatory action within the meaning of Executive Order
12866 or within the meaning of DOT regulatory policies and procedures.
The proposed amendments clarify and revise requirements for the
procurement, management, and administration of engineering and design
related services using FAHP funding and directly related to a
construction project. Additionally, this action complies with the
principles of Executive Order 13563. The proposed changes to part 172
will provide additional clarification, guidance, and flexibility to
stakeholders implementing these regulations. After evaluating the costs
and benefits of these proposed amendments, the FHWA anticipates that
the economic impact of this rulemaking would be minimal. These changes
are not anticipated to adversely affect, in any material way, any
sector of the economy. In addition, these changes will not create a
serious inconsistency with any other agency's action or materially
alter the budgetary impact of any entitlements, grants, user fees, or
loan programs. It is anticipated that the economic impact of this
rulemaking will be minimal; therefore, a full regulatory evaluation is
not necessary.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354,
5 U.S.C. 60l-612), the FHWA has evaluated the effects of this proposed
rule on small entities, such as local governments and businesses. Based
on the evaluation, the FHWA anticipates that this action would not have
a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The proposed amendments clarify and revise requirements for
the procurement, management, and administration of engineering and
design related services using FAHP
[[Page 53806]]
funding and directly related to a construction project. After
evaluating the cost of these proposed amendments, as required by
changes in authorizing legislation, other applicable regulations, and
industry practices, the FHWA believes the projected impact upon small
entities which utilize FAHP funding for consultant engineering and
design related services would be negligible. Therefore, I certify that
the proposed action would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
This NPRM would not impose unfunded mandates as defined by the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4, March 22, 1995,
109 Stat. 48). The actions proposed in this NPRM would not result in
the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $143.1 million or more in any
one year (2 U.S.C. 1532). Further, in compliance with the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, FHWA will evaluate any regulatory action
that might be proposed in subsequent stages of the proceeding to assess
the effects on State, local, and Tribal governments and the private
sector. Additionally, the definition of ``Federal Mandate'' in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act excludes financial assistance of the type
in which State, local, or tribal governments have authority to adjust
their participation in the program in accordance with changes made in
the program by the Federal Government. The FAHP permits this type of
flexibility.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism Assessment)
This proposed action has been analyzed in accordance with the
principles and criteria contained in Executive Order 13132, dated
August 4, 1999, and it has been determined that this proposed action
does not have a substantial direct effect or sufficient federalism
implications on States that would limit the policymaking discretion of
the States. Nothing in this proposed rule directly preempts any State
law or regulation or affects the States' ability to discharge
traditional State governmental functions.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Federal agencies must obtain approval from the Office of Management
and Budget for each collection of information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations. This proposed action does not contain a
collection of information requirement for the purpose of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).
National Environmental Policy Act
The FHWA has analyzed this proposed action for the purpose of the
National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and has
determined that this action would not have any effect on the quality of
the human and natural environment because this rule would merely
establish the requirements for the procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and design related services using FAHP
funding and directly related to a construction project.
Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
The FHWA has analyzed this proposed action under Executive Order
13175, dated November 6, 2000, and believes that this proposed action
would not have substantial direct effects on one or more Indian Tribes,
would not impose substantial direct compliance costs on Indian Tribal
governments, and would not preempt Tribal law. This proposed rulemaking
merely establishes the requirements for the procurement, management,
and administration of engineering and design related services using
FAHP funding and directly related to a construction project. As such,
this proposed rule would not impose any direct compliance requirements
on Indian Tribal governments nor would it have any economic or other
impacts on the viability of Indian Tribes. Therefore, a Tribal summary
impact statement is not required.
Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects)
The FHWA has analyzed this proposed action under Executive Order
13211, Actions Concerning Regulations that Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use. We have determined that this proposed
action would not be a significant energy action under that order
because any action contemplated would not be likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy. Therefore, the FHWA certifies that a Statement of Energy
Effects under Executive Order 13211 is not required.
Executive Order 12630 (Taking of Private Property)
The FHWA has analyzed this proposed rule and has determined that
this proposed action would not affect a taking of private property or
otherwise have taking implications under Executive Order 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected
Property Rights.
Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
This action meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2)
of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children)
The FHWA has analyzed this proposed action under Executive Order
13045, Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks and
Safety Risks, and certifies that this proposed action would not cause
an environmental risk to health or safety that may disproportionately
affect children.
Regulation Identification Number
A regulation identification number (RIN) is assigned to each
regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulations.
The Regulatory Information Service Center publishes the Unified Agenda
in April and October of each year. The RIN number contained in the
heading of this document can be used to cross-reference this action
with the Unified Agenda.
List of Subjects in 23 CFR Part 172
Government procurement, Grant programs-transportation, Highways and
roads.
Issued on: August 24, 2012.
Victor M. Mendez,
Administrator.
In consideration of the foregoing, the FHWA proposes to amend part
172 of title 23, Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:
title 23--highways
1. Revise Part 172 to read as follows:
PART 172-PROCUREMENT, MANAGEMENT, AND ADMINISTRATION OF ENGINEERING
AND DESIGN RELATED SERVICES
Sec.
172.1 Purpose and applicability.
172.3 Definitions.
172.5 Program management and oversight.
172.7 Procurement methods and procedures.
172.9 Contracts and administration.
172.11 Allowable costs and oversight.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 106, 112, 114(a), 302, 315, and 402; 40
U.S.C. 1101 et seq.; 48 CFR part 31; 49 CFR 1.48(b) and part 18.
[[Page 53807]]
Sec. 172.1 Purpose and applicability.
This part prescribes the requirements for the procurement,
management, and administration of engineering and design related
services under 23 U.S.C. 112 and as supplemented by the common grant
rule (as specified in 49 CFR part 18). The requirements of the common
grant rule shall apply except where inconsistent with the requirements
of this part and other laws and regulations applicable to the Federal-
aid highway program (FAHP). The requirements herein apply to federally
funded contracts for engineering and design related services for
highway construction projects subject to the provisions of 23 U.S.C.
112(a) and are issued to ensure that a qualified consultant is obtained
through an equitable qualifications-based selection procurement
process, that prescribed work is properly accomplished in a timely
manner, and at fair and reasonable cost.
State transportation agencies (STAs) (or other direct grantees)
shall ensure that subgrantees comply with the requirements of this part
and the common grant rule.
Federally funded contracts for services not defined as engineering
and design related, or for services not in furtherance of a highway
construction project or activity subject to the provisions of 23 U.S.C.
112(a), are not subject to the requirements of this part and shall be
procured and administered under the requirements of the common grant
rule and procedures applicable to such activities.
Sec. 172.3 Definitions.
As used in this part:
Audit means a formal examination, in accordance with professional
standards, of a consultant's accounting systems, incurred cost records,
and other cost presentations to test the reasonableness, allowability,
and allocability of costs in accordance with the Federal cost
principles (as specified in 48 CFR part 31).
Cognizant agency means any agency described below that has
performed an audit in accordance with generally accepted government
auditing standards to test compliance with the requirements of the
Federal cost principles (as specified in 48 CFR part 31) and issued an
audit report of the consultant's indirect cost rate, or any described
agency that has conducted a review of an audit report and related
workpapers prepared by a certified public accountant and issued a
letter of concurrence with the audited indirect cost rate(s). A
cognizant agency may be any of the following:
(1) Federal agency;
(2) State transportation agency of the State where the consultant's
accounting and financial records are located; or
(3) State transportation agency to whom cognizance for the
particular indirect cost rate(s) of a consulting firm has been
delegated or transferred in writing by the State transportation agency
identified in subparagraph (2) of this definition.
Competitive negotiation means qualifications-based selection
procurement procedures complying with 40 U.S.C. 1101-1104, commonly
referred to as the Brooks Act.
Consultant means the individual or firm providing engineering and
design related services as a party to a contract.
Contract means a procurement contract or agreement between a
contracting agency and consultant under a FAHP grant or subgrant and
includes any procurement subcontract under a contract.
Contracting agencies means State transportation agency or a
procuring agency of the State acting in conjunction with and at the
direction of the State transportation agency, other direct grantees,
and all subgrantees that are responsible for the procurement,
management, and administration of engineering and design related
services.
Contract modification means an agreement modifying the terms or
conditions of an original or existing contract.
Engineering and design related services means:
(1) Program management, construction management, feasibility
studies, preliminary engineering, design engineering, surveying,
mapping, or architectural related services with respect to a highway
construction project subject to 23 U.S.C. 112(a) (as defined in 23
U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A)); and
(2) Professional services of an architectural or engineering
nature, as defined by State law, which are required to or may logically
or justifiably be performed or approved by a person licensed,
registered, or certified to provide the services (as defined in 40
U.S.C. 1102(2)).
Federal cost principles means the cost principles contained in 48
CFR part 31 of the Federal Acquisition Regulations for determination of
allowable costs of commercial, for-profit entities (as specified in 49
CFR 18.22(b)).
Fixed fee means a dollar amount established to cover the
consultant's profit and business expenses not allocable to overhead.
Management role means acting on the contracting agency's behalf,
subject to review and oversight by agency officials, to perform
management services such as a program or project administration role
typically performed by the contracting agency and necessary to fulfill
the duties imposed by title 23 U.S.C., other Federal and State laws,
and applicable regulations.
One-year applicable accounting period means the annual accounting
period for which financial statements are regularly prepared by the
consultant.
Scope of work means all services, work activities, and actions
required of the consultant by the obligations of the contract.
State transportation agency (STA) means that department or agency
maintained in conformity with 23 U.S.C. 302 and charged under State law
with the responsibility for highway construction (as defined in 23
U.S.C. 101); and that is authorized by the laws of the State to make
final decisions in all matters relating to, and to enter into, all
contracts and agreements for projects and activities to fulfill the
duties imposed by title 23 United States Code, title 23 Code of Federal
Regulations, and other applicable Federal laws and regulations.
Sec. 172.5 Program management and oversight.
(a) STA responsibilities. STAs (or other direct grantees) shall
develop and sustain organizational capacity and provide the resources
necessary for the procurement, management, and administration of
engineering and design related consultant services, reimbursed in whole
or in part with FAHP funding (as specified in 23 U.S.C. 302(a)).
Responsibilities shall include the following:
(1) Preparing and maintaining written policies and procedures for
the procurement, management, and administration of engineering and
design related consultant services in accordance with paragraph (c) of
this section;
(2) Establishing a procedure for estimating staffing, resources,
and costs of needed consultant services and associated agency oversight
in support of project authorization requests submitted to FHWA for
approval (as specified in 23 CFR 630.106);
(3) Procuring, managing, and administering engineering and design
related consultant services in accordance with applicable Federal and
State laws, regulations, and approved policies and procedures (as
specified in 23 CFR 1.9(a)); and
(4) Administering subgrants in accordance with State laws and
procedures (as specified in 49 CFR 18.37) and the requirements of 23
U.S.C.
[[Page 53808]]
106(g)(4)). This shall include providing oversight of the procurement,
management, and administration of engineering and design related
consultant services by subgrantees to assure compliance with applicable
Federal and State laws and regulations. Nothing in this part shall be
taken as relieving the STA of its responsibility under laws and
regulations applicable to the FAHP for the work performed under any
consultant agreement or contract entered into by a subgrantee.
(b) Subgrantee responsibilities. Subgrantees shall develop and
sustain organizational capacity and provide the resources necessary for
the procurement, management, and administration of engineering and
design related consultant services, reimbursed in whole or in part with
FAHP funding (as specified in 23 U.S.C. 106(g)(4)(A)). Responsibilities
shall include the following:
(1) Adopting written policies and procedures prescribed by the
awarding STA (or other direct grantee) for the procurement, management,
and administration of engineering and design related consultant
services in accordance with applicable Federal and State laws and
regulations; or when not prescribed, shall include:
(i) Preparing and maintaining its own written policies and
procedures in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section; or
(ii) Submitting documentation associated with each procurement and
subsequent contract to the awarding STA (or other direct grantee) for
review to assess compliance with applicable Federal and State laws,
regulations, and the requirements of this part;
(2) Procuring, managing, and administering engineering and design
related consultant services in accordance with applicable Federal and
State laws, regulations, and approved policies and procedures (as
specified in 23 CFR 1.9(a)).
(c) Written policies and procedures. The contracting agency shall
prepare and maintain written policies and procedures for the
procurement, management, and administration of engineering and design
related consultant services. The STA (or other direct grantee) written
policies and procedures and all revisions shall be approved by the
FHWA. Written policies and procedures prepared by subgrantees shall be
approved by the awarding STA (or other direct grantee). Any deviations
from approved policies and procedures shall require review by FHWA, or
the direct grantee as appropriate, to assess compliance with applicable
requirements. These policies and procedures shall, as appropriate for
each method of procurement a contracting agency proposes to use,
address the following items to assure compliance with Federal and State
laws, regulations, and the requirements of this part:
(1) Preparing a scope of work and evaluation factors for the
ranking/selection of a consultant;
(2) Soliciting proposals from prospective consultants;
(3) Preventing, identifying, and mitigating conflicts of interest
for employees of both the contracting agency and consultants (as
specified in 23 CFR 1.33 and the requirements of this part).
(4) Verifying suspension and debarment actions and eligibility of
consultants (as specified in 49 CFR 18.35 and 2 CFR part 180);
(5) Evaluating proposals and the ranking/selection of a consultant;
(6) Preparing an independent agency estimate for use in negotiation
with the selected consultant;
(7) Selecting appropriate contract type, payment method(s), and
terms and incorporating required contract provisions, assurances, and
certifications in accordance with Sec. 172.9;
(8) Negotiating a contract with the selected consultant;
(9) Establishing elements of contract costs, accepting indirect
cost rate(s) for application to contracts, and assuring consultant
compliance with the Federal cost principles in accordance with Sec.
172.11;
(10) Assuring consultant costs billed are allowable in accordance
with the Federal cost principles and consistent with the contract terms
as well as the acceptability and progress of the consultant's work;
(11) Monitoring the consultant's work and compliance with the
terms, conditions, and specifications of the contract;
(12) Preparing a consultant's performance evaluation when services
are completed and using such performance data in future evaluation and
ranking of consultant to provide similar services;
(13) Closing-out a contract;
(14) Retaining adequate programmatic and contract records (as
specified in 49 CFR 18.42 and the requirements of this part);
(15) Determining the extent to which the consultant, which is
responsible for the professional quality, technical accuracy, and
coordination of services, may be reasonably liable for costs resulting
from errors and omissions in the work furnished under its contract;
(16) Assessing administrative, contractual, or legal remedies in
instances where consultants violate or breach contract terms and
conditions, and providing for such sanctions and penalties as may be
appropriate; and
(17) Resolving disputes in the procurement, management, and
administration of engineering and design related consultant services.
(d) A contracting agency may formally adopt, by statute or within
approved written policies and procedures as specified in paragraph (c)
of this section, any direct Federal Government or other contracting
regulation, standard, or procedure provided its application does not
conflict with the provisions of 23 U.S.C. 112, the requirements of this
part, and other laws and regulations applicable to the FAHP.
(e) Notwithstanding the foregoing, a contracting agency shall have
a reasonable period of time, not to exceed 12 months from the effective
date of this rule unless an extension is granted for unique or
extenuating circumstances, to issue or update current written policies
and procedures for review and approval in accordance with paragraph (c)
of this section and consistent with the requirements of this part.
Sec. 172.7 Procurement methods and procedures.
(a) Procurement methods. The procurement of engineering and design
related services funded by FAHP funds and directly related to a highway
construction project subject to the provisions of 23 U.S.C. 112(a)
shall be conducted in accordance with one of three methods: Competitive
negotiation (qualifications-based selection) procurement, small
purchase procurement for small dollar value contracts, and
noncompetitive procurement where specific conditions exist allowing
solicitation and negotiation to take place with a single consultant.
(1) Competitive negotiation (qualifications-based selection).
Except as provided in (2) and (3) below, contracting agencies shall use
the competitive negotiation method for the procurement of engineering
and design related services when FAHP funds are involved in the
contract (as specified in 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2)(A)). The solicitation,
evaluation, ranking, selection, and negotiation shall comply with the
qualifications-based selection procurement procedures for architectural
and engineering services codified under 40 U.S.C. 1101-1104, commonly
referred to as the Brooks Act. In accordance with the requirements of
the Brooks Act, the following
[[Page 53809]]
procedures shall apply to the competitive negotiation procurement
method:
(i) Solicitation. The solicitation process shall be by public
announcement, public advertisement, or any other public forum or method
that assures qualified in-State and out-of-State consultants are given
a fair opportunity to be considered for award of the contract.
Procurement procedures may involve a single step process with issuance
of a request for proposal (RFP) to all interested consultants or a
multiphase process with issuance of a request for statements or letters
of interest or qualifications (RFQ) whereby responding consultants are
ranked based on qualifications and request for proposals are then
provided to three or more of the most highly qualified consultants.
Minimum qualifications of consultants to perform services under general
work categories or areas of expertise may also be assessed through a
prequalification process whereby statements of qualifications are
submitted on an annual basis. Regardless of any process utilized for
prequalification of consultants or for an initial assessment of a
consultant's qualifications under an RFQ, a RFP specific to the
project, task, or service is required for evaluation of a consultant's
specific technical approach and qualifications.
(ii) Request for proposal (RFP). The RFP shall provide all
information and requirements necessary for interested consultants to
provide a response to the RFP and compete for the solicited services.
The RFP shall:
(A) Provide a clear, accurate, and detailed description of the
scope of work, technical requirements, and qualifications of
consultants necessary for the services to be rendered. The scope of
work should detail the purpose and description of the project, services
to be performed, deliverables to be provided, estimated schedule for
performance of the work, and applicable standards, specifications, and
policies;
(B) Identify the requirements for any discussions that may be
conducted with three (3) or more of the most highly qualified
consultants following submission and evaluation of proposals;
(C) Identify evaluation factors including their relative weight of
importance in accordance with subparagraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section;
(D) Specify the contract type and method(s) of payment to be
utilized in accordance with Sec. 172.9;
(E) Identify any special provisions or contract requirements
associated with the solicited services;
(F) Require that submission of any requested cost proposals or
elements of cost be in a concealed format and separate from technical/
qualifications proposals as these shall not be considered in the
evaluation, ranking, and selection phase; and
(G) Provide a schedule of key dates for the procurement process and
establish a submittal deadline for responses to the RFP which provides
sufficient time for interested consultants to receive notice, prepare,
and submit a proposal, which except in unusual circumstances shall be
not less than 14 days from the date of issuance of the RFP.
(iii) Evaluation factors. (A) Criteria used for evaluation,
ranking, and selection of consultants to perform engineering and design
related services must assess the demonstrated competence and
qualifications for the type of professional services solicited. These
qualifications-based factors may include, but are not limited to,
technical approach (e.g., project understanding, innovative concepts or
alternatives, quality control procedures), work experience, specialized
expertise, professional licensure, staff capabilities, workload
capacity, and past performance.
(B) Price shall not be used as a factor in the evaluation, ranking,
and selection phase. All price or cost related items which include, but
are not limited to, cost proposals, direct salaries/wage rates,
indirect cost rates, and other direct costs are prohibited from being
used as evaluation criteria.
(C) In-State or local preference shall not be used as a factor in
the evaluation, ranking, and selection phase. State licensing laws are
not preempted by this provision and professional licensure within a
jurisdiction may be established as a requirement which attests to the
minimum qualifications and competence of a consultant to perform the
solicited services.
(D) The following nonqualifications-based evaluation criteria are
permitted under the specified conditions and provided the combined
total of these criteria do not exceed a nominal value of ten percent of
the total evaluation criteria to maintain the integrity of a
qualifications-based selection:
(1) A local presence may be used as a nominal evaluation factor
where appropriate. This criteria shall not be based on political or
jurisdictional boundaries and may be applied on a project-by-project
basis for contracts where a need has been established for a consultant
to provide a local presence, a local presence will add value to the
quality and efficiency of the project, and application of this criteria
leaves an appropriate number of qualified consultants, given the nature
and size of the project. If a consultant outside of the locality area
indicates as part of a proposal that it will satisfy the criteria in
some manner, such as establishing a local project office, that
commitment shall be considered to have satisfied the local presence
criteria.
(2) The participation of qualified and certified Disadvantaged
Business Enterprise (DBE) subconsultants may be used as a nominal
evaluation criteria where appropriate in accordance with 49 CFR part 26
and a contracting agency's FHWA-approved DBE program.
(iv) Evaluation, ranking, and selection. (A) Consultant proposals
shall be evaluated by the contracting agency based on the criteria
established and published within the public solicitation.
(B) While the contract will be with the prime consultant, proposal
evaluations shall consider the qualifications of the prime consultant
and any subconsultants identified within the proposal with respect to
the scope of work and established criteria.
(C) Following submission and evaluation of proposals, the
contracting agency shall conduct interviews or other types of
discussions determined appropriate for the project with at least three
of the most highly qualified consultants to clarify the technical
approach, qualifications, and capabilities provided in response to the
RFP. Discussion requirements shall be specified within the RFP and
should be based on the size and complexity of the project as defined in
contracting agency written policies and procedures (as specified in
Sec. 172.5(c)). Discussions may be written, by telephone, video
conference, or by oral presentation/interview. Discussions following
proposal submission are not required provided proposals contain
sufficient information for evaluation of technical approach and
qualifications to perform the specific project, task, or service with
respect to established criteria.
(D) From the proposal evaluation and any subsequent discussions
which have been conducted, the contracting agency shall rank, in order
of preference, at least three consultants determined most highly
qualified to perform the solicited services based on the established
and published criteria.
(E) Notification must be provided to responding consultants of the
final ranking of the three most highly qualified consultants.
(F) The contracting agency shall retain acceptable documentation of
the solicitation, proposal, evaluation, and selection of the consultant
in
[[Page 53810]]
accordance with the provisions of 49 CFR 18.42.
(v) Negotiation. (A) Independent estimate. Prior to receipt or
review of the most highly qualified consultant's cost proposal, the
contracting agency shall prepare a detailed independent estimate with
an appropriate breakdown of the work or labor hours, types or
classifications of labor required, other direct costs, and consultant's
fixed fee for the defined scope of work. The independent estimate shall
serve as the basis for negotiation and ensuring the consultant services
are obtained at a fair and reasonable cost.
(B) Elements of contract costs (e.g., indirect cost rates, direct
salary or wage rates, fixed fee, and other direct costs) shall be
established separately in accordance with Sec. 172.11.
(C) If concealed cost proposals were submitted in conjunction with
technical/qualifications proposals, only the cost proposal of the
consultant with which negotiations are initiated may be considered.
Concealed cost proposals of consultants with which negotiations are not
initiated should be returned to the respective consultant due to the
confidential nature of this data (as specified in 23 U.S.C.
112(b)(2)(E)).
(D) The contracting agency shall retain documentation of
negotiation activities and resources used in the analysis of costs to
establish elements of the contract in accordance with the provisions of
49 CFR 18.42. This documentation shall include the consultant cost
certification and documentation supporting the acceptance of the
indirect cost rate to be applied to the contract (as specified in Sec.
172.11(c)).
(2) Small purchases. The small purchase method involves procurement
of engineering and design related services where an adequate number of
qualified sources are reviewed and the total contract costs do not
exceed an established simplified acquisition threshold. Contracting
agencies may use the State's small purchase procedures which reflect
applicable State laws and regulations for the procurement of
engineering and design related services provided the total contract
costs do not exceed the Federal simplified acquisition threshold (as
specified in 48 CFR 2.101). When a lower threshold for use of small
purchase procedures is established in State law, regulation, or policy,
the lower threshold shall apply to the use of FAHP funds. The following
additional requirements shall apply to the small purchase procurement
method:
(i) The scope of work, project phases, and contract requirements
shall not be broken down into smaller components merely to permit the
use of small purchase procedures.
(ii) A minimum of three consultants are required to satisfy the
adequate number of qualified sources reviewed.
(iii) Contract costs may be negotiated in accordance with State
small purchase procedures; however, the allowability of costs shall be
determined in accordance with the Federal cost principles.
(iv) The full amount of any contract modification or amendment that
would cause the total contract amount to exceed the established
simplified acquisition threshold would be ineligible for Federal-aid
funding. The FHWA may withdraw all Federal-aid from a contract if it is
modified or amended above the applicable established simplified
acquisition threshold.
(3) Noncompetitive. The noncompetitive method involves procurement
of engineering and design related services when it is not feasible to
award the contract using competitive negotiation or small purchase
procurement methods. The following requirements shall apply to the
noncompetitive procurement method:
(i) Contracting agencies may use their own noncompetitive
procedures which reflect applicable State and local laws and
regulations and conform to applicable Federal requirements.
(ii) Contracting agencies shall establish a process to determine
when noncompetitive procedures will be used and shall submit
justification to, and receive approval from, the FHWA before using this
form of contracting.
(iii) Circumstances under which a contract may be awarded by
noncompetitive procedures are limited to the following:
(A) The service is available only from a single source;
(B) There is an emergency which will not permit the time necessary
to conduct competitive negotiations; or
(C) After solicitation of a number of sources, competition is
determined to be inadequate.
(iv) Contract costs may be negotiated in accordance with
contracting agency noncompetitive procedures; however, the allowability
of costs shall be determined in accordance with the Federal cost
principles.
(b) Additional procurement requirements. (1) Common grant rule. (i)
STAs (or other direct grantees) and their subgrantees must comply with
procurement requirements established in State and local laws,
regulations, policies, and procedures which are not addressed by or in
conflict with applicable Federal laws and regulations (as specified in
49 CFR 18.36).
(ii) When State and local procurement laws, regulations, policies,
or procedures are in conflict with applicable Federal laws and
regulations, contracting agencies must comply with Federal requirements
to be eligible for Federal-aid reimbursement of the associated costs of
the services incurred following FHWA authorization (as specified in 49
CFR 18.4).
(2) Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) program. (i)
Contracting agencies shall give consideration to DBE consultants in the
procurement of engineering and design related service contracts subject
to 23 U.S.C. 112(b)(2) in accordance with 49 CFR part 26. When DBE
program participation goals cannot be met through race-neutral
measures, additional DBE participation on engineering and design
related services contracts may be achieved in accordance with a
contracting agency's FHWA approved DBE program through either:
(A) Use of an evaluation criterion in the qualifications-based
selection of consultants (as specified in Sec. 172.7(a)(1)(iii)(D));
or
(B) Establishment of a contract participation goal.
(ii) The use of quotas or exclusive set-asides for DBE consultants
is prohibited (as specified in 49 CFR 26.43).
(3) Suspension and debarment. Contracting agencies must verify
suspension and debarment actions and eligibility status of consultants
and subconsultants prior to entering into an agreement or contract in
accordance with 49 CFR 18.35 and 2 CFR part 180.
(4) Conflicts of interest. (i) Contracting agencies shall maintain
a written code of standards of conduct governing the performance of
their employees engaged in the award and administration of engineering
and design related services contracts under this part and governing the
conduct and roles of consultants in the performance of services under
such contracts to prevent, identify, and mitigate conflicts of interest
in accordance with 23 CFR 1.33 and the provisions of this subparagraph.
(ii) No employee, officer, or agent of the contracting agency shall
participate in selection, or in the award or administration of a
contract supported by Federal-aid funds if a conflict of interest, real
or apparent, would be involved. Such a conflict arises when:
(A) The employee, officer, or agent;
(B) Any member of his or her immediate family;
(C) His or her partner; or
(D) An organization which employs or is about to employ, any of the
above, has
[[Page 53811]]
a financial or other interest in the consultant selected for award.
(iii) The contracting agency's officers, employees, or agents shall
neither solicit nor accept gratuities, favors, or anything of monetary
value from consultants, potential consultants, or parties to
subagreements. Contracting agencies may establish dollar thresholds
where the financial interest is not substantial or the gift is an
unsolicited item of nominal value.
(iv) Contracting agencies may provide additional prohibitions
relative to real, apparent, or potential conflicts of interest.
(v) To the extent permitted by State or local law or regulations,
such standards of conduct shall provide for penalties, sanctions, or
other disciplinary actions for violations of such standards by the
contracting agency's officers, employees, or agents, or by consultants
or their agents.
(5) Consultant services in management roles. (i) When FAHP funds
participate in the contract, the contracting agency shall receive
approval from the FHWA, or the direct grantee as appropriate, before
utilizing a consultant to act in a management role for the contracting
agency, unless an alternate approval procedure has been approved. Use
of consultants in management roles does not relieve the contracting
agency of responsibilities associated with the use of FAHP funds (as
specified in 23 U.S.C. 302(a) and 23 U.S.C. 106(g)(4)) and should be
limited to large projects or circumstances where unusual cost or time
constraints exist, unique technical or managerial expertise is
required, and/or an increase in contracting agency staff is not a
viable option.
(ii) Management roles may include, but are not limited to,
providing oversight of an element of a highway program, function, or
service on behalf of the contracting agency or may involve managing or
providing oversight of a project, series of projects, and/or the work
of other consultants and contractors on behalf of the contracting
agency. Contracting agency written policies and procedures (as
specified in Sec. 172.5(c)) may further define allowable management
roles and services a consultant may provide, specific approval
responsibilities, and associated controls necessary to ensure
compliance with Federal requirements.
(iii) Use of consultants in management roles requires appropriate
conflicts of interest standards as specified in subparagraph (b)(4) of
this section and adequate contracting agency staffing to administer and
monitor the management consultant contract (as specified in Sec.
172.9(d)). A consultant serving in a management role shall be precluded
from providing services on projects, activities, or contracts under its
oversight.
(iv) FAHP funds shall not participate in the costs of a consultant
serving in a management role where the consultant was not procured in
accordance with Federal and State requirements (as specified in 23 CFR
1.9(a)).
(v) Where benefiting more than a single Federal-aid project,
allocability of consultant contract costs for services related to a
management role shall be distributed consistent with the cost
principles applicable to the contracting agency (as specified in 49 CFR
18.22(b)).
Sec. 172.9 Contracts and administration.
(a) Contract types. The types of contracts which shall be used are:
(1) Project-specific. A contract between the contracting agency and
consultant for the performance of services and defined scope of work
related to a specific project or projects.
(2) Multiphase. A project-specific contract where the defined scope
of work is divided into phases which may be negotiated and authorized
individually as the project progresses.
(3) On-call or indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (IDIQ). A
contract for the performance of services for a number of projects,
under task or work orders issued on an as-needed or on-call basis, for
an established contract period. The procurement of services to be
performed under on-call or IDIQ contracts must follow either
competitive negotiation or small purchase procurement procedures (as
specified in Sec. 172.7). The solicitation and contract provisions
must address the following requirements:
(i) Specify a reasonable maximum length of contract period,
including the number and period of any allowable contract extensions,
which shall not exceed 5 years;
(ii) Specify a maximum total contract dollar amount which may be
awarded under a contract;
(iii) Include a statement of work, requirements, specifications, or
other description to define the general scope, complexity, and
professional nature of the services; and
(iv) If multiple consultants are to be selected and multiple on-
call or IDIQ contracts awarded through a single solicitation for
specific services:
(A) Identify the number of consultants that may be selected or
contracts that may be awarded from the solicitation; and
(B) Specify the procedures the contracting agency will use in
competing and awarding task or work orders among the selected,
qualified consultants. Task or work orders shall not be competed and
awarded among the selected, qualified consultants on the basis of costs
under on-call or IDIQ contracts for services procured with competitive
negotiation procedures. Under competitive negotiation procurement, each
specific task or work order shall be awarded to the selected, qualified
consultants:
(1) Through an additional qualifications-based selection procedure;
or
(2) On a regional basis whereby the State is divided into regions
and consultants are selected to provide on-call or IDIQ services for an
assigned region(s) identified within the solicitation.
(b) Payment methods. (1) The method of payment to the consultant
shall be set forth in the original solicitation, contract, and in any
contract modification thereto. The methods of payment shall be: Lump
sum, cost plus fixed fee, cost per unit of work, or specific rates of
compensation. A single contract may contain different payment methods
as appropriate for compensation of different elements of work.
(2) The cost plus a percentage of cost and percentage of
construction cost methods of payment shall not be used.
(3) The lump sum payment method shall only be used when the
contracting agency has established the extent, scope, complexity,
character, and duration of the work to be required to a degree that
fair and reasonable compensation, including a fixed fee, can be
determined at the time of negotiation.
(4) When the method of payment is other than lump sum, the contract
shall specify a maximum amount payable which shall not be exceeded
unless adjusted by a contract modification.
(5) The specific rates of compensation payment method provides for
reimbursement on the basis of direct labor hours at specified fixed
hourly rates (including direct labor costs, indirect costs, and fee or
profit) plus any other direct expenses or costs, subject to an
agreement maximum amount. This payment method shall only be used when
it is not possible at the time of procurement to estimate the extent or
duration of the work or to estimate costs with any reasonable degree of
accuracy and should be limited to contracts or components of contracts
for specialized or support type services where the consultant is not in
direct control of the number of hours worked, such as construction
engineering and inspection. Use of this payment method
[[Page 53812]]
requires contracting agency management and monitoring of the
consultant's level of effort and classification of employees used to
perform the contracted services.
(6) Contracting agencies may withhold retainage from payments in
accordance with prompt pay requirements (as specified in 49 CFR 26.29).
When retainage is used, the terms and conditions of the contract must
clearly define agency requirements, including periodic reduction in
retention and the conditions for release of retention.
(c) Contract provisions. Contracts must include the following
provisions:
(1) Administrative, contractual, or legal remedies in instances
where consultants violate or breach contract terms and conditions, and
provide for such sanctions and penalties as may be appropriate (all
contracts and subcontracts);
(2) Termination for cause and for convenience by the contracting
agency including the manner by which it will be effected and the basis
for settlement (all contracts and subcontracts in excess of $10,000);
(3) Notice of contracting agency requirements and regulations
pertaining to reporting (all contracts and subcontracts);
(4) Contracting agency requirements and regulations pertaining to
copyrights and rights in data (all contracts and subcontracts);
(5) Access by grantee, the subgrantee, the FHWA, the U.S.
Department of Transportation's Inspector General, the Comptroller
General of the United States, or any of their duly authorized
representatives to any books, documents, papers, and records of the
consultant which are directly pertinent to that specific contract for
the purpose of making audit, examination, excerpts, and transcriptions
(all contracts and subcontracts);
(6) Retention of all required records for not less than 3 years
after the contracting agency makes final payment and all other pending
matters are closed (all contracts and subcontracts);
(7) Lobbying certification and disclosure (as specified in 49 CFR
part 20) (all contracts and subcontracts exceeding $100,000);
(8) Standard DOT Title VI Assurances (DOT Order 1050.2) (all
contracts and subcontracts);
(9) Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) assurance (as specified
in 49 CFR 26.13(b)) (all contracts and subcontracts);
(10) Prompt pay requirements (as specified in 49 CFR 26.29) (all
contracts and subcontracts);
(11) Determination of allowable costs in accordance with the
Federal cost principles (all contracts and subcontracts);
(12) Contracting agency requirements pertaining to consultant
errors and omissions (all contracts and subcontracts); and
(13) Contracting agency requirements pertaining to conflicts of
interest (as specified in 23 CFR 1.33 and the requirements of this
part) (all contracts and subcontracts).
(d) Contract administration and monitoring. (1) Responsible charge.
A full-time, public employee of the contracting agency qualified to
ensure that the work delivered under contract is complete, accurate,
and consistent with the terms, conditions, and specifications of the
contract shall be in responsible charge of each contract or project.
While an independent consultant may be procured to serve in a program
or project management role (as specified in Sec. 172.7(b)(5)) or to
provide technical assistance in review and acceptance of engineering
and design related services performed and products developed by other
consultants, a full-time, public employee must be designated by the
contracting agency as being in responsible charge. A public employee
may serve in responsible charge of multiple projects and contracting
agencies may use multiple public employees to fulfill monitoring
responsibilities. The public employee's responsibilities shall include:
(i) Administering inherently governmental activities including, but
not limited to, contract negotiation, contract payment, and evaluation
of compliance, performance, and quality of services provided by
consultant;
(ii) Being familiar with the contract requirements, scope of
services to be performed, and products to be produced by the
consultant;
(iii) Being familiar with the qualifications and responsibilities
of the consultant's staff and evaluating any requested changes in key
personnel;
(iv) Scheduling and attending progress and project review meetings,
commensurate with the magnitude, complexity, and type of work, to
ensure the work is progressing in accordance with established scope of
work and schedule milestones;
(v) Assuring consultant costs billed are allowable in accordance
with the Federal cost principles and consistent with the contract terms
as well as the acceptability and progress of the consultant's work;
(vi) Evaluating and participating in decisions for contract
modifications; and
(vii) Documenting contract monitoring activities and maintaining
adequate contract records (as specified in 49 CFR 18.42).
(2) Performance evaluation. The contracting agency shall prepare a
final evaluation report of the consultant's performance on a contract.
The report should include, but not be limited to, an evaluation of the
timely completion of work, adherence to contract scope and budget, and
quality of the work. The consultant shall be provided a copy of the
report and shall be provided an opportunity to provide written comments
to be attached to the report. Additional interim performance
evaluations should be considered based on the scope, complexity, and
size of the contract as a means to provide feedback, foster
communication, and achieve desired changes or improvements. Completed
performance evaluations should be archived for consideration as an
element of past performance in the future evaluation of the consultant
to provide similar services.
(e) Contract modification. (1) Contract modifications are required
for any amendments to the terms of the existing contract that change
the cost of the contract; significantly change the character, scope,
complexity, or duration of the work; or significantly change the
conditions under which the work is required to be performed.
(2) A contract modification shall clearly define and document the
changes made to the contract, establish the method of payment for any
adjustments in contract costs, and be in compliance with the terms and
conditions of the contract and original procurement.
(3) Contract modifications shall be negotiated following the same
procedures as the negotiation of the original contract.
(4) Only the type of services and work included within the scope of
services of the original solicitation from which a qualifications-based
selection was made may be added to a contract. Services outside of the
scope of work established in the original request for proposal must be
procured under a new solicitation, performed by contracting agency
staff, or performed under a different contract established for the
services desired.
(5) Overruns in the costs of the work shall not automatically
warrant an increase in the fixed fee portion of a cost plus fixed fee
reimbursed contract. Permitted changes to the scope of work or duration
may warrant consideration
[[Page 53813]]
for adjustment of the fixed fee portion of cost plus fixed fee or lump
sum reimbursed contracts.
(f) Contracts. Contracts and contract settlements involving
engineering and design related services for projects that have not been
assumed by the State under 23 U.S.C. 106(c), that do not fall under the
small purchase procedures (as specified in Sec. 172.7(a)(2)), shall be
subject to the prior approval by FHWA, unless an alternate approval
procedure has been approved by FHWA.
Sec. 172.11 Allowable costs and oversight.
(a) Allowable costs. (1) Costs or prices based on estimated costs
for contracts shall be eligible for Federal-aid reimbursement only to
the extent that costs incurred or cost estimates included in negotiated
prices are allowable in accordance with the Federal cost principles.
(2) Consultants shall be responsible for accounting for costs
appropriately and for maintaining records, including supporting
documentation, adequate to demonstrate that costs claimed have been
incurred, are allocable to the contract, and comply with Federal cost
principles.
(b) Elements of contract costs. The following requirements shall
apply to the establishment of the specified elements of contract costs:
(1) Indirect cost rates. (i) Indirect cost rates shall be updated
on an annual basis in accordance with the consultant's annual
accounting period and in compliance with the Federal cost principles.
(ii) Contracting agencies shall accept a consultant's or
subconsultant's indirect cost rate(s) established for a 1-year
applicable accounting period by a cognizant agency that has:
(A) Performed an audit in accordance with generally accepted
government auditing standards to test compliance with the requirements
of the Federal cost principles and issued an audit report of the
consultant's indirect cost rate(s); or
(B) Conducted a review of an audit report and related workpapers
prepared by a certified public accountant and issued a letter of
concurrence with the related audited indirect cost rate(s).
(iii) When the indirect cost rate has not been established by a
cognizant agency in accordance with subparagraph (1)(ii) herein, a STA
(or other direct grantee) shall perform an evaluation of a consultant's
or subconsultant's indirect cost rate prior to acceptance and
application of the rate to contracts administered by the grantee or its
subgrantees. The evaluation performed by STAs (or other direct
grantees) to establish or accept an indirect cost rate(s) shall provide
assurance of compliance with the Federal cost principles and may
consist of the following:
(A) Performing an audit in accordance with generally accepted
government auditing standards and issuing an audit report;
(B) Reviewing and accepting an audit report and related workpapers
prepared by a certified public accountant or another STA;
(C) Establishing a provisional indirect cost rate for the specific
contract and adjusting contract costs based upon an audited final rate;
or
(D) Conducting other evaluations in accordance with a risk-based
oversight process as specified in subparagraph (c)(2) of this section
and within the agency's approved written policies and procedures (as
specified in Sec. 172.5(c)).
(iv) A lower indirect cost rate may be accepted for use on a
contract if submitted voluntarily by a consultant; however, the
consultant's offer of a lower indirect cost rate shall not be a
condition or qualification to be considered for the work or contract
award.
(v) Once accepted in accordance with subparagraphs (1)(ii)-(iv)
herein, contracting agencies shall apply such indirect cost rate(s) for
the purposes of contract estimation, negotiation, administration,
reporting, and contract payment and the indirect cost rate(s) shall not
be limited by administrative or de facto ceilings of any kind.
(vi) A consultant's accepted indirect cost rate for its 1-year
applicable accounting period shall be applied to contracts; however,
once an indirect cost rate is established for a contract, it may be
extended beyond the 1-year applicable period, through the duration of
the specific contract, provided all concerned parties agree. Agreement
to the extension of the 1-year applicable period shall not be a
condition or qualification to be considered for the work or contract
award.
(vii) Disputed rates. If an indirect cost rate established by a
cognizant agency in subparagraph (1)(ii) herein is in dispute, the
contracting agency does not have to accept the rate. A contracting
agency may perform its own audit or other evaluation of the
consultant's indirect cost rate for application to the specific
contract, until or unless the dispute is resolved. A contracting agency
may alternatively negotiate a provisional indirect cost rate for the
specific contract and adjust contract costs based upon an audited final
rate. Only the consultant and the parties involved in performing the
indirect cost audit may dispute the established indirect cost rate. If
an error is discovered in the established indirect cost rate, the rate
may be disputed by any prospective contracting agency.
(2) Direct salary or wage rates. (i) Compensation for each employee
or classification of employee must be reasonable for the work performed
in accordance with the Federal cost principles.
(ii) To provide for fair and reasonable compensation, considering
the classification, experience, and responsibility of employees
necessary to provide the desired engineering and design related
services, contracting agencies may establish consultant direct salary
or wage rate limitations or ``benchmarks'' based upon an objective
assessment of the reasonableness of proposed rates performed in
accordance with the reasonableness provisions of the Federal cost
principles.
(iii) When an assessment of reasonableness in accordance with the
Federal cost principles has not been performed, contracting agencies
shall use and apply the consultant's actual direct salary or wage rates
for estimation, negotiation, administration, and payment of contracts
and contract modifications.
(3) Fixed fee. (i) The determination of the amount of fixed fee
shall consider the scope, complexity, contract duration, degree of risk
borne by the consultant, amount of subcontracting, and professional
nature of the services as well as the size and type of contract.
(ii) The establishment of fixed fee shall be project or task order
specific.
(iii) Fixed fees in excess of 15 percent of the total direct labor
and indirect costs of the contract may be justified only when
exceptional circumstances exist.
(4) Other direct costs. The Federal cost principles shall be used
in determining the reasonableness, allowability, and allocability of
other direct contract costs.
(c) Oversight. (1) Agency controls. Contracting agencies shall
provide reasonable assurance that consultant costs on contracts
reimbursed in whole or in part with FAHP funding are allowable in
accordance with the Federal cost principles and consistent with the
contract terms considering the contract type and payment method(s).
Contracting agency written policies, procedures, contract documents,
and other controls (as specified in Sec. 172.5(c) and Sec. 172.9)
shall address the establishment, acceptance, and administration of
contract costs to assure compliance with the Federal cost
[[Page 53814]]
principles and requirements of this section.
(2) Risk-based analysis. The STAs (or other direct grantees) may
employ a risk-based oversight process to provide reasonable assurance
of consultant compliance with Federal cost principles on FAHP funded
contracts administered by the grantee or its subgrantees. If employed,
this risk-based oversight process shall be incorporated into STA (or
other direct grantee) written policies and procedures (as specified in
Sec. 172.5(c)). In addition to ensuring allowability of direct
contract costs, the risk-based oversight process shall address the
evaluation and acceptance of consultant and subconsultant indirect cost
rates for application to contracts. A risk-based oversight process
shall consist of the following:
(i) Risk assessments. Conducting and documenting an annual
assessment of risks of noncompliance with the Federal cost principles
per consultant doing business with the agency, considering the
following factors:
(A) Consultant's contract volume within the State;
(B) Number of States in which the consultant operates;
(C) Experience of consultant with FAHP contracts;
(D) History and professional reputation of consultant;
(E) Audit history of consultant;
(F) Type and complexity of consultant accounting system;
(G) Size (number of employees and/or annual revenues) of
consultant;
(H) Relevant experience of certified public accountant performing
audit of consultant;
(I) Assessment of consultant's internal controls;
(J) Changes in consultant organizational structure; and
(K) Other factors as appropriate.
(ii) Risk mitigation and evaluation procedures. Allocating
resources, as considered necessary based on the results of the annual
risk assessment, to provide reasonable assurance of compliance with the
Federal cost principles through application of the following types of
risk mitigation and evaluation procedures appropriate to the consultant
and circumstances:
(A) Audits performed in accordance with generally accepted
government audit standards to test compliance with the requirements of
the Federal cost principles;
(B) Certified public accountant or other STA workpaper reviews;
(C) Desk reviews;
(D) Other analytical procedures;
(E) Consultant cost certifications in accordance with subparagraph
(c)(3) herein; and
(F) Training on the Federal cost principles.
(iii) Documentation. Maintaining adequate documentation of the
risk-based analysis procedures performed to support the allowability
and acceptance of consultant costs on FAHP funded contracts.
(3) Consultant cost certification. (i) Indirect cost rate proposals
for the consultant's 1-year applicable accounting period shall not be
accepted and no agreement shall be made by a contracting agency to
establish final indirect cost rates, unless the costs have been
certified by an official of the consultant as being allowable in
accordance with the Federal cost principles. The certification
requirement shall apply to all indirect cost rate proposals submitted
by prime and subconsultants for acceptance by a STA (or other direct
grantee).
(ii) Consultant official shall be an individual executive or
financial officer of the consultant's organization at a level no lower
than a Vice President or Chief Financial Officer, or equivalent, who
has the authority to represent the financial information utilized to
establish the indirect cost rate proposal submitted for acceptance.
(iii) The certification of final indirect costs shall read as
follows:
Certificate of Final Indirect Costs
This is to certify that I have reviewed this proposal to establish
final indirect cost rates and to the best of my knowledge and belief:
1. All costs included in this proposal (identify proposal and date)
to establish final indirect cost rates for (identify period covered by
rate) are allowable in accordance with the cost principles of the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) of title 48, Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR), part 31; and
2. This proposal does not include any costs which are expressly
unallowable under applicable cost principles of the FAR of 48 CFR part
31.
Firm:------------------------------------------------------------------
Signature:-------------------------------------------------------------
Name of Certifying Official:-------------------------------------------
Title:-----------------------------------------------------------------
Date of Execution:-----------------------------------------------------
(4) Sanctions and penalties. Contracting agency written policies,
procedures, and contract documents (as specified in Sec. 172.5(c) and
Sec. 172.9(c)) shall address the range of administrative, contractual,
or legal remedies that may be assessed in accordance with Federal and
State laws and regulations where consultants violate or breach contract
terms and conditions. Where consultants knowingly charge unallowable
costs to a FAHP funded contract:
(i) Contracting agencies shall pursue administrative, contractual,
or legal remedies and provide for such sanctions and penalties as may
be appropriate; and
(ii) Consultants are subject to suspension and debarment actions
(as specified in 2 CFR part 180), potential cause of action under the
False Claims Act (as specified in 32 U.S.C. 3729-3733), and prosecution
for making a false statement (as specified in 18 U.S.C. 1020).
(d) Prenotification; confidentiality of data. The FHWA, grantees,
and subgrantees of FAHP funds may share audit information in complying
with the grantee's or subgrantee's acceptance of a consultant's
indirect cost rates pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 112 and this part provided
that the consultant is given notice of each use and transfer. Audit
information shall not be provided to other consultants or any other
government agency not sharing the cost data, or to any firm or
government agency for purposes other than complying with the grantee's
or subgrantee's acceptance of a consultant's indirect cost rates
pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 112 and this part without the written permission
of the affected consultants. If prohibited by law, such cost and rate
data shall not be disclosed under any circumstance; however, should a
release be required by law or court order, such release shall make note
of the confidential nature of the data.
[FR Doc. 2012-21520 Filed 8-31-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P