Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Application
1) The provisions of this Section apply to
every procurement of professional and artistic (P&A) services, except those
subject to the Architectural, Engineering and Land Surveying Qualifications
Based Selection Act [30 ILCS 535 ] and except as provided in subsection (e).
2)
"Professional and
artistic services" means those services provided under contract to a State
agency by a person or business, acting as an independent contractor, qualified
by education, experience, and technical ability [30 ILCS
500/1-15.60] .
b) P&A services are further defined as
follows:
1) "Qualified by education" means the
individual who would perform the services must have obtained the level of
education specified in the Request for Proposals.
2) "Qualified by experience" means the
individual who would perform the services must have the level of general
experience specified in the Request for Proposals.
3) "Qualified by technical ability" means the
individual who would perform the services must demonstrate a high degree of
skill or ability in performing services that are the same, similar or closely
related in nature to those specified in the Request for Proposals.
4) An essential element distinguishing
P&A services from other services is confidence, trust, and belief in not
only the ability, but the talent, of the individual performing the
service.
5) P&A services are
primarily for intellectual or creative skills. Contracts for services primarily
involving manual skills or labor are not P&A services contracts.
6) If the professional or artistic contract
is with a firm or other business entity, the individuals whose education,
experience and technical ability provided the basis on which the firm or other
business entity was selected must meet the qualifications.
7) When a State agency requires services that
meet the requirements of this subsection (b), the competitive selection
procedures described in this Section must be followed. Services that do not
meet the requirements of this Section must be procured in accordance with other
methods of source selection authorized by the Code and this Part.
c) The SPO may determine whether
the factors identified in subsection (b), when applied to particular services
to be procured, must be procured as P&A under these competitive selection
procedures or as services that are subject to one of the other methods of
source selection authorized by the Code and this Part.
d) Architect, engineering and land surveying
services shall be procured pursuant to the procedures of the Architectural,
Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications Based Selection Act. These
procurements are not subject to the procedures for other professional services
established in the Code or this Part.
e) Except as authorized under Section 20-25
(Sole Source Procurements) or Section 20-30 (Emergency Purchases) of the Code,
these competitive selection procedures shall be used for all procurements of
P&A services of $100,000 or more.
f) Request for Proposals
P&A services shall be procured using an RFP.
1) Contents. The RFP shall be in the form
specified by the CPO-GS and shall contain at least the following information:
A) the type of services required;
B) a description of the work
involved;
C) an estimate of when
and for how long the services will be required;
D) the type of contract to be used;
E) a date by which proposals for the
performance of the services shall be submitted;
F) a statement of the minimum information
that the proposal shall contain, which may, by way of example, include:
i) the name of the offeror, the location of
the offeror's principal place of business and, if different, the place of
performance of the proposed contract;
ii) if deemed relevant, the age of the
offeror's business and average number of employees over a previous period of
time, as specified in the RFP;
iii)
the abilities, qualifications, and experience of all persons who would be
assigned to provide the required services;
iv) a listing of other contracts under which
services similar in scope, size or discipline to the required services were
performed or undertaken within a previous period of time, as specified in the
RFP;
v) a plan, giving as much
detail as is practical, explaining how the services will be
performed;
G) price (to
be submitted in a separate envelope in the proposal package and not mentioned
elsewhere in the proposal package); and
H) the factors to be used in the evaluation
and selection process and their relative importance.
2) Evaluation Factors, Evaluation Subfactors,
and Scoring Tools
A) The relative importance
of the evaluation factors will vary according to the type of services being
procured. The minimum factors are:
i) the plan
for performing the required services;
ii) ability to perform the services as
reflected by technical training and education, general experience, specific
experience in providing the required services, and the qualifications and
abilities of personnel proposed to be assigned to perform the
services;
iii) the personnel,
equipment, and facilities to perform the services currently available or
demonstrated to be made available at the time of contracting; and
iv) a record of past performance of similar
work.
B) Establishment
of subfactors, if any, and their relative importance must be finalized before
publication of the RFP and made available for inspection and copying upon
opening.
C) Numerical rating
systems shall be used unless another scoring tool is authorized by the SPO. Any
scoring tool shall reflect the evaluation criteria and ranking set forth in the
P&A RFP and any subfactors available at the opening.
D) The scoring tool used by the Evaluation
Team must be finalized and approved by the SPO before publication of the RFP
and made available for inspection and copying upon opening.
g) Proposals shall be
submitted in three parts: the first, covering price; the second, covering
commitment to diversity; and the third, covering all other items. Price must be
submitted separately in the proposal package and shall not be mentioned
elsewhere in the proposal package. Each part of all proposals shall be
evaluated and ranked independently of the other parts of all proposals. The
results of the evaluation of all 3 parts shall be used in the ranking of
proposals.
h) Receipt and
Registration of Proposals
1) Proposals and
modifications shall be opened publicly at the time, date and place designated
in the RFP.
2) Opening shall be
witnessed by a State employee or by any other person present, but the person
opening proposals shall not serve as witness. A record shall be prepared that
shall include the name of each offeror, the number of modifications received,
if any, a description sufficient to identify the supply or service item
offered, and a notation that the package contains a price proposal. The record
of proposals shall be open to public inspection after award of the
contract.
3) Proposals and
modifications shall be opened in a manner designed to avoid disclosing contents
to other offerors. Other than information that was recorded, read and made
publicly available at the opening of the proposals, the State agency conducting
the procurement shall not disclose any information contained in the offer
outside of the persons authorized by the SPO until after award of the proposed
contract has been posted to the Bulletin. This does not restrict the disclosure
of information to board or authority members or to commissioners of a State
agency. Only State personnel and contractual agents authorized by the SPO may
review the proposals prior to award. In authorizing State personnel under this
Section, the SPO may require confidentiality and conflict of interest
statements be executed. The SPO may provide blanket authorization to:
A) State employees who have primary
responsibility for the procurement;
B) State employees who exercise experience or
expertise in the subject matter of the particular procurement in the normal
course of business and as part of official responsibilities;
C) State employees who exercise oversight,
supervisory or management authority over the procurement in the normal course
of business and as part of official responsibilities.
i) Evaluation of P&A Proposals
1) Prior to evaluation, an evaluation team
kick-off meeting must be held. The purpose of that meeting is to provide the
evaluation team with information regarding the evaluation process, including
but not limited to conducting the evaluation with fairness and integrity,
maintaining confidentiality, and discussing any possible conflicts of interest
of evaluation team members. The SPO and all evaluation team members must attend
the meeting. Attendance may be in person, by conference call, or by
videoconference call.
2) The
evaluation shall be based solely on the evaluation factors set forth in the
RFP, except as communicated in advance to each offeror with the opportunity to
make necessary adjustments to the proposal.
3) Each member of the evaluation team must
evaluate the first part individually.
4) After completion of the individual
evaluations, the SPO shall determine whether the evaluation team should meet to
confirm the individual scores. Factors the SPO should consider in determining
whether the evaluation team should meet include whether there is a significant
or substantial variance of scores, divergent scoring comments, or other
information that suggests the need for further discussion.
5) Price will not be evaluated until ranking
of all proposals and identification of the most qualified vendor.
j) Discussions with Offerors
1) Discussions Permissible. The CPO-GS, SPO
or State employee with the approval of the SPO on behalf of the CPO-GS may
conduct discussions with any offeror to:
A)
determine in greater detail the offeror's qualifications; and
B) explore with the offeror the scope and
nature of the required services, the offeror's proposed method of performance,
and the relative utility of alternative methods of approach. The SPO or
designee may allow changes to the proposal based on those
discussions.
2) No
Disclosure of Information. Discussions shall not disclose any information
derived from proposals submitted by other offerors, and the State agency
conducting the procurement shall not disclose any information contained in any
proposals outside of contracting officers, identified State agency personnel or
others specifically authorized by the CPO-GS or SPO until after the award of
the proposed contract has been posted to the Bulletin. This does not restrict
the disclosure of information to, or receipt by, State agency personnel
identified by the State agency head or the chief executive officer of a board
or commission to receive the information. The SPO may require confidentiality
and conflict statements from those persons identified by the agency head or the
chief executive officer to receive the information. The agency head or chief
executive officer may identify:
A) State
employees who have primary responsibility for the procurement;
B) State employees who exercise experience or
expertise in the subject matter of the particular procurement in the normal
course of business and as part of official responsibilities;
C) State employees who exercise oversight,
supervisory or management authority over the procurement in the normal course
of business and as part of official responsibilities.
k) Selection of the Best Qualified
Offerors
After conclusion of validation of qualifications, evaluation
and discussion, the SPO shall rank the acceptable offerors in the order of
their respective qualifications.
l) Evaluation of Pricing Data
Pricing submitted for all acceptable proposals timely
submitted shall be opened and ranked.
1) If the low price is submitted by the most
qualified vendor, the SPO may award to that vendor.
2) If the price of the best qualified vendor
exceeds $100,000, the SPO, but not a designee, must state why a vendor other
than the low priced vendor was selected and that determination shall be
published in the Bulletin.
m) Negotiation and Award of Contract
1) General. The purchasing agency, in
consultation with the SPO, shall attempt to negotiate a contract with the best
qualified offeror for the required services at fair and reasonable
compensation. The purchasing agency, in consultation with the SPO, may, in the
interest of efficiency, negotiate with the next highest ranked vendor, while
negotiating with the best qualified vendor.
2) Elements of Negotiation. At a minimum,
contract negotiations shall be directed toward:
A) making certain that the offeror has a
clear understanding of the scope of the work, specifically, the essential
requirements involved in providing the required services;
B) determining that the offeror will make
available the necessary personnel and facilities to perform the services within
the required time; and
C) agreeing
upon compensation that is fair and reasonable, taking into account the
estimated value of the required services and the scope, complexity, and nature
of those services.
3)
Successful Negotiation of Contract with Best Qualified Offeror
A) If compensation, contract requirements and
contract documents can be agreed upon with the best qualified offeror, the
contract shall be awarded to that offeror, unless the procurement is
canceled.
B) Compensation must be
determined in writing to be fair and reasonable. Fair and reasonable
compensation shall be determined by the purchasing agency, in consultation with
SPO, based on the circumstances of the particular procurement, including but
not limited to the nature of the services needed, qualifications of the
offerors, consideration of range of prices received in the course of the
procurement, other available pricing information and the State agency's
identified budget.
C) Contracts
entered into under this Section shall provide:
i) The duration of the contract, with a
schedule for delivery when applicable;
ii) The method for charging and measuring
cost (hourly, per day, etc.);
iii)
The rate of renumeration; and
iv)
The maximum price.
4) Failure to Successfully Negotiate Contract
with Best Qualified Offeror
A) If
compensation, contract requirements or contract documents cannot be agreed upon
with the best qualified offeror, a written record stating the reasons shall be
placed in the file. The purchasing agency, in consultation with the SPO, shall
advise such offeror of the termination of negotiations.
B) Upon failure to successfully negotiate a
contract with the best qualified offeror, the purchasing agency, in
consultation with the SPO, may enter into negotiations with the next most
qualified offeror.
n) Multiple Awards
The purchasing agency, in consultation with the SPO, may
enter into negotiations with the next most qualified vendor or vendors when the
purchasing agency has a need that requires multiple vendors under
contract.
o) Notice of
Award
1) After completion of the evaluation,
if board, commission, or authority approval of a contract award is necessary,
the State agency may have separate discussions with individual board,
commission, or authority members to obtain each individual board, commission or
authority member's approval of the award prior to publishing the award in the
Bulletin.
2) An award shall be made
by the SPO pursuant to a written determination showing the basis on which the
award was found to be most advantageous to the State, taking into consideration
price and evaluation factors set forth in the RFP. An award made to the highest
scoring vendor is presumed to be most advantageous to the State, taking into
consideration evaluation factors set forth in the RFP, including price. The
contract file shall contain the basis on which the award is made.
p) Prequalification
Prequalification of P&A vendors shall not be used to bar
or prevent an otherwise qualified person from responding to a request for
proposal for P&A services.