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 services except those
professional and other services necessary to prepare for anticipated
litigation, enforcement actions, or investigations, which are exempt from the
requirements of the Code and this Part and except as provided in Section
1120.2020 and in
subsection (c) of this Section.
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) Public Notice of Competitive Selection
Procedures
1) Notice of the need for
professional and artistic services shall be made by the CPO in the form of an
RFP.
2) Notice shall be given as
provided in Section
1120.2010(e).
3) Notice shall also be distributed to
prequalified persons interested in performing the services required by the
proposed contract.
c)
Request for Proposals
1) Contents. The RFP
shall be in the form specified by the CPO 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 include, but is not limited to:
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) the abilities, qualifications and
experience of all persons who would be assigned to provide the required
services;
iii) 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;
iv)
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. Proposals shall be evaluated
only on the basis of evaluation factors stated in the RFP. Price will not be
evaluated until ranking of all proposals and identification of the most
qualified vendor. The relative importance of the evaluation factors will vary
according to the type of services being procured. The minimum factors are:
A) the plan for performing the required
services;
B) 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;
C) the personnel,
equipment, and facilities to perform the services currently available or
demonstrated to be made available at the time of contracting; and
D) a record of past performance of similar
work.
d)
Pre-Proposal Conference
A pre-proposal conference may be conducted in accordance with
Section
1120.2010(f).
The conference may be held at any time prior to the date established for
submission of proposals.
e)
Receipt and Handling of Proposals
1) Proposals
and modifications shall be sent to the CPO as directed in the solicitation and
shall be time-stamped upon receipt and held in a secure place until the due
date and time at which they will be opened by the Procurement
Officer.
2) Proposals shall not be
opened publicly nor disclosed to unauthorized persons, but shall be opened in
the presence of at least one witness.
3) A register of proposals shall be
established that shall include, for all proposals, the name of each offeror,
the number of modifications received, if any, and a description sufficient to
identify the services offered.
4)
The register of proposals shall be open to the public only after award of the
contract.
f) Discussions
1) Discussions Permissible
A) The Procurement Officer may conduct
discussions with any offeror to:
i) determine
in greater detail the offeror's qualifications; and
ii) 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.
B) The CPO 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 agency conducting the procurement shall not disclose any
information contained in any proposals until after award of the proposed
contract has been made. The proposal of the offeror awarded the contract shall
be open to public inspection except as otherwise provided in the
contract.
g) Selection
of the Best Qualified Offerors
After conclusion of validation of qualifications, evaluation,
and discussion, the CPO shall rank the acceptable offerors in the order of
their respective qualifications.
h) Evaluation of Pricing Data
Pricing submitted for all proposals timely submitted shall be
opened and ranked.
1) If the low price
is submitted by the most qualified vendor, the CPO may award to that
vendor.
2) If the price of the most
qualified vendor is not low and if it is under $25,000, the CPO may award to
that vendor.
3) If the price is
over $25,000, the CPO must state why the qualifications were deemed more
important than price and that determination shall be published in the next
available issue of the Bulletin.
i) Negotiation and Award of Contract
1) General. The Procurement Officer shall
attempt to negotiate a contract with the best qualified offeror for the
required services at fair and reasonable compensation. The Procurement Officer
may, in the interest of efficiency, negotiate with other vendors while
negotiating with the best qualified vendor.
2) Elements of Negotiation. 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 the services.
3) Request for Nondisclosure of
Data
A) If the offeror selected for award has
requested in writing the nondisclosure of trade secrets and other proprietary
data so identified, the head of the agency conducting the procurement or a
designee of such officer shall examine the request in the proposal to determine
its validity prior to entering negotiations.
B) If the parties do not agree as to the
disclosure of data in the contract, the CPO shall reject the
proposal.
4) 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 CPO 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 the range of prices
received in the course of the procurement, and the agency's identified
budget.
5) Failure to
Negotiate Contract with Best Qualified Offeror
A) If compensation, contract requirements,
and contract documents cannot be agreed upon with the best qualified offeror, a
written record stating the reasons therefore shall be placed in the file. The
Procurement Officer shall advise the offeror of the termination of
negotiations.
B) Upon failure to
negotiate a contract with the best qualified offeror, the Procurement Officer
may enter into negotiations with the next most qualified offeror, and so on in
that manner until an award is made or the procurement canceled.
j) Multiple Awards
The Procurement Officer 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.
k) Notice of Award
Written notice of award shall be public information and made
a part of the contract file. The CPO shall publish the successful vendor, a
contract reference number or other identifier, and the value of the contract.
Publication shall be in the next available issue of the Bulletin.
l) The CPO may publish notices of
small, sole source and emergency procurements of professional and artistic
services under the jurisdiction of the CPO.