The Department will periodically audit a sampling of
qualified consultants to ensure compliance with the qualification requirements,
and consultants found to misrepresent their qualifications will be subject to
suspension of qualifications with the Department in accordance with Rule
14-75.0051, F.A.C. The following
criteria apply to the qualification of professional consultants:
(5)
Qualification may be sought in any of the following categories or
sub-categories:
(a) Group 2. Project
Development and Environmental (PD&E) Studies.
1. Type of Work. This work group involves the
study and evaluation of the social, economic, and environmental effects on the
human and natural environment by transportation systems and alternate
transportation modes in meeting identified community transportation and growth
needs. Such work also includes the evaluation of alternate transportation
corridors, and location/design alternatives within viable corridors. The work
involves preparing engineering studies to address economic and engineering
feasibility of alternatives, level of service, traffic capacity, geometrics,
soils, structures, intersection and interchange improvements, etc., to
accommodate travel demand at an acceptable level of service. Additionally, the
work entails the detailed study and preparation of environmental reports and
documents which evaluate the physical, natural, social, cultural, economic, and
human impacts of the alternatives under consideration upon the adjacent
community. Public involvement and interagency coordination are integral parts
of the assessment process. Potential mitigations that are identified in the
studies and public involvement are evaluated and incorporated into the
alternatives as appropriate.
2.
Qualification Requirements. Group 2: PD&E Studies. This work group requires
a professional engineer, a natural scientist, and a social scientist. The
professional engineer must be registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers and must have managed and completed at least one
PD&E study or similar study, including roadway design and environmental
engineering. This experience must include conducting environmental studies for
transportation projects involving highway projects and public involvement
issues. The natural scientist must have a four-year university or college
degree and experience in a natural science such as ecology, biology,
environmental science, or wildlife management and have completed at least one
PD&E study or similar study in a natural science area such as defined
above. The social scientist must have a four-year university or college degree
and experience in a social science such as psychology, sociology, statistics,
political science, geography, urban planning demographics, archeology, or
economics and have completed at least one PD&E study or similar study in a
social science area such as defined above.
(b) Group 3. Highway Design - Roadway. This
work group involves the production and/or review of highway plans, related
design studies, creative utilization of roadsides, and the accommodation of
utilities and utility crossings (where appropriate), which conform with
acceptable design standards and which meet the specific requirements of the
Department or the Federal Highway Administration.
1. This group includes the following
sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of
Work 3.1: Minor Highway Design. This type of work includes roadway design for
rural RRR and minor widening and resurfacing projects which do not involve
major reconstruction, new curb and gutter, or substantial capacity
improvements. This work type also includes interstate projects involving
resurfacing only. Projects of this type generally involve minor drainage,
utility relocation, traffic operations improvements, miscellaneous design
services, etc.
b. Type of Work 3.2:
Major Highway Design. This type of work includes roadway design for all urban
highways with new curb and gutter and new or major reconstruction rural
projects with substantial capacity improvements such as adding two or more
lanes. Projects of this type generally include utility relocation plans,
drainage design and permitting, maintenance of traffic plans, traffic
engineering applications, intersection details, etc.
c. Type of Work 3.3: Controlled Access
Highway Design. This type of work includes design of new and complex
reconstruction projects on controlled access facilities including interstates,
interchanges, and expressways. Projects of this type generally include the use
of complex geometrics, substantial drainage evaluation and design features,
permitting, traffic engineering applications, utility relocation plans,
maintenance of traffic plans, interchange design, etc.
2. Qualification Requirements.
a. Type of Work 3.1: Minor Highway Design.
This type of work requires at least one professional engineer, registered with
the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having proficiency in civil
engineering and at least one year of post-registration experience in the design
and preparation of plans for highways.
b. Types of Work 3.2 and 3.3: Major Highway
Design and Controlled Access Highway Design. These types of work require at
least two professional engineers, registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers, having proficiency in civil engineering and at least
two years of post registration experience in the design and preparation of
plans for highways, one year of which must be in the category for which
qualification is sought.
(c) Group 4. Highway Design - Bridges. This
work group involves the production and/or review of competently engineered
bridge plans which conform with acceptable design standards and which meet the
specific requirements of the Department or the Federal Highway Administration.
1. This group includes the following
sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of
Work 4.1: Miscellaneous Structures and Minor Bridge Design. This type of work
is subdivided into two categories.
(I) Type of
Work 4.1.1: Miscellaneous Structures. This group type of work includes the
design of sound barriers, structural supports for highway signals, luminaries,
and traffic signals.
(II) Type of
Work 4.1.2: Minor Bridge Design. This type of work includes the design of
conventional, non-complex bridges and the structural design of other
highway-related structures such as non-standard concrete box culverts and
retaining walls. Generally, this group is limited to designs utilizing
conventional foundation types, simple geometry, and having total estimated
bridge(s) plan area(s) no greater than 100,000 square feet (sum of the areas of
multiple bridges). Typically, this includes design for the construction,
rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of box culverts, retaining walls,
cast-in-place or precast prestressed short span slab type bridges, simple span
prestressed concrete beam bridges, and simple span I-beam
bridges.
b. Type of Work
4.2: Major Bridge Design. This type of work includes the design of structures
that cannot be included in Type of Work 4.1 because of deck area, complex
geometry (curvature, skew, or variable width), complexity of design (including
bridges with statically indeterminate superstructure components) with spans
estimated to be less than 400 feet, non-conventional substructures,
substructures requiring ship impact design, bridges over navigable waters, and
railroad bridges. This type of work is subdivided into three categories:
(I) Type of Work 4.2.1: Major Bridge Design -
Concrete: This group includes design for construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of structurally continuous concrete superstructures
(longitudinally post-tensioned concrete beam bridges, etc.), reinforced
concrete boxes, and post-tensioned substructures.
(II) Type of Work 4.2.2: Major Bridge Design
- Steel: This group includes design for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of structurally-continuous steel superstructures
(steel box girders, curved steel girder bridges, etc.).
(III) Type of Work 4.2.3: Major Bridge Design
- Segmental: This group includes design for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of precast or cast-in-place concrete segmental
superstructures or substructures.
c. Type of Work 4.3: Complex Bridge Design.
This type of work includes the structures that cannot be included in Type of
Work 4.1 or 4.2 because of unique, specialized, and uncommon types of designs
as determined by the Department. Typically, this includes design for the
construction, rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of bridges with
estimated span(s) longer than 400 feet, tunnels, cable-stayed bridges,
suspension bridges, truss spans, concrete arch bridges, and bridges requiring
unique analytical methods or other design features not commonly addressed in
AASHTO publications. This type of work is separated into two categories:
(I) Type of Work 4.3.1: Complex Bridge Design
- Concrete: This group includes design for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of concrete superstructures of the structure types
listed in this category.
(II) Type
of Work 4.3.2: Complex Bridge Design - Steel: This group includes design for
the construction, rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of steel
superstructures of the types listed in this category.
d. Type of Work 4.4: Movable Span Bridge
Design. This type of work includes the design of bascule bridges and other
movable bridges. The work includes all structural, electrical, and mechanical
requirements. Typically, this includes design for the construction,
rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of bascule bridges, swing bridges, and
vertical lift bridges.
2.
Qualification Requirements. Qualification will be assessed from the
résumés of individuals employed by the firm. The
résumés must state which bridge components were actually designed
by the individual. General oversight or project management activities will not
be considered for qualification purposes.
a.
Type of Work 4.1.1: Miscellaneous Structures. This type of work requires at
least one professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers, having a minimum of five years of structural
experience, designing items such as sound barriers, structural supports for
highway signs, luminaries, and traffic signals, or in bridge design; and two
structural design engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years each of
design experience, either designing items such as sound barriers, structural
supports for highway signs, luminaries, and traffic signals, or in bridge
design. The qualifying professional engineer(s) shall be responsible for
quality assurance of all the design services and shall sign a letter of
certification stating the project documents have been reviewed under the
quality assurance process and that all issues are resolved. Certifications will
be pursuant to Section
837.06, F.S.
b. Type of Work 4.1.2: Minor Bridge Design.
This type of work requires at least one professional engineer, registered with
the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a minimum of five
years structural bridge design experience; and two structural design
engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years each of bridge design
experience. The professional engineer shall be responsible for quality
assurance of all the design services.
c. Type of Work 4.2.1: Major Bridge
Design-Concrete. This type of work requires at least two professional
engineers, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having a minimum of five years each of structural bridge design experience in
continuous span concrete bridges as defined for Work Group 4.2.1: Major Bridge
Design - Concrete, excluding segmental bridges or qualified as required in Work
Group 4.2.3: Major Bridge Design - Segmental with an additional two years of
design experience in continuous span concrete bridges as defined in Work Group
4.2.1: Major Bridge Design - Concrete; and three or more structural design
engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years each of bridge design
experience. The qualifying professional engineers shall be responsible for the
quality assurance of all the design services and shall sign a letter of
certification stating the project documents have been reviewed under the
quality assurance process and that all issues are resolved.
d. Type of Work 4.2.2: Major Bridge Design -
Steel. This type of work requires at least two professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each of structural bridge design experience in continuous
span steel bridges as defined in Work Group 4.2.2: Major Bridge Design - Steel
and three or more structural design engineers/technicians having a minimum of
three years of bridge design experience. The qualifying professional engineers
shall be responsible for the quality assurance of all the design services and
shall sign a letter of certification stating the project documents have been
reviewed under the quality assurance process and that all issues are resolved.
Certifications will be pursuant to Section
837.06, F.S.
e. Type of Work 4.2.3: Major Bridge Design -
Segmental. This type of work requires at least two professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each of structural bridge design experience in continuous
span segmental concrete (precast or cast-in-place) bridges as defined in Work
Group 4.2.3: Major Bridge Design - Segmental and three or more structural
design engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years of bridge design
experience. The qualifying professional engineers shall be responsible for the
quality assurance of all the design services and shall sign a letter of
certification stating the project documents have been reviewed under the
quality assurance process and that all issues are resolved. Certifications will
be pursuant to Section
837.06, F.S.
f. Type of Work 4.3.1: Complex Bridge Design
- Concrete. This type of work requires at least three professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each of structural concrete bridge design experience in
categories as defined in Work Group 4.3.1: Complex Bridge Design - Concrete,
and four or more structural design engineers/technicians having a minimum of
three years each of bridge design experience. The qualifying professional
engineers shall be responsible for the quality assurance of all design services
and shall sign a letter of certification stating the project documents have
been reviewed under the quality assurance process and that all issues are
resolved. Certifications will be pursuant to Section
837.06, F.S.
g. Type of Work 4.3.2: Complex Bridge Design
- Steel. This type of work requires at least two professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each of structural steel bridge design experience in
categories as defined in Work Group 4.3.2: Complex Bridge Design - Steel and
three or more structural design engineers/technicians having a minimum of three
years of bridge design experience. The qualifying professional engineers shall
be responsible for the quality assurance of all the design services and shall
sign a letter of certification stating the project documents have been reviewed
under the quality assurance process and that all issues are resolved.
Certifications will be pursuant to Section
837.06, F.S.
h. Type of Work 4.4: Movable Span Bridge
Design. This type of work requires qualification in type of work 4.2.2: Major
Bridge Design - Steel, and also requires an electrical engineer and a
mechanical engineer both registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers. In addition to the experience requirements for type of
work 4.2 4.2.2: Major Bridge Design - Steel, the professional engineers will
have at least five years of movable bridge structural design experience and the
three engineers/technicians shall have a minimum of three years of movable
bridge design experience. At least one of the professional engineers or
engineer/technicians will have experience in the design of at least three
movable bridge electrical control systems within the last 10 years and one will
have experience in the design of at least three movable bridge drive systems
within the last 10 years. The electrical engineer will have experience in the
design of at least three movable bridge electrical control systems within the
last 10 years and experience with the commonly used bridge leaf motion control
techniques used within the last 30 years. The mechanical engineer will have
experience in the design of at least three movable bridge drive systems within
the last 10 years and experience with the commonly used bridge drive systems
used within the last 30 years. The qualifying professional engineers shall be
responsible for the quality assurance of all the design services and shall sign
a letter of certification stating the project documents have been reviewed
under the quality assurance process and that all issues are
resolved.
(d)
Group 5. Bridge Inspection. This work group is defined as the on-site
inspection, load rating, and preparation of bridge inspection reports in
accordance with approved federal and state statutes, policies, guidelines, and
standards. Availability of required equipment will also be considered, along
with level of experience in evaluating qualification.
1. This group includes the following
sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of
Work 5.1: Conventional Bridge Inspection. This type of work includes inspection
and load rating of all types of bridges except movable bridges, box girders,
bulb-tees, suspension, cable stayed, post-tensioned segmental concrete, large
steel trusses, high-rise structures, and other complex bridge
structures.
b. Type of Work 5.2:
Movable Bridge Inspection. This type of work includes inspection and load
rating of all types of movable structures (vertical lift, swing span, and
bascule), utilizing specialty skills in inspection, load rating, and design of
mechanical and electrical equipment.
c. Type of Work 5.3: Complex Bridge
Inspection. This type of work includes inspection and load rating of all
complex bridges except movable bridges. Typical types of structures will
include box girders, bulb-tees, suspension, cable stayed, post-tensioned
segmental concrete, high-rise structures, and large steel trusses.
d. Type of Work 5.4: Bridge Load Rating. This
type of work involves the process of determining the live load capacity of a
structure.
2.
Qualification Requirements. Types of work 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, and 5.4: Bridge
Inspection. This type of work requires at least one professional engineer
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having
experience appropriate to the sub-category requested. For types of work 5.1,
5.2, and 5.3, the engineer must have participated in field inspections meeting
the requirements of the National Bridge Inspection Standards, Appendix C to
U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration,
Recording and Coding Guide for the Structure Inventory and Appraisal of
the Nation's Bridges, Report No. FHWA-A-PD96-001, December 1995,
incorporated herein by reference, for the structure types in the sub-category
for which qualification is requested. For type of work 5.4, the engineer must
have performed a load rating of a bridge.
(e) Group 6. Traffic Engineering and
Operations Studies. This work group includes the performance of studies of
existing traffic problems within an urban area; and the determination of the
most effective way to improve traffic flow and safety through the application
of traffic engineering techniques and other corrective measures. It includes
street and signal inventories; intersection and crossing diagrams; highway
lighting information at nighttime high accident locations; and analysis of
accident reports, traffic counts, travel times, parking practices, and laws and
ordinances affecting transportation. This work group is limited to generalized
description and schematic layouts of the proposed improvements, including right
of way requirements, and generally does not include the preparation of
construction plans and the writing of specifications for traffic system
projects.
1. This group includes the following
sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of
Work 6.1: Traffic Engineering Studies. This type of work is defined as the
study of operational problems and the determination of traffic operational
improvements for efficiency and safety. This work group includes studies for
the following: signing, marking, and signal inventories; traffic counts;
intersection and collision diagrams; signal warrant and intersection analysis;
and travel time and delay studies. Many of the traffic engineering studies
require knowledge and experience with traffic engineering computer programs
such as SOAP, PASSER, and TRANSYT. This type of work requires the consultant to
make specific recommendations to improve the operational efficiency at a
particular location.
b. Type of
Work 6.2: Traffic Signal Timing. This type of work is defined as the timing of
traffic signals to improve traffic flow and safety. Department approved traffic
engineering computerized timing programs shall be used. This type of work
includes data collection, intersection analysis and documentation, section
analysis and documentation, timing implementation and fine tuning, and timing
evaluation.
c. Type of Work 6.3:
Intelligent Transportation Systems Analysis, Design, and Implementation. This
type of work is defined as the use of electrical engineering, electronics
engineering, computer science, and traffic engineering to analyze, design, and
implement real-time intelligent transportation systems. This includes system
performance and cost analysis, system hardware and software design, development
of management plans, system installation and operation, system testing and
debugging, system documentation, and the training of operations personnel. This
work Type is subdivided into four categories: Type of Work 6.3.1: Intelligent
Transportation Systems Analysis and Design, Type of Work 6.3.2: Intelligent
Transportation Systems Implementation, Type of Work 6.3.3: Intelligent
Transportation Traffic Engineering Systems Communications, and Type of Work
6.3.4: Intelligent Transportation Systems Software
Development.
2.
Qualification Requirements.
a. Type of Work
6.1: Traffic Engineering Studies. This type of work requires a professional
engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having at least two years of post-registration traffic studies
experience.
b. Type of Work 6.2:
Traffic Signal Timing. This type of work requires a professional engineer,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having
demonstrated traffic signal timing experience in the application and
interpretation of traffic flow and signal timing models.
c. Type of Work 6.3: Intelligent
Transportation Systems Analysis, Design, and Implementation. This type of work
requires a professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers, having at least three years of post-registration
experience in the technical skill area for which qualification is requested.
These technical skill areas are as follows:
(I) Type of Work 6.3.1: Intelligent
Transportation Systems Analysis and Design. This type of work requires
experience involving the production of competently engineered design, and
preparation of construction plans and specifications for traffic control
systems, freeway operations systems, dynamic message sign systems, closed
circuit television camera systems, detection systems, and automatic vehicle
identification systems. The experience must also involve traffic engineering
software applications, freeway control software, and computerized timing
programs.
(II) Type of Work 6.3.2:
Intelligent Transportation Systems Implementation. This type of work requires
experience involving realtime traffic control systems, system installation and
testing, and knowledge of Construction Engineering Inspection (CEI)
requirements for intelligent transportation construction projects.
(III) Type of Work 6.3.3: Intelligent
Transportation Traffic Engineering Systems Communications. This type of work
requires documented experience involving electronic engineering of system
hardware, digital system design, specifications, and utilization. The
experience must involve electrical engineering of power and communications,
including power distribution, standby power supply, lightning protection,
hardware interconnect, fiber optic networks, wireless communications networks,
local area networks, wide area networks, Internet communications, data
recording, data transmission, modulating, and multiplexing
techniques.
(IV) Type of Work
6.3.4: Intelligent Transportation Systems Software Development. This type of
work requires documented experience in software development, specifically with
intelligent transportation systems applications, and computer science (realtime
process control software systems, including realtime executive Input/Output
(I/O) processing and priority interrupt based processing). The experience must
also involve system software testing and debugging, data base software,
graphical user interfaces, system documentation, and training of operations
personnel.
(f) Group 7. Traffic Operations Design. This
work group is defined as the production of competently engineered designs, and
preparation of construction plans and specifications for a variety of traffic
operations type work.
1. This group includes
the following sub-categories of qualifications:
a. Type of Work 7.1: Signing, Pavement
Marking, and Channelization. This type of work includes designing, preparing
construction plans, and writing specifications for signing, pavement marking,
and channelization. Such work involves structural support and foundation
calculations, and requires a basic knowledge of traffic engineering
studies.
b. Type of Work 7.2:
Lighting. This type of work includes designing, preparing construction plans,
and writing specifications for roadway lighting improvements. Such work
involves lighting calculations, pole location, foundation design, electrical
circuit calculations, and power supply and distribution design, and requires a
basic knowledge of traffic engineering studies.
c. Type of Work 7.3: Signalization. This type
of work includes designing, preparing construction plans, and writing
specifications for traffic signalization. Such work involves capacity
calculations, signal operating plan development, timing calculations, equipment
location, pole and foundation designs, etc., and requires a basic knowledge of
traffic engineering studies and traffic signal retiming.
2. Qualification Requirements. Qualification
for this work group requires a professional engineer, registered with the
Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, who has served in responsible
charge of at least one project in the type of work, as defined above, for which
qualification is requested.
(g) Group 8. Surveying and Mapping. This work
group includes surveying and mapping, as defined in Rule Chapter 61G17-6,
F.A.C., required for the land acquisition, design, and construction of
transportation projects.
1. This group
includes the following sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of Work 8.1: Control Surveying. This
type of work provides horizontal and vertical control to a specified standard
for Department projects.
b. Type of
Work 8.2: Design, Right of Way, and Construction Surveying. This type of work
includes boundary surveys, right of way surveys, as-built surveys, construction
layout surveys, topographic surveys, hydrographic surveys, quantity surveys,
record surveys, mean high water line surveys, and special purpose
surveys.
c. Type of Work 8.3:
Photogrammetric Mapping. This type of work includes surveys and the preparation
of maps using photogrammetric methods.
d. Type of Work 8.4: Right of Way Mapping.
This type of work includes the production of right of way related maps, as well
as the preparation of legal descriptions and sketches of legal descriptions
based on information supported by the applicable surveys or maps defined in the
preceding types of work, title searches, and other
documents.
2.
Qualification Requirements: To qualify to perform surveying and mapping
services as defined above, the consultant must employ at least one professional
surveyor and mapper, registered with the Florida Board of Professional
Surveyors and Mappers, having at least one year of documented post registration
experience in the specific type of work for which qualification is requested.
The consultant must also employ at least two additional technical personnel,
each having at least one year of documented experience in the specific type of
work for which qualification is requested. In addition, the consultant must
submit a written statement of intent to use equipment and software meeting the
accuracy, formatting, and other requirements defined in Department policies,
procedures, manuals, or handbooks, related to the type(s) of work for which
qualification is sought.
(h) Group 9. Soil Exploration, Material
Testing, and Foundations.
1. This group
includes the following sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of Work 9.1: Soil Exploration. This
type of work includes acquisition and reporting of subsurface material,
hydrological, and environmental information to be used for the planning,
design, construction, and performance of transportation facilities. The
methodology involved includes on-site investigations by performing borings,
Standard Penetration tests, Cone Penetration tests, and rock coring; the use of
specialized test equipment, such as the field vane, pressuremeter, or
dilatometer; and the use of geophysical methods. Also included is the field
classification of materials and acquisition of soil and rock samples.
b. Type of Work 9.2: Geotechnical
Classification Lab Testing. This type of work includes conducting tests on soil
and rock according to Department approved specifications for the purpose of
classifying materials. The methodology involved includes testing moisture
content, grain size, Atterberg limits, compaction, and Limerock Bearing Ratio
(LBR) tests.
c. Type of Work 9.3:
Highway Materials Testing. This type of work includes sampling and testing
various materials and reporting results and recommendations. Work will be
performed at mines, quarries, mills, refineries, processors, producers,
fabricators, constructors, laboratories, and project construction sites; some
of which will be outside the State of Florida. Materials to be tested include
aggregates; concrete products; cements and additives, including water, epoxies,
and curing compounds; bituminous materials, mixtures, additives, and joint
fillers; metals; galvanizing, rubber, paints, and other coatings; and soils and
limerock.
d. Type of Work 9.4:
Foundation Studies. This group is subdivided into two categories:
(I) Type of Work 9.4.1: Standard Foundation
Studies. This type of work includes producing reports which include selection
of the type (shallow foundations, piles, and redundant drilled shafts) and
depth of foundation for bridges and other structures; bearing capacity and the
predicted settlement of the selected foundation; slope stability; surcharge or
stage construction time schedules for construction over soft ground; pile load
tests; soil treatment; stabilization; and direction of field instrumentation
installation, including the interpretation of data obtained and other
foundation studies using the applicable Department Standard Specifications for
Road and Bridge Construction, and Federal Highway Administration guidelines and
checklist.
(II) Type of Work 9.2.2:
Non-redundant Drilled Shaft Bridge Foundation Studies. This type of work
includes the work activities described in Type of Work 9.4.1: Standard
Foundation Studies and, in addition, the complex geotechnical analyses required
for the design and construction of non-redundant drilled shaft bridge
foundations.
e. Type of
Work 9.5: Geotechnical Specialty Lab Testing. This type of work includes
conducting tests on soil and rock according to Department approved
specifications for the purpose of identifying their physical properties. The
methodology involved includes testing permeability, consolidation, unconfined
compression, direct shear, splitting tensile, and triaxial.
2. Qualification Requirements. For all
sub-categories this work requires at least one professional engineer,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years of experience in the activities normally associated with
the category(ies) under consideration.
a. Type
of Work 9.1: Soil Exploration. This type of work requires one professional
engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having a minimum of five years of experience in activities normally associated
with soil exploration. The consultant must have equipment (in-house or
subcontracted) necessary to perform the work. It should be noted that the
qualified consultant shall be solely responsible for any and all explorations
work, whether performed by the consultant or its subcontractor.
b. Type of Work 9.2: Geotechnical
Classification Lab Testing. This type of work requires one professional
engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having a minimum of five years of experience in activities normally associated
with geotechnical testing. The consultant must have at least one technician
with a minimum of two years of experience in geotechnical testing and LBR
Technician qualification under the Department's Construction Training
Qualification Program. In addition, the consultant must have in-house the
following equipment: oven, balance, stirring apparatus, hydrometer bulb,
hydrometer bath, thermometer, sieves, sieve shaker, liquid limit device,
grooving tool, pycnometer, molds, compaction hammer, straightedge, and LBR
loading device with penetration piston.
c. Type of Work 9.3: Highway Materials
Testing. This type of work requires one professional engineer, registered with
the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a minimum of five
years of experience in activities normally associated with highway materials
testing. Among the consultant's personnel, at least one individual must possess
LBR Technician qualification, one individual must possess Asphalt Plant Level I
qualification, one individual must possess Concrete Field testing Technician
Level I qualification under the Department's Construction Training
Qualification Program, and one individual must possess nuclear gauge operator
certification as provided by a gauge manufacturer. In addition, the consultant
must have (in-house) at least the following test equipment: oven, balances,
sieves, mechanical shaker, colorimetric kit, compression testing machine,
moisture curing room or tanks, slump cone, air meters, gravity apparatus,
thermometers, pycnometer, pulverizing apparatus, jaw crusher apparatus,
splitter or quartering device, Los Angeles machine, flowmeter, water bath,
muffle furnace, compaction hammer, molds LBR loading devices with penetration
piston, soak tanks, and ignition furnace.
d. Type of Work 9.4: Foundation Studies.
(I) Type of Work 9.4.1: Standard Foundation
Studies. This type of work requires one professional engineer, registered with
the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a minimum of five
years of experience in activities normally associated with standard foundation
studies.
(II) Type of Work 9.4.2:
Non-redundant Drilled Shaft Bridge Foundation Studies. This type of work
requires qualification in Type of Work 9.4.1: Standard Foundation Studies, and,
in addition, two professional engineers, registered with the Florida State
Board of Professional Engineers, having a minimum of three years of experience
each in activities normally associated with non-redundant drilled shaft
foundation design. The qualifying professional engineers shall be responsible
for the quality assurance of the design services, and shall sign a letter of
certification stating that the project documents have been reviewed under the
quality assurance process, and that all issues are resolved.
(III) Type of Work 9.5: Geotechnical
Specialty Lab Testing. The consultant must have at least one staff member with
at least four years of experience performing the tests, or an equivalent
bachelor's degree. In addition, the consultant must have (in-house) at least
the following test equipment: oven, balances, permeameter, consolidation load
device, load frame, direct shear machine, triaxial panel, and a triaxial
cell.
(i) Group 10. CEI. This type of work involves
the monitoring and inspection of the work required under various construction
contracts. This type of work includes coordinating with other public agencies,
utilities, and affected property owners.
1.
This group includes the following subcategories of qualification:
a. Type of Work 10.1: Roadway CEI. This type
of work includes the administration and inspection of single or multiple
construction contracts on rural, municipal, urban, and interstate facilities;
including necessary minor bridges as defined in Type of work 3.1.
b. Type of Work 10.2: Reserved.
c. Type of Work 10.3: Construction Materials
Inspection. This type of work includes conducting inspections and
investigations of various highway materials or products, together with the
proper recording, analysis, and reporting of results and recommendations. The
work will be performed at mines, quarries, mills, refineries, processors,
producers, fabricators, constructors, and project construction sites; some of
which will be outside the State of Florida.
d. Type of Work 10.4: Minor Bridge and
Miscellaneous Structures CEI. This type of work includes the CEI of
conventional non-standard concrete box culverts, retaining walls, sound
barriers, structural supports for highway signs, luminaries, and traffic
signals. Generally, this group of structures is limited to conventional
foundation types, simple geometry, and having total estimated bridge(s) plan
area(s) no greater than 100,000 square feet (sum of the areas of multiple
bridges). Typically, this includes the construction, rehabilitation, widening,
or lengthening of box culverts, retaining walls, cast-in-place or precast
prestressed short span slab type bridges, simple span prestressed concrete beam
bridges, and simple span I-beam bridges.
e. Type of Work 10.5: Major Bridge CEI. This
type of work includes CEI of structures that cannot be included in Type of Work
10.4 because of deck area, complex geometry (curvature, skew, or variable
width), complex design (including bridges with statically indeterminate
superstructure components) with spans estimated to be less than 400 feet,
non-conventional substructures, bridges over navigable waters, and railroad
bridges. This group is separated into three categories:
(I) Type of Work 10.5.1: Major Bridge CEI -
Concrete. This type of work includes CEI for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of structurally-continuous concrete superstructures
(longitudinally post-tensioned concrete beam bridges, etc.), reinforced
concrete boxes, and post-tensioned substructures.
(II) Type of Work 10.5.2: Major Bridge CEI -
Steel. This type of work includes CEI for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of structurally-continuous steel superstructures
(steel box girders, curved steel girder bridges, etc.).
(III) Type of Work 10.5.3: Major Bridge CEI -
Segmental. This type of work includes CEI for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of precast or cast-in-place concrete post-tensioned
segmental superstructures or substructures.
f. Type of Work 10.6: Movable Span Bridge
CEI: This type of work includes the CEI of structures that cannot be included
in Type of Work 10.5.1 or 10.5.2 because of unique, specialized, or uncommon
types of designs. Typically, this includes the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of bridges with estimated span(s) longer than 400
feet, tunnels, cable-stayed bridges, suspension bridges, truss spans, arch
bridges, and bridges requiring unique analytical methods or other design
features not commonly addressed in AASHTO publications. This group is separated
into two categories:
(I) Type of Work 10.6.1:
Complex Bridge CEI - Concrete: This type of work includes CEI for the
construction, rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of concrete
superstructures of the structure types listed in Type of Work 10.6.
(II) Type of Work 10.6.2: Complex Bridge CEI
- Steel: This type of work includes CEI for the construction, rehabilitation,
widening, or lengthening of steel superstructures of the structure types listed
in Type of Work 10.6.
g.
Type of Work 10.7: Movable Span Bridge CEI: This type of work includes the CEI
of bascule bridges and other movable bridges. The work includes all structural,
electrical, and mechanical requirements. Typically, this includes CEI for the
construction, rehabilitation, widening, or lengthening of bascule bridges,
swing bridges, and vertical lift bridges.
2. Qualification Requirements.
a. Type of Work 10.1: Roadway CEI. This type
of work requires at least one professional engineer, registered with the
Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having at least two years of
responsible charge experience as a project engineer on a roadway construction
inspection project.
b. Type of Work
10.2: Reserved.
c. Type of Work
10.3: Construction Materials Inspection. This type of work requires a minimum
of one professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers, having at least three years of responsible experience
in bridge or roadway construction inspection.
d. Type of Work 10.4: Minor Bridge and
Miscellaneous Structures CEI. This type of work requires at least one
professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional
Engineers, having a minimum of five years experience in the performance of CEI
for Type of Work 10.4; and two engineers/project administrators having a
minimum of three years each CEI for Type of Work 10.4.
e. Type of Work 10.5.1: Major Bridge CEI -
Concrete. This type of work requires at least two professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.5.1 in
continuous span concrete bridges as defined in Type of Work 10.5.1, excluding
segmental bridges, or qualified as required in work group 10.5.3 with one
additional year of CEI experience in continuous span concrete bridges as
defined in Type of Work 10.5.1, three or more engineers/technicians having a
minimum of three years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work
10.5.2.
f. Type of Work 10.5.2:
Major Bridge CEI - Steel. This type of work requires at least two professional
engineers, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having a minimum of five years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work
10.5.2 in continuous span steel bridges as defined for Type of Work 10.5.2
above and three or more engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years
each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.5.2.
g. Type of Work 10.5.3: Major Bridge CEI -
Segmental. This type of work requires at least two professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.5.3 in
continuous span post-tensioned segmental concrete (precast or cast-in-place)
bridges as defined for Type of Work 10.5.3 and three or more
engineers/technicians having a minimum of three years each in the performance
of CEI for Type of Work 10.5.3.
h.
Type of Work 10.6.1: Complex Bridge CEI - Concrete. This type of work requires
at least three professional engineers, registered with the Florida State Board
of Professional Engineers, having a minimum of five years experience each in
the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.6.1 in categories as defined in Type
of Work 10.6.1 and four or more engineers/ technicians having a minimum of
three years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.5.1.
i. Type of Work 10.6.2: Complex Bridge CEI -
Steel. This type of work requires at least three professional engineers,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having a
minimum of five years experience each in the performance of CEI for Type of
Work 10.6.2 and four or more engineers/technicians having a minimum of three
years each in the performance of CEI for Type of Work 10.6.2.
j. Type of Work 10.7: Movable Span Bridge
CEI. This type of work requires qualification in Type of Work 10.5.2 and also
requires an electrical engineer and a mechanical engineer both registered with
the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers. In addition to the
experience requirements for Type of Work 10.5.2, the professional engineers
will have at least five years of experience in the performance of CEI for Type
of Work 10.7 and three engineers/technicians shall have a minimum of three
years of movable bridge experience in the performance of CEI for Type of Work
10.7. At least one of the professional engineers or engineer/technicians will
have experience in CEI of at least three movable bridge electrical control
systems within the last 10 years and one will have experience in CEI of at
least three movable bridge drive systems within the last 10 years. The
electrical engineer will have experience in CEI of at least three movable
bridge electrical control systems within the last 10 years and experience with
the commonly used bridge leaf motion control techniques used within the last 30
years. The mechanical engineer will have experience in CEI of at least three
movable bridge drive systems within the last 10 years and experience with the
bridge drive systems commonly used within the last 30
years.
(j)
Group 11. Engineering Contract Administration and Management.
1. Type of Work: Engineering Contract
Administration and Management. This type of work is defined as the
administration and management of engineering activities. Consultants applying
for qualification in this type of work must be determined qualified in a number
of categories under this rule chapter. Examples of assignments made to a
consultant qualified for this type of work are:
a. Engineering analysis of transportation
facility deficiencies; and the preparation of an engineering scope of services
and staff hour estimate to correct those deficiencies.
b. Project schedule development for planning,
environmental, design, and construction engineering inspection
activities.
c. Review and analysis
of professional engineering issues contained in statements of qualification and
technical proposals submitted by consultants competing for professional
contracts.
d. Conduct Scope of
Service meetings with professional consultants.
e. Preparation of contractual agreements for
professional services in accordance with Department policies and
procedures.
f. Supervision and
management of engineering consultants on individual projects, responding to
their technical questions, and reviewing their work in progress and completed
work.
g. Representing the
Department during professional service negotiations with consultants,
utilities, and other entities.
h.
Other professional engineering activities associated with the acquisition and
management of professional consulting services.
2. Qualification Requirements. Engineering
Contract Administration and Management. To be determined qualified for this
type of work, a consultant must be qualified by the Department in the following
Groups and Types of Work under this rule chapter: Group 3, Types of Work 4.1.1,
4.1.2, 4.2.1, 4.2.2, and 6.1, Group 7, and Type of Work 10.1. Firms deemed
qualified in these groups and requesting qualification for Group 11 will be
deemed qualified without a requirement to submit additional qualification
documentation or materials.
(k) Group 13. Planning. This type of work
involves the determination of future actions necessary to address the need for
transportation facilities and services. The work effort may involve planning
both short range (up to 10 years) and long range (more than 10 years) time
periods, and may involve any or all typical activities of planning, including
development and refinement of processes and procedures; development and
analysis of policies, goals, and objectives; data collection and analysis;
issue analysis; development and use of forecasting and other models; analysis
of transportation/land use relationships; assessing the impact that planning
transportation improvements may have on private property; establishment of
standards and performance criteria; forecasts of transportation and
transportation related data; determination and analysis of alternatives;
multimodal/intermodal tradeoff analysis; analysis of alternatives;
multimodal/intermodal tradeoff analysis; development of recommended plans and
courses of action; financial feasibility; assessment of the impacts of growth
management requirements on transportation; and public participation and
coordination with other planning processes and plans.
1. This group includes the following
sub-categories of qualification:
a. Type of
Work 13.1: Reserved.
b. Type of
work 13.2: Reserved.
c. Type of
Work 13.3: Policy Planning. This type of work involves transportation and
transportation related planning activities in the broadest or most general way.
Planning in this sub-category usually occurs at levels where difficult
trade-offs in the use and allocation of resources must be made and where many
people will be affected in important but often subtle ways. Hence, the ability
to use judgement, both political and technical/professional, is very important,
as is the ability to effectively communicate using a variety of media. Included
in this sub-category are development and refinement of statewide transportation
plans or plan components, and activities involving the determination of the
impacts and implications of policies, legislative issues, processes, and
standards on a wide variety of subjects, including: transportation facilities
and services; land use; the environment; the private sector; and the
public.
d. Type of Work 13.4:
Systems Planning. This type of work deals with planning for entire systems (one
or several modes) of transportation covering an entire geographic area such as
the development of long range transportation plans for an MPO, county, or
region; or the development of an ITS Strategic Plan for a region. Included in
this sub-category are activities involving the systematic analysis of future
demand for transportation facilities and services, leading to recommendations
for addressing that demand. Typical activities include: data collection and
analysis, including analysis of transportation/land use relationships;
estimation, forecasting, and assignment of travel demand, including modeling
the characteristics and use of transportation systems; mode split and
multimodal tradeoff analysis; development of ITS strategies; impact analysis;
evaluation and decision making; cost analysis and financial feasibility; and
modal coordination and management. Although recommendations as to the type,
number, and approximate location of transportation facilities are to be made,
this sub-category does not include determination of the precise location or
design of facilities or systems.
e.
Type of Work 13.5: Subarea/Corridor Planning. This type of work deals with
planning for entire systems or portions of systems (one or several modes) of
transportation covering a smaller geographic area than Systems Planning or for
a specific transportation corridor. Included in this sub-category are
activities involving the systematic analysis of future demand for
transportation facilities and services, leading to recommendations for
addressing that demand. Typical activities, usually performed at a more
detailed level than with systems planning, include data collection and
analysis, as well as: analysis of transportation/land use relationships;
estimation, forecasting, and assignment of travel demand, including modeling
the characteristics and use of transportation systems; mode split and
multimodal tradeoff analysis; development of ITS strategies to maximize the
operation of the corridor; impact analysis; evaluation and decision making;
cost analysis; and financial feasibility; and modal coordination and
management. Although recommendations as to the type, number, and approximate
location of transportation facilities are to be made, this sub-category does
not include determination of the precise location or design of facilities or
systems.
f. Type of Work 13.6: Land
Planning/Engineering. This work involves planning and engineering in support of
assessing the impacts that proposed transportation improvements may have on
private property. Included in this sub-category are activities involving site
analysis for compliance with comprehensive plans, local ordinances, and
appraisers' cost to cure; reviewing and providing engineering opinions of site
plans for feasibility and conformance with applicable codes and regulations;
assessing the impact to drainage and environment; and preparing site plan and
studies which may encompass parking layout, vehicle use areas, and general site
consideration in conformance with applicable codes, laws, and
regulations.
g. Type of Work 13.7:
Transportation Statistics. This type of work involves data collection,
analysis, editing, processing, and reporting to support planning, design, and
maintenance of the transportation network. This type of work also involves the
construction, replacement, or repair of traffic monitoring equipment including
sensors (either installed in, or along the roadway) and associated equipment
and appurtenances. The construction of traffic monitoring sites may include
design, preparing construction plans, writing specifications, and construction
engineering supervision. Special traffic counts may also be performed under
this activity to support production and development activities and special
needs.
2. Qualification
Requirements.
a. Type of Work 13.1:
Reserved.
b. Type of Work 13.2:
Reserved.
c. Type of Work 13.3:
Policy Planning. This type of work requires at least one professional engineer,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having at
least five years of training and experience in areas directly related to policy
planning; or at least one professional engineer, registered with the Florida
State Board of Professional Engineers, with at least one employed planner
having training and experience in areas directly related to policy planning; or
at least one planner, certified with the American Institute of Certified
Planners, having training and experience in areas directly related to policy
planning.
d. Type of Work 13.4:
Systems Planning. This type of work requires at least one professional
engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having at least five years of training and experience in areas directly related
to systems planning; or at least one professional engineer, registered with the
Florida State Board of Professional Engineers with at least one employed
planner having at least five years of training and experience in areas directly
related to systems planning; or at least one planner, certified with the
American Institute of Certified Planners, having at least five years training
and experience in areas directly related to systems planning.
e. Type of Work 13.5: Subarea/Corridor
Planning. This type of work requires at least one professional engineer,
registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, having at
least one year of post-registration experience in areas directly related to
subarea/corridor planning; or at least one professional engineer, registered
with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers, with at least one
employed planner having at least one year of experience in areas directly
related to subarea/corridor planning; or at least one planner, certified with
the American Institute of Certified Planners, having at least one year of
experience in areas directly related to subarea/corridor planning.
f. Type of Work 13.6: Land
Planning/Engineering. This type of work requires at least one professional
engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional Engineers,
having a minimum of three years of experience in comprehensive planning or
areas directly related to assessing impacts to private property; or at least
one professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of
Professional Engineers, with at least one employed planner having a minimum of
three years of experience in comprehensive planning or areas directly related
to assessing impacts to private property; or at least one landscape architect
registered with the Florida State Board of Landscape Architecture, having
training and experience in areas directly related to assessing impacts to
private property, or at least one planner, certified with the American
Institute of Certified Planners, with a minimum of three years of experience in
comprehensive planning or areas directly related to assessing impacts to
private property.
g. Type of Work
13.7: Transportation Statistics. This type of work requires at least one
professional engineer, registered with the Florida State Board of Professional
Engineers, having at least one year of post-registration experience in
activities associated with the collection of traffic data of a statistical
nature that can be used in the Department's databases such as the Rail-Highway
Crossing Inventory (RHCI), Traffic Characteristics Inventory (TCI), and Roadway
Characteristics Inventory (RCI), or used to support other Department activities
such as highway design. In addition, either the same engineer, or an additional
professional engineer registered with the State Board of Professional Engineers
with at least one year of post-registration experience in the construction,
replacement, or repair of traffic monitoring equipment, including sensors
(either installed in, on, or alongside the roadway) and associated equipment
and appurtenances, and maintenance of traffic is
required.
(l)
Group 14. Architect.
1. Type of Work. This
type of work is defined as the rendering of services in connection with the
design and construction of a structure or group of structures which have as
their principal purpose human habitation or use, and the utilization of space
within and surrounding such structures. These services include planning;
providing preliminary study designs, drawings, and specifications;
architectural supervision; job-site inspection; and administration of
construction contracts.
2.
Qualification Requirements. This type of work requires at least one architect,
registered with the Florida State Board of Architecture and Interior Design,
with a minimum of five years of post-registration experience in commercial
design and favorable references.
(m) Group 15: Landscape Architect.
1. Type of Work. This type of work is defined
as the rendering of services in connection with the design and construction of
landscape projects. These services include planning; site planning; providing
preliminary study designs, drawings, and specifications; landscape
architectural supervision; job-site inspection; and administration of
construction contracts.
2.
Qualification Requirements. This type of work requires at least one landscape
architect, registered with the Florida State Board of Landscape Architecture,
with at least five years of post-registration experience in landscape
architecture projects.
(n) Group 20. Appraisal Services.
1. This type of work is defined as the
services provided by an appraiser to the State of Florida, Department of
Transportation. Appraisal Services include: "Appraisal Assignment" in which a
person is employed or retained to act as a disinterested third party in
rendering objective and unbiased analyses, opinions, reviews, or conclusions
relating to the nature, quality, value, or utility of specified interests in,
or aspects of, identified real property. Such appraisal services must be in
compliance with the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, as
incorporated by reference in Section
475.628, F.S.
2. Qualification Requirements. This type of
work requires a minimum of one person licensed as a State Certified General
Real Estate Appraiser issued by the Florida Department of Business and
Professional Regulation, with a minimum of three years experience in appraising
for eminent domain purposes.
(o) Group 21. Acquisition, Negotiation,
Closing, and Order of Taking.
1. Type of Work.
This type of work involves notifying all affected parties of their rights
pursuant to Section 73.015, F.S.; reviewing and
verifying all title work; reviewing right of way maps and construction plans
and verifying that all legal descriptions, right of way maps, and appraisals
correspond; conducting surveys to identify all businesses operating on property
being acquired; preparing real property/personal property inventories; making
purchase offers including the approved market value estimate, and conducting
negotiations in accordance with state policies and procedures and all
applicable laws; when applicable, making business damage counteroffers and
conducting negotiations to settle business damage claims in accordance with
state policies and procedures; participating in the non-binding pre-litigation
mediation process; preparing recommendations for administrative settlements;
preparing and processing invoices for requesting warrants for settlements, and
order of taking deposits; conducting all necessary closings as well as
preparation, styling, and filing of lawsuit packages under the direction of the
Department's attorney; providing assistance to the Department's attorneys in
obtaining Orders of Taking, including providing testimony and responding to
interrogatories; and maintaining complete written documentation of all contacts
with property owners or property owners' representatives.
2. Qualification Requirements. This type of
work requires registration of the consultant with the Florida Real Estate
Commission and, at a minimum, one real estate broker and one real estate
salesperson licensed by the State of Florida, Department of Business and
Professional Regulation. These employees each must have at least three years of
demonstrated experience in transportation acquisition
projects.
(p) Group 22.
Acquisition Business Damage Estimating and Estimate Review.
1. Type of Work. This type of work is defined
as the preparation of business damage estimate reports describing the impact of
a right of way acquisition on the income, expenses, and profits of a particular
business, in accordance with the standards established in Rule Chapter 14-102,
F.A.C., and all other recognized accounting and performance standards; and the
critical and analytical review and evaluation of business damage estimate
reports, exhibits, and other documentation submitted to the Department by the
business damage estimator on behalf of the Department or business
owners.
2. Qualification
Requirements. This type of work requires a minimum of one employee, registered
as a Certified Public Accountant in the State of Florida, with a minimum of
three years of demonstrated professional accounting work, after registration.
This type of work also requires the Certified Public Accountant to demonstrate
previous experience in the preparation of accepted business damage estimate
reports for the Department within the last three years immediately preceding
application for qualification; or have served as an expert witness in the State
of Florida in eminent domain cases or other legal cases regarding business
valuation or damages within the last three years immediately preceding
application for qualification; or a minimum of 48 hours of completed course
work, directly related to business valuation. Verification of course work shall
be by copies of course certificates of completion issued by the course provider
which will indicate the number of hours that may be counted for continuing
professional education credits.
(q) Group 24. Acquisition Relocation
Assistance.
1. Type of Work. This type of work
is defined as relocation planning at the conceptual stage of a transportation
project and the preparation of the Relocation Needs Assessment Survey,
identifying displaced persons and likely business damage candidates pursuant to
the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act
and 49 C.F.R., Part
24, incorporated herein by reference, and available at:
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/realestate/ua/index.htm.
Advisory services, including personal interviews and coordination with
displaced persons, must be provided to ensure the timely relocation to
replacement properties. Relocation assistance also involves the delivery of all
required notices and offers to owners and tenants, the location and offer of
comparable decent, safe and sanitary replacement dwellings available for sale
or rent, the computation of replacement housing payments, the determination of
appropriate move cost payments, the monitoring of moves, the preparation of
claim packages, invoicing of payment amounts, and delivery of warrants. The
work also entails obtaining all information pertinent to evictions and
relocation appeals, and includes providing testimony.
2. Qualification Requirements. This type of
work requires a minimum of one full time employee with a minimum of three years
of demonstrated current experience in administering and providing relocation
assistance for transportation projects under the provisions of the Uniform
Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act and 49 C.F.R.,
Part
24.
(r) Group 25.
Right of Way Clearing and Leasing.
1. Type of
Work. This type of work involves preparing real property/personal property
inventories and inventory updates up to and including final disposition of the
property; performing property inspections on an ongoing basis to determine the
need for rodent control, maintenance, and security; conducting negotiations for
short-term leases and preparing leasing documents for real and personal
property prior to construction of a project; preparing, obtaining, managing,
and reviewing contracts for consultant services to perform asbestos surveys,
preparing asbestos operation and maintenance plans, preparing asbestos
abatement specifications, and performing air and asbestos project monitoring;
preparing, obtaining, and managing departmental contracts for asbestos
abatement services; preparing, obtaining, and managing departmental contracts
for demolition and removal services; inspecting demolition sites and
documenting demolition activities; and preparing, obtaining, and managing
Department contracts for removal of pollutant storage tanks.
2. Qualification Requirements. This type of
work requires registration of the consultant with the Florida Real Estate
Commission and, at a minimum, one real estate broker and one real estate
salesperson licensed by the Florida State Department of Business and
Professional Regulation. These employees each must have at least three years of
demonstrated experience in managing properties acquired for transportation
purposes and managing contracts for demolition activities. Additionally, at
least one employee must be certified as an Asbestos Inspector and as an
Asbestos Management Planner, and have a minimum of three years of
administrative experience in the asbestos
field.