Or. Admin. Code § 334-001-0032 - Source Selection
(1)
General: Either the Board or the Executive Director must Award Contracts for
Goods or Services by one of the source selection methods in this rule. Except
as provided in section (2), (5) and (6) of this rule, the Board will generally
conduct a competitive process for Goods or Services by issuing a Solicitation
Document.
(2) Small Procurements:
Any procurement of Goods or Services not exceeding $15,000 may be awarded
without a competitive process. The Board may Award a Contract in any manner
deemed practical or convenient by the Board, including by direct selection or
Award. A procurement may not be artificially divided or fragmented so as to
constitute a small procurement under this rule.
(3) Intermediate Procurements: Any
procurement of Goods or Services exceeding $15,000 but not exceeding $150,000
may be awarded after seeking three competitive price quotes or Offers. Either
the Board or the Executive Director must keep a written record of the sources
of the Offers received. If three Offers are not reasonably available, fewer
will suffice, but either the Board or the Executive Director must make a
written record of the effort made to obtain the Offers. If a Contract is
awarded, either the Board or the Executive Director must Award the Contract to
the Offeror whose Offer will best serve the interests of the Board. A
procurement may not be artificially divided or fragmented so as to constitute
an intermediate procurement under this rule.
(4) Large Procurements: Any procurement of
Goods or Services exceeding $150,000 may be awarded after seeking three
solicited competitive Offers. The Board must keep a written record of the
sources of the Offers received. If three Offers are not reasonably available,
fewer will suffice, but the Board must make a written record of the effort made
to obtain the Offers. If a Contract is awarded, the Board must Award the
Contract to the Offeror whose Offer will best serve the interests of the
Board.
(5) Sole Source
Procurements: Either the Board or the Executive Director may Award a Contract
for Goods or Services without a competitive process when the Executive
Director, or a person designated in Writing by the Board, determines in
Writing, based on findings of current market research, that the Goods or
Services are available from only one seller or source.
(6) Emergency Procurements:
(a) General: The Executive Director may
conduct an Emergency procurement and enter into Contracts Awarded as Emergency
procurements in an Emergency. The Executive Director may conduct an Emergency
procurement and enter into Contracts Awarded as Emergency procurements
regardless of the dollar amount of the Contract without the Board's approval.
The Board may, in its discretion, enter into a contract without a competitive
solicitation if an emergency exists. Regardless of the dollar value of the
contract, the Board entering into an Emergency Contract must encourage
competition that is reasonable and appropriate under the Emergency
circumstances.
(b) Large
Procurements:
(A) Notwithstanding subsection
6(a) of this rule, the Executive Director may conduct an Emergency procurement
or enter into an Emergency Contract for a Large Procurement only upon the
approval of the Board.
(B) The
Executive Director may establish an extension of an Emergency Contract for a
Large Procurement without the approval of the Board, where the original
Contract specifically provides for the extension, the extension does not result
in any change in the terms and conditions of the Contract other than an
extension in its term.
(C) The
Executive Director must make reasonable efforts to report to the Board in
Writing, within five days of the Contract Award, or by the next scheduled Board
meeting following the Contract Award date, whichever is later, any Emergency
Contracts entered into by the Executive Director. However, the Executive
Director's inability or failure to report to the Board within this time must
not affect the validity of any Emergency Contract.
(7) Alternative Procurement
Methods:
(a) The Board reserves the right to
use an alternative procurement method if that method will be more likely to:
(A) Maximize the Board's net
revenue;
(B) Achieve the specific
business objective or business objectives of the procurement; or
(C) Aid the Executive Director in fulfilling
the statutory mandate to operate and administer the Board.
(b) Alternative procurement methods may
include, but are not limited to, multistep bids, quotes or Proposals, single
Proposer negotiations, competitive negotiations between two or more Proposers,
brand name solicitations, and cooperative procurements.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 183, 687
Stats. Implemented: ORS 182.456 - 182.472, 687.011, 687.051, 687.057, 687.061, 687.086, 687.121
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