Basic Outline of Government
Contract Award Rules
(August 9, 2010)
Below is
an outline of the general procedures and practices which inform the manner in
which Government of Jamaica (GOJ) contracts are awarded.
The
Basics of the Procurement Process
1. GOJ
contracts are not recommended, approved, endorsed and/or awarded by the Office
of the Contractor General (OCG). The primary mandate of the OCG, as is
outlined in Section 4 (1) (a) of the Contractor General Act, is to
monitor and to investigate the award of GOJ contracts to ensure that said
contracts are awarded on merit, impartially and in circumstances that do not
involve impropriety and/or irregularity. The OCG does not award
Government of Jamaica contracts.
2. GOJ
contracts are awarded by GOJ public bodies after approval by (a) the awarding
public body and (b) the Accountable/Accounting Officer of the public body. It
is also instructive to note that, depending upon the value of the contract, the recommendation for award must be further
endorsed by the National Contracts Commission (NCC) and approved by the
Cabinet, before the contract can be lawfully awarded by the awarding public
body.
3. The
rules that govern the award of GOJ contracts are embodied in the Government
Procurement Procedures Handbook (GPPH) for contracts which are awarded
pre-December 2008 and in the Revised Public Sector Procurement Procedures
Handbook (RPPH) for contracts which are awarded post-November 2008. The
referenced ‘Handbooks’ are developed, promulgated and approved by the Ministry
of Finance and the Public Service and the Cabinet.
4. The
general philosophy of the ‘Handbook’, and its embodied rules, is that the
higher the value of the contract, the greater the level of scrutiny and the
level of checks and balances which are brought to bear. In particular, the
rules are premised on the principle that:
a. Contracts
should be procured/consummated in such a manner so as
to ensure competitiveness, value for money, probity and transparency, etc. in
the award process.
However, there are exceptions in the
rules which permit contracts to be awarded without public competitive
tendering. i.e., via a Sole Source, Direct Contracting or a Limited
Tendering procurement methodology.
5. In
keeping with the value thresholds which were previously alluded to, the
following should be noted:
a. To
bid on a government contract over J$275,000, the contractor must be first
registered with the NCC. NCC registration ensures that contractors are
legitimate, competent and adequately resourced to perform and/or to execute the
contracts that are awarded to them;
b. The
NCC must endorse all contract recommendations over J$4 million pre-October 2008
and over J$10 million post-September 2008;
c. Cabinet
must approve all contracts valued at J$15 million and above pre-October 2008
and all contracts valued at J$30 million and above post-September 2008.
6. In
the case of the Sole Source procurement methodology, which is permissible under
the rules, the following should be noted:
a. Pre-October
2008, Public Bodies were required to seek and obtain the prior written approval
of the NCC to enter in such contracts valued at J$1 million and above;
b. Post-September
2008, Public Bodies are required to seek and to obtain the prior written
approval of the NCC to enter in such contracts valued at J$3 million and above.
7. In
the case of the Limited Tender procurement methodology, please note the
following:
a. Pre-October
2008, Public Bodies were required to seek and to obtain the prior written
approval of the NCC to enter in such contracts valued at J$4 million and above;
b. Post-September
2008, Public Bodies are required to seek and obtain the prior written approval
of the NCC to enter in such contracts valued at J$10 million and above.
Procurement
Methodologies
The
GOJ procurement rules establishes and permits several types of procurement
methodologies as are detailed below:
a. Open/Selective Tender methodology
(tender publicly advertised);
b. Limited
Tender methodology (only a specified number of NCC registered contractors are
selected and invited by the public body to participate in the tender);
c. Sole
Source and Direct Contracting methodology (only one NCC registered contractor
is selected and invited by the public body to participate in the tender);
d. Emergency
procurement (a contract can be awarded by a public body without the prior
endorsement of the NCC or approval of the cabinet where “emergency
circumstances” exist).
For
each of the referenced procurement methodologies, the GOJ procurement rules
will stipulate the approval requirements, the appropriate value thresholds and
the relevant processes which must be employed by the procuring public body.
OCG Publications
In the
interest of public transparency, the OCG regularly publishes, to the Media,
particulars regarding Government contract award recommendations which have
received the formal endorsement of the NCC. These particulars, together with
other Government contract award particulars, are regularly posted on the OCG’s
official web-sites and can be freely scrutinized or examined by you, the Media
or by any other person, at any time.
Each
month (usually by the 20th day of the month), the OCG publishes to
the Media a spreadsheet of the particulars of all Recommendations for the Award
of Government contracts which have been endorsed by the NCC in the previous
month. These monthly lists of NCC endorsements go back to June 2000.
Please
note that prior to October 2008 the NCC minimum contract approval threshold was
$4 Million. Post September 2008, the threshold was set by the Cabinet at $10
Million. To review these NCC endorsements, please click on this link: http://www.ocg.gov.jm/ocg/past_contracts.php
The
OCG’s Quarterly Contract Award (QCA) Report Regime requires all of the
country’s ~190 Procuring Public Bodies to submit to the OCG, within one month
of the ending of each calendar year quarter, in spreadsheet format, particulars
of the contracts which they have awarded during the quarter – in respect of
contracts which value between $275,000 and the NCC minimum approval threshold
value (i.e. $4 Million pre October 2008 and $10 Million post September 2008). The
OCG’s database of these contract particulars currently covers contracts which
were awarded between May 1, 2006 and June 30, 2010.
The
database is constantly updated and refreshed with new data as it becomes
available. To review the actual electronic QCA Reports which have been filed by
each public body and uploaded on the OCG’s websites, please click on this link:
http://www.ocg.gov.jm/ocg/qca_listing.php.
Should
you wish to review or download a free searchable database of the QCA Report
data which the OCG currently has on record, please click on this link: http://www.ocg.gov.jm/ocg/searchable_qca.php.
The
above referenced databases give full particulars of the contracts which have
been reportedly endorsed and/or awarded, inclusive of the name of the
contractor, the value of the contract and the procurement methodology which was
employed.
For
further information regarding the Government Procurement Policy and Procedures,
the Office of the Contractor General and matters which deal generally with the
OCG’s work, please feel free to browse the OCG’s website at www.ocg.gov.jm.