List Of Exempt Steel Products Issued For 2022

On February 19, 2022, the Pennsylvania Department of General Services (DGS) issued the list of machinery and equipment steel products which are exempt for calendar year 2022 under the PA Steel Products Procurement Act. The list was published in Read more

Recent Commonwealth Court Decision Affirms Core Bidding Principles

A recent decision concerning a bid protest filed on a PennDOT contract re-affirmed core principles of public bidding and bid protests on Commonwealth contracts. In Sidelines Tree Service, LLC v. Department of Transportation, the Commonwealth Court considered an appeal from a Read more

PA Supreme Court Clarifies The Meaning Of "Cost" Under the PA Steel Products Procurement Act

The PA Steel Products Procurement Act was first enacted in 1978. At its core, the Act provides that any steel products used or supplied on a public works project in Pennsylvania must be U.S. steel products. Under the Act, a product Read more

Can A Public Owner Recover Legal Fees From A Bidder Who Loses A Challenge To A Bid Rejection?

Can a public entity include in its bid instructions the right to recover its legal fees from a bidder if the bidder's bid protest lawsuit is unsuccessful? In the course of providing advice recently to a client, I came across Read more

List Of Exempt Steel Products Issued For 2020

On June 27, 2020, the Pennsylvania Department of General Services (DGS) issued the list of machinery and equipment steel products which are exempt for calendar year 2020 under the PA Steel Products Procurement Act.  The list was published in Read more

City of Phila.

Philadelphia LBE Bidder Must Include Subcontractor LBE Compliance With Its Bid

A recent Commonwealth Court decision has clarified what is required from a bidder for a City of Philadelphia (City) contract in order to be afforded the 5% bid preference for a certified local business entity (LBE) under the City’s local bidding preference ordinance.

Under the City of Philadelphia local bidding preference ordinance, an LBE receives a 5% reduction/preference from its bid price for purposes of determining the lowest bidder for award. According to the ordinance, and the City’s local bidding preference regulations, the LBE is entitled to the LBE 5% preference so long as it will perform at least 51% of the work with its own forces, or with the forces of its certified LBE subcontractors. Pursuant to the local bidding preference ordinance, and the regulations, the bidder is required to submit with its bid its LBE certification and annual affidavit, as well as the LBE certification and annual affidavit of any LBE subcontractors it intends to use to satisfy the 51% requirement.

However, notwithstanding the plain language in the ordinance and regulations, the City’s standard bid instructions normally required only submission of the bidder’s own LBE certification, even where the bidder intended to use LBE subcontractors to satisfy the requirement that the bidder will perform at least a majority of the work under the contract.

In April 2019, the City awarded a Water Department contract to Thomas P. Carney, Inc. (Carney), an LBE whose bid price was the second lowest, but was the lowest after the local preference was applied. Carney included with its bid its own LBE certification and affidavit, but did not include any LBE paperwork for its subcontractors, even though the work involved would have been performed by Carney’s LBE subcontractors.

C. Abbonizio Contractors, Inc. (Abbonizio), the low bidder, filed for a preliminary injunction to stop the contract award to Carney, claiming that Carney’s bid was defective because it failed to include a current LBE certification and affidavit for its subcontractors. The trial court refused to enter an injunction. On appeal, the Commonwealth Court reversed, finding that:

Based upon this Court’s strict reading of Section 17-109(5)(a) of the Philadelphia Code, Carney had to fulfill the requirements in Section 17-109(5)(a)(.1), (.2), (.3) and (.4) of the Philadelphia Code when it submitted its bid in order to receive the LBE preference in accordance with the Philadelphia Code. It being undisputed that Carney did not satisfy the specific LBE preference requirements, Carney should not have received the benefit thereof. Without the LBE preference, Carney was not the lowest bidder. Rather, Appellants submitted the Project’s lowest bid. Accordingly, Appellants are likely to prevail on the merits and their right to relief is clear. 

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Posted on by Christopher I. McCabe, Esq. in City of Phila., Local Bidding Preference Comments Off on Philadelphia LBE Bidder Must Include Subcontractor LBE Compliance With Its Bid
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