On Call Renovation, Repair Construction – Job Order Contracting
The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly
Defining a Job Order Contract – On-Call Construction Contract
THE GOOD – Procedures Associated with Job Order Contract – On-Call Construction Contracts
THE BAD – Using JOC to Improperly Approve Construction Projects
Over the past several years, many public agencies have begun to use Job Order Contracts as a way to either approve construction projects that otherwise would NOT have been approved if due diligence and traditional procurement practices were followed… or simply as a means to speed project delivery by bypassing procurement and/or purchasing.
While properly implement JOC does speed total project delivery time, this can ONLY be diligently accomplished if established Job Order Contract best management practices, processes, and procedures are followed.
THE UGLY – Implementing JOC without Proper Oversight, Competency, and Ethics
JOC is an excellent tool for productively executing the numerous common and repetitive public works projects encountered across facility and physical infrastructure portfolios. It provides a means to have a local contractor, one that is experienced with an Owner’s portfolio and associated nuances, perform work at reasonable prices as work needs develop, without the months or even years of delay and poor quality resulting from traditional design-bid-build and lowest bidder processes.
However, JOB ORDER CONTRACT AUDITS over the past several years have noted what can happen if JOCs are not implemented per best management and best value practices.
Here are examples of the “UGLY” that have recently be noted…
“detailed the systemic pressures and lack of control that led to city job contracts for the Department of Public Works were being overinflated, inappropriately priced and were vulnerable to fraud. The nearly two-year review of the city’s Job Order Contracting program (JOC) showed that the city has paid over $1.9 million more than it was contractually obligated.”
“(The audit report) shows that the JOC program within the Department of Public Works had created an environment “highly vulnerable to fraud,” partially because it placed an emphasis on getting jobs done quickly instead of ensuring that they were competitively priced and properly defined.”
“The “Triangle of Fraud” as defined in Doud’s report, was created by contractor’s pressure to inflate costs because the city was accepting bids that were unrealistically low. The three points of the triangle were listed as the pressure to inflate costs, opportunity without detection and justification for quick completion.”
“…adjustments were able to fly under the radar because of a lack of structure and oversight in the JOC program, the report said. This ranged from the initial scope of work (SOW) that made it difficult to assess whether the submitted price was appropriate. The lack of clarity led to order changes and cost overruns to occur in 91 percent of the projects surveyed in the report that spanned 17 months.”
“Adding non-catalog charges requires three independent quotes that are reviewed by the city prior to approval. The audit found that 67 percent of the the non-catalog items documented had no independent quotes, but also had no documentation of justification explaining why the quotes were forgone.”
“Furthermore, Long Beach’s program, unlike other JOC’s, does not have a cap on how many “non-catalog” items can be added once an bid is awarded. This resulted in over 40 percent of contractor jobs having these items added, resulting in an overall expenditure increase of almost $2 million.”
“Doud’s report noted that despite a former city project manager issuing a letter to a JOC contractor addressing the overinflation of a proposal, one that was circulated to JOC management staff, the city continued to grant over $3.8 million of work to that contractor who had allegedly “padded proposals” to inflate pricing.”
“The report acknowledge the obvious advantages of using the JOC program—speed—but…During the audit period seven projects amounting to $3.3 million took more than 90 days to initiate. The industry standard is 25 days (for JOC) with an existing design and 55 days without.”
-Long Beach Post, 2016
The above highlights the need for assuring that robust LEAN best management practices be applied to JOC and any construction delivery method, as well as the need for independent, objective, and best value job order contracting industry resources.
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