A. This
chapter of the Napa Municipal Code may be referred to as the "Contracting
Ordinance."
B. The
purpose and intent of this chapter is to exercise and affirm, to the
greatest extent possible, the City's constitutional "home rule" authority
with respect to City contracts, as a charter city pursuant to California
Constitution Article XI, Section 5. This chapter also responds to
the provisions of California
Public Contract Code Section 1100.7 by
affirmatively exempting the City from the requirements of the Public
Contract Code, except to the extent the City has expressly adopted
one or more provisions of the
Public Contract Code pursuant to the
City Charter, this code, Council resolution or other Council action,
or express terms of a City contract. Nothing in this chapter is intended
to concede or agree that:
Public Contract Code Section 1100.7 addresses
a matter of statewide concern sufficient to preempt the City's constitutional
"home rule" authority, or that this chapter is required in order for
the City to exercise such "home rule" authority, or that the City's
"home rule" authority over other matters is limited or preempted in
any manner by the City's failure to expressly exempt itself in this
chapter from any other state law.
C. Pursuant
to the City's constitutional "home rule" authority, the City is and
shall be exempt from the provisions of state law governing general
law cities, including the provisions of the California Public Contract
Code; provided, however, the City may expressly adopt one or more
provisions of state law to govern City contracts to the extent expressly
provided in the City Charter, this code, Council resolution or other
Council action, or express terms of a City contract. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, to the extent that California
Labor Code Section 1782
imposes a condition on charter cities for the receipt of state funding,
the City shall include a provision in each of its public works contracts
requiring that each contractor performing any public works construction
contract on behalf of the City shall comply with state law requirements
related to the payment of state prevailing wages, as imposed by California
Labor Code Division 2, Part 7, Chapter 1, Article 2 (Sections 1770
through 1784).
D. Consistent
with the requirements of the City Charter, including City Charter
Sections 100 through 105, this chapter establishes the parameters
by which representatives of the city may enter into contractual obligations
on behalf of the city. It is the goal of the city that any administrative
regulations adopted to implement this chapter, and any city contract,
will meet the following goals:
1. Obtain
the most cost effective result for the city, which avoids improvidence,
extravagance, and any other waste of public funds or public property,
and which also achieves an appropriate balance between the costs and
benefits of maximizing quality within available resources.
2. Takes
into consideration all reasonably available relevant information regarding
the range of types, effectiveness, quality, and costs of potential
property, services, public projects, and contractors available to
achieve the city's project goals. Depending upon the particular requirements
of the project (and the more particular procedures identified in this
chapter), the information to be considered may include data gathered
from one or more of the following sources: similar city projects,
other public agencies, professional journals, private businesses,
outreach to potential contractors, and private businesses, competitive
bids, formal or informal quotes, proposals, or qualification statements.
3. Guards
against favoritism, fraud, corruption, and conflicts of interest.
4. Efficiently
uses city resources in the preparation, approval, administration,
and enforcement of contracts which are effective tools in achieving
the city's goals.
E. Any
contract made, or purported to be made, by the city in violation of
this chapter shall be void and of no force or effect.
(O2009-5; O2014-16, 11/18/14; O2017-1, 1/17/17)
As used in this chapter:
"Contract"
means a set of promises between two or more parties which
is legally enforceable. The term "contract" shall include all of the
various types of contracts identified in this code, such as contracts
for: acquisition or disposition of personal property or real property,
services, public project construction, private development construction,
purchase orders, grants, settlement of claims, contract amendments,
and contract change orders.
"Contractor"
means a party with which the city contracts for any legal
purpose, including the acquisition or disposition of property, for
obtaining or providing services, or for the construction of public
projects. For the purpose of this chapter, the term "contractor" may
be used in its general sense to refer to a party which might otherwise
be referred to in other chapters of this code with a more specific
term. For example, the term "contractor" shall be used to refer to:
"vendor" or "supplier" for the city's acquisition of personal property,
or "grantor" or "lessor" for the city's acquisition of real property,
or "grantee" or "tenant" for the city's disposition of real property,
or "consultant" for services, or "developer" for private development
construction.
"Emergency"
means a sudden, unexpected occurrence that poses a clear
and imminent danger, requiring immediate action to prevent or mitigate
the loss or impairment of life, health, property, or essential public
services.
"Grant"
means any offer to or from the city of property (in the form
of a grant, donation, or gift), in return for which no monetary compensation
is required. For the purpose of this chapter, acceptance of the grant,
including any relevant terms and conditions, forms a contract.
"Public works project"
means any project that is required to be let to the lowest
and best bidder, pursuant to City Charter Section 101. A public works
project shall also include any "public project" as defined by California
Public Contracts Code Section 22002. Therefore, a public works project
shall include the construction, reconstruction, erection, alteration,
renovation, improvement, demolition, and repair work involving any
publicly owned, leased, or operated facility, and any supplies or
materials furnished for the project. A public works project shall
specifically exclude any "maintenance work," as defined by California
Public Contracts Code Section 22002.
(O2009-5; O2017-1, 1/17/17)
A. This section shall apply to any action taken by the city to resolve an emergency, as defined by Section
2.91.020, provided that the City Manager makes a written determination based on substantial evidence that there is an emergency, there is a need to take immediate action to resolve the emergency, and the action proposed to be taken is directly related to resolving the emergency, and the emergency will not permit a delay resulting from compliance with this code.
B. Upon documentation of compliance with subsection
(A), the City Manager shall be authorized to direct any action to the extent necessary to resolve the emergency. The City Manager shall, to the extent feasible, comply with the requirements of this code. The City Manager shall comply with the purpose and goals identified in Section
2.91.010(D).
C. Notwithstanding
contrary provisions in this code, emergency contracts made pursuant
to this section may be made orally or in writing. Provided, however,
to the extent an oral contract is made, the City Manager shall (at
the earliest feasible time): (1) document the terms of any oral contract
in a writing approved as to form by the City Attorney, and (2) obtain
the endorsement of the City Auditor that the contract is covered by
sufficient unencumbered funds appropriated in the adopted budget.
D. At the
earliest feasible time, the City Manager shall issue a written termination
of the authorization of action by emergency, and the city shall thereafter
comply with the requirements of this code.
E. At the earliest feasible time after a determination of emergency, the City Manager shall report to the City Council, at a regularly scheduled City Council meeting, any action taken pursuant to this section, including the written determination pursuant to subsection
(A). The City Council shall determine whether there is a need to continue or terminate the emergency action. If the City Council does not authorize the need to continue the emergency action by a four-fifths vote, the emergency action shall be terminated. The City Manager shall continue to make these reports to City Council at each regularly scheduled City Council meeting until the emergency action is terminated by the City Council, or the City Manager reports to City Council that the need for emergency action is terminated pursuant to subsection
(D).
F. If the City Manager determines, in accordance with subsection
(A), that additional actions (beyond those reported to City Council) are necessary to resolve the emergency, the additional actions shall be reported to City Council in accordance with subsection
(E).
G. The
City Council hereby determines that substantial compliance with the
requirements of this section shall satisfy the requirements of City
Charter Section 100, and the requirement to award City contracts to
the lowest and best bidder, pursuant to City Charter Section 101,
and California
Public Contract Code Sections 1102, 22035, and 22050.
(O2009 5; O2017-1, 1/17/17)