[HISTORY: Adopted by the City Council of the City of Harrisburg 12-14-2021 by Ord. No. 20-2021. Amendments noted where applicable.]
The City of Harrisburg ("the City") recognizes that there is a need to ensure that all work on public construction and maintenance contracts is performed by responsible, qualified firms that maintain the capacity, expertise, personnel and other qualifications and resources necessary to successfully perform such contracts in a timely, reliable and cost-effective manner.
To effectuate the purpose of selecting responsible contractors for these public contracts and to protect the City's investments in such contracts, prospective contractors and subcontractors should be required to meet preestablished, clearly defined, minimum qualification standards regarding past project performance in terms of competency, safety and law compliance, technical abilities, experience, and adequacy of resources.
Further, due to the critical impact that skilled craft labor has on the execution of public works projects, and the increasingly limited availability of such labor, it is necessary to require contractors and subcontractors to participate in proven apprenticeship training programs as a condition of bidding to promote successful project delivery and help ensure future workforce development.
Therefore, the City shall require compliance with the provisions of this chapter by business entities seeking to provide services as specified herein. The requirements of this chapter are intended to supplement, not replace, existing contractor qualification standards or other criteria currently required by the City.
A. 
This chapter shall apply to public works projects undertaken by the City for construction, demolition, alteration, renovation, modernization, service or maintenance of buildings, structures or facilities valued at $200,000 or more; excepting contracts necessary to immediately mitigate emergency conditions or otherwise protect public safety. All contractors and subcontractors of any tier that perform work on such projects, regardless of value of individual contract or subcontract packages shall meet the requirements of this chapter.
B. 
All firms engaged in public works contracts subject to this chapter including general contractors, construction managers, other lead or prime contractors, and subcontractors at any level, shall be qualified, responsible contracting firms that have sufficient capabilities in all respects to successfully perform contracts on which they are engaged, including the necessary experience, equipment, technical skills and qualifications, organizational resources, financial stability, and personnel resources. Firms bidding or otherwise participating in public works contracts shall also be required to have a satisfactory past performance record and a satisfactory record of law compliance, integrity and business ethics.
C. 
The firm will pay all craft employees on the project, at a minimum, the applicable wage and fringe benefit rates, as established for the classification in which the worker is employed, in accordance with the Pennsylvania Prevailing Wage Act, 43 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 165-1 et seq., as amended or recodified. These wages shall also be paid to employees performing any custom fabrication work for the project. For purposes of this subsection, custom fabrication shall mean the fabrication, assembly modification or other production of nonstandard goods, or materials, including components, fixtures, or parts thereof, that are fabricated assembled or modified off-site, but produced specifically for a project covered by this chapter. This requirement shall include, but not be limited to custom fabrication for electrical, plumbing, mechanical, refrigeration, heating, cooling, ventilation, sheet metal or other duct systems, mechanical insulation, ornamental iron work or boiler systems. Fabrication shall also include the fabrication, assembly or other production of components or structures prefabricated to specifications for a particular project covered by this chapter.
A. 
As a condition of performing work on a public works contract subject to this chapter, a general contractor, construction manager or other lead or prime contractor seeking award of a contract shall submit a Contractor Responsibility Certification as specified herein.
B. 
The Contractor Responsibility Certification shall be completed on a form provided by the City and reference the project for which a bid is being submitted by name and contract or project number.
C. 
In the Contractor Responsibility Certification, the construction manager, general contractor or other lead or prime contractor shall confirm the following facts regarding its past performance and work history and its current qualifications and performance capabilities:
(1) 
The firm and its employees have all licenses, registrations, certificates or other credentials required by federal and state law and the laws of the City with respect to the contract work it seeks to self-perform.
(2) 
The firm meets the bonding requirements for the contract required by law or contract specifications, as well as applicable insurance requirements for the contract, including general liability, workers compensation and unemployment insurance.
(3) 
The firm has not been debarred or suspended by any federal, state or local government agency or authority in the past three years.
(4) 
The firm has not defaulted on any project in the past three years.
(5) 
The firm has not had any type of business, contracting or trade license, registration or certification revoked or suspended in the past three years.
(6) 
The firm and its principals/owners have not been convicted of any crime relating to its contracting business in the past 10 years.
(7) 
Within the past three years, the firm has not been found in violation of any law applicable to its contracting business, including, but not limited, to licensing laws, tax laws, wage and hour laws, prevailing wage laws, environmental laws or others, where the result of such violation was the payment of a fine, back pay damages or any other type of penalty in the amount of $5,000 or more.
(8) 
The firm will employ a sufficient number of craft labor personnel required to successfully perform any project work it self-performs or shall use qualified subcontractors to meet this requirement.
(9) 
The firm shall ensure that all craft labor it employs on the project will have completed, prior to working on the project, the OSHA ten-hour training course for safety established by the U.S. Department of Labor, or other substantially similar course approved by the City. Nothing herein is intended, however, to voluntarily enlarge the jurisdiction or authority of OSHA or the U.S. Department of Labor for public projects not otherwise subject to OSHA regulation.
(10) 
The firm, and all subcontractors to the firm, participates in a Class A apprenticeship training program, as defined below, for each separate trade or classification in which it employs craft employees. This apprenticeship requirement assures that workers in each trade or craft employed are participants in or graduates of bona fide apprenticeship training programs in each trade or craft in which their services are utilized, as evidenced by the fact that the program is registered with federal or state government and has been in continuous existence for no fewer than five years prior to the project relating to the certification.
(a) 
For purposes of this section, a Class A apprenticeship program is an apprenticeship program registered with and approved by the U.S. Department of Labor or a state apprenticeship agency and has graduated apprentices to journey person status for at least three of the past five years. This may be an apprenticeship program subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. ("ERISA"), or a non-ERISA program.
(b) 
To demonstrate compliance with this section, the firm shall provide, with this certification, a list of all trades or classifications of craft employees it will employ on the project and documentation verifying it participates in a Class A apprenticeship program for each trade or classification listed.
(11) 
The firm shall assign workers to perform only work in their respective craft or trade for which they have sufficient skills and training, or shall use qualified subcontractors to meet this requirement.
(12) 
The firm shall comply with the wage requirements set forth in § 2-1101.2C of this chapter. The minimum wage for custom fabrication work shall be the same as the wage paid for project work in accordance with each applicable trade or classification.
(13) 
The firm has all other technical qualifications and resources, including equipment, personnel and financial resources, to successfully perform the referenced contract and shall maintain such capabilities throughout the duration of the project, or will obtain same through the use of qualified, responsible subcontractors or vendors.
(14) 
The firm shall notify the City of Harrisburg within seven days of any material changes in its operation that relate to any matter attested to in this certification.
D. 
Execution of the Contractor Responsibility Certification required by this chapter shall not establish a presumption of contractor responsibility, and the City may require any additional information it deems necessary to evaluate a firm's status as a responsible contractor, including information regarding the firm's technical qualifications, financial capacity or other resources and performance capabilities. The City may require that such information be included in a separate statement of qualifications and experience or as an attachment to the Contractor Responsibility Certification.
E. 
The submitting firm shall stipulate in the Contractor Responsibility Certification that, if it receives a notice of intent to award contract, it will provide a subcontractor list and required subcontractor information as specified in § 2-1101.5.
F. 
If the submitting firm has ever operated under another name or is controlled by another company or business entity or in the past five years controlled or was controlled by another company or business entity, whether as a parent company, subsidiary or in any other business relation, it shall attach an appendix to its Contractor Responsibility Certification that explains in detail the nature of any such relationship. Additional information may be required from such an entity if the relationship in question could potentially impact contract performance.
G. 
If a firm fails to provide a Contractor Responsibility Certification required by this section, it shall be disqualified from bidding. No action of any nature shall lie against the City because of its refusal to accept a bid for this reason.
A. 
After it has received bids for a project, the City shall issue a notice of intent to award contract to the firm that has submitted the lowest responsive bid.
B. 
Such notice shall be issued immediately or as soon as practicable after bids are opened and shall stipulate that the contract award is conditioned on the issuance of a written Contractor Responsibility Determination for the firm as required by § 2-1101.6, compliance with subcontractor certifications required by § 2-1101.5, and any other qualification standards required by the City, or by requirements of other laws.
A. 
Within 14 days of receiving a notice of intent to award contract, the prospective awardee shall submit a subcontractor list, which provides the name and address of the subcontractors it will use on the project, the scope of work assigned to each subcontractor, and Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications as required by this section.
B. 
The prospective awardee shall not be permitted to use a subcontractor on any work performed for the City unless it has identified the subcontractor on its subcontractor list and provided a Subcontractor Responsibility Certification in accordance with the requirements of § 2-1101.5.
C. 
At the time a prospective awardee submits the subcontractor list, it shall also submit Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications and applicable supporting information for all listed subcontractors to the City.
D. 
A prospective awardee shall determine whether any firm on its subcontractor list is organized as a sole proprietership owned and operated by a single person. This shall apply to subcontractors at any tier. For any such entity, the prospectivee awardee shall ensure that the sole proprietorship subcontractor is a legitimate business entity and not a misclassified employee by requiring the subcontractor to supplement its Subcontractor Certification with its Employer Identification Number and copies of any license, certificate or registration it is required to maintain in to do business in the state in which it is located.
E. 
Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications shall be executed by the respective subcontractors on forms prepared by the City and contain the same information, representations and supporting information required in Contractor Responsibility Certifications, including verification of apprenticeship qualifications required by § 2-1101.3C(11) for each trade or classification of craft workers it will employ on the project.
F. 
Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications shall be executed by a person having sufficient knowledge to address all matters in the certification and shall include an attestation stating, under the penalty of perjury, that all information submitted is true, complete and accurate.
G. 
A subcontractor listed on a firm's subcontractor list shall not be substituted unless written authorization is obtained from the City and a Subcontractor Responsibility Certification is provided for the substitute subcontractor.
H. 
In the event that the City determines that a subcontractor fails to meet the requirements of this chapter or is otherwise determined to be nonresponsible, it may, after informing the prospective awardee, exercise one of the following options:
(1) 
Permit the awardee to substitute a qualified, responsible subcontractor in accordance with the requirements of this section, upon submission of a completed Subcontractor Certification for the substitute and approval of the substitute by the City.
(2) 
Require the awardee to self-perform the work in question if the firm has the required experience, licenses and other qualifications to perform the work in question; or
(3) 
Disqualify the prospective awardee.
I. 
In the event a subcontractor is disqualified under this chapter, and the general contractor, construction manager or other lead or prime contractor is unable to cure the defect either by providing a qualified subcontractor or demonstrate that it can perform the work itself in a time deemed reasonable by the City, the entire bid shall be deemed nonresponsive, and the City shall issue a notice of intent to award to the next lowest responsive bidder.
J. 
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to waive any immunity, governmental or otherwise, to which the City is entitled.
A. 
After the City has issued a notice of intent to award contract to the lowest responsive bidder, it shall undertake a contractor responsibility review process to determine whether the firm is a qualified, responsible firm in accordance with the requirements of this chapter and other applicable laws and regulations. The time frame for conducting this review process shall be as determined by the City.
B. 
As part of the review process, the City shall ensure that the Contractor Responsibility Certification and Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications and applicable supporting information comply with the requirements of this chapter.
C. 
The City may conduct any additional inquiries to verify that the prospective awardee and its subcontractors have the technical qualifications and performance capabilities necessary to successfully perform the contract and that the firms have a sufficient record of law compliance and business integrity to justify the award of a public contract. In conducting such inquiries, the City may seek relevant information from the firm, its prior clients or customers, its subcontractors or any other relevant source.
D. 
After the City determines that all responsibility certifications have been properly executed and has verified that all other relevant information requested for reviews indicates that the prospective awardee and its subcontractors are qualified, responsible firms, it shall issue a written contractor responsibility determination for the prospective awardee.
E. 
In the event a firm is determined to be nonresponsible, the City shall notify the firm and proceed to conduct a responsibility review of the next lowest, responsive bidder or, if necessary, rebid the project. A responsibility determination may be revoked at any time if the City obtains relevant information warranting any such revocations.
F. 
The City may engage or designate an internal or external construction or project manager to ensure compliance with necessary the reviews under this chapter.
A. 
A contract subject to this chapter shall not be executed until all requirements of this chapter have been fulfilled and until a contractor responsibility determination has been issued by the City pursuant to § 2-1101.6.
B. 
Prior to the execution of a final contract under this section, the City shall publicly post the notice of intent to award, Contractor and Subcontractor Responsibility Certifications, subcontractor lists, related supporting documentation and the contractor responsibility determination on a publicly available website for public inspection for a period of 10 calendar days after the issuance of the contractor responsibility determination.
If the City determines that a Contractor Certification, subcontractor list or Subcontractor Responsibility Certification contains false or misleading information that was provided knowingly or with reckless disregard for the truth or omits material information knowingly or with reckless disregard of the truth, the firm for which the certification was submitted shall be disqualified from the project and shall be prohibited from performing work for the City for a period of three years. The City may withhold payment of any monies due to the firm as damages and impose other applicable penalties and sanctions, including contract termination, as permitted by law or contract.
This chapter is enacted under the authority of Chapter 119 of the Third Class City Code governing contracts, authorizing the enactment provisions for and regulation of the procedures for the award of contracts, as provided by 11 Pa.C.S. § 11901 (a).
A. 
Nothing in this legislation is intended to alter, diminish or impede any grant of legislative or executive authority provided in the Optional Third Class City Charter Law.
B. 
In the event that any part of this chapter is deemed to conflict with applicable provisions of any federal or state law or regulation, the federal or state provision shall control.
The provisions of this chapter shall be implemented by the appropriate City departments, as determined by the Mayor, within one year from the effective date of this chapter.