October 2008

MSW Contract Administration

It’s not glamorous, contract administration. It may seem to be a thankless job: No one notices when the garbage disappears from the curb, but a missed collection—or rate increase—raises Cain. You may feel like a parent nagging a teenager when you remind your contractor to deliver a report or call a nettled customer.

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By Constance Hornig

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VII. FURTHER ASSURANCES: BE VIGILANT FOR NEWS EVENTS
Your contract may give you assorted rights that are triggered in certain events, such as:

  • Merger or acquisition of your contractor (and/or its parent guarantor), sale of substantially all its assets, or other change in control their that may trigger your consent rights for substitution of service provider/credit support.
  • Financial announcements and news releases with respect to your contractor (and/or its parent guarantor)¸ such as downgrading corporate stock or bond ratings or decrease in earnings that might violate a financial covenant in your agreement (especially guaranty).
  • Criminal conduct—if your contract gives you certain remedies in the event of specified “bad boy” conduct (such as conviction or no-contest plea of felonies or listed actions—antitrust, securities, etc.) of specified persons or entities, such as contractor, its officers and directors, and named representative under your contract. (For example, remedies may include replacing the offending person.)
  • Further performance assurance, where your contract gives you the right to ask for additional performance security (such as an increased letter of credit) in certain events that could presage contractor’s financial problems and/or service default. Examples may include:
  • Labor unrest (including work stoppage or slowdown, sick-out, picketing, lock-out or other concerted job action) in excess of specified number of days.
  • Failure to pay bills, such as a tipping fee at any solid waste management facility, any insurance deductibles or self-insured retention, any employee’s wages, and any other bill for over a prescribed number of days.
  • Fines, penalties, or civil or criminal judgment or order in excess of a specified amount of customer service charges/gross receipts under the contract (such as more than the past three months).

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Be alert for news releases and broadcasts that might trigger the exercise of your rights.

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rjproto

October 28th, 2008 10:08 AM PT

This is a terrific article and a great resource for contract administration. I noticed it is the eighth article in a series. How can you get the other articles in the series?

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