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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POST CONTRACT FOLLOW-UP
It ain’t over until it’s over, as the saying goes. Make a list of your contractor’s obligations that continue even after the contract has expired at the end of its stated term or been terminated for breach or convenience. As a contract administrator, distribute copies to your counsel and department head to help ensure that, even if you retire or move, someone else will be aware of your contractor’s continuing duties and your surviving rights. Some of the rights and contractor obligations that your contract explicitly provides to continue (i.e., “survive” termination), may include all the acknowledgements, representations and warranties that the parties make in the contract,
all indemnities, and contractor’s payment obligations (or your claims for payments), such as:

  • regulatory fees the contractor has collected on your behalf;
  • franchise, contract administration fees or other fees that contractor owes you;
  • damages (both liquidated and compensatory); and
  • reimbursements for money you spent to secure alternative performance by a third party when your contractor did not meet its obligations.
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With respect to records, the following may be included:

  • giving you prescribed notice of destruction of disposal records (that could limit your liability in event of Superfund litigation);
  • giving you a copy of records, or allowing you to copy, inspect, and audit specified records (such as information with respect to disposal or gross receipts for final franchise audit);
  • submitting final, complete reports;
  • securing certificates of insurance and endorsements that meet prescribed insurance coverage (for example, endorsements extending coverage of claims made insurance policies for you as additional insured);
  • procuring an inventory of service assets that you are acquiring (for example, collection carts or MRF equipment) and providing you with related documentation (such as warranties, operations and maintenance manuals, or maintenance logs); and
  • clean facility or site to the state it was when your contractor first operated or occupied it (for example, at the end of a MRF operating contract or land lease for a buy-back/drop-off center site), wear and tear excepted.

In summary, invest the time in creating a “tickler” calendar when you first execute your contract to remind you when insurance, bonds/letters of credit and permits expire and must be renewed and reports are due. Also, create a template for the form of required reports to facilitate your contractor’s preparation and your review. Check reports for timeliness, completeness, consistency, mathematical accuracy, and inclusion of required warranties or certifications. Occasionally scan the filings that your contractor might submit to the SEC.

Audit targeted records, such as financial statements, shared revenues, tonnage, and gross receipts, as relevant to your transaction. If you bill customers and pay the contractor, require a route audit to compare your billing records with level and location of service that contractor is actually providing.

At least annually, preserve your contract rights by reviewing your contract for notices of extensions or breaches that you must give. Make sure the names and contact information for a contractor representative or notice or service of process recipient are all current. Re-read your contract to refresh your recollection of your rights and detailed contractor obligations, and check the lists of liquidated damages and breaches/ defaults. Conduct a field visit.

Be alert for news releases and broadcasts that might trigger the exercise of your rights, such as contract “transfer” consent, criminal conduct clauses and securing additional performance assurance (i.e. in events of strikes, failure to pay tip fees or fines, penalties, or civil or criminal judgments in excess of specified amounts).

Check your right to review records (such as customer complaints, permit compliance) and audit records (such as financial accounts) well in advance of any optional renewal notice date.

Distribute to your counsel and department heads a list of contractor’s obligations that continue after expiration or termination of your contract, such as reps and warranties, indemnities, outstanding payment obligations, records maintenance (e.g., disposal, gross receipts), submitting final reports, providing annual COIs or endorsements (i.e., to provide you with continued protection under claims-made policies), inventories of assets you are acquiring, and returning facilities or sites to required states or standards.

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And finally, remember: P rivatization, outsourcing, or private contracting does not signify that you have delegated your municipal responsibility to protect health and safety. If you don’t do everything on this checklist, don’t berate yourself. Give it to your elected officials to illustrate why responsible contract administration takes  time . . . but attentive contract administration better ensures that you and your residents and businesses get what your bargained for and counted on.

 

Author's Bio: Constance Hornig is an attorney who represents municipal governments in MSW contract procurement, drafting, and negotiating.

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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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