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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It’s not glamorous, contract administration. It may seem to be a thankless job: When the garbage disappears from the curb no one notices, 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.

The eighth article in a series on MSW contract development, procurement, administration and enforcement, this article reviews necessary and optional contract administration tasks. You probably undertake many or all of them already. But compare this checklist with your own annual and occasional contract administration regimen. You just might add some items to your own tickler file.

I. DEVELOP AN ANNUAL CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION CALENDAR
Between Excel spreadsheets and scheduling software, you have more tools than ever to set up a calendar containing the time of your MSW contractor’s every reporting and renewal performance obligation that occurs regularly and routinely. Leaf through your contract and note every relevant obligation on your calendar. To double-check, use the global search function on your work processing program for such words as “submit” or “deliver,” which are associated with reporting, and “secure” or “maintain,” which pertain to insurance and performance assurance. For example:

  • check liability insurance renewals
  • check performance bond, letter of credit, or other financial assurance renewals
  • check compliance with employment and labor-related obligations
  • confirm that permits remain current

(1) Protect your local government from municipal liability—check liability insurance renewals. One of your most important contract administrative functions is that of making sure your contractor timely renews its general and auto liability policies. This may seem self-evident, but it bears repeating because the risk is high. Your hauler might be the one to log service subscriptions, bill customers, and collect fees, but if its collection vehicle is in an accident, then you—as contracting entity with perceived deep pocket—are likely to be named as a party to suit. If a car delivering self-hauled rubbish backs into the pit of your transfer station under contract operation, you will certainly be sued in any consequent action.

At the commencement of your contract, note your contractor’s policy expiration dates on your contract administration calendar. Your contractor will secure a performance bond or other performance assurance that applies particularly to your project and contract, and therefore it may run conterminously with your contract year (such as a calendar year or July 1 fiscal year). But your contractor’s insurance policies probably cover all of your contractor’s operations, and their renewal dates will not coincide with your contract year. (Consider an endorsement to make all limits apply to you.)

Compare the certificate of insurance (COI) with your contract requirements. Remember that your contractor does not generally submit the actual policy, and, even if it did, you might find it difficult to ascertain that the policy meets all your contractual prescriptions. (You can require that your contractor instruct its broker to provide you with a letter stating that the policy complies.) And check that the broker has provided sufficient information on the COI for you to determine that the policy covers your contractual requirements, including:

  • naming your contract if necessary to secure “insured contract” coverage status under the policy for your MSW services agreement (indemnity obligations, for example),
  • identifying each required ISO policy form or confirmation of its equivalency to ISO policy forms required under your contract (such as “general liability ISO form CG 00 01 [occurrence] or its equivalent [and not CG 00 02 claims made),
  • stating that the insurer must give you a cancellation notice (with no “best efforts”) and that language such as “failure to do so shall impose no obligation or liability of any kind upon the insurer, its agents or representatives”, is deleted, and
  • stating deductible limits (or more importantly, self insured retention / SIR levels).

Make certain not only that the effective date coverage begins at least as early as your contract term, renewal dates are presently effective and the coverage amounts sufficient, but that the policy still contains the requisite endorsements attached to the COI on separate pages (whose policy numbers should match the policy numbers listed on the COI) such as:

  • additional insured status,
  • waiver of subrogation,
  • making insurance primary (and not contributing)
  • naming your contract, if necessary, to secure coverage under the policy.

Remember that COI does not give you any rights to make claims under the liability policies. It is merely informational. You must be named on the endorsements in order to secure your coverage.

Check A.M. Best ratings (online) to confirm that the insurers meet any size and credit rating requirements in your contract, such as A VII. (The letter represents the insurer’s rating; the Roman numeral, its size. Explore A.M. Best’s web site for an explanation of ratings and size.)

Check that all “claims made” policies have a retroactive date no later than the date of your contract. “Claims made” means that a policy covers only insured events that occur and are filed during the policy term. (Pollution policies are especially likely to be written on a “claims made” basis. But neighbors’ nuisance actions or Superfund suits for leaky landfills may occur far in the future after your disposal contract has long expired and contractual relationship ended. “Claims made” pollution policies intended to cover you for landfill liability should ideally provide a continuing obligation that survives termination to keep you on as an additional insured. But this poses a practical challenge to administer and enforce, especially since your contractor may go out of business, dissolve, or merge with or be acquired by another company. And pollution policies frequently have very high self-insured retentions (SIRs) in the millions of dollars, which means that you must look to your contractor, not the insurer, to reimburse you for that amount of claims. Lastly, your contractor’s pollution policy may have an “insured versus insured” clause that—unless removed by endorsement—would prohibit you, as an additional insured, from making claims against the principal insured, your contractor. Therefore, as a supplement or alternative to being an additional insured, you might investigate non-owned disposal (NOD) facility coverage for pollution liability arising out of your private contractor’s disposal facilities.

Retain the contractual right to pay your contractor’s overdue premiums. Even though you may not intend to step in, since the stakes are high you lose nothing by keeping that option open. Make certain that your contract allows you to recover the cost from your contractor, including by liquidating performance assurance. (For the nervous: Include specific language of disclaimer that you have no obligation to secure the insurance.)

(2) Ensure continued performance assurance—Check performance bonds, letters of credit, and other financial assurance. Don’t risk your garbage piling up in the event that your contractor becomes bankrupt or suffers labor disturbances. Make certain that your performance assurance remains current. (And secure letters of credit rather than performance bonds, where possible. You can immediately draw down a letter of credit issued by a bank and hire another contractor to step in on a temporary basis, though probably at a premium price that you should project when you size your assurance. By contrast, you may suffer time-consuming claims processing— or even contest—if you call on a performance bond.)

Check the following items in your performance bonds:

  • you are named as the payee (you’d be surprised that sometimes another party is named!)
  • the surety is licensed to transact business (“admitted”) in your state
  • the surety has the requisite A.M. Best rating
  • the bond is conditioned on contractor’s performance of all terms and conditions of the agreement, including payment of any fees it owes you (such as franchise fees) and liquidated damages (for breaches, such as failure to collect)
  • Prohibition against the surety substituting a new contractor that you have not chosen or approved for your defaulting contractor, and, conversely, requirement that the surety pay your money

This last condition is commonly found in performance bonds that are primarily intended to complete building infrastructure. Since you are not contracting for the construction of a building pursuant to plans and specifications but rather securing service from a contractor with whom you will have an ongoing relationship over a term of years, you can require that the performance bond prohibit the surety from substituting another service provider, one that may not have the experience, references, or environmental record that you evaluated when you awarded your contract to the defaulting contractor. Rather, your performance bond can require that the surety must provide payment of money to you so that you—not the surety—can both secure substitute services and recover your contractually prescribed damages and fees.

Check the following in a letter of credit:

Termination date—Ideally the letter of credit should expire when you certify to the issuing bank that (1) your contract has expired; (2) a period of 180 days or other bankruptcy preference period has passed since you terminated your contract, such as for default; (3) your contractor has substituted an alternative letter of credit or other security document acceptable to the you; or (4) your contractor does not owe you any money. However, many letters of credit may be in effect only for a year, like insurance, and must be renewed or replaced.

Draw conditions—Ideally the letter of credit should specify instances in which you can draw upon it, such as in the event that (1) your contractor defaults; (2) your contractor is unable to regularly pay its bills as they become due; (3) your collection contractor fails to timely pay the applicable tipping fees at any MSW facility, such as a MRF, landfill, or other disposal facility; or (4) your contractor fails to pay an insurance deductible or self-insured retention. However, many contracts may require that you can draw on the letter of credit only if your contractor defaults.

(3) Support public policy—Check employment and labor-related obligations. Check compliance with the following obligations, either through certification or reasonable spot checks:

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Local policies— Your elected body may have established policies with respect to your contracts and contractors that result in “boiler plate” provisions in your contracts, such as

  • state law provisions regarding eight-hour workdays, overtime, and employment of persons in a local job training or relief program
  • providing notices to employees (such as with respect to the Federal Earned Income Credit
  • posting a list of parents that are delinquent in child support payments
  • posting fact sheets on how to safely surrender babies
  • compliance with ILO Convention Concerning Minimum Age for Employment (child labor)
  • Equal Employment Opportunity certification, and development and implementation of a mandated health and safety program
  • current workers compensation coverage; meeting any contractually prescribed employment performance standards that promote safe operation, such as not receiving any OSHA “failure to abate” notices, satisfactory vehicle test ratings from the state highway patrol or other regulatory authority, and maintaining an experience modification factor used to calculate your contractor’s worker’s compensation insurance premium (i.e. 1.25 or less).

(4) Confirm that permits remain current— Examples for a collection contractor include local collection/haul permit, business license, and special waste/ e-waste/tire collection permits. Examples of facilities are myriad: CUP, water, air, storm runoff, and solid waste. If you are feeling especially diligent, check your own permitting department (such as health and safety) and other permitting agencies for violations or notices of violations . . . or at least get your contractor’s compliance warranty in its reports. Next Page >

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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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