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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HGUAC
DATE TYPED 3/2/05
HB 283/HGUACS
SHORT TITLE Performance Contracting Act
SB
ANALYST Hadwiger
APPROPRIATION
(in $000s)
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
$0.1 Recurring General Fund/
Other funds
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Companion to SB330.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
Department of Health (DOH)
Corrections Department (CD)
Human Services Department (HSD)
Attorney General (AG)
State Auditor
No comments were received from the Department of Finance and Administration at the time this
FIR was prepared.
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HGUAC Substitute
The House Government and Urban Affairs Committee Substitute for House Bill 283 would enact
the “Contract Management Act.” This act would apply to contracts for professional and consult-
ing services, including contract management, construction, construction contract management,
construction manager at-risk and information technology.
The substitute would require agencies to objectively evaluate the need for a contract prior to
making a decision to contract to assess 1) whether the agency has the necessary skills to deliver
the service, 2) whether the service would duplicate similar services already provided by the
agency in the same geographic area and 3) whether there are deadline requirements that an
agency may not be able to meet. The agency’s administrative services division, general counsel
pg_0002
House Bill 283/HGUACS -- Page 2
and cabinet secretary (or equivalent personnel for noncabinet agencies) would be required to
substantively review the decision to contract, request for proposal process, final contract negotia-
tions and contract form and legal sufficiency.
The substitute would prohibit agencies from entering into contracts valued at $1 million or
greater without developing specific guidelines for the administration and implementation of the
contract. For contracts valued below $1 million, the agency would use department or similar
guidelines including 1) documentation to support the contract solicitation and selection process,
2) policies to ensure contractors do not provide services until an executed contract is in place, 3)
cost-effective methods to track contracts and 4) filing of contracts and related documentation. If
review is required by rule of the General Services Department or Department of Finance and
Administration (DFA), the agency would be required to submit the contract for review no less
than 30 days prior to the effective date.
The bill would require, subject to specified exemptions, that state agencies use performance con-
tracting for contracts for which the maximum amount payable is $100,000 or more. The per-
formance contracts would include 1) performance measures developed by the agency for that
contract that will be used by the agency to evaluate the services, 2) an accountability section that
requires the contractor to report regularly on how performance levels are being met and allows
the agency to withhold payment until successful completion of all or part of a contract, and 3)
monitoring requirements that outline the agency’s evaluation of the contractor’s performance..
DFA would be responsible for 1) assisting agencies in developing and managing the contracts
(including training courses), 2) developing policies for performance accountability in contract
management, 3) preparing guidelines for agencies to conduct meaningful contract evaluations
and provide for different types of evaluations depending on the types and amounts of the con-
tracts, 4) preparing guidelines for agencies on performance contract specifications and other
specified aspects of performance contract implementation and 5) selectively monitoring contract
procedures and projects in agencies.
The Act would apply to any contract entered into by a department, institution, board, bureau
commission, district or committee of the state, except for:
1.
litigation expenses in connection with proceedings before administrative agencies, state
or federal courts (including experts, mediators, court reporters, process servers, and wit-
ness fees but not including attorney contracts).
2.
hospital- and health-care-related service exempt from the procurement code pursuant to
Section 13-1-98.1 NMSA 1978.
3.
emergency procurements under statute
4.
contracts exempted by rule of the DFA or order of the DFA secretary
DFA would develop a schedule so that all agencies implement the Act by the end of FY08.
It would apply to the legislative and judiciary branches but those agencies could develop their
own policies and guidelines, may provide their own exemptions, and would not be required to
report or make submissions to DFA. No provision of the Act would be applied to any situation
in which the application of the provision would directly or indirectly impair a legally protected
right. The bill would be effective July 1, 2006 to allow time for implementation.
pg_0003
House Bill 283/HGUACS -- Page 3
Significant Issues
According to the U.S. General Services Administration, performance contracting has been
around for over 20 years. In October 1998, the Office of Management and Budget published a
guide to best practices in performance-based service contracting. In 2001, the President set a
goal of converting 50 percent of all federal service contracts to performance based contracts.
Implementation of this program is well underway in the federal government.
LFC staff studies in 1999 and 2000 have shown that New Mexico state government's contract
management and accountability system needs improvement. The 1999 study noted that the state's
expenditures for contract services have grown by $1.6 billion from FY95 to FY00. The 2000
study reviewed six state agencies' contract policies and procedures and found they are generally
inadequate for financial accountability or quality control. A joint study by Governing magazine
and Rutgers University study released in January 2001 noted that contracting in New Mexico is
"very decentralized, leaving problems with the potential to fester unnoticed."
In Moving New Mexico Forward: Further Along, issued in August 2004, Governor Bill
Richardson endorsed the use of performance contracting in the New Mexico Department of En-
vironment. That report provides a good example of the potential benefits of performance
contracting in its findings:
“The New Mexico Department of Environment makes payments…to contractors and
storage tank owners based on criteria related only indirectly to the effectiveness of the
cleanup conducted at the contaminated site. The department awards contracts based
on a combination of low bid and the engineering design for the proposed work. Once
the contracts are awarded, payments to the contractors are not related to the actual
results achieved. The current NMED approach rewards firms that submit bids pro-
posing systems that may be relatively inexpensive up-front but take a long time to
complete. The current approach also unintentionally encourages contract change or-
ders that often add incremental costs not approved at the outset. Change orders can
cause the ultimate costs of the cleanup to be much higher than the original bid. Per-
haps most important, the current approach does not verify whether the cleanup has
been successful before payments are made… Fourteen states employ some form of
PFP (pay-for-performance) contracting for their state clean up funds… NMED
should adopt PFP contracting using contracts that require achievement of specific en-
vironmental results before the contractor receives payment.”
Some state agencies are already implementing performance-based contracting. For example, the
2004 General Appropriation Act included language requiring the Department of Health (DOH)
to include performance measures in its outcome-based contracts to increase oversight and ac-
countability. DOH indicates that their Contracts and Grants Bureau is implementing review of
all contracts to ensure that the deliverables and performance measures support the strategic ac-
tivities necessary to achieve the overall department strategic goals. Also, DOH is requiring a
summary of contractor performance on a quarterly basis to be shared across the department.
Some agencies were concerned that the requirements in SB283 would be burdensome or delay
timely award of contracts. The Department of Education indicated that the bill’s additional re-
quirements for performance measures and measurement monitoring could impact the timely de-
livery of service and possible loss of federal funds (i.e., when short time frames are allowed for
reallocated dollars) with regard to 13 agency contracts (down from 100 contracts in the original
pg_0004
House Bill 283/HGUACS -- Page 4
version of the bill).
The HGUAC substitute generally streamlined the contracting process specified in the original
bill and addressed a few specific concerns that arose with regard to the original bill, such as pro-
viding sufficient time for transition/implementation of the new contracting requirements.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
Enactment of this bill would provide greater accountability for the use of taxpayer dollars to fund
professional services contracts entered into by state agencies. Expanding DFA’s role in the man-
agement of professional services contracts would potentially improve accountability in the ongo-
ing management of contracts and by supporting agencies’ use of performance contracting. Na-
tionally, agencies that have adopted performance contracting report significant savings and im-
proved performance.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The growing popularity of performance-based contracting reflects experiences in federal gov-
ernment and in many state governments that this is a cost-saving approach to achieving outcomes
desired by agencies. For example, the Governor’s report, Moving New Mexico Forward: Fur-
ther Along, offered the following example with regard to environmental clean-up contracts:
“Nebraska, Oklahoma, Florida, South Carolina, and Vermont are considered the leaders
and have achieved millions of dollars of cost savings using PFP [pay-for-performance] con-
tracts for site assessment and environmental remediation.”
Agencies generally indicated they could absorb the costs of implementing performance budget-
ing with existing staff. The Public Education Department had anticipated a need for additional
staff under the original bill, but indicated that the HGUAC substitute simplified the process suf-
ficiently that additional staff would not be required. The Department of Corrections (DOC) indi-
cated the agency could likely absorb the costs and administrative burden of negotiating, drafting
and carrying out performance contracts. The Human Services Department indicated uncertainty
as to additional staff may be required to comply with the additional duties in the bill. DOH indi-
cated it may incur additional costs to evaluate decisions to contract but that this is an important
aspect of effective contracting.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
See fiscal implications for general discussion of staffing and resource implications of the bill.
Additionally, DOH was uncertain on how to apply the objective evaluation requirement in the
substitute bill in those instances where a federal grant award is based on a work plan that says
contracts will be awarded for certain services or programs, or whether these requirements apply
at all to contracts awarded using federal funds.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Companion to SB330.
DH/sb