Connecticut General Statutes 4a-101 – Standard contractor evaluation form. Public agency to submit completed evaluation form. Contractor response. Definitions. Preliminary evaluation. Exemption from liability. Failure to submit form
(a) On or before October 1, 2005, the Commissioner of Administrative Services shall adopt regulations, in accordance with chapter 54, to establish a standard contractor evaluation form. Such form shall include, at a minimum, the following evaluation criteria: (1) Timeliness of performance; (2) quality of performance; (3) cost containment, including, but not limited to, the contractor’s ability to work within the contract‘s allotted cost, the accuracy of the contractor’s billing, and the number and cause of change orders and the manner in which the contractor determined the price on the change orders; (4) safety; (5) the quality of the contractor’s working relationship with the agency and the quality of the contractor’s supervision of the work area; (6) communication with the agency; (7) the quality of the contractor’s required documentation; (8) the performance of the contractor’s subcontractors and substantial subcontractors, to the extent known by the official who completes the evaluation; and (9) the contractor’s and any subcontractor’s compliance with part III of chapter 557, or chapter 558, or the provisions of the federal Davis-Bacon Act, 40 USC, Sections 276a to 276a-5, inclusive, as from time to time amended, to the extent known by the official who completes the evaluation.
Terms Used In Connecticut General Statutes 4a-101
- Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
- Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
- Oversight: Committee review of the activities of a Federal agency or program.
(b) Each public agency shall compile evaluation information during the performance of the contract and complete and submit the evaluation form to the commissioner after completion of a building project under the agency’s control if the building project is funded, in whole or in part, by state funds. Such evaluation information shall be available to any public agency for purposes of assessing the responsibility of the contractor during a bid selection and evaluation process. The designated official from such agency shall certify that the information contained in the evaluation form represents, to the best of the certifying official’s knowledge, a true and accurate analysis of the contractor’s performance record on the contract. The commissioner shall include the evaluation in the contractor’s prequalification file. The official shall mail a copy of the completed evaluation form to the contractor. Any contractor who wishes to contest any information contained in the evaluation form may submit a written response to the commissioner not later than thirty days after the date the form was mailed as indicated by the postmark on the envelope. Such response shall set forth any additional information concerning the building project or the oversight of the contract by the public agency that may be relevant in the evaluation of the contractor’s performance on the project. The commissioner shall include any such response in the contractor’s prequalification file.
(c) As used in this section, “public agency” means a public agency, as defined in section 1-200, “contract” means an agreement for work for the state or a municipality that is estimated to cost more than one million dollars and is funded, in whole or in part, by state funds, “subcontractor” means a person who performs work with a value in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars for a contractor pursuant to a contract and “substantial subcontractor” means a substantial subcontractor, as defined in section 4a-100.
(d) Upon fifty per cent completion of any building project under a public agency’s control, the agency shall advise the contractor in writing of the agency’s preliminary evaluation of the contractor’s performance on the project.
(e) No person, public agency, employee of a public agency or certifying official of a public agency shall be held liable to any contractor or subcontractor for any loss or injury sustained by such contractor or subcontractor as the result of the completion of an evaluation form, as required by this section or section 4a-100, unless such person, agency, employee or official is found by a court of competent jurisdiction to have acted in a wilful, wanton or reckless manner.
(f) Any public agency that fails to submit a completed evaluation form, as required by this section, not later than seventy days after the completion of a project, shall be ineligible for the receipt of any public funds disbursed by the state for the purposes of the construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling, repair or demolition of any public building or any public works project until such completed evaluation form is submitted.
(g) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, any public agency of the state, when evaluating the performance of a contractor’s subcontractors or substantial subcontractors, to the extent known, may rely on an evaluation of such subcontractors or substantial subcontractors that is conducted by the contractor. No contractor shall be held liable to any subcontractor or substantial subcontractor for any loss or injury sustained by such subcontractor or substantial subcontractor as the result of such evaluation provided to a public agency, unless such contractor is found by a court of competent jurisdiction to have acted in a wilful, wanton or reckless manner.