S.B. 1580 78(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


S.B. 1580
By: Wentworth
Transportation
Committee Report (Unamended)



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

According to TxDOT, under current law, contractors are required to post a
performance bond in the total amount of the contract.  Under this bill, a
private maintenance contractor would be allowed, on certain contracts, to
post a bond annually in an amount equal to the amount to be paid to the
contractor divided by the number of years of the contract. 

When asset management was introduced in the last decade, state
transportation departments naturally tried to fit asset management
projects into the normal procurement process. One area of "misfit" was
bonding. State transportation departments are accustomed to requiring
performance bonds on construction bonds that are for the term of the
project and for the total amount of the project. This method makes sense
for the following reasons: 1) most highway construction projects are
complete in a finite, often short period of time and 2) projects are
accumulative, that is, they involve building an asset to its completion.
For highway construction projects, this method is reasonable and makes
economic sense. 

Asset management projects differ from construction projects in the two key
areas stated above.  First, asset management projects are best designed to
be long-term projects, often five to ten years in length.  This allows the
state maximum savings as the contractor is able to apply life-cycle
costing to the asset.  The contractor can make long-term investments in
maintenance improvements instead of just "patching" problems as they go
along.  Second, asset management projects are not accumulative, building
toward a completion, but instead routine and repetitive, involving
activities that take place again and again over the period of a contract.
For example, if the contractor is going to mow a certain area of grass
forty times over the life of a seven-year contract, it makes little sense
to bond all fifty mowings. The mowings recur, the department is not at
risk on all fifty mowings over the life of the contract. 

State transportation departments who are successfully implementing asset
management projects, such as Florida, have recognized these fundamental
differences and developed an approach that protects the state in case of a
contractor default, but does not place unreasonable costs and burdens on
the contractor, which of course are passed on to the state.  Texas can
benefit from adopting a similar method, with additional considerations to
protect the Department in the event of a contractor default.  The proposed
method is to require either a) an bond in the greatest annual amount to be
paid out under the contract to remain effective for one year after
resumption of work upon default of the contractor or b) be for a term of
two years, renewable in two-year increments, in an amount equal to the
amount to be paid to the contractor under the term of the bond.  Since
most of the work is repetitive in nature, this method provides more than
adequate coverage in the event of the default of a contractor.  In truth,
the department's actual risk exposure is probably more along the lines of
six months' worth of work.  The term of the bond, which either remains in
place one year after default or is renewed in advance, provides the
Department with at least one year of notice at all times should a
contractor be unable to renew the bond. 

In summary, the proposed bond strategy for asset management contracts
ensures that the state will have numerous companies capable of bonding and
performing the work, while at the same time providing the state with more
than adequate coverage for the risk involved. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any
additional rulemaking  authority to a state officer, department, agency,
or institution. 

ANALYSIS

This bill would amend Section 223.042 of the Transportation Code to
require a private sector contractor to post a performance bond for certain
projects undertaken for the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT). 

A private maintenance contractor would be allowed, on certain contracts,
to post a bond annually in an amount equal to the amount to be paid to the
contractor divided by the number of years of the contract. 

The bill could require a maintenance contract entered into by TxDOT before
September 1, 2003, under Section 223.042 to be governed for the remaining
term of the contract by Section 223.042 as it existed before September 1,
2003, and the prior law would be continued for that effect. 

This Senate Bill is identical to C.S.H.B. 2959 by Representative Krusee.

EFFECTIVE DATE

Upon passage, or, if the Act does not receive the necessary vote, the Act
takes effect September 1, 2003.