SOURCES SOUGHT
N -- Project management and support services to analyze the anticipated initial outfitting and transition contracts that will assist a medical teaching facility and an operational medical facility in the San Antonio, TX area.
- Notice Date
- 3/6/2009
- Notice Type
- Sources Sought
- NAICS
- 541614
— Process, Physical Distribution, and Logistics Consulting Services
- Contracting Office
- Department of the Army, U.S. Army Medical Command, Center for Health Care Contracting, Center for Health Care Contracting, ATTN: MCAA C BLDG 4197, 2107 17TH Street, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234-5015
- ZIP Code
- 78234-5015
- Solicitation Number
- W81K04-09-TBD
- Response Due
- 3/20/2009
- Archive Date
- 5/19/2009
- Point of Contact
- Nadine Vasquez, 210-295-4346<br />
- Small Business Set-Aside
- N/A
- Description
- The US Army Medical Command, Center for Health Care Contracting (CHCC), on behalf of San Antonio Military Medical Center (SAMMC) and Medical Education and Training Campus (METC), has developed this Request for Information (RFI) to support two efforts to analyze the anticipated initial outfitting and transition contracts that will assist a medical teaching facility and an operational medical facility to relocate/stand-up as directed by the Defense Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) law. The anticipated contracts would encompass a significant range of performance-based services needed to open a new world class medical teaching facility and healthcare facility. These efforts include, but are not limited to, hospital transition, planning, provisioning/installing materials, provisioning/installing furniture, provisioning/installing medical equipment, and moving medical equipment to support a new teaching facility, a renovated and a new military medical facility in the San Antonio area. Fort Sam Houston and Camp Bullis are the focal points for the teaching requirements. Fort Sam Houston and Lackland Air Force Base are the focal points for the medical operational facilities. This RFI is intended to solicit information from industry to assist the Government with analysis of this project and provide commercial insight on holistic performance-based solutions, best practices, possible contractual arrangements and potential issues. BRAC law requires the two facilities to be operational by 15 September 2011. Historically, providing the resources required to accomplish the significant range of services was accomplished by assigning additional personnel to a specific project site (Health Facility Project Officers), through interim manpower allocations (internal reassignments of in-house staff), or by hiring temporary employees for specific support (logistics managers). While these methods were successful in a low volume environment, they will not support the requirements of SAMMC and METC. Therefore, a new holistic approach is being considered to include a variety of tasks under two contractual vehicles. The Government desires that respondents offer their experience and recommendations on the following questions and issues related to the initial outfitting and transition of military medical and training facilities. When addressing these items respondents should consider the size and scope of the requirements, which will include the outfitting of two large military installation facilities with fluid construction completion dates that may include the provisioning of approximately 40,000 (notional) items of medical and non-medical furniture/equipment/supplies/materials per contract. (1) Have other similar (size, scope) initial outfitting and transition projects implemented a holistic approach that includes project management, provision of specified medical, non-medical, IT, and furniture/furnishings, relocation of existing equipment, warehousing of new and existing equipment, installation and technical inspection of equipment, training and turnover of equipment? (2) Is there a template or format that would best identify outfitting requirements? (3) Given a list of approximately 80,000 (notional) furniture/equipment/supplies/materials along with standard project management, moving, installation, and training labor costs, what pricing arrangement(s) and method(s) would be best suited for the project? (4) How would provisioning and installation best be accomplished? Would the company provision and warehouse the items or follow a just-in-time approach to install furniture and equipment with minimal storage time? (5) What best practices have been implemented for delivery and installation of equipment prior to technical testing and turnover to the customer (i.e., Government)? Does the contractor maintain control of the equipment? How do contractors ensure the security of delivered equipment prior to customer acceptance? Would this security expectation change if the delivery location is a Government installation? (6) Would a contractor in the initial outfitting and transition competitive space typically provide and install IT equipment to include desktop/laptop computers, printers, scanners, et al, but also provision and install routers, switches, servers? (7) What tools/methods/capabilities can be implemented to provide web-based tracking access for customers? Is the use of web-based tracking and RFID standard in the industry? If not, would implementing these capabilities be cost prohibitive or otherwise unattainable? (8) Are there any specialized hazardous material and hazardous transportation issues that need to be addressed for this project considering the provisioning or transportation of medical equipment? Are there any specific insurance or indemnification issues that need to be addressed for this project? (9) If long-lead-time items are procured under a separate contractual vehicle, would you envision that this contractor (the holistic solution provider) will coordinate and handle the installation and transition of these items? How would this best be accomplished? (10) What type of acquisition strategy would you recommend for this type of solution? Please include contract type, CLIN structure, pricing and incentive strategies in your response. (11) If your company has provided clinical transition services to support the outfitting of facilities, what was the extent of those services? (12) In your past experience with the transitioning of official government records/files, to include patient records and other sensitive protected information, what security measures were implemented to ensure the safeguarding of the files and how was the service executed? (13) In general, what lessons learned would you offer to the Government as they consider planning for the initial outfitting and transition of these large military medical training/operational facilities? (14) What issues and stumbling blocks has your company encountered in the past with operational medical/training facility outfitting projects that should be addressed? (15) Does your company have a current GSA schedule for executing all contemplated services delineated in questions 1 thru 15? THIS IS A REQUEST FOR INFORMATION ONLY. It is not a Request for Proposal, a Request for Quotation, an Invitation for Bids, a solicitation, or an indication the Center for Health Care Contracting will contract for the items contained in the RFI. The Government will not pay respondents for information provided in response to this RFI. This RFI is part of a Government market research effort to determine the scope of industry capabilities and interest. Respondents to this RFI should describe their interest and ability to perform the requirements summarized within this notice. Responses should contain Company Name, Address, Point of Contact, Cage Code, Phone Number, FAX Number, Size of Business pursuant to NAICS code 541614 (size standard $7,000,000) and GSA contract number if any. Responses should address the companys experience in providing similar initial outfitting and transition support to medical facilities including commercial, military, or other federal government hospitals and treatment facilities. When describing this past experience, a brief description of the size, scope, and complexity of the requirement and the contracting vehicle should be provided. To be of greatest value, responses should address the aforementioned questions and issues. Responses should be formatted as either MS Word (.doc,.docx) or Adobe Portable Document Format (.pdf) and should be limited to a maximum of ten (10) pages. Reponses shall be hand delivered or by courier to the Point of Contact identified in the below section. Proprietary/Competition Sensitive information (appropriately marked) will be protected from disclosure to the greatest extent practical, however it is preferred that respondents do not provide proprietary or otherwise restricted responses. Responses should be submitted no later than 3:00 PM CDST, March 20, 2009. It is anticipated that any resultant contracts that might result from this survey would have a period of performance from date of award through 15 September 2011. The North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) code is 541614; and the small business size standard is $7.0 MIL. Point of Contact: Nadine Vasquez, (210) 295-4346 Email your questions to Center for Health Care Contracting at: nadine.vasquez@us.army.mil Contracting Office Address: Center for Health Care Contracting ATTN: MCAA-C-PA, Bldg 4197 2107 17th Street, Suite 68 Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234-5068
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- Place of Performance
- Address: Center for Health Care Contracting ATTN: MCAA C BLDG 4197, 2107 17TH Street Fort Sam Houston TX<br />
- Zip Code: 78234-5015<br />
- Zip Code: 78234-5015<br />
- Record
- SN01763540-W 20090308/090306220738-024a1f99eb7be9609930373e044dc852 (fbodaily.com)
- Source
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