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SAMDAILY.US - ISSUE OF DECEMBER 10, 2020 SAM #6951
SOLICITATION NOTICE

A -- Small Business Behavioral Safety Research Support IDIQ Contract

Notice Date
12/8/2020 12:37:30 PM
 
Notice Type
Solicitation
 
NAICS
541720 — Research and Development in the Social Sciences and Humanities
 
Contracting Office
693JJ9 NHTSA OFFICE OF ACQUISTION WASHINGTON DC 20590 USA
 
ZIP Code
20590
 
Solicitation Number
693JJ921R000008
 
Response Due
1/5/2021 11:00:00 AM
 
Archive Date
07/07/2021
 
Point of Contact
David Larson, Phone: 2023664843, Sherese A. Gray, Phone: 2023663998
 
E-Mail Address
david.larson@dot.gov, sherese.gray@dot.gov
(david.larson@dot.gov, sherese.gray@dot.gov)
 
Small Business Set-Aside
SBA Total Small Business Set-Aside (FAR 19.5)
 
Description
REVISION:� This revision provides clarification for two (2) questions recieved in response to this RFP. The purpose of this contract is to procure, on a Cost Reimbursement, Time and Materials (T&M), and/or a Firm Fixed Price (FFP) basis, professional and technical services to conduct behavioral safety research projects. Under this contract, the Government will issue Task Orders to obtain professional and technical services. � Each Task Order will include specific requirements for that Task Order. This section describes the types of services that may be required under this contract.� The listing below is provided as an example and does not represent any current or known requirement.� The Contractor will be required to conduct behavioral traffic safety research. This may include any or all of the following activities: research design, data collection, subject recruitment, conducting focus groups, program development, program implementation, literature reviews, data analyses, performance analyses, technological design, human-environment interface, statistical analysis, interpretation of data and results, and report preparation. �Any of these activities may involve data collection at a local, state, or federal level.�� Typical examples of data to be collected include the following: driver records; law enforcement records, such as enforcement activity, police stops, and arrest data; court records, such as conviction records and sanction records; vehicle data, such as instances and circumstances of braking or speed change; crash data, including fatal crash data; public attitudes;� safety equipment uses (e.g., observation of seat belt or child restraint use); human and environment or technological interface; the impairing effects of alcohol or drug use; human performance; attitudes and opinions of traffic safety officials; and, program process information (e.g., how well a program runs from an operations viewpoint). � The Contractor will be required to obtain data in various formats.� Some data may be available archival data, such as DWI arrest records. �In some cases, the contractor will be able to obtain data in an electronic format.� In other cases, data will be available in hard copy only, which will require more extensive labor to organize. �In some cases, the Contractor may need to collect data during the task order, such as seat belt observations or vehicle speeds.� In many instances, data collection procedures may require prior approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and an institutional review board (IRB). Of the different potential research activities listed above, research activities may include:� Field Data Collection; Crash and Injury Statistical Analyses; Program Evaluation; and Human Factors/Technology Evaluation. These activities are explained in more detail below: Field Data Collection will require the Contractor to send staff to specific locations to collect the data underlying the research activity.� An example would be gathering information on the number of passengers in vehicles leaving a high school student parking lot at the end of a school day.� The Contractor may be required to collect data on how many cars left the parking lot, how many drivers had passengers, and the sex of the driver and front seat passengers. �Another example would be collecting seat belt use at areas frequented by different groups of drivers, such as at a sports bar frequented by college students and a restaurant near a retirement community. Activities would include collecting, organizing and delivering data to the COR (TO). Crash and Injury Statistical Analyses require analyzing existing data from a variety of sources that may include States� crash files, hospital or medical cost files, or NHTSA�s crash files such as the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) or the Crash Report Sampling System (CRSS).� Examples of projects include analyzing characteristics of fatal non-intersection crashes involving young adult drivers on rural roadways using FARS data, analyzing injury severity of different age groups of drivers using CRSS data, or analyzing teen licensure rates based on State data.� These projects shall require the Contractor to conduct statistical analyses on specific data sets and interpret the findings. � Program Evaluation is an evaluation of a program (countermeasure) developed and implemented by a State or local government.� Examples include assessing the impact of a demonstration program to increase seat belt use in rural communities; evaluating the impact of a local primary seat belt ordinance; or evaluating a program designed to encourage parents to actively monitor their teen�s driving.� The appropriate evaluation approach may be a process evaluation, an outcome evaluation, a safety impact evaluation, or some combination. The Contractor shall use sound evaluation methodology and techniques to address all evaluation questions. Human Factors/Technology Evaluation project explores drivers� and/or passengers� interactions with the vehicle, including advanced driver assistance systems. Examples include implementing and evaluating an in-vehicle monitoring system for teen drivers; developing, implementing and evaluating technologies designed to encourage seat belt use among at-risk populations; using driving simulators for driver training. Through human factors psychology and/or human factors engineering, the Contractor may be required to implement and evaluate various technologies.
 
Web Link
SAM.gov Permalink
(https://beta.sam.gov/opp/8e30c4adf87a45148ced9d589e47467c/view)
 
Place of Performance
Address: Washington, DC 20590, USA
Zip Code: 20590
Country: USA
 
Record
SN05868799-F 20201210/201208230139 (samdaily.us)
 
Source
SAM.gov Link to This Notice
(may not be valid after Archive Date)

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