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SAMDAILY.US - ISSUE OF JANUARY 26, 2022 SAM #7361
SOLICITATION NOTICE

G -- Request for Proposal - Health Insurance Service - US Embassy Malabo

Notice Date
1/24/2022 6:07:17 AM
 
Notice Type
Solicitation
 
NAICS
524114 — Direct Health and Medical Insurance Carriers
 
Contracting Office
U.S. EMBASSY MALABO WASHINGTON DC 20520 USA
 
ZIP Code
20520
 
Solicitation Number
19EK2022R0001
 
Response Due
3/2/2022 3:00:00 AM
 
Archive Date
05/01/2022
 
Point of Contact
Jazmin McGhee, Phone: +240555000304
 
E-Mail Address
MalaboP@state.gov
(MalaboP@state.gov)
 
Description
U.S. Embassy Malabo, Equatorial Guinea Date: 01/14/2022 To: Prospective Offerors Subject: Request for Proposals number 19EK2022R0001 The Embassy of the United States of America invites you to submit a proposal for locally employed staff health insurance coverage. The Embassy encourages prospective offerors to offer off-the-shelf plans that meet at least the minimum benefit levels required in this solicitation. The U.S. Government intends to award a contract to the responsible company submitting an acceptable offer at the lowest price. We intend to award a contract based on initial proposals, without holding discussions, although we may hold discussions with companies in the competitive range if there is a need to do so. To help you submit a complete and accurate proposal, a site visit will be held on Ferbruary 15th 2022, at 10:00am. Please send names of representatives that would be attending this site visit to MalaboP@state.gov. Your proposal must be submitted to the by email to MalaboP@state.gov Proposals are due by March 2nd, 2022, before 16:00 GMT. In order for a proposal to be considered, you must also complete and submit the following: 1. Section A, SF-1449 2. Section B, Pricing Schedule; 3. Section B, Retention Amounts in B.3; 4. Section K, Representations and Certifications; and 5. Additional information as required in Section L. Direct any questions regarding this request for quotations to Contracting Officer: Jazmin L. McGhee, by telephone at 555-000-304 during business hours or by email to MalaboP@state.gov. Please note: Proposals that contain less than the minimum reimbursement levels or do not provide all benefit categories may be deemed technically unacceptable. The successful offeror shall be registered in the SAM (System for Award Management) database https://www.sam.gov prior to contract award pursuant to FAR provision 5.207. Therefore, prospective offerors are encouraged to register prior to the submittal of their proposal. The guidelines for registration in SAM are also available at: https://www.fsd.gov/fsd-gov/learning-center-system.do?sysparm_system=SAM Sincerely, Jazmin L. McGhee Contracting Officer PRICE B.1. HEALTH INSURANCE SERVICES The Contractor shall provide the Health Insurance services to employees of the Government of the United States of America in The Republic of Equatorial Guinea and their eligible dependents as described in Section C. This insurance shall be provided in accordance with Section C. B.1.1. Official Residence Expense (ORE) Staff and Embassy Association Employees (EAE) are included under this contract only as a rider; the Contractor shall bill the Chief of Mission and Deputy Chief of Mission (for ORE Staff), and the Embassy Association (for EAEs) at the rates specified below. Retirees are included under this contract only as riders; the Contractor shall bill the individual covered at the rates specified below. Excess Coverage (C.1.1.19) is included under this contract only as rider benefits; the Contractor shall bill the individual covered at the rates specified below. See Section G for billing procedures. Note that USG is not responsible, nor liable, for any riders. JAMES ZADROGA 9/11 VICTIMS HEALTH AND COMPENSATION ACT OF 2010 NOTICE: UNLESS A WAIVER OR EXCEPTION APPLIES, PAYMENTS SUBSEQUENT TO THIS PROCUREMENT ARE SUBJECT TO AN EXCISE TAX OF 2% PERSUANT TO 26 U.S.C. 5000C. B.2. PRICES B.2.1 VALUE ADDED TAX. The Government will not reimburse the Contractor for VAT under this contract. The Contractor shall not include a line for VAT on Invoices as the U.S. Embassy has a tax exemption certificate with the host government. B.2.2 This is a fixed price with economic price adjustment requirements type contract under which will be issued firm, fixed-price task orders.� Employee 103 Spouse 36 Dependent Children 196 Monthly Total Total Price for First Option Year (d x 12)** Employee 103 Spouse 36 Dependent Children 196 MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM AMOUNTS During the Base Year of the contract, and during the option year that might be exercised, the United States Government (USG) shall place orders totaling a minimum of 335 Premiums. This reflects the contract minimum guarantee for each period of performance. The amount of all orders, for base and all option years shall not exceed XAF 635,000,000 This reflects the contract maximum. B.3 ADMINISTRATIVE RETENTION AMOUNTS B.3.1 If the Contractor requests a price adjustment under B.4 below, the Contractor shall present cost experience data that includes the retention amount. For purposes of any economic price adjustment, this retention amount is a fixed amount that is a part of the premium amounts in B.2. This retention amount will not be adjusted for any reason. The retention amount is part of the premium and may include, but not be limited to, such costs as overhead and general and administrative costs. It will also include any profit. Essentially, it includes all costs except the actual portion of the premium intended to fund claims paid to the health care provider/claimant. B.3.2 sets forth the retention amounts per premium paid for each category of premium and for each period of performance. NOTE TO OFFEROR: Fill in the fixed bi-weekly retention amounts for each period of performance and for each category of premium. This fixed amount shall be expressed in the currency in which the premium amount is proposed. The fixed retention amount shall not be expressed in terms of a percentage of the premium. B.3.2 Bi-Weekly Retention Amounts per separate premium paid per single employee and per family plan. B.4. ECONOMIC PRICE ADJUSTMENT-HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUMS B.4.1. Premium Adjustment Based on Experience - For health insurance, prices may be adjusted upward or downward based on the experience rating of the Mission(s) covered by this contract, and it specifically excludes all riders in B.1.1. No adjustment will be allowed during the first twelve months. After such time, the Contractor or the Government may request an adjustment in premiums on an annual basis. Adjustments are not retroactive to previous contract terms. Before any such adjustment is made, the Contractor agrees to provide the Government a balance sheet showing three main components for the time period: (1) receipts (premiums received) minus the retention amount, (2) number of insurance plans and (3) claims paid. This information shall be provided per type of premium, i.e., per line item. The retention amount is not subject to adjustment. The Government reserves the right to have an independent third party review the balance sheet and claims and make recommendations regarding the appropriateness of the requested adjustment. Any adjustment shall be subject to mutual agreement of the parties and shall result in a written modification to the contract. Mutually agreed to adjustments shall be effective thirty days after complete information is received by the Government. Any failure to reach agreement under this clause shall be subject to the procedures in the Disputes clause. B.4.2. Premium Adjustment Based on Laws - The rates may also be adjusted during the performance period of the contract as a result of laws enacted by the host Government, if such change in the laws has a direct impact on the cost to the Contractor to perform this contract at the contracted rate. In that event, the Contracting Officer may enter into negotiations with the Contractor to modify the contract to adjust the premium rate. The Contractor agrees to provide all documentation necessary to support any requested adjustment. B.4.2.1 Employee Pool � This clause is only in effect if the Contractor included details in its offer regarding a pooling arrangement, of which this contract is a part. Before any adjustment is made under this price adjustment clause, the Contractor shall include in its proposal for adjustment, details setting forth how the pool impacts the request for equitable adjustment. SECTION C DESCRIPTION/SPECIFICATION/WORK STATEMENT C.1. HEALTH INSURANCE SERVICES The Government of the United States of America requires Health Insurance coverage for its employees as described herein. C.1.1 Employee and Dependent Health Service Benefits C.1.1.1 Hospitalization (Treatment in the Hospital for Inpatient Care): Minimum Coverage - 100% Services and supplies provided during hospitalization including services provided by a licensed healthcare provider, bed and board (semi-private accommodations), operating room, recovery room, intensive care, imaging and diagnostic testing, and general hospital nursing care, physical therapy, as well as drugs and medicines administered while in-patient. When private accommodations are provided, coverage will be limited to the cost of a semi-private room unless otherwise covered in an off the shelf plan. See Mental Health and Substance Abuse care (C.1.1.13) for details concerning inpatient psychiatric care. See Mental Health and Substance Abuse Care (below) for details concerning inpatient psychiatric care. See Outpatient Services (below) for details concerning professional services. C.1.1.2 Emergency Services (Trips to Emergency Room): Minimum Coverage - 100% Services provided for conditions that could lead to serious disability or death if not immediately treated, such as accidents or sudden illness. C1.1.3 Ambulance: Minimum Coverage - 80% Professional ground transport to move a patient from the place where s/he is injured or becomes ill to the nearest hospital able to provide treatment or to move a patient from one medical facility to another. C.1.1.4 Outpatient Services: Minimum Coverage - 80% Services provided by a licensed healthcare provider on an ambulatory or outpatient basis (without being admitted to a hospital), including surgeon�s fees and other medical services provided at a hospital, clinic, doctor�s office, medical facility, etc. Examples include, but are not limited to: - Annual physical examinations - Specialist consultations and treatment, including second surgical opinion - Minor surgical interventions - Chemotherapy and radiation treatments - Immunizations recommended by local authorities and/or the World Health Organization - Diagnostic tests and diagnostic imaging See Rehabilitative and Habilitative Services and Devices (below) for details concerning physical therapy. See Mental Health and Substance Abuse Care (below) for details concerning psychiatric therapy. C.1.1.5 Obstetric and Newborn Care: Minimum Coverage - Inpatient/Emergency: 100%; Outpatient: 80% Care and services that women receive during pregnancy (prenatal care), throughout labor, delivery and post-delivery, and outpatient care for newborn babies. Hospitalization during pregnancy and/or delivery will be reimbursed as inpatient care All other treatments will be considered outpatient services and will be reimbursed at that rate. C.1.1.6 Pediatric Services: Minimum Coverage - Inpatient/Emergency: 100%, Outpatient: 80% Primary and preventive routine care services for covered dependent children, including, but not limited to: physical examinations, developmental assessments, laboratory tests, and immunizations recommended by local authorities and/or the World Health Organization. C.1.1.7 Prescription Drugs: Minimum Coverage -Inpatient/Emergency: 100%, Outpatient: 80% Medications prescribed by a licensed health care provider that are medically required. Examples include, but are not limited to prescription antibiotics to treat an infection, medication used to treat an ongoing condition, such as high cholesterol, prophylaxis, contraceptive medication. C.1.1.8 Preventive and Wellness Services and Chronic Disease Management: Minimum Coverage - 80% Counseling or preventive care designed to prevent or detect medical conditions and care for chronic conditions such as asthma and diabetes. Examples include, but are not limited to: physicals, immunizations, and cancer screenings. C.1.1.9 Hearing Aids: Minimum Coverage � 80% Examinations and Treatment: 80% Minimum Coverage Hearing Aid Apparatus: Limited to one apparatus per ear up to a maximum of XAF 824,805 per covered individual per three-year period. 80% Minimum Coverage: with annual cap. C.1.1.10 Optical Care: Minimum Coverage � 80% Examinations and Treatment: 80% Minimum Coverage Prescription lenses and frames, or contact lenses: Covered up to a maximum of XAF 164,961 per covered individual every two years. 80% Minimum Coverage; with annual cap. C.1.1.11 Dental Care: Minimum Coverage � 80% Examinations and Treatment: Dentist�s fees, x-rays, examinations and treatment, cleanings, fillings, extractions, false teeth, crowns, and bridges up to a maximum of XAF 1,759,584 per covered individual per contract year. 80% Minimum Coverage: with annual cap. Orthodontia: Treatment is covered only if treatment begins before age 18, or if required as the result of an accident. A maximum of four years of orthodontia treatment will be covered per covered individual up to a maximum of XAF 1,319,688 lifetime limit. 80% Minimum Coverage; with contract lifetime cap. C.1.1.12 Reproductive Health: Minimum Coverage - 80% Prescribed contraceptive devices, preventive care and routine examinations, voluntary sterilization, and diagnosis and treatment of conditions which may cause infertility. Assisted reproductive technology (ART), fertility treatments, and reversal of sterilization are not covered (see Exclusions to Coverage). C.1.1.13 Mental Health and Substance Abuse Care: Minimum Coverage - 50% Inpatient and outpatient care provided to evaluate, diagnose and treat a mental health condition or substance abuse disorder. This includes behavioral health treatment, counseling, and psychotherapy. Services must be provided by a licensed psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, psychologist, or psychiatric social worker. Inpatient care for alcohol and substance abuse must be provided at a facility licensed for detoxification and rehabilitation. C.1.1.14 Rehabilitative and Habilitative Services and Devices: Minimum Coverage - 50% Rehabilitative services (e.g., recovering skills, such as speech therapy after a stroke or physical therapy after an accident) and habilitative services (e.g., developing skills, such as speech therapy for children, etc.) that help develop skills needed for everyday life. Devices to help gain or recover mental or physical skills lost due to injury, disability or a chronic condition, and devices needed for habilitative reasons. C.1.1.15 HIV/AIDS: 100% up to XAF 5,498,700 per contract year per covered individual Medications to suppress opportunistic infections (such as tuberculosis or toxoplasmosis for covered individuals who have HIV/AIDS). Brief courses of anti-retroviral drugs during childbirth to prevent the transmission of HIV/AIDS to the child. Generally excludes medication for the long-term suppression of HIV/AIDS through the combination of anti-retroviral drugs in locations with inadequate local healthcare infrastructures. C.1.1.16 Catastrophic Coverage Additional coverage equal to XAF 20,000,000 per covered individual per contract year. Catastrophic conditions shall be defined as major medical conditions occurring as a result of a single/illness/accident or closely related set of major illnesses (or conditions relating to a single accident) that exceed the standard maximum coverage limit. C.1.1.17 Out-of-Country Medical Treatment: Medical expenses incurred out-of-country will be covered at the same benefit levels and subject to the same total maximum annual limit as for medical expenses incurred in-country. C.1.1.18 Out-of-Country Medical Travel: 80% Reimbursement Transportation for out-of-country medical treatment will be a covered expense for covered employees and eligible family members. To be considered a covered expense, the attending certified health care provider must certify in advance that the treatment is medically necessary and unavailable locally. 80% of covered individual�s transportation expenses by the least expensive, appropriate means of transportation to the nearest city with adequate medical facilities will be covered. 80% of the transportation expenses of an attendant will also be covered, but only if the covered individual's attending certified health care provider certifies that an attendant for the patient is necessary, (e.g., a parent in the case of a patient who is a minor, or a family member to make medical decisions in the case of a patient who is unwell or unconscious). All coverage for transportation for out-of-country medical treatment is subject to the total maximum annual limit. Transportation to a neighboring country without the attending certified health care provider certifying that the treatment is medically necessary and unavailable locally will not be covered. C.1.1.21 Excess Coverage NOTE: Employee responsible for paying 100% of premium for Excess Coverage Additional coverage equal to XAF 20,000,000 per covered individual per contract year. This excess coverage will be offered as an optional benefit to LE Staff. This can be used for any covered individual for any covered expense that exceeds annual maximum. LE Staff must pay 100% of the premium if they elect Excess Coverage. The premium for this additional coverage is a rider to be paid by the employee to the vender directly and USG will not be responsible for collecting of these premium payments. C.1.2 Annual Maximum Limit - The maximum annual reimbursement per covered individual per contract year, not including expenses defined under Exclusions and Limitations (C.1.3) and C.1.1.16, Catastrophic Coverage, or those covered under C.1.1.15, HIV/AIDS, and C.1.1.21 Excess Coverage is equivalent to XAF 20,000,000 C.1.3 Exclusions and Limitations There is no coverage for elective cosmetic surgery; spa cures; rejuvenation cures; massage; exercise therapy; long-term rehabilitative therapy; non-medical hospital charges (e.g., telephone, television, etc.); home help, family help, or similar household assistance; fees of persons who are not certified health care providers; advanced reproductive technology (e.g., in-vitro fertilization, intra-cellular sperm injection, artificial insemination, microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration, testicular sperm extraction, cryopreservation, etc.); or services or supplies which have not been prescribed or approved by a certified health care provider. Exclusions to coverage may be amended if provided in an off the shelf plan and is the lowest-cost and technically acceptable. Removal of any exclusions require prior authorization. There is no coverage for expenses that will be reimbursed or paid directly under a host country medical program or workers' compensation program, the U.S. workers� compensation program, or post�s LE Staff workers� compensation program. C.1.4 Eligible Participants C.1.4.1 Identification of Eligible Employees and Dependents: U.S. Mission Malabo will provide a list of all eligible employees and dependents with relationship to employee (self/spouse/child) and DOB for each. Updates will be provided to add or remove individuals on a monthly basis. C.1.4.1.1 Definition of Dependents C1.4.1.1.1 Spouse: a limit of one legal spouse as defined by local law per employee will be covered. C.1.4.1.1.2 Children: a child is defined as the LE Staff�s natural, adopted, stepchild, or foster child. The child must be unmarried and financially dependent upon the LE Staff. A child will be covered until the end of the contract year in which s/he reaches age 26. An unmarried child determined to be incapable of self-support due to a physical or mental condition will continue to be eligible to participate in the medical plan as long as the condition persists, the child remains unmarried, and the LE Staff maintains coverage. C.1.4.2 Location of Employment: The eligible employees covered by C.1.4.1 must be employed within the geographic boundaries of The Republic of Equatorial Guinea by: Department of State and Department of Defense C.1.4.3 Participants Covered Under a Rider a. All current active ORE Staff personally employed by the Chief of Mission and the Deputy Chief of Mission and assigned to their respective official Government residences and paid under an ORE account. All costs for coverage of ORE Staff are the responsibility of the Chief of Mission and the Deputy Chief of Mission, not the U.S. Government. b. All current active employees of the Employee Association at Embassy/Consulate Malabo. All costs for coverage EAEs are the responsibility of the Employee Association, not the U.S. Government. C.1.5 Eligibility C.1.5.1 Term of Eligibility and Effective Date Each current active eligible employee and their eligible dependents are enrolled for health benefits under this contract upon award and thereafter during the performance period of this contract. Each new eligible employee and eligible dependents will be enrolled upon entering on duty with the United States Government. An employee is considered active (""on the rolls"") whenever such employee is on approved leave, whether paid or unpaid. C.1.6 Brochure Requirement C.1.6.1 The Contractor shall provide a document (brochure/pamphlet/other written document) in English and Spanish that sets forth a complete listing of the health insurance benefits to be provided under this contract. This brochure shall be provided in sufficient quantities so that each covered employee receives a copy. The Contractor shall furnish all copies of the brochures to the COR, who will ensure that appropriate distribution is made. C.1.6.2 The Contractor shall provide the document described in C.1.6.1 to the COR not later than 10 (ten) days after date of contract award. The Contractor shall provide additional brochures for new employees within ten (10) business days of the COR�s request. C.1.6.3 The Contractor assumes full responsibility for ensuring that the document described in C.1.6.1 accurately reflects the requirements, coverage, and contract terms of the contract, as implemented by the Contractor�s technical proposal. In all cases, the contract shall take precedence. Should the COR discover that the document contains inaccuracies, the Contractor will be notified in writing; however, failure on the part of the U.S. Government to notice any inaccuracies shall in no way limit, revise or otherwise affect the requirement under this contract for the Contractor to fully comply with all contract terms. SECTION E INSPECTION AND ACCEPTANCE E.1. 52.252-2 CLAUSES INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (FEB 1998) This contract incorporates one or more clauses by reference, with the same force and effect as if they were given in full text. Upon request, the Contracting Officer will make their full text available. In addition, the full text of a clause may be accessed electronically at: Acquisition.gov this address is subject to change. If the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) is not available at the location indicated above, use the Department of State Acquisition website at e-CFR to see the links to the FAR. You may also use an Internet �search engine� (for example, Google, Yahoo or Excite) to obtain the latest location of the most current FAR. The following Federal Acquisition Regulation clause(s) is/are incorporated by reference: CLAUSE TITLE AND DATE 52.246-4 INSPECTION OF SERVICES - FIXED PRICE (AUG 1996) E.2. QUALITY ASSURANCE AND SURVEILLANCE PLAN (QASP) This plan is designed to provide an effective surveillance method to promote effective Contractor performance. The QASP provides a method for the Contracting Officer's Representative (COR) to monitor Contractor performance, advise the Contractor of unsatisfactory performance, and notify the Contracting Officer of continued unsatisfactory performance. The Contractor, not the Government, is responsible for management and quality control to meet the terms of the contract. The role of the Government is to conduct quality assurance to ensure that contract standards are achieved. Performance Objective PWS Paragraph Performance Threshold Services Performs all the insurance services set forth in the Performance Work Statement (PWS) C.1.0 thru C.1.6 All required services are performed and no more than one (1) customer complaint is received per month E.2.1 Surveillance. The COR will receive and document all complaints from Government personnel regarding the services provided. If appropriate, the COR will send the complaints to the Contractor for corrective action. E.2.2 Standard. The performance standard is that the Government receives no more than one (1) customer complaint per month. The COR shall notify the Contracting Officer of the complaints so that the Contracting Officer may take appropriate action to enforce the inspection clause (FAR 52.246-4, Inspection of Services � Fixed Price (AUG 1996) or the appropriate Inspection of Services clause), if any of the services exceed the standard. E.2.3 Procedures (a) If any Government personnel observe unacceptable services, either incomplete work or required services not being performed, they should immediately contact the COR. (b) The COR will complete appropriate documentation to record the complaint. (c) If the COR determines the complaint is invalid, the COR will advise the complainant. The COR will retain the annotated copy of the written complaint for his/her files. (d) If the COR determines the complaint is valid, the COR will inform the Contractor and give the Contractor additional time to correct the defect, if additional time is available. The COR shall determine how much time is reasonable. (e) The COR shall, as a minimum, orally notify the Contractor of any valid complaints. (f) If the Contractor disagrees with the complaint and challenges the validity of the complaint, the Contractor will notify the COR. The COR will review the matter to determine the validity of the complaint. (g) The COR will consider complaints as resolved unless notified otherwise by the complaint. (h) Repeat customer complaints are not permitted for any services. If a repeat customer complaint is received for the same deficiency during the service period, the COR will contact the Contracting Officer for appropriate action under the Inspection clause. SECTION F DELIVERIES OR PERFORMANCE F.1. 52.252-2 CLAUSES INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (FEB 1998) This contract incorporates one or more clauses by reference, with the same force and effect as if they were given in full text. Upon request, the Contracting Officer will make their full text available. In addition, the full text of a clause may be accessed electronically at: Acquisition.gov this address is subject to change. If the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) is not available at the location indicated above, use the Department of State Acquisition website at e-CFR to see the links to the FAR. You may also use an Internet �search engine� (for example, Google, Yahoo or Excite) to obtain the latest location of the most current FAR. The following Federal Acquisition Regulation clauses are incorporated by reference: CLAUSE TITLE AND DATE 52.242-15 STOP WORK ORDER (AUG 1989) 52.242-17 GOVERNMENT DELAY OF WORK (APR 1984) F.2 PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE. The performance period of this contract is one year beginning 30 days following contract award. with four (4) one-year options to renew. F.3 OPTIONS (a) The Government may extend this contract in accordance with the option clause at Section I, clause I.2, FAR Clauses Incorporated by Full Text (FAR 52.217-9, Option to Extend the Term of the Contract), which also specifies the total potential duration of the contract. (b) The Government may exercise the option set forth at Section I, ""FAR 52.217-8, Option to Extend Services"". F.4 REPORTS AND OTHER DELIVERABLES All reports and other deliverables required under this contract shall be delivered to the following address: Jazmin McGhee MalaboP@state.gov SECTION G CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION DATA G.1. 652.242-70 CONTRACTING OFFICER�S REPRESENTATIVE (COR) (AUG 1999) (a) The Contracting Officer may designate in writing one Government employee, by name or position title, to take action for the Contracting Officer under this contract. This designee shall be identified as a Contracting Officer�s Representative (COR). Such designation shall specify the scope and limitations of the authority so delegated; provided, that the designee shall not change the terms or conditions of the contract, unless the COR is a warranted Contracting Officer, and this authority is delegated in the designation. (b) The COR for this contract is the Human Resources Officer. G.2 COR DUTIES G.2.1 The COR is responsible for inspection and acceptance of services. These duties include review of Contractor invoices, including the supporting documentation required by the contract. The COR may provide technical advice, substantive guidance, inspections, invoice approval, and other purposes as deemed necessary under the contract. G.2.2 In addition, the COR shall maintain updated list of employees and dependents insured, which will supersede the initial list provided under this contract and as reported to the insurer, without prejudice to the ineligibility clause. G.2.3. The COR has the additional responsibility of maintaining the eligible listing of employees and dependents for insurance coverage. G.2.4 The COR may not change the terms and conditions of the contract. While the COR is authorized to provide the Contractor with updated listings of eligible employees and dependents, only the Contracting Officer may modify existing task orders or issue new task orders, reflecting these changes, since only the Contracting Officer can obligate funding and commit the Government. G.3. Payment shall be made in XAF. G.4 SUBMISSION OF INVOICES AND PAYMENT G.4.1. Invoices for U.S. Government employees shall be submitted in an original and three (3) copies to the following address (designated billing office only for the purpose of submitting invoices): Financial Management Office U.S. Embassy Malabo Malabo II Highway Malabo, Equatorial Guinea G.4.2. Frequency of Payments. All funds under this contract for non-rider coverage will be obligated by issuance of task orders, as described in H.3. Each task order will fund a specific period of time and number of employees, and the task orders will be issued at the frequency described in H.3. All payments under this contract will be made at the conclusion of the period covered. Invoices may be submitted monthly with payments being made monthly by the Government. G.4.3 Riders: a. ORE. The Chief of Mission and/or Deputy Chief of Mission will make payment directly to the Contractor for the entire premium amount of the ORE staff, whether or not the ORE employee is contributing to the premium amount. b. EAE Staff. The Employee Association will make payment directly to the Contractor for the entire premium amount of the EA employee, whether or not the EA employee is contributing to the premium amount. c. Retirees. The retiree will make payment directly to the Contractor for the entire premium amount. G.5 RESERVED G.6 VALUE ADDED TAX VALUE ADDED TAX (VAT). The Government will not reimburse the Contractor for VAT under this contract. The Contractor shall not include a line for VAT on Invoices as the U.S. Embassy has a tax exemption certificate with the host government. SECTION H SPECIAL CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS H.1 SECURITY. On occasion, a Contractor employee may require entry into U.S. Government-owned or -operated facilities. If so, the Contractor should be prepared to provide the necessary identification to permit escorted access within that facility. H.2 STANDARDS OF CONDUCT. The Contractor shall maintain satisfactory standards of employee competency, conduct, cleanliness, appearance, and integrity and shall be responsible for taking such disciplinary action with respect to employees as may be necessary. Each Contractor employee is to adhere to standards that reflect credit on themselves, their employer, and the Unit...
 
Web Link
SAM.gov Permalink
(https://sam.gov/opp/6e54177a96684acbae530db8e740a561/view)
 
Place of Performance
Address: Malabo, Bioko North 240, GNQ
Zip Code: 240
Country: GNQ
 
Record
SN06222344-F 20220126/220125201429 (samdaily.us)
 
Source
SAM.gov Link to This Notice
(may not be valid after Archive Date)

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