|
COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JANUARY 12,1995 PSA#1261Department of the Army, Baltimore District, Corps of Engineers, P.O.
Box 1715, Baltimore, MD 21203-1715 C -- IDTC FOR HAZARDOUS TOXIC AND RADIOACTIVE WASTE FOR VARIOUS SITES
WITHIN THE NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION SOL DACA31-95-R-0037 POC Jean Petty
(410) 962-2587 Architect Engineering Services are required for
hazardous, toxic, and radioactive waste (HTRW) studies, investigations,
and designs of various sites within North Atlantic Division. Selection
will be made for two separate firms for these two Indefinite Delivery
Type Contracts (IDTC). The contracts will also include, but are not
limited to, decision documents, permit acquisition, and engineering
advice during construction. HTRW sites may be located anywhere within
the boundaries of the North Atlantic Division, which includes New York,
New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, District of Columbia,
West Virginia and Virginia, with lessor work efforts within Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. The
sites may be: (1) currently owned or controlled by the Federal
Government, either military or civilian agencies, (2) Formerly Used
Defense Sites (FUDS), or (3) other sites where the Baltimore District
is authorized to perform HTRW studies, investigations, designs, or
construction. Expertise required includes, but is not limited to,
hazardous waste, groundwater hydrology, analytical chemistry,
toxicology/risk assessment, process engineering, alternatives analysis,
data management, remedial investigations/feasibility studies, remedial
designs, environmental regulatory compliance, environmental training,
safety and occupational health, industrial hygiene, unexploded
ordnance (UXO) avoidance, community relations, and permits. Each
contract may include, but is not limited to, performance of the
following: 1. preliminary assessments, 2. site investigations, 3.
remedial investigations/feasibility studies, 4. remedial designs, 5.
preparation of plans and specifications, 6. public health
evaluation/risk assessments, 7. ecological risk assessments, 8.
modeling, 9. fate and transport analysis, 10. bench and pilot scale
treatability/compatibility studies, 11. bioassay/toxicity studies, 12.
identification of action levels/cleanup levels, 13. Federal, state,
and local laws, regulations, and guidance determinations, 14.
regulatory coordination, 15. cost estimating, 16. permit acquisition,
and 17. chemical data quality management, 18. development or use of
geographical information systems, and informational databases. Should
geographic information services be required, the A-E is required to
possess all hardware and software required to provide required support
services. Selected firms will be required to provide additional
consultants on a locality basis for topographical surveys and mapping,
drilling and installing wells, and assisting in obtaining property
access for investigations. However, additional consultants are not
required to be listed on the SF 255. The time period for the proposed
services is 1 year, with options for two 1-year extensions. The maximum
award amount for these fixed price contracts is $5,000,000 per year,
with $1,000,000 maximum per delivery order. Only firms and their
primary consultants having experience and qualified personnel (to
include 29 CFR 1910.120 training and medical surveillance) in
geotechnical, structural, civil, chemical, mechanical, electrical,
safety, and environmental engineering, as well as industrial hygiene
(certified industrial hygienist required), toxicology, health physics,
chemistry, geochemistry, hydrogeology, geology, cost estimating,
geophysics, risk assessment, and public affairs should apply. Firms and
personnel specifically listed in paragraph 7 of the SF 255 must have
demonstrated in-depth knowledge of all federal and state ARARs for the
states listed above and the District of Columbia, HTRW environmental
statutes, EPA and Corps of Engineers regulations. The Baltimore
District may provide the Corps-validated laboratory for testing on a
case-by-case basis under this advertisement. Firms are required to have
analytical chemistry testing capability. Before performing analytical
chemistry testing, the laboratory will be required to be validated by
the Corps of Engineers. Selected firms will be responsible for sampling
and delivering specimens for chemical testing to the selected
laboratory of the district. In addition, the selection criteria will
include: 1. past experience and complexity of work in HTRW pre-remedial
design investigations and remedial designs; and 2. past performance on
contracts with Government agencies and private sector in terms of
quality control and meeting established schedules. Qualification
statements must clearly indicate the location of the offices that will
perform the work at defined locations. The AE firm selected shall
provide the final products in the following CADD format: AutoCAD
Release 12 on 3 1/2'' high density diskettes formatted for 1.44 MD. The
products are not required to be performed using a specific CADD system.
However, the AE will be required to provide any digitizing and/or
translation services necessary to deliver the final design products in
the above stated CADD format. Architect-Engineer firms meeting the
requirements described in this announcement are invited to submit a SF
254 and SF 255, supplemental information requested should be furnished
for prime, joint venture(s) and/or consultants. Be advised that the
Baltimore District does not maintain SF 254's at this office.
Information must be received within 30 days of the date of this
announcement. No other general notification to firms under
consideration for this project will be made. Subcontracting Plan
Requirements: If the selected Architect-Engineer is a large business
concern, and the contract amount exceeds $500,000 the A-E shall be
required to submit a subcontracting plan with the final proposal. The
plan must be consistent with Section 806 (b)(2) of PL 100-180.
Subcontract awards to Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB), Historically
Black Colleges & Universities (HBCU's) and/or Minority Institutes
(MI's) should be included in the plan. The following subcontracting
goals are considered to be reasonable and achievable. Award of
approximately 25 percent of the total subcontracting dollars to all
small business concerns and no less than 8 percent of the total
subcontracting dollars to any combination of small disadvantaged
business, historically black colleges and universities or minority
institutes. POC technical inquires: Mr. Jeremy Morgan (410) 962-2778 or
Mr. Michael Castaldi (410) 962-3563. This is not a request for
proposal. (0010) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0020 19950111\C-0002.SOL)
C - Architect and Engineering Services - Construction Index Page
|
|