
Senate Bill No. 491
(By Senators Craigo, Wooton, Fanning, Kessler, Hunter, Ball and
Edgell)
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[Introduced February 15, 2000; referred to the
Committee on Government Organization.]
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A BILL to amend and reenact section one, article twenty-two,
chapter five of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended; to amend and reenact
section eleven, article three, chapter five-a of said code;
to amend and reenact section eleven, article one, chapter
seven of said code; to amend chapter twelve of said code by
adding thereto a new article, designated article four-c; to
amend and reenact section nineteen, article four, chapter
seventeen of said code; to amend and reenact section
fifteen, article nine-d, chapter eighteen of said code; and
to amend and reenact section five, article five, chapter
eighteen-b of said code, all relating to debarment of vendors from bidding on certain government contracts;
describing the duties of the state auditor with respect to
the debarment process; setting the scope of the
applicability of the debarment process; providing for an
administrative procedure for contesting debarment decisions;
and granting authority to promulgate regulations.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section one, article twenty-two, chapter five of the
code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be amended and reenacted; that section eleven, article
three, chapter five-a of said code be amended and reenacted; that
section eleven, article one, chapter seven of said code be
amended and reenacted; that chapter twelve of said code be
amended by adding thereto a new article, designated article
four-c; that section nineteen, article four, chapter seventeen of
said code be amended and reenacted; that section fifteen, article
nine-d, chapter eighteen of said code be amended and reenacted;
and that section five, article five, chapter eighteen-b of said
code be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
CHAPTER 5. GENERAL POWERS AND AUTHORITY OF THE GOVERNOR,
SECRETARY OF STATE AND ATTORNEY GENERAL; BOARD
OF PUBLIC WORKS; MISCELLANEOUS AGENCIES, COMMISSIONS,
OFFICES, PROGRAMS, ETC.
ARTICLE 22. GOVERNMENT CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS.
§5-22-1. Bidding required; government construction contracts to
go to qualified responsible bidder; debarment;
exceptions.
(a) As used in this section, "the state and its
subdivisions" means the state of West Virginia, every political
subdivision thereof of the state, every administrative entity
that includes such a subdivision, all municipalities and all
county boards of education.
(b) The state and its subdivisions shall, except as provided
in this section, solicit competitive bids for every construction
project exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars in total cost:
Provided, That a vendor who has been debarred pursuant to the
provisions of article four-c, chapter twelve of this code may not
bid on or be awarded a contract under this section.
(c) Following the solicitation of such the bids the
construction contract shall be awarded to the lowest qualified
responsible bidder, who shall furnish a sufficient performance
and payment bond: Provided, That the state and its subdivisions
may reject all bids and solicit new bids on said the project.
(d) Nothing in this section shall apply applies to work performed on construction or repair projects by regular full-time
employees of the state or its subdivisions, nor shall anything in
this section prevent students enrolled in vocational educational
schools from being utilized used in construction or repair
projects when such the use is a part of the students training
program.
(e) Nothing herein shall apply in this section applies to
emergency repairs to building components and systems. For the
purpose of this paragraph subsection, emergency repairs means
repairs that if not made immediately will seriously impair the
use of such the building components and systems, or cause danger
to those persons using such the building components and systems.
(f) Nothing herein shall apply in this section applies to
any situation where the state or a subdivision thereof shall come
of this state comes to an agreement with volunteers, or a
volunteer group, whereby the governmental body will provide
construction or repair materials, architectural, engineering,
technical or any other professional services and the volunteers
will provide the necessary labor without charge to, or liability
upon, the governmental body.
CHAPTER 5A. DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATION.
ARTICLE 3. PURCHASING DIVISION.
§5A-3-11. Purchasing in open market on competitive bids; bids
to be based on standard specifications; period for
alteration or withdrawal of bids; awards to lowest
responsible bidder; uniform bids; record of bids;
and exception.
(a) The director may make a purchase of commodities,
printing, and services of ten thousand dollars or less in amount
in the open market, but such the purchase shall, wherever
possible, be based on at least three competitive bids.
(b) The director may authorize spending units to purchase
commodities, printing and services in the amount of one thousand
dollars in the open market without competitive bids.
(c) Bids shall be based on the standard specifications
promulgated and adopted in accordance with the provisions of
section five of this article, and shall may not be altered or
withdrawn after the appointed hour for the opening of such the
bids. All open market orders, purchases based on advertised bid
requests or contracts made by the director or by a state
department shall be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder,
taking into consideration the qualities of the articles to be
supplied, their conformity with specifications, their suitability
to the requirements of the government and the delivery terms: Provided, That state bids on school buses shall be accepted from
all bidders who shall then be awarded contracts if they meet the
state board's "Minimum Standards for Design and Equipment of
School Buses". County boards of education may select from those
bidders who have been awarded contracts and shall pay the
difference between the state aid formula amount and the actual
cost of bus replacement. Any or all bids may be rejected. If
all bids received on a pending contract are for the same unit
price or total amount, the director shall have has authority to
reject all bids, and to purchase the required commodities,
printing and services in the open market, if the price paid in
the open market does not exceed the bid prices: Provided, That
a vendor who has been debarred under the provisions of article
four-c, chapter twelve of this code may not bid on or be awarded
a contract under this section.
Both copies must be received at the respective offices prior
to the specified date and time of the bid openings. The failure
to deliver or the nonreceipt of these bid forms at either of
these offices prior to the appointed date and hour are grounds
for rejection of the bids. In the event of any deviation between
the copies submitted to the purchasing division and the state auditor, such the bids as to which there is such a deviation
shall be rejected, if the deviation relates to the quantity,
quality or specifications of the commodities, printing or
services to be furnished or to the price therefor or to the date
of delivery or performance. After the award of the order or
contract, the director, or someone appointed by him or her for
that purpose, shall indicate upon the successful bid and its copy
in the office of the state auditor that it was the successful
bid. Thereafter, the copy of each bid in the possession of the
director and the state auditor shall be maintained as a public
record by both of them, shall be open to public inspection in the
offices of both the director and the state auditor and shall may
not be destroyed by either of them without the written consent of
the legislative auditor: Provided, That the board of regents the
governing board as defined in section two, article one, chapter
eighteen-b of this code, may certify in writing to the director
the need for a specific item essential to a particular usage
either for instructional or research purposes at an institution
of higher education and the director upon review of such the
certification may provide for the purchase of said the specific
items in the open market without competitive bids. If the director permits bids by facsimile transmission machine to be
accepted in lieu of sealed bids pursuant to the provisions of
section ten of this article, a duplicate facsimile transmission
machine bid shall be transmitted to the state auditor pursuant to
this section, provided that an original bid is received by the
state auditor within two working days following the date
specified for bid opening.
CHAPTER 7. COUNTY COMMISSIONS AND OFFICERS.
ARTICLE 1. COUNTY COMMISSIONS GENERALLY.
§7-1-11. Purchasing in open market or competitive bids.
County commissions may make a purchase of commodities and
printing of five thousand dollars or less in amount in the open
market, but a purchase of and contract for commodities and
printing over five thousand dollars shall be based on competitive
bids, except in case of emergency.
The county commission of any county is hereby authorized and
empowered to may promulgate rules and regulations governing the
procedure of competitive bids: Provided, That a vendor who has
been debarred pursuant to the provisions of article four-c,
chapter twelve of this code may not bid on or be awarded a
contract under this section.
As used in this section, the terms "commodities" and "printing" shall have the same meaning as those terms are defined
in section one, article one, chapter five-a of this code.
CHAPTER 12. PUBLIC MONEYS AND SECURITIES.
ARTICLE 4C. DEBARMENT OF VENDORS.
§12-4C-1. Definitions.
For purposes of this article:
(1) "Debarment" means the exclusion of a vendor from the
right to bid on contracts to sell goods or supply services to the
state or its subdivisions for a specified period of time.
(2) "The state and its subdivisions" means the state of West
Virginia, every political subdivision of the state, every
administrative entity that includes a subdivision, all
municipalities and all county boards of education.
(3) "Vendor" means any person or entity that is eligible to
bid on contracts to supply the state or its subdivisions with
commodities or services, including contracting services for the
construction and improvement of roads and buildings.
§12-4C-2. Scope of article.
The provisions in this article govern the debarment of
vendors with regard to bids under the following provisions of
this code:
(a) Section one, article twenty-two, chapter five of this code, relating to bids for construction contracts by the state
and its subdivisions;
(b) Section eleven, article three, chapter five-a of this
code, relating to the purchase of supplies and printing by the
state;
(c) Section eleven, article one, chapter seven of this code,
relating to bids for the purchase of commodities and printing by
county commissions;
(d) Sections nineteen and twenty, article four, chapter
seventeen of this code, relating to bids for construction and
reconstruction of state roads and bridges and the furnishing of
materials and supplies therefor;
(e) Article nine-d, chapter eighteen of this code, relating
to the awarding of contracts by the school building authority;
and
(f) Sections four and five, article five, chapter eighteen-b
of this code, relating to expenditures by the governing boards
for higher education.
§12-4C-3. Duties of the state auditor.
The state auditor has primary responsibility for
administering the debarment process. The auditor's duties
include:
(a) Obtaining lists of vendors declared ineligible under
federal laws and regulations;
(b) Notification of all contracting officials for the state
and its subdivisions regarding debarred vendors;
(b) Compiling and maintaining a current, consolidated list
of all vendors that have been debarred or declared ineligible,
the period of the debarment, and the reasons for the debarment;
(c) Investigating complaints about vendors from the
officials of the state and its subdivisions responsible for
contracting with vendors for supplies and services;
(d) Initiating and conducting debarment procedures; and
(e) Promulgating rules for the operation of the debarment
process described in this article.
§12-4C-4. Grounds for debarment.
Grounds for debarment include:
(a) Conviction of an offense involving fraud or a criminal
offense in connection with obtaining, attempting to obtain or
performing a public contract or subcontract;
(b) Conviction of any federal or state antitrust statute
relating to the submission of offers;
(c) Conviction of an offense involving embezzlement, theft,
forgery, bribery, falsification or destruction of records, making false statements or receiving stolen property in connection with
the performance of a vending contract;
(d) Conviction of, or civil judgment for, commission of any
other offense indicating a lack of business integrity or business
honesty that seriously and directly affects the present
responsibility of the vendor or subcontractor;
(e) Violation of the term of a state contract or subcontract
so serious as to justify debarment, such as willful failure to
perform in accordance with the terms of one or more state
contracts, a history of failure to perform or unsatisfactory
performance on one or more state contracts;
(f) Conviction of provisions of the West Virginia workers'
compensation act, convictions of the West Virginia unemployment
compensation act, convictions of the West Virginia state tax and
revenue laws, convictions of the provisions of the West Virginia
vendor's licensing statutes and convictions of the West Virginia
division of labor statutes and rules;
(g) Violation of the terms of a government contract or
subcontract so serious as to justify debarment, including but not
limited to:
(1) Willful failure to perform in accordance with the terms of one or more contracts;
(2) A history of failure to perform, or of unsatisfactory
performance of one or more contracts;
(3) Willful failure to perform, or a history of
unsatisfactory performance of any contract obligations regarding
disadvantaged business enterprise participation in department
contracts under the state or federal programs concerning
disadvantaged business enterprises;
(4) Use of substandard materials or failure to furnish or
install materials in accordance with the contract in a department
project, even if the discovery of the defect is subsequent to
acceptance of the project and expiration of the warranty of the
project, if the defect amounts to intentionally deficient or
grossly negligent performance of the contract under which the
defect was a consequence;
(h) Any other cause of a serious or compelling nature that
affects the present responsibility of the vendor or
subcontractor.
§12-4C-5. Debarment procedure.
(a) The auditor shall initiate debarment proceedings by
notifying the vendor and any specifically named affiliates of the
vendor by certified mail, return receipt requested, of the following:
(1) The reasons for the proposed debarment in sufficient
detail to put the vendor on notice of the conduct or transactions
upon which the proposed debarment is based;
(2) The causes relied upon for the proposed debarment;
(3) That within thirty working days after receipt of the
notice, the vendor may submit in writing information and argument
in opposition to the proposed debarment;
(4) The procedures governing debarment decision making; and
(5) The potential effect of the proposed debarment.
(b) In the event a vendor wishes to contest the debarment
decision, the auditor shall decide the matter in accordance with
the provisions of article five, chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code.
§12-4C-6. Effects of debarment.

(a) Unless the auditor determines in writing that there is
a compelling reason to do otherwise, the state and its
subdivisions may not solicit offers from, award contracts to, or
consent to subcontract with a debarred vendor during the
debarment period.
(b) The contracting officer may not exercise an option to
renew or otherwise extend a current contract with a debarred vendor, or a contract which is being performed in any part by a
debarred subcontractor, unless the auditor approves the action in
writing, based on compelling reasons for exercise of the option
or extension.
(c) Debarment constitutes debarment of all divisions or
other organizational elements of the vendor, unless the debarment
decision is limited by its terms to specific divisions,
organizational elements or commodities.
(d) The auditor may extend the debarment decision to include
any affiliates of the vendor by specifically naming the affiliate
and giving the affiliate written notice of the proposed debarment
and an opportunity to respond in accordance with the provisions
of this chapter.
(e) The auditor may reduce the period or extent of
debarment, upon the vendor's request supported by documentation,
for the following reasons:
(1) Newly discovered material evidence;
(2) Reversal of the conviction or judgment upon which
debarment was based; or
(3) Elimination of the causes for which the debarment was
imposed.
(f) The auditor may extend the debarment period for an
additional period if the auditor determines that the extension is
necessary to protect the interests of the state.
(g) A debarment under this article may be waived by the
auditor with respect to a particular contract if the auditor
determines the debarment of the vendor would severely disrupt the
operation of a governmental entity to the detriment of the
general public or would not be in the public interest.
CHAPTER 17. ROADS AND HIGHWAYS.
ARTICLE 4. STATE ROAD SYSTEM.
§17-4-19. Contracts for construction, materials, etc.; work by
prison labor, etc.; bidding procedure.
All work of construction and reconstruction of state roads
and bridges, and the furnishing of all materials and supplies
therefor, and for the repair thereof shall be done and furnished
pursuant to contract except that the commissioner may not be
required to award any contract for work, which can be done
advantageously, economically and practicably by commission forces
or prison labor and by use of state road equipment, or for
materials and supplies, which are manufactured, processed or
assembled by the commissioner: Provided, That the commissioner
may not be required to award any contract for work, materials or supplies for an amount less than three thousand dollars. In all
the work, the commissioner shall utilize state road forces or
prison labor and state road equipment and shall manufacture,
process and assemble all the materials and supplies for the work
whenever and wherever the commissioner, in his or her discretion,
finds work and services advantageous, economical and practicable
in the state road program.
If the work is to be done, or the materials therefor for
the work are to be furnished by contract, the commissioner shall
thereupon publish the following described advertisement as a
Class II legal advertisement in compliance with the provisions of
article three, chapter fifty-nine of this code, and the
publication area for the publication shall be the county or
municipality in which the road lies. The advertisement shall
also be published at least once in at least one daily newspaper
published in the city of Charleston and in other journals or
magazines as may to the commissioner seem advisable. The
advertisement shall solicit sealed proposals for the construction
or other improvement of the road, and for the furnishing of
materials therefor, accurately describing the same, and stating
the time and place for opening the proposals and reserving the right to reject any and all proposals: Provided, That whenever
the estimated amount of any contract for work or for materials or
supplies is less than three thousand dollars, the commissioner
may is not be required to advertise the letting of the contract
in newspapers as above required in this section, but may award
the contract to the lowest responsible bidder, when two or more
sealed proposals or bids have been received by him or her
without the advertisement, but the contract may not be so awarded
unless the bid of the successful bidder is three thousand dollars
or less. The commissioner shall have the power to may prescribe
proper prequalifications of contractors bidding on state road
construction work. To all sealed proposals there shall be
attached the certified check of the bidder or bidder's bond
acceptable to the commissioner, in the amount as specified by the
commissioner shall specify in the advertisement, but not to
exceed five percent of the aggregate amount of the bid; but the
amount shall never be less than five hundred dollars. The
proposals shall be publicly opened and read at the time and place
specified in the advertisement, and the contract for the work, or
for the supplies or materials required therefor for the work
shall, if let, be awarded by the commissioner to the lowest responsible bidder for the type of construction selected:
Provided, That a vendor who has been debarred pursuant to the
provisions of article four-c, chapter twelve of this code may not
bid on or be awarded a contract under this section. In case all
bids be rejected, the commissioner may thereafter do the work
with commission forces or with prison labor, or may readvertise
in the same manner as before prescribed by this section and let
a contract for the work.
CHAPTER 18. EDUCATION.
ARTICLE 9D. SCHOOL BUILDING AUTHORITY.
§18-9D-15. Legislative intent; distribution of money.
(a) It is the intent of the Legislature to empower the
school building authority to facilitate and provide state funds
and to administer all federal funds provided for the construction
and major improvement of school facilities so as to meet the
educational needs of the people of this state in an efficient and
economical manner. The authority shall make funding
determinations in accordance with the provisions of this article
and shall assess existing school facilities and each facility's
school major improvement plan in relation to the needs of the
individual student, the general school population, the
communities served by the facilities and facility needs statewide.
(b) An amount that is no more than three percent of the sum
of moneys that are determined by the authority to be available
for distribution during the then current fiscal year from: (1)
Moneys paid into the school building capital improvements fund
pursuant to section ten, article nine-a of this chapter; (2) the
issuance of revenue bonds for which moneys in the school building
debt service fund are pledged as security; (3) moneys paid into
the school construction fund pursuant to section six of this
article; and (4) any other moneys received by the authority,
except moneys paid into the school major improvement fund
pursuant to section six of this article, may be allocated and may
be expended by the authority for projects that service the
educational community statewide or, upon application by the state
board, for educational programs that are under the jurisdiction
of the state board. In addition, upon application by the state
board or the administrative council of an area vocational
educational center established pursuant to article two-b of this
chapter, the authority may allocate and expend under this section
moneys for school major improvement projects proposed by the
state board or an administrative council for school facilities under the direct supervision of the state board or an
administrative council, respectively: Provided, That the
authority may not expend any moneys for a school major
improvement project proposed by the state board or the
administrative council of an area vocational educational center
unless the state board or an administrative council has submitted
a ten-year school major improvement plan, to be updated annually,
pursuant to section sixteen of this article: Provided, however,
That the authority shall, before allocating any moneys to the
state board or the administrative council of an area vocational
educational center for a school improvement project, consider all
other funding sources available for the project.
(c) An amount that is no more than two percent of the moneys
that are determined by the authority to be available for
distribution during the current fiscal year from: (1) Moneys
paid into the school building capital improvements fund pursuant
to section ten, article nine-a of this chapter; (2) the issuance
of revenue bonds for which moneys in the school building debt
service fund are pledged as security; (3) moneys paid into the
school construction fund pursuant to section six of this article;
and (4) any other moneys received by the authority, except moneys deposited into the school major improvement fund, shall be set
aside by the authority as an emergency fund to be distributed in
accordance with the guidelines adopted by the authority.
(d) The remaining moneys determined by the authority to be
available for distribution during the then current fiscal year
from: (1) Moneys paid into the school building capital
improvements fund pursuant to section ten, article nine-a of this
chapter; (2) the issuance of revenue bonds for which moneys in
the school building debt service fund are pledged as security;
(3) moneys paid into the school construction fund pursuant to
section six of this article; and (4) any other moneys received by
the authority, except moneys deposited into the school major
improvement fund, shall be allocated and expended on the basis of
need and efficient use of resources, the basis to be determined
by the authority in accordance with the provisions of section
sixteen of this article.
(e) If a county board of education proposes to finance a
project that is approved pursuant to section sixteen of this
article through a lease with an option to purchase leased
premises upon the expiration of the total lease period pursuant
to an investment contract, the authority may allocate no moneys to the county board in connection with the project: Provided,
That the authority may transfer moneys to the state board of
education, which, with the authority, shall lend the amount
transferred to the county board to be used only for a one-time
payment due at the beginning of the lease term, made for the
purpose of reducing annual lease payments under the investment
contract, subject to the following conditions:
(1) The loan shall be secured in the manner required by the
authority, in consultation with the state board, and shall be
repaid in a period and bear interest at a rate as determined by
the state board and the authority and shall have such the terms
and conditions as are required by the authority, all of which
shall be set forth in a loan agreement among the authority, the
state board and the county board;
(2) The loan agreement shall provide for the state board and
the authority to defer the payment of principal and interest upon
any loan made to the county board during the term of the
investment contract, and annual renewals of the investment
contract, among the state board, the authority, the county board
and a lessor: Provided, That in the event a county board, which
has received a loan from the authority for a one-time payment at the beginning of the lease term, does not renew the subject lease
annually until performance of the investment contract in its
entirety is completed, the county board is in default and the
principal of the loan, together with all unpaid interest accrued
to the date of the default, shall at the option of the authority,
in consultation with the state board, become due and payable
immediately or subject to renegotiation among the state board,
the authority and the county board: Provided, however, That if
a county board renews the lease annually through the performance
of the investment contract in its entirety, the county board
shall exercise its option to purchase the leased premises:
Provided further, That the failure of the county board to make a
scheduled payment pursuant to the investment contract constitutes
an event of default under the loan agreement: And provided
further, That upon a default by a county board, the principal of
the loan, together with all unpaid interest accrued to the date
of the default, shall at the option of the authority, in
consultation with the state board, become due and payable
immediately or subject to renegotiation among the state board,
the authority and the county board: And provided further, That
if the loan becomes due and payable immediately, the authority, in consultation with the state board, shall use all means
available under the loan agreement and law to collect the
outstanding principal balance of the loan, together with all
unpaid interest accrued to the date of payment of the outstanding
principal balance; and
(3) The loan agreement shall provide for the state board and
the authority to forgive all principal and interest of the loan
upon the county board purchasing the leased premises pursuant to
the investment contract and performance of the investment
contract in its entirety.
(f) To encourage county boards to proceed promptly with
facilities planning and to prepare for the expenditure of any
state moneys derived from the sources described in this
subsection, any county board failing to expend money within three
years of the allocation to the county board shall forfeit the
allocation and thereafter is ineligible for further allocations
pursuant to this subsection until the county board is ready to
expend funds in accordance with an approved facilities plan:
Provided, That the authority may authorize an extension beyond
the three-year forfeiture period not to exceed an additional two
years. Any amount forfeited shall be added to the total funds available in the school construction fund of the authority for
future allocation and distribution.
(g) The remaining moneys that are determined by the
authority to be available for distribution during the then
current fiscal year from moneys paid into the school major
improvement fund pursuant to section six of this article shall be
allocated and distributed on the basis of need and efficient use
of resources, the basis to be determined by the authority in
accordance with the provisions of section sixteen of this
article: Provided, That the moneys may not be distributed to any
county board that does not have an approved school major
improvement plan or to any county board that is not prepared to
commence expenditures of the funds during the fiscal year in
which the moneys are distributed: Provided, however, That any
moneys allocated to a county board and not distributed to that
county board shall be deposited in an account to the credit of
that county board, the principal amount to remain to the credit
of and available to the county board for a period of two years.
Any moneys which are unexpended after a two-year period shall be
redistributed on the basis of need from the school major
improvement fund in that fiscal year.
(h) No local matching funds may be required under the
provisions of this section. However, the responsibilities of the
county boards of education to maintain school facilities are not
negated by the provisions of this article. To be eligible to
receive an allocation of school major improvement funds from the
authority, a county board must have expended in the previous
fiscal year an amount of county moneys equal to or exceeding the
lowest average amount of money included in the county board's
maintenance budget over any three of the previous five years and
must have budgeted an amount equal to or greater than the average
in the current fiscal year: Provided, That the state board of
education shall promulgate rules relating to county boards'
maintenance budgets, including items which shall be included in
the budgets.
(i) Any county board may use moneys provided by the
authority under this article in conjunction with local funds
derived from bonding, special levy or other sources.
Distribution to a county board, or to the state board or the
administrative council of an area vocational educational center
pursuant to subsection (b) of this section, may be in a lump sum
or in accordance with a schedule of payments adopted by the authority pursuant to guidelines adopted by the authority.
(j) Funds in the school construction fund shall first be
transferred and expended as follows:
Any funds deposited in the school construction fund shall be
expended first in accordance with an appropriation by the
Legislature. To the extent that funds are available in the
school construction fund in excess of that amount appropriated in
any fiscal year, the excess funds may be expended in accordance
with the provisions of this article. Any projects which the
authority identified and announced for funding on or before the
first day of August, one thousand nine hundred ninety-five, or
identified and announced for funding on or before the
thirty-first day of December, one thousand nine hundred
ninety-five, shall be funded by the authority in an amount which
is not less than the amount specified when the project was
identified and announced.
(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage county
boards to explore and consider arrangements with other counties
that may facilitate the highest and best use of all available
funds, which may result in improved transportation arrangements
for students, or which otherwise may create efficiencies for county boards and the students. In order to address the intent
of the Legislature contained in this subsection, the authority
shall grant preference to those projects which involve
multicounty arrangements as the authority shall determine
reasonable and proper.
(l) County boards shall submit all designs for construction
of new school buildings to the school building authority for
review and approval prior to preparation of final bid documents:
Provided, That a vendor who has been debarred pursuant to the
provisions of article four-c, chapter twelve of this code may not
bid on or be awarded a contract under this article.
CHAPTER 18B. HIGHER EDUCATION.
ARTICLE 5. HIGHER EDUCATION BUDGETS AND EXPENDITURES.
§18B-5-5. Prequalification disclosure by vendors; register of
vendors; exceptions; suspension of vendors.
(a) Every person, firm or corporation selling or offering to
sell to the governing boards, upon competitive bids or otherwise,
any materials, equipment or supplies in excess of fifteen
thousand dollars shall comply with all of the provisions of
section twelve, article three, chapter five-a of this code and
shall file with the director of the purchasing division of the
state of West Virginia the affidavit required herein in that section: Provided, That every such person, firm or corporation
who is presently in compliance with said that section shall may
not be required to requalify thereunder under that section to be
able to transact business with the governing boards.
(b) Any person, firm or corporation failing or refusing to
comply with said the said statute as herein required shall be by
this section is ineligible to sell or offer to sell commodities
or printing to the governing boards as hereinafter set forth in
this section: Provided, That any person suspended under the
provisions of section thirty-nine, article three, chapter five-a
of this code shall may not be eligible to sell or offer to sell
commodities or printing to the governing boards: Provided,
however, That the governing boards shall have the power and
authority to may suspend, for a period not to exceed one year,
the right and privilege of a person to bid on purchases of the
governing boards when there is reason to believe that such that
person has violated any of the provisions in sections four
through seven of this article or the rules of the governing
boards pursuant thereto. Every person whose right to bid has
been so suspended shall be notified thereof of the suspension by
a letter posted by registered mail containing the reason for such the suspension and shall have has the right to have the
appropriate governing board's action reviewed in accordance with
section forty, article three, chapter five-a of this code:
Provided further, That a vendor who has been debarred pursuant to
the provisions of article four-c, chapter twelve of this code may
not bid on or be awarded a contract under this article.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to provide procedures and
guidelines concerning the debarment of vendors which contract to
supply goods or services to the state or its subdivisions.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken
from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language
that would be added.
§§12-4C is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring
have been omitted.