For your assigned sections, review the
request for proposal (RFP)
. Assume your organization requested you to review the RFP for clarity and content. Identify three areas that are well-developed and appropriate for the RFP and explain why you chose those three areas. Identify three areas that you are unfamiliar with the terminology or feel the RFP is unclear or incomplete and explain why you chose those three areas. For your assigned section(s), develop three sample criteria for differentiating vendor responses to the RFP.
**** Option 2: Section 3 (3.1 through 3.2.16)
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New York State
Office for People With Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD)
Division of Service Delivery
Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP)
ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD
Prepared by:
Assistant Deputy Commissioner
NYS OFFICE FOR PEOPLE WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES
Division of Service Delivery
44 Holland Avenue
Albany, NY 12229
Revised October 15, 2014.
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Table of Contents
Section 1: Overview ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 6
1.1 Purpose …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 6
1.2 Background …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 6
1.3 Current Technology Environment …………………………………………………………………………………. 7
Section 2: Procurement Information and Requirements ………………………………………………………………………………. 10
2.1 Title of the RFP …………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 10
2.2 Issuing Agency ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 10
2.3 Contract Duration …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 10
2.4 Closing Date for Bidders’ Questions ………………………………………………………………………………. 10
2.5 Bidders Conference ……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 10
2.6 Date for Response to Questions ……………………………………………………………………………………… 10
2.7 Primary Point of Contact ………………………………………………………………………………………………. 11
2.8 Procurement Timetable …………………………………………………………………………………………………. 12
2.9 Letters of Intent …………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 12
2.10 Proposal Delivery Instructions ……………………………………………………………………………………….. 13
2.11 Late Bids ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 13
2.12 Bidder Covenant …………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 14
2.13 Offeror/ Vendor Presentations ……………………………………………………………………………………….. 14
2.14 OPWDD Rights Declaration ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 14
2.15 Right to Information ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… 14
2.16 Incurred Costs ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 16
2.17 Content of Proposals ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16
2.18 Period of Validity ………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 16
2.19 Public Information Requirements ………………………………………………………………………………….. 16
2.20 Notification of Award ……………………………………………………………………………………………………. 16
2.21 Debriefing Procedures …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16
2.22 Prime Contractor Responsibilities ………………………………………………………………………………….. 17
2.23 Contract ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 17
2.24 Award Contract in Event of Unsuccessful Negotiation ……………………………………………………. 17
2.25 Federal Requirements ……………………………………………………………………………………………………. 17
2.26 Multi-Agency and Local Human Services District/County Use ………………………………………… 19
2.27 Order of Precedence ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… 19
2.28 Contacts with Employees ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 19
2.29 Public Officers Law……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 19
2.30 Omnibus Procurement Act …………………………………………………………………………………………….. 19
2.31 Information Technology Services Review ……………………………………………………………………….. 20
2.32 Procedure for Handling of Protests/Appeals of Bid Specifications and Proposed Awards …. 20
2.33 Reservation of Rights and Responsibilities of the OPWDD ……………………………………………… 21
2.34 Procurement Activity Prior to Final Protest Activity ………………………………………………………. 21
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2.35 Record Retention of Bid Protests ……………………………………………………………………………………. 22
2.36 Information Security Breach and Notification Act ………………………………………………………….. 22
2.37 New York State Sales and Compensating Use Taxes ……………………………………………………….. 22
2.38 Vendor Responsibility ……………………………………………………………………………………………………. 22
2.39 Suspension of Work (for Non-Responsibility) …………………………………………………………………. 23
2.40 Termination (for Non-Responsibility) …………………………………………………………………………….. 23
2.41 Workers’ Compensation Contract Requirements …………………………………………………………… 23
2.42 Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (MWBE) …………………………………………. 23
2.43 MWBE Reporting Requirements and Forms ………………………………………………………………….. 24
2.44 Vendor Responsibility Status …………………………………………………………………………………………. 24
2.45 Tax Provisions ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 24
2.46 Security Breach Notification ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 25
2.47 Termination ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 25
2.48 Contractor Transition Responsibilities …………………………………………………………………………… 26
Section 3. Project scope ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 27
3.1 Functions ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 27
3.2 Electronic Health Record. ……………………………………………………………………………………………… 27
3.2.1 Data integration from existing systems. …………………………………………………………………. 28
3.2.2 Assessments. ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 28
3.2.3 Electronic Individualized Service Plan (eISP). ………………………………………………………. 30
3.2.4 Service Monitoring and Recording. ………………………………………………………………………. 30
3.2.5 Self-Directed Care and Portal. ……………………………………………………………………………… 31
3.2.6 Quality Assurance Activities. ………………………………………………………………………………… 31
3.2.7 Financial Tracking and Billing. …………………………………………………………………………….. 31
3.2.8 Analytical and Reporting Requirements. ………………………………………………………………. 32
3.2.9 Federally Certified Medical Electronic Health Record. ………………………………………….. 32
3.2.10 HIPAA Security and Confidentiality. ……………………………………………………………………. 32
3.2.11 System Performance. …………………………………………………………………………………………. 33
3.2.12 System Interoperability Requirements. …………………………………………………………………….. 33
3.2.14 Mandatory Deliverable 1: System Modifications and Acceptance Testing. …………………. 34
3.2.16 Mandatory Deliverable 3: Successful Full Implementation (Full Rollout). ……………… 35
3.3 Data Conversion Requirements. …………………………………………………………………………………….. 38
3.4 Development Lifecycle. ………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 38
3.5 Implementation Plan. …………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 39
3.6 Training Plan. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 39
3.7 System Maintenance and Help Desk Support. ………………………………………………………………… 40
3.8 Additional Services Change Orders: ………………………………………………………………………………. 41
3.9 Change Order Project Schedule. ……………………………………………………………………………………. 41
3.10 Issuance of Change Orders ……………………………………………………………………………………………. 41
3.11 Testing and Acceptance. ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 42
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3.12 Virus Warranty. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 43
3.13 Date/Time Warranty. …………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 43
3.14 Vulnerability Assessment ………………………………………………………………………………………………. 43
3.15 Penalties for vulnerabilities. …………………………………………………………………………………………… 43
3.16 Penalties for System Downtime and Incident Resolution. ………………………………………………… 44
3.17 Dispute Procedure …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 44
Section 4. MANDATORY BIDDER REQUIREMENTS ……………………………………………………………………………….. 45
4.1 Qualifications of Prospective Bidders. ……………………………………………………………………………. 45
4.2 Structure of Bid. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 45
4.3 Non-responsive determination. ………………………………………………………………………………………. 45
Section 5. COVER LETTER SUBMISSION ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 46
5.1 Cover Letter Requirement. ……………………………………………………………………………………………. 46
5.2 Check List of Submission Requirements. ……………………………………………………………………….. 47
Section 6. TECHNICAL PROPOSAL SUBMISSION ………………………………………………………………………………….. 48
6.1 Technical Proposal. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 48
6.1.1 Bidder Experience and Qualifications …………………………………………………………………… 48
6.1.2 Application Processing Capabilities and Proposed Solution …………………………………… 49
6.1.3 Proposed Implementation Plan …………………………………………………………………………….. 50
6.1.4 Training Plan ………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 51
Section 7. COST PROPOSAL REQUIREMENTS………………………………………………………………………………………… 53
7.1 Cost Proposal ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 53
7.2 Most Favored Nation Clause: ………………………………………………………………………………………… 53
7.3 Extension of Use (Piggybacking): …………………………………………………………………………………… 53
Section 8. EVALUATION OF PROPOSALS ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 54
8.1 Evaluation Method. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 54
8.2 Evaluation Process. ……………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 54
8.3 Level 1: Mandatory Requirements. ……………………………………………………………………………….. 54
8.4 Level 2: Technical Evaluation. ……………………………………………………………………………………….. 54
8.4.1 Bidder’s Experience and Qualifications. …………………………………………………………………. 55
8.4.2 Effectiveness of Proposed Project Application Solution in Meeting OPWDD’s Needs. … 55
8.4.3 Proposed Implementation Plan. ……………………………………………………………………………… 55
8.4.4 Training Proposal ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 56
8.5 Level 3: Cost Evaluation ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 56
8.6 Level 4: Oral Presentation …………………………………………………………………………………………….. 56
8.7 Tie Bids …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 56
Section 9. CONTRACT AWARD ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 58
9.1 Period of Contract Award. …………………………………………………………………………………………….. 58
9.2 Contract Renewal. …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 58
9.3 Notification of Award. …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 58
9.4 Debriefing Unsuccessful Bidders. …………………………………………………………………………………… 58
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9.5 Expenses Prior Contract. ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 58
9.6 Contract Negotiations and Approval. …………………………………………………………………………….. 58
9.7 Rights to Materials Produced. ……………………………………………………………………………………….. 58
APPENDIX A …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 59
APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 68
ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT ………………………………………………………………………………………. 71
Appendix B ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 82
Appendix C ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 87
Appendix D …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 88
Appendix E …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 90
Appendix F …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 91
Appendix G ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 92
Appendix H ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 93
Appendix I ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 94
Section 10. ATTACHMENTS ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 99
Attachment 1……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 100
Attachment 2……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 101
Attachment 3……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 102
Attachment 4……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 128
Attachment 5……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 129
Attachment 6……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 134
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Section 1: Overview
1.1 Purpose
The New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD) is seeking proposals
for a Vendor–hosted automated electronic health record for OPWDD’s state-run and operated residential,
clinic, and day service systems. Proposals are limited to Bidders with existing comprehensive electronic
heath record systems that:
Serve the unique needs of individuals with developmental disabilities.
Are federally certified as meeting federal meaningful use (stage one and stage two) standards or
are seeking federal certification.
Have experience hosting an Electronic Health Record (EHR) application.
Has been successfully implemented in at least one other organization serving individuals with
developmental disabilities.
Can be accessed by employees, individuals/families receiving services, and other healthcare
providers.
The successful Bidder will be responsible for software customization, data conversion, maintenance, and
OPWDD staff training in the use of the application. It is anticipated that OPWDD will implement the
system initially in Region 3 (see http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211 ). This initial implementation in
only Region 3 will be the pilot phase which will provide an opportunity to identify and remediate any
potential problems or issues related to system implementation. Upon successful completion of the pilot
phase, the Bidder will phase in implementation at remaining sites across New York State.
All data accessed under the contract with the successful Bidder must remain in the United States.
1.2 Background
The New York State Office for People with Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD) is a New York State
executive agency responsible for the provision, regulation and oversight of services to New York citizens
with developmental disabilities. Individuals served by OPWDD have a documented history of
experiencing diagnoses which could include, but are not necessarily limited to, intellectual disabilities,
cerebral palsy, epilepsy, neurological impairments, or autism spectrum disorders.
OPWDD operates as either a direct service provider through state operations or oversees and monitors
services delivered by an extensive network of more than 800 not-for-profit service providers who employ
more than 70,000 people. More than 126,000 New York citizens are served by either state operated,
voluntary, or the combined public/private service system. OPWDD has extensive investment in
stakeholder groups comprised of self-advocates, families, advocates, state and local human service
agencies, state and local government, and the business community. It is overseen by a host of federal,
state, and other oversight agencies.
The OPWDD State Operations system is divided into six regions, each having two districts with the
exception of the Region 5 which covers the New York City area (see
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211 ). There are approximately 22,000 OPWDD employees, of which
approximately 50-75% will directly access and utilize an EHR, although employee user roles and access
authorization will vary by job function.
As a direct care provider, OPWDD performs a major role within New York’s service system.
Approximately 34,000 individuals receive services solely from OPWDD and an additional 28,000
individuals’ services plans involve both OPWDD and voluntary agency programs. Settings in which
OPWDD services are provided include:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211
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Home: Many individuals served by OPWDD chose to live at home which could include their
own home, apartment, or the home of a family member. Services and supports are placed into the
home so the person can live as independently as possible. The types of services and supports
provided vary and are based on the individual’s needs.
Family Care- Certified Private Home: Individuals may choose to live in a home that is certified
through OPWDD. Services can be provided by a family member or a house parent with other
providers offering supports and services as needed.
Supervised Community Residence: In this environment individuals have access to a supervised
and supportive environment that can include staff available up to 24 hours a day depending on the
individual’s need. The residence offers a “home like” atmosphere with supports offered so
individuals can access independent and community-integrated living. The extent of the supports
provided varies depending on the individual’s needs.
Individualized Residential Alternative (IRA): Individuals served through an IRA reside in a
community home where they receive room, board, and individualized services. These programs
offer 24 hour staff support and supervision.
Intermediate Care Facility (ICF): Individuals served through an ICF typically cannot live
independently and therefore have a need for supervision, structure, and support that is more
intensive than in other settings. Individuals receive a variety of therapies and day services as well
as 24 hour staff support and supervision. Intensive clinical and direct support services are
provided to assist with adaptive, medical, and behavioral needs.
Article 16 Clinics: Article 16 Clinics provide a wide array of clinical services to individuals.
Clinical services could include rehabilitation/habilitation services, medical/dental services,
pharmacy, medication management, and health care services which could include nursing,
dietetics and nutrition, occupational and physical therapy (OT/PT), speech and language
pathology, audiology, podiatry, psychology, and rehabilitative counseling. Clinical services
support an individual so they can live independently and remain in their current community based
residential setting.
Day Habilitation: Day Habilitation and day services are offered to individuals who may or may
not reside in a residential setting. Services support the skills of self-help and advocacy,
socialization, adaptive skills, communication, travel to access the community, leisure and
recreation, adult education, etc. Services support independent living and community inclusion.
Prevocational skills, supported employment, and general day habilitation services can be
supported in this setting.
The complexities of managing this vast system, even in a relatively static environment, are significant.
Adding to these complexities, OPWDD is committed to transformational goals designed to make its
outcomes, supports and services, business processes, administrative structure, and decision-making
capabilities more person-centric and streamlined. These transformation goals involve transforming the
traditional service delivery model to a system with a heightened ability to offer more opportunities for
self-direction including; self-directed living arrangements, allowing the individual and circle of support to
make choices related to the types of interventions and services utilized, designing individualized and
customized services, providing individuals opportunities to be part of and contribute to their community,
and the provision of services that are community-integrated.
1.3 Current Technology Environment
Currently, record keeping is primarily a paper-intensive, manual effort. There is inconsistency in the
type, form, and format of records across state-operated services. Personal computers are used for word
processing and, to a limited extent, for development of Microsoft ACCESS applications and various data
Page 8
collection forms that are then printed and stored in an individual’s record. These ACCESS applications
and forms may differ from region to region and can vary by employee.
Standardized throughout OPWDD programs are the following OPWDD software applications and tools.
The OPWDD Billing System (TABS) generates electronic Medicaid claims to the fiscal agent
for the New York State Department of Health (DOH). The TABS tracks the claims submitted to
the fiscal agent, the Computer Science Corporation (CSC), and the payment information related
to those claims. This all-Payor Billing System includes a Financial Eligibility Database,
automated Payor Selection functionality, Liability Distribution module, and customized Billing
Account Management software. The system also generates payment claims to third party insurers
and charges to State appropriations. Information from this system also feeds approximately 40
sub-systems, including provider directories, quality assurance, incident reporting, etc. The
proposed solution must be able to interface in near real-time with the OPWDD TABS, a legacy
application performing numerous business operations and running on the Open VMS 8.4
Operating System, utilizing an Intersystem Caché 2013.1 database.
The OPWDD CHOICES System houses a wide range of information about each service
recipient. Information is entered into CHOICES around the initial time of assessment and
information is updated periodically over the course of time. The type of information housed in
CHOICES includes, but is not limited to, eligibility information and criteria, findings from an
assessment of needs and identification of services that support these needs, and an individual’s
service plan which outlines supports and services that will be made available to help the
individual to live as independently as possible. Information is entered into CHOICES through
data entry into text fields or through the storage of scanned documents relating to an individual’s
service plan.
The Incident Report and Management Application (IRMA) is used to track incidents that
occur at both state-operated and voluntary programs. IRMA is a secure internet application that
captures incidents or events, such as elopements or occurrences that result in individuals being
displaced from their living environment. Agencies, agency directors, and OPWDD central office
incident management and quality monitoring staff monitor IRMA data to ensure that incidents are
responded to appropriately and to support quality assurance. Recent developments also enable
IRMA to communicate with an incident tracking system utilized by the Justice Center. This
enables OPWDD and the Justice Center to efficiently transmit data on incidents involving
allegations of abuse or neglect. The Restrictive Intervention Application (RIA) is a component
of IRMA and tracks the use of restrictive interventions (e.g. restrictive physical interventions, use
of emergency medications (STAT), use of as needed medications (PRN), and time out). RIA
provides a means for OPWDD state operated and voluntary providers to track and trend the use of
restrictive interventions for quality assurance purposes. It is critical that there is interoperability
between RIA and the EHR to avoid the need for duplicative entry of data. If the use of a
restrictive intervention is entered into the EHR, this data must be populated into RIA. However,
OPWDD does not anticipate replacing IRMA or RIA at this time.
The Medical Appointment Tracking System (MATS) is a browser-based appointment tracking
system. The system provides nursing staff, and other relevant users like a house manager, with
reminders or alerts to make appointments for the individual, reminders to keep an appointment,
and offers reports pertaining to appointments attended and/or needed. The system also supports
appointment tracking as nurses can enter scheduled appointments, modify existing appointments,
and maintain a consultation form that staff and the individual bring to appointments to support
continuity of care. The EHR must provide a mechanism to track medical appointments and
provide a “face sheet” that includes the individual’s current diagnosis, medical needs, medication
orders and prescriptions, allergies, etc. to ensure that relevant health information is communicated
to care providers who do not work for OPWDD.
Page 9
In addition to the above referenced applications, OPWDD’s technical infrastructure consists of a variety
of operating systems, databases and applications that use multiple interfaces.
Architecture:
o Systems: Intel-based, AIX, Tru64, Linux, HP-UX, VMS clusters, VMS stand alone and a
VMS Test Network within an internal network and external DMZ zones
o Backups: VMS tapesys, Unix sysback, Veritas and Oracle RMAN
o Robotics: StorageTek, IBM, VMS and Multiple standalone backup storage devices
Applications:
o Oracle Forms 9i
o InterSystems Caché /MUMPS
o Java non-proprietary jsp /servlets
o Various 3
rd
Party
Products: OPWDD has a broad range of products, some of which include the following:
o Oracle 9i, 10g, 11g databases, SQLServer 2005, 2008, and 2008R2
o Oracle 10g Application Servers
o Sun One and IIS web servers
o Outlook Exchange; Pathworks File Share
o Microsoft Exchange
o Intersystem Cachè database (MUMPS programming language)
o LDAP and Active Directory
o Crystal Reports
o McAfee
o Citrix
o VMWare
o Microsoft Dynamics
o WebSphere 8.5
o Adobe Professional
Page 10
Section 2: Procurement Information and Requirements
2.1 Title of the RFP
This RFP shall be identified as the NYS OPWDD Electronic Health Record (EHR) proposal.
2.2 Issuing Agency
This RFP is being issued by the New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities
(OPWDD).
2.3 Contract Duration
This Agreement shall commence upon the approval of the New York State Comptroller’s Office (OSC)
except that, by mutual agreement, the parties may, retroactively or prospectively as the case may be,
delay or advance the starting date by a period of up to thirty calendar days subject to OSC approval and
shall continue for the implementation period plus five (5) years, subject to the termination provisions
contained in the document titled Standard Clauses for New York State Contracts (Appendix A) of this
RFP and section 2.47 titled Termination. A CPI-U adjustment, U.S. City Average, all items, index
based on the prior contract year, annual September to September, may be requested by the vendor for
years 3,4, and 5 of this contract. The adjustment must not exceed 3% annually, and must be requested
by the contractor.
The OPWDD has the option, at its sole discretion and subject to the approval of the Office of the State
Comptroller, to extend the date of this Agreement for up to one five (5) year period, at which time a
CPI-U adjustment, U.S. City Average, all items, index based on prior contract year, annual September
to September can be made available upon the request of the contractor. The adjustment must not exceed
3% annually, and must be requested by the contractor.
2.4 Closing Date for Bidders’ Questions
Specific questions concering the RFP shall be submitted by letter or email to the contact listed in Section
2.7 prior to the conference so that the questions can be answered at the conference to the degree possible.
Each inquiry should cite the relevant proposal section and paragraph number. No telephone calls will be
accepted. Written questions will be accepted until 5:30PM on September 26, 2014.
Additional questions will be permitted at the conference. Answers to questions submitted and questions
from the conference will be posted at:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
2.5 Bidders Conference
A mandatory Bidder’s conference is scheduled for October 6, 2014 and will take place at the NYS Office
for People With Developmental Disabilities, Central Office, 44 Holland Avenue, Room 4B, Albany, New
York at 9:00am. Bidders must attend this conference in person. Bidder attendance is mandatory;
attendance will be taken.
2.6 Date for Response to Questions
The answers to all questions will be in the form of a formal addendum which will be annexed to and
become part of this RFP and any ensuing contract. All answers to questions of a substantive nature, as
well as copies of the questions, shall be posted to OPWDD’s internet site at
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities The date for OPWDD’s
response to questions is October 15, 2014 close of business.
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
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2.7 Primary Point of Contact
New York State Finance Law (SFL) §139-j restricts contact by Vendors with any governmental entity
regarding procurement contracts. Subject to certain exceptions set forth in SFL §139-j (3), contacts
between Vendors and governmental entity personnel, other than the governmental entity’s designated
contact person(s), are prohibited during the restricted period of the governmental procurement.
Pursuant to State Finance Law §§139-j and 139-k, this procurement includes and imposes certain
restrictions on communications between OPWDD and a Vendor during the procurement process. A
Vendor is restricted from making contacts from the earliest notice of intent to solicit bids through final
award and approval of the procurement contract by the Office of the State Comptroller (“restricted
period”) to other than designated staff unless it is a contact that is included among certain statutory
exceptions set forth in State Finance Law §139-j (3) (a). Designated staff, as of the date hereof, is
identified in this RFP. OPWDD employees are required to obtain certain information when contacted
during the restricted period and make a determination of the responsibility of the Vendor pursuant to these
two statutes. Certain findings of non responsibility can result in rejection for contract award. In the
event of two findings within a four-year period, the Vendor is debarred from obtaining governmental
Procurement contracts. Further information about these requirements can be found on the Office of
General Services (OGS) website:
http://www.ogs.ny.gov/aboutOgs/regulations/defaultAdvisoryCouncil.html
State Finance Law also requires that every procurement over $50,000 include a certification by the
Vendor that all information provided to the agency is complete, true, and accurate with regard to prior
non-responsibility determinations within the past four years based on (i) impermissible contacts or other
violations of State Finance Law Section 139-j, or (ii) the intentional provision of false or incomplete
information to a governmental entity.
The Primary Point of Contact for technical questions regarding this procurement:
Mr. Michael Juzwak
New York State Office of Information Technology Services
500A Balltown Road
Schenectady, NY 12304
E-mail Address: Michael.Juzwak@its.ny.gov
The Primary Point of Contact for clinical, program or service delivery related questions regarding this
procurement:
Dr. Virginia Scott-Adams
New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities
Division of Service Delivery
44 Holland Avenue, Fourth Floor
Albany, New York 12229-0001
E-mail Address: Virginia.L.ScottAdams@opwdd.ny.gov
The Primary Point of Contact for contract related questions regarding this procurement:
Ms. Lisa F. Davis
New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities
Contract Management Unit
44 Holland Avenue, Third Floor
Albany, New York 12229-0001
Email: Lisa.F.Davis@opwdd.ny.gov
Questions concerning this RFP must be received by OPWDD in accordance with the timetable included
in this RFP (see section 2.8). All questions must be submitted via electronic mail, or standard US
http://www.ogs.ny.gov/aboutOgs/regulations/defaultAdvisoryCouncil.html
mailto:Michael.Juzwak@its.ny.gov
mailto:Virginia.L.ScottAdams@opwdd.ny.gov
mailto:Lisa.F.Davis@opwdd.ny.gov
Page 12
mail, to the appropriate Technical, Program and/ or Contract contact as stipulated above. Each question
should, to the degree possible, cite the specific RFP section and paragraph number to which it refers. The
OPWDD will distribute its official answers to the questions by the date indicated in the Procurement
Timetable, see below, to all prospective Vendors having filed a Letter of Intent.
The terms and conditions contained in Appendix A – Standard Clauses for New York State Contracts
attached herein and the requirements and specifications outlined in this RFP provide the terms and
conditions for such contract. Vendors are strongly encouraged to conduct a thorough review of the
Standard Clauses for New York State Contracts and the requirements and specifications set forth in this
RFP. Vendors MUST raise any potential exceptions to the terms and conditions, specifications, and
requirements during the Questions and Answer phase of the procurement. Vendors submitting proposals
that contain material changes to the terms and conditions, specifications, and/or requirements set forth
throughout this RFP may be disqualified. The State reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to determine
materiality of the Vendors stated exceptions.
2.8 Procurement Timetable
Release of RFP September 3, 2014
Letters of Intent September 26, 2014
Closing Date for Submission of Written Questions September 26, 2014
Bidders Conference October 6, 2014
Official Answers to Written Questions Posted October 15, 2014
Closing Date for Receipt of Proposals/Bid Opening 3PM – Nov. 3, 2014
Proposal Evaluation**
o Technical and Cost Evaluation Nov. 4 –Nov. 14, 2014
o Oral Presentations/Interviews Nov. 17 – Nov. 25, 2014
Preliminary Contract Award Announcement** December 5, 2014
Estimated Control Agency Approvals** February 2, 2015
Contract Start Date** February 2, 2015
Pilot Start Date** June 1, 2015
Successful Pilot Completion** September 2, 2015
Successful Full System Implementation** September 2, 2016
**NOTE: These dates are target dates and are subject to change at OPWDD’s sole discretion.
2.9 Letters of Intent
Any Vendor intending to submit a proposal in response to this RFP may submit a letter of intent (see
Attachment 1). If a letter is submitted, it must be submitted to Virginia Scott-Adams, as identified in
Section 2.7.
The letter of intent must reference the title of this RFP and must be submitted in accordance with the
timetable in Section 2.8, Procurement Timetable. The letter of intent should provide the current
mailing address, e-mail address, and telephone number(s) for the person who will be the Vendor’s
designated point of contact throughout the duration of this RFP. Vendors must notify Virginia Scott-
Adams of any and all changes relative to the point of contact provided in the letter of intent. OPWDD
is not responsible for any miscommunications that occur throughout this RFP process as a result of a
Vendor’s failure to provide notification of changes in the point of contact information.
Subsequent to the date for submission of letters of intent, prospective Vendors who do not submit
letters of intent will not be considered “Vendors/ Offerors” as that term is used herein and will not be
advised of subsequent changes in the scope of this RFP. Submitting a letter of intent is required in
order for a prospective Vendor to submit a proposal. A prospective Vendor which elects not to submit
a proposal but wishes to be kept advised of subsequent developments in this procurement (including
changes to the RFP) can make arrangements in such regard by submission of a written request to Lisa
F. Davis (see Section 2.7).
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Notification of amendments to the RFP and official responses to vendor questions will be posted on
the OPWDD website at:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
2.10 Proposal Delivery Instructions
Submission of the Bidder’s proposal, with submission of a cover letter, shall be construed by OPWDD as
the Bidder’s acceptance of the procedures, evaluation criteria, and other administrative instructions in the
RFP.
Bidders must submit one (1) original and seven (7) copies of their proposal and the required Appendices
and Exhibits. The original and each copy of the Cover Letter must have original signatures. In addition,
(2) two electronic copies of only the Technical Proposal should be submitted on USB flash drives (one
copy on each drive) in a Microsoft Office compatible format.
A proposal must consist of the following separate documents:
Cover Letter: (see Section 5 of this RFP).
Technical Proposal: (See Section 6 of this RFP). The cover of each copy is to clearly identify
the Bidder’s name, the title of this Request for Proposal and the wording, “Technical Proposal”.
Cost Proposal: (See Section 7 of this RFP). All copies of the Cost Proposal must be packaged
separately from copies of the Technical Proposal and labeled “Cost Proposal”.
Complete proposals must be submitted by 3:00PM eastern daylight time on November 3, 2014
addressed to:
Ms. Lisa F. Davis
New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities
Contract Management Unit
44 Holland Avenue, Third Floor
Albany, New York 12229-0001
Complete proposals must have a label on the outside of the package that states the following:
PROPOSAL ENCLOSED (Bold, Large Print, All capital letters);
TITLE OF THIS RFP;
BIDDER’S NAME AND ADDRESS; and
PROPOSAL SUBMISSION DATE.
If using a commercial delivery company that requires the use of their shipping package or envelope, the
proposal must be placed within a sealed envelope labeled as detailed above and this envelope must be put
into the commercial delivery company’s envelope. This will ensure that the proposal is not prematurely
opened. Non-Compliance with the submission of proposals as required by this section may result in
disqualification of the offering.
Bids submitted via Facsimile or E-mail will NOT be accepted.
All proposals and accompanying documentation become the property of OPWDD and ordinarily will not
be returned.
2.11 Late Bids
Proposals not received by the time indicated in Section 2.8 titled Procurement Timetable may not be
opened at the sole discretion of OPWDD.
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
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2.12 Bidder Covenant
In submitting a proposal, the Bidder covenants that they will not make any claims for, or have any right
to, damages for any misinterpretation or misunderstanding of the specifications or because of any lack of
information.
2.13 Offeror/ Vendor Presentations
Oral presentations will be required as outlined in Section 8 of this RFP.
2.14 OPWDD Rights Declaration
The OPWDD reserves the right to:
Reject any or all proposals received in response to this RFP.
Amend, withdraw or reissue a modified version of this RFP.
NOTE: Any such modification issued on or before the due date for proposals shall go to all
entities that have requested a copy of this RFP and/or submitted a letter of intent; after that date
(or an amended date, as the case may be), notification will be only to Vendors who have
submitted proposals or letters of intent. The OPWDD’s right to issue modifications of this RFP
permits any addition or deletion of requirements as the OPWDD may deem appropriate.
Utilize any and all ideas submitted in the proposals received, unless legal patent or proprietary
rights cover those ideas. Selection or rejection of any proposal does not affect this right.
Disqualify any Vendor whose conduct or proposal fails to conform to the requirements of this
RFP.
Direct any Vendor, or number of Vendors, to submit proposal modifications addressing
subsequent RFP amendments.
Accept all or part of a selected Vendor’s proposal.
Eliminate any requirement(s) unmet by all Vendors upon notice to all parties submitting
proposals.
Make typographical corrections to proposals, with the concurrence of the Vendor.
Correct computational errors with the written concurrence of the Vendor.
Waive procedural technicalities in proposals received, upon notification to the Vendor.
Change any of the scheduled dates, including start dates, stated herein upon notice to the
Vendors.
Request Vendors to clarify their proposal and/or submit additional information pertaining to their
proposal.
Re-solicit offers from the vendor community by re-publishing and re-advertising this RFP at any
time.
The OPWDD shall have unlimited rights to disclose or duplicate, for any purpose whatsoever, all
information or other work product developed, derived, documented or furnished by the Vendor
under any Agreement resulting from this RFP.
2.15 Right to Information
1. Except as otherwise provided herein, the ideas, concepts, know-how or techniques developed
during the course of this Agreement by the selected vendor/contractor’s personnel, or jointly by the
selected vendor/contractor and OPWDD, can be used by either party in any way it may deem
appropriate.
2. Each invention, discovery, or improvement and specifically, new software programs and associated
documentation as well as modification, improvements and enhancements to existing software which
includes ideas, concepts, know-how or techniques developed in the course of this Agreement shall be
treated in accordance with the following general principles:
Page 15
a. If a modification, improvement or enhancement to software generally licensed by the
Contractor to end-users occurs, then such modifications, improvements, and enhancements
shall be the property of the Contractor and the Contractor hereby grants to OPWDD a non-
transferable (except to sibling State agencies to OPWDD), non-exclusive, irrevocable and
royalty-free license to use and any necessary software or instruction manuals.
b. If a modification, improvement, or enhancement to application software which has not been
licensed to OPWDD by the Contractor occurs and is used by the Contractor in its provision of
services, then such modifications, improvements and enhancements shall be the property of the
Contractor.
c. If a modification, improvement or enhancement to application software which is owned by
OPWDD and has been licensed to the Contractor occurs, then such modifications,
improvements, and enhancements shall be jointly owned, without right of accounting.
d. If a modification, improvement or enhancement to application software developed
exclusively by the Contractor for use by OPWDD occurs, then such modifications,
improvements, and enhancements shall be jointly owned without right of accounting. In all
other cases, such modification, improvements and enhancements shall remain the sole property
of the Contractor.
e. If a new application software program for OPWDD with development costs partially funded
by the Contractor occurs, then such application software program shall be jointly owned,
without right of accounting.
f. If a derivative of existing applications software, that is the property of the Contractor with
development costs funded in whole or in part by OPWDD occurs, then such derivative
application software shall be jointly owned, without right of accounting.
g. If a new application program for OPWDD which has been entirely funded by OPWDD
occurs, then such new application software shall be the property of OPWDD.
h. If a new application software program for OPWDD with development costs partially funded
by the Contractor or derived from the existing application software which is the property of the
Contractor occurs, then such applications software program shall be jointly owned, without
right of accounting.
3. Notwithstanding the provisions set forth above, the parties agree that the United States Department
of Health and Human Services shall be granted a royalty-free, non-exclusive and irrevocable license
to produce, publish or otherwise use such documents and software and to authorize others to do so for
government purposes to the extent that the services which resulted in the production of such
documents and software are Federally funded. The grant excludes the proprietary products,
documentation, materials and information (and derivative works thereto) of the Contractor, the
Contractor’s sub-contractors and third-party product providers.
4. OPWDD acknowledges that the provision of Contractor services under this Agreement does not
create a license by OPWDD to use any software generally licensed by the Contractor to end-users and
if any such software is to be used in connection with the provision of Services hereunder, a separate
license is necessary. Ownership of software modifications, improvements, and enhancements does
not create any interest in or right to use underlying software, absent ownership of the underlying
software or an express conveyance of rights or grant license from the party owning the underlying
software.
Page 16
5. The above provisions shall not preclude the Contractor from developing materials, including
software, which are similar to those furnished to OPWDD in the course of providing services under
this Agreement.
2.16 Incurred Costs
Neither the State of New York nor OPWDD is liable for any costs incurred by Vendors in the
preparation, production, and submission of the Bidder’s proposal. Neither the State of New York nor
OPWDD is liable for any costs incurred by Vendors/Bidder for the preparation or execution of any
activities including; but not limited to, any benchmark demonstration, simulation, or laboratory session
occurring prior to an approval of an executed contact by the Comptroller of the State of New York.
2.17 Content of Proposals
To be considered responsive, a Vendor must submit complete proposals that satisfy all the requirements
stated in this RFP. Proposals not conforming to the outline, content, and sequence requirements specified
in of this RFP may be rejected.
2.18 Period of Validity
The Vendor’s Proposal must include a statement as to the period during which the provisions of the
proposal will remain valid. A minimum of 270 calendar days are required from the Closing Date for
Receipt of Proposals as specified in this RFP.
2.19 Public Information Requirements
All of the proposals, upon submission, will become the property of the OPWDD. The OPWDD will have
the right to disclose all or any part of a proposal to public inspection based on its determination that
disclosure of all or any part of the proposal will serve the public interest. Prospective Vendors are further
advised that, except for trade secrets, other proprietary information and certain personnel information
(which the OPWDD has reserved the right to disclose), all parts of proposals must ultimately be disclosed
to those members of the general public making inquiry under the New York State Freedom of
Information Law (Public Officers Law, Article 6), although proposal contents cannot ordinarily be
disclosed by the OPWDD prior to bid award.
Should a Vendor wish to request exception from public access to information contained in its proposal,
the Vendor must specifically identify the information and explain in detail why public access to the
information would be harmful to the Vendor. Use of generic trade secret legends encompassing
substantial portions of the proposal or simple assertions of trade secret interest without substantive
explanation of the basis therefore will be regarded as nonresponsive to this requirement for specificity
and explanation. Information relating to Contractor price submissions, including commercial, book or list
pricing, applicable discounts or final bid price and like information, shall not be entitled to confidentiality
protection whether or not submitted or designated as proprietary to Contractor. Non-responsive requests
for exception from public access will not be considered by the OPWDD in the event a Freedom of
Information request for proposal information is received.
2.20 Notification of Award
After selection of the successful Vendor, all Vendors will be notified of the acceptance or rejection of
their proposals. News releases relating to this RFP or resulting contract shall not be made by any Vendor
or its agent without prior approval of OPWDD.
2.21 Debriefing Procedures
Upon OPWDD’s receipt of a written request within 30 calendar days of the award of this RFP, OPWDD
shall provide a debriefing to any unsuccessful Vendor that responded to this RFP regarding the reasons
that the proposal or bid submitted by the unsuccessful Bidder was not selected for an award. The
discussion will be limited to only the evaluation results as they apply to the proposal of the Bidder
receiving the debriefing.
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2.22 Prime Contractor Responsibilities
In the event the selected Vendor’s proposal includes the provision of goods or services by another firm or
manufacturer, it shall be mandatory for the selected Vendor to assume full responsibility for the delivery,
installation, maintenance and support services for such items described in the proposal. Should the
selected Vendor seek external financing, the State reserves the right to approve the assignment of the
contract for financing purposes. In any event, OPWDD will contract only with a Vendor, not the
Vendor’s financing institution or subcontractors. OPWDD shall consider the selected Vendor to be the
sole contactor with regard to all provisions of the contract resulting from this RFP.
Prior written approval by OPWDD shall be required for all subcontracts entered into by any Vendor
selected under this RFP. Copies of subcontracts must be supplied to OPWDD prior to their approval.
Any subcontract related to performance of the contract resulting from this RFP shall be subject to the
provisions of law set forth in Sections 220, 220-d, and 220-e of the Labor Law of the State of New York,
Articles 15 of the Executive Law of the State of New York, and to the provisions set forth in Appendix A
– Article 5 of this RFP.
2.23 Contract
The OPWDD will enter into a contract with the Vendor selected as a result of this RFP. Appendix A of
this RFP provides the terms and conditions of the Standard State contract. The proposal shall be
submitted with the understanding that only the acceptance in writing by a designated duly authorized
OPWDD representative with the approval of the Attorney General, the Office of the State Comptroller
and, when appropriate, the Division of the Budget shall constitute a contract between the Successful
Bidder and the State of New York.
2.24 Award Contract in Event of Unsuccessful Negotiation
Should OPWDD be unsuccessful in negotiating a contract with the selected Bidder within a reasonable
time frame as determined by OPWDD, then OPWDD may begin contract negotiations with the next
ranked Bidder in order to serve the best interest of the State of New York.
2.25 Federal Requirements
All contracts awarded by a recipient, including small purchases, shall contain the following provisions as
applicable where the cost of the contract is treated as a direct cost of an award:
1. Equal Employment Opportunity – All contracts shall contain a provision requiring compliance
with E.O. 11246, “Equal Employment Opportunity,” as amended by E.O. 11375, “Amending
Executive Order 11246 Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity,” and as supplemented by
regulations at 41 CFR part 60, “Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Equal
Employment Opportunity, Department of Labor.”
2. Copeland “Anti-Kickback” Act (18 U.S.C. § 874 and 40 U.S.C. § 276c) – All contracts and
subgrants in excess of $2,000 for construction or repair awarded by recipients and
subrecipients shall include a provision for compliance with the Copeland “Anti Kickback”
Act, 18 U.S.C. § 874, as supplemented by Department of Labor regulations, 29 CFR Part 3,
“Contractors and Subcontractors on Public Building or Public Work Financed in Whole or in
Part by Loans or Grants from the United States.” The Act provides that each contractor or
sub-recipient shall be prohibited from inducing, by any means, any person employed in the
construction, completion, or repair of public work, to give up any part of the compensation to
which he is otherwise entitled. The recipient shall report all suspected or reported violations
to the Federal awarding agency.
3. Davis-Bacon Act, as amended (40 U.S.C. §§ 276a to a-7) – When required by Federal program
legislation, all construction contracts awarded by the recipients and sub-recipients of more
than $2000 shall include a provision for compliance with the Davis-Bacon Act, 40 U.S.C. §§
276a to a-7, and as supplemented by Department of Labor regulations, 29 CFR part 5, “Labor
Page 18
Standards Provisions Applicable to Contracts Governing Federally Financed and Assisted
Construction.” Under this Act, contractors shall be required to pay wages to laborers and
mechanics at a rate not less than the minimum wages specified in a wage determination made
by the Secretary of Labor. In addition, contractors shall be required to pay wages not less than
once a week. The recipient shall place a copy of the current prevailing wage determination
issued by the Department of Labor in each solicitation and the award of a contract shall be
conditioned upon the acceptance of the wage determination. The recipient shall report all
suspected or reported violations to the HHS awarding agency.
4. Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (40 U.S.C. §§ 327-333) – Where applicable,
all contracts awarded by recipients in excess of $100,000 for construction contracts and for
other contracts that involve the employment of mechanics or laborers shall include a provision
for compliance with Sections 102 and 107 of the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards
Act, 40 U.S.C. §§ 327-333, as supplemented by Department of Labor regulations, 29 CFR
Part 5. Under Section 102 of the Act, each contractor shall be required to compute the wages
of every mechanic and laborer on the basis of a standard work week of 40 hours. Work in
excess of the standard work week is permissible provided that the worker is compensated at a
rate of not less than 1 1/2 times the basic rate of pay for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours
in the work week. Section 107 of the Act is applicable to construction work and provides that
no laborer or mechanic shall be required to work in surroundings or under working conditions
which are unsanitary, hazardous or dangerous. These requirements do not apply to the
purchases of supplies or materials or articles ordinarily available on the open market, or
contracts for transportation or transmission of intelligence.
5. Rights to Inventions Made Under a Contract or Agreement – Contracts or agreements for the
performance of experimental, developmental, or research work shall provide for the rights of
the Federal Government and the recipient in any resulting invention in accordance with 37
CFR Part 401. “Rights to Inventions Made by Nonprofit Organizations and Small Business
Firms Under Government Grants, Contracts and Cooperative Agreements,” and any further
implementing regulations issued by HHS.
6. Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 7401 et seq.) and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act as
amended (33 U.S.C. §§ 1251 et seq.) – Contracts and sub-grants of amounts in excess of
$100,000 shall contain a provision that requires the recipient to agree to comply with all
applicable standards, orders or regulations issued pursuant to the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. §§
7401 et seq., and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amended 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251 et
seq. Violations shall be reported to the HHS and the appropriate Regional Office of the
Environmental Protection Agency.
7. Byrd Anti-Lobbying Amendment (31 U.S.C. § 1352) -Contractors who apply or bid for an
award of more than $100,000 shall file the required certification. Each tier certifies to the tier
above that it will not and has not used Federal appropriated funds to pay any person or
organization for influencing or attempting to influence an officer or employee of any Federal
agency, a member of Congress, officer or employee of Congress, or an employee of a
member of Congress in connection with obtaining any Federal contract, grant or any other
award covered by 31 U.S.C. § 1352. Each tier shall also disclose any lobbying with non-
Federal funds that takes place in connection with obtaining any Federal award. Such
disclosures are forwarded from tier to tier up to the recipient. (See also 45 CFR Part 93).
8. Debarment and Suspension (E.O.s 12549 and 12689) – Certain contracts shall not be made to
parties listed on the nonprocurement portion of the General Services Administration’s “Lists of
Parties Excluded from Federal Procurement or Nonprocurement Programs” in accordance with
E.O.s 12549 and 12689, “Debarment and Suspension.” (See 45 CFR Part 76.) This list
contains the names of parties debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded by agencies, and
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contractors declared ineligible under statutory authority other than E.O. 12549. Contractors
with awards that exceed the simplified acquisition threshold shall provide the required
certification regarding their exclusion status and that of their principal prior to award.
2.26 Multi-Agency and Local Human Services District/County Use
Any contract entered into pursuant to an award resulting from this RFP shall contain a provision that
grants the option to extend the terms and conditions of such contract to any other State agency in New
York State as well as to the local social service districts in New York State providing human services.
See Appendix A – Standard Clauses for New York State Contracts in Appendix A1 -Contract Terms and
Conditions of this RFP.
2.27 Order of Precedence
In the event of a conflict between the terms of the contract (including any and all attachments thereto and
amendments thereof) the order of precedence shall be: (1) Appendix A- Standard Clauses for All
Contracts with New York State; (2) the contract and appendices; (3) This RFP; and (4) Bidder’s proposal.
2.28 Contacts with Employees
Prospective Vendors may not approach OPWDD personnel with offers of employment during the
procurement period. Any Vendor who is aware of an OPWDD employee who is considering
employment with the Vendor must advise Lisa F. Davis via e-mail forthwith (see Section 2.7 for contact
information).
2.29 Public Officers Law
All Vendors and their employees must be aware of, and comply with, the requirements of the New York
State Public Officers Law, and all other appropriate provisions of New York State Law and all resultant
codes, rules and regulations from State laws establishing the standards for business and professional
activities of State employees and governing the conduct of employees of firms, associations and
corporations in business with the State. In signing the proposal, each Vendor guarantees knowledge and
full compliance with those provisions for any dealings, transactions, sales, contracts, services, offers and
relationships involving the State and/or State employees. Failure to comply with those provisions may
result in disqualification from the bidding process and in civil or criminal proceedings as authorized by
law.
2.30 Omnibus Procurement Act
It is the policy of New York State to maximize opportunities for the participation of New York State
business enterprises, including minority and women-owned business enterprises as Bidders,
subcontractors, and suppliers on its procurement contracts.
Information on the availability of New York State subcontractors and suppliers is available from:
Empire State Development Corporation
Division for Small Business
30 N. Pearl Street
Albany, New York 12245
Phone: 1(800) 782-8369
http://www.esd.ny.gov
Bidders are hereby notified that if their principal place of business is located in a state that penalizes
New York State vendors, and if goods or services they offer will be substantially produced or
performed outside of New York State, the Omnibus Procurement Act 1994 amendments (Chapter 684,
Laws of 1994) require that they be denied placement on Bidders mailing lists and contracts for which
they would otherwise obtain.
http://www.esd.ny.gov/
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A directory of minority and women-owned business enterprises is available from:
Empire State Development Corporation
Minority and Women’s Business Development Division
30 N. Pearl Street
Albany, New York 12245
Phone: 1(800) 782-8369
http://www.esd.ny.gov
The Omnibus Procurement Act of 1992 requires that by signing a bid proposal, Contractors certify that
whenever the total bid amount is greater than one (1) million dollars:
1. The Contractor has made reasonable efforts to encourage the participation of New York State
Business Enterprises as suppliers and subcontractors on this project, and has retained the
documentation of these efforts to be provided upon request to the State.
2. The Contractor has complied with the Federal Equal Opportunity Act of 1972 (P.L. 92-261), as
amended.
3. The Contractor agrees to make reasonable efforts to provide notification to New York State
residents of employment opportunities on this project through listing any such positions with the
Job Service Division of the New York State Department of Labor, or providing such notification
in such manner as is consistent with existing collective bargaining contracts or agreements. The
Contractor agrees to document these efforts and to provide said documentation to the State upon
request.
2.31 Information Technology Services Review
Prior to award selection, this RFP and all responses thereto are subject to review by the New York State
Office for Information Technology Services (ITS). The Vendor will cooperate with any and all requests
from ITS relating to this RFP, including requests for documentation and presentations.
2.32 Procedure for Handling of Protests/Appeals of Bid Specifications and Proposed Awards
a. Formal Written Protests
Final agency decisions or recommendations for award generally may be reconsidered only in the
context of a formal written protest as described below. Any Vendor or prospective Vendor who
believes that there are errors or omissions in the procurement process or who otherwise has been
aggrieved in the drafting or issuance of a bid solicitation, proposal evaluation, bid award, or
contract award phases of the procurement, may present a formal complaint to the OPWDD and
request administrative relief concerning such action (“formal protest”).
A formal protest must be submitted in writing to the OPWDD, by ground mail, except where
alternate arrangements have been made, to Mr. John F. Smith, Associate Commissioner of
OPWDD Division of Enterprise Solutions, 44 Holland Avenue, 3
rd
Floor, Albany, NY 12229.
A formal protest must include a statement of all legal and/or factual grounds for disagreement
with an OPWDD specification or purchasing decision; a description of all remedies or relief
requested; and copies of all applicable supporting documentation.
b. Deadline for Submission of Formal Protests
OPWDD must receive formal protests concerning errors, omissions or prejudice including
patently obvious errors in the bid specifications or documents at least ten (10) calendar days
before the date set in the solicitation for receipt of bids.
http://www.esd.ny.gov/
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OPWDD must receive formal protests concerning a pending contract award within seven (7)
calendar days after the protesting party (“protester”) knows or should have known of the facts
which form the basis of the protest.
c. Review and Final Determination of Protests
Protests will be resolved through written correspondence. However, the protester may request a
meeting to discuss a formal protest or the OPWDD may initiate a meeting on its own motion, at
which time the participants may present their concerns. Either the protester or the OPWDD may
elect to decline such a meeting.
Where further formal resolution is required, the Associate Commissioner shall designate an
OPWDD employee (“designee”) to determine and undertake the initial resolution or settlement of
any protest.
The designee will conduct a review of the records involved in the protest, and provide a
memorandum to the Associate Commissioner summarizing the facts as determined by the
designee, an analysis of the substance of the protest, and a preliminary recommendation. The
Associate Commissioner shall: (a) evaluate the procurement team’s findings and
recommendations, (b) review the materials presented by the protesting party and/or any materials
required of or submitted by other Vendors, (c) if necessary, consult with agency Counsel, and (d)
prepare a response to the protest.
A copy of the protest decision, stating the reason(s) upon which it is based and informing the
protester of the right to appeal an unfavorable decision to the Office of the State Comptroller
(OSC) shall be sent to the protester or its agent within forty-five (45) calendar days of receipt of
the protest, except that upon notice to the protester such period may be extended. The protest
decision will be recorded and included in the procurement record, or otherwise forwarded to OSC
upon issuance.
d. Appeals
Upon receipt of OPWDD’s determination of a protest, a protester has ten (10) business days
within which to file an appeal of the determination with the OSC Bureau of Contracts. The
appeal must be filed with Charlotte Breeyear at New York State Office of the State Comptroller,
Bureau of Contracts, 110 State Street, 11th Floor, Albany, NY 12236. The protester’s appeal
must contain an affirmation in writing that a copy of the appeal has been served on OPWDD and
any other party that participated in the protest. In its appeal, the interested party shall set forth
the basis on which it challenges the contracting agency’s determination. The OSC Bureau of
Contracts will conduct its determination of the appeal in accordance with its established policy.
2.33 Reservation of Rights and Responsibilities of the OPWDD
The OPWDD reserves the right to waive or extend the time requirements for protest submissions,
decisions and appeals herein prescribed when, in its sole judgment, circumstances so warrant to serve the
best interests of the State and OPWDD. If the OPWDD determines that there are compelling
circumstances, including the need to proceed immediately with the contract award in the best interest of
the State, then these protest procedures may be suspended and such decision shall be documented in the
procurement record. The OPWDD will consider all information relevant to the protest, and may, at its
discretion, suspend, modify, or cancel the protested procurement action including solicitation of bids or
withdraw the recommendation of contract award prior to issuance of a formal protest decision.
2.34 Procurement Activity Prior to Final Protest Activity
Receipt of a formal bid protest shall not stay action on procurement unless otherwise determined by the
OPWDD. If a formal protest or appeal is received by the OPWDD on a recommended award prior to the
underlying contract being forwarded to the Office of the State Comptroller (OSC), notice of receipt of the
protest and appeal must be included in the procurement record forwarded to the OSC. If a final protest
decision or final decision on appeal has been reached prior to transmittal to the OSC, a copy of the final
decision must be included in the procurement record and forwarded with the recommendation for award.
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If a final protest decision is made after the transmittal of a bid package to the OSC, but prior to the OSC
approval under SFL § 112, a copy of the final OPWDD decision shall be forwarded to the OSC when
issued, along with a letter either: a) confirming the original OPWDD recommendation for award and
supporting the request for final § 112 approval, b) modifying the proposed award recommendation in part
and supporting a request for final § 112 approval as modified; or c) withdrawing the original award
recommendation.
2.35 Record Retention of Bid Protests
All records related to formal Vendor protests and appeals shall be retained for at least one (1) year
following resolution of the protest. All other records concerning the procurement shall be retained
according to the statutory requirements for records retention.
2.36 Information Security Breach and Notification Act
The New York State “Information Security Breach and Notification Act” also known as the “Internet
Security and Privacy Act” took effect December 9, 2005. The Legislature and Governor have enacted
the Law in response to past and continuing identity theft and security breaches affecting thousands of
people. The Law requires any person or business that conducts business in New York State and that
owns or licenses computerized data that includes private information (including but not necessarily
limited to social security numbers, credit and debit card numbers, drivers license numbers, etc.) must
disclose any breach of that private information to all individuals affected or potentially affected in an
expeditious manner. Contractor shall comply with the provisions of the New York State Information
Breach and Notification Act. Contractor shall be liable for the costs associated with such breach if
caused by the Contractor’s negligent or willful acts or omissions, or the negligent or willful acts or
omissions of the Contractor’s agents, officers, employees or subcontractors. You may view a copy of the
Law at http://public.leginfo.state.ny.us/MENUGETF.cgi?COMMONQUERY=LAWS by searching for
“INTERNET SECURITY AND PRIVACY.” The law is found at Article 2 of the State Technology Law
and at Article 39-F of the General Business Law.
2.37 New York State Sales and Compensating Use Taxes
Tax Law Section 5-a. which was added to the Tax Law under Part N of Chapter 60 of the Laws of 2004,
imposes upon certain contractors the obligation to certify whether or not the contractor and its affiliates
are required to register to collect state sales and compensating use tax. Where required to register, the
contractor must also certify that it is, in fact, registered with the New York State Department of Taxation
and Finance (DTF). The law prohibits the New York State Comptroller, or other approving agency, from
approving a contract awarded to a Vendor meeting the registration requirements but who is not so
registered in accordance with the law. Pursuant to Tax Law Section 5-a, winning contractors resulting
from this RFP must complete, sign, and file a properly completed Form ST-220-CA (with OPWDD) and
Form ST-220-TD (with the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance). Contractors must also
submit a copy of the Certificate of Authority, if available, for itself and any affiliates required to register
to collect state sales and compensating use tax. If Certificates of Authority are unavailable, the
contractor, affiliate, subcontractor or affiliate of subcontractor must represent that it is registered and that
it has confirmed such status with DTF.
2.38 Vendor Responsibility
Section 163 of the State Finance Law requires that contracts be awarded on the basis of lowest price or
best value to a responsive and responsible Vendor. The State and courts have determined that
responsibility includes integrity, previous performance, legal authority to do business in New York State,
and financial and organizational ability to perform the contract.
As part of the procurement process, Vendors, affiliates and any business entity of which the Vendor is a
subsidiary and subcontractors (where the subcontractor is known at the time of the contract award, its
qualifications are a material factor in the award, and its subcontract will equal or exceed $100,000 over
the life of the contract) are required to complete the Contractor/Subcontractor Questionnaire (see
Appendix F of this RFP) and submit it with its proposal.
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OPWDD shall conduct reviews of each vendor for responsibility and responsiveness. OPWDD may, at
OPWDD’s sole discretion, request additional information, including meeting with the Vendor.
If the Vendor is determined by OPWDD to be not responsible, OPWDD shall inform the Vendor of such
ruling. The Vendor shall have 30 days to request a meeting with OPWDD to explain the ruling and to
demonstrate the finding to be incorrect or to correct/resolve any issues affecting the Vendor’s
responsibility. If OPWDD’s findings remain unchanged after meeting with the Vendor, the Vendor shall
be removed from consideration for this contract.
The Contractor shall at all times during the Contract term remain responsible. The Contractor agrees, if
requested by the Commissioner of the OPWDD or his or her designee, to present evidence of its
continuing legal authority to do business in New York State, integrity, experience, ability, prior
performance, and organizational and financial capacity.
2.39 Suspension of Work (for Non-Responsibility)
The Commissioner of the OPWDD or his or her designee, in his or her sole discretion, reserves the right
to suspend any or all activities under the Contract resulting from this RFP, at any time, when he or she
discovers information that calls into question the responsibility of the Contractor. In the event of such
suspension, the Contractor will be given written notice outlining the particulars of such suspension. Upon
issuance of such notice, the Contractor must comply with the terms of the suspension order. Contract
activity may resume at such time as the Commissioner of the OPWDD or his or her designee issues a
written notice authorizing a resumption of performance under the Contract.
2.40 Termination (for Non-Responsibility)
Upon written notice to the Contractor, and a reasonable opportunity to be heard with appropriate OPWDD
officials or staff, the Contract may be terminated by the Commissioner of the OPWDD or his or her
designee at the Contractor’s expense where the Contractor is determined by the Commissioner of the
OPWDD or his or her designee to be non-responsible. In such event, the Commissioner of the OPWDD
or his or her designee may complete the contractual requirements in any manner he or she may deem
advisable and pursue available legal or equitable remedies for breach.
The Vendor that is awarded this contract shall update the Contractor/Subcontractor Questionnaire
(located in Appendix F) whenever such information changes and prior to any contract extensions and/or
amendments. In the case of an assignment, a Contractor/Subcontractor Background Questionnaire should
be submitted for the Contractor and Subcontractors. If the Vendor is determined on the basis of new or
previously undisclosed information, to be not responsible, the contract may be terminated, at OPWDD’s
sole discretion.
2.41 Workers’ Compensation Contract Requirements
The Workers’ Compensation Law requires that the State obtain evidence that all contracting organizations
maintain the required Workers Compensation and Disability Benefits Insurance for their employees. The
successful Bidder will need to supply OPWDD with a copy of form C-105.2 Certificate of Workers’
Compensation Insurances and a copy of form DB-120.1 Disability Benefits Insurance or a copy of form
CE-200, Attestation of Exemption. These forms can be obtained from your insurance carrier. The name
and address of OPWDD must appear as the entity requesting proof of coverage (listed as the certificate
holder) on form C-105.2 and DB-120.1.
2.42 Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (MWBE)
OPWDD is required to implement the provisions of New York State Executive Law Article 15-A and 5
NYCRR Parts 142-144 (“MWBE Regulations”) for all State contracts as defined therein, with a value (1)
in excess of $25,000 for labor, services, equipment, materials, or any combination of the foregoing or (2)
in excess of $100,000 for real property renovations and construction. The Successful Bidder agrees, in
addition to any other nondiscrimination provision of the Contract and at no additional cost to OPWDD, to
fully comply and cooperate with the OPWDD in the implementation of New York State Executive Law
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Article 15-A. These requirements include equal employment opportunities for minority group members
and women (“EEO”) and contracting opportunities for certified minority and women-owned business
enterprises (“MWBEs”). Successful Bidder’s demonstration of “good faith efforts” pursuant to 5
NYCRR §142.8 shall be a part of these requirements. These provisions shall be deemed supplementary
to, and not in lieu of, the nondiscrimination provisions required by New York State Executive Law
Article 15 (the “Human Rights Law”) or other applicable federal, state or local laws. Failure to comply
with all of the requirements herein may result in a finding of non-responsiveness, non-responsibility
and/or a breach of contract, leading to the withholding of funds or such other actions, liquidated damages
pursuant to Section II.F of this Appendix or enforcement proceedings as allowed by the Contract.
For purposes of this procurement, OPWDD hereby establishes an overall goal of 20% for MWBE
participation, 10% for Minority-Owned Business Enterprises (“MBE”) participation and 10% for
Women-Owned Business Enterprises (“WBE”) participation (based on the current availability of
qualified MBEs and WBEs).
For purposes of providing meaningful participation by MWBEs on the Contract and achieving the
Contract Goals established in Section II-A hereof, Successful Bidder should reference the directory of
New York State Certified MBWEs found at http://www.esd.ny.gov/mwbe.html. Additionally, the
successful Bidder is encouraged to contact the Division of Minority and Woman Business Development
at: (518) 292-5250; (212) 803-2414; or (716) 846-8200 to discuss additional methods of maximizing
participation by MWBEs on the Contract.
Where MWBE goals have been established herein, pursuant to 5 NYCRR §142.8, Successful Bidder must
document “good faith efforts” to provide meaningful participation by MWBEs as subcontractors or
suppliers in the performance of the Contract. In accordance with Section 316-a of Article 15-A and 5
NYCRR §142.13, the successful Bidder acknowledges that if the successful Bidder is found to have
willfully and intentionally failed to comply with the MWBE participation goals set forth in the Contract,
such a finding constitutes a breach of contract and the successful Bidder shall be liable to OPWDD for
liquidated or other appropriate damages, as set forth herein.
2.43 MWBE Reporting Requirements and Forms
MWBE reporting requirements and forms are contained in Appendix A through B of this RFP.
2.44 Vendor Responsibility Status
Procurement laws and guidelines require the award of New York State contracts to responsible
contractors. Vendor responsibility generally means that a contractor has the integrity to justify the award
of public dollars and the capacity to fully perform the requirements of the contract. Instructions for
documenting vendor responsibility are included in Attachment F.
During the period of the contract, the successful Bidder shall notify OPWDD of any changes in vendor
responsibility disclosures. The State reserves the right to terminate the contract for non-responsibility or
failure of the successful Bidder to disclose accurately.
2.45 Tax Provisions
Purchases made by the State of New York are not subject to state or local sales taxes or federal excise
taxes. The official State of New York Voucher for materials, equipment, supplies and services is
sufficient evidence to exempt the transaction from sales tax under section 1116 (a)(1) of the Tax Law.
Section 5-a of the Tax Law, as amended and effective April 26, 2006 requires certain contractors awarded
certain contracts valued at more than $100,000 to certify to the NYS Department of Taxation and Finance
(hereinafter referred to as Tax and Finance) that they are registered to collect New York State and local
sales and compensating use taxes if they made sales delivered by any means to locations within New
York State of tangible personal property or taxable services having a cumulative value in excess of
$300,000, for the four (4) completed sales tax quarters in which the certification is made. In addition,
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contractors must certify to Tax and Finance that each affiliate and subcontractor exceeding such sales
threshold during the period previously indicated, is registered to collect New York State and local and
compensating tax.
This law imposes upon certain contractors the obligation to certify whether or not the contractor, its
affiliates, and its subcontractors are required to register to collect state sales and compensating use tax and
contractors must certify to Tax and Finance that each affiliate and subcontractor exceeding such sales
threshold is registered with Tax and Finance to collect New York State and local sales and compensating
use taxes. The law prohibits the State Comptroller, or other approving agencies, from approving a
contract awarded to a Bidder meeting the registration requirements but who is not so registered in
accordance with the law.
The Bidder that is awarded the contract as a result of this RFP will be required to complete and submit to
Tax and Finance the Contractor Certification Form, ST-220-TD (Part IV-2.). The selected Vendor must
also submit the Contractor Certification to Covered Agency Form, ST-220–CA (Part IV-2.) to OPWDD
certifying that they filed Form ST-220–TD and that the information contained on Form ST-220-TD was
correct and complete as of the date it was filed. These forms as fill able PDF documents can be found at:
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220td_fill_in and
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220ca_fill_in
Vendors may call Tax and Finance at 1-800-698-2931 for contractor sales tax information. For additional
information and frequently asked questions, please refer to Tax’s web site:
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/publications/sales/pub223
Bidders may call Tax and Finance at 1-800-972-1233 for questions relating to Tax Law§5-a and relating
to a company’s registration status with Tax and Finance. For additional information and frequently asked
questions, please refer to Tax’s web site: http://www.tax.ny.gov/
2.46 Security Breach Notification
If the successful Bidder breaches the confidentiality of a person’s HIPAA or State protected information,
the successful Bidder must (i) promptly cure any deficiencies and (ii) comply with any applicable federal
and state laws and regulations pertaining to unauthorized disclosures. The successful Bidder and the State
will cooperate to mitigate the effects of any breach, intrusion, or unauthorized use or disclosure. The
successful Bidder must report to the State, in writing, any use or disclosure of Confidential Information,
whether suspected or actual, other than as provided for by the Contract within two hours after becoming
aware of the use or possible disclosure.
Bidder’s terms referenced in the RFP and mutually agreed upon by both parties.
2.47 Termination
The Agreement shall be subject to the following termination provisions:
2.47.1 All or any part of the Agreement may be terminated by OPWDD in the event of failure of the
Contractor to perform within the time requirements set forth in the Agreement.
2.47.2 All or any part of the Agreement may be terminated by OPWDD for cause upon the failure of
the Contractor to comply with the terms and conditions of the Agreement, including the
attachments hereto, provided that OPWDD shall give the Contractor written notice via registered
or certified mail, return receipt requested, or shall deliver same by hand – receiving the
Contractor’s receipt therefore, such written notice to specify the Contractor’s failure and the
termination of the Agreement. Termination shall be effective ten business days from receipt of
such notice, established by the receipt returned to OPWDD, unless the Contractor, in the opinion
of OPWDD, has cured said failure. The Contractor agrees to incur no new obligations nor to
claim for any expenses made after receipt of the notification of termination.
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2.47.3 The Agreement may be terminated for convenience, provided that OPWDD shall give written
notice to the Contractor not less than 30 days prior to the date upon which termination shall
become effective, such notice to be made via registered or certified mail, return receipt requested
or hand-delivered with receipt made. The date of such notice shall be deemed to be the date of
postmark in the case of mail or the date of the Contractor’s receipt for notice in the case of hand
delivery. In the case of termination under this subsection, OPWDD agrees to pay the Contractor
for reasonable and appropriate expenses incurred in good faith. The Contractor, on its part,
agrees to incur no new obligations after receipt of notification of termination and to cancel as
many outstanding obligations as possible.
2.47.4 The Agreement may be deemed terminated immediately at the option of OPWDD upon the
filing of a petition in bankruptcy or insolvency, by or against the Contractor. Such termination
shall be immediate and complete, without termination costs or further obligations by OPWDD to
the Contractor.
2.47.5 Should OPWDD determine that Federal and State funds are unavailable; OPWDD may
terminate the Agreement immediately upon notice to the Contractor. If the initial notice is oral
notification, OPWDD shall follow this up immediately with written notice. OPWDD will be
obligated to pay the Contractor only for the expenditures made and obligations incurred by the
Contractor until such time as notice of termination is received either orally or in writing by the
Contractor from OPWDD.
2.47.6 In the event of termination for any reason, the Contractor shall not incur new obligations for the
terminated portion and the Contractor shall cancel as many outstanding obligations as possible.
The Contractor shall take all reasonable measures to mitigate any damages for which OPWDD
may be liable. OPWDD will not be obligated to pay the Contractor for any lost and/or
anticipated profits.
2.47.7 If the Agreement is terminated for any reason, OPWDD shall have the right to award a new
contract to a third party. In the event of termination for cause, OPWDD shall have the right to
seek recovery of damages, and for all additional costs incurred in reassigning the contract.
2.47.8 OPWDD reserves the right to terminate the award resulting from this procurement in the event it
is found that the certification filed by the Offeror in accordance with New York State Finance
Law §139-k was intentionally false or intentionally incomplete. Upon such finding, OPWDD
may exercise its termination right by providing written notification to the award recipient.
2.48 Contractor Transition Responsibilities
If the State terminates the Contract, for convenience or cause, or if the Contract is otherwise
dissolved, voided, rescinded, nullified, expires or rendered unenforceable, the Contractor agrees to
comply with direction provided by the State to assist in the orderly transition of services to the State
or a third party designated by the State. The Contractor must work with the State, or a specified third
party, to develop a transition plan setting forth the specific tasks and schedule to be accomplished by
the parties to effect an orderly transition. The Contractor must provide the State with data generated
from the inception of the Contract through the date on which the Contract is terminated in a comma-
delineated format unless otherwise requested by the State.
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Section 3. Project scope
3.1 Functions
This RFP is soliciting Bidders to address the automation needs of OPWDD State-operated programs only.
While many services are provided through a network of voluntary agencies, the RFP is not proposing a
single statewide Bidder solution for all organizations. Several voluntary organizations already have EHR
and case management/care coordination systems that OPWDD is not seeking to replace through this RFP.
That said, the EHR System must be able to integrate an individual’s care coordination data, and
information pertaining to services delivered, when services are received from both state operated and
voluntary providers. Individuals who receive services directly from OPWDD, which is considered the
lead agency, as well as non OPWDD providers must have their service delivery information integrated
into the Bidder’s solution.
Bidder’s responses to this RFP will describe a proposed EHR solution to address the functional areas
noted below:
An Electronic Health Record System that encompasses care and service coordination and financial
billing;
An Electronic Health Record system that utilizes ICD-9-CM coding at the time of system
implementation and will utilize ICD-10 codes by the federally mandated due date to ensure
compliance with Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) standards;
A proposal that envisions a Software-as-a-Service solution;
Data conversion of existing structured and unstructured data files for current service recipients;
Ongoing data exchanges between the Bidder’s solution and multiple State applications, including
those listed in Section 1.3- Current Technology Environment;
Implementation of a work plan/ implementation plan to ensure successful transition from the
current paper charts/records to an EHR System within the timeframe specified in Section 2.8
(Procurement Timetable) of this RFP; and
Training applicable to users who work in various disciplines to support successful implementation
of the EHR.
The successful Bidder’s solution must also recognize current and future federal mandates, comply
with the federal meaningful use standards, and accommodate implications of managed care that are
universal and comply with federal meaningful use standards.
In reflecting Federal goals for electronic health information exchange, New York State has
implemented the State Health Information Network for New York (SHIN-NY)
(http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastructure.htm). SHIN-NY incorporates a
network of Regional Health Information exchange organizations (RHIOs) as part of its structure.
Health organizations participate as members of one or more of these RHIOs, with the RHIOs
maintaining the infrastructure for data exchanged across the State. The Bidder’s solution will be
required to access the SHIN-NY to exchange health care data.
OPWDD is initiating a pilot managed care program with Developmental Disabilities Individual
Support and Care Coordination Organizations (DISCOs) in 2015 with a complete transfer to
managed care services expected within the next five years. Bidder solutions offered in response to
this RFP will be required to electronically transfer data between the Bidder’s system and multiple
managed care organizations.
3.2 Electronic Health Record.
This project involves the Bidder’s implementation of a “turnkey” solution for an electronic health record
system for persons with developmental disabilities. Service functions that the Bidder’s solution should
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consider are referenced below. Corresponding to these narrative descriptions, are detailed system
requirements listed in ATTACHMENT 3 – Application Capabilities. Bidders must respond to these
processing features in ATTACHMENT 3 indicating whether the feature is already included in the proposed
solution, not planned as part of the solution, or will be a provided as a customized feature.
3.2.1 Data integration from existing systems.
The proposed solution must allow OPWDD to receive data from systems that are either
existing at the time of implementation of the EHR or will be utilized within five years after
implementation of the EHR. The Bidder must ensure that the EHR can receive data from
various systems from OPWDD and outside parties. See Sections titled Current Technology
Environment and System Interoperability Requirement for details.
3.2.2 Assessments.
The EHR is expected to maintain assessment data, including information entered in narrative
form and scanned documents. Information maintained should document an individual’s
needs, document services offered and utilized, and document an individual’s progress in
achieving goals that are clearly linked to their individualized service plan (ISP).
a. Service recipients must be assessed based on the individual’s needs or condition and at
intervals and frequencies specified by both state and federal entities. Sample copies of
assessments currently used by OPWDD can be found at:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities Bidders are not
expected to modify their software to include these specific OPWDD forms but are expected
to provide a comprehensive set of assessment tools that maintains similar data elements and
complies with required assessment functionality:
The individual’s medical problems;
The level of impact these problems have on the individual’s independent functioning;
All current medications used by the individual and the individual’s response to any
prescribed medications. Drug groups include:
o Hypnotics,
o Antipsychotics (neuroleptics),
o Mood stabilizers and antidepressants,
o Antianxiety-sedative agents, and
o Anti-Parkinson agents.
Assessment of the individual’s ability to self-monitor health status;
Assessment of the individual’s ability to self-administer and schedule medical treatments;
Assessment of the individual’s ability to self-monitor nutritional status;
Sensorimotor development, such as ambulation, positioning, transfer skills, gross motor
dexterity, visual motor perception, fine motor dexterity, eye-hand coordination, and
extent to which prosthetic, orthotic, corrective or mechanical supportive devices can
improve the individual’s functional capacity;
Speech and language (communication) development, such as expressive language (verbal
and nonverbal), receptive language (verbal and nonverbal), extent to which non-oral
communication systems can improve the individual’s ability to function, auditory
functioning, and extent to which amplification devices (for example, hearing aid) or a
program of amplification can improve the individual’s functioning;
Social development, such as interpersonal skills, recreation-leisure skills, and
relationships with others;
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Academic/educational development, including functional learning skills;
Self-help and activities of daily living such as toileting, dressing, grooming, and eating;
Independent living skills such as meal preparation, budgeting and personal finances,
ability to respond in an emergency, ability to maintain safety, mobility skills (orientation
to the neighborhood, town, city), laundry, housekeeping, shopping, bed making, care of
clothing, and ability to navigate the environment;
Vocational development, including present vocational skills;
Affective development such as skills involved with expressing and managing emotions,
making reasonable judgments, and healthy decision making; and
The presence of identifiable maladaptive or inappropriate behaviors of the individual
based on systematic observation (including, but not limited to, the frequency and
intensity of identified maladaptive or inappropriate behaviors).
b. Within the next two years, OPWDD is planning to participate in a Uniform Assessment
System (UAS) hosted by NYS Department of Health. The UAS will provide an integrated
core data set of information on individuals served by State health and disability agencies. As
part of this integrated system, OPWDD is developing a Coordinated Assessment System
(CAS) that will serve as an initial assessment tool designed to identify the needs of those with
Intellectual and Developmental Disability (ID/DD). The CAS, unique to New York State
(NYS), is part of the interRAI (http://www.interrai.org/) integrated assessment suite. The
EHR must be able to integrate data gathered from the CAS. Information about OPWDD’s use
of the CAS is available through:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/people_first_waiver/coordinated_assessment_system and
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/people_first_waiver/coordinated_assessment_system/documents/i
nterRai_fact_sheet_final
The CAS Core Assessment maintains information from the following categories:
Identification information
Intake and initial history
Community and social involvement
Strengths, relationships and supports
Lifestyle
Environmental assessment
Communication and vision
Cognition
Health conditions
Everyday activities
Oral and nutritional status
Mood and behavior
Medications
Services
Disease diagnosis
Assessment information
c. OPWDD is also piloting a project, called START (Systemic Therapeutic Assessment Respite
and Treatment) which will provide community based crisis intervention and prevention
services (www.centerforstartservices.com) with the goal of providing intensive services in the
community whenever possible rather than relying on inpatient or other restrictive settings.
The START program promotes collaboration between service providers and individuals so
that individuals can be active in the treatment planning and service delivery process. The
START program utilizes an electronic system called SIRS (START Information Reporting
System). SIRS is used to track various data elements including current stressors, behavior
demonstrated by the individual, crisis prevention plans, activities completed by START staff
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such as referrals, education, planning, and outreach, and documents services provided. SIRS
also captures intake information and assessment data from tools such as MEDS (Matson
Evaluation of Drug Side Effects Checklist), ABC (Aberrant Behavior Checklist), and the
RSQ (Recent Stressors Questionnaire). The EHR must be able to integrate data elements
from SIRS.
3.2.3 Electronic Individualized Service Plan (eISP).
A core component of an electronic health record serving persons with developmental disabilities
is a comprehensive individualized and person centered Service Plan that summarizes what a
person wants, needs, and aspires to. It is expected that the Service Plan would be automated as
part of the Bidder’s solution allowing for regular online entry, updating and query of the plan.
The ISP data fields can be found at:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
Bidders are expected to include these data fields within their person-centered electronic service
plan format.
The person-centered service plan should:
Integrate the individual’s needs and wants identified through the completion of various
assessments.
Identify and outline services and supports that the person chooses that will help them achieve
their identified and desired outcomes.
Be maintained in a manner that is usable to OPWDD employees, the individual, and other
people whom the individuals wishes to have access to their ISP.
Support linkages across the multiple organizations that may be involved in delivering the
plan. Document that components are designed to meet an individual’s unique needs.
Document and track the use of multiple services and supports that may be provided through
multiple programs by varied staff.
Integrate data pertaining to outcomes, including but not limited to quality of life and the
maintenance of rights. Personal outcome data is obtained through collecting feedback from
the individual and members of their circle of support. This person centered approach is used
to promote choice, decision-making, and self-advocacy and overall captures whether an
individual believes the services and supports they receive contribute to their unique and
personal goals, overall well-being, and desired outcomes. Information about assessing these
outcomes can be found through:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_services_supports/person_centered_planning/POMs_fact_Shee
t_clean
3.2.4 Service Monitoring and Recording.
The proposed solution should offer a comprehensive system of tracking planned and delivered
services. Aggregated data regarding these services must permit:
Generating reports that capture the types and categories of services provided on a given day and
the duration in which services were utilized;
Identifying services-by-day for each individual, including staff assigned to provide the service,
the amount of time the individual was involved in the service, and the amount of time staff
spent providing the service;
Tracking of consents, including consent for treatment and intervention, and rights
acknowledgement;
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Identifying a care or service coordinator as well as the list of participants who received services
by day;
Means of assuring that appropriate services are provided based on the ISP; and
Means of identifying utilization or underutilization of services by an individual’s ISP.
The EHR must be able to electronically transfer service delivery data to TABS in near time,
and in the service record format provided by OPWDD.
3.2.5 Self-Directed Care and Portal.
Self-directed care is a key element of OPWDD’s transformation of services. A self-directed Portal
is envisioned as a component of the EHR allowing individuals, their families and/or advocates to
view available information regarding the individual and their services. The Individual portal should
also provide individuals and their families and/or advocates, a means to communicate their
satisfaction with particular services and their perspective regarding the service and how receipt of
the service contributes to their quality of life or desired outcomes. The portal provides a means to
document individual involvement or utilization of services offered based on the ISP. Information
gathered from and maintained in the Individual portal will be used to track personal outcomes as
well as quality of services.
3.2.6 Quality Assurance Activities.
This function will allow OPWDD to continuously monitor the quality of services provided based on
a person’s Individualized Service Plan (ISP). Activities monitored could include the individual’s
response to the intervention, their satisfaction with the service, and agency and program compliance
with State and Federal laws and regulations governing services, and OPWDD management
directives, policies and procedures. It is expected that the Bidder’s solution will offer quality
metrics, data manipulation and analytics, and robust reporting capability.
It is a future goal of OPWDD to incorporate quality assurance indicators such as personal outcome
measures to assess an individual’s quality of life and to assess whether services and supports meet
the individual’s personal goals and desires. Bidders are requested to document how the
functionality within Bidder’s proposed solution would be used to track the effectiveness of services
through indicators, such as personal outcome measures, and the extent to which this will integrate
with the individual portal.
3.2.7 Financial Tracking and Billing.
(Optional Deliverable: OPWDD at its sole discretion may determine whether or not to include
financial tracking and billing functionality as part of the award.) Bidders should describe any
financial tracking and billing functionality available in the proposed system. Bidders should also
include the cost of financial tracking of billing functionality in the cost evaluation.
The proposed software should be able to integrate financial assessment data with service data to
establish on-line accounts that will provide the capability for processing bills and payments. The
system must provide a secure environment that is capable of posting and displaying, in near real-
time, an individual’s account records as well as generating and displaying a variety of transactions
and reports both on screen and in hard-copy format. Examples include, but are not limited to, the
following: accounts receivable ledgers, aging-account reports, uncollectible and bad-debt write-off
transactions, payment data, and balances outstanding as of the end of the billing cycle. Information
about OPWDD’s billing requirements and procedures can be found at
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/links_to_opwdd_guidance_documents_wit
h_payment_standards
As part of a financial module, the software should be able to bill for services. The software or
proposed solution functionality must include the ability to:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/links_to_opwdd_guidance_documents_with_payment_standards
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/links_to_opwdd_guidance_documents_with_payment_standards
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Generate electronic bills in a HIPAA-acceptable format to payors.
Generate, in a format acceptable to payors, hardcopy bills that can be submitted to payors that
will not accept electronic format.
Allow for correction of billing data rejected by a payor upon initial submission, and the
subsequent resubmission of the bill for full or adjusted payment.
Maintain complete account receivable ledgers, reflecting payments made and balances
outstanding as of the end of the billing period.
Maintain an accounts receivable “aging” feature that displays account balances outstanding for
60 days, 90 days, 120 days, and more than 120 days; enable the write-off uncollectible accounts
and bad debts, as appropriate, and produce individual and summary reports on screen and in
hard copy.
Include the ability to produce full-cost bills for submission to primary and secondary third party
payors, including health insurance and managed care providers. The system must ensure that
the billing sent to a secondary provider is not sent until the bill sent to the primary provider has
been settled.
The bill to secondary insurers should indicate whether the primary insurer has paid maximum
benefit for its coverage.
Generate third party bills which display the full cost on the bill and the full cost and anticipated
payment amounts on the accounts receivable record. The system should automatically write off
the unpaid balance upon receipt of the correct anticipated payment amount. The system should
hold open any accounts with discrepancies until such discrepancies are resolved
Ensure that necessary documentation is linked to the services billed.
3.2.8 Analytical and Reporting Requirements.
Ensuring appropriate and timely service requires comprehensive standardized reports and support
for the creation of Ad Hoc reports. The Bidder’s solutions should reflect this requirement. Reports
will generally be used for quality assurance, tracking utilization, and tracking efficacy of services
offered.
3.2.9 Federally Certified Medical Electronic Health Record.
Primary care medical services are key components of an Individual’s Service Plan (ISP) and
functionality required by OPWDD. The winning Bidder’s solution must integrate standard medical
EHR offerings with service delivery which is documented by an ISP. The EHR must also comply,
or be seeking to comply, with Federal meaningful use standards. The winning Bidder must maintain
compliance, at no additional cost to the State, with meaningful use standards.
3.2.10 HIPAA Security and Confidentiality.
The proposed solution is required to comply with Federal HIPAA privacy and security standards.
The successful Bidder should expect to be able to certify such compliance with its hosted solution.
The successful Bidder’s solution is also subject to the terms of the New York Cyber Security
Policy http://www.dhses.ny.gov/ocs/ and the New York State Information Security Breach and
Notification Act
(http://www.ag.ny.gov/new-york-state-information-security-breach-and-notification-act).
The contract with the successful Bidder will include provisions for notification of OPWDD within
two hours of any suspected breach of security involving an individual’s personal or health
information.
The successful Bidder must agree to, and sign, the OPWDD HIPAA Business Association
Agreement (see Appendix I of this RFP).
http://www.dhses.ny.gov/ocs/
http://www.ag.ny.gov/new-york-state-information-security-breach-and-notification-act
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3.2.11 System Performance.
OPWDD anticipates as many as 5,000 concurrent users of the fully implemented solution. OPWDD
further expects the system to be performant; given the variance in system design and architecture
possibilities, OPWDD will work collaboratively with the selected Bidder to establish measurable
performance goals for throughput, user load, and stability over time.
OPWDD anticipates that the Bidder’s environment will utilize load balancing, cluster and failover
technology. OPWDD recognizes that system performance can vary depending upon hardware,
system design, architecture, and associated technologies.
3.2.12 System Interoperability Requirements.
The proposed solution must interface with various systems that are utilized within NYS agencies,
by health care providers, and voluntary providers. Modifications made to existing OPWDD
systems to interface with the proposed EHR system will be performed by OITS staff.
a. The EHR must exchange healthcare data with primary health care providers to ensure that
OPWDD staff can access up-to-date health care data from external providers for all clients
served by the EHR. Additionally, the EHR must make primary health care data available to
authorize external health care providers serving OPWDD clients. The interface with primary
health care is expected to be through the State Health Information Network for New York
(SHIN-NY) (http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastructure.htm). SHIN-NY
incorporates a network of regional health information exchange organizations (RHIOs) as part
of its structure. Health organizations participate as members of one or more of these RHIOs,
with the RHIOs maintaining the infrastructure for data exchanged across the State.
b. In addition to the data exchange requirements of the SHIN-NY, the proposed solution must be
able to electronically accept and transmit data with applications maintained by OPWDD, DOH
and OPWDD DISCOs.
1. The winning Bidder will be responsible for implementing a near real-time data
exchange with the TABS system. This exchange must provide for the exchange of
client data including but not limited to demographic, service, billing and assessment
data. One set of data elements that the Successful Bidder must incorporate into the
EHR is an OPWDD summary assessment tool known as DDP2 (Developmental
Disabilities Profile Second Edition):
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/opwdd_forms/developmental_disabilities_
profile_user_guide_and_forms/ddp_2 provides a description of the skills and
challenges of a person with developmental disabilities that are related to their service
needs. Data from the DDP2 is housed in OPWDD’s TABS application and is used for
several OPWDD functions. It should be noted that the DDP2 will be replaced by the
Coordinated Assessment System (CAS) as described in Section 3.2.2, and that the
winning Bidder will be required to alter the EHR system, at no additional charge to the
State, when the conversion the CAS becomes available (the expected implementation
of the CAS is April 2015) for integration with the EHR.
2. Additionally, the solution must provide a daily data feed to the OPWDD data
warehouse. The data feed for the data warehouse must include a comprehensive set of
data, including demographic, medical, service, assessment and billing data for each
individual enrolled in the EHR.
3.2.13 The successful Bidder is expected to cooperate with New York State OITS staff.
http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastructure.htm
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/opwdd_forms/developmental_disabilities_profile_user_guide_and_forms/ddp_2
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/opwdd_forms/developmental_disabilities_profile_user_guide_and_forms/ddp_2
Page 34
3.2.14 Mandatory Deliverable 1: System Modifications and Acceptance Testing.
This Deliverable includes the modification of the Bidder’s system to meet the unique needs of
OPWDD, and verification by OPWDD that the modifications meet those needs.
3.2.14.1 System Modifications.
It is expected that winning Bidder will review all proposed customization identified in response to
Attachment 3 Application Capabilities with OPWDD staff to ensure that the customization will
meet OPWDD’s needs. Once agreement on each customization has been reached, the successful
Bidder will document each customization, customize the system, and conduct a comprehensive test
the revised system.
3.2.14.2 Bidder (Vendor) Testing.
The Bidder is expected to perform a comprehensive test of the system after
modifications have been made.
3.2.14.3 Successful Bidder (Vendor) Acceptance Testing.
The successful Bidder will set up and demonstrate an operating version of the revised system. The
demonstration(s) is intended to assure that the System operates in the way that was agreed with the
Contractor in the initial discussion of the customizations and to familiarize OPWDD staff with the
operation of the System. After the demonstration OPWDD may request changes to bring the
system into conformity with the documentation of customizations, and the Contractor will
implement those changes as specified.
3.2.14.4 User Acceptance Testing (UAT).
A. After the successful Bidder and OPWDD agree that the system complies
with the documentation of the customizations, the Contractor will:
1. Allow the State to continue to test the operational System;
2. Assist OPWDD by loading and/or refreshing test data;
3. Provide instruction in the use of the System for all staff who will be
participating in the System testing;
4. Assist in the State’s testing which will include testing system interfaces and
will continue until the State is ready to proceed with actual use of the System at
the pilot location. This testing is expected to last at least ten (10) business
days; and
5. Be available on-site to assist the State with this testing.
B. Upon completion of acceptance testing, the State may identify how and where the data does
not conform to the documentation of the customizations, or where the modification have
introduced errors into the original system, and provide the successful Bidder with a written
list of necessary revisions.
C. The Contractor will incorporate such revisions as necessary.
D. If revisions are necessary the State may require additional rounds of preliminary acceptance
testing and further revisions until successful completion of the testing.
3.2.15 Mandatory Deliverable 2: Pilot Testing.
Subsequent to UAT completion and approval, the pilot testing in a live environment will begin.
The pilot testing will include all aspects of implementation and operation of the System at the
OPWDD Central Office and throughout Region 3, which encompasses two DDSOs, Capital
District and Sunmount (see 1.2 of this RFP and visit http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211 ). This
phase of implementation will also include testing of the training plan.
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/1211
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3.2.15.1 Implementation.
The Bidder will provide OPWDD the following documentation prior to installation:
Statement of work,
Architecture design,
Network infrastructure,
Requirements traceability matrices,
Test strategy,
Test plans,
Test cases,
UAT test scripts,
Test results,
Release plans,
Backup and disaster recovery plans,
Site security plans, and
System security plans.
At the time of installation, the Bidder must load initial data into the system and make the system
available to the OWPDD Central Office and the pilot Region (Region 3). The Bidder will ensure
that the System is operational, and implement the training plan.
3.2.15.2 Evaluation of the Pilot Testing.
1. OPWDD Staff and the successful Bidder will systematically test and monitor all activities at
the pilot sites to ensure that the system is operational.
2. The successful Bidder will make all changes necessary to meet the requirements of the RFP
and the customization that the State approved at no additional charge to the State.
3. The successful Bidder will assure that sufficient Bidder staff participate in the Systems test to
assure a comprehensive and complete test of the System.
3.2.16 Mandatory Deliverable 3: Successful Full Implementation (Full Rollout).
Upon completion of the Pilot Testing, the Bidder will begin implementation at remaining OPWDD
locations based upon the Bidder’s proposed Implementation Plan (See section 3.5) including:
A. Converting existing OPWDD data to the new EHR data system as per
Section 3- Data Conversion Requirements;
B. Providing consultation and direction to Local Agency staff in converting
their procedures, filing system, and data over the new system; and
C. Implementing the Bidders proposed Training Plan (see section 3.6).
3.2.17 Mandatory Deliverable 4: System Operation and Maintenance.
The Contractor will operate the System in a reasonable and efficient manner, warranting that the
System operates as intended. The Contractor will be responsible for any defects or corrections to
the System. In addition, the State may require modifications to the System in order to meet State
or Federal regulations or to enhance the EHR system in order to improve service delivery as per
negotiated Change Orders. The contractor may be required to provide assistance to OPWDD, at
no additional cost to OPWDD, to comply with federal and state audits including providing
documentation of procedures and protocols, system audit trails, and records access.
The Operations Management consists of the following activities, which are described below:
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3.2.17.1 Operations Management.
The Contractor is responsible for the provision of management activities sufficient to ensure the
proper operation of the System, including:
3.2.17.1.1 Administrative Activities.
A. Establish and enforce a schedule for all central facility data processing activities:
1. Operations Calendar: A three month prospective plan informing the State of planned
outages, and processing, including any overloads, disaster recovery tests, conflicts or
hardware/software modifications at the Contractor’s facility that may negatively impact
the performance of the system.
2. System Maintenance/Enhancement Calendar: A six month prospective plan detailing
future corrections, modifications, or enhancements to the EHR.
B. Establish and enforce a schedule for performance by all subcontractors;
C. Provide and maintain sufficient resources for the operation and management of the
System;
D. Maintain and test a comprehensive Disaster Recovery Plan.
E. Meet (in person or via telephone/video conferencing) regularly with State employees to
review operations and maintenance or enhancement projects:
1. The Contractor will meet at least monthly with State staff, typically OPWDD and/or
OIT staff, to discuss operation of the System.
2. Conclusions and decisions reached at these meetings as well as future plans and matters
related to problem resolution shall be documented in a detailed memorandum prepared
by the Contractor and submitted to the State staff.
3.2.17.1.2 Coordinate and Audit Operational Activities.
Coordinate Contractor, State, and subcontractor staff in the event a technical problem arises that
causes a breakdown in processing or system functionality.
3.2.17.1.3 Analysis of Operational Activities.
A. Monitor, analyze, and suggest improvements for increased efficiencies in:
1. Data communication between the various platforms;
2. Processing functions within the EHR; and
3. Computer system usage.
B. Make the State aware of any significant variances from the previous month’s activities.
3.2.17.1.4 Operational Reports.
A. Operational Status Reports
The Contractor will provide the State staff with monthly operational status reports detailing the
operation of the System at the Contractor’s central facility, including:
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1. Detailed audit trails;
2. Lists of problems;
3. Results and actions taken to rectify any errors or problems detected; and
4. The Contractor’s staff activities and time expended.
5. Status reports should also identify future action steps and identify potential problems
or issues and document the steps necessary to overcome and resolve any potential
problems or issues.
B. Maintenance/Enhancement Projects Report
3.2.18 Optional Deliverable 1: Financial Tracking and Billing Functionality.
This Deliverable includes the modifications or additional functionality to the bidders EHR system that
would be necessary to replace and assume the billing functions currently performed by the TABS
system.
3.2.18.1 Requirements Gathering.
The contractor must document the billing functionality in their solution, and conduct a series
of Joint Application Development sessions with the state to identify and document the
billing requirements in the TABS system. The contractor will develop a gap analysis
document that describes the degree of change necessary to make the EHR conform to billing
requirements used in the TABS system that are set forth by OPWDD.
3.2.18.2 Develop Testing Methodology.
The contractor will work with the state to determine an agreed upon methodology to test the
billing modification to the EHR to ensure that the proposed EHR billing functionality works
as intended. Consideration will be given to the parallel testing with both TABS and the
financial tracking billing functionality of the EHR. The contractor will then develop an
overall Test Plan, including detailed specifications, if applicable, and sub-tasks. The Test
Plan will set forth the kind, type, volume considerations and number of tests to be
performed. Where appropriate, the contractor will use automated tools for testing.
3.2.18.3 Testing.
Testing may begin once the system Test Plan has been approved by OPWDD. The
Contractor shall notify OPWDD when the billing features and modifications have been
made, tested by the Contractor, and are ready for parallel testing and/or testing by the State.
State and Contractor staff will perform all tests according to the previously agreed upon and
established Test Plan.
If system revisions are necessary the State may require the contractor to perform additional
rounds of testing of system performance and the contractor is to use any necessary further
revisions until successful completion of the Testing is achieved.
3.2.18.4 Implementation.
Upon successful completion of Testing, the Contractor will implement revised billing
functionality in the production system. Once the new billing functionality has successfully
operated for a complete monthly billing cycle the State shall certify that the Billing
Functionality is complete. Such certification will not preclude the State from requiring the
Contractor to make additional corrections that may be necessary to resolve problems (for
example, internal inconsistencies) identified as a result of the normal system operation.
Page 38
3.2.19 Optional Deliverable 2: End User Training.
This Deliverable includes training all end users in accordance with the bidder training plan
(section 6.1.4, Item Q) without leveraging state staff to provide training.
A. Approximately 14,500 OPWDD staff must receive training in the use of the
EHR system. Additionally, training must include assisting staff in implementing any
newly required functional flow and/or altered work station responsibilities that may be
required.
B. Training must be provided to OPWDD staff at each permanent site in accordance to the
bidders training and implementation plan. Contractors must provide training sufficient
to ensure that OPWDD staff, who have varied degrees of experience and knowledge
regarding the use of technology, can operate the EHR at the completion of the training.
C. The Contractor will certify that OPWDD staff have attained proficiency in the
System. If the Contractor finds that proficiency has not been attained, or if the State
subsequently determines that proficiency has not been attained, the Contractor will
provide such additional training at the next available training site within a maximum 50
mile radius in distance from the original training site, or by teleconference. This
supplementary training will be coincidental with another scheduled training session
when possible. If training is not scheduled to occur within a 50 mile radius within one
(1) month of notice that the original training was unsatisfactory and teleconference
training is not possible, the Contractor shall schedule supplementary training as
necessary to achieve System proficiency without additional charge to the State.
3.3 Data Conversion Requirements.
OPWDD will provide the successful Bidder a CSV file of demographic and service information on
approximately 34,000 individuals currently receiving services at OPWDD operated facilities and
programs and an additional 28,000 individuals receiving services from both OPWDD and voluntary
agencies. It will be the Successful Bidder’s responsibility to use this data to populate individual care
coordination records for each person. A copy of data elements that will be supplied for this data
conversion effort can be found at:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities.
In addition to structured data referenced above, the successful Bidder will also be responsible for the data
conversion of unstructured information contained in various forms and scanned materials that currently
make up an individual’s record in OPWDD’s CHOICES application. The EHR must provide the ability
for users to attach images of legacy forms to a client’s record.
3.4 Development Lifecycle.
OPWDD requires that the Bidder describe their project developmental lifecycle. As part of the
description the Bidder must include the milestones that the Bidder will adhere to and achieve throughout
the development lifecycle.
An iterative approach is to be taken. The intent behind an iterative model is to enable OPWDD to plan for
and measurably verify project progress and solution quality throughout the project.
An outline of the content of each iterative milestone will be established and will be included in the
detailed project schedule and plan. OPWDD understands and accepts that the nature of an iterative
approach means the detailed project plan and schedule will be subject to change throughout the project
lifecycle. Specific content for any given iteration may be altered due to project conditions per OPWDD
input and/or approval. The specific quality criteria for each iterative milestone will therefore be altered
accordingly.
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/procurement_opportunities
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As part of the development lifecycle approach, the Bidder will include how they implement changes into
the system. This will include but not be limited to: expected durations, impact on system, impact on
business processes, training, and support.
3.5 Implementation Plan.
Bidders are required to provide a narrative work plan clearly describing their approach to this project. The
Bidder must state specifically how deliverables, including the optional financial and billing modules, will
be achieved by the Bidder. This work plan should address:
The Bidder’s approach to managing the system implementation and integration work. It is expected
that the successful Bidder will assign an overall project manager for this engagement.
A description of the requirements management process that the Bidder plans to use during system
implementation.
The approach to risk management and what the Bidder considers to be the key risks to the success of
this implementation and how these risks should be addressed.
A description of any proprietary tools, techniques or technologies that the bidding firm uses for such
implementation work.
A description of the Bidder’s staffing level that is anticipated to accomplish the work including the
level of onsite presence.
A description on the use of subcontractors if applicable.
A listing of roles the Bidder expects from State personnel to be involved in the implementation and
description on how these State personnel will be incorporated into the project team.
An outline of the project organization structure which depicts the key individuals and areas of
responsibility.
A plan on how all the parties involved in the implementation and integration effort will be
coordinated.
The timeframe after contract signing that the Bidders’ resources can begin the project and the
implementation start.
The timeline for project tasks, milestones and deliverables that will allow for system rollout in the
timeframe specified in Section 2.8 (Procurement Timeline).
3.6 Training Plan.
The successful Bidder will be responsible for providing training using a train-the-trainer approach at
minimum. The Bidder will also be required to provide on-line tutorials for all modules. Any training
available beyond the train-the-trainer approach and online tutorials is an optional deliverable (see Section
3.2.19). The cost sheet (see attachment 5) should include the cost for the train-the-trainer approach that
includes on line tutorials. The cost sheet should also include the cost of any additional training
approaches that the Bidder would be able to offer and that OPWDD could purchase at its sole discretion.
It is expected that approximately 14,500 New York State OPWDD employees will require some degree of
training to utilize the EHR solution.
The Bidder’s proposed solution must describe the training approach for user personnel and the types of
training offered. Bidder proposals must include a train the trainer approach that leverages state staff in
their proposed Training Plan (Section 6.1.4.C). Bidders may also include an alternative approach where
the Bidder will provide training to all end users without leveraging state staff (see 6.1.4 Q).
OPWDD will provide a training space near or at the state operations office within each district (e.g.
Finger Lakes, Western NY, Broome, Central NY, Hudson Valley, Taconic, Brooklyn, Staten Island, New
York City, Bernard Fineson (Queens), and Long Island). Trainings must be offered at a minimum of six
Page 40
locations, one location within each region (see http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_contacts/ddsoo ).
OPWDD will make video conferencing available upon request. OPWDD will identify and provide
“trainers” who will be attending the train the trainer sessions provided by the Bidder. OPWDD will also
provide an expert from the service delivery/clinical side as well as an expert from the Information
Technology (IT) side to support the Bidder’s trainers.
As part of the training plan, the Bidder should identify:
How a train the trainer approach will be incorporated into the training plan.
The types of additional training being proposed by job function including the method in which
training is offered (i.e.; computer or web-based training, face to face classroom style training with an
instructor, one to one training, or self-study). Bidders should be mindful that employees within the
OPWDD system have a range of technological skills which could range from limited knowledge and
experience with computers to proficient in the use of technology. Training will need to meet these
varying abilities;
The duration of each class;
The number of classes that will be offered and/or the number of participants included in each training;
How often the training will be offered (as needed, or on a set calendar schedule);
The recommended number of people that should attend training;
Identification of who will provide the proposed product training to each discipline;
A description of ongoing training programs and how such training will be accessed;
The extent that the Bidder provides a “Help Desk” or technical support to end users;
A description of how training materials will be made available and accessible.
3.7 System Maintenance and Help Desk Support.
3.7.1 Bidders are required to provide Help Desk support, provided in a clear and understandable
manner, to technical personnel. The Bidder’s proposed solution must be based upon the
following requirements:
A system availability uptime of 99.7 percent 24 x 7 x 365 for service other than downtime
for scheduled maintenance.
A maximum 15 minute Help Desk response time to technical calls 24 x 7 x 365.
3.7.2 Bidders should identify the nature and extent of system support activities offered by the Bidder.
Included in the documentation should be:
Identification of the Bidder’s normal support hours (specify time zone) and location of
support staff.
The extent to which the following support features are available:
o Toll-free hotline;
o Remote monitoring;
o Remote diagnostics;
o Training tutorials;
o Web based support tracking.
The typical response time for problems reported:
o 1) During regular business hours and
o 2) Off hours.
The range and average for system downtime (scheduled and unscheduled) for your client’s
systems and the backup plan to be used during downtime. System downtime must not
exceed four hours within a 24 hour period.
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_contacts/ddsoo
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The process for evaluating and fixing “bugs” or problems in your software as well as other
system maintenance.
The extent to which the Bidder has user groups and, or, advisory groups and the nature of
their membership.
The frequency, timing, and extent to which the system will be updated.
The Bidder will provide documentation describing their system maintenance requires for
planned downtime, disaster recovery, and recoverability.
3.8 Additional Services Change Orders:
A. If the modifications, additions, or deletions beyond the work described in this RFP are
requested in writing by the State and are agreed to by the Bidder, during the contract
period, then the Bidder will provide the State with the requested modifications,
additions or deletions at the rates agreed upon in the resulting Contract. The price for
additional services in effect at the time of the Change Order will apply.
B. If any modifications requested by the State cause an increase or decrease in the time
required for performance of one or more Change Orders issued under the resulting
Contract, or otherwise affect any other provision of the Contract, an equitable
adjustment shall be made in the periods of performance, delivery schedule, or other
terms of the Change Order(s), or of the Contract, and in such other provisions of the
Contract as may be so affected. The affected Change Orders and the Contract shall be
modified in writing to reflect agreed upon changes.
3.9 Change Order Project Schedule.
A. Overall Schedule.
The Bidder and the State agree that the work performed on Change Orders issued under
the resulting Agreement will be completed within the time frame set forth in the
respective Change Orders, unless circumstances beyond the Bidder’s or State’s
reasonable control impact performance.
B. Milestone Dates.
The Work performed on Change Orders issued under the resulting Contract shall be
completed in accordance with milestone dates, as set forth in the respective Change
Orders.
C. Reports of Work.
The Bidder shall prepare a written report on the progress of the work on any
outstanding Change Orders on a monthly basis. Up to four (4) copies of such reports
shall be furnished in such form as specified by the State, and shall disclose all
significant results, and indicate whether the work is on time, in conformity with the
schedules set forth in the respective Change Orders and, if not, why not, and what steps
will be taken by the Bidder to correct the delay.
D. Inspection.
The State, through any authorized representatives, has the right, at all reasonable times,
to inspect or otherwise evaluate the work performed or being performed. All
inspections and evaluations shall be performed in such a manner as will not unduly
delay the work being performed hereunder.
3.10 Issuance of Change Orders
A. Issuance of Change Orders.
Any Change Order issued under this Contract shall be subject to the terms and
conditions of the Contract and shall be issued as specified in this RFP.
B. Contents of Change Orders.
The State shall:
1. Submit brief statements of work for any additional Change Orders that
may be issued; and
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2. Submit a broadly defined Acceptance Test for each deliverable under the
Change Order.
C. To finalize the Change Orders, the Bidder shall then prepare a Change Order
statement of work, proposed sub-tasks and proposed milestone dates. Such Change
Order statements shall be prepared and delivered to the State by the Bidder within ten
(10) business days of the request.
1. Statement of Work. The statement of work shall:
a. Set forth the specific services or products desired by the State;
and
b. Specify any further requirements if other than set forth under
the resulting Contract.
2. Submission of Proposal.
Unless otherwise required, in preparing and submitting proposed Change
Orders, the Bidder shall furnish the State with applicable pricing data
consisting of:
a. Total fixed or estimated price, based on the rates specified for
additional services and any required travel arrangements based
on the State Government rates;
b. Critical milestones and payment schedules in the performance
of fixed price work; and
c. Documentation to be furnished, including updates to existing
documentation (For example, FRL, TDD, Operations/User
Manuals and Training Materials).
3. Finalized Change Order.
Upon receipt of the proposed Change Order and upon completion of any
necessary negotiations, the Bidder shall submit to the State a signed copy of the
Change Order which includes a scope of work, period of performance,
estimated or fixed price and any other terms and conditions agreed upon by the
parties. Upon receipt of the signed Change Order, the State shall indicate its
acceptance, return a copy to the Bidder who shall commence performance in
accordance with the terms and conditions set forth herein.
3.11 Testing and Acceptance.
A. Testing.
For each Change Order, the State and Bidder will meet and develop a broadly defined
Acceptance Test plan. The Bidder will then develop an overall Test Plan, including
detailed specifications, if applicable, and sub-tasks. The Test Plan will set forth the
kind, type, volume considerations and number of tests to be performed for acceptance
of the Change Order. Every Test Plan shall be reviewed and responded to by the State
within five (5) working days of submission of such Test Plan to the State. If the Plan is
not approved by both parties at the end of a five (5) working day period, the parties
agree to enter into good faith negotiations at an in person meeting for the purpose of
producing an acceptable Test Plan within two (2) working days. Failure to reach such a
result will then be a dispute under Section 3.13 Dispute Procedure.
Once the System Test Plan has been approved, the Bidder shall notify the State in
writing when the System called for under the Change Order has been completed, tested
by the Contract in accordance with the test plan, is ready for testing by the State. The
contactor will supply the State with sufficient documentation of test result to verify that
the acceptance test plan was successfully completed. Within five (5) working days of
notification, the designated State personnel shall commence performing the acceptance
testing. The Acceptance Tests, as defined by the Test Plan developed under the
Change Order, shall determine whether the System operates and conforms to the
specifications set forth in the Change Order.
B. Successful Testing and Acceptance.
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The date that the System successfully passes the previously agreed to Acceptance Test
at the State’s site, set forth in the Test Plan, shall be the Acceptance Date. On the
Acceptance Date, the State Project Director shall confirm in writing that the System is
accepted.
C. Failure of Testing.
In the event the System does not pass the Acceptance Test at the State’s site, the Bidder
shall re-conduct and complete such portions of the Acceptance Test identified as failing
the Test, until successful and accepted by the State. In the event the System still fails
to pass the Acceptance Test after 60 days of the date of the initial failure and such
failure is due to reproducible error malfunction in the System for which the Bidder is
responsible, the State may immediately terminate the Change Order and shall be
entitled to be reimbursed all payments made to date on the Change Order.
D. Successful Testing Dispute.
In the event the State disagrees with the Bidder on the issue of whether or not the
System has successfully passed the Acceptance Test, such disagreement shall be a
dispute; see section 3.13 Dispute Procedure.
3.12 Virus Warranty.
The Bidder warrants that services relating to the integration, development, and implementation of the
Software by means of the Bidder’s configuration, modification, and/or enhancement of such Software
shall be performed in a manner so as not to result in introducing a virus or other malware to the
software. The Bidder will utilize commercially reasonable virus detection and vulnerability scanning
software on its equipment to ensure that any configuration, modification, and/or enhancement it creates
and provides to the State shall not contain any virus vulnerability.
3.13 Date/Time Warranty.
The Bidder warrants that product(s) furnished pursuant to the resulting contract shall, when used in
accordance with the product documentation, be able to accurately process date/time data (including but
not limited to calculating, comparing, and sequencing) transitions, including leap-year calculations.
3.14 Vulnerability Assessment
The Bidder will be ready to demonstrate that there are no network vulnerabilities. The network must
follow HIPAA and Hi-Tech Privacy and Security Standards, Federal Meaningful Use Standards and
NY Cyber Security Policy. The Bidder will demonstrate through documentation that the network is
secure and meets the aforementioned standards.
Further, OPWDD reserves the right to hire an industry recognized vendor to perform a network
vulnerability assessment on the implemented system. The Bidder will be expected to support the
vendor during the assessment. The Bidder will be expected to develop an implementation plan with ten
days of receiving the assessment results to address any findings. The bidder is expected to resolve
minor findings as soon as possible. If deemed appropriate by OPWDD, the change request process as
described in this RFP may be used to address any major findings requiring redesign or significant
changes to the system. OPWDD reserves the right to implement penalties on the Bidder for any
findings not address satisfactorily within 30 days.
3.15 Penalties for vulnerabilities.
If a vulnerability is detected within the system, the successful Bidder, within ten days, will provide a
plan to address and remediate the vulnerability. Upon identification of any vulnerability, the Bidder
must supply a plan of corrective action to OPWDD for approval that outlines how the vulnerability will
be addressed, and the timeframes for taking corrective actions.
Failure to provide a remediation plan within ten days, or failure to implement the approved plan of
corrective action, will result in a daily fine of $250.00 to be deducted from monthly licensing fees.
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3.16 Penalties for System Downtime and Incident Resolution.
For those incidents described herein that are within the Bidder’s control (subject to OPWDD’s
reasonable agreement as to whether an incident is within the Bidder’s control), and unless mutually
agreed upon, OPWDD shall levy the following penalties upon the Bidder on a monthly basis:
i. System downtime exceeding four hours will result in a $250.00 fine for each additional
four hours the system is down.
ii. Failure to provide Problem Resolution for any incident within thirty (30) days shall result
in a $250.00 fine for each additional day that the incident is unresolved to OPWDD’s
satisfaction.
iii. Fines will be collected as a reduction to the Monthly Licensing Fees, including the monthly
maintenance costs/hosting or licensing costs schedule.
3.17 Dispute Procedure
Except as otherwise provided in the Contract, any dispute arising under the resulting Contract shall be
promptly referred to the New York State Project Director and the Bidder’s Project Manager. If the
parties are unable to amicably resolve the dispute within thirty (30) days of the referral, then either
party may seek legal or equitable relief in a court of competent jurisdiction.
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Section 4. MANDATORY BIDDER REQUIREMENTS
4.1 Qualifications of Prospective Bidders.
Proposals are limited to Bidders with an electronic health record system that serves the unique needs of
individuals with developmental disabilities; and
a solution that has been implemented in one or more organizations serving individuals with
developmental disabilities; and
an EHR that is federally certified as meeting federal meaningful use standards, stage one and stage
two, or will be certified by the contract signing date*.
a web-based solution.
* Bidders must provide OPWDD with documentation of their federal certification no later than the date of
contract signing.
4.2 Structure of Bid.
Each Bidder must submit a complete and comprehensive proposal consisting of three parts:
1. Cover Letter (see Section 5 of this RFP).
2. Technical Proposal (see Section 6 of this RFP).
a. The Technical Proposal must include the completed Bidders Experience Form (see
Attachment 2 of this RFP).
b. The Technical Proposal must also include the completed Application Capabilities table
(see Attachment 3 of this RFP).
3. Cost Proposal (see Section 7 of this RFP).
a. The Cost Proposal should include the completed Project Cost Form (see Attachment 5 of this
RFP).
4.3 Non-responsive determination.
Failure to comply with the requirements of Section 4.1 and 4.2 may cause a Bidder’s proposal to be
deemed non-responsive to the RFP and removed from consideration.
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Section 5. COVER LETTER SUBMISSION
5.1 Cover Letter Requirement.
A cover letter is an integral part of the proposal package. The cover letter must be signed by an
individual who is authorized to contractually bind the successful Bidder. The letter must:
Acknowledge that the Bidder has read the proposal, understands it, and agrees to be bound by all
of the conditions therein.
Include the Bidder’s name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and the name(s), address(es),
telephone number(s) and e-mail address(es) of the Bidder’s contact(s) concerning the proposal;
Acknowledge that the costs set forth in the Cost Proposal are firm costs that are binding and
irrevocable for a period of not less than 270 days from the date of proposal submission;
Acknowledge that the Bidder understands and accepts the provisions of this RFP and all
attachments thereto.
Explicitly set forth any questions or anticipated difficulty with any such contract provisions.
OPWDD reserves the right to reject any or all issues raised by a Bidder and require full
acceptance of the terms of this RFP.
Provide the Bidder’s Federal Employer Identification number.
The following completed and signed forms or documents shall be attached to the cover letter*:
1. Contractor Certification Tax Form ST-220-TD and Contractor Certification to Covered Agency
Form, ST-220-CA (See Section 10.14 Tax Provision for additional information. Fillable forms can
be found at:
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220td_fill_in
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220ca_fill_in
2. The following Minority and Women Owned Forms located within Attachment B of this RFP:
o Form MWBE 100 Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises – Equal
Employment Opportunity Program (MWBE-EEO) Policy Statement.
o Form MWBE 101 Staffing Plan
o Form MWBE 103 MWBE Utilization Plan
3. MacBride Fair Employment Principles (see Attachment C);
4. Affidavit of Non-Collusion (See Attachment D);
5. Bidder’s Compliance with Communications during the Restricted Period (See Attachment E);
6. Bidder’s Responsibility Questionnaire if the Bidder is not enrolled in the Office of the State
Comptroller’s VendRep System: http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/vendor_index.htm ) (see
Attachment F);
7. Use of New York Businesses (See Attachment G);
8. Iran Divestment Act Certification (See Attachment H); and
9. Documentation certifying and confirming that the proposed solution is currently certified as meeting
federal stage one and stage two meaningful use standards OR documentation clearly describing the steps
completed and the process that will be used to ensure that the proposed solution will be certified as
meeting stage one and stage two meaningful use standards by the contract signing date.
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220td_fill_in
http://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/st/st220ca_fill_in
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/vendor_index.htm
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.
* Although these documents are not part of the bid evaluation process, they are required in order to enter into
a contract with the successful proposer.
5.2 Check List of Submission Requirements.
A Checklist of Submission Requirements is found as Attachment 4 of this RFP. The checklist may be
of value to the Bidder in ensuring compliance with RFP requirements. It is recommended that the
Checklist be completed and submitted with the proposal package. Submission of this checklist, however, is
not mandatory so the failure to submit the Checklist will not result in the rejection of the proposal.
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Section 6. TECHNICAL PROPOSAL SUBMISSION
6.1 Technical Proposal.
(Scoring Weight – 70 percent of the evaluation)
Each Bidder must submit a complete and comprehensive Technical Proposal that addresses all factors,
including the phasing of tasks, methods to be utilized and scheduling of resources necessary to
satisfactorily complete the requirements of the Scope of Project.
The technical proposal must reflect an understanding of OPWDD’s need for an Automated Electronic
Health Record System that supports care coordination. Specific responses to Application Processing
Capabilities and brief biographical sketches and/or resumes of Bidder’s staff are to be appended to each
proposal to demonstrate the capability of the Bidder, through its employees or sub-contractors, to meet
the requirements of Section 3, Project Scope. Bidders must be certain to accurately reflect and describe
the functionality and features of the proposed system. Technical scores can be adjusted after the oral
presentation if the evaluators identify discrepancies between the system as described in this section of
the proposal and the system demonstrated during the oral presentation.
The Technical Proposal describes how the Bidder will supply a system that fulfills the specifications
identified in Section 3, Project Scope.
6.1.1 Bidder Experience and Qualifications
(Scoring Weight — 10 pts.)
OPWDD intends to enter into a contract with a qualified Bidder who is knowledgeable about
automated systems for managing health services and care coordination described in this Request
for Proposal. In order to fulfill all of the necessary roles required by this contract, the qualified
Bidder must:
A. Demonstrate expertise in the development, customization, and hosting of an automated
EHR system that supports and maintains care coordination information based on a
person-centered individualized service plan (ISP) for individuals with developmental
disabilities. Identify the:
Total number of client installations using the proposed system.
The number of client installations in organizations similar in size, specialty, etc. using
the proposed system. Include the number of installations in organizations that serve
people with developmental disabilities.
Demonstrated experience in the ability to operate a HIPAA compliant web hosted
service 24 hours by 7 day service, 365 days per year.
B. Provide the background and experience of the project manager and each of the key
identified professional staff who shall be assigned to the project. If specific individuals
have not been identified for the positions, then job descriptions and minimum staff
qualifications for the positions must be submitted.
C. Identify the respective roles and specific expertise of any subcontractor involved in the
Bidder’s proposal. The Bidder submitting the successful proposal pursuant to the RFP
must assume full responsibility for the performance under the resultant contract.
OPWDD retains the right and privilege to approve the use of the subcontractors under the
agreement resulting from this RFP. In any event, the prime Bidder (the successful
Bidder) shall be responsible for all contract performance whether or not subcontractors
are employed.
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D. Provide three or more specific work references of businesses, corporations, or entities
where the proposed solution, or similar systems, were implemented or are being
implemented. OPWDD will contact these references to assist in judging past Bidder’s
performance (see Attachment 6). Each reference should include the name, business
address and current telephone number of an individual who is qualified to judge the
Bidder’s past or current work. An OPWDD employee, with one witness, will contact
each reference and ask a standard list of questions. All responses will be recorded.
Responses provided by references will be shared with the evaluation team. The totality
of the references responses will be considered and scored as part of the evaluation
process.
E. Describe the current status of all litigation in which the Bidder is presently involved or in
which it anticipates to become involved, and how, if at all, it impairs the Bidder’s ability
to perform under the proposed contract.
6.1.2 Application Processing Capabilities and Proposed Solution
(Scoring Weight – 40 pts.)
As part of the proposed application software solution, each proposal must describe the approaches
that will be taken to address requirements specified in Section 3 – Scope of Project and
Attachment 3 – Application Capabilities.
A. Clearly identify the name(s) and version(s) of the software package(s) or modules being
proposed.
B. Include responses as specified in Attachment3 – Application Capabilities.
C. Describe warranty period and customer service provisions, including minimum response
times.
D. Describe the level of support available during the implementation of the proposed
software. If there are optional levels of support, these options should be clearly noted.
E. OPWDD anticipates that modification or custom development may be necessary to satisfy
some of its unique requirements that cannot be accommodated by the proposed software
packages. Bidders should clearly indicate the services they will provide to customize the
application, when appropriate, to ensure the system fulfils requirements of Section 3 titled
Project Scope and Attachment 3 – Application Capabilities. Bidder should also discuss
the methodology and/or tools that are used to facilitate such product enhancement.
Bidders should note where they have previously assisted clients in this manner. They
should also define the effect that such customization or modification will have on their
warranty provisions and future releases of the proposed application software. Bidders
should also describe how their solution can be used to track the effectiveness of services as
well as describe quality assurance activities and how the solution can track the
effectiveness of services through indicators such as personal outcome measures.
F. Describe its computer environment, data security measures, description of the physical
security of the computer center, hours of operation, backup and recovery procedures,
transaction response time for when staff are using the application, guarantees of system
availability and response times for resolving problems, and disaster recovery plans.
G. Bidders should describe the network requirements, protocols and end-user equipment
necessary to operate the proposed application software effectively. This should include a
description of the communication interfaces and network architecture required to interface
the proposed software with OPWDD.
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H. The Bidder’s proposed solution should identify the nature and extent of system support
activities offered by the Bidder. Included in the documentation should be:
Identification of the Bidder’s normal support hours (specify time zone) and location of
support staff.
The extent to which the following support features are available:
o Toll-free hotline;
o Remote monitoring;
o Remote diagnostics;
o Training tutorials; and
o Web based support tracking.
The typical response time for problems reported: 1) during regular business hours and
2) off-hours.
The range and average for system downtime (scheduled and unscheduled) for the
Bidder’s systems and the backup plan to be used during downtime. System downtime
cannot exceed four (4) hours within a 24 hour period.
The process for evaluating and fixing “bugs” or problems in your software as well as
other system maintenance.
Disaster recovery plans, system features that mitigate risk, and plans to respond in the
event of a disaster or notable system failure.
Plans for responding to a HIPAA or related breach of information.
The extent to which the Bidder has user groups and, or, advisory groups and the nature
of their membership.
The frequency, timing, and extent to which the system will be updated and a
description of the accessibility to meaningful EHR data (e.g., health needs, medication,
behavior alerts) during times when the system is updated.
6.1.3 Proposed Implementation Plan
(Scoring Weight — 15 pts.)
Each proposal must provide a management and implementation plan that identifies and describes
how the project will be planned, directed and controlled. The work plan should envision a
phased-in EHR implementation within the timeframe specified in Section 2 of this RFP. The
Bidder must include:
A. A description of your Project development life cycle and milestones.
B. The work plan for managing the system implementation and integration work.
C. A description of the requirements management process that the Bidder plans to use during
the implementation of the EHR system.
D. A plan for converting data into the Bidder’s EHR System to populate the individual’s care
coordination record as outlined in section 3 of this RFP.
E. The approach to risk management and what you consider to be the key risks to the success
of this implementation and how these risks will be addressed and managed.
F. A method for status reporting and periodic status meetings.
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G. The quality assurance measures and the plan that will be utilized to monitor the project
and address issues, both foreseen and unforeseen.
H. A description of all work anticipated in implementing the scope of services, including a
time frame for implementing project components.
I. A project plan identifying activities required for implementation, key milestones and the
implementation timeframe.
J. A description of any proprietary tools, techniques or technologies that the Bidder’s firm
uses for such implementation work.
K. A project organization structure and a plan on how all the parties involved in the
implementation and integration effort will be coordinated. This structure and plan should
include:
A description of the Bidder’s staffing level that is anticipated to accomplish the work
including any onsite requirements.
A description on the Bidder’s use of subcontractors if applicable.
A listing of roles the Bidder would expect from State personnel to be involved in the
implementation and description on how these personnel will be incorporated into the
project team.
For each project component, identify the title of staff that will be involved and an
estimate of staff time to complete the component.
L. The timeframe after contract signing that your resources can begin the project.
6.1.4 Training Plan
(Scoring Weight — 5 pts.)
The successful Bidder will be responsible for providing training, using a train the trainer model at
minimum, to users who are located across the State of New York. The Bidder’s proposed solution
must:
A. Describe the extent to which on-line training modules are provided.
B. Describe the use of the “train the trainer” approach.
C. The types of training being proposed by job function.
D. The manner in which the “train the trainer” training, as well as any other training, will be
presented (i.e., classroom style with an instructor, one-on-one, computer-based training,
self-study, etc.).
E. Describe how often training sessions will be offered.
F. Describe ownership of training materials and the extent that training materials are
available on an ongoing basis.
G. Describe the form and format of training materials.
H. The duration of each “train the trainer” class.
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I. The location of the training (Note: OPWDD requires that training be offered at a minimum
of six locations. See Section titled Training Plan located in Section 3 of this RFP).
J. How often training is offered (as needed, or on a set calendar schedule).
K. The number of classes or training courses that will be offered.
L. The recommended number of people that should attend training.
M. Who provides the proposed product training and expectations of OPWDD employees.
N. A description of ongoing training programs.
O. The extent that the Bidder’s Help Desk support is available to end users.
P. Extent to which training materials address OPWDD customizations.
Q. Proposal for Optional Training Deliverable to provide training to all end users without
leveraging state staff. This is an optional deliverable. Bidders should describe any training
options they can offer in addition to the train-the-trainer approach.
Training costs are to be included on Attachment 5 titled Project Costs. The cost of
statewide end user training using the train-the-trainer approach must be included in
Section A of Attachment 5. The cost for the optional training deliverable must be included
in Attachment 5 Section E.
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Section 7. COST PROPOSAL REQUIREMENTS
7.1 Cost Proposal
(Scoring Weight – 20 percent of the evaluation)
The Cost Proposal identifies the Bidder’s total cost for providing services as identified in this RFP. The
Bidder is required to use the format presented in Attachment 5- Project Costs to provide the cost for each
task as well as an overall cost. The Bidder’s proposal must include:
A. The total cost of the mandatory deliverables,
B. Hourly rates for key staff involved with possible change orders,
C. Recurring costs,
D. Cost for optional deliverable “financial tracking and billing” reflecting contract year one
and two costs,
E. Cost for optional deliverable “statewide training” reflecting contract year one and two
costs.
Each of the above costs is to be reflected on the Project Costs form, Attachment 5.
The costs for the optional deliverables will be scored and the scores included in the overall 20% cost
score. Scores for the optional deliverables will be determined using the same method deployed for the
mandatory deliverable cost scoring; (X-20) X (Low bid/Proposer’s bid), where X-20 is a to be
determined percent applied to each optional deliverable.
Total Cost score = mandatory deliverable cost + optional deliverable financial tracking and billing cost +
optional deliverable additional statewide training costs for a total of 20 percent of the evaluation.
In the event the optional deliverable financial tracking and billing will be implemented, the CPI-U index
referenced in section 2.3 of this RFP will be applied, not to exceed 3%.
Costs should incorporate all Bidder costs associated with providing the services required (and
optional deliverables) within this RFP, including travel* and administrative overhead.
*Travel is to conform to New York State travel guidelines.
7.2 Most Favored Nation Clause:
The successful Bidder guarantees that the pricing offered to the State shall be the same as or lower than
that offered to other customers under the same or similar terms and conditions. If, for any reason during
the term of the contract the successful Bidder reduces the pricing due to special offers to a similarly
situated entity, the State shall receive an equivalent reduction in pricing for the product or services
delivered to the State.
7.3 Extension of Use (Piggybacking):
This agreement may be extended to additional New York State governmental agencies, not-for-profit
provider agencies, and/or municipal or local government entities upon mutual written agreement
between OPWDD and the given jurisdiction. New York State reserves the right to negotiate additional
discounts based upon any increased volume generated by such an extension.
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Section 8. EVALUATION OF PROPOSALS
8.1 Evaluation Method.
The method of evaluation will be “best value” based on the optimization of quality, costs and efficiency.
The Technical and Cost Proposals will be evaluated separately and the State shall award the assignment
to the Bidder with the highest composite score. The technical and cost components will be weighted in
accordance with the “best value” evaluation methodology bearing the weight assigned below:
Technical component……………. 70%
Cost component………………….. 20%
Oral Presentation…………………. 10%
Upon review of a Bidder’s submitted proposal, OPWDD may, at its discretion, submit to the Bidder a
request for clarification relating to its Cover Letter, Technical, and/or Cost Proposal. A Bidder will be
provided the period of time in which the written responses to OPWDD’s requests for clarification must
be completed. Other than to provide clarifying information as may be requested by OPWDD, no Bidder
will be allowed to alter its proposal.
8.2 Evaluation Process.
The evaluation criteria will be based on the RFP and consists of four levels:
Level 1: Mandatory Bidder Requirements (pass/fail)
Level 2: Technical Evaluation (Maximum score of 70 %)
Level 3: Cost Evaluation (Maximum score of 20 %)
Level 4: Oral Presentation (Maximum score of 10 %)
A Bidder’s proposal score will be converted to a weighted score, with the highest scoring bid on the
technical and cost components of the evaluation receiving the maximum score for that level. The
formulae for this conversion are:
Technical: Points = (bid being evaluated divided by highest bid score) x evaluation points
Cost: Points = (lowest dollar amount bid divided by the bid being evaluated) x cost points
The oral presentation will be scored on a full numeric point basis with scores ranging from 0-10.
The Bidder with the highest total score of technical, cost and oral components will be deemed the
successful Bidder.
8.3 Level 1: Mandatory Requirements.
Proposals submitted in response to this RFP shall first undergo a completeness review. This review shall
determine minimal compliance with the RFP. If a proposal fails to include all requirements listed in
Section 4.1-Mandatory Bidder Requirements, it shall be deemed non-responsive and removed from
consideration. (Note: OPWDD reserves the right to eliminate any mandatory requirement that cannot be
met by all Bidders).
8.4 Level 2: Technical Evaluation.
Proposals that pass the review of the mandatory requirements will undergo a Technical Evaluation
conducted by the Evaluation Team. This technical evaluation will identify the proposals that have the
highest probability of best serving the needs of OPWDD. The following criteria will be used:
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8.4.1 Bidder’s Experience and Qualifications.
(10 pts.)
The Bidder and their assigned employees’ experience and performance with similar projects in
the public and private sector will be evaluated. Reference and background checks will be
conducted as well as a review of any litigation the Bidder is involved with. OPWDD will contact
references provided by the Bidder in the proposal as well as communicate with other clients of
which OPWDD may be aware.
8.4.2 Effectiveness of Proposed Project Application Solution in Meeting OPWDD’s Needs.
(40 pts.)
The demonstrated understanding of OPWDD functions and service requirements.
The ability to comprehensively describe how the proposal will meet OPWDD’s needs.
The comprehensiveness and appropriateness of the proposed technical solution.
The degree of customization needed.
The degree to which the system can be implemented using existing hardware.
The flexibility of the proposed solution in making future customizations to address changing
data needs or business requirements.
The ability to interface with outside reporting systems.
The commitment to customer service and support.
The ability to take advantage of emerging technologies.
The flexibility of the proposed system, including the flexibility for OPWDD to add data
elements, create and modify reports and forms and modify the workflow of the task
assigned to staff roles.
The ability and intent of the Bidder to deliver additional application modules which may be
relevant that are not specifically included in this Request for Proposal.
The nature and extent of Bidder objections to OPWDD’s and New York State’s standard
contracting terms and procedures.
All other relevant information submitted by the Bidder as deemed appropriate by the
Evaluation Team.
8.4.3 Proposed Implementation Plan.
(15 pts.)
The proposed methodology for performing the work will be evaluated, including:
The ability to delineate the Bidder’s plan for providing these services.
The ability to meet the proposed time table as outlined in Section 2 of this RFP.
The Bidder’s management structure and staffing, including the degree to which the
Bidder’s staff are available on-site.
The experience of proposed Bidder staff.
The ability to detail how it will use personnel, facilities and resources to complete the
required work.
The ability to describe the management controls and quality assurance techniques to be used.
The overall requirements management approach.
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The ability to describe work plan assumptions and anticipated involvement of OPWDD
or other parties.
The approach for integration of State staff (OPWDD and Office of Informational
Technology Services staff) in the project work and maintenance.
The special experts available to respond to unanticipated situations or problems.
The overall project management approach.
The manner in which communication will occur between NY State and the Bidder (e.g.
Degree to which Bidder’s staff are available onsite, the degree to which communication
will take place via phone or video conference, e-mail communication).
The ability to meet a reasonable time frame.
8.4.4 Training Proposal
(5 pts.)
Suitability of training offered for specific staff roles and responsibilities.
Comprehensive nature of the train the trainer program.
Availability of training materials.
Ability to provide ongoing training support.
8.5 Level 3: Cost Evaluation
(Maximum score of 20 pts.)
All costs listed on Attachment 5 titled Project Costs will be included in the cost evaluation. The lowest
cost workable solution will be given the highest costs score (20 points maximum). Other workable but
more expensive solutions will be awarded points proportionally. The costs for the two optional
deliverables (training in addition to the train-the-trainer model and the financial tracking and billing
component) will be part of the total cost score.
8.6 Level 4: Oral Presentation
(Maximum score of 10 pts.)
After completion of the Technical and Cost Evaluation, a composite score will be assigned to each
proposal with a technical score weighted at 70 % and a cost score weighted at 20 % to determine finalists
for oral presentations. Bidders within 10 points of the top Bidder’s composite score will be considered as
finalists and will be required to deliver a demonstration of the Bidder’s product to the Evaluation Team.
The format of the oral presentation will be provided prior to the presentation. This presentation will be
geared to assess the Bidders’ full understanding of the project requirements and functionality of the
application. OPWDD will provide Bidder’s selected to provide the oral presentation with a script, or de-
identified health and care coordination information that is to be entered into the proposed solution and
presented during the oral presentation. Up to ten points will be awarded for a Bidder’s oral presentation.
If as a result of the oral presentation, OPWDD determines that material differences exists in the proposed
solution between what was submitted in the written Technical Proposal and subsequent oral presentation,
OPWDD at its sole discretion may adjust the Technical score accordingly.
8.7 Tie Bids
Step 1. In the event of a tie, the award will be made to the proposer with the lowest cost. If a tie
continues to exist, step 2 will be used.
Step 2. In the event costs are tied, the award will be made to the vendor who has the most number of
years of experience with EHR systems that are designed to meet the unique needs of
Page 57
individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities. If a tie continues to exist, step 3 will
be used.
Step 3. If the tie involves a New York State firm and another firm whose principal place of business is
outside the State of New York, preference shall be given to the New York State firm. If a tie
continues to exist, step 4 will be used.
Step 4. If a tie continues to exist despite use of the above methods, the award will be made by random
selection.
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Section 9. CONTRACT AWARD
9.1 Period of Contract Award.
The contract will be awarded for a period of five years.
9.2 Contract Renewal.
Upon mutual agreement of the parties, the contract may be extended for an additional five (5) year period.
Revisions in prices or associated charges may be accepted upon contract renewal. The Contractor will
agree to demonstrate the need for such revisions through written documentation. Approval will be at the
sole discretion of OPWDD and the Office of the State Comptroller.
9.3 Notification of Award.
The successful Bidder will be advised of its selection by OPWDD through the issuance of a “Notification
of Award Letter.” Public announcements or news releases pertaining to this proposal or contract shall not
be made public without prior approval from OPWDD.
9.4 Debriefing Unsuccessful Bidders.
Bidders will be notified by letter of the conditional award and possibility that a failed negotiation could
result in an alternative award. Debriefings will also be offered, although the discussion will be limited to
only the evaluation results as they apply to the proposal of the Bidder receiving the debriefing.
9.5 Expenses Prior Contract.
Under no circumstances will OPWDD be responsible for any expenses incurred by the successful Bidder
occurring prior to the completion of a fully executed contract.
9.6 Contract Negotiations and Approval.
A contract containing terms and conditions will be negotiated with the successful Bidder based on this
RFP and the successful proposal. The contract will include, but not be limited to standard clauses for all
New York State contracts, the RFP, the proposal received and appendices, exhibits and any other
attachments.
During contract negotiations, OPWDD expects to have direct access to Bidder’s personnel who have full
authority to make commitments on behalf of the Bidder. Bidders must include, as part of their proposal,
any restrictions under which their primary negotiations will operate.
Any negotiated contract must conform to the laws of New York State, and the provisions of this RFP, and
will be subject to approval by the Office of the Attorney General and the Office of the State Comptroller.
The contract will not be considered fully executed until formal approval has been granted by both of these
State Control Agencies.
9.7 Rights to Materials Produced.
All products, data and written materials developed pursuant to this contract shall be and remain the sole
property of OPWDD. The successful Bidder must secure written permission from OPWDD to use any
such materials for purposes other than those specified in the Project Scope of Work.
Page 59
APPENDIX A
STANDARD CLAUSES FOR NEW YORK STATE
CONTRACTS
PLEASE RETAIN THIS DOCUMENT
FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.
STANDARD CLAUSES FOR NYS CONTRACTS APPENDIX A
Page 60
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
1. Executory Clause 3
2. Non-Assignment Clause 3
3. Comptroller’s Approval 3
4. Workers’ Compensation Benefits 3
5. Non-Discrimination Requirements 3
6. Wage and Hours Provisions 3
7. Non-Collusive Bidding Certification 4
8. International Boycott Prohibition 4
9. Set-Off Rights 4
10. Records 4
11. Identifying Information and Privacy Notification 4
12. Equal Employment Opportunities For Minorities and Women 4-5
13. Conflicting Terms 5
14. Governing Law 5
15. Late Payment 5
16. No Arbitration 5
17. Service of Process 5
18. Prohibition on Purchase of Tropical Hardwoods 5-6
19. MacBride Fair Employment Principles 6
20. Omnibus Procurement Act of 1992 6
21. Reciprocity and Sanctions Provisions 6
22. Compliance with New York State Information Security Breach and Notification Act 6
23. Compliance with Consultant Disclosure Law 6
24. Procurement Lobbying 7
25. Certification of Registration to Collect Sales and Compensating Use Tax by Certain 7
State Contractors, Affiliates and Subcontractors
26. Iran Divestment Act 7
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STANDARD CLAUSES FOR NYS CONTRACTS
The parties to the attached contract, license, lease, amendment or other agreement of any kind
(hereinafter, “the contract” or “this contract”) agree to be bound by the following clauses which are
hereby made a part of the contract (the word “Contractor” herein refers to any party other than the State,
whether a contractor, licenser, licensee, lessor, lessee or any other party):
1. EXECUTORY CLAUSE. In accordance with Section 41 of the State Finance Law, the State shall
have no liability under this contract to the Contractor or to anyone else beyond funds appropriated and
available for this contract.
2. NON-ASSIGNMENT CLAUSE. In accordance with Section 138 of the State Finance Law, this
contract may not be assigned by the Contractor or its right, title or interest therein assigned, transferred,
conveyed, sublet or otherwise disposed of without the State’s previous written consent, and attempts to do
so are null and void. Notwithstanding the foregoing, such prior written consent of an assignment of a
contract let pursuant to Article XI of the State Finance Law may be waived at the discretion of the
contracting agency and with the concurrence of the State Comptroller where the original contract was
subject to the State Comptroller’s approval, where the assignment is due to a reorganization, merger or
consolidation of the Contractor’s business entity or enterprise. The State retains its right to approve an
assignment and to require that any Contractor demonstrate its responsibility to do business with the State.
The Contractor may, however, assign its right to receive payments without the State’s prior written
consent unless this contract concerns Certificates of Participation pursuant to Article 5-A of the State
Finance Law.
3. COMPTROLLER’S APPROVAL. In accordance with Section 112 of the State Finance Law (or, if
this contract is with the State University or City University of New York, Section 355 or Section 6218 of
the Education Law), if this contract exceeds $50,000 (or the minimum thresholds agreed to by the Office
of the State Comptroller for certain S.U.N.Y. and C.U.N.Y. contracts), or if this is an amendment for any
amount to a contract which, as so amended, exceeds said statutory amount, or if, by this contract, the
State agrees to give something other than money when the value or reasonably estimated value of such
consideration exceeds $10,000, it shall not be valid, effective or binding upon the State until it has been
approved by the State Comptroller and filed in his office. Comptroller’s approval of contracts let by the
Office of General Services is required when such contracts exceed $85,000 (State Finance Law Section
163.6-a). However, such pre-approval shall not be required for any contract established as a centralized
contract through the Office of General Services or for a purchase order or other transaction issued under
such centralized contract.
4. WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BENEFITS. In accordance with Section 142 of the State Finance
Law, this contract shall be void and of no force and effect unless the Contractor shall provide and
maintain coverage during the life of this contract for the benefit of such employees as are required to be
covered by the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Law.
5. NON-DISCRIMINATION REQUIREMENTS. To the extent required by Article 15 of the
Executive Law (also known as the Human Rights Law) and all other State and Federal statutory and
constitutional non-discrimination provisions, the Contractor will not discriminate against any employee or
applicant for employment because of race, creed, color, sex (including gender identity or expression),
national origin, sexual orientation, military status, age, disability, predisposing genetic characteristics,
marital status or domestic violence victim status. Furthermore, in accordance with Section 220-e of the
Labor Law, if this is a contract for the construction, alteration or repair of any public building or public
work or for the manufacture, sale or distribution of materials, equipment or supplies, and to the extent that
this contract shall be performed within the State of New York, Contractor agrees that neither it nor its
subcontractors shall, by reason of race, creed, color, disability, sex, or national origin: (a) discriminate in
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hiring against any New York State citizen who is qualified and available to perform the work; or (b)
discriminate against or intimidate any employee hired for the performance of work under this contract. If
this is a building service contract as defined in Section 230 of the Labor Law, then, in accordance with
Section 239 thereof, Contractor agrees that neither it nor its subcontractors shall by reason of race, creed,
color, national origin, age, sex or disability: (a) discriminate in hiring against any New York State citizen
who is qualified and available to perform the work; or (b) discriminate against or intimidate any employee
hired for the performance of work under this contract. Contractor is subject to fines of $50.00 per person
per day for any violation of Section 220-e or Section 239 as well as possible termination of this contract
and forfeiture of all moneys due hereunder for a second or subsequent violation.
6. WAGE AND HOURS PROVISIONS. If this is a public work contract covered by Article 8 of the
Labor Law or a building service contract covered by Article 9 thereof, neither Contractor’s employees nor
the employees of its subcontractors may be required or permitted to work more than the number of hours
or days stated in said statutes, except as otherwise provided in the Labor Law and as set forth in
prevailing wage and supplement schedules issued by the State Labor Department. Furthermore,
Contractor and its subcontractors must pay at least the prevailing wage rate and pay or provide the
prevailing supplements, including the premium rates for overtime pay, as determined by the State Labor
Department in accordance with the Labor Law. Additionally, effective April 28, 2008, if this is a public
work contract covered by Article 8 of the Labor Law, the Contractor understands and agrees that the
filing of payrolls in a manner consistent with Subdivision 3-a of Section 220 of the Labor Law shall be a
condition precedent to payment by the State of any State approved sums due and owing for work done
upon the project.
7. NON-COLLUSIVE BIDDING CERTIFICATION. In accordance with Section 139-d of the State
Finance Law, if this contract was awarded based upon the submission of bids, Contractor affirms, under
penalty of perjury, that its bid was arrived at independently and without collusion aimed at restricting
competition. Contractor further affirms that, at the time Contractor submitted its bid, an authorized and
responsible person executed and delivered to the State a non-collusive bidding certification on
Contractor’s behalf.
8. INTERNATIONAL BOYCOTT PROHIBITION. In accordance with Section 220-f of the Labor
Law and Section 139-h of the State Finance Law, if this contract exceeds $5,000, the Contractor agrees,
as a material condition of the contract, that neither the Contractor nor any substantially owned or
affiliated person, firm, partnership or corporation has participated, is participating, or shall participate in
an international boycott in violation of the federal Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 USC App.
Sections 2401 et seq.) or regulations thereunder. If such Contractor, or any of the aforesaid affiliates of
Contractor, is convicted or is otherwise found to have violated said laws or regulations upon the final
determination of the United States Commerce Department or any other appropriate agency of the United
States subsequent to the contract’s execution, such contract, amendment or modification thereto shall be
rendered forfeit and void. The Contractor shall so notify the State Comptroller within five (5) business
days of such conviction, determination or disposition of appeal (2NYCRR 105.4).
9. SET-OFF RIGHTS. The State shall have all of its common law, equitable and statutory rights of set-
off. These rights shall include, but not be limited to, the State’s option to withhold for the purposes of set-
off any moneys due to the Contractor under this contract up to any amounts due and owing to the State
with regard to this contract, any other contract with any State department or agency, including any
contract for a term commencing prior to the term of this contract, plus any amounts due and owing to the
State for any other reason including, without limitation, tax delinquencies, fee delinquencies or monetary
penalties relative thereto. The State shall exercise its set-off rights in accordance with normal State
practices including, in cases of set-off pursuant to an audit, the finalization of such audit by the State
agency, its representatives, or the State Comptroller.
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10. RECORDS. The Contractor shall establish and maintain complete and accurate books, records,
documents, accounts and other evidence directly pertinent to performance under this contract (hereinafter,
collectively, “the Records”). The Records must be kept for the balance of the calendar year in which they
were made and for six (6) additional years thereafter. The State Comptroller, the Attorney General and
any other person or entity authorized to conduct an examination, as well as the agency or agencies
involved in this contract, shall have access to the Records during normal business hours at an office of the
Contractor within the State of New York or, if no such office is available, at a mutually agreeable and
reasonable venue within the State, for the term specified above for the purposes of inspection, auditing
and copying. The State shall take reasonable steps to protect from public disclosure any of the Records
which are exempt from disclosure under Section 87 of the Public Officers Law (the “Statute”) provided
that: (i) the Contractor shall timely inform an appropriate State official, in writing, that said records
should not be disclosed; and (ii) said records shall be sufficiently identified; and (iii) designation of said
records as exempt under the Statute is reasonable. Nothing contained herein shall diminish, or in any way
adversely affect, the State’s right to discovery in any pending or future litigation.
11. IDENTIFYING INFORMATION AND PRIVACY NOTIFICATION. (a) Identification Number(s). Every
invoice or New York State Claim for Payment submitted to a New York State agency by a payee, for payment for
the sale of goods or services or for transactions (e.g., leases, easements, licenses, etc.) related to real or personal
property must include the payee’s identification number. The number is any or all of the following: (i) the payee’s
Federal employer identification number, (ii) the payee’s Federal social security number, and/or (iii) the payee’s
Vendor Identification Number assigned by the Statewide Financial System. Failure to include such number or
numbers may delay payment. Where the payee does not have such number or numbers, the payee, on its invoice or
Claim for Payment, must give the reason or reasons why the payee does not have such number or numbers.
(b) Privacy Notification. (1) The authority to request the above personal information from a seller of goods or
services or a lessor of real or personal property, and the authority to maintain such information, is found in Section 5
of the State Tax Law. Disclosure of this information by the seller or lessor to the State is mandatory. The principal
purpose for which the information is collected is to enable the State to identify individuals, businesses and others
who have been delinquent in filing tax returns or may have understated their tax liabilities and to generally identify
persons affected by the taxes administered by the Commissioner of Taxation and Finance. The information will be
used for tax administration purposes and for any other purpose authorized by law. (2) The personal information is
requested by the purchasing unit of the agency contracting to purchase the goods or services or lease the real or
personal property covered by this contract or lease. The information is maintained in the Statewide Financial System
by the Vendor Management Unit within the Bureau of State Expenditures, Office of the State Comptroller, 110 State
Street, Albany, New York 12236.
12. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR MINORITIES AND WOMEN. In
accordance with Section 312 of the Executive Law and 5 NYCRR 143, if this contract is: (i) a written
agreement or purchase order instrument, providing for a total expenditure in excess of $25,000.00,
whereby a contracting agency is committed to expend or does expend funds in return for labor, services,
supplies, equipment, materials or any combination of the foregoing, to be performed for, or rendered or
furnished to the contracting agency; or (ii) a written agreement in excess of $100,000.00 whereby a
contracting agency is committed to expend or does expend funds for the acquisition, construction,
demolition, replacement, major repair or renovation of real property and improvements thereon; or (iii) a
written agreement in excess of $100,000.00 whereby the owner of a State assisted housing project is
committed to expend or does expend funds for the acquisition, construction, demolition, replacement,
major repair or renovation of real property and improvements thereon for such project, then the following
shall apply and by signing this agreement the Contractor certifies and affirms that it is Contractor’s equal
employment opportunity policy that:
(a) The Contractor will not discriminate against employees or applicants for employment because of race,
creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability or marital status, shall make and document its
conscientious and active efforts to employ and utilize minority group members and women in its work
force on State contracts and will undertake or continue existing programs of affirmative action to ensure
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that minority group members and women are afforded equal employment opportunities without
discrimination. Affirmative action shall mean recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion,
upgradings, demotion, transfer, layoff, or termination and rates of pay or other forms of compensation;
(b) at the request of the contracting agency, the Contractor shall request each employment agency, labor
union, or authorized representative of workers with which it has a collective bargaining or other
agreement or understanding, to furnish a written statement that such employment agency, labor union or
representative will not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability
or marital status and that such union or representative will affirmatively cooperate in the implementation
of the Contractor’s obligations herein; and
(c) the Contractor shall state, in all solicitations or advertisements for employees, that, in the performance
of the State contract, all qualified applicants will be afforded equal employment opportunities without
discrimination because of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability or marital status.
Contractor will include the provisions of “a”, “b”, and “c” above, in every subcontract over $25,000.00 for
the construction, demolition, replacement, major repair, renovation, planning or design of real property
and improvements thereon (the “Work”) except where the Work is for the beneficial use of the
Contractor. Section 312 does not apply to: (i) work, goods or services unrelated to this contract; or (ii)
employment outside New York State. The State shall consider compliance by a contractor or
subcontractor with the requirements of any federal law concerning equal employment opportunity which
effectuates the purpose of this section. The contracting agency shall determine whether the imposition of
the requirements of the provisions hereof duplicate or conflict with any such federal law and if such
duplication or conflict exists, the contracting agency shall waive the applicability of Section 312 to the
extent of such duplication or conflict. Contractor will comply with all duly promulgated and lawful rules
and regulations of the Department of Economic Development’s Division of Minority and Women’s
Business Development pertaining hereto.
13. CONFLICTING TERMS. In the event of a conflict between the terms of the contract (including
any and all attachments thereto and amendments thereof) and the terms of this Appendix A, the terms of
this Appendix A shall control.
14. GOVERNING LAW. This contract shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York except
where the Federal supremacy clause requires otherwise.
15. LATE PAYMENT. Timeliness of payment and any interest to be paid to Contractor for late
payment shall be governed by Article 11-A of the State Finance Law to the extent required by law.
16. NO ARBITRATION. Disputes involving this contract, including the breach or alleged breach
thereof, may not be submitted to binding arbitration (except where statutorily authorized), but must,
instead, be heard in a court of competent jurisdiction of the State of New York.
17. SERVICE OF PROCESS. In addition to the methods of service allowed by the State Civil Practice
Law & Rules (“CPLR”), Contractor hereby consents to service of process upon it by registered or
certified mail, return receipt requested. Service hereunder shall be complete upon Contractor’s actual
receipt of process or upon the State’s receipt of the return thereof by the United States Postal Service as
refused or undeliverable. Contractor must promptly notify the State, in writing, of each and every change
of address to which service of process can be made. Service by the State to the last known address shall
be sufficient. Contractor will have thirty (30) calendar days after service hereunder is complete in which
to respond.
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18. PROHIBITION ON PURCHASE OF TROPICAL HARDWOODS. The Contractor certifies and
warrants that all wood products to be used under this contract award will be in accordance with, but not
limited to, the specifications and provisions of Section 165 of the State Finance Law, (Use of Tropical
Hardwoods) which prohibits purchase and use of tropical hardwoods, unless specifically exempted, by the
State or any governmental agency or political subdivision or public benefit corporation. Qualification for
an exemption under this law will be the responsibility of the contractor to establish to meet with the
approval of the State.
In addition, when any portion of this contract involving the use of woods, whether supply or installation,
is to be performed by any subcontractor, the prime Contractor will indicate and certify in the submitted
bid proposal that the subcontractor has been informed and is in compliance with specifications and
provisions regarding use of tropical hardwoods as detailed in §165 State Finance Law. Any such use must
meet with the approval of the State; otherwise, the bid may not be considered responsive. Under Bidder
certifications, proof of qualification for exemption will be the responsibility of the Contractor to meet
with the approval of the State.
19. MACBRIDE FAIR EMPLOYMENT PRINCIPLES. In accordance with the MacBride Fair
Employment Principles (Chapter 807 of the Laws of 1992), the Contractor hereby stipulates that the
Contractor either (a) has no business operations in Northern Ireland, or (b) shall take lawful steps in good
faith to conduct any business operations in Northern Ireland in accordance with the MacBride Fair
Employment Principles (as described in Section 165 of the New York State Finance Law), and shall
permit independent monitoring of compliance with such principles.
20. OMNIBUS PROCUREMENT ACT OF 1992. It is the policy of New York State to maximize
opportunities for the participation of New York State business enterprises, including minority and
women-owned business enterprises as Bidders, subcontractors and suppliers on its procurement contracts.
Information on the availability of New York State subcontractors and suppliers is available from:
NYS Department of Economic Development
Division for Small Business
Albany, New York 12245
Telephone: 518-292-5100
email: opa@esd.ny.gov
A directory of certified minority and women-owned business enterprises is available from:
NYS Department of Economic Development
Division of Minority and Women’s Business Development
633 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10017
212-803-2414
email: mwbecertification@esd.ny.gov
https://ny.newnycontracts.com/FrontEnd/VendorSearchPublic.asp
The Omnibus Procurement Act of 1992 requires that by signing this bid proposal or contract, as
applicable, Contractors certify that whenever the total bid amount is greater than $1 million:
(a) The Contractor has made reasonable efforts to encourage the participation of New York State
Business Enterprises as suppliers and subcontractors, including certified minority and women-owned
business enterprises, on this project, and has retained the documentation of these efforts to be provided
upon request to the State;
mailto:opa@esd.ny.gov
mailto:mwbecertification@esd.ny.gov
https://ny.newnycontracts.com/FrontEnd/VendorSearchPublic.asp
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(b) The Contractor has complied with the Federal Equal Opportunity Act of 1972 (P.L. 92-261), as
amended;
(c) The Contractor agrees to make reasonable efforts to provide notification to New York State residents
of employment opportunities on this project through listing any such positions with the Job Service
Division of the New York State Department of Labor, or providing such notification in such manner as is
consistent with existing collective bargaining contracts or agreements. The Contractor agrees to
document these efforts and to provide said documentation to the State upon request; and
(d) The Contractor acknowledges notice that the State may seek to obtain offset credits from foreign
countries as a result of this contract and agrees to cooperate with the State in these efforts.
21. RECIPROCITY AND SANCTIONS PROVISIONS. Bidders are hereby notified that if their
principal place of business is located in a country, nation, province, state or political subdivision that
penalizes New York State vendors, and if the goods or services they offer will be substantially produced
or performed outside New York State, the Omnibus Procurement Act 1994 and 2000 amendments
(Chapter 684 and Chapter 383, respectively) require that they be denied contracts which they would
otherwise obtain. NOTE: As of May 15, 2002, the list of discriminatory jurisdictions subject to this
provision includes the states of South Carolina, Alaska, West Virginia, Wyoming, Louisiana and Hawaii.
Contact NYS Department of Economic Development for a current list of jurisdictions subject to this
provision.
22. COMPLIANCE WITH NEW YORK STATE INFORMATION SECURITY BREACH AND
NOTIFICATION ACT. Contractor shall comply with the provisions of the New York State
Information Security Breach and Notification Act (General Business Law Section 899-aa; State
Technology Law Section 208).
23. COMPLIANCE WITH CONSULTANT DISCLOSURE LAW. If this is a contract for consulting
services, defined for purposes of this requirement to include analysis, evaluation, research, training, data
processing, computer programming, engineering, environmental, health, and mental health services,
accounting, auditing, paralegal, legal or similar services, then, in accordance with Section 163 (4-g) of the
State Finance Law (as amended by Chapter 10 of the Laws of 2006), the Contractor shall timely,
accurately and properly comply with the requirement to submit an annual employment report for the
contract to the agency that awarded the contract, the Department of Civil Service and the State
Comptroller.
24. PROCUREMENT LOBBYING. To the extent this agreement is a “procurement contract” as defined
by
State Finance Law Sections 139-j and 139-k, by signing this agreement the contractor certifies and
affirms that all disclosures made in accordance with State Finance Law Sections 139-j and 139-k are
complete, true and accurate. In the event such certification is found to be intentionally false or
intentionally incomplete, the State may terminate the agreement by providing written notification to the
Contractor in accordance with the terms of the agreement.
25. CERTIFICATION OF REGISTRATION TO COLLECT SALES AND COMPENSATING
USE TAX BY CERTAIN STATE CONTRACTORS, AFFILIATES AND SUBCONTRACTORS.
To the extent this agreement is a contract as defined by Tax Law Section 5-a, if the contractor fails to
make the certification required by Tax Law Section 5-a or if during the term of the contract, the
Department of Taxation and Finance or the covered agency, as defined by Tax Law 5-a, discovers that the
certification, made under penalty of perjury, is false, then such failure to file or false certification shall be
a material breach of this contract and this contract may be terminated, by providing written notification to
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the Contractor in accordance with the terms of the agreement, if the covered agency determines that such
action is in the best interest of the State.
26. IRAN DIVESTMENT ACT. By entering into this Agreement, Contractor certifies in accordance
with State Finance Law §165-a that it is not on the “Entities Determined to be Non-Responsive
Bidders/Offerers pursuant to the New York State Iran Divestment Act of 2012” (“Prohibited Entities
List”) posted at: http://www.ogs.ny.gov/about/regs/docs/ListofEntities
Contractor further certifies that it will not utilize on this Contract any subcontractor that is identified on
the Prohibited Entities List. Contractor agrees that should it seek to renew or extend this Contract, it must
provide the same certification at the time the Contract is renewed or extended. Contractor also agrees that
any proposed Assignee of this Contract will be required to certify that it is not on the Prohibited Entities
List before the contract assignment will be approved by the State.
During the term of the Contract, should the state agency receive information that a person (as defined in
State Finance Law §165-a) is in violation of the above-referenced certifications, the state agency will
review such information and offer the person an opportunity to respond. If the person fails to demonstrate
that it has ceased its engagement in the investment activity which is in violation of the Act within 90 days
after the determination of such violation, then the state agency shall take such action as may be
appropriate and provided for by law, rule, or contract, including, but not limited to, imposing sanctions,
seeking compliance, recovering damages, or declaring the Contractor in default.
The state agency reserves the right to reject any bid, request for assignment, renewal or extension for an
entity that appears on the Prohibited Entities List prior to the award, assignment, renewal or extension of
a contract, and to pursue a responsibility review with respect to any entity that is awarded a contract and
appears on the Prohibited Entities list after contract award.
http://www.ogs.ny.gov/about/regs/docs/ListofEntities
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APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
The parties to the attached contract agree to be bound by the following, which are hereby made part of said contract:
1. The contractor shall not discriminate against any applicant for services for reasons based upon religion or
religious belief. The contractor shall not use any monies received from the State to benefit or inhibit a particular religion or
religious belief.
2. The relationship of the contractor to the State is that of an independent contractor and the officers and
employees of the contractor shall conduct themselves in a manner consistent with such status, shall neither hold
themselves out as nor claim to be officers, employees, or agents of the State by reason thereof, and shall not make any
claim, demand or application to or for any right of the State, including, but not limited to, Workers’ Compensation
coverage, unemployment insurance benefits, Social Security coverage or retirement membership credit.
3. The contractor shall be solely responsible and answerable in damages for any and all accidents and/or
injuries to persons or property, including death, arising out of or related to the services to be rendered by the contractor. It
shall indemnify and hold harmless the State and its officers and employees from any and all claims, suits, actions,
damages and costs of every nature and description arising out of or related to the services to be rendered by the
contractor or the violation by the contractor, its employees, servants, agents, or contractors, of any law, ordinance, rule or
regulation in connection therewith.
4. Neither party shall be liable for losses, defaults, or damages under this contract which result from delays in
performing, or inability to perform, all or any of the obligations or responsibilities imposed upon it pursuant to the terms
and conditions of this contract, due to or because of acts of God, the public enemy, earthquake, floods, typhoons, civil
strife, fire or any other cause beyond the reasonable control of the party that was so delayed in performing or so unable to
perform, provided that such party was not negligent and shall have used reasonable efforts to avoid and overcome such
cause. Such party shall resume full performance of such obligations and responsibilities promptly upon removal of any
such cause.
5. If any term or provision of the contract shall be found to be illegal or unenforceable, then, notwithstanding, the
contract shall remain in full force and effect and such term or provision shall be deemed stricken from the contract.
6. The contractor shall comply with all statutory requirements relating to the confidentiality of information
obtained during the performance of the contract.
7. The contractor shall certify that payment requests do not duplicate reimbursement of costs and services
received from other sources.
8. Upon termination of the contract, there shall be a reconciliation based upon the services provided by the
contractor and the payments made by the State. The contractor shall refund to the State any overpayments made by the
State pursuant to the contract.
9. Unless otherwise provided, the contract may be amended, modified, renewed, and/or renegotiated by written
agreement of the parties which shall become effective upon approval by the Office of the State Comptroller.
10. Unless otherwise provided, the OPWDD may cancel the contract without cause upon serving thirty (30)
days’ written notice on the contractor. Cancellation by mutual agreement of all parties to the contract will be allowed
subject to documentation in writing.
11. No part of the contractor’s income or resources shall be used directly or indirectly for the benefit of, or
payment to, any State employee for services provided under this contract other than employees whose names are
furnished to the OPWDD and no employee so identified shall receive any benefit or payment under this contract without
prior written approval by the OPWDD.
12. This contract contains all the terms and conditions agreed upon by the parties and no statement or
representation, oral or written, express or implied, shall be deemed to exist or to bind either party or to vary any of the
terms and conditions of the contract.
13. Where applicable, the contractor shall maintain eligibility for reimbursement from any program that provides
payment for services and shall apply for and obtain all funds available for the program from any public or private source.
Upon request, the OPWDD shall assist in establishing the contractor’s eligibility for such funds.
14. General conditions relating to Article 15-A of the Executive Law are set forth in the attached Addendum.
15. A determination of vendor non-responsibility may be cause for termination of the contract.
16. Contractor must comply with the provisions of Mental Hygiene Law Section 16.33 and Executive Law
Section 845-b, the regulations related to criminal history record checks adopted by OPWDD in connection with the
fingerprinting of certain individuals and the policies and procedures of OPWDD in connection therewith. In particular,
any individual employed by or affiliated as a volunteer with a provider of services as defined in Section 1.03(5) of the
Mental Hygiene Law who has regular and substantial unsupervised or unrestricted physical contact with people
receiving services (such contact hereinafter referred to as “consumer contact”) and who hereafter submits or who has
submitted an application for employment or otherwise becomes or became affiliated with the Contractor on or after
April 1, 2005 (such individual hereinafter referred to as “a subject party”) shall be required to consent and submit to a
criminal history record check. Upon the completion thereof, the contractor shall deny or hold in abeyance
employment or volunteer opportunities involving consumer contact to a subject party when directed to do so by
OPWDD and in those instances the contractor shall notify the subject party that his or her criminal history record
information is the basis for such action taken by the contractor.
17. The Procurement Lobbying Act is applicable to specified non-grant governmental procurements of
annualized value greater than $15,000 which are initiated after January 1, 2006.
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18. Federal False Claims Act (31 USC Sections 3729-3733) and the New York State False Claims Act (State
Finance Law Article XIII, Sections 187-194) – contractor is bound by all of the related laws. The law requires that
OPWDD provide its contractors with information about the federal False Claims Act, the New York State False Claims
Act, and other federal and State laws that play a role in preventing and detecting fraud, waste and abuse in federal
health care programs. This information must include the whistleblower protections that are in these laws. OPWDD
must also provide its contractors with information about OPWDD’s own policies and procedures for detecting and
preventing waste, fraud and abuse. You can find detailed descriptions of these laws, their whistleblower protections
and OPWDD’s policies on the OPWDD website – (www.opwdd.ny.gov). At the home page, select Information for
Providers on the left side of the page, then select False Claims Recoveries. You can also visit the New York State
Medicaid Inspector General website at www.omig.state.ny.us to obtain information about these laws. A paper copy of
the detailed descriptions of the laws and of OPWDD policies and procedures related to waste, fraud and abuse is
available from the OPWDD Contract Management Unit, 3rd floor, 44 Holland Ave., Albany NY 12229-0001. As a
contractor of OPWDD, you are required to participate in the reviews and audits described in OPWDD’s policies, and
to abide by these policies with respect to funding for OPWDD services. You are also required to make the information
at the OPWDD website address listed above available to all your employees and to all of your contractors involved in
performing work under your contract with OPWDD.
19. Both the United States Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of the Medicaid
Inspector General (OMIG) can exclude persons and organizations from federal and State healthcare programs. If this
contract is funded through the New York State Medicaid program, the following applies:
For contractors
The contractor represents that:
(1) The United States Secretary of Health and Human Services has not excluded the contractor from
participation in a federal health care program (including the Medicaid program) under 42 U.S.C. §§1320a-7
or 1320a-7a, or excluded the contractor from eligibility to provide services under the Social Security Act on a
reimbursable basis under 42 U.S.C. §1320c-5;
(2) The Secretary of Health and Human Services has not directed the New York State Department of Health or
any other New York State government agency to exclude the contractor from participation in a federal health
care program (including the Medicaid program) under 42 U.S.C. §§1320a-7(d) or 1320a-7a(a);
(3) The New York State Medicaid Inspector General has not excluded the contractor from participation in the
New York Medicaid program under 18 NYCRR Part 515, and
(4) No federal or State agency has otherwise excluded the contractor from participation in the New York
Medicaid program or excluded the contractor from eligibility to provide services under the Social Security Act
or the New York Medicaid program on a reimbursable basis.
If, during the term of this contract, the contractor is excluded from participation in a federal health care program or the
New York Medicaid program, or is excluded from eligibility to provide services under the Social Security Act or the
New York Medicaid program on a reimbursable basis, under the authorities stated above, this contract shall be
immediately terminated.
20. On February 12, 2007 the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act took effect as law. Pursuant to new §19-0323
of the N.Y. Environmental Conservation Law (“NYECL”), it is now a requirement that heavy duty diesel vehicles in
excess of 8,500 pounds use the best available retrofit technology (“BART”) and ultra low sulfur diesel fuel (“ULSD”).
The requirements of the law apply to all vehicles owned, operated by or on behalf of, or leased by State agencies and
State or regional public authorities. As a contract vendor, the Law may be applicable to vehicles used by contract
vendors “on behalf of” State agencies and State or regional public authorities. Therefore, the bidder/contractor hereby
certifies and warrants that all heavy duty vehicles, as defined in NYECL §19-0323, to be used under this contract will
comply with the specifications and provisions of NYECL §19-0323, and any regulations promulgated pursuant
thereto, which requires the use of BART and ULSD, unless specifically waived by NYSDEC. Qualification and
application for a waiver under this Law will be the responsibility of the bidder/contractor.
21 Notices:
(1). All notices permitted or required hereunder shall be in writing and shall be transmitted either:
(a) via certified or registered United States mail, return receipt requested;
(b) by facsimile transmission;
(c) by personal delivery;
(d) by expedited delivery service; or
(e) by e-mail.
Such notices shall be addressed as follows or to such different addresses as the parties may
from time-to-time designate:
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State of New York, Office for People with Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD)
Name:
Title:
Address:
Telephone Number:
Facsimile Number:
E-Mail Address:
[Contractor Name]
Name:
Title:
Address:
Telephone Number:
Facsimile Number:
E-Mail Address:
(2). Any such notice shall be deemed to have been given either at the time of personal delivery or, in the case of
expedited delivery service or certified or registered United States mail, as of the date of first attempted delivery at the
address and in the manner provided herein, or in the case of facsimile transmission or email, upon receipt.
(3). The parties may, from time to time, specify any new or different address in the United States as their address for
purpose of receiving notice under this Agreement by giving fifteen (15) days written notice to the other party sent in
accordance herewith. The parties agree to mutually designate individuals as their respective representatives for the
purposes of receiving notices under this Agreement. Additional individuals may be designated in writing by the
parties for purposes of implementation and administration/billing, resolving issues and problems and/or for dispute
resolution.
22. Chapter 1 of the Laws of 2012 amends State Finance Law by adding new section 165-A known as the Iran
Divestment Act of 2012. This Act became effective on April 12, 2012 and imposes limitations on vendors that do
business with the Iranian energy sector. The Act prohibits, with certain exemptions, state contracts and subcontracts
with “persons” engaged in investment activities in the energy sector of Iran. For commodities, services, construction,
and printing, the Act requires that bids or offers for and renewals or assignments of, contracts include certification
with respect to investment activities in Iran. According to the Act, a person engages in investment activities in Iran if
the person provides goods or services of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) or more in the energy sector of Iran or
is a financial institution that extends twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) or more in credit for a minimum of 45 days to
a person for purposes of providing goods or services in the energy sector of Iran. The Act requires that within 120
days after the effective date of the law (eff. April 12, 2012), the Office of General Services (OGS) develop a list of
persons who engage in investment activities in Iran. Any person on the list is deemed non-responsive as defined in
State Finance Law section 163. The list will be posted on the OGS website. No person on the list shall be utilized as
a contractor or a subcontractor. Exemptions may be granted under certain conditions as denoted in Office of the
State Comptroller (OSC) bulletin numbered G-252 issued on 3/2/2012 and available on the OSC website.
23. 14 NYCRR Sec. 624.6(t)(2) An agency shall not take any retaliatory action against an employee or agent who
believes that he or she has reasonable cause to suspect that a person receiving services has been subjected to a
reportable incident or notable occurrence, and the employee or agent makes a report to the VPCR and/or OPWDD in
accordance with this section and/or if the employee or agent cooperates with the investigation of a report made to the
VPCR or OPWDD. This extends to NY State contractors; associated language can be found at
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/regulations_guidance/opwdd_regulations/implemenation_of_the_PPSNA_and_reforms_to_i
ncident-management-effective-12-25-13.
January, 2014
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ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
Authority: Article 15-A of the Executive Law and 5 NYCRR parts 140-144)
Standard Clauses for All New York State Office for People with Developmental Disabilities
(OPWDD) Contracts
PARTICIPATION BY MINORITY GROUP MEMBERS AND WOMEN WITH RESPECT TO
STATE CONTRACTS: REQUIREMENTS AND PROCEDURES
I. General Provisions
A. The Office For People With Developmental Disabilities is required to implement the
provisions of New York State Executive Law Article 15-A and 5 NYCRR Parts 142-144
(“MWBE Regulations”) for all State contracts as defined therein, with a value (1) in
excess of $25,000 for labor, services, equipment, materials, or any combination of the
foregoing or (2) in excess of $100,000 for real property renovations and construction.
B. The Contractor to the subject contract (the “Contractor” and the “Contract,” respectively)
agrees, in addition to any other nondiscrimination provision of the Contract and at no
additional cost to the New York State Office For People With Developmental Disabilities
(the “OPWDD”), to fully comply and cooperate with the OPWDD in the implementation
of New York State Executive Law Article 15-A. These requirements include equal
employment opportunities for minority group members and women (“EEO”) and
contracting opportunities for certified minority and women-owned business enterprises
(“MWBEs”). Contractor’s demonstration of “good faith efforts” pursuant to 5 NYCRR
§142.8 shall be a part of these requirements. These provisions shall be deemed
supplementary to, and not in lieu of, the nondiscrimination provisions required by New
York State Executive Law Article 15 (the “Human Rights Law”) or other applicable
federal, state or local laws.
C. Failure to comply with all of the requirements herein may result in a finding of non-
responsiveness, non-responsibility and/or a breach of contract, leading to the withholding
of funds or such other actions, liquidated damages pursuant to Section VII of this
Appendix or enforcement proceedings as allowed by the Contract.
II. Contract Goals
A. For purposes of this procurement, the OPWDD hereby establishes an overall goal of 20%
for Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (“MWBE”) participation, 12% for
Minority-Owned Business Enterprises (“MBE”) participation and 8% for Women-
Owned Business Enterprises (“WBE”) participation (based on the current availability of
qualified MBEs and WBEs).
B. For purposes of providing meaningful participation by MWBEs on the Contract and
achieving the Contract Goals established in Section II-A hereof, Contractor should
reference the directory of New York State Certified MBWEs found at the following
internet address: http://www.esd.ny.gov/mwbe.html.
http://www.esd.ny.gov/mwbe.html
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Additionally, Contractor is encouraged to contact the Division of Minority and Woman Business
Development ((518) 292-5250; (212) 803-2414; or (716) 846-8200) to discuss additional methods
of maximizing participation by MWBEs on the Contract.
C. Where MWBE goals have been established herein, pursuant to 5 NYCRR §142.8,
Contractor must document “good faith efforts” to provide meaningful participation by
MWBEs as subcontractors or suppliers in the performance of the Contract. In accordance
with Section 316-a of Article 15-A and 5 NYCRR §142.13, the Contractor acknowledges
that if Contractor is found to have willfully and intentionally failed to comply with the
MWBE participation goals set forth in the Contract, such a finding constitutes a breach of
contract and the Contractor shall be liable to the OPWDD for liquidated or other
appropriate damages, as set forth herein.
I. Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO)
A. Contractor agrees to be bound by the provisions of Article 15-A and the MWBE
Regulations promulgated by the Division of Minority and Women’s Business
Development of the Department of Economic Development (the “Division”). If any of
these terms or provisions conflict with applicable law or regulations, such laws and
regulations shall supersede these requirements.
B. Contractor shall comply with the following provisions of Article 15-A:
1. Contractor and Subcontractors shall undertake or continue existing EEO programs
to ensure that minority group members and women are afforded equal employment
opportunities without discrimination because of race, creed, color, national origin,
sex, age, disability or marital status. For these purposes, EEO shall apply in the areas
of recruitment, employment, job assignment, promotion, grading, demotion, transfer,
layoff, or termination and rates of pay or other forms of compensation.
2. The Contractor shall submit an EEO policy statement to the OPWDD within seventy
two (72) hours after the date of the notice by OPWDD to award the Contract to the
Contractor.
3. If Contractor or Subcontractor does not have an existing EEO policy statement,
OPWDD has provided the Contractor or Subcontractor a model statement (see
Form 100 – Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises Equal Employment
Opportunity Policy Statement).
4. The Contractor’s EEO policy statement shall include the following language:
a. The Contractor will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for
employment because of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age,
disability or marital status, will undertake or continue existing EEO programs
to ensure that minority group members and women are afforded equal
employment opportunities without discrimination, and shall make and
document its conscientious and active efforts to employ and utilize minority
group members and women in its work force.
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b. The Contractor shall state in all solicitations or advertisements for employees
that, in the performance of the contract, all qualified applicants will be
afforded equal employment opportunities without discrimination because of
race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability or marital status.
c. The Contractor shall request each employment agency, labor union, or
authorized representative of workers with which it has a collective bargaining
or other agreement or understanding, to furnish a written statement that such
employment agency, labor union, or representative will not discriminate on
the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex age, disability or marital
status and that such union or representative will affirmatively cooperate in the
implementation of the Contractor’s obligations herein.
d. The Contractor will include the provisions of Subdivisions (a) through (c) of
this Subsection 4 and Paragraph “E” of this Section III, which provides for
relevant provisions of the Human Rights Law, in every subcontract in such a
manner that the requirements of the subdivisions will be binding upon each
subcontractor as to work in connection with the Contract.
C. Form 101 – Staffing Plan
To ensure compliance with this Section, the Contractor shall submit a staffing plan to
document the composition of the proposed workforce to be utilized in the performance of
the Contract by the specified categories listed, including ethnic background, gender, and
Federal occupational categories. Contractors shall complete the Staffing plan form and
submit it as part of their bid or proposal or within a reasonable time, but no later than the
time of award of the contract.
D. Form 102 – Workforce Employment Utilization Report (“Workforce Report”)
1. Once a contract has been awarded and during the term of Contract, Contractor is
responsible for updating and providing notice to the OPWDD of any changes to
the previously submitted Staffing Plan. This information is to be submitted on a
quarterly basis during the term of the contract to report the actual workforce
utilized in the performance of the contract by the specified categories listed
including ethnic background, gender, and Federal occupational categories. The
Workforce Report must be submitted to report this information.
2. Separate forms shall be completed by Contractor and any subcontractor
performing work on the Contract.
3. In limited instances, Contractor may not be able to separate out the workforce
utilized in the performance of the Contract from Contractor’s and/or
subcontractor’s total workforce. When a separation can be made, Contractor shall
submit the Workforce Report and indicate that the information provided related to
the actual workforce utilized on the Contract. When the workforce to be utilized
on the contract cannot be separated out from Contractor’s and/or subcontractor’s
total workforce, Contractor shall submit the Workforce Report and indicate that
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 74 of 135
the information provided is Contractor’s total workforce during the subject time
frame, not limited to work specifically under the contract.
E. Contractor shall comply with the provisions of the Human Rights Law, all other State and
Federal statutory and constitutional non-discrimination provisions. Contractor and
subcontractors shall not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment
because of race, creed (religion), color, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, military
status, age, disability, predisposing genetic characteristic, marital status or domestic
violence victim status, and shall also follow the requirements of the Human Rights Law
with regard to non-discrimination on the basis of prior criminal conviction and prior
arrest.
IV. MWBE Utilization Plan
A. The Contractor represents and warrants that Contractor has submitted an MWBE
Utilization Plan prior to the execution of the contract.
B. MWBE Utilization Plan (Form MWBE 103).
1. Contractors are required to submit a Utilization Plan on Form MWBE 103 with their
bid or proposal. Complete the following step to prepare the Utilization Plan:
a. list NYS Certified minority- and women-owned business enterprises which the
Contractor intends to use to perform the State contract;
b. insert a description of the contract scope of work which the Contractor intends to
structure to increase the participation by NYS Certified minority- and women-owned
enterprises on the State contract;
c. insert the estimated or, if known, actual dollar amounts to be paid to and performance
dates of each component of a State contract which the Contractor intends to be
performed by a NYS Certified minority- or women-owned business; and
d. Any modifications or changes to the agreed participation by NYS Certified MWBEs
after the Contract Award and during the term of the contract must be reported on a
revised MWBE Utilization Plan and submitted to the NYS OPWDD MWBE
Program Management Unit.
2. The NYS OPWDD MWBE Program Management Unit will review the MWBE
Utilization Plan and will issue the Contractor a written notice of acceptance or
deficiency within twenty (20) day of its receipt. A notice of deficiency shall include
the:
a. list NYS Certified minority- and women-owned business enterprises which the
Contractor intends to use to perform the State contract;
b. name of any MWBE which is not acceptable for the purpose of complying with the
MWBE participation goals;
c. reasons why it is not an acceptable element of the Contract scope of work which the
MWBE Program Management Unit has determined can be reasonably structured by
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the Contractor to increase the likelihood of participation in the Contract by MWBEs;
and
d. other information which the MWBE Program Management Unit determines to be
relevant to the MWBE Utilization Plan.
3. The Contractor shall respond to the notice of deficiency within seven (7) business days of
receipt by submitting to NYS OPWDD MWBE Program Management Unit a written remedy
in response to the notice of deficiency.
a. If the written remedy that is submitted is not timely or is found to be inadequate, the
MWBE Program Management Unit shall notify the Contractor and direct the
Contractor to submit, within five (5) business days, a request for partial or total
waiver of MWBE participation goals on forms provided by NYS OPWDD MWBE
Program Management Unit.
b. Failure to file the waiver form in a timely manner may be grounds for
disqualification of the bid or proposal.
4. NYS OPWDD MWBE Program Management Unit may disqualify a Contractor as
being non-responsive under the following circumstances:
a. If a Contractor fails to submit a MWBE Utilization Plan;
b. If a Contractor fails to submit a written remedy to a notice of deficiency in a
MWBE Utilization Plan;
c. If a Contractor fails to submit a request for waiver; or
d. If the MWBE Program Management Unit determines that the Contractor has
failed to document Good Faith Efforts.
C. Contractor agrees to use such MWBE Utilization Plan for the performance of MWBEs on the
Contract pursuant to the prescribed MWBE goals set forth in Section III-A of this Appendix.
D. Contractor further agrees that a failure to submit and/or use such MWBE Utilization Plan
shall constitute a material breach of the terms of the Contract. Upon the occurrence of
such a material breach, OPWDD shall be entitled to any remedy provided herein, including
but not limited to, a finding of Contractor non-responsiveness.
V. Waivers
A. For Waiver Requests Contractor should use Form 104 – Waiver Request.
B. If the Contractor, after making good faith efforts, is unable to comply with MWBE goals, the
Contractor may submit a Request for Waiver form documenting good faith efforts by the
Contractor to meet such goals. If the documentation included with the waiver request is
complete the OPWDD shall evaluate the request and issue a written notice of acceptance or
denial within twenty (20) days of receipt.
C. If the OPWDD, upon review of the MWBE Utilization Plan and updated Quarterly
MWBE Contractor Compliance Reports determines that Contractor is failing or refusing
to comply with the Contract goals and no waiver has been issued in regards to such non-
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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compliance, the OPWDD may issue a notice of deficiency to the Contractor. The contractor
must respond to the notice of deficiency within seven (7) business days of receipt. Such
response may include a request for partial or total waiver of MWBE Contract Goals.
VI. Quarterly MWBE Contractor Compliance Report
Contractor is required to submit a Quarterly MWBE Contractor Compliance Report (Form 105) to the
OPWDD by the 10
th
day following each end of quarter over the term of the Contract documenting the
progress made towards achievement of the MWBE goals of the Contract.
VII. Liquidated Damages – MWBE Participation
A. Where OPWDD determines that Contractor is not in compliance with the requirements of
the Contract and Contractor refuses to comply with such requirements, or if Contractor is
found to have willfully and intentionally failed to comply with the MWBE participation
goals, Contractor shall be obligated to pay to the OPWDD liquidated damages.
B. Such liquidated damages shall be calculated as an amount equaling the difference
between:
1. All sums identified for payment to MWBEs had the Contractor achieved the
2. contractual MWBE goals; and
3. All sums actually paid to MWBEs for work performed or materials supplied under
the Contract.
C. In the event a determination has been made which requires the payment of liquidated
damages and such identified sums have not been withheld by the OPWDD, Contractor
shall pay such liquidated damages to the OPWDD within sixty (60) days after they are
assessed by the OPWDD unless prior to the expiration of such sixtieth day, the
Contractor has filed a complaint with the Director of the Division of Minority and
Woman Business Development pursuant to Subdivision 8 of Section 313 of the Executive
Law in which event the liquidated damages shall be payable if Director renders a decision
in favor of the OPWDD.
Effective April 1, 2012
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Page 1 of 2
MINORITY AND WOMEN-OWNED BUSINESS ENTERPRISES – EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
POLICY STATEMENT
I, _________________________, the (awardee /contractor)___________________ agree to adopt the following policies with
respect to the project being developed or services rendered at the address below:
__________________________________________________________________________
This organization will and will cause its contractors and subcontractors to take good faith actions to achieve the
MWBE contract participations goals set by the State for that area in which the State-funded project is located,
by taking the following steps:
(1) Active and affirmatively solicit bids for contracts and subcontracts from qualified State certified MBEs or WBEs,
including solicitations to MWBE contractor associations.
(2) Request a list of State-certified MWBEs from OPWDD and solicit bids from them directly.
(3) Ensure that plans, specifications, request for proposals and other documents used to secure bids will e made available in
sufficient time for review by prospective MWBEs.
(4) Where feasible, divide the work into smaller portions to enhanced participations by MWBEs and encourage the
formation of joint venture and other partnerships among MWBE contractors to enhance their participation.
(5) Document and maintain records of bid solicitation, including those to MWBEs and the results thereof. Contractor will
also maintain records of actions that its subcontractors have taken toward meeting MWBE contract participation goals.
(6) Ensure that progress payments to MWBEs are made on a timely basis so that undue financial hardship is avoided, and
that bonding and other credit requirements are waived or appropriate alternatives developed to encourage MWBE
participation.
(a) This organization will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment because of
race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital status, will undertake or continue existing
programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group members are afforded equal employment opportunities without
discrimination, and shall make and document its conscientious and active efforts to employ and utilize minority group members
and women in its work force on state contracts.
(b) This organization shall state in all solicitation or advertisements for employees that in the performance of the State contract
all qualified applicants will be afforded equal employment opportunities without discrimination because of race, creed, color,
national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital status.
(c) At the request of the contracting agency, this organization shall request that each employment agency, labor union, or
authorized representative will not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital
status and that such union or representative will affirmatively cooperate in the implementation of this organization’s obligations
herein.
(d) This organization will include the provisions of sections (a) through (c) of this agreement in every subcontract in such a
manner that the requirements of the subdivisions will be binding upon each subcontractor as to work in connection with the
State contract.
Agreed to this _______ day of ____________________, 2___________
By __________________________________________
Print: _____________________________________ Title: ______________________
MWBE
EEO
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 78 of 135
Page 2 of 2
Minority Business Enterprise Liaison
_________________________________is designated as the Minority Business Enterprise Liaison
(Name of Designated Liaison)
responsible for administering the Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises- Equal Employment Opportunity (MWBE-
EEO) program.
MWBE Contract Goals
________% Minority Business Enterprise Participation
________% Women’s Business Enterprise Participation
EEO Contract Goals
________% Minority Labor Force Participation
________%Female Labor Force Participation
____________________________________________
(Authorized Representative)
Title: ________________________________________
Date: ________________________________________
FORM 100 (MWBE UNIT REVISED: 02/2012)
Effective April 1, 2012
January 2014
STAFFING PLAN
Submit with Bid or Proposal – Instructions on page 2
Solicitation No.: Reporting Entity: Report includes Contractor’s/Subcontractor’s:
□ Work force to be utilized on this contract
□ Total work force
Offeror/Vendor’s Name: □ Offeror/ Vendor
□ Subcontractor
Subcontractor’s name________________
Offeror/Vendor’s Address:
Enter the total number of employees for each classification in each of the EEO-Job Categories identified
PREPARED BY (Signature): TELEPHONE NO.:
EMAIL ADDRESS:
DATE:
NAME AND TITLE OF PREPARER (Print or Type):
Submit completed with bid or proposal MWBE 101 (Rev 02/12)
Effective April 1, 2012
EEO-Job Category
Total
Work
force
Work force by
Gender
Work force by
Race/Ethnic Identification
Total
Male
(M)
Total
Female
(F)
White
(M) (F)
Black
(M) (F)
Hispanic
(M) (F)
Asian
(M) (F)
Native American
(M) (F)
Disabled
(M) (F)
Veteran
(M) (F)
Officials/Administrator
s
Professionals
Technicians
Sales Workers
Office/Clerical
Craft Workers
Laborers
Service Workers
Temporary
/Apprentices
Totals
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page – 80 – of 135
General instructions: All Offerors and each subcontractor identified in the bid or proposal must complete an EEO Staffing Plan (MWBE 101) and submit it as
part of the bid or proposal package. Where the work force to be utilized in the performance of the State contract can be separated out from the contractor’s
and/or subcontractor’s total work force, the Offeror shall complete this form only for the anticipated work force to be utilized on the State contract. Where the
work force to be utilized in the performance of the State contract cannot be separated out from the contractor’s and/or subcontractor’s total work force, the
Offeror shall complete this form for the contractor’s and/or subcontractor’s total work force.
Instructions for completing:
1. Enter the Solicitation number that this report applies to along with the name and address of the Offeror.
2. Check off the appropriate box to indicate if the Offeror completing the report is the contractor or a subcontractor.
3. Check off the appropriate box to indicate work force to be utilized on the contract or the Offerors’ total work force.
4. Enter the total work force by EEO job category.
5. Break down the anticipated total work force by gender and enter under the heading ‘Work force by Gender’
6. Break down the anticipated total work force by race/ethnic identification and enter under the heading ‘Work force by Race/Ethnic Identification’.
Contact the OMWBE Permissible contact(s) for the solicitation if you have any questions.
7. Enter information on disabled or veterans included in the anticipated work force under the appropriate headings.
8. Enter the name, title, phone number and email address for the person completing the form. Sign and date the form in the designated boxes.
RACE/ETHNIC IDENTIFICATION
Race/ethnic designations as used by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission do not denote scientific definitions of anthropological origins. For the
purposes of this form, an employee may be included in the group to which he or she appears to belong, identifies with, or is regarded in the community as
belonging. However, no person should be counted in more than one race/ethnic group. The race/ethnic categories for this survey are:
WHITE (Not of Hispanic origin) All persons having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East.
BLACK a person, not of Hispanic origin, who has origins in any of the black racial groups of the original peoples of Africa.
HISPANIC a person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
ASIAN & PACIFIC a person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent or the Pacific Islands.
ISLANDER
NATIVE INDIAN (NATIVE a person having origins in any of the original peoples of North America, and who maintains cultural identification through
tribal
AMERICAN/ ALASKAN affiliation or community recognition.
NATIVE)
OTHER CATEGORIES
DISABLED INDIVIDUAL any person who: – has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life
activity(ies)
– has a record of such an impairment; or
– is regarded as having such an impairment.
VIETNAM ERA VETERAN a veteran who served at any time between and including January 1, 1963 and May 7, 1975.
GENDER Male or Female
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 81 of 135
MWBE UTILIZATION PLAN
INSTRUCTIONS: This form must be submitted with any bid, proposal, or proposed negotiated contract or within a reasonable time thereafter, but prior to contract award. This
Utilization Plan must contain a detailed description of the supplies and/or services to be provided by each certified Minority and Women-owned Business Enterprise
(MWBE) under the contract. Attach additional sheets if necessary.
Offeror/ Vendor’s Name: Federal Identification No.:
Address: Project/Contract No.:
City, State, Zip Code:
Telephone No.: MWBE Goals in the Contract: MBE % WBE %
Region/Location of Work:
1. Certified MWBE Subcontractors/Suppliers
Name, Address, Email Address, Telephone No.
2. Classification 3. Federal ID No. 4. Detailed Description of Work
(Attach additional sheets, if
necessary)
5. Dollar Value of Subcontracts/
Supplies/Services and intended
performance dates of each component of
the contract.
A.
NYSDED CERTIFIED
MBE
WBE
B. NYS DED CERTIFIED
MBE
WBE
6. IF UNABLE TO FULLY MEET THE MBE AND WBE GOALS SET FORTH IN THE CONTRACT, OFFEROR MUST SUBMIT A REQUEST FOR WAIVER FORM (MWBE 104).
PREPARED BY (Signature):
DATE:
NAME AND TITLE OF PREPARER (Print or Type):
SUBMISSION OF THIS FORM CONSTITUTES THE OFFEROR’S ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND
AGREEMENT TO COMPLY WITH THE MWBE REQUIREMENTS SET FORTH UNDER NYS
EXECUTIVE LAW, ARTICLE 15-A, 5 NYCRR PART 143, AND THE ABOVE-REFERENCED
SOLICITATION. FAILURE TO SUBMIT COMPLETE AND ACCURATE INFORMATION MAY RESULT
IN A FINDING OF NONCOMPLIANCE AND POSSIBLE TERMINATION OF YOUR CONTRACT.
TELEPHONE NO.:
EMAIL ADDRESS:
FOR MWBE USE ONLY
REVIEWED BY:
DATE:
UTILIZATION PLAN APPROVED: YES NO Date:
Contract No.: Project No. (if applicable):
Contract Award Date: Estimated Date of Completion:
Amount Obligated Under the Contract:
Description of Work:
NOTICE OF DEFICIENCY ISSUED: YES NO Date:______________
NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE ISSUED: YES NO Date:_____________
MWBE 103 (Revised 2/12)
Effective April 1, 2012
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 82 of 135
Appendix B
Minority and Women Owned Business Enterprises
MINORITY AND WOMEN-OWNED BUSINESS ENTERPRISES – EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
POLICY STATEMENT
I, _________________________, the (awardee /contractor)___________________ agree to adopt the following policies with
respect to the project being developed or services rendered at the address below:
__________________________________________________________________________
This organization will and will cause its contractors and subcontractors to take good faith actions to achieve the
MWBE contract participations goals set by the State for that area in which the State-funded project is located,
by taking the following steps:
(7) Active and affirmatively solicit bids for contracts and subcontracts from qualified State certified MBEs or WBEs,
including solicitations to MWBE contractor associations.
(8) Request a list of State-certified MWBEs from OPWDD and solicit bids from them directly.
(9) Ensure that plans, specifications, request for proposals and other documents used to secure bids will e made available in
sufficient time for review by prospective MWBEs.
(10) Where feasible, divide the work into smaller portions to enhanced participations by MWBEs and encourage the
formation of joint venture and other partnerships among MWBE contractors to enhance their participation.
(11) Document and maintain records of bid solicitation, including those to MWBEs and the results thereof. Contractor will
also maintain records of actions that its subcontractors have taken toward meeting MWBE contract participation goals.
(12) Ensure that progress payments to MWBEs are made on a timely basis so that undue financial hardship is avoided, and
that bonding and other credit requirements are waived or appropriate alternatives developed to encourage MWBE
participation.
(a) This organization will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment because of
race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital status, will undertake or continue existing
programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group members are afforded equal employment opportunities without
discrimination, and shall make and document its conscientious and active efforts to employ and utilize minority group members
and women in its work force on state contracts.
(b) This organization shall state in all solicitation or advertisements for employees that in the performance of the State contract
all qualified applicants will be afforded equal employment opportunities without discrimination because of race, creed, color,
national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital status.
(c) At the request of the contracting agency, this organization shall request that each employment agency, labor union, or
authorized representative will not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, disability, or marital
status and that such union or representative will affirmatively cooperate in the implementation of this organization’s obligations
herein.
(d) This organization will include the provisions of sections (a) through (c) of this agreement in every subcontract in such a
manner that the requirements of the subdivisions will be binding upon each subcontractor as to work in connection with the
State contract.
Agreed to this _______ day of ____________________, 2___________
By __________________________________________
Print: _____________________________________ Title: ______________________
MWBE
EEO
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 83 of 135
Page 2 of 2
Minority Business Enterprise Liaison
_________________________________is designated as the Minority Business Enterprise Liaison
(Name of Designated Liaison)
responsible for administering the Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises- Equal Employment Opportunity (MWBE-
EEO) program.
MWBE Contract Goals
________% Minority Business Enterprise Participation
________% Women’s Business Enterprise Participation
EEO Contract Goals
________% Minority Labor Force Participation
________%Female Labor Force Participation
____________________________________________
(Authorized Representative)
Title: ________________________________________
Date: ________________________________________
FORM 100 (MWBE UNIT REVISED: 02/2012)
Effective April 1, 2012
January 2014
STAFFING PLAN
Submit with Bid or Proposal – Instructions on page 2
Solicitation No.: Reporting Entity: Report includes Contractor’s/Subcontractor’s:
□ Work force to be utilized on this contract
□ Total work force
Offeror/ Vendor’s Name: □ Offeror
□ Subcontractor
Subcontractor’s name________________
Offeror/ Vendor’s Address:
Enter the total number of employees for each classification in each of the EEO-Job Categories identified
PREPARED BY (Signature): TELEPHONE NO.:
EMAIL ADDRESS:
DATE:
NAME AND TITLE OF PREPARER (Print or Type):
Submit completed with bid or proposal MWBE 101 (Rev 02/12)
Effective April 1, 2012
EEO-Job
Category
Total
Work
force
Work force by
Gender
Work force by
Race/Ethnic Identification
Total
Male
(M)
Total
Female
(F)
White
(M) (F)
Black
(M) (F)
Hispanic
(M) (F)
Asian
(M) (F)
Native
American
(M) (F)
Disabled
(M) (F)
Veteran
(M) (F)
Officials/
Administrators
Professionals
Technicians
Sales Workers
Office/Clerical
Craft Workers
Laborers
Service
Workers
Temporary
/Apprentices
Totals
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page – 85 – of 135
General instructions: All Offerors and each subcontractor identified in the bid or proposal must complete an EEO Staffing Plan (MWBE 101) and submit it as
part of the bid or proposal package. Where the work force to be utilized in the performance of the State contract can be separated out from the contractor’s
and/or subcontractor’s total work force, the Offeror shall complete this form only for the anticipated work force to be utilized on the State contract. Where the
work force to be utilized in the performance of the State contract cannot be separated out from the contractor’s and/or subcontractor’s total work force, the
Offeror shall complete this form for the contractor’s and/or subcontractor’s total work force.
Instructions for completing:
9. Enter the Solicitation number that this report applies to along with the name and address of the Offeror.
10. Check off the appropriate box to indicate if the Offeror completing the report is the contractor or a subcontractor.
11. Check off the appropriate box to indicate work force to be utilized on the contract or the Offerors’ total work force.
12. Enter the total work force by EEO job category.
13. Break down the anticipated total work force by gender and enter under the heading ‘Work force by Gender’
14. Break down the anticipated total work force by race/ethnic identification and enter under the heading ‘Work force by Race/Ethnic Identification’.
Contact the OMWBE Permissible contact(s) for the solicitation if you have any questions.
15. Enter information on disabled or veterans included in the anticipated work force under the appropriate headings.
16. Enter the name, title, phone number and email address for the person completing the form. Sign and date the form in the designated boxes.
RACE/ETHNIC IDENTIFICATION
Race/ethnic designations as used by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission do not denote scientific definitions of anthropological origins. For the
purposes of this form, an employee may be included in the group to which he or she appears to belong, identifies with, or is regarded in the community as
belonging. However, no person should be counted in more than one race/ethnic group. The race/ethnic categories for this survey are:
WHITE (Not of Hispanic origin) All persons having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East.
BLACK a person, not of Hispanic origin, who has origins in any of the black racial groups of the original peoples of Africa.
HISPANIC a person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
ASIAN & PACIFIC a person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent or the Pacific Islands.
ISLANDER
NATIVE INDIAN (NATIVE a person having origins in any of the original peoples of North America, and who maintains cultural identification through
tribal
AMERICAN/ ALASKAN affiliation or community recognition.
NATIVE)
OTHER CATEGORIES
DISABLED INDIVIDUAL any person who: – has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life
activity(ies)
– has a record of such an impairment; or
– is regarded as having such an impairment.
VIETNAM ERA VETERAN a veteran who served at any time between and including January 1, 1963 and May 7, 1975.
GENDER Male or Female
January 2014
MWBE UTILIZATION PLAN
INSTRUCTIONS: This form must be submitted with any bid, proposal, or proposed negotiated contract or within a reasonable time thereafter, but prior to contract
award. This Utilization Plan must contain a detailed description of the supplies and/or services to be provided by each certified Minority and
Women-owned Business Enterprise (MWBE) under the contract. Attach additional sheets if necessary.
Offeror/Vendor’s Name: Federal Identification No.:
Address: Project/Contract No.:
City, State, Zip Code:
Telephone No.: MWBE Goals in the Contract: MBE % WBE %
Region/Location of Work:
1. Certified MWBE Subcontractors/Suppliers
Name, Address, Email Address, Telephone No.
2. Classification 3. Federal
ID No.
4. Detailed Description of Work
(Attach additional sheets, if
necessary)
5. Dollar Value of Subcontracts/
Supplies/Services and intended performance
dates of each component of the contract.
A.
NYSDED CERTIFIED
MBE
WBE
B. NYS DED CERTIFIED
MBE
WBE
6. IF UNABLE TO FULLY MEET THE MBE AND WBE GOALS SET FORTH IN THE CONTRACT, OFFEROR MUST SUBMIT A REQUEST FOR WAIVER FORM (MWBE
104).
PREPARED BY (Signature):
DATE:
NAME AND TITLE OF PREPARER (Print or Type):
SUBMISSION OF THIS FORM CONSTITUTES THE OFFEROR’S
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND AGREEMENT TO COMPLY WITH THE MWBE
REQUIREMENTS SET FORTH UNDER NYS EXECUTIVE LAW, ARTICLE 15-A, 5
NYCRR PART 143, AND THE ABOVE-REFERENCED SOLICITATION. FAILURE TO
SUBMIT COMPLETE AND ACCURATE INFORMATION MAY RESULT IN A FINDING
OF NONCOMPLIANCE AND POSSIBLE TERMINATION OF YOUR CONTRACT.
TELEPHONE NO.:
EMAIL ADDRESS:
FOR MWBE USE ONLY
REVIEWED BY:
DATE:
UTILIZATION PLAN APPROVED: YES NO Date:
Contract No.: Project No. (if applicable):
Contract Award Date: Estimated Date of Completion:
Amount Obligated Under the Contract:
Description of Work:
NOTICE OF DEFICIENCY ISSUED: YES NO Date:______________
NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE ISSUED: YES NO Date:_____________
MWBE 103 (Revised 2/12)
Effective April 1, 2012
January 2014
Appendix C
Nondiscrimination in Employment in Northern Ireland
MacBride Fair Employment Principles
In accordance with Section 165 of the State Finance Law, the Bidder, by submission of this bid certifies that it or any
individual or legal entity in which the Bidder holds a 10% or greater ownership interest, or any individual or legal entity
that holds a 10% or greater ownership in the Bidder, either: (answer yes or no to one or both of the following, as
applicable)
(1) has business operations in Northern Ireland
Yes _____ No _____
If Yes,
(2) shall take lawful steps in good faith to conduct any business operations that it has in Northern Ireland in accordance
with the MacBride Fair Employment Principles relating to nondiscrimination in employment and freedom of
workplace opportunity regarding such operations in Northern Ireland, and shall permit independent monitoring of
their compliance with such Principles.
Yes _____ No _____
________________________________________ __________________
Signature Date
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 88 of 135
Appendix D
Non-Collusive Bidding Certification Required
By Section 139-D of the State Finance Law
By submission of this bid, Bidder and each person signing on behalf of Bidder Certifies, and in the case of joint bid, each
party thereto certifies as to its own organization, under penalty of perjury, that to the best of his/her knowledge and belief:
[1] The prices of this bid have been arrived at independently, without collusion, consultation, communication, or
agreement, for the purposes of restricting competition, as to any matter relating to such prices with any other Bidder
or with any competitor;
[2] Unless otherwise required by law, the prices which have been quoted in this bid have not been knowingly disclosed
by the Bidder and will not knowingly be disclosed by the Bidder prior to opening, directly or indirectly, to any other
Bidder or to any competitor; and
[3] No attempt has been made or will be made by the Bidder to induce any other person, partnership or corporation to
submit or not to submit a bid for the purpose of restricting competition.
A BID SHALL NOT BE CONSIDERED FOR AWARD NOR SHALL ANY AWARD BE MADE WHERE [1], [2],
AND [3] ABOVE HAVE NOT BEEN COMPLIED WITH; PROVIDED HOWEVER, THAT IF IN ANY CASE
THE BIDDER(S) CANNOT MAKE THE FOREGOING CERTIFICATION, THE BIDDER SHALL SO STATE
AND SHALL FURNISH BELOW A SIGNED STATEMENT WHICH SETS FORTH IN DETAIL THE
REASONS THEREFORE:
[AFFIX ADDENDUM TO THIS PAGE IF SPACE IS REQUIRED FOR STATEMENT.]
Subscribed to under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of New York, this _________ day of
____________________, _____ as the act and deed of said corporation or partnership.
IF BIDDER(S) IS (ARE) A PARTNERSHIP, COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING:
NAMES OF PARTNERS/PRINCIPALS LEGAL RESIDENCE
___________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________
___________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________
IF BIDDER(S) IS (ARE) A CORPORATION, COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING:
NAME LEGAL RESIDENCE
President: _________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 89 of 135
Secretary: __________________________________ _______________________________________
_____________________________________
Treasurer: _________________________________ _____________________________________
_____________________________________
IDENTIFYING DATA
Potential Contractor ________________________________________________________________
Street Address ____________________________________________________________________
City, State and Zip Code_____________________________________________________________
Telephone _________________ Title: ________________________________________
Fax ______________________
If applicable, Responsible Corporate Officer
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
Name Title
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
Signature Date
Joint or combined bids by companies or firms must be certified on behalf of each participant.
___________________________________
Legal name of person, firm or corporation
By____________________________________________
Name
_____________________________________________
Title
______________________________________________
Street Address
_______________________________________ __________
City, State, Zip Code
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 90 of 135
Appendix E
Bidder’s Compliance with Communications During Restricted Period
A. Affirmations & Disclosures related to State Finance Law §§ 139-j & 139-k:
Pursuant to State Finance Law §§139-j and 139-k, this Request for Proposal includes and imposes certain restrictions
on communications between the State agency and a Bidder during the procurement process. A Bidder is restricted
from making contacts from the earliest notice of intent to solicit bids/proposals through final award and approval of
the Procurement Contract by the Office of the State Comptroller (“restricted period”) to other than designated staff
unless it is a contact that is included among certain statutory exceptions set forth in State Finance Law §139-j (3) (a).
Designated staff, as of the date hereof, are identified in Section One of this Request for Proposal. If State agency
employees, other than the designated contacts, are contacted by the Bidder, the State employees are required to obtain
certain information when contacted during the restricted period and make a determination of the responsibility of the
Bidder pursuant to these two statutes. Certain findings of non-responsibility can result in rejection for contract award
and in the event of two findings within a 4 year period, the Bidder is debarred from obtaining governmental
Procurement Contracts. Further information about these requirements can be found on the Office of General Services
Website at http://www.ogs.ny.gov/aboutOgs/regulations/defaultAdvisoryCouncil.asp
Bidder affirms that it understands and agrees to comply with the procedures relative to permissible contacts
(provided below) as required by State Finance Law §139-j (3) and §139-j (6) (b).
Bidder Name: _________________________________________________________________
________________________________________ __________________________________
(Officer Signature) (Date)
_________________________ _________________________________________
(Officer Title) (Telephone)
_____________________________________
(E-mail Address)
http://www.ogs.ny.gov/aboutOgs/regulations/defaultAdvisoryCouncil.asp
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 91 of 135
Appendix F
Bidder’s Responsibility Questionnaire
Procurement laws and guidelines require the award of New York State contracts to responsible contractors. Vendor
responsibility generally means that a contractor has the integrity to justify the award of public dollars and the
capacity to fully perform the requirements of the contract. It is the State’s responsibility to evaluate the
responsibility of a prospective contractor. A responsibility determination, wherein the State determines that it has
reasonable assurances that a contractor is responsible, is an important part of the procurement process, promoting
fairness in contracting and protecting a contracting State agency and the State of New York against failed contracts.
The following factors are considered in making a responsibility determination:
* legal authority to do business in New York State
* integrity
* capacity – both organizational and financial
* previous performance
OPWDD is required to conduct a review of a prospective contractor to provide reasonable assurances that the
contractor is responsible. The Office of the State Comptroller (OSC) maintains the VendRep system, which allows
business entities (vendors) to enter and maintain their Vendor Responsibility Questionnaire (VRQ) information in a
secure, centralized database. It is recommended that all potential vendors prepare their VRQ on-line as follows:
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/vendor_index.htm. For direct VendRep user assistance, the OSC Help Desk
may be reached at 866-370-4672 or 518-408-4672, or by e-mail at: helpdesk@osc.state.ny.us .
If a Bidder opts to use the paper copy, forms can be downloaded from the website:
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/forms_vendor.htm
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/vendor_index.htm
mailto:helpdesk@osc.state.ny.us
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/vendrep/forms_vendor.htm
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 92 of 135
Appendix G
ENCOURAGING USE OF NEW YORK STATE BUSINESSES
IN CONTRACT PERFORMANCE
New York State businesses have a substantial presence in State contracts and strongly contribute to the
economies of the state and the nation. In recognition of their economic activity and leadership in doing business
in New York State, Bidder/Bidders for this contract for commodities, services, and technology are strongly
encouraged and expected to consider New York State businesses in the fulfillment of the requirements for the
contact. Such partnering may be as subcontractors, suppliers, protégés, or other supporting roles.
Bidder/Bidders need to be aware that all authorized users of their contract will be strongly encouraged, to the
maximum extent practical and consistent with legal requirements, to use responsible and responsive New York
State businesses in purchasing commodities that are of equal quality and functionality and in utilizing services
and technology. Furthermore, Bidder/Bidders are reminded that they must continue to utilize small, minority
and women-owned businesses, consistent with current State law.
Utilizing New York State businesses in State contracts will help create more private sector jobs, rebuild New
York’s infrastructure, and maximize economic activity to the mutual benefit of the contractor and its New York
State business partners. New York State businesses will promote the contractor’s optimal performance under
the contract, thereby fully benefiting the public sector programs that are supported by associated procurements.
Public procurements can drive and improve the State’s economic engine through promotion of the use of New
York businesses by its contractors. The State therefore expects Bidder/Bidders to provide maximum assistance
to New York businesses in their use of the contract. The potential participation by all kinds of New York
businesses will deliver great value to the State and its taxpayers.
Bidder/Bidders can demonstrate their commitment to the use of New York state businesses by responding to the
question below:
Will New York State Businesses be used in the performance of this contract? ______ _______
Yes No
If yes, identify New York State businesses that will be used and attach identifying information.
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 93 of 135
Appendix H
Bidder’s Certification of Compliance with State Iran Divestment Act
Background
By submitting a bid/proposal in response to this solicitation or by assuming the responsibility of a Contract awarded
hereunder, Bidder/Contractor (or any assignee) certifies that it is not on the Entities Determined to be Non-Responsive
Bidders/Offerers Pursuant to the New York State Iran Divestment Act of 2012 list (Prohibited Entities List) posted on the
OGS website at: http://www.ogs.ny.gov/about/regs/docs/ListofEntities and further certifies that it will not utilize on
such Contract any subcontractor that is identified on the Prohibited Entities List. Additionally, Bidder/Contractor is
advised that should it seek to renew or extend a Contract awarded in response to the solicitation, it must provide the same
certification at the time the Contract is renewed or extended.
During the term of the Contract, should OPWDD receive information that a person (as defined in State Finance Law
§165-a) is in violation of the above-referenced certifications, OPWDD will review such information and offer the person
an opportunity to respond. If the person fails to demonstrate that it has ceased its engagement in the investment activity
which is in violation of the Act within 90 days after the determination of such violation, then OPWDD shall take such
action as may be appropriate and provided for by law, rule, or contract, including, but not limited to, seeking compliance,
recovering damages, or declaring the Contractor in default. OPWDD reserves the right to reject any bid, request for
assignment, renewal or extension for an entity that appears on the Prohibited Entities List prior to the award, assignment,
renewal or extension of a contract, and to pursue a responsibility review with respect to any entity that is awarded a
contract and appears on the Prohibited Entities list after contract award.
Bidder Certification:
The Bidder certifies that it is not listed as a non-responsive Bidder/Offerer pursuant to the New York State
Divestment Act of 2012 nor that it will utilize on this Contract any subcontractor that is identified on the list.
________________________________________ __________________________________
(Officer Signature) (Date)
_________________________ _________________________________________
(Officer Title) (Telephone)
_____________________________________
(E-mail Address)
http://www.ogs.ny.gov/about/regs/docs/ListofEntities
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 94 of 135
Appendix I
OPWDD HIPAA BUSINESS ASSOCIATE AGREEMENT
THIS Agreement is made by and between New York State Office for People With Developmental Disabilities
(“Covered Entity”), and (“Business Associate”).
WHEREAS, Business Associate provides certain services to Covered Entity through existing written
contract______________________ (the Contract) and, in connection with such services, creates, uses or discloses for or
on behalf of Covered Entity certain individually identifiable protected health information relating to individuals served by
the Covered Entity (“PHI”) that is subject to protection under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA) as amended, including Subpart D of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health
Act (HITECH) of Title XIII, Division A of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, and related
regulations, 45 CFR Parts 160 and 164 (the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules); and
WHEREAS, by reason of such activities, the parties believe that Business Associate is a “business associate” of
Covered Entity, as such term is defined in 45 CFR 160.103; and
WHEREAS, Covered Entity and Business Associate wish to comply in all respects with the requirements of
HIPAA and HITECH, including requirements applicable to the relationship between a covered entity and its business
associates;
NOW, THEREFORE, the parties agree as follows:
1. Definitions:
a. Catch-all definition: The following terms used in this Agreement shall have the same meaning as
those terms in the HIPAA Rules: Breach, Data Aggregation, Designated Record Set, Disclosure,
Health Care Operations, Individual, Minimum Necessary, Notice of Privacy Practices, Protected
Health Information, Required By Law, Secretary, Security Incident, Subcontractor, Unsecured
Protected Health Information, and Use.
b. Specific definitions:
i. “Business Associate” shall generally have the same meaning as the term “business associate”
at 45 CFR 160.103, and in reference to the party to this agreement, shall mean the specific
Business Associate listed in the first paragraph of this Agreement.
ii. “Covered Entity” shall generally have the same meaning as the term “covered entity” at 45
CFR 160.103, and in reference to the party to this agreement, shall mean OPWDD
iii. “HIPAA Rules” shall mean the Privacy, Security, Breach Notification, and Enforcement
Rules at 45 CFR Part 160 and Part 164.
2. Obligations and Activities of Business Associate
(a) Business Associate agrees to:
i. Not use or further disclose Protected Health Information other than as Required by Law, or as otherwise
permitted or as required by this Agreement.
ii. Use appropriate safeguards to prevent use or disclosure of the Protected Health Information other than as
provided for by this Agreement and to implement administrative, physical, and technical safeguards that
reasonably and appropriately protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of any electronic
Protected Health Information that it creates, receives, maintains, or transmits on behalf of Covered Entity
pursuant to this Agreement in accordance with 45 CFR 164 (the HIPAA Security Rule). Business
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 95 of 135
Associate agrees to fully comply with the responsibilities of Business Associates as set forth in sections
13401 and 13404 of the HITECH Act.
iii. to mitigate, to the extent practicable, any harmful effect that is known to Business Associate of a use or
disclosure of Protected Health Information by Business Associate in violation of the requirements of this
Agreement.
iv. to report to Covered Entity any use or disclosure of the Protected Health Information not provided for by
this Agreement of which it becomes aware. Further, Business Associate agrees to report to Covered
entity any security incident, including a breach of Unsecured Protected Health Information as defined by
the Security Rule, of which it becomes aware. In the event of such a breach:
1. Business Associate shall promptly notify Covered Entity of the breach when it is
discovered, A breach is considered discovered on the first day on which Business
Associate knows or should have known of such breach. Such notification shall
identify the Individuals, and their contact information, whose Unsecured Protected
Health Information has, or is reasonably believed to have been, the subject of the
breach. Business Associate shall provide additional information concerning such
breach to Covered Entity as requested.
2. Covered Entity or Business Associate, as determined by Covered Entity, shall
promptly notify individuals about a breach of their Unsecured Protected Health
Information as soon as possible but not later than 60 calendar days after discovery of
the Breach, except where a law enforcement official determines that a notification
would impede a criminal investigation or cause damage to national security.
Notification shall be in a form and format prescribed by Covered Entity and shall
meet the requirements of section 13402 of the HITECH Act
3. to mitigate, to the extent practicable, any harmful effect that is known to Business
Associate of a use or disclosure of Protected Health Information by Business
Associate in violation of the requirements of this Agreement
v. to ensure that any agent, including a subcontractor, to whom it provides Protected
Health Information received from, or created or received by Business Associate
on behalf of Covered Entity agrees to the same restrictions and conditions that apply through this
Agreement to Business Associate with respect to such information.
vi. to provide access, at the request of Covered Entity, and in the time and manner
designated by Covered Entity, to Protected Health Information in a Designated Record Set, to Covered
Entity or, as directed by Covered Entity, to an Individual in order to meet the requirements under 45 CFR
164.524.
vii. to make any amendments to Protected Health Information in a Designated Record
Set that the Covered Entity directs or agrees to pursuant to 45 CFR 164.526 at the
request of Covered Entity or an Individual, and in the time and manner designated
by Covered Entity.
viii. to make internal practices, books, and records relating to the use and disclosure of
Protected Health Information received from, or created or received by Business
Associate on behalf of Covered Entity available to the Covered Entity, or at the
request of the Covered Entity to the Secretary, in a time and manner designated
by the Covered Entity or the Secretary, for purposes of the Secretary determining
Covered Entity’s compliance with the Privacy Rule.
ix. to document such disclosures of Protected Health Information and information
related to such disclosures as would be required for Covered Entity to respond to
a request by an Individual for an accounting of disclosures of Protected Health
Information in accordance with 45 CFR 164.528.
x. to provide to Covered Entity or an Individual, in time and manner designated by
Covered Entity, information collected in accordance with Section (2)(i) of this
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 96 of 135
Agreement, to permit Covered Entity to respond to a request by an Individual for
an accounting of disclosures of Protected Health Information in accordance with
45 CFR 164.528.
(b) Business Associate hereby acknowledges and agrees that Covered Entity has notified Business Associate that it is
required to comply with the confidentiality, disclosure and re-disclosure requirements of 10 NYCRR part 63 and to the
provisions of Mental Hygiene Law Section 33.13 and 33.16 to the extent such requirements may be applicable.
(c) Business Associate shall be directly responsible for full compliance with the relevant requirements of the Privacy Rule
and the Security Rule to the same extent that Covered Entity is responsible for compliance with such Rules. Business
Associate acknowledges that it is subject to civil and criminal penalties for violations of such provisions in the same
manner as if Covered Entity violated such provisions.
3. Permitted Uses and Disclosures by Business Associate
(a) Except as otherwise limited in this Agreement, Business Associate may use or disclose Protected Health Information:
i. to perform functions, activities, or services for, or on behalf of Covered Entity
pursuant to the Contract provided that such use or disclosure would not violate the
Privacy Rule if done by Covered Entity.
ii. for the proper management and administration of the Business Associate or to carry out the legal
responsibilities of the Business Associate.
iii. for the proper management and administration of the Business Associate, provided
that disclosures are required by law, or Business Associate obtains reasonable assurances from the person
to whom the information is disclosed that it will remain confidential and used or further disclosed only as
required by law or for the purpose for which it was disclosed to the person, and the person notifies the
Business Associate or any instances of which it is aware in which the confidentiality of the information
has been breached.
iv. to provide Data Aggregation services to Covered Entity as permitted by 45 CFR
164.504(e)(2)(i)(B). Data aggregation includes the combining of protected information created or received
by a business associate through its activities under this contract with other information gained from other
sources.
v. to report violations of law to appropriate Federal and State authorities, consistent
with New York State Mental Hygiene Law and 45 CFR 164.502(j)(1).
4. Obligations of Covered Entity
(a) Covered Entity shall notify Business Associate of any:
i. limitation(s) in the Notice of Privacy Practices Covered Entity produces in accordance with 45 CFR
§164.520, to the extent that such limitation may affect Business Associate’s use or disclosure of Protected
Health Information.
ii. changes in, or revocation of, permission by an Individual to use or disclose Protected Health Information,
to the extent that such changes may affect Business Associate’s permitted or required uses or disclosures
of Protected Health Information.
iii. restriction on the use or disclosure of Protected Health Information that Covered Entity has agreed to in
accordance with 45 CFR §164.522, to the extent that such restriction may affect Business Associate’s use
or disclosure of Protected Health Information.
5. Permissible Requests by Covered Entity
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 97 of 135
Covered Entity shall not request Business Associate to use or disclose Protected Health Information in any
manner that would not be permissible under the Privacy Rule if done by Covered Entity. Covered Entity may permit
Business Associate to use or disclose Protected Health Information for data aggregation or management and
administrative activities of business Associate, if the Agreement includes provisions for same.
6. Remedies in Event of Breach
Business Associate hereby recognizes that irreparable harm may result to Covered Entity, and to the business of
Covered Entity, in the event of breach by Business Associate of any of the covenants and assurances contained in this
Agreement. As such, in the event of breach of any of the covenants and assurances contained in Sections 2 or 3 above,
Covered Entity shall be entitled to enjoin and restrain Business Associate from any continued violation of such Sections.
Furthermore, in the event of breach of Sections 2 or 3 by Contractor, Covered Entity is entitled to reimbursement and
indemnification from Business Associate for Covered Entity’s reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses and costs that were
reasonably incurred as a proximate result of Business Associate’s breach. The remedies contained in this Section shall be
in addition to (and not supersede) any action for damages and/or any other remedy Covered Entity may have for breach of
any part of this Agreement.
7. Consideration
Business Associate acknowledges that the covenants and assurances it has made in the Agreement shall be relied
upon by Covered Entity in choosing to continue or commence a business relationship with Business Associate.
8. Term and Termination
(a) Term. The Term of this Agreement shall be effective as of the Effective Date of this agreement and
shall not terminate until all of the Protected Health Information provided by Covered Entity to
Business Associate, or created or received by Business Associate on behalf of the Covered Entity is
destroyed or returned to the Covered Entity or, if it is infeasible to return or destroy Protected Health
Information, protections are extended to such information in accordance with the termination
provisions in this section.
(b) Termination for Cause. Upon Covered Entity’s knowledge of a material breach by Business
Associate, Covered Entity shall provide Business Associate with an opportunity to cure the breach
and then terminate this Agreement and any other agreement between Covered Entity and Business
Associate if Business Associate does not cure the breach within time period specified by the Covered
Entity
(c) Effect of Termination.
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this section, upon termination of this
Agreement for any reason, Business Associate shall return or destroy all Protected
Health Information received from Covered Entity or created or received by Business
Associate on behalf of Covered Entity. This provision shall apply to Protected Health
Information that is in the possession of subcontractors or agents of Business
Associate. Business Associate shall retain no copies of the Protected Health
Information.
(2) In the event that Business Associate determines that returning or destroying the
Protected Health Information is infeasible, Business Associate shall provide to
Covered Entity notification of the conditions that make return or destruction
infeasible. Upon mutual agreement of the Parties that return or destruction of
Protected Health Information is infeasible, Business Associate shall extend the
protection of this Agreement to such Protected Health Information and limit further
uses and disclosures of such Protected Health Information to those purposes that
make the return or destruction infeasible, for so long as Business Associate maintains
such Protected Health Information.
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 98 of 135
9. Miscellaneous.
(a) Regulatory References. A reference in this Agreement to a section in the Privacy Rule means the
section as in effect or as amended, and for which compliance is required.
(b) Agreement. The Parties agree to take such action as necessary to amend this Agreement from time to
time as is necessary for Covered Entity to comply with the requirements of the Privacy Rule and the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, Public Law 104-191, and any other applicable
law.
(c) Survival. The respective rights and obligations of Business Associate under Section 6 and 8 of this
Agreement shall survive the termination of this Agreement, as shall the rights of access and inspection
of Covered Entity.
(d) Interpretation. Any ambiguity in this Agreement shall be resolved in favor of a meaning that permits
Covered Entity to comply with the Privacy Rule.
10. Material Breach. The parties acknowledge that in the event the Covered Entity learns of a pattern or activity or
practice of the Business Associate that constitutes violation of a material term of this Agreement, then the parties
promptly shall take reasonable steps to cure the violation. If such steps are, in the judgment of the Covered Entity,
unsuccessful, ineffective or not feasible, then the Covered Entity may terminate this Agreement upon written notice to the
Business Associate, if feasible, and if not feasible, shall report the violation to the Secretary of HHS. Written notice may
be transacted by certified or registered mail return receipt requested, facsimile transmission, personal delivery, expedited
delivery service or via e-mail.
11. Law Governing Conflicts. This Agreement shall be enforced and construed in accordance with the laws of the State
of New York. Jurisdiction of any litigation with respect to this Agreement, shall be in New York, with venue in a court of
competent jurisdiction in Albany County.
New York State Office for People with
Developmental Disabilities
By ______________________________________
Title
________________________________________
Signature
________________________________________
Date signed
Business Associate
By ______________________________________
Title
_______________________________________
Signature
________________________________________
Date
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 99 of 135
Section 10. ATTACHMENTS
Attachment 1 Notice of Intent to Submit Bid Form
Attachment 2 Business Experience Form
Attachment 3 Application Capabilities Form
Attachment 4 Check List of Submission Requirements
Attachment 5 Project Costs Form
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 100 of 135
Attachment 1
Notice of Intent to Submit Bid
Lisa Davis
New York State Office For People With Developmental Disabilities
Contract Management Unit
44 Holland Avenue, Third Floor
Albany, New York 12229-0001
RE: RFP for an Automated Electronic Health Record for the New York State Office For People with
Developmental Disabilities
Dear Ms. Davis:
This letter of intent is to notify OPWDD of intent to submit a bid in response to the above RFP.
Our main point of contact for the purpose of this bid will be:
Name of Organization______________________________________________________
Contact Name: ____________________________________________________________
Mailing Address: __________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Phone Number____________________________________________
Email Address: ____________________________________________
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 101 of 135
Attachment 2
Bidder’s Experience
A. BIDDER’S EXPERIENCE
Item
#
Function Bidder’s Response
A1 Number of years in business providing an EHR solution
A2 Release date of current software version
A3 Number of Facility/Site/Agency Installations (Note: this is regardless of the specific modules
installed)
A4 Number of installations with clients similar in size to OPWDD.
A5 Number of installations with individuals with developmental disabilities similar to those
receiving services from OPWDD.
A6 Number of years hosting Software-as- a-Service
A7 Number of clients receiving hosted Software- as- a-Service
B. BUSINESS LINE APPLICABILITY
Requirements matrix; the Bidder shall provide its indication as to whether its solution can fulfill the business needs
expressed in the requirements using by checking if the feature is an existing feature (Existing Feature), if the feature is
available through customization (Proposed Customization), or if the feature is not included in the Bidder’s proposal and
not available (Not included in Bidder’s Proposal).
Check One
Item
#
General System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required
/Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
B1 Living at home services Required
B2 Family Care in certified private home services Required
B3 Supervised Community Residence services Required
B4 Individual Residential Alternative (IRA) Required
B5 Intermediate Care Facility (ICF) Required
B6 Campus based setting Required
B7 Outpatient clinics Required
B8 Day Habilitation/ Day Services Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 102 of 135
Attachment 3
Application Capabilities
Application Capabilities: Specific processing features. Bidders are required to respond and to identify specific processing
features and capabilities. Attachment 3 is a companion to section 6.1.2 and will be scored as part of the evaluation
process. This completed form provides information about the functionality and features within the proposed electronic
health record system and it is critical that Bidder’s ensure that their responses accurately reflect the features and
functionality of the proposed solution. In the event that information in the oral presentation indicates that the proposed
solution does not perform or have functionality as described in the proposal or on this form, the Bidder’s technical score
will be adjusted accordingly.
Features designated as “Required” are mandatory and are expected to be an existing feature within the solution or
made available as a customization. Features designated as “Desired” are features or functions that OPWDD would
like to have available in the solution but these features are not required.
A. END USER TECHNOLOGY FEATURES
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
End User Access
A1 System is available to end users 24 by 7. Required
A2
Provides a web-enabled application with graphic user
interface that does not require a client server
configuration on end user devices.
Required
A3 Can be accessed remotely by authorized users. Required
A4
Terminates an electronic session after a predetermined
time of inactivity.
Required
A5
Provides off-line functionality (functions on a pc/device
during internet outage with subsequent uploading of
data).
Desired
A6
Provides automated process for users to obtain forgotten
user ID or password information.
Desired
A7 Permits user ability to reset their password online. Desired
A8
Provides single sign-on for all modules that are
authorized for an end user.
Desired
A9
Permits authorized users (who are authorized for
emergency situations) to access electronic health
information during an emergency.
Required
Authorized User Administration
AA1
Assigns a unique name and/or number for identifying
and tracking user identity and establishes controls that
permit only authorized users to access electronic health
information.
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 103 of 135
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
AA2
Verifies that a person or entity seeking access to
electronic health information is the one claimed and is
authorized to access such information.
Required
AA3
System supports various levels of administrator-assigned
user rights.
Required
AA4 User access roles are customizable. Required
AA5
A user management process allows authorized users to
generate, modify and delete user accounts.
Desired
AA6
The system supports an automated approval process of
user authorizations.
Desired
AA7
A user management process allows for the reporting
and printing of individuals granted access based upon
specific roles.
Desired
AA8
System automatically requires password changes at
predetermined intervals.
Desired
AA9
User access is linked to OPWDD’s Microsoft active
directory accounts to allow for single sign-on with other
OPWDD applications and services.
Desired
AA10 System allows for two factor authentication. Required
Data Entry and Editing
AB1 Provides word processing capabilities in text fields. Required
AB2 Includes spell check functionality. Desired
AB3
Data once entered into system populates all relevant
modules.
Required
AB4 Ability to bring old notes forward and modify. Desired
AB5
The system will detect missing required data in
add/update response and flag incomplete responses.
Required
AB6
Ability to correct errors while retaining information
about correction.
Required
AB7 Limit or prohibit copy and paste functionality. Desired
AB8 Ability to create and save draft documents. Desired
AB9
System allows for the scanning of documents that can
be attached to a person’s record.
Required
AB10
System provides document management functionality
that manages the creation, storage/retention, and
control of documents.
Required
AB11
System permits annotating, and “mark up” of scanned
documents.
Desired
AB12
System can remove a document from an individual’s
record if document erroneously attached to wrong
record.
Required
AB13
Has an OCR capability to allow querying scanned
documents.
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 104 of 135
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
AB14
Provides speech recognition which converts oral
language to written text form that can be saved, accessed
and reviewed, edited, emailed, or transmitted with
command and control features.
(1) Ability to capture dictation on a mobile device
on an on-line or off-line mode.
(2) Has an option to dictate while navigating
through an individual record.
Has a dictation management system with intelligent
routing and tracking of the status of each dictation job.
Desired
Workflows and Alerts
AC1 Provides workflow processes. Required
AC2 Workflow processes can be customized. Required
AC3
Provide capabilities whereby the system electronically
assists the completion of predefined work steps.
Required
AC4
Ability to see all chart activity since employee last
worked on the chart.
Desired
AC5
Allows for multiple simultaneous user viewing of same
individual’s record.
Desired
AC6 Workflow design includes an inbox. Desired
AC7
Provides for alerts and notifications with priority coding
or features.
Required
AC8 Customizable to-do lists by users. Desired
AC9
Scheduling system that schedules both client and staff
time.
Desired
Reporting and Analytics
AD1
Provides Dash Board functionality at multiple user
levels.
Required
AD2
User can electronically transmit an individual’s record
within the enterprise.
Required
AD3
Ability to generate assessments, progress notes, service
plans.
Required
AD4
User can print the entire care coordination record for an
individual.
Required
AD5 Permits printing of forms in PDF. Required
AD6 Provides a robust list of standardized reports. Required
AD7 Provides the ability for ad hoc report creation. Required
AD8
Users are able to store report specifications in a central
report repository.
Desired
AD9
Users will be able to select data fields on which they
want to report/query.
Required
AD10
The system supports exporting of query results to: MS
Word, MS Excel and Text.
Desired
AD11
The system includes multiple pre-defined report types
and formats that are easily selected by users.
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 105 of 135
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
AD12 The system includes page-formatting features. Desired
AD13
The system supports a minimum of two (2) levels sorting
in ascending and descending order.
Desired
AD14
The system includes the capability to include header
information, date and run time, and page numbers on
reports.
Desired
AD15 Users are able to direct reports to a user-selected printer. Desired
AD16 The system will provide print preview capability. Desired
B. GENERAL SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY FEATURES
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
B1
Web pages meet New York State Accessibility
Standards. (http://www.its.ny.gov/policy/NYS-P08-
005
Desired
B2
The Bidder requests an exemption to accessibility
standards as authorized by above Accessibility Policy for
application web pages. (Yes/No) Unless an exemption is
requested, the Bidder’s proposal must comply, even if
requires customizations.
B3
Regardless of whether a request for an exemption to
State Accessibility Standards is being requested,
application contains zoom technology to assist the
visually impaired in reading web pages.
Desired
B4
Screen layout and views can be customized based on user
preferences
Desired
B5
Provides direct secured e-mail capabilities within the
system.
Desired
B6
Provides direct secured e-mail capabilities outside the
system.
Desired
B7
Routine upgrades are through an established version
control process.
Required
B8
Provides backup and recovery routines for both
programs and data.
Required
B9 Has offsite disaster recovery location. (COLD) Required
B10 Has offsite disaster recovery location. (HOT) Desired
http://www.its.ny.gov/policy/NYS-P08-005
http://www.its.ny.gov/policy/NYS-P08-005
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 106 of 135
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
TRAINING and SUPPORT
BA1 Provides on-line tutorials for all modules. Required
BA2
On-line modules customized to address system
customizations made for Bidder’s proposed solution for
OPWDD.
Required
BA3
Onsite training using a “train the trainer” approach
provided at a minimum of six sites across various regions
throughout New York State.(see
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_contacts/ddsoo)
Required
BA4 Provides training webinars. Required
BA5 Users can be tracked as to training modules completed. Required
BA6 Users provided certification for modules completed. Desired
BA7 Listserv and/or user groups. Desired
BA8 Other training options (Please list).
BA9
24-hour Help Desk support provided for technical
problems. Solutions for technical support are
communicated in a clear and understandable manner.
Required
BA10 24-hour technical support – Web. Desired
BA11 Email technical support. Required
SYSTEM INTEROPERABILITY STANDARDS AND FUNCTIONS
BB1 HL7 Primary Standards Desired
BB2 HL7 Foundation Standards Desired
BB3 HL7 Clinical and Administrative Domains Desired
BB4 HL7 EHR Profiles Desired
BB5 HL7 Rules and Reference Standards Desired
BB6 HL 7 Continuity of Care Documentation (CCD) Required
BB7 HL7 CDA (Clinical and Administrative Domains) Desired
BB8
ICD-9-CM diagnoses and coding available at the time of
system implementation.
Required
BB9
ICD-10 diagnoses and coding (see project scope for
ICD-10 requirements).
Desired
BB10
Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes
(LOINC) for laboratory and clinical results
Desired
BB11
SNOMED CT (Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine
– Clinical Terms)
Desired
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_contacts/ddsoo
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 107 of 135
Check One
Item
#
System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
BB12 HCPCS/CPT codes Required
BB13 National Drug Codes (NDC) Required
BB14 RXNorm Medications Standards Desired
BB15 Blue Button Desired
BB16
Other Standards (Please list)
BB17
Is currently federally certified as meeting Stage One
meaningful use standards.
Desired
BB18
Is currently federally certified as meeting Stage Two
meaningful use standards.
Desired
BB19
If not federally certified, Bidder will have federally
required certifications by date of contract signing if
Bidder is selected as OPWDD’s contractor.
Required
BB20
Capability to electronically exchange key clinical
information (for example,
**
discharge summary,
procedures
**
, problem list, medication list, medication
allergies, diagnostic test results), among providers of
care and authorized entities.
Required
BB21
Ability to exchange an individual’s medical data with
other health providers via New York State’s Health
Information Exchange, the State Health Information
Network for New York (SHIN-NY)
(http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastr
ucture.htm).
Required
BB22 Offers e-Prescribing and medication management. Required
BB23
Provides FAX send and receipt capabilities (e.g. for
referrals, discharge summaries, etc.).
Desired
BB24
Supports industry accepted import/export standards (e.g.,
ODBC (Open Database Connectivity)).
Desired
BB25
Provides interoperability to receive and send provider,
enrollment and service data with OPWDD’s Tracking
and Billing System (TABS).
Required
BB26
Can accept batch data loads from OPWDD and other
authorized parties.
Required
BB27
Can transmit and receive data to OPWDD using BizTalk
or other technologies on a near real-time basis.
Desired
BB28 Includes Wellness Monitoring Technologies. Desired
BB29 Includes Safety Monitoring Technologies. Desired
BB30 Includes Telehealth /Telemonitoring technologies Desired
BB31 Software functions as an integration engine. Desired
http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastructure.htm
http://www.health.ny.gov/technology/technical_infrastructure.htm
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System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
BB32
Fully integrated system that includes Clinical, Case
Management, Financial and Staff Scheduling.
Required
BB33
Requires third-party software/ interfaces for any
functionality (Yes/No).
BB34 List third party software/interfaces required.
SECURITY
BC1
Complies with Federal HIPAA and Hi-Tech privacy
standards as patient information is maintained within
the proposed solution.
Required
BC2
Complies with Federal HIPAA security standards as
patient information is maintained within the proposed
solution.
Required
BC3
Complies with NY Cyber Security Policy
http://www.dhses.ny.gov/ocs/
Required
BC4
Complies with the Federal Risk and Authorization
Management Program (FedRAMP) requirements as
developed by the Federal Cloud Computing Initiative
(FCCI) at the US General Services Administration
(GSA) http://www.gsa.gov/portal/category/102371
Required
BC5
Meets Federal Meaningful Use requirements for
maintaining and generating audit logs.
Required
BC6
Meets Federal Meaningful Use requirements for
recording disclosures made for treatment, payment,
and health care operations.
Required
BC7
Meets Federal Meaningful Use requirement for
encrypting and decrypting electronic health
information.
Required
BC8
Meets Federal Meaningful Use requirements for end-user
devices.
Required
BC9
Meets Federal Meaningful Use requirements enabling
user created audit report for a specific time periods and
to sort data entries in the audit log.
Required
CONSENT TRACKING
BD1 Tracks notice of legal rights and services. Required
BD2
Tracks statement of authority (i.e. guardianship, who is
legally authorized to provide consent).
Required
BD3
Tracks consents to use/release records, including date of
the request for records and date the records were
released.
Required
BD4 Tracks consent of service plan. Required
BD5 Tracks consent to changes in service plan. Required
BD6 Tracks consent for medication. Required
BD7
Tracks consent for restrictive/intrusive interventions
incorporated into a Behavioral Support Plan.
Required
http://www.dhses.ny.gov/ocs/
http://www.gsa.gov/portal/category/102371
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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System Features
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
BD8 Allows for users to customize additional consents. Desired
BD9 Provides for e-signature of consents. Desired
BD10 Issues alerts for missing consents. Desired
BD11 Prevents the release of data absent authorizing consent. Desired
HARDWARE/SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
BE1 Identify Desktop/Laptop Specifications.
BE2 Operating System – Windows (Yes/No answer).
BE3 Operating System – Apple (Yes/No answer).
BE4 Mobile OS – Android (Yes/No answer).
BE5 Mobile OS – Blackberry (Yes/No answer).
BE6 Mobile OS – Windows (Yes/No answer).
BE7 Mobile OS – Apple (Yes/No answer).
BE8 Identify Network Specifications.
BE9 Identify Wireless Specifications.
BE10 Identify Browser Requirements.
BE11 Identify Internet / Bandwidth Specifications.
BE12
Identify Applets/ miscellaneous software needed (e.g.,
Citrix).
BE13 Reporting software requirements (e.g., Crystal Reports).
BE14 Remote Access (Yes/No answer).
BE15 Identify VPN Device Requirements.
BE16 Identify Data Transfer Mechanisms.
C. SCREENING AND REQUEST FOR SERVICES
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Item
#
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
C1
Maintains data provided by the referral source, including
source of the individual referral.
Desired
C2
Maintains pre-established admission criteria on the
system.
Desired
C3
Matches pre-established admission criteria with data
stored on the resource allocation list to identify
candidates for admission and admission date.
Desired
C4
Permits variation in the data maintained and admission
criteria.
Required
C5
Creates notification letter, including admission date, for
individual accepted for admission.
Desired
C6
Maintains eligibility information including qualifying
diagnosis and condition.
Required
C7 Permits gathering and entry of significant additional Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Functionality Requirement
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Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
information into the system once an admission date is
established.
C8
Permits the ability to revise or otherwise update data
maintained in the request for services and resource
allocation application.
Required
C9
Reports lists of resources allocated and candidates by
status, e.g. awaiting additional information, accepted for
admission, admitted, etc., on a “from–to” date basis.
Desired
C10
Accepts electronically submitted data from external
sources.
Required
C11
Accepts and maintain scanned reports as part of the
individual’s record.
Required
C12
Provides ongoing assessment and monitoring ensures
that individual’s health needs are met and that medical
conditions are managed. The EHR must support the
completion of various assessments. Assessments and
monitoring are listed below (C12-1 through C12-41):
C13
Maintains data pertaining to medical history and past
significant medical needs.
Required
C14
Maintains medical/ physical exam findings, current
health status, medical needs and monitoring.
Required
C15 Maintains a Plan of Nursing Services (PONS). Required
C16 Maintains Immunization Records. Required
C17 Maintains current medication regiment. Required
C18
Maintains medical treatments and response to treatment
or intervention.
Required
C19
Maintains data pertaining to Pulse Oximetry and Oxygen
administration for specified individuals.
Desired
C20
Houses information pertaining to the assessment and
monitoring of osteoporosis.
Desired
C21
Maintains current diagnoses including developmental
disability, medical and mental health diagnoses.
Required
C22 Tracks completion of cancer screening. Desired
C23
Ability to track completion of body checks for specified
individuals.
Desired
C24
Ability to track and monitor skin integrity for specified
individuals.
Desired
C25
Maintains data on seizure monitoring for identified
individuals.
Desired
C26
Supports decubiti/ wound care monitoring for specified
individuals.
Desired
C27
Houses the AIMS (Abnormal Involuntary Movement
Scale).
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
C28
Supports diabetes monitoring that includes housing data
pertaining to blood glucose and insulin administration.
Desired
C29
Maintains charts to assess and monitor bodily functions
such as daily bowel movement, menses, and food/
nutrition intake or provide for these charts to be created
by the end user.
Desired
C30
Ability to house data pertaining to falls assessments and
monitoring.
Desired
C31
Use of the Nutrition Care Process (NCP) designed by the
Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. This includes
nutrition assessment, nutrition related diagnoses,
nutrition intervention and prescription (plan of care), and
nutrition monitoring and evaluation.
Desired
C32
House data pertaining to dietary needs including caloric
requirements and diet consistency.
Required
C33 Maintains anthropometric measurements. Desired
C34
Assessments related to Medical Immobilization Plans
(MIP’s) and related orders.
Desired
C35
Supports and maintains data for oral hygiene and health
evaluation, diagnoses, treatment, response to treatment,
and dental history.
Desired
C36
Houses data from psychiatric assessments or reports
including initial and regular psychiatric assessments
which include a diagnostic impression, ongoing
monitoring of mental health and psychiatric needs, and
ongoing monitoring or medication management.
Required
C37
Houses data from psychological reports or assessments
such as diagnoses, results from IQ or cognitive
assessments, findings from adaptive functioning
evaluation, mood or symptom assessment, forensic
evaluation reports, findings from assessments of capacity
to provide informed consent, response to therapy/
counseling or skill training, data from risk assessments,
Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA) reports, and the
Behavior Support Plan (BSP) and response to
intervention(s) in the BSP.
Required
C38
Tracks activities of Daily Living which are typically
monitored by direct support staff (e.g., hygiene and
grooming, toileting, homemaking, dressing, eating and
drinking, sleep hygiene, activities to maintain health,
functional mobility, use of assistive technology, use of
services, money management, and shopping).
Desired
C39
Maintains assessment and monitoring data pertaining to
sensorimotor development (e.g., ambulation, positioning,
transfer skills, gross motor dexterity, visual motor
perception, fine motor dexterity, eye-hand coordination,
and extent to which prosthetic, orthotic, corrective or
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
mechanical supportive devices can improve the
individual’s functional capacity).
C40
Houses an assessment for adaptive or supportive
equipment (e.g. wheelchairs, bedrail assessments) and
turning and positioning charts and wheelchair release
charts.
Desired
C41
Maintains a speech, language, and communication
assessment, including the hearing assessment.
Desired
C42
Maintains Physical Therapy (PT) and Occupational
Therapy (OT) assessment and intervention data.
Desired
C43 Tracks the use and monitoring of mechanical devices. Desired
C44
Houses information pertaining to a vision assessment
and related treatment.
Desired
C45
Maintains data pertaining to social development, such as
interpersonal skills, use of social support, social
participation, communication, recreation-leisure skills,
community involvement and outings, and relationships
with others.
Desired
C46
Houses data pertaining to academic/ educational
development, including functional learning skills.
Desired
C47
Maintains data pertaining to independent living
development such as meal preparation, budgeting and
personal finances, survival skills, mobility skills
(orientation to the neighborhood, town, city), laundry,
housekeeping, shopping, bed making, care of clothing,
and orientation skills (for individuals with visual
impairments).
Desired
C48
Maintains data pertaining to employment and vocational
development, including present vocational skills.
Desired
C49
Maintains data pertaining to affective development such
as interests and skills involved with expressing emotions,
making judgments, and making independent decisions.
Desired
C50
Houses identifiable maladaptive or inappropriate
behaviors of the individual based on systematic
observation (including, but not limited to, the frequency
and intensity of identified maladaptive or inappropriate
behaviors).
Desired
C51 Houses the drug regimen review. Desired
C52
Houses prior authorization documentation for medication
related to third party payment and reimbursement.
Desired
C53
Houses the assessment of ability to self-administer
medications.
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
C54
Enables a user to electronically record, modify, and
retrieve individual demographic data including preferred
language, gender, race, ethnicity, and date of birth.
Required
C55
Generates a packet of necessary health and clinical
information that ensures preparation for appointments
and supports communication between the agency and
outside providers.
Desired
D. INDIVIDUAL SERVICE PLAN
Check One
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#
Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
D1
Receives assessment data that is used to build the
Individualized Service Plan (ISP).
Required
D2
Provides template-based, configurable care planning
tool.
Required
D3 Documents all resources available to an individual. Desired
D4
Swiftly determines which programs and resources will
be most beneficial to the individual utilizing structured
and configurable initial, general, and specialty
assessments.
Desired
D5
Creates customized care plans that allow for the
documentation of the problems, goals and interventions
required.
Required
D6
Allows users to quickly individualize care plans for
member-specific conditions, while driving program
consistency.
Required
D7
Accesses evidence-based guidelines at the point of care
to improve treatment and deliver more personalized
information and services to members.
Desired
D8 Contains measurable treatment goals. Required
D9 Contains the rationale for identified goals. Required
D10
Links a rating scale to goals so progress can be
documented.
Desired
D11 Designates a treatment or intervention for each goal. Required
D12
System has the ability to be customized to meet unique
needs such as the needs of those whom English is not
their primary language, those who have problems with
alcohol and substance abuse, those with co-morbid
psychiatric problems, those with a legal history or legal
involvement, or those with visual/hearing impairment.
Desired
D13 Means of documenting when a goal is achieved. Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
D14
Incorporates outcome measures to capture whether the
individual, or their circle of support, believes the
services and support they receive contribute to their
unique and personal goals, overall well-being, and
desired outcomes.
Required
D15 Schedules the review of individual progress. Desired
D16
Permits users to make timely changes to the service
plan.
Required
D17 Reminds or alerts clinical staff when updates are due. Desired
D18 Provides a means for documenting transition planning. Required
D19
Maintains data associated with internal OPWDD
activities and from outside referral agencies.
Required
D20 Allows variation of treatment planning by location. Required
D21
Maintains a schedule of an individual’s treatment and
rehabilitation activities.
Required
D22
Reports the individual’s daily activity schedule on a
“from-to” date basis.
Required
D23
Schedules activities and staff assignments for direct
person involvement.
Desired
D24
Reports the activity and staff assignment schedule on a
“from-to” date basis.
Required
E. SERVICE DELIVERY
Check One
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#
Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
E1
Tracks data from various programs and services
provided to the individual so they can be viewed in one
place.
Required
E2
Easily identifies high-risk, high-cost individuals for case
management by leveraging internal and external patient
data from multiple referral channels.
Desired
E3 Tracks progress toward goals. Required
E4
Ensures ongoing adherence to care plans and correct
deviations from treatment protocols.
Desired
E5
Proactively identifies missed tasks and gaps in care with
standard operating procedures to expedite appropriate
interventions.
Required
E6
Documentation includes structured notes that meet
individual organization requirements which are
available throughout the case management workflow.
Required
E7
Tracks units of service for each individual receiving
services including service date, service location, funding
source, contact type, contact reason, type of service,
persons present during the service unit, and comments.
Required
E8 Maintains case notes on an individual’s case and care Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
plan including all pertinent comments, updates, visits,
etc. There is no limit on notes, and an archive is
accessible that gives you access to all data collected in
the notes.
E9
Manages data from multiple sites (e.g. program
location) and post records against each site of a plan.
This would enable the user to analyze data for each
program site or data in its entirety across multiple sites.
Desired
E10 System maintains current and up to date information. Required
E11 Data is carried over from prior session or visit. Required
E12
Enables a user to electronically select, sort, access,
retrieve, and generate lists of individuals according to, at
a minimum, the data elements:
(1)Problem list
(2)Medication list
(3)Immunizations
(4)Demographics
(5)Laboratory test results
(6)Date and time
(7)All allergies (e.g. food, environmental, medication,
latex)
(8)Dietary needs and anthropometric measurements
(9)Communication preferences
(10) Diagnosis
(11) Provider- By job title (e.g. psychiatrist,
psychologist, social worker)
(12) Provider- By name
(13) Service Type
Required
E13
Allows the user to customize the individual
demographic banner to display any number of practice
management system fields to clinician.
Desired
E14
Generates and displays an individual summary or “face
sheet” that includes the person’s demographics,
communication needs, list of problems including
challenging behavior, current prescribed medications,
allergies, immunizations, encounter listings, individual’s
photo, and personal profile.
Desired
E15
Enables a user to electronically record, store, retrieve,
and modify, at a minimum, the following order types
and justifications of need:
(1) Medications;
(2) Treatment;
(3) Laboratory;
(4) Radiology/imaging;
(5) Safety precautions (e.g. 1:1 observation, mechanical
restraint device);
(6) Approved physical intervention(s);
(7) Dietary needs including diet consistency, tube
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Feature
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feature
Included in
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Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
feeding, or other nutrition intervention.
E17
Ability to populate standard orders that can be
customized according to the person’s needs.
Required
E18
Maintains up-to-date diagnoses: Utilizes the ICD-9-CM
criteria and coding and maintains a log of both current
and prior diagnoses with the ability to update diagnoses
as necessary. Stores primary and secondary diagnoses.
Required
E19
Utilizes DSM-V criteria and coding and maintains a log
of both current and prior diagnoses with the ability to
update diagnoses as necessary.
Desired
E20
Maintains up-to-date problem list. Enable a user to
electronically record, modify, and retrieve an
individual’s problem list for longitudinal care.
Problems could be medical, nutritional/dietary,
psychiatric, behavioral, or psychosocial in nature. User
has the ability to add problems beyond the ICD-9/ICD-
10 to be recognized by standard nomenclature (e.g.
SNOMED CT, CPT (Current Procedural Terminology)
developed by the American Medical Association, or
MEDCIN).
Required
E21
Houses and supports an assessment of medication
needs, ability to self-administer or self-manage
medication, and monitor the efficacy of the medication
regimen.
Required
E22
Electronic medication administration record (MAR).
(i) Utilizes assistive technology that provides
automated information to enable a user to
electronically verify the following before
administering medication(s):
(A) Right individual. The individual to whom the
medication is to be administered matches the
medication to be administered.
(B) Right medication. The medication to be
administered matches the medication ordered
for the individual.
(C) Right dose. The dose of the medication to be
administered matches the dose of the medication
ordered for the individual.
(D) Right route. The route of medication delivery
matches the route specified in the medication
order.
(E) Right time. The time that the medication was
ordered to be administered compared to the
current time.
(ii) Documentation. Electronically records the time and
date and user identification when a medication is
administered.
(iii) Ability to print the MAR is available.
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Feature
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feature
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Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
(iv) Offers on/off functionality.
(v) Given the needs of OPWDD, this cannot be a “hard
stop.” This means the system must offer the ability to
print the MAR and manually document the medication
administration if the nurse or staff administering the
medication does not have an available computer or
laptop to directly input the medication administration.
(vi) The system must offer nurses the ability to add
mediation into the MAR in the event that the individual
is seen by a community physician who doesn’t have the
ability to transfer the medication regimen to the EHR
solution.
(vii) Receives information from the CPOE or E-Scribe
functionality.
E23
Maintains active medication list: Enable a user to
electronically record, modify, and retrieve an
individual’s active medication list as well as medication
history for longitudinal care.
Required
E24
Enables a user to electronically generate and transmit
prescriptions and prescription-related information in
accordance with NYS mandates effective 3-27-2015 by
the Department of Health.
The application must meet federal security requirements
as included in the Drug Enforcement Administration
Interim Final Rule. The application must be registered
with the Department of Health, Bureau of Narcotic
Enforcement “Electronic Prescribing” in accordance
with NY State regulations.
Required
E25
Prescription features:
1) System must be able to generate an electronically
signed prescription that can be printed in a form that
can be submitted to a pharmacy by the individual.
2) System must allow for electronic transmission of the
prescription to the individual’s pharmacy of choice
using FAX and/or E-SCRIPT standard.
Required
E26
Electronic prescribing system is available wirelessly so
a physician can write the prescription using a PDA.
Desired
E27
Drug-formulary checks. Enable a user to electronically
check if drugs are in a formulary or preferred drug list.
Ability to customize the formulary.
Desired
E28 System can recommend alternative medications. Desired
E29
System can generate individual specific medication
information sheets.
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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Feature
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feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
E30
Assess medical necessity for intervention and provide
alert if the intervention is not medically indicated or if
intervention is duplicated, however, offers an override
feature so a physician can still prescribe even if an alert
is generated.
Desired
E31
Medication reconciliation. Enable a user to
electronically compare two or more medication lists.
Desired
E32
Drug-drug, drug-allergy interaction checks.
(1) Notifications. Automatically and electronically
generate and indicate in near real-time, notifications at
the point of care for drug-drug and drug-allergy
contraindications based on medication list, medication
allergy list, and computerized provider order entry.
2) Adjustments. Provide certain users with the ability to
adjust notifications provided for drug-drug and drug-
allergy interaction checks.
Required
E33
Maintains active allergy list:
Enables a user to electronically record, modify, and
retrieve an individual’s active allergy list (including
medication, food, environmental, latex, and/or other
allergies) as well as allergy history for longitudinal
care.
Required
E34
Records and chart changes in the following:
(A) Temperature;
(B) Pulse;
(C) Respiration;
(D) Blood Pressure;
(E) Height;
(F) Weight;
(G) Anthropometric measurements;
(H) Calculate and display body mass index (BMI);
(I) Plot and display growth charts for children 0–20
years, including BMI and anthropometric
measurements.
Required
E35
Incorporates laboratory test results:
(1) Receive Results: Electronically receive clinical
laboratory test results in a structured format and display
such results in human readable format.
(2) Display test report information: Electronically
display all the information for a test report.
(3) Incorporate results. Electronically attribute,
associate, or link a laboratory test result to a laboratory
order or patient or individual service record.
Desired
E36
Reportable lab results: Electronically record, modify,
retrieve, and submit reportable clinical lab results.
Required
E37
User can review and sign results for any ordered tests
and procedures and review and sign/approve drug
Required
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Feature
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feature
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Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
regimen.
E38
User can generate test results informational letters or
reports.
Desired
E39
Smoking status. Enables a user to electronically record,
modify, and retrieve the smoking status of a person.
Smoking status types must include: current every day
smoker; current some day’s smoker; former smoker;
never smoker; smoker, current status unknown; and
unknown if ever smoked.
Required
E40 Calculates and submit clinical quality measures. Required
E41 System can produce a controlled substance count sheet Desired
E42
Provides an alert for temperature checks for medication
refrigeration.
Desired
E43
Enable a user to electronically record whether an
individual has an advance directive.
Required
E44
Generate Health Maintenance Alerts:
Ability for the system to have a default or automatic
notification of health care/medical appointments,
lab/diagnostic tests, abnormal laboratory values,
immunizations, diet orders which could include food
consistency or liquid consistency, choking risk, and
changes in body weight.
Desired
E45
General Alerts: Ability for staff to enter alerts that will
be posted for a designated time period that can be
communicated to providers using the EHR. Examples
of alerts could include alerting providers that the
individual experienced a recent loss, acute medical
needs, alerts that there has been a change in services or
in a plan such as a behavior support plan (BSP), the
person was involved in a physical intervention, or
positive changes in the person’s life.
Required
E46
Timely access: Enable an authorized and identified
user(s) to provide individuals with online access to their
clinical information, including, at a minimum, lab test
results, problem list, medication list, and allergy list.
Required
E47
Exchanges clinical information and individual summary
record.
(1) Electronically receive and display. Electronically
receive and display an individual’s summary record,
from other providers and organizations including, at
a minimum, diagnostic tests results, laboratory
results, problem list, medication list, and allergy list.
Ability to exchange this information within the
agency for multidisciplinary review and to support
task completion.
(2) Electronically transmit. Enable a user to
electronically transmit an individual’s summary
record, to other providers and organizations
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 120 of 135
Check One
Item
#
Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
including, at a minimum, diagnostic tests results,
laboratory results, problem list, medication list, and
allergy list.
E48
Transitions of care: receive, display, and incorporate
transition of care/referral summaries and support
medication reconciliation.
Required
E49
Submission to immunization registries. Electronically
record, modify, retrieve, and submit immunization
information as required by the State of New York and
New York City Department of Health.
Desired
E50
Public health surveillance. Electronically record,
modify, retrieve, and submit public health surveillance
information.
Desired
E51
Reporting to the public health central cancer registry.
Electronically record and report cancer cases to a public
health central registry, except where prohibited, and in
accordance with applicable law and practice.
Desired
E52
Provides individuals receiving services (and their
authorized representatives) with an online means to
view, download, and transmit data to a 3
rd
party.
Required
E53
Enables a user to electronically send messages to, and
receive messages from, an individual in a manner that
ensures:
Both the individual (or authorized representative)
and EHR technology user are authenticated; and
The message content is encrypted and integrity-
protected in accordance with the standard for
encryption and hashing algorithms.
Required
E54
Enables a user to electronically record, change, and
access immunization information.
Required
E55
Enables a user to electronically record, change, access,
and search electronic notes. User can review and sign
notes from their own visits and calls.
Required
E56
Dual Routing: Ability for multiple users to sign and
review documentation (e.g. lab results forwarded to a
team).
Required
E57
Image results. Electronically indicates to a user the
availability of an individual’s images and narrative
interpretations (relating to the radiographic or other
diagnostic test(s)) and enable electronic access to such
images and narrative interpretations.
Desired
E58
Enables a user to electronically record, change, and
access an individual’s family health history.
Desired
E59
Has web-based interviewing templates that can be
incorporated into a note or report. Desired
E60 Has user-defined automatic routing of information Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 121 of 135
Check One
Item
#
Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
(messages, lab results, other tests, etc.) with override
capabilities.
E61
Stores and maintains safety assessments, such as the
ability to leave in the event of a fire, with clear
identification of supports needed to ensure safety.
Required
E62
Maintains data from various clinical assessments as
outlined in this RFP. The EHR should maintain
information pertaining to clinical and diagnostic
assessments including data from psychological
evaluations, psychiatric assessments, cognitive
evaluations, physical and/or occupational therapy
assessments, speech and language assessments, health
assessments, or psychosocial evaluations. EHR should
offer comparative standards for data elements such as
body weight and BMI so the individual can be compared
to normal ranges.
Required
E63
Maintains specialized plans, particularly behavior
support plans (BSP), which outline interventions used
by various staff and providers to address problem or
challenging behavior, as well as Medication Monitoring
plans.
Required
E64
Maintains logs such as meal logs/ food and nutrition
intake record, behavior logs, sleep logs, etc. These logs
are used based on the individuals needs and data is
entered by all staff, particularly direct support staff.
Ability to filter and aggregate data from the logs.
Desired
E65
Maintains data related to the Functional Behavior
Assessment (FBA). Desired
E66
Implement the Nutrition Care Process (NCP) designed
by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics which
include a Nutrition Assessment, Nutrition Diagnosis,
Nutrition Intervention, and Nutrition Monitoring and
Evaluation Plan. System should offer a tool to
automatically calculate BMI and calorie requirements.
Desired
E67
Interoperability between the EHR and RIA (the
Restrictive Intervention Application) which tracks the
use of PRN/STAT medication administration, use of
time out, and use of restrictive physical interventions to
avoid the need for duplicate entry of data. A form
outlining all data elements in RIA can be found using
the web link http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/2309
General information about RIA can be found at web link
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/incident_m
anagement/RIA
Desired
E68 Maintain the Order/Plan for Medical Immobilization/ Desired
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/2309
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/incident_management/RIA
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_resources/incident_management/RIA
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 122 of 135
Check One
Item
#
Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not included
in Bidder’s
Proposal
Protective Stabilization (MIPS)/ Sedation available
through the following web link:
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance
/adm_memoranda/documents/adm2010-
02mipsorderplan
F. SELF DIRECTED CARE AND PORTAL
Check One
Item # Functionality Requirement Required
/Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
F1
Provides authorized users (individuals/guardians) with
the current service plan.
Required
F2
Provides authorized users (individuals/ guardians) with
information on future services (e.g., appointment
reminders) and a list of services delivered/received
within the past six months.
Desired
F3
Provides basic clinical summaries to an authorized user
(individuals, or their designee), that include, at a
minimum, diagnostic test results, problem list,
medication list, and medication and other allergy list,
including environmental, food, and latex allergies, and
dietary needs (e.g. food consistency).
Required
F4
Enables a user to electronically identify and provide
individual-specific education resources according to, at
a minimum, the data elements included in the
individual’s: diagnoses, problem list; medication list;
and laboratory test results; as well as provide such
resources to the individual.
Desired
F5
System has an on-line solution that will allow
authorized individuals, guardians, and designated circle
of support to verify their medical record, access billing
status, review test results, and communicate with service
providers.
Desired
F6
Utilizes technology to support health and wellness:
(1) Scheduling assistant to increase potential for
attending appointments.
(2) Sends reminders to attend appointments.
(3) Utilizes alerts.
(4) Tracks data related to personal outcomes
including satisfaction with services, the degree
to which an individual or their circle of support
believes a service contributes to the
achievement of their personal goals and desires,
and progress toward their self-identified
outcomes.
Desired
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/adm_memoranda/documents/adm2010-02mipsorderplan
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/adm_memoranda/documents/adm2010-02mipsorderplan
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/adm_memoranda/documents/adm2010-02mipsorderplan
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 123 of 135
Check One
Item # Functionality Requirement Required
/Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
(5) Ability to alert provider if their needs or status
changes.
(6) Reminders to take medication or to fill
prescriptions.
(7) Track completion of activities.
F7
Enable an Individual, their guardian, or other authorized
user, the ability to request records which can be
retrieved and viewed in an electronic human readable
format or image.
Desired
F8
Provide an immediate alert, to a designated OPWDD
employee, when a request for records has been
submitted.
Desired
G. SERVICE TRACKING, SERVICE UTILIZATION, AND PARTICIPATION IN SERVICES FOR MONITORING AND
OVERSIGHT
Check One
Item # Admission (at actual time of an individual’s
admission)
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
G1 Ability to download medication history from Regional
Health Information Organizations (RHIO’s) to identify
duplication of medications and potential interactions.
Required
G2 Tracks individuals use of specified medications Required
G3 Ability to search and report on prescribed medications
in case of a drug recall, which requires maintaining a lot
number.
Required
G4
Provides cost analysis of prescribed medications in
comparison to formulary and generics.
Desired
G5
Ability to filter data by person receiving services and
immunizations received.
Required
G6
Ability to draft reports of activities and services the
person participated in daily, monthly, etc.
Required
G7
Ability to track an individual’s participation and
progress in a service or activity.
Required
G8
Ability to filter data to track service utilization or refusal
to participate.
Required
G9
Ability to filter data by provider or agency to assess
services offered.
Required
G10
Ability to filter data by person providing the services
and the services offered.
Required
G11
Ability to filter data by physician to see orders,
treatments offered, and services.
Required
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 124 of 135
Check One
Item # Admission (at actual time of an individual’s
admission)
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Included in
Bidder’s
Proposal as
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
G12
Ability to filter data by service to identify agencies that
offer a particular service.
Desired
H. QUALITY IMPROVEMENT ACTIVITIES (ongoing)
Check One
Item # Functionality Requirement Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
H1
Maintains a standards based data collection structure to
facilitate data manipulation and standardized reports
ensuring compliance with State and Federal laws and
regulations.
Required
H2
Provides support to help ensure that treatment is delivered
in a cost-effective and beneficial manner in the following
areas:
Data collection and maintenance
Supervisory oversight
Resource utilization
Utilization review occurs within 30 days of admission.
(see http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/870 and
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidanc
e/adm_memoranda/adm2009-05_clarifying_memo)
Comparisons, longitudinal studies and trend analysis
Benchmarking capability
Outcomes
Satisfaction with services which is completed by
individual/guardians, or other authorized
representative, referral source, and referral target
Management reporting
Records management
Required
H3
Ability to filter data by health care precautions and events
such as people on precaution plans due to seizures,
choking/aspirations, falls, bowel precautions, impaction,
behavioral issues including pica, restraints, or self-injury.
Desired
H4
Ability to filter data using demographic fields, such as date
of birth, by services delivered.
Desired
H5
Comparative standards to compare an individual’s
laboratory results or scores to normal ranges.
Desired
H6
Ability to filter data using diagnosis and diagnostic ICD
codes.
Desired
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/node/870
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/adm_memoranda/adm2009-05_clarifying_memo
http://www.opwdd.ny.gov/opwdd_regulations_guidance/adm_memoranda/adm2009-05_clarifying_memo
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 125 of 135
Financial Tracking and Billing (Optional Deliverable)
The financial tracking and billing functionality or modules are considered an optional deliverable as OPWDD may, at its
sole discretion, determine whether to include this functionality as part of the contract award. Bidders, however, are
required to submit a proposal for billing functionality. Bidders should include the separate cost of their billing module,
where indicated on Attachment 5, when completing the Project Cost form.
I. FINANCIAL ASSESSMENT
Check One
Item # Financial Assessment
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
I1
Maintains data gathered during a financial assessment
interview as to potential sources of payment.
Desired
I2
Prompts when a financial assessment is not completed
within 7 days of admission.
Desired
I3
Maintains a record to critical future dates for Medicaid
eligibility to permit recertification of Medicaid
eligibility.
Desired
J. TREATMENT DATA INTERFACE
Check One
Item # Treatment Data Interface
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
J1
Directly accesses an individual’s identification and
demographic information needed for billing purposes
which is maintained as part of the individual’s
management information.
Desired
J2
Provides “individual days” to be billed based on the
actual service days that an individual received services.
Desired
J3
Provides system controls such that all days for a billing
period are billed or otherwise accounted for.
Desired
K. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
Check One
Item # Accounts Receivable
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
K1 Maintains an open item account for each individual. Desired
K2
Ability to provide near real-time billing updates and
notification (e.g. changes to insurance, situational data
elements and special billing features).
Desired
K3
Create the following accounts receivable reports:
Accounts receivable ledger
Aged accounts receivable report
Uncollectible and bad debt write-off report
Payment posting report
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 126 of 135
Check One
Item # Accounts Receivable
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
Automated tasks to remind state employees of missing
charges.
L. FINANCIAL BILLING CAPABILITY
Check One
Item
#
Billing Capability
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
L1
Generates, in a HIPAA acceptable format, electronic bills
centrally based on individual days and other account
information maintained in an automated billing system.
Desired
L2
Generates, in a format acceptable to the payor, hardcopy
bills to payors (including health insurance and other third
parties, private payors) that will not accept electronic
format.
Desired
L3
Allows for correction of billing data rejected by a payor
upon initial submission, and the subsequent resubmission
of the bill for full or adjusted payment.
Desired
L4
Maintains complete account receivable ledgers, reflecting
payments made and balances outstanding as of the end of
the billing period.
Desired
L5
Maintains an accounts receivable “aging” feature that
displays account balances outstanding for 60 days, 90
days, 120 days and more than 120 days.
Desired
L6
Enables the write-off of uncollectible accounts and bad
debts, as appropriate, and produce individual and summary
reports on screen and in hard copy.
Desired
Third Party Billing Requirements:
L7
Produces full-cost bills for submission to primary and
secondary third party payors, including health insurance
and managed care providers.
Desired
L8
Ensures that the billing to secondary insurers is not sent
before being settled with the primary insurer and
indicating that the bill should indicate the primary insurer
has paid maximum benefit for its coverage.
Desired
L9
Generates third party bills that display the full cost on the
bill and the full cost and anticipated payment amounts on
the accounts receivable record. The system should
automatically write off the unpaid balance upon receipt of
the correct anticipated payment amount. The system
should hold open any accounts with discrepancies until
such discrepancies are resolved.
Desired
Private Party Billing Requirements:
L10
Generates both full cost and partial-rate bills to private
parties.
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 127 of 135
Check One
Item
#
Billing Capability
Functionality Requirement
Required/
Desired
Feature
Existing
feature
Proposed
Customization
Not
included in
Bidder’s
Proposal
L11
Carry forward unpaid balances until paid or written off
maintaining open item detail, such that the system must
produce new bills each month for all unpaid private party
accounts, in the amount of the unpaid balances.
Desired
L12
Generates a report that lists uncollectible amounts and bad
debt write-offs and the reason for each such write-off.
Desired
L13
Enables crediting private party payors with third party
payments received, with the credited amount displayed on
the bill and the net amount reflected on the accounts
receivable record.
Desired
L14
Enables crediting all third party and private party
payments received to the Individual’s Medicaid account,
with the credited amount displayed on the bill and the net
amount billed reflected on the accounts receivable record.
Desired
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 128 of 135
Attachment 4
CHECKLIST OF SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
[ ] Cover Letter
[ ] Representative of Bidder for this proposal (name, title, name of company, address, telephone/fax numbers, and e-
mail address)
[ ] Signed by an official authorized to bind Bidder to all provisions
[ ] Three specific work references including contact name, business address and current telephone number
[ ] Attachments to Cover Letter:
[ ] Contractor Certification Tax Form ST-220-TD and Contractor Certification to Covered Agency Form, ST-
220-CA
[ ] Appendix B – Minority and Women Owned Forms 100, 101 and 103
[ ] Appendix C – MacBride Fair Employment Principles
[ ] Appendix D – Affidavit of Non-Collusion
[ ] Appendix E – Compliance with Communications during Restricted Period
[ ] Appendix F – Bidder’s Responsibility Questionnaire
[ ] Appendix G – Encouraging New York Business Statement
[ ] Appendix H – Compliance with Iran Divestment Act
[ ] Certification indicating that the proposed solution is currently certified as meeting stage one and stage two
federal meaningful use standards OR documentation clearly indicating and describing the process used to ensure
that the proposed solution will be certified as meeting stage one and stage two meaningful use standards by the
contract signing date.
[ ] Technical Proposal
[ ] One original and seven complete copies of Technical Proposal
[ ] Two copies of Technical Proposal on separate Thumb Drives
[ ] Each set includes Bidder’s Experience Form (Attachment 2)
[ ] Each set includes Application Capabilities (Attachment 3)
[ ] Each set identified on cover with Bidder’s name, name of RFP and phrase: “Technical Proposal”
[ ] All copies of a technical proposal packaged together, separate from cost proposal, and sealed.
[ ] Outside of package identified with name of RFP and phrase: “Technical Proposal”
[ ] Cost Proposal
[ ] One original and seven complete copies of the Cost Proposal.
[ ] Each set identified on cover with Bidder’s name, name of RFP and phrase “Cost Proposal”
[ ] Each set includes Project Cost (Attachment 5)
[ ] All copies of Cost Proposal packaged together, separate from technical proposal, and sealed
[ ] Outside of package identified with name of RFP and phrase “Cost Proposal”
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 129 of 135
Attachment 5
Project Costs
It is anticipated that OPWDD will implement the system on a limited basis as an initial pilot, with a phased-in
implementation at the remaining service sites upon successful adoption of the pilot. In calculating software-as-a service
cost, Bidders should assume that 10 percent of users will be accessing the system four months after contract signing, 25
percent of users will access the system seven months after contract signing and 100 percent of users will access the system
by September 2, 2016.
The successful Bidder will be responsible for software installation, customization, hosting, maintenance and OPWDD
staff training in use of the application. The Bidder must include all Bidder-related expenses in the bid, including travel and
lodging as necessary (e.g., meetings in Albany with OPWDD project staff and/or meetings at state operated programs or
settings). Travel is to reflect and comply with NY State travel guidelines.
Sections A and B are mandatory deliverable costs. Section C is for future change order consultant rates. Sections D and
E are optional deliverable costs. Section F is for a summary of costs in Sections A-E, and the total of Sections A-E.
A. MANDATORY DELIVERABLES 1 – 3
This cost is to include ALL costs needed to bring OPWDD’s EHR system through full, statewide implementation. It
should NOT include hosting and maintenance costs AFTER full statewide implementation (see section B.)
Cost for Proposed Scope of
Project
1. System modifications and acceptance testing. $
2. Pilot testing. $
3. Full successful rollout and statewide implementation; all features are
accessible and operating as intended and the train the trainer model has
been utilized so the system can be utilized.
$
Total cost for mandatory deliverables 1-3. $
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 130 of 135
B. MANDATORY DELIVERABLE 4 – SYSTEM OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
(MONTHLY MAINTENANCE COSTS/ HOSTING OR LICENSING COSTS)
Costs in this section refer to all routine and recurring costs post full statewide implementation.
Monthly Cost-
remainder of
contract period
(from 9/2/2016
thru 1/31/17)
post full
statewide
implementation
Monthly Cost-
Contract Year
3
post full
statewide
implementation
Monthly Cost-
Contract Year
4
post full
statewide
implementation
Monthly Cost-
Contract Year
5
Post full
statewide
implementation
Total monthly cost to OPWDD
for operation of the EHR
system:
POST FULL STATEWIDE
IMPLEMENTATION
Total Mandatory Deliverable
4 – Post Full Statewide
Implementation
Maintenance/Hosting/
Licensing Costs
(MONTHLY COST TIMES
NUMBER OF MONTHS
PER EACH COLUMN
HEADING FOR ALL
REMAINING YEARS OR
PORTION OF YEAR
THROUGH THE END OF
THE FIVE YEAR
CONTRACT PERIOD)
$
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 131 of 135
C. FUTURE CHANGE ORDERS
As New York State implements health care and managed care reforms there may be future customizations required
that are not currently known. Bidders are requested to identify consulting rates for future product customizations.
Costs should be broken down into an hourly fee for differing job descriptions of consultant staff. Hours per job
category are only estimates. Actual hours per category and total amount spent may vary depending on need. These
are estimated hours to provide a basis for scoring. Total Cost in each column of second table = hourly rate from first
table, below, X estimated hours/year for each job category.
Job Category Estimated
Hours per
year
Hourly Rate for
years 1 and 2
Hourly Rate
for year 3
Hourly Rate
for year 4
Hourly Rate
for year 5
Business Analyst 1,000
Programmer 4,000
Database Administrator 1,000
Technical Architect 1,000
Quality Control Specialist 2,000
Project Management 500
Trainer- Person to provide training using
a train the trainer approach.
500
Technical Specialist 500
Job Category Estimated
Hours
per year
TOTAL
COST
YEARS 1
AND 2
(TOTAL)
TOTAL
COST
YEAR 3
TOTAL
COST
YEAR 4
TOTAL
COST
YEAR 5
Business Analyst 1,000
Programmer 4,000
Database Administrator 1,000
Technical Architect 1,000
Quality Control Specialist 2,000
Project Management 500
Trainer- Person to provide training using
a train the trainer approach.
500
Technical Specialist 500
“TOTAL COST COLUMN TOTALS”
TOTAL FUTURE CHANGE ORDERS
(TOTAL OF ALL “TOTAL COST
COLUMN TOTALS”)
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 132 of 135
D. OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE – FINANCIAL TRACKING AND BILLING
Financial tracking and billing functionality is an optional deliverable; however, the cost will be scored and included in
the total point score of the whole proposal. As this cost will be scored, it will be reflected in the contract and “locked
in” in the event this option is exercised. If the financial tracking and billing option becomes a deliverable in any year
after the first two years of the contract, the cost proposed will be adjusted based on the CPI-U, U.S., City Average for
all items with a base period of the immediate prior year to the contract date for this optional deliverable, measured
September to September.
If the financial tracking and billing component is included in the EHR mandatory deliverables please insert 0,
below, for full implementation costs if no other implementation costs apply.
FULL IMPLEMENTATION COST $
MONTHLY MAINTENANCE/HOSTING/LICENSING COSTS –
ONE YEAR ONLY
$
TOTAL OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE: FINANCIAL TRACKING
AND BILLING
$
E. OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE – STATEWIDE TRAINING
Statewide training, training beyond the required train-the-trainer approach, is an optional deliverable; however, the
cost will be scored and included in the total point score of the whole cost proposal. The cost should reflect a contract
year 1 and/or 2 implementation. This cost will be scored and included in the contract and “locked in” in the event this
option is exercised. Travel costs are to be included in the cost. Travel is to reflect NY State travel guidelines.
TOTAL OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE – STATEWIDE
TRAINING
$
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 133 of 135
F. TOTAL COST PROPOSAL
TOTAL MANDATORY DELIVERABLES 1-3 (A) $
TOTAL MANDATORY DELIVERABLES 4 (B) $
TOTAL FUTURE CHANGE ORDERS (C) $
TOTAL OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE:
FINANCIAL TRACKING AND BILLING (D)
$
TOTAL OPTIONAL DELIVERABLE:
STATEWIDE TRAINING (E)
$
TOTAL COST PROPOSAL (A+B+C+D+E) (F) $
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
– Page 134 of 135
Attachment 6
Date:
RFP Name:
Bidder’s Information
Bidder’s Legal Company Name:
Company Contact Person:
Company Street Address:
Company City, State, Zip Code:
Company Phone:
Company Fax:
Reference 1
Reference Company Name:
Type of Business:
Primary Contact Person’s Name:
Title:
Mailing Address:
Phone:
E-Mail:
Project Name:
Project Description:
APPENDIX A SUPPLEMENT AND ADDENDUM TO APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENT
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