DOBCO, INC. VS. BERGEN COUNTY IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY HOSSAM IBRAHIM VS. BERGEN COUNTY IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY (L-0486-21 and L-0508-21, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2201-20
    A-2202-20
    DOBCO, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,           APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    July 8, 2021
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    BERGEN COUNTY
    IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY
    and COUNTY OF BERGEN,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ___________________________
    HOSSAM IBRAHIM,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    BERGEN COUNTY
    IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY
    and COUNTY OF BERGEN,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ___________________________
    Argued June 1, 2021 – Decided July 8, 2021
    Before Judges Messano, Hoffman and Smith.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Civil Part, Passaic County, Docket Nos. L-0486-21
    and L-0508-21.
    Greg Trif argued the cause for appellants Dobco, Inc.
    and Hossam Ibrahim (Trif & Modugno, LLC,
    attorneys; Greg Trif and Kyle H. Cassidy, of counsel
    and on the brief).
    Mary Anne Groh argued the cause for respondent
    Bergen County Improvement Authority (Cleary
    Giacobbe Alfieri Jacobs, LLC, attorneys; Mary Anne
    Groh, of counsel and on the brief).
    Leslie G. London argued the cause for respondent
    County of Bergen (McManimon, Scotland &
    Baumann, LLC, attorneys; Leslie G. London, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MESSANO, P.J.A.D.
    Pursuant to the Local Redevelopment and Housing Law, N.J.S.A.
    40A:12A-1 to -89 (the LRHL), a municipality may implement a redevelopment
    project directly, or it may authorize another public body to act as the
    "redevelopment entity." N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-4(c); see also N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-3
    (defining "[r]edevelopment entity" as "an entity authorized by the governing
    body of a municipality pursuant to [N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-4] to implement
    redevelopment plans and carry out redevelopment projects").        A county
    improvement authority organized pursuant to the County Improvement
    Authorities Law, N.J.S.A. 40:37A-44 to -135 (the CIAL), may serve as a
    A-2201-20
    2
    designated redevelopment entity pursuant to the LRHL. N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-
    4(c). When the LRHL was enacted in 1992, only three types of public entities,
    other than municipalities, were authorized to act as redevelopment entities:
    municipal redevelopment agencies, municipal housing authorities, or county
    improvement authorities. L. 1992, c. 79, § 4; N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-4(c).1 In
    2017, the Legislature authorized municipal parking authorities to serve as
    designated redevelopment entities. L. 2017, c. 253; 40A:12A-4(c); see also
    N.J.S.A. 40:11A-4.1 (a section of the "Parking Authority Law," N.J.S.A.
    40:11A-1 to -26 (the PAL), which permits a municipality to, by ordinance,
    "authorize its parking authority to serve as a redevelopment entity").
    The Legislature granted redevelopment entities broad powers to
    effectuate a redevelopment plan, permitting the entity to
    contract with . . . redevelopers for the planning,
    replanning, construction, or undertaking of any project
    or redevelopment work, or any part thereof; negotiate
    and collect revenue from a redeveloper to defray the
    costs of the redevelopment entity, including where
    applicable the costs incurred in conjunction with
    bonds, notes or other obligations issued by the
    redevelopment entity, and to secure payment of such
    revenue; . . . provide for extension of credit, or
    making of loans, to redevelopers to finance any
    project or redevelopment work, or upon a finding that
    1
    The LRHL defined "[h]ousing authority" and "[r]edevelopment agency" to
    include newly created entities as well as those in existence at the time of the
    statute's enactment. N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-3.
    A-2201-20
    3
    the project or redevelopment work would not be
    undertaken but for the provision of financial
    assistance . . . provide as part of a[] . . . contract for
    capital grants to redevelopers; and . . . contract
    with . . . redevelopers for the opening, grading or
    closing of streets, roads, roadways, alleys, or other
    places or for the furnishing of facilities or for the
    acquisition by such agency of property options or
    property rights or for the furnishing of property or
    services in connection with a redevelopment area.
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-8(f).]
    With limitation irrelevant to these appeals, a redevelopment entity may "lease
    or convey property or improvements to any other party . . . without public
    bidding and at such prices and upon such terms as it deems reasonable . . .
    notwithstanding the provisions of any law, rule or regulation to the contrary."
    N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-8(g) (emphasis added).           The designated redevelopment
    entity may "[d]o all things necessary or convenient to carry out its powers."
    N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-8(n).
    However, the LRHL also provides that "[e]ach redevelopment agency
    and housing authority shall be subject to the provisions . . . of the 'Local Public
    Contracts Law'" (the LPCL). 2         N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-23. (emphasis added).
    Municipal parking authorities authorized to act as redevelopment entities may
    "enter into . . . any and all contracts . . . necessary or useful . . . to carry[ing]
    2
    The LPCL is codified at N.J.S.A. 40A:11-1 to -60.
    A-2201-20
    4
    out any of the powers expressly granted to it by [the PAL] or any other acts
    subject to . . . [the] 'Local Public Contracts Law.'" N.J.S.A. 40:11A-6(4)(l).
    In 1979, the Legislature made sweeping changes to the CIAL which
    permitted county improvement authorities to serve as redevelopment entities
    for the first time. L. 1979, c. 275 §§ 31-34. Those amendments included: 1)
    the adoption of definitions relating to redevelopment projects identical to those
    in the subsequently enacted LRHL, N.J.S.A. 40:37A-45; and, 2) providing
    county improvement authorities with additional powers that allowed them to
    "plan[], initiat[e] and carry[] out redevelopment projects . . . and . . . dispos[e]
    . . . of any property . . . acquired in the area of such project," N.J.S.A. 40:37A -
    54(a) and (j), and "[t]o extend credit or make loans to redevelopers." N.J.S.A.
    40:37A-55(q).
    The Legislature also enacted a new section to the CIAL in 1979,
    N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55.1, which granted county improvement authorities broad
    powers "[f]or purposes of the redevelopment of blighted . . . areas." However,
    those redevelopment powers were "subject to the provisions of this act." Ibid.
    Moreover, the Legislature did not amend N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55(t), which permits
    a county improvement authority "[t]o enter into any and all agreements or
    contracts . . . and perform any and all acts or things necessary, convenient or
    desirable for the purposes of the authority or to carry out any power expressly
    A-2201-20
    5
    given in this act subject to the 'Local Public Contracts Law.'"        (emphasis
    added).
    In these consolidated appeals, the three statutory schemes — the LRHL,
    the CIAL, and the LPCL — converge, requiring us to decide whether under the
    particular facts presented the Bergen County Improvement Authority (BCIA),
    designated by the City of Hackensack as the "redevelopment entity" for a
    portion of a duly designated redevelopment area — the historic Bergen County
    Courthouse (the Courthouse) — may select a "redeveloper" without regard to
    the LPCL. The BCIA and the County of Bergen (the County) contend that a
    redevelopment entity may choose a redeveloper without public bidding. See
    Vineland Constr. Co., v. Twp. of Pennsauken, 
    395 N.J. Super. 230
    , 255 (App.
    Div. 2007) (holding "the LRHL does not set forth any criteria governing the
    selection of a private redeveloper." (citing Bryant v. City of Atl. City, 
    309 N.J. Super. 596
    , 624 (App. Div. 1998)). Therefore, the BCIA and the County argue
    the BCIA may choose a "redeveloper" through a process that does not require
    public bidding, by first soliciting responses to requests for qualifications
    (RFQs), winnowing those responses, and then soliciting responses to requests
    for proposals (RFPs) from those on the shorter list.
    In this case, the BCIA issued an RFQ which designated the general
    contractor for the project as the "redeveloper," and said the BCIA would
    A-2201-20
    6
    contract with the general contractor to provide goods and services for the
    rehabilitation of the Courthouse. The redeveloper would be paid with public
    funds the BCIA obtained through the issuance and sale of bonds guaranteed by
    the County. In other words, unlike most redevelopment agreements, here, the
    "redeveloper" would be paid with public funds to provide goods and services
    to the BCIA that are typically subject to public bidding, but with no public
    bidding.
    The trial court dismissed complaints brought by plaintiffs, Dobco, Inc.
    (Dobco), and one of its principals, Hossam Ibrahim, challenging the RFQ
    selection process. The court accepted the BCIA's and the County's arguments
    that because the BCIA was acting as a redevelopment entity pursuant to the
    LRHL, it need not comply with the LPCL. We disagree and reverse in A -
    2202-20. For other reasons, we affirm in A-2201-20.
    I.
    In 2011, Hackensack designated its downtown as an area in need of
    rehabilitation pursuant to the LRHL and adopted a redevelopment plan for the
    designated area. The redevelopment area included certain properties owned by
    the County, including the Courthouse (Project Site).    In 2019, the BCIA
    adopted a resolution authorizing the issuance of up to $60 million in "County
    Guaranteed Governmental Lease Revenue Bonds" for the purpose of financing
    A-2201-20
    7
    the "reconstruct[ion], rehabilitat[ion] and improve[ment] [of] certain County
    buildings," including the Courthouse. A resolution approved in September
    2019 stated that the BCIA would use the proceeds from the bonds to finance
    the project and would "simultaneously . . . enter into a lease purchase
    agreement with the County . . . pursuant to which the [BCIA would] lease the
    Project to the County for its use and ultimately convey the Project to the
    County."3 The resolution also stated that the County agreed to guarantee the
    bonds "in order to assist the [BCIA] with the Project," and the Local Finance
    Board had approved the issuance of the bonds and the County's guarantee.
    In October 2019, the County and the BCIA entered into an
    "Improvement Lease and Agreement," whereby the County agreed to lease
    certain buildings it owned to the BCIA for nominal rent in contemplation of
    the BCIA's completion of the "Improvement Project." The BCIA would then
    lease the improved real estate back to the County and ultimately convey the
    properties to the County at the end of the lease term.
    On August 18, 2020, Hackensack adopted a resolution designating the
    BCIA as the "redevelopment entity" for the "Project Site." The resolution
    cited the BCIA's collaboration with the County "to facilitate the substantive
    3
    The "Project" as defined in the resolution included several other county
    buildings and facilities in addition to the Courthouse.
    A-2201-20
    8
    rehabilitation and redevelopment of the County Courthouse," and it
    "empowered" the BCIA "to perform all actions necessary, proper and
    authorized under the [LRHL] in furtherance of the Redevelopment Plan with
    respect to the Project Site."
    On November 6, 2020, the BCIA issued a "Request for Qualifications
    for Redevelopment/Rehabilitation Services for the Substan[t]ial Rehabilitation
    of the Bergen County Justice Complex."        The RFQ stated that the BCIA,
    acting as the redevelopment entity, was "seeking to engage the services of a
    Build Team to provide general contracting for the [r]ehabilitation of the Justice
    Center." The RFQ specified that the County had already engaged a company
    to serve as "Construction Manager and owner[']s representative for the
    Project[,]" and "ha[d] developed substantial plans . . . that will be used to
    direct the contractor."         Additionally, the RFQ provided that "[t]he
    Redevelopment Team shall consist of a General Contractor and a Value
    Engineering Consultant," and "will provide value engineering, construction
    administration and general contracting services (for all trades), including
    securing all required permits and approvals, for the Project." According to the
    RFQ, "[t]he General Contractor will hold the Redevelopment Contract with the
    BCIA and in that capacity will . . . be called the Redeveloper."
    A-2201-20
    9
    The RFQ explained that a selection committee would review and
    evaluate the proposals submitted and recommend a "short list" of no more than
    four Redevelopment Teams "to compete for a [r]edevelopment contract for the
    Project." The short list of respondents would then be invited to respond to an
    RFP in the second phase of the selection process.
    Nine companies, including Dobco, submitted proposals in response to
    the RFQ. Ibrahim is the vice-president and a shareholder of Dobco, and a
    resident and taxpayer of Bergen County. On December 21, 2020, the BCIA
    notified four firms selected to proceed to the next phase of the procurement
    process, and it notified Dobco and the other firms not selected for the short
    list.
    Plaintiffs immediately filed separate, but essentially identical, verified
    complaints alleging that defendants' actions violated the LPCL and were
    arbitrary and capricious. 4 Plaintiffs sought temporary and permanent restraints
    enjoining defendants from continuing with, or entering into any agreement
    pursuant to, the solicitation, recission of any contract or resolution authorizing
    4
    Dobco's complaint contains three paragraphs not included in Ibrahim's
    complaint. Those paragraphs claimed that Dobco sought information from the
    BCIA, questioned its ability to proceed without following the LPCL, and was
    told that the County was "intentionally avoiding the LPCL" so the contract
    would not be awarded to Dobco. There is nothing in the complaint or the
    appellate record that supports these assertions.
    A-2201-20
    10
    defendants to enter into a contract pursuant to the solicitation, and judgment
    declaring that defendants' actions violated the LPCL.
    The trial court entered orders to show cause with temporary restraints,
    and, prior to filing answers, defendants moved to dismiss the complaints. 5 The
    court heard oral argument, and on April 1, the judge entered orders denying
    plaintiffs' requested relief and dismissing plaintiffs' complaints with prejudice
    for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule 4:6-2(e).
    In a written decision accompanying the orders, the judge concluded that
    the project was "not subject to the LPCL because it has been designated a
    5
    The trial court did not require the mandatory joinder of the four firms
    selected to proceed in the process as indispensable parties. See R. 4:28-1(a).
    Nor did any of the firms apparently seek to intervene in the trial court action,
    and they have not done so before us. See R. 4:33-1 and -2 (governing
    mandatory and discretionary intervention). Arguably, those firms have "an
    interest in the subject of the action and [are] so situated that the disposition of
    the action in [their] absence may . . . impair or impede [their] ability to protect
    that interest." R. 4:28-1(a)(2)(i). We have recognized, for example, the
    indispensable nature of the second lowest bidder's presence in a challenge
    brought by the lowest bidder which was subsequently disqualified.
    Schlumberger Indus., Inc. v. Borough of Avalon, 
    252 N.J. Super. 202
    , 204,
    213 (App. Div. 1991).
    However, in this case, the RFQ was only the first step in a process
    wherein none of the four firms selected for the next round possessed an
    interest different from or more important than the interests of the BCIA and
    the County in seeing the process continue. Moreover, regardless of our
    resolution of this appeal, the four firms will undoubtedly be able to participate
    in whatever the procurement process may be going forward.
    A-2201-20
    11
    redevelopment project procured by the [LRHL]." He noted there was "no
    provision in the [LRHL] stipulating that the powers of a redevelopment entity
    are subject to the LPCL, or that the power to contract with a redeveloper at its
    discretion for the solicitation of 'bids' falls under the LPCL." The court found
    that the BCIA properly "exercised its broad discretion in establishing criteria
    for the selection of a redeveloper pursuant to the [LRHL]."
    The judge further determined that plaintiffs were barred from seeking
    equitable relief because Dobco responded to the RFQ, and Ibrahim had not
    challenged the procurement process or the RFQ prior to filing his complaint.
    In addition, the judge determined that plaintiffs acted with unclean hands
    because their complaints did not mention Dobco's participation in the RFQ
    process. The court held plaintiffs "failed to establish a valid cause of action."
    The judge did not address plaintiffs' arguments, raised at oral argument but not
    pleaded in their complaints, that under the LRHL, the BCIA could not pay a
    redeveloper to construct the project and the County could not pledge taxpayer
    funds to secure the BCIA bonds. The judge subsequently denied plaintiffs'
    request for a stay pending appeal.
    Plaintiffs sought leave before us to move for a stay pending appeal on an
    emergent basis, which we granted. On April 20, 2021, we granted plaintiffs'
    motions for a stay and consolidated and accelerated the appeals.
    A-2201-20
    12
    II.
    "We review a dismissal for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule 4:6-
    2(e) de novo, following the same standard as the trial court."                MasTec
    Renewables Constr. Co. v. SunLight Gen. Mercer Solar, LLC, 
    462 N.J. Super. 297
    , 309 (App. Div. 2020) (citing Castello v. Wohler, 
    446 N.J. Super. 1
    , 14
    (App. Div. 2016)). "We . . . treat the [plaintiff's] version of the facts as
    uncontradicted and accord it all legitimate inferences. We pass no judgment
    on the truth of the facts alleged; we accept them as fact only for the purpose of
    reviewing the motion to dismiss." Banco Popular N. Am. v. Gandi, 
    184 N.J. 161
    , 166 (2005) (citing R. 4:6-2(e)).
    The critical concern is whether, upon review of the complaint, exhibits
    attached thereto and matters of public record, there exists "the fundament of a
    cause of action . . . ; the ability of the plaintiff to prove its allegations is not at
    issue." 
    Id.
     at 183 (citing Printing Mart-Morristown v. Sharp Elecs. Corp., 
    116 N.J. 739
    , 746 (1989)).       We only consider "whether a cause of action is
    'suggested' by the facts." Teamsters Local 97 v. State, 
    434 N.J. Super. 393
    ,
    412 (App. Div. 2014) (quoting Printing Mart, 
    116 N.J. at 746
    ).
    Before turning to plaintiffs' arguments on the merits, we consider
    defendants' contentions, accepted by the Law Division judge, that plaintiffs are
    barred from challenging the RFQ process on procedural and equitable grounds.
    A-2201-20
    13
    Defendants claim the complaints were properly dismissed because plaintiffs
    never challenged the RFQ process until after Dobco submitted a proposal and
    was eliminated moving forward.
    Certainly, the LPCL provides that a "prospective bidder who wishes to
    challenge a bid specification" must do so at less three days prior to the bid,
    otherwise the challenge "shall be considered void and having no impact on the
    contracting unit or the award of a contract." N.J.S.A. 40A:11-13; see also Jen
    Elec., Inc. v. Cnty. of Essex, 
    197 N.J. 627
    , 631 (2009) (construing N.J.S.A.
    40A:11-13 to be "a statute of limitations" but otherwise not "restrict[ing] or
    otherwise substitut[ing] for traditional notions of standing"). Plaintiffs rightly
    note, however, that defendants asserted in the Law Division and continue to
    assert before us that the LPCL simply does not apply to these facts;
    defendants, therefore, cannot rely on a limitations period specific to the LPCL
    as barring the complaints.
    However, plaintiffs ignore other precedent that does not rely on the
    statute of limitations contained in N.J.S.A. 40A:11-13.         The decision in
    Autotote, Ltd. v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority, 
    85 N.J. 363
    (1981), provides facts most similar to this case.        In Autotote, the Court
    considered whether the plaintiff-vendor, which had supplied services to the
    defendant authority via a negotiated contract, could now challenge the award
    A-2201-20
    14
    of a negotiated contract to a different vendor by asserting the contract needed
    to be publicly bid. 
    Id.
     at 368–69. Noting that the plaintiff "was prepared to
    negotiate a new contract without public bidding[,]" the Court considered
    whether "[t]he abrupt 'about-face' in [the plaintiff's] attitude toward public
    bidding after [the competitor] was awarded the contract . . . raises the question
    whether [the plaintiff's] past conduct estops it from challenging the award."
    
    Id. at 369
    .
    Citing its much earlier decision in Waszen v. City of Atlantic City, 
    1 N.J. 272
     (1949), the Court noted "[t]he rationale of th[at] holding was that 'one
    cannot endeavor to take advantage of a contract to be awarded under illegal
    specifications and then, when unsuccessful, seek to have the contract set
    aside.'" Autotote, 
    85 N.J. at 369
     (quoting Waszen, 
    1 N.J. at 276
    ); see also
    Camden Plaza Parking, Inc. v. City of Camden, 
    16 N.J. 150
    , 158 (1954)
    (where, citing Waszen, the Court held an unsuccessful bidder lacked standing
    to challenge specifications allegedly "not sufficiently precise and definite" to
    promote "a common standard of competition"). 6
    6
    In Autotote, finding "a paucity of judicial attention" to the "statutory
    provision" at issue, N.J.S.A. 5:10-21, and the "substantial public importance
    and large sums of public monies . . . at stake," the Court nevertheless
    proceeded to the merits of the case. 
    85 N.J. at 369
    . The Court held that the
    "degree of technical knowledge and professional skill" required from the
    vendor brought the contract within a statutory exception and could be awarded
    A-2201-20
    15
    Under the facts presented, we agree with defendants that Dobco is
    estopped from now complaining that a process in which it willingly
    participated violated the law. We see no principled reason that supports a
    different result in this case from those we have cited. We therefore affirm the
    dismissal of Dobco's complaint.
    However, it is well-settled that "taxpayers . . . have the right to challenge
    whether public bidding is required in a particular instance." Yacenda Food
    Mgmt. Corp. v. N.J. Highway Auth., 
    203 N.J. Super. 264
    , 271 (App. Div.
    1985); accord Camden Parking Plaza, 
    16 N.J. at
    158–59 (noting the individual
    plaintiffs, "as citizens and taxpayers," may challenge the specifications and
    award despite unsuccessful bidder's lack of standing to do so).          Ibrahim's
    additional personal stake in the litigation as a principal of Dobco "does not
    diminish his standing as a taxpayer."        Yacenda, 
    203 N.J. Super. at 271
    (citations omitted); see also Commc'ns Workers of Am., AFL-CIO v. Clymer,
    
    292 N.J. Super. 138
    , 145–46 (Law Div. 1996) (acknowledging the plaintiffs'
    standing as "taxpayers and persons directly affected by the bidding process[,]"
    notwithstanding their union's status as unsuccessful bidder, and also rejecting
    without public bidding. Id. at 373. Although the LPCL contains a similar
    exception for "professional services," see N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(a)(i),
    defendants have never claimed that the redeveloper services procured through
    the RFQ process in this case fall within this or any other exception to the
    LPCL.
    A-2201-20
    16
    claim that the plaintiffs were "strawm[e]n" for the union (citing Yacenda, 
    203 N.J. Super. at
    270–71)).
    We reject BCIA's claim that the trial judge properly dismissed both
    complaints based on the doctrine of "unclean hands."           See Borough of
    Princeton v. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders, 
    169 N.J. 135
    , 158 (2001) ("The
    essence of [the unclean hands] doctrine . . . is that '[a] suitor in equity must
    come into court with clean hands and he must keep them clean after his entry
    and throughout the proceedings.'" (second alteration in original) (quoting A.
    Hollander & Son, Inc. v. Imperial Fur Blending Corp., 
    2 N.J. 235
    , 246
    (1949))).   The judge reasoned that despite having participated in the RFQ
    process, Dobco never disclosed that fact in its verified complaint.
    While undoubtedly both defendants were aware Dobco submitted a
    proposal in response to the RFQ, the unclean hands doctrine has no application
    to Ibrahim's complaint.    He was under no obligation to disclose Dobco's
    response to the RFQ in his taxpayer complaint, and, we reject any implicit
    contention that Ibrahim is simply a "strawman" for the company, thereby
    justifying dismissal of his complaint.
    The BCIA argues that to the extent plaintiffs' complaints challenged its
    designation as the redevelopment entity for the Courthouse, its issuance of
    bonds, or the Local Finance Board's approval of the County's guarantee, they
    A-2201-20
    17
    were untimely pursuant to Rule 4:69-6. That Rule requires an action in lieu of
    prerogative writs challenging government action to be commenced within
    forty-five days. 
    Ibid.
     However, Ibrahim challenges none of those actions.
    Rather, he filed a challenge to the first step in the RFQ process, asserting the
    process required compliance with the LPCL. 7
    We are fully aware of the detriment caused to the public interest in this
    matter by further delay. The County presents this as support for affirming the
    orders under review. However, the RFQ solicitation was only the first step in
    a process that anticipated further evaluation of additional responses to the RFP
    submitted by those on the short list; the entire process to choose a
    "redeveloper" has no specific end date.
    More importantly, it is axiomatic that if adherence to the LPCL were
    required, consideration of the merits of Ibrahim's complaint serves the greater
    public interest. See Meadowbrook Carting Co. v. Borough of Island Heights,
    
    138 N.J. 307
    , 313 (1994) ("[S]tatutes authorizing competitive bidding . . .
    promot[e] competition on an equal footing and guard[] against 'favoritism,
    7
    In a separate point heading in their joint brief, plaintiffs argued the project's
    "contorted funding scheme offends the intent and spirit of the [LRHL], LPCL
    and CIAL." As noted, the argument was not pled in plaintiffs' complaints
    although counsel raised it during oral argument before the Law Division judge.
    However, during oral argument before us, plaintiffs conceded that their
    challenge was limited to the expenditure of public funds as contemplated by
    the RFQ without compliance with the LPCL.
    A-2201-20
    18
    improvidence, extravagance and corruption.'" (quoting Twp. of Hillside v.
    Sternin, 
    25 N.J. 317
    , 322 (1957)). We accelerated these appeals, issued an
    expedited briefing schedule, and calendared argument only two months after
    the judge entered the orders we review.
    In short, for the reasons stated, we affirm the order dismissing Dobco's
    complaint in A-2201-20. We reject the procedural and equitable arguments
    raised by defendants as to Ibrahim's complaint, the subject of the order under
    review in A-2202-21, and we proceed to consider the merits of plaintiff's
    arguments.
    III.
    The parties concede that the issue may be simply framed: must the
    BCIA, acting as a "redevelopment entity" pursuant to the LRHL, comply with
    the bidding requirements of the LPCL when selecting and contracting a
    "redeveloper" to serve as general contractor for the rehabilitation of the
    Courthouse?   Although simply framed, resolution of the question involves
    interpretation of three complex statutory schemes.
    "We review matters of statutory interpretation de novo."         MasTec
    Renewables, 462 N.J. Super. at 318 (citing Verry v. Franklin Fire Dist. No. 1,
    
    230 N.J. 285
    , 294 (2017)). "The objective of all statutory interpretation is to
    discern and effectuate the intent of the Legislature[,]" Murray v. Plainfield
    A-2201-20
    19
    Rescue Squad, 
    210 N.J. 581
    , 592 (2012), and "the best indicator of that intent
    is the statutory language" which should be given its "ordinary meaning and
    significance." DiProspero v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492 (2005). "We construe
    the words of a statute 'in context with related provisions so as to give sense to
    the legislation as a whole.'" Spade v. Select Comfort Corp., 
    232 N.J. 504
    , 515
    (2018) (quoting N. Jersey Media Grp., Inc. v. Twp. of Lyndhurst, 
    229 N.J. 541
    , 570 (2017)).
    "If the plain language leads to a clear and unambiguous result, then our
    interpretative process is over." Johnson v. Roselle EZ Quick LLC, 
    226 N.J. 370
    , 386 (2016) (quoting Richardson v. Bd. of Trs., Police & Firemen's Ret.
    Sys., 
    192 N.J. 189
    , 195 (2007)). However, "[w]hen the statutory language is
    ambiguous and 'leads to more than one plausible interpretation,' courts may
    resort to extrinsic sources, like legislative history and committee reports. "
    MasTec Renewables, 462 N.J. Super. at 320 (quoting State v. Twiggs, 
    233 N.J. 513
    , 533 (2018)).
    Although courts may not "rewrite a plainly written statute or . . .
    presume that the Legislature meant something other than what it conveyed in
    its clearly expressed language[,]" Murray, 210 N.J. at 592, a court may "draw
    inferences based on the statute's overall structure and composition and may
    consider the entire legislative scheme of which [the statute] is a part." MasTec
    A-2201-20
    20
    Renewables, 462 N.J. Super. at 318 (alteration in original) (quoting Twiggs,
    233 N.J. at 532). In addition, "[s]tatutes that deal with the same matter or
    subject should be read in pari materia and construed together as a unitary and
    harmonious whole." Ibid. (quoting Nw. Bergen Cnty. Utils. Auth. v. Donovan,
    
    226 N.J. 432
    , 444 (2016)).        Thus, "[w]hen interpreting multiple statutes
    touching upon the same subject . . . [courts] must attempt to harmonize the
    provisions of all statutes that the Legislature has enacted affecting the subjects
    involved." Nw. Bergen Cnty. Utils. Auth., 226 N.J. at 444 (citing Town of
    Kearny v. Brandt, 
    214 N.J. 76
    , 98 (2013)). "[U]nless there are other clues, a
    court must 'presume that the Legislature intended for its two statutory schemes
    . . . to generally work harmoniously, not in conflict with one another.'"
    MasTec Renewables, 462 N.J. Super. at 319 (quoting Nw. Bergen Cnty. Utils.
    Auth., 226 N.J. at 444). "A court must make every effort to avoid rendering
    any part of a statute inoperative, superfluous or meaningless." Id. at 318.
    With these guideposts informing our review, we examine the three
    statutory schemes at issue.
    A.
    The LPCL's purpose "is to 'secure for the public the benefits of
    unfettered competition.'"     Meadowbrook Carting, 
    138 N.J. at 313
     (quoting
    Terminal Constr. Corp. v. Atl. Cnty. Sewerage Auth., 
    67 N.J. 403
    , 410
    A-2201-20
    21
    (1975)). "To that end, the Legislature has enacted a comprehensive statutory
    framework governing public contracts." Clean Earth Dredging Techs., Inc. v.
    Hudson Cnty. Improvement Auth., 
    379 N.J. Super. 261
    , 267 (App. Div. 2005).
    "Public bidding statutes exist for the benefit of taxpayers, not bidders, and
    should be construed with sole reference to the public good."           Nat'l Waste
    Recycling, Inc. v. Middlesex Cnty. Improvement Auth., 
    150 N.J. 209
    , 220
    (1997).
    The LPCL requires
    [e]very contract awarded by [a] contracting agent for
    the provision or performance of any goods or services,
    the cost of which in the aggregate exceeds the bid
    threshold, [to] be awarded only by resolution of the
    governing body of the contracting unit to the lowest
    responsible bidder after public advertising for bids and
    bidding therefor, except as is provided otherwise in
    [the LPCL] or specifically by any other law.
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:11-4(a) (emphasis added).]
    The BCIA is a "contracting unit" under the LPCL, see N.J.S.A. 40A:11-
    2(1)(c), and its "governing body" is a "[c]ontracting agent." N.J.S.A. 40A:11 -
    2(3). "'[G]oods or services' means any work, labor, commodities, equipment,
    materials, or supplies of any tangible or intangible nature, except real property
    A-2201-20
    22
    or any interest therein, provided or performed through a contract awarded by a
    contracting agent." N.J.S.A. 40A:11-2(24).8
    Prior to a 1975 amendment, N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55(n) empowered a county
    improvement authority "[t]o enter into any and all agreements or contracts,
    execute any and all instruments, and do and perform any and all acts or things
    necessary, convenient or desirable for the purposes of the authority or to carry
    out any power expressly given in this act." L. 1960, c. 183, § 12. The 1975
    amendment added the phrase "subject to the 'Local Public Contracts Law'" to
    the end of the previously unqualified statement. L. 1975, c. 96, § 6.9
    The 1975 amendment not only made county improvement authorities
    subject to the LPCL, but it also amended the enabling statutes governing many
    other county and municipal authorities including, for example, parking,
    sewerage, county recreation, and solid waste management authorities.           L.
    1975, c. 96, §§ 1-15. The Sponsor's Statement to the bill explained:
    The purpose of this bill is to clarify the existing
    law and to restate the intention of the Legislature with
    regard to the impact of the [LPCL] on municipal and
    county authorities. Since the [LPCL] was adopted, a
    8
    Contracts for certain goods and services are excepted from the public
    bidding requirements. N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5. As already noted, defendants do
    not contend that these exceptions apply in this case.
    9
    This provision is now codified at N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55(t) due to additional
    amendments to the CIAL.
    A-2201-20
    23
    court has held that despite the provision of the [LPCL]
    to the contrary, it did not affect the powers of
    municipal authorities to enter into contracts in
    disregard of it. This bill will amend various statutes
    regulating authorities and subject them specifically to
    the [LPCL].
    [Sponsor's Statement to S. 711 (L. 1975, c. 96)
    (emphasis added).]
    It is beyond debate that the LPCL requires a county improvement authority to
    publicly bid the hiring of a general contractor to rehabilitate its property if the
    contract exceeds the statutory bid threshold. See N.J.S.A. 40A:11-3 (defining
    the bid threshold). Neither the BCIA nor the County contend otherwise.
    Instead, defendants contend that while the LPCL may generally apply to
    county improvement authorities, it does not apply if "provided otherwise . . .
    specifically by any other law." N.J.S.A. 40A:11-4(a). Defendants contend the
    "other law" in this case are certain provisions of the CIAL and the LRHL.
    B.
    The 1979 amendments to the CIAL not only granted redevelopment
    powers to county improvement authorities, but it also vested them with the
    power to finance and operate housing projects. The preamble to the legislation
    stated that it was "[a]n Act concerning county improvement authorities,
    vesting them with necessary powers to undertake, finance and operate housing
    projects and to redevelop property in connection therewith . . . ." A. 3430
    A-2201-20
    24
    (1979). The bill was apparently introduced in response to a housing crisis
    experienced in Atlantic City at the time. As explained by the Senate County
    and Municipal Government Committee:
    The purpose of Assembly 3430 is to afford the
    Atlantic County Improvement Authority powers to
    deal with the current housing crisis in Atlantic City.
    The bill has been recommended by the Governor's
    Cabinet Committee on Atlantic City, and is necessary
    to complete implementation of Assembly 3313, which
    would phase out the Atlantic City luxury tax and
    direct it from the city to a special fund to back County
    Improvement Authority bonds.
    The bill accords all county improvement
    authorities certain powers, which would be in addition
    to the public facilities construction and public services
    powers they currently possess. The additional powers
    are: (1) to act as a housing finance agency to promote
    construction of low and moderate income housing;
    and, (2) to act as a redevelopment agency to plan and
    carry out the redevelopment of blighted areas.
    [S. Cnty. & Mun. Gov't Comm. Statement to A. 3430
    (June 21, 1979).]
    The provisions specifically enabling county improvement authorities to
    undertake, finance and operate housing projects were newly added extensions
    to the existing CIAL. L. 1979, c. 275, §§ 1-30; N.J.S.A. 40:37A-106 to -135.
    However, the redevelopment powers granted by the 1979 amendments
    were contained within the body of the existing CIAL. N.J.S.A. 40:37A-54
    describes the purposes of a county improvement authority.              The 1979
    A-2201-20
    25
    amendment added two of particular relevance: (1) providing loans to facilitate
    the construction of low- and moderate-income housing; and (2) "planning,
    initiating and carrying out redevelopment projects . . . and the disposition . . .
    of any property . . . acquired in the area of such project." A. 3430, § 32;
    N.J.S.A. 40:37A-54(a), (i), and (j). N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55 governs the powers
    and duties of a county improvement authority. The 1979 amendment to the
    CIAL added one power relevant to these appeals, namely, giving improvement
    authorities the ability "[t]o extend credit or make loans to redevelopers for the
    planning, designing, acquiring, constructing, reconstructing, improving,
    equipping and furnishing any redevelopment project or redevelopment work."
    A. 3430, § 33; N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55(q) (emphasis added). Interestingly, this
    new power, along with two others not relevant here, were inserted in the
    alphabetized list of powers already in N.J.S.A. 40:37-55; these new powers
    were inserted immediately before the existing provision that authorized an
    improvement authority to enter into agreements or contracts and do all things
    necessary to carry out its powers, subject to the LPCL. L. 1979, c. 275, § 33.
    The 1979 amendments also added an entirely new section, N.J.S.A.
    40:37A-55.1, that describes an authority's redevelopment powers.          Among
    other powers, a county improvement authority may:
    Arrange or contract with public agencies or
    redevelopers   for   the   planning,   replanning,
    A-2201-20
    26
    conservation,    rehabilitation,   construction,    or
    undertaking of any project, or redevelopment work, or
    any part thereof, to provide as part of any such
    arrangement or contract for extension of credit or
    making of loans to redevelopers to finance any project
    or redevelopment work, and to arrange or contract
    with public agencies for the opening, grading or
    closing of streets, roads, roadways, alleys, or other
    places or for the furnishing of facilities or for the
    acquisition by such agency of property options or
    property rights or for the furnishing of property or
    services in connection with a redevelopment area.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55.1(i).]10
    However, all these redevelopment powers were made expressly "subject to the
    provisions of this act." N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55.1.
    We reject any implication that the use of the phrase "this act" signals the
    Legislature's intention to set apart the newly enacted redevelopment powers
    from other provisions of the CIAL, thereby eliminating the requirement that a
    county improvement authority comply with the LPCL when it acts as a
    redevelopment entity. We acknowledge some authority for the proposition
    that the use of the phrase "this act" signals the Legislature's reference only to
    the 1979 amendments and not the CIAL in its entirety. See, e.g., Ptaszynski v.
    10
    These powers are like those granted to redevelopment entities pursuant to
    the later enacted LRHL, although redevelopment entities may in limited
    circumstances also provide capital grants to redevelopers. See N.J.S.A.
    40A:12A-8(f).
    A-2201-20
    27
    Atl. Health Sys., Inc., 
    440 N.J. Super. 24
    , 35 (App. Div. 2015) ("[t]he plain
    language . . . and the context in which the phrase 'this act' is used . . . indicate
    that the Legislature intended the phrase to mean the amendatory legislation ").
    However, the entire structure of the CIAL persuades us otherwise.
    Initially, as noted, the Legislature granted county improvement
    authorities new redevelopment powers in the 1979 amendments, but, unlike the
    sweeping changes which were added to the existing CIAL that permitted
    authorities to construct housing, the Legislature included these new
    redevelopment powers — N.J.S.A. 40:37A-54, -55, and -55.1, for example —
    within existing provisions of the CIAL.        Moreover, when the LRHL was
    enacted in 1992, the only other public entities with redevelopment powers
    were municipal redevelopment and housing authorities. The LRHL explicitly
    required that they comply with the LPCL.             See N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-23.
    Logically, the Legislature did not need to add county improvement authorities
    to N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-23 because since 1975, seventeen years before enactment
    of the LRHL, the CIAL was amended to require compliance with the LPCL.
    See N.J.S.A. 40:37A-55(t).
    In short, by its terms, the CIAL does not exempt county improvement
    authorities from complying with the LPCL when procuring "goods and
    A-2201-20
    28
    services" simply because they are acting pursuant to redevelopment powers
    granted by the Legislature.
    C.
    When enacted in 1992, the LRHL was intended to "revise[],
    consolidate[] and clarif[y] the various statutes related to the exercise of
    redevelopment and housing powers by local governments into a modern and
    comprehensive statute."       Sponsor's Statement to A. 1138 (L. 1992, c. 79).
    Notably, while the LRHL repealed certain sections of the 1979 amendments to
    the CIAL, it left undisturbed those provisions granting redevelopment powers
    to county improvement authorities.
    The LRHL provides that only if a "county improvement authority [is]
    authorized to undertake redevelopment projects pursuant to the [CIAL] may
    [it] also act as a redevelopment entity pursuant to [the LRHL]." N.J.S.A.
    40A:12A-4(c). The LRHL clearly permits a redevelopment entity to "contract
    with . . . redevelopers for the . . . construction . . . of any project or
    redevelopment work, or any part thereof." N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-8(f). See also
    N.J.S.A. 40:37-55.1(i) (allowing county improvement authorities to do the
    same).
    As noted, N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-8(g) permits a redevelopment entity to
    "lease or convey property or improvements to any other party . . . without
    A-2201-20
    29
    public bidding."   No other section of the LRHL relieves a redevelopment
    entity from the strictures of the LPCL, which explicitly apply to municipal
    housing authorities and redevelopment agencies.         N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-23.11
    Defendants argue that pursuant to the LRHL, redevelopment entities are
    permitted to choose a redeveloper without public bidding. We have no quarrel
    with this general proposition.
    We previously held that "the LRHL does not set forth any criteria
    governing the selection of a private redeveloper." Vineland Constr. Co., 
    395 N.J. Super. at 255
    . Typically, however, contracts with redevelopers specify
    the parameters of a redevelopment project with costs borne by the redeveloper,
    who then is entitled to reap revenues from the project. See, e.g., 
    id. at 243
    (developer and its partners "planned to provide all of the invested capital" for a
    waterfront redevelopment project with estimated cost exceeding $700 million);
    Deegan v. Perth Amboy Redevelopment Agency, 
    374 N.J. Super. 80
    , 82 (App.
    Div. 2005) (proposed redevelopment project "would consist of approximately
    250 rental apartments, a supermarket, retail space, a walkway/park and parking
    facilities"); Bryant, 309 N.J. Super. at 622 (redeveloper "agree[d] to commit
    11
    N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-39, which deals with cooperation in the planning and
    execution of a redevelopment project, permits a "public body" to aid and
    cooperate in redevelopment efforts "with or without consideration."
    A-2201-20
    30
    millions of dollars towards construction of the planned resort"). Nothing in
    our caselaw suggests that by giving county improvement authorities the power
    to contract with redevelopers, the Legislature intended to allow a public
    agency to use public funds to pay a general contractor without complying with
    the LPCL simply by denominating the contractor as a "redeveloper."
    Indeed, one need only look at N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-9, which concerns
    agreements with redevelopers, to appreciate how alien the arrangement
    anticipated in this case is from a typical redeveloper agreement. Pursuant to
    that section of the LRHL,
    [a]ll agreements . . . and other instruments . . .
    between a . . . redevelopment entity and . . . a
    redeveloper shall contain a covenant running with the
    land requiring that the owner shall construct only the
    uses established in the current redevelopment
    plan; . . . a provision that the redeveloper shall be
    without power to sell, lease or otherwise transfer the
    redevelopment . . . project, or any part thereof,
    without the written consent of the . . . redevelopment
    entity; a provision that upon completion of the
    required improvements, the conditions determined to
    exist at the time the area was determined to be in need
    of redevelopment shall be deemed to no longer exist,
    and the land and improvements thereon shall no longer
    be subject to eminent domain as a result of those
    determinations; and any other covenants, provisions
    and continuing controls as may be deemed necessary
    to effectuate the purposes of this act. The aforesaid
    covenants, provisions and controls shall be deemed
    satisfied upon termination of the agreements and
    covenants entered into by the redeveloper to construct
    the improvements and to perform the redevelopment.
    A-2201-20
    31
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-9(a) (emphasis added).]
    A redevelopment entity may lease property to a redeveloper, with a proviso
    that all improvements shall became property of the entity. N.J.S.A. 40A:12-
    9(b). But, such a lease "shall not impose upon the . . . redevelopment entity
    any liability for the financing, construction, management or operation of any
    redevelopment project, or any part thereof." Ibid. The express terms of the
    LRHL do not anticipate a contract with a "redeveloper" like the one proposed
    by the RFQ in this case.
    We conclude that under these particular facts, the BCIA cannot avoid the
    requirements of public bidding for "goods or services" covered by the LPCL
    simply by cloaking itself in the rubric of a redevelopment entity under the
    LRHL and designating the general contractor for the project as a
    "redeveloper." We therefore reverse the order under review in A-2202-20 and
    remand the matter to the trial court to enter an order permanently restraining
    the BCIA from proceeding with the procurement process contemplated by the
    RFQ.
    Affirmed in A-2201-20; reversed and remanded in A-2202-20. We do
    not retain jurisdiction.
    A-2201-20
    32