Judges: JOHN CORNYN, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 9/7/2000
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Tony Goolsby Chair, House Administration Committee Texas House of Representatives P.O. Box 2910 Austin, Texas 78768
Re: Whether a municipality must competitively bid a contract with a temporary day labor agency (RQ-0217-JC)
Dear Representative Goolsby:
You ask whether a city's annual contract with a temporary day labor agency to provide qualified day laborers, particularly garbage collection workers, is exempt from the competitive bidding procedure required by Local Government Code section 252.021 as a procurement necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety.1 The city's contract with the temporary day labor agency, if limited to the employment of laborers necessary to preserve or protect the public health, would be excepted from competitive bidding pursuant to section
You write that many Texas cities find workers for their city-operated solid waste collection services through temporary day labor agencies.See Request Letter, note 1, at 1. To be sure of having a reliable source of qualified day laborers, municipalities will often contract with a temporary day labor agency. See id. If a municipality anticipates spending more than $15,000 in one year with a temporary day laborer provider, you ask whether the contract must be put out for competitive bids. See id. at 2. You also ask whether the purchase of equipment and materials used exclusively for solid waste collection, such as garbage trucks and residential trash containers, would be excepted from competitive bidding as necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety of the city. See id. at 1, 3.
Under section
(1) a procurement made because of a public calamity that requires the immediate appropriation of money to relieve the necessity of the municipality's residents or to preserve the property of the municipality; [or]
(2) a procurement necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety of the municipality's residents.
. . . .
Id. § 252.022(a)(1), (2).
The Texas Supreme Court has construed the exemption for purchases necessary "to preserve or protect the public health or safety" as independent from the exemption for purchases made necessary by a public calamity. See Hoffman v. City of Mt. Pleasant,
A city's contract for garbage collection with a private corporation is within the exception for expenditures to protect or preserve the public health and may be awarded without competitive bidding. SeeBrowning-Ferris, Inc. v. City of Leon Valley,
A city council could reasonably determine on the authority ofBrowning-Ferris, Inc. v. City of Leon Valley that a contract with a temporary day labor agency for garbage collection workers was necessary to preserve or protect the public health, thereby bringing the contract within the "public health or safety" exception found in Local Government Code section 252.022(a)(2). In our opinion, the city's contract with the temporary day labor agency would also be within this exception if it were limited to day laborers necessary to preserve the public health or safety, such as laborers to staff city solid waste collection services.
You also ask whether the purchase of equipment and materials used exclusively for solid waste collection, such as garbage trucks and residential trash containers, would be exempt from competitive bidding as necessary to preserve the public health or safety. See Request Letter,supra note 1, at 1, 3. In Hoffman v. City of Mt. Pleasant, the exception from the competitive bidding requirement for a procurement that is necessary to protect or preserve the public health or safety of the municipality's residents was held applicable for an expenditure "for the construction of a new septic tank, filter bed, mains, and other replacements and improvements" to the city's sewer system. Hoffman,
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
SUSAN D. GUSKY Chair, Opinion Committee
Susan L. Garrison Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee