Source: https://www.codepublishing.com/CA/SantaCruzCounty/html/SantaCruzCounty02/SantaCruzCounty0233.html
Timestamp: 2019-05-22 23:23:51
Document Index: 775478745

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 3', '§ 1']

Chapter 2.33 LOCAL HIRING FOR PUBLIC WORKS PROJECTS
LOCAL HIRING FOR PUBLIC WORKS PROJECTS
2.33.010 Findings and purpose.
2.33.020 Definitions.
2.33.030 Local hiring requirements.
2.33.040 Required documentation.
2.33.050 Forms submitted under penalty of perjury.
2.33.055 Contracts, bid documents, subcontracts.
2.33.060 Binding on subcontractors.
2.33.070 Declaration of nonresponsive bidder.
2.33.080 Declaration of nonresponsible contractor or bidder.
2.33.090 Finding of noncompliance.
2.33.095 Appeals.
2.33.100 Disqualification.
2.33.110 Repealed.
2.33.120 Repealed.
2.33.130 Repealed.
2.33.140 Repealed.
2.33.150 Repealed.
2.33.160 Repealed.
2.33.170 Rules and regulations.
(A) Findings. The Board of Supervisors of the County of Santa Cruz finds and declares as follows:
(1) The annual average unemployment rates in Santa Cruz County are consistently higher than in California as a whole. Seasonal impacts from the agricultural, retail and visitor serving industries in the County lead to a fluctuating unemployment rate throughout the year. This points to the need for economic diversification to provide more year-round employment for County residents.
(2) The Santa Cruz County economy is characterized by small, locally owned and operated firms. The State estimates over 80 percent of County businesses employ less than 20 people. In the construction sector, a majority of the firms are very small; approximately 75 percent have less than five employees.
(3) The State reports that construction firms in Santa Cruz County employ about 4,000 people and generate about $30,000,000 in payroll to the Monterey Bay economy. But compared to Statewide averages, the County has a lower concentration of jobs in construction.
(4) Given the high cost of living in Santa Cruz County, a single parent with two children, one in elementary school, the other pre-school age, would need to earn a wage in excess of $17.00 per hour, full time, to no longer need government subsidies. The construction industry can provide a family supporting wage. Statewide, the average hourly wage is in excess of $20.00 per hour for construction workers.
(B) Purpose. The purpose of this chapter is to encourage contractors who receive County public works contracts to hire residents of the Monterey Bay area in order to provide job opportunities to County residents, expand the County’s employment base, and lessen the drain on public assistance resources caused by high unemployment. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
(A) “Contractor” means any person or entity, which, pursuant to a written agreement or purchase order, provides labor or materials on public works projects for the County.
(B) “Days” means calendar days unless otherwise specified.
(C) “Monterey Bay area” means Santa Cruz County, Monterey County and San Benito County.
(D) “Public works project” means any project of the County valued at or above $10,000 which is subject to the formal bidding procedures set forth in SCCC 2.35.030(B).
(E) “Qualified individual” means an individual who is in a certified State or Federally approved apprenticeship program in an applicable trade or has become a journeyperson in their applicable trade. A journeyperson shall demonstrate proof of five years’ experience in each applicable trade by declaring under penalty of perjury that their sworn statement of experience is complete and correct.
(F) “Resident of the Monterey Bay area” means an individual who is domiciled within the boundaries of the Monterey Bay area at the time immediately preceding the advertisement of the bid for a project, who can verify their domicile upon request of the contractor or County by producing documentation such as a rent/lease agreement, telephone and utility bills or payment bills, a valid California driver’s license or identification card, and/or any other similar, reliable evidence that verifies that the individual is domiciled within the Monterey Bay area. A worker who is a building trade journeyman or building trade apprentice whose local hiring hall has jurisdiction over the Monterey Bay area is also deemed a resident of the Monterey Bay area.
(G) “Subcontractor” means any person or entity, which, pursuant to an agreement or purchase order with a County contractor or another subcontractor, participates in the provision of labor or materials on public works projects for the County. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
Unless such provision would conflict with a State or Federal law or regulation applicable to a particular contract for a public works project, all County contracts for a public works project shall contain provisions pursuant to which the contractor promises to make a good faith effort, with the assistance of local labor union hiring halls, to hire qualified individuals who are residents of the Monterey Bay area in sufficient numbers so that no less than 50 percent of the contractor’s total construction work force, including any subcontractor work force, measured in labor work hours is comprised of Monterey Bay area residents. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
(A) The contractor shall keep an accurate record on a standardized form showing the name, place of residence, trade classification, hours employed, proof of journeyperson or apprenticeship status, per diem wages and benefits of each person employed by the contractor, and the contractor’s subcontractors, on the specific public works project, including full-time, part-time, permanent and temporary employees, and make such records available to the County, upon request, within five working days.
(B) The contractor shall keep, and provide to the County, on forms acceptable to the County, an accurate record documenting compliance with this chapter. Said records shall include: a listing by name and business address of all local recruitment sources contacted by the contractor, the date of the local recruitment contact and the identity of the person contacted, the trade and classification and number of hire referrals requested, the number of local hires made as a result of the contact, and the identity of the business address of the person(s) hired pursuant to the contact. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
All forms required under this chapter shall be attested to as true as to the information set forth therein and shall be submitted under penalty of perjury. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
(A) Contracts and bid documents shall incorporate this chapter by reference and shall provide that the failure of any contractor or subcontractor to comply with any of its requirements shall be deemed a material breach of contract or subcontract.
(B) Contracts and bid documents shall require bidders, contractors and subcontractors to maintain and submit records necessary for monitoring their compliance with this chapter. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018].
(A) The provisions of this chapter shall bind the contractor both with respect to persons hired directly by the contractor and to all persons hired by the contractor’s subcontractors. The contractor shall be responsible for assuring that all subcontractors document said compliance by submitting the forms required by SCCC 2.33.040 to the County.
(B) The contractor shall include the following language and a copy of this chapter as may be amended from time to time in all contracts with the contractor’s subcontractors: “This contract is for labor or materials for a County of Santa Cruz public works project. As a subcontractor on a County project, you are required to comply with all of the requirements of the Santa Cruz County local hiring preference ordinance, SCCC 2.33, attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference. Failure to comply with the provisions of the local hiring preference ordinance may subject the contractor and/or subcontractor to disqualification from eligibility for County of Santa Cruz contracts.” [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
Should any contractor or subcontractor fail to comply with the provisions of this chapter in their bid submissions prior to award, the bidder shall be declared by the County to be a nonresponsive bidder. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
Where a County contractor or subcontractor has failed, or the County has cause to believe a bidder shall fail, to abide by a material term of any of the provisions of this chapter applicable to contractors or subcontractors, said contractor, subcontractor or bidder shall be declared a nonresponsible contractor pursuant to the procedures outlined in SCCC 2.33.090. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
If the County department head with responsibility for contract administration has cause to believe that any contractor or subcontractor has violated this chapter or that any bidder shall not perform the contract in compliance with this chapter, the department head may conduct an investigation. If, upon investigation, the department head determines that evidence exists to conclude that a violation of this chapter has occurred or will occur, the department head, after consultation with the County Administrative Officer or their designee, shall make a written finding of noncompliance which shall include a declaration of nonresponsibility. The written finding of noncompliance shall provide the contractor, subcontractor or bidder with an opportunity to appeal the finding of noncompliance to the Board of Supervisors in accordance with SCCC 2.33.095. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
A declaration of nonresponsibility and finding of noncompliance under this chapter may be appealed by the affected contractor to the Board of Supervisors under the procedures set forth in SCCC 2.31.030. The County shall be considered an interested party in any appeal. If the Board concurs with the finding of noncompliance, it shall affirm that finding along with the declaration of nonresponsibility contained therein. The decision of the Board of Supervisors shall be final. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018].
Any contractor, subcontractor or bidder declared to be nonresponsible pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall be disqualified from eligibility for providing goods, labor, materials or services to the County for a period of one year for the first violation and three years for a second, with a right of review and reconsideration by the Board of Supervisors after two years upon a showing of corrective action indicating violations are not likely to reoccur. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
2.33.110 Contracts, bid documents, subcontracts.
Repealed by Ord. 5284. [Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].
2.33.120 Bid protests.
2.33.130 Appeals.
2.33.140 Appeal time limits.
2.33.150 Initiation of appeals.
2.33.160 Appeal procedure.
The County Administrative Officer shall prescribe rules, regulations and procedures relating to the application, administration and interpretation of the provisions of this chapter. The rules, regulations and procedures shall be consistent with the provisions of this chapter and may specify forms to be used. [Ord. 5284 § 3, 2018; Ord. 4551 § 1, 1999].