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District of Columbia Public-Private Partnerships Facts:

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Presentation on theme: "District of Columbia Public-Private Partnerships Facts:"— Presentation transcript:

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2 District of Columbia Public-Private Partnerships Facts:
Authorized under D.C. Act , the “Public-Private Partnerships Act of 2014” Mayor Bowser launched the Office of Public-Private Partnerships in November 2015 Mandate to find those infrastructure projects, in all sectors, with the highest possibility to deliver best value-for-money to the District residents Rules and Guidelines approved by District Council October 2016 Advisory services contract issued and proposals currently under review Public engagement process on-going

3 Summary of P3 Rules and Guidelines: Procurement Process
Solicited Proposal Unsolicited Proposal RFI RFQ Public Hearing RFP Submitted to Council RFP Published Review Bids, Select Winner, Negotiate P3 Agreement P3 Agreement Submitted to Council Unsolicited Proposal Preliminary Evaluation Public Notice to Proceed, Accept Alternatives Review Bids CFO and OAG Certifications Select Winner, Negotiate P3 Agreement P3 Agreement Submitted to Council 10 day passive review if < 10 years, $50M; Otherwise 45 day passive 30 Days Minimum 10 day passive or active approval required based on size/term 60 Days Maximum 30 Days Minimum 90 Days Minimum 10 day passive or active approval required based on size/term

4 Pipeline of Potential P3 Projects: op3.dc.gov/pipeline

5 Unsolicited Proposals: op3. dc
Unsolicited Proposals: op3.dc.gov/proposals DC OP3 will be open for unsolicited proposals: November 28th, January 26th, 2017

6 D.C. Office of Public-Private Partnerships
John A. Wilson Building 1350 Pennsylvania Ave, NW | Suite 533 Washington, DC | 20004 Seth Miller Gabriel, Director Direct: Judah Gluckman, Deputy Director Direct:


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