City of Seattle
Criteria
Security Services for the Seattle Parks and Recreation Department
PR0-6531
Evaluation Criteria
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Rebate
The City requires a 3% rebate from the successful vendor(s). The rebate shall be 3% of total money spent by the City with the vendor each year. If the vendor agrees to Interlocal Agreement Sales on the Offer Form, sales conducted within this contract authority to other jurisdictions shall also incur the 3% rebate which shall be calculated and paid to the City of Seattle, unless the City instructs the vendor otherwise through written notice. The total rebate due to the City shall be paid in check to the City of Seattle, Department of Finance and Administrative Services (FAS), Attn: Accounting – Purchasing Rebates, PO Box 94689, Seattle WA 98124-4689. Send a “copy” of the rebate check with any supporting documents to PO Box 94687, Seattle WA 98124-4687. For the first year, rebates will be made for total payments made to the Vendor under this Contract, starting from Contract award to June 30. For every year thereafter, the rebates will be made for total payments made to the Vendor for the period starting from July 1 of each year to June 30 of the following year.Vendor shall track payments made by other Agencies utilizing this Contract via Interlocal Agreement on the Rebate Report embedded below. The City will provide the Vendor with a report showing the City’s payments to the Vendor for the appropriate time period. Rebates will be due 30 days from Vendor’s receipt of the City’s report.All monies spent between the City and the vendor are part of the rebate calculation, unless the vendor can differentiate a spend category or separate contract not associated with the contract. If the Vendor’s records conflict with the City’s reports, Vendor shall contact the buyer and provide supporting documentation which comprise of a report showing the 1) City Ordering Department/ Other Public Agency using this contract, 2) Invoice Number, 3) Date of Invoice, 4) Dollar Amount “excluding” tax, 5) Any other relevant information. This report should also show all credits and returns made by the City Departments.If the rebate is late, the City reserves the right to “hold” all future invoice payments until the rebate has been issued, or to withhold the rebate amount from the next invoice payment due to the vendor.
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Prevailing Wage Compliance
If this contract is subject to prevailing wages, as required by RCW 39.12 (Prevailing Wages on Public Works) and RCW 49.28 (Hours of Labor) as amended or supplemented, Contractor shall be responsible for compliance by the Contractor and all subcontractors with all provisions herein. See included Terms and Conditions for more information on these requirements.If required, prior to issuing award the City will verify that the apparent low bidder meets the training requirements related to public works and prevailing wage by Labor & Industries per RCW 39.04.350 and chapter 39.12 RCW. Bidders are exempt from training if Bidder has been in business with active Unified Business Identifier (UBI) number for three (3) or more years AND have performed work on three (3) or more public works projects. Bidder exemption status may be verified by entering the Bidder's UBI number, selecting the Bidder's Company, and clicking on the "Public Works Requirements" drop-down menu from the following web site: https://secure.lni.wa.gov/verify/.Contractor is responsible for compliance by the Contractor and all subcontractors. Any Offer must be sufficient to pay prevailing wages, and vendor costs associated with filing of Intents and Affidavits, including filing of one or multiple Intents and Affidavits as required by the Department of Labor & Industries. See included Terms and Conditions for more information on these requirements.
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No Gifts and Gratuities
Vendors shall not directly or indirectly offer anything of value (such as retainers, loans, entertainment, favors, gifts, tickets, trips, bonuses, donations, special discounts, work, or meals) to any City employee, volunteer or official, if it is intended or may appear to a reasonable person to be intended to obtain or give special consideration to the Vendor. An example is giving sporting event tickets to a City employee on the evaluation team of a bid you plan to submit. The definition of what a “benefit” would be is broad and could include not only awarding a contract but also the administration of the contract or evaluating contract performance. The rule works both ways, as it also prohibits City employees from soliciting items of value from vendors. Promotional items worth less than $25 may be distributed by the vendor to City employees if the Vendor uses the items as routine and standard promotions for the business.
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The successful Vendor shall provide a Bond
Executed by a Company included in the U. S. Department of the Treasury’s Listing of Approved Sureties (Circular 570), and is included on the Washington State Insurance Commissioner’s Authorized Insurance Company List and has a rating of A-(VII) or better in the A. M. Best’s Key Rating Guide (These materials are also accessible at https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/fsreports/ref/suretyBnd/c570.htm).
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Overview
The Seattle Parks and Recreation Department (SPR) is responsible for operating and maintaining public parks, community centers, and recreation facilities throughout the City of Seattle. SPR is seeking qualified Vendors to provide comprehensive security services that include, but are not limited to:Locking and unlocking gates at parks and facilities (unarmed security services)Locking and unlocking comfort stations/restrooms (unarmed security services)Mobile security patrols (unarmed security services)Overnight security for events and programs (as needed, and may require armed security services on rare occasions)Ad hoc security at festivals and community events (unarmed security services)Emergency and disaster response security services (unarmed security services as needed, and may require armed security services on rare occasions)SPR intends to award contracts to a pool of qualified Vendors. Vendors must submit pricing for all unarmed security services included in the scope of work. Vendors may chose to submit pricing for armed security services, but if they do not bid, it will not affect eligibility for award of the unarmed security services. The SPR currently has contract #0000000004788 in place for these services. The SPR spent approximately $250,000 on services in 2025.
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The following are minimum qualifications the Vendor must meet to submit a bid. Responses must show compliance to these minimum qualifications. The City reserves the right, but is not obligated, to clarify if compliance to the minimum qualifications is not clear in Vendor’s response. Those not responsive shall be rejected by the City without further consideration: Vendor, its employees, or subcontractors must have a minimum of three years of continuous experience during which time security guard and patrol services has been the primary business service. Vendor must have successfully performed at least one contract with an agency of similar size to the City of Seattle. This experience must include include at least one contract that was active for a minimum of three consecutive years, or a combination of two or more contracts with similar scope and volume that together total at least three years of active service.
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Protests and Complaints
The City has rules to govern the rights and obligations of interested parties that desire to submit a complaint or protest to this ITB process. Please see the City website at http://www.seattle.gov/city-purchasing-and-contracting/solicitation-and-selection-protest-protocols for these rules. Interested parties have the obligation to know of and understand these rules, and to seek clarification from the City.
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The City expects to achieve the following outcomes through this solicitation:Ensure Safety and Security: Provide reliable security guard services to safeguard SPR staff, assets, facilities, and the public.Establish a Qualified Pool of Vendors: Develop a pool of qualified security contractors capable of meeting SPR’s routine, emergency, and surge security needs.Support Operational Continuity: Maintain uninterrupted operations by protecting critical infrastructure from unauthorized access, theft, vandalism, and other security risks.Enable Flexible Service Deployment: Allow SPR to assign work quickly to vendors within the pool based on expertise, staffing availability, and price competitiveness.Promote Accountability and Professional Standards: Ensure security personnel meet minimum training, licensing, and performance requirements, and uphold standards of professionalism, customer service, and cultural competency.Enhance Emergency Preparedness: Secure access to qualified security resources during emergencies, natural disasters, or heightened security situations.Advance Equity Goals: Encourage participation from diverse businesses, including women- and minority-owned firms, and align with SPR and City of Seattle’s equity objectives.
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Order Desk
Vendors must maintain a branch office. This office must be reachable by phone, text, and email, with a qualified contact person available to respond Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, excluding City holidays. Vendors must provide 24/7 emergency dispatch or an on-call supervisor for staffing, after-hours and emergency situations.
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Seattle Business Licensing and Associated Taxes
If you have a “physical nexus” in the city, you must obtain a Seattle Business license and pay all taxes due before the Contract can be signed. A “physical nexus” means you have physical presence, such as: a building/facility in Seattle, you make sales trips into Seattle, your own company drives into Seattle for product deliveries, and/or you conduct service work in Seattle (repair, installation, service, maintenance work, on-site consulting, etc.).We provide a Vendor Questionnaire Form that will ask you to specify if you have “physical nexus”. All costs for any licenses, permits and Seattle Business License taxes owed shall be borne by the Vendor and not charged separately to the City.The apparent successful Vendor must immediately obtain the license and ensure all City taxes are current, unless exempted by City Code due to reasons such as no physical nexus. Failure to do so will cause rejection of the bid/proposal. Self-Filing: You can pay your license and taxes on-line using a credit card: https://www.filelocal-wa.gov/Default_FileLocal.aspx.For questions and assistance, call the License and Tax Administration office which issues business licenses and enforces licensing requirements. The general e-mail is tax@seattle.gov. The main phone is 206-684-8484. The licensing website is http://www.seattle.gov/licenses.The City of Seattle website allows you to apply and pay on-line with a credit card if you choose.If a business has extraordinary balances due on their account that would cause undue hardship to the business, the business can contact our office to request additional assistance. A weblink providing further explanation, with the application and instructions for a Seattle Business License is provided below.Those holding a City of Seattle Business license may be required to report and pay revenue taxes to the City. Such costs should be carefully considered by the Vendor prior to submitting your offer. When allowed by City ordinance, the City will have the right to retain amounts due at the conclusion of a contract by withholding from final invoice payments.The application for a Seattle Business License can be found at https://www.seattle.gov/license-and-tax-administration/business-license-tax-certificates.
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Responsiveness and Responsibility
Purchasing shall review submittals to determine basic responsiveness (timely submittal, all required forms submitted, etc), responsibility (minimum qualifications, equal benefit determinations, etc), WMBE Inclusion Plan, and technical minimum requirements if any (delivery date, required specifications, etc). An initial review is made after opening, however additional and more detailed reviews may be made during evaluation and before award. The review may be made of all Vendors or only as needed to determine the lowest responsive and responsible Vendor.
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Green Seal Products
Vendor shall use Green Seal, Eco Logo or other certified cleaning products as approved by the City, for cleaning and janitorial work. All Cleaning products, floor care products and other appropriate products must carry a Green Seal certification. The Bidder shall identify products the Bidder intends to use at City facilities and list them on the Offer, with a note to confirm Green Seal certification. The City has contracts with vendors who can supply Green Seal products at City contract pricing. For the list of vendors, contact the City Buyer.
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There are no minimum qualifications for eligibility to submit a bid.
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PurposeThe purpose of this policy is to ensure that City landscapes are designed, constructed, and maintained in a manner that protects and enhances our region’s natural resources and public health; that City landscapes are models of environmental stewardship in the eyes of the public; that the City establishes a leadership role in developing both aesthetically pleasing and ecologically sensitive landscapes; and that there is a consistent standard of environmental stewardship observed by City departments managing landscapes and other grounds.Organizations AffectedAll City departments responsible for managing construction projects or managing City-owned grounds and landscapes are affected.DefinitionsIntegrated Pest Management: A pest management process that uses monitoring to determine pest injury levels and combines biological, cultural, physical, and chemical tools to minimize health, environmental and financial risks. The method uses the least toxic synthetic pesticides only as a last resort to controlling pests.Sustainable Design, Construction, and Maintenance: Principles, materials, and techniques that conserve natural resources and improve environmental quality throughout the life cycle of the landscape and its surrounding environment.Landscapes: Grounds that are actively managed such as parks, library lawns, right-of-ways, in-town watersheds, etc., but not large tracts of forest land like the Cedar River Watershed.Water Budget: A set of month-by-month estimates of irrigation water use for a specific landscape taking into account plant material, soil type, type of irrigation system, and average weather conditions. The annual budget is the sum of all the monthly budgets.Evapotranspiration (ET): The sum of the water lost from the soil surface and water use by plants.PolicyIn planning, siting, designing, constructing, and maintaining grounds and landscapes owned and managed by the City, site objectives shall include management and maintenance practices that protect and enhance natural ecosystems. City grounds designers, planners, managers, crews, and their contractors shall give priority to:Maximizing water use efficiency (see Energy and Water Conservation Policy);Practicing the principles of Integrated Pest Management including the reduced use of pesticides (see also Chemical Use Policy);Reducing and reusing landscape waste materials through practices such as mulch mowing, mulching and composting;Selecting and using fertilizers that minimize negative impacts on soil organisms and aquatic environments;Designing new and renovating existing landscaped areas to suit the site conditions and with sustainable maintenance in mind. For example:• Using proper soil preparation and amendment;• Specifying weed-free soil amendments;• Using mulches to control weeds, conserve water, and build healthy, biotically diverse soils;• Using site adapted and pest resistant plants: “the right plant for the right place”;• Grouping together plants with similar horticultural needs;• Retaining and using regionally native plant material where appropriate;• Controlling noxious weeds and invasive, non-native, plant species;• Planting for erosion and weed control;• Assessing whether landscapes can still meet the intended site use objectives while modifying the aesthetic standard and/or applying less maintenance; and• Matching maintenance standards to site objectives in the design stage.Restoring, creating, and protecting environmentally valuable areas such as wetlands and riparian, aquatic, wildlife, forest, and meadow habitats. Protection shall include avoiding developing these areas whenever feasible.Increasing the City’s tree canopy. Trees contribute numerous environmental benefits including reducing the build-up of atmospheric carbon dioxide; absorbing atmospheric pollutants; and slowing the rate of precipitation which allows increased infiltration and reduced run-off, slope stabilization, and wildlife habitat.• City departments responsible for open space and public rights of way shall give priority to:(a) Significantly increasing the number of trees in rights of way and open spaces;(b) Replanting in parks and open spaces where trees are mature and nearing the end of their life cycle;(c) Working with community and neighborhood interest groups to involve them in planting and maintaining the urban forest.• City departments managing construction projects shall give priority to incorporating into the construction design any existing, healthy, mature trees on the building site or, alternatively, to moving such trees.Procedures and ResponsibilitiesCity departments responsible for managing landscaped areas shall provide training to grounds management and maintenance staff. The purpose of the training is to acquaint staff with this policy and to keep staff current with best landscape-management practices and technologies.City departments responsible for managing landscaped areas shall prepare water shortage contingency plans for water shortage events such as droughts.City departments shall implement procedures that ensure that contractors and vendors are knowledgeable about and comply with this policy.In making landscaping staffing and budget decisions, departments shall consider the potential environmental tradeoffs; for example, will reduced staffing require increased use of pesticides to maintain the landscape at the same standard?An interdepartmental Grounds Management Committee shall meet regularly to coordinate activities, share resources, plan training, exchange information, set goals, evaluate progress, and periodically review this policy and update it as necessary.Designs for new or renovated landscapes shall include maintenance plans, which shall conform to the requirements of this policy. Pesticides shall be selected using the guidelines provided in the Chemical Use Policy. City departments responsible for grounds management shall establish a water budget for all irrigated landscapes larger than 0.5 acres that are not controlled by ET based systems.Landscape design, installation, or maintenance contracts shall require contractors and vendors to comply with this policy.Department heads shall be responsible for:Ensuring that departmental procedures, budget, and staffing decisions support implementation of this policy;Providing training to grounds management staff in the requirements of this policy; andAppointing a staff person to the Grounds Management Committee to represent the department on matters related to this policy.The Office of Environmental Management (OEM) shall be responsible for:Providing staff support to the Grounds Management Committee; andFacilitating interdepartmental resource sharing.ReferencesCity of Seattle, Landscape and Grounds Management Guidelines: Environmental Stewardship (1999).Related Policies: Energy and Water Conservation Policy and Chemical Use Policy.
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Registration into City's Procurement Portal
f you have not previously done so, register at: https://procurement.opengov.com/portal/seattle, then subscribe to the City’s Procurement Portal. The Procurement Portal is used by City staff to identify companies for future solicitation lists and check certifications. Women- and minority-owned firms are asked to self-identify their business as such in OpenGov. Registration in the City's Procurement Portal is required to submit a response to this solicitation.
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Federal Davis-Bacon Act
If this work has federal funding, this contract is subject to prevailing wage requirements for the State (RCW Chapter 39.12) and federal (Davis-Bacon and related acts), for any applicable wage category. The Contractor and every Subcontractor shall then pay the greater between State Prevailing Wages or federal Davis Bacon wages, on a classification-by-classification basis. Contractors are required to pay wages not less than once a week. See included Terms and Conditions for more information on these requirements.
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Adequate Inventory and Response Times
Vendors must provide 24/7 emergency dispatch or an on-call supervisor for staffing, after-hours and emergency situations.
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Communications
All vendor communications concerning this acquisition and evaluation must be directed only to the Buyer below. Failure to comply may cause bid rejection. Unless authorized by the Buyer, no other City official or City employee is empowered to speak for the City regarding this solicitation or resultant contract evaluation.Tracy Staggers(206) 256-5607tracy.staggers@seattle.gov
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Instructions to the Apparently Successful Vendor(s)
The Apparently Successful Vendor(s) will receive an Intention to Award Letter from the Buyer after award decisions are made by the City. The Letter will include instructions for final submittals due prior to execution of the contract or Purchase Order. The Vendor will be expected to provide all essential documents within ten (10) business days. This includes attaining a Seattle Business License and payment of all associated taxes due and providing proper proof of insurance. If the selected Vendor fails to complete all the final submittals within the allotted ten (10) days, the City may elect to cancel the intended award and award to the next ranked Vendor, or cancel or reissue this solicitation. Cancellation of an award for failure to execute the Contract in the timeframes above may cause Bidder disqualification for future solicitations for this same or similar product/service.
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Environmental Standards
Unless notified otherwise by the Vendor, products bid will be compliant to USEPA Standards published by the USEPA, unless specified otherwise.See USEPA Standards at: https://www.epa.gov/smm/comprehensive-procurement-guideline-cpg-program.
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Involvement of Current and Former City Employees
If a Vendor has any current or former City employees, official or volunteer, working or assisting on solicitation of City business or on completion of an awarded contract, you must provide written notice to Purchasing of the current or former City official, employee or volunteer’s name. The Vendor Questionnaire within your bid documents prompts you to answer that question. You must continue to update that information to City Purchasing during the full course of the contract. The Vendor is to be aware and familiar with the Ethics Code, and educate vendor workers accordingly.
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General Vendor Requirements
Office ContactThe Vendors office must be reachable by phone, text, and email, with a qualified contact person available to respond Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, excluding City holidays.Emergency ContactVendors must provide 24/7 emergency dispatch or an on-call supervisor for staffing, after-hours and emergency situations.Key ControlVendors must maintain strict control of all SPR-issued keys and keycards. Duplication or unauthorized removal of keys is strictly prohibited. In the event of loss or unauthorized duplication, the Vendor will be responsible for re-keying costs, up to $100,000.Key ReturnAll keys and keycards must be returned to SPR within 24 hours of an employee’s removal from the SPR account.
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State Business Licensing and associated taxes
Before the contract is signed, provide the State of Washington business license (a State “Unified Business Identifier” known as a UBI Number). If the State of Washington has exempted your business from State licensing (some foreign companies are exempt and sometimes, the State waives licensing because the company does not have a physical presence in the State), then submit proof of that exemption to the City. All costs for any licenses, permits and associated tax payments due to the State because of licensing shall be borne by the Vendor and not charged separately to the City.Instructions and applications are at http://bls.dor.wa.gov/file.aspx.
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Brand Name or Approved Equal
The manufacturer and model listed indicate a standard of performance acceptable to the City. Any alternate items proposed must meet or exceed the specifications of the equipment in both published specifications and actual performance. Alternates will not be considered for those items marked “No Substitutions.” Any alternate item proposed is subject to acceptance at the sole opinion of the City. Such determinations are not subject to protest, and remain the sole discretion of the City. If you intend to submit an “Approved Equal” product, you must present sufficiently clear and detailed materials, product specification sheets, manufacturer materials, or other evidence that the product is an “Approved Equal” to the brand stated. See the Evaluation Section for further detail about “Approved Equal” determinations.
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Alternatively, the successful Vendor may provide a Letter of Credit
Executed by a Banking Institution provided a Moody’s Bank Rating of B or better. The Bond or Letter of Credit is required at Contract signature and returned to the City. The City does not intend to execute the Contract until the proper and approved form of the Bond or Letter of Credit has been accepted by the City.
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Specifications
Before tabulating price, the City evaluates Vendor compliance with specifications and bid requirements.
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PBT Free Specification - Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxic (PBT) Chemicals – Mercury, Dioxin, PCB, PBDE, Lead, PVC and other
The City of Seattle adopted Resolution #30487 in 2002 which requires City Purchasing differentiate products that contain PBT chemicals and that release PBT chemicals during production or disposal, from those products that do not, and requires City Purchasing reduce acquisition of products that contain or release PBT chemicals. This includes mercury, dioxin, PCB, PBDE (polybrominated diphenyl ethers, i.e. flame retardants), and others identified by the State of Washington, Department of Ecology see https://ecology.wa.gov/Waste-Toxics/Reducing-toxic-chemicals/Addressing-priority-toxic-chemicals.If a Bidder has a product that contains or releases any PBT materials, Bidder must immediately notify the City Buyer. Should the City determine there is no reasonable or economically feasible substitute, the City may amend allow for, or provide a maximum of 10% preference for, products that include or release the least PBT chemical practical. The City may reject Bids with PBT materials. Additional information is at: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/toxhaz.html. The City Council Resolution is here: http://clerk.seattle.gov/search/resolutions/30487
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Permits
All permits required to perform work must be supplied by the Vendor at no additional cost to the City.
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Contract Workers with over 1,000 Hours
The Ethics Code has been amended to apply to vendor company workers that perform over 1,000 cumulative hours on any City contract during any 12-month period. Any such vendor company employee covered by the Ethics Code must abide by the City Ethics Code. The Vendor is to be aware and familiar with the Ethics Code, and educate vendor workers accordingly.
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With Solicitation Response, Vendors shall submit a Letter of Commitment from an approved surety
This Letter of Commitment is a letter that confirms the intention of an appropriate surety to provide a bond should the company receive an award. This letter does not supply the bond but expresses that the surety can provide a qualified bond should an award be given.This Letter of Commitment may be for a Contract Bond. The Letter shall be from a qualified Bond Agency as specified above and shall confirm the willingness of the Bond Agency to provide a bond at 100% of the contract value that meets the form and requirements of the City Bond Form, should the vendor win award.Alternatively, the City will accept a Letter of Commitment for a Letter of Credit. The Letter of Commitment shall be from a qualified Banking Institution as specified above and confirm the willingness of the Banking Institution to provide a Letter of Credit in 100% of the contract value, should the Vendor win the award.
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Prevailing Wage Rates
As part of your response to this ITB, you will be asked to provide Prevailing Wage Rates for King County & Benefit Code Key with the effective date: Thursday, March 26, 2026.To receive prevailing wage rates you may go to the following:To download the rates, go to https://secure.lni.wa.gov/wagelookup/
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No Substitutions
The City requires the brand name as specified and will not allow substitute products.
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Pre-Bid Conference
The City shall conduct a Non-Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference virtually using the information below. Vendors need not attend to be eligible to submit a Bid. The meeting answers questions potential Vendors may have regarding the solicitation document and to discuss and clarify issues. This is an opportunity for Vendors to raise concerns regarding specifications, terms, conditions, and any requirements of this solicitation. Failure to raise concerns over any issues at this opportunity will be a consideration in any protest filed regarding such items known as of this pre-bid conference.The Non-Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be held at 1:00 pm, on Tuesday, March 3, 2026. Please use this link to get on the meeting: Join the meeting on TEAMS https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/29523272118354?p=xRUAGfMOYYenp7DJfG Meeting ID: 295 232 721 183 54 Passcode: rw74Vc6P Dial in by phone +1 206-686-8357,,448476055# United States, Seattle Find a local number Phone conference ID: 448 476 055# Join on a video conferencing device Tenant key: seattle@m.webex.com Video ID: 116 785 631 5.
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Pricing
Items on price sheets shall then be calculated for award. Hourly rates and daily rates will be multiplied by the number of units required for an item total. If an error in math occurs, the hourly rate or daily rate will be considered the correct price and will be used.
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Final Submittals Prior to Award
The Vendor(s) should anticipate that the Letter will require at least the following. Vendors are encouraged to prepare these documents when possible, to eliminate risks of late compliance. Ensure Seattle Business License is current and all taxes due have been paid.Ensure the company has a current State of Washington Business License.Supply Evidence of Insurance to the City Insurance Broker if applicableSpecial Licenses (if any)Proof of certified dealer status (if applicable)Intent to Pay Prevailing Wage Online Registration (if applicable) for Prime and all SubcontractorsContract Bond (if applicable)Supply a Taxpayer Identification Number and W-9 Form
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Pick-up Option
City employees may pick up orders at the Vendor location. Vendor shall require a City ID and the employee’s Washington Driver’s license, City shop assignment and City equipment number when placing and picking up an order.
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Vendor Personnel Requirements
Vendors must provide well-trained, professional, and courteous security personnel for coverage at parks, community centers, and comfort stations. Vendors shall provide unarmed and armed security services.Security Personnel Vendor must ensure their personnel have:Legal authorization to work in the United StatesProficiency in English (verbal and written communication)Valid First Aid and CPR certification (at vendor’s expense)Clean, professional appearance and adherence to the Vendor's uniform standardsValid, visible photo identification while on dutyEarned a high school diploma or GEDCompliance with RCW 18.170 - Security Guards Training Vendor must cover:Safety procedures and hazard identificationReview of SPR facilities with SPR Security Manager to understand security needs Public/customer service and conflict de-escalationEmergency procedures, including CPR, AED, fire safetyReporting, documentation, and communication skillsRules of conduct, grooming standards, and use of force limitationsWAC 308-18 - Private security guard companies and private security guards Background Check RequirementsVendors must conduct comprehensive pre-employment background checks on all assigned personnel. Individuals with the following may not be assigned to City accounts:Felony convictionsConvictions related to substance abuseMisdemeanor convictions for violent crimes, theft, or crimes of moral turpitudeGang affiliationsExcessive arrests without convictionsCurrent or pending criminal investigationsPhysical & Mental Capability RequirementsSecurity personnel must meet the following (not physician-verified at hire unless performance indicates otherwise):Distinguish primary colorsCorrected vision: 20/40 (distance), 13–16 inches (near)Hearing loss not exceeding 20 dB at 500–3000 cps (hearing aids permitted)Adequate physical mobility and coordination, including the ability to climb laddersAble to stand/walk entire shift, lift up to 50 lbs, and run short distancesSPR may require medical examination if performance concerns arise.Conduct ExpectationsSecurity personnel must:Act professionally and courteously with staff and the publicExercise personal safety and avoid escalation of conflictBe polite, cooperative, and professional at all timesRespond to subpoenas related to SPR assignmentsMaintain awareness of political and cultural sensitivities in public settingsStay alert and focused on duties—no reading, use of personal devices, or entertainment while on dutyAbstain from tobacco/nicotine/intoxicant use while on duty or on City propertyWear valid photo ID at all timesPersonnel ManagementVendors must:Maintain a reserve pool of trained personnel to ensure full coverageMaintain a pool of licensed, on-call officers for emergency deploymentNotify SPR Security Manager within 24 hours of any personnel changes to SPR accountEnsure equipment and supplies are sufficient for duties assignedPersonnel must be removed immediately upon SPR request
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Test Samples
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Purpose and Background
The City of Seattle Parks and Recreation Department (SPR) operates and maintains public parks, community centers, and recreation facilities across the City of Seattle. SPR is seeking security services, including but not limited to: unlocking/locking gates at various City of Seattle parks and facilities, unlocking/locking comfort stations (bathrooms), providing mobile security patrols, and on occasion, providing overnight security for special events/programs, ad hoc park security services at festivals, and supplemental emergency/disaster security services.The City seeks to award multiple contracts to a pool of eligible Vendors. Vendors must submit pricing for all unarmed security services included in the scope of work. Vendors may chose to submit pricing for armed security services, but if they do not bid, it will not affect eligibility for award of the unarmed security services.
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Vendor Equipment Requirements
Equipment RequirementsVendors must equip personnel with appropriate uniforms and gear including:Radios, flashlights, and other required duty equipmentUniforms in good repair (no rips, tears, discoloration); all personnel must be clearly identified with vendor logo (hat, jacket, shirt, trousers, and black boots). Uniforms must be in compliance with RCW 18.235 - Uniform Regulation of Business and Professions. Loudspeaker or bull horn for closure announcementsVendor will be responsible for any costs incurred by SPR from security personnel’s improper or careless use of any SPR equipment.Non-issued/non-essential items, such as beds/cots, radios, and other personal entertainment devices belonging to contract security personnel (excluding personal cell phones), should not be used while working at SPR sites.Vehicle RequirementsVendors must have a fleet of vehicles for use by security staff performing work under the Contract. Vehicles should be clearly marked for security services. All costs associated with vehicles; purchase, maintenance, licensing, branding, etc. are the responsibility of the Vendor.
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Taxpayer Identification Number and W-9
Unless the apparently successful Vendor has already submitted a fully executed Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification Request Form (W-9) to the City, the apparently successful Vendor must execute and submit this form prior to the contract execution date.
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Vehicle Specialty Licenses
A vehicle specialty license from the State of Washington is required to be eligible to bid for any contract. This license is required for: purchase or sale of new or used cars, trucks, and/or motorhomes at retail or wholesale, and Auctioneers selling titled vehicles. The State of Washington requires a Vessel Dealer License for each business location that sells, at retail or wholesale, any watercraft designed for either motor or wind propulsion, or 16 feet or longer in length, even if unpowered. Instructions and applications can be obtained at http://www.dol.wa.gov/business/vehiclevesselmanufacturer.
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Delivery Option
The Vendor shall provide a delivery service for routine orders. The Vendor will pick up or deliver products to the City location specified. There will be no charge for delivery, unless specified in the Bid.
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No Conflict of Interest
Vendor (including officer, director, trustee, partner or employee) must not have a business interest or a close family or domestic relationship with any City official, officer or employee who was, is, or will be involved in selection, negotiation, drafting, signing, administration or evaluating Vendor performance. The City shall make sole determination as to compliance.
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Prompt Payment Discount
The City will calculate and reduce the pricing submitted by applying any prompt payment discounts.
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Groundskeeping
The scope of work for this resultant contract requires use of pesticides, and the successful Vendor must comply with WSDA’s licensing requirements for a commercial license, on or before resultant contract signature. The City will require proof of licensing from the successful Vendor before resultant contract signature. If the successful Vendor fails to prove compliance to the licensing requirements, the City will reject the proposal. More information can be found at https://apps.oria.wa.gov/permithandbook/permitdetail/67.
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Optional Coverage Amounts
The City may request Vendors to provide pricing options for the Bond or Credit Coverage. The City reserves the option to execute a bond for the pricing option selected by the City prior to execution of the contract. The Letter of Commitment shall still be for the entire estimated value of the Contract; however, the City would reserve the right to execute a contract selecting a value less than 100%.
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Pre-Bid Conference
The City shall conduct a Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference virtually using the information below. Vendors must attend to be eligible to submit a Bid. The meeting answers questions potential Vendors may have regarding the solicitation document and to discuss and clarify issues. This is an opportunity for Vendors to raise concerns regarding specifications, terms, conditions, and any requirements of this solicitation. Failure to raise concerns over any issues at this opportunity will be a consideration in any protest filed regarding such items known as of this pre-bid conference.The Mandatory Pre-Bid Conference will be held at 1:00 pm, on Tuesday, March 3, 2026. Please use this link to get on the meeting: Join the meeting on TEAMS https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/29523272118354?p=xRUAGfMOYYenp7DJfG Meeting ID: 295 232 721 183 54 Passcode: rw74Vc6P Dial in by phone +1 206-686-8357,,448476055# United States, Seattle Find a local number Phone conference ID: 448 476 055# Join on a video conferencing device Tenant key: seattle@m.webex.com Video ID: 116 785 631 5.
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Reporting & Documentation
Vendors must maintain accurate records of all security activities, incidents, and personnel assignments, and provide reports as requested by the City.A daily report must be emailed before 9:00 AM to the SPR Security Manager. The daily report will include details from the previous day (6:00 AM to 6:00 AM). It must include: date, time of lock or unlock, location, officer, photo documentation, problems or issues encountered or observed, and comments including graffiti, damage or other issues needing repair. Patrol officers must report issues in a timely manner.Activity Notification RequirementCriminal activities and emergenciesCall 911, then call the SPR security manager and also include in the daily report Non-emergency issues; like broken bathroom dispensers, graffiti, problems with locks, encampments, etc. Call the SPR Work Order Desk at (206) 684-7250 and include in the daily report A comprehensive monthly report must be emailed at the beginning of the following month to the SPR Security Manager. The monthly report will include date, time of lock and unlock, and location of all services provided. It should also included all emergency and non-emergency issues that occurred in the month.
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Contract Term
This contract shall be for five years, with one two-year extension allowed at the option of the City. The Vendor may provide a notice to not extend, but must provide such notice to the City at least 45 days prior to the renewal date.
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Single Award
The City intends to award one contract and does not anticipate multiple awards. Regardless, the City reserves the right to make multiple or partial awards.
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Campaign Contributions (Initiative Measure No. 122)
Elected officials and candidates are prohibited from accepting or soliciting campaign contributions from anyone having at least $250,000 in contracts with the City in the last two years or who has paid at least $5,000 in the last 12 months to lobby the City. Please see Initiative 122, or call 206-684-8500 with questions.
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Questions
Submit questions to the Buyer no later than 3:00 pm on Friday, March 20, 2026. The City strongly prefers that vendors use the City’s Procurement Portal at https://procurement.opengov.com/portal/seattle to submit questions. Failure to request clarification of any inadequacy, omission, or conflict will not relieve Vendor of any responsibilities herein or in any subsequent contract. The Vendor is responsible to assure they received responses to the questions if issued.
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Landscape Management & Pesticide Free Policies
Site planning, designing, constructing or maintaining grounds and landscapes, requires the Bidder to perform services compliant to the City’s Landscape Management and Integrated Pest Management program. The program requires strict compliance to best environmental landscape care and management practices, restricts pesticides, and requires a highly regulated set of controls. Vendors performing such services must comply with these practices and policies.
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Local Business Tax Revenue Consideration
SMC 20.60.106 (H) authorizes that in determining the lowest and best bid, the City shall consider the tax revenues derived by the City from its business and occupation, utility, sales and use taxes from the proposed purchase. The City will apply SMC 20.60.106(H) and calculate when the value could serve as a differentiator to determine the lowest bid. The City of Seattle’s Business and Occupation Tax rate varies according to business classification. Typically, the rate for service such as consulting and other professional services is .00415% and for retail or wholesale sales and associated services, the rate is .00215%. Only vendors that have a City of Seattle Business License and have an annual gross taxable Seattle income of $100,000 or greater, pay Business and Occupation Tax.
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Delivery/Shipping
Materials, supplies and/or equipment must be delivered within TBD calendar days after the City has placed an order.
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No Guaranteed Contract Utilization
The City does not guarantee utilization through any resultant contract. The solicitation may provide estimates of utilization solely to help Vendors prepare their bids and does not serve as a guarantee of usage. The City reserves the right to make multiple or partial awards, and/or to order greater or less quantities based on City needs. The City reserves the right to use other appropriate contract sources to obtain these products or services, such as State of Washington Contracts. The City may also periodically re-solicit for new additions to the Vendor pool, to invite additional Vendors to submit bids for award. Use of such supplemental contracts does not limit the right of the City to terminate existing contracts for convenience or cause.If the City awards multiple contracts to form a vendor pool, this ITB established competition compliant to City competitive proposal laws; the City Project Manager may place an order with any pool vendor or may solicit multiple quotes to select among the pool vendors. If departments request quotes, the Vendors must use the costs and hourly rates in the contract.
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Multiple Awards
The City expects to award contracts to more than one successful bidder.
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Rebates
A 3% rebate offer is required on all bids, so the rebate will not be tabulated in the calculation and tabulation as a separate factor.
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Delivery/Shipping
Delivery is required by TBD. Any bids received with a delivery date that exceeds this requirement will be rejected as non-responsive. Goods delivered beyond that date will be returned at vendor’s expense. Vendor agrees to deliver by this time and date.
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Changes to the ITB/Addenda
A change may be made by the City if, in the sole judgment of the City, the change will not compromise the City’s objectives. A change will be made by formal addendum issued by the City’s Buyer, through the Procurement Portal at https://procurement.opengov.com/portal/seattle. Such Addenda shall become part of this ITB and included in the Contract. Interested Vendors are responsible to assure they received Addenda.
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Site Specific Lock up Security Services
Gate and Parking Lot Closures Some SPR locations require daily security needs, like entrance or parking lot gate, locking and unlocking throughout the year.Lock/unlock duties follow fixed schedules and must be adhered to without variation.A detailed list of site specific security locations is are provided in the Attachments section of the solicitation, Attachment A. Park locations requiring security lock up services will change based on operating season, currently described as "peak" (April 1 - September 30) and "off peak" (October 1 - March 31) and as necessary due to park projects, programs and facility usage. A majority of the work is closing parks. Security officers will visually inspect the parking lot, looking for vehicles in unauthorized or closed areas, unoccupied cars, illegal encampments, unauthorized vendors, vandalism, graffiti, lighting issues and other obvious safety concerns. Security officers will verbally announce to the public via bullhorn or microphone that the park is about to close, vehicles may be locked inside that gate, as soon as 15 minutes after the park is closed.For larger parks such as Lincoln, Carkeek and Discovery parks, security officers may need to make several announcements at several locations in the park to ensure the park users can hear the announcements. The SPR Security Manager will provide direction on announcement locations after contract award.Once the park or parking lot is empty, except for abandoned vehicles, security officers must lock the gate. If vehicles are locked inside park gates they should be included in the 9am daily report including plate number, make and model. Comfort Station/Restroom Closures Security officers will unlock/lock assigned comfort stations throughout the year. A detailed list of site specific security locations is are provided in the Attachments section of the solicitation, Attachment A.Security officers will visually inspect the park between the parking lot and the restroom building, looking for vehicles in unauthorized or closed areas, unoccupied cars, illegal encampments, unauthorized vendors, vandalism, graffiti, lighting issues and other obvious safety concerns. Security officers will verbally announce the intention of closing the restroom and ask that any occupants finish what they are doing and exit the building. Security officers will visually inspect the restroom, including all stalls for occupants, vandalism, graffiti, running water, and/or other issues with closing. Security officer will close and lock the facility when it is determined that there are no occupants.Security officers should strongly encourage occupants to leave within 10 minutes. If an occupant refuses to leave, Security Officer will disengage, report the issue to SPD by calling 911. Security officer will then make a note that they are not able to close the comfort station and include it in the 9am report. Personnel performing security services under this contract are not to exercise any power of arrest.Coverage must be maintained for all holidays, vacations, and absences. Vendors must account for any associated overtime or premium pay in their billing rates. City-observed holidays include:New Year’s DayMartin Luther King Jr. DayPresidents’ DayMemorial DayJuneteenthIndependence DayLabor DayIndigenous Peoples’ DayVeterans DayThanksgiving Day & the following dayChristmas DaySite conditions vary at each location but are all public parks. Park use varies widely during the year. Parks must be locked nightly regardless of weather, park use, holiday, etc.Vendor will have access to public park parking lots. Vendor vehicles must not drive on park pathways unless specified, past park bollards, on park lawn area, etc. Vendor is requited to walk to restroom buildings from parking lots. This distance varies from a few feet to hundreds of feet. Vendors will bid on activities by location, at a daily, weekly and annual rate. All overhead, including equipment, training, vehicle, fuel and vehicle maintenance, overtime, holiday and weekend costs must be included in the service rate for each location. Locations may be added or removed from requiring service at anytime. Added locations will be assigned the same price as a comparable location/facility. Park Hours and Closing TimesSMC 18.12.245 states general park operating hours shall be between four (4:00) a.m. and eleven-thirty (11:30) p.m., however, some parks have different operating hours established by the Superintendent. Attachment A lists park lock/unlock hours for the parks where security services are requested. These may be subject to change at any time. Vendors must perform requested unlock duties within the hour before official park opening time and lock duties no later than one hour after park closing time. Any exceptions must be pre-approved by SPR Security manager.
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Liquidated Damages
Delivery time is of the essence. Liquidated damages will be assessed for late delivery. Liquidated damages will be assessed for $ for each day beyond the required delivery date. See Contract Terms and Provisions, Liquidated Damages section.
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Receiving Addenda and/or Question and Answers
The City Buyer intends to provide you notice, through the City’s Procurement Portal, when addenda are posted on the procurement portal. Notwithstanding such efforts, it is the Vendor’s responsibility to learn of addenda, responses, or notices issued by the City. Some third-party services post City of Seattle bids on their websites. The City does not guarantee such services have accurately provided bidders with all information, particularly Addenda or changes to bid date/time.Bids are considered compliant to all Addenda, with or without specific Bidder confirmation. The Buyer can reject the Bid if it does not reasonably appear to have incorporated Addendum. The Buyer may reject bids that do not appear to incorporate substantive Addendum, or the Buyer may find that the Addenda were not material and accept the bid.
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Contract Expansion
Any resultant contract or Purchase Order may be expanded as allowed below. A modification may be considered per the criteria and procedures below, for any ongoing Contract that has not yet expired. Likewise, a one-time Purchase Order may be modified if the bid reserved the right for additional orders to be placed within a specified period of time, or if the project or body of work associated with a Purchase Order is still active. Such modifications must be mutually agreed. The only person authorized to make such agreements for the City is the Buyer from the City Purchasing Division (Department of Finance and Administrative Services). No other City employee is authorized to make such written notices. Expansions must be issued in writing from the City Buyer in a formal notice. The Buyer will ensure the expansion meets the following criteria collectively: (a) it could not be separately bid, (b) the change is for a reasonable purpose, (c) the change was not reasonably known to either the City or Vendor at time of bid or else was mentioned as a possibility in the bid (such as a change in environmental regulation or other law); (d) the change is not significant enough to be reasonably regarded as an independent body of work; (e) the change could not have attracted a different field of competition; and (f) the change does not vary the essential identity or main purpose of the contract. The Buyer shall make this determination, and may make exceptions for immaterial changes, emergency or sole source conditions, or for other situations as required in the opinion of the Buyer. Some changes are not an expansion of scope, including an increase in quantities, exercising bid options and alternates, or ordering work identified within the solicitation. If such changes are approved, changes are done as a written order issued by City Purchasing to the Vendor.
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Special Event Security Services
Vendors must have licensed and trained security officers ready for deployment within 48 hours of special event notification.Vendors will coordinate with SPR Security Manager to ensure appropriate staffing of security for special events.Special events, which may include, but are not be limited to, the following:4th of July (locations for this event are found in the Attachments section, Attachment B.Annual Big Day of Play (for information on this event, visit the website at Big Day of Play - Parks | seattle.gov)Fire watchesEmergency SheltersAfter hours meetingsBuilding watchesEvent staffingPolitical eventsProtestsSocial service events On day of the special event, Vendor will check in with the SPR Site Leader for specific instructions.Locations that have recreational programs or special events will require adjustments to closing times based on schedules that will be provided by SPR. Special event security services may include:Site security at parks, community centers, shelters, or staging areasCrowd control, access monitoring, and patrolsCoordination with SPD, SFD, and SPR staffDocumentation of activities and incident reportingAll personnel assigned to special events must be trained in emergency response, crowd management, and interagency communication.Officers must have protective gear appropriate to the special event at vendors cost.Special event security services will be billed at the hourly rates provided in the vendor's proposal. All overhead, including equipment, training, vehicle, fuel and vehicle maintenance, overtime, holiday and weekend costs should be included in the hourly rate.Conditions for on-call hourly security services could vary widely from providing security for a single concert in a park with a few hundred spectators to providing overnight security at a closed park site undergoing construction for several months.
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Pool Contracts
The City intends to award a pool of eligible, qualified and competitive contracts for these products and/or services. The City may place orders with any of the resultant contract vendors, selecting the vendor the City wishes to use in any manner that the City department placing the order chooses.
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References
The City reserves the right to perform reference checks on a pass/fail basis. A fail may remove you from consideration. Please complete the Reference Sheet document and submit with your bid response or upon request.Please provide up to three (3) references with Customer information including name, address, point of contact name, phone number, email address, and years’ service was provided. You may submit references with your bid response, or upon request by the City.
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Late Submittals
The submitter has full responsibility to ensure the response is submitted to the City’s Procurement portal within the deadline. The Procurement portal will not allow vendors to upload submissions past the deadline.
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Trial Period And Right To Award To Next Low Bidder
A ninety (90) day trial period applies to contracts awarded by this solicitation. During the trial period, vendors must successfully perform. Failure to perform may cause immediate cancellation of the contract. If a dispute occurs or a discrepancy arises as to acceptability of product or service, the City’s decision prevails. The City will pay only for authorized orders received up to termination. If the contract is terminated within the trial period, the City may award the contract to the next low responsive Bidder by mutual agreement with that Bidder. Any new award will be for remaining contract work and is also subject to a trial period.
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No Minimum Order Quantities
There will be no minimum order quantities for any resultant contract.
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Bid Timeline
ITB Issued:February 19, 2026Pre-Bid Conference (Non-Mandatory):March 3, 2026, 1:00pmJoin the meeting on TEAMShttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/29523272118354?p=xRUAGfMOYYenp7DJfGMeeting ID: 295 232 721 183 54 Passcode: rw74Vc6P Dial in by phone +1 206-686-8357,,448476055# United States, Seattle Find a local number Phone conference ID: 448 476 055# Join on a video conferencing device Tenant key: seattle@m.webex.com Video ID: 116 785 631 5Deadline For Questions:March 20, 2026, 3:00pmSealed Bids Due to the City / Bid Opening:March 26, 2026, 3:00pmJoin the TEAMS meeting nowhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/26154265141016?p=BiTPa7QcLsT4CDDCQy Meeting ID: 261 542 651 410 16 Passcode: 88TB3yh6 Dial in by phone +1 206-686-8357,,345925050# United States, Seattle Find a local number Phone conference ID: 345 925 050# Join on a video conferencing device Tenant key: seattle@m.webex.com Video ID: 119 480 031 8
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Emergency Security Services
Vendors must provide 24/7 emergency dispatch for staffing, after-hours and emergency situations.Vendors will coordinate with SPR Security Manager to ensure appropriate staffing during an emergency.In the event of declared emergencies (e.g., severe weather, natural disasters, public safety events), SPR may require deployment of security officers.SPR requires deployment of licensed, trained security personnel within two (2) hours of notification of an emergency.All personnel assigned to emergency duty must be trained in emergency response, crowd management, and interagency communication.Security officers must have protective gear appropriate to emergency conditions at no additional cost to the City.Emergency security services will be billed at the hourly rates provided in the vendor's proposal. All overhead, including equipment, training, vehicle, fuel and vehicle maintenance, overtime, holiday and weekend costs should be included in the hourly rate.
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Use of Hyperlinks and URLs in Submittals
Hyperlinks and URLs to web sites or references to attachments may not be used in documents submitted in response to this solicitation, unless specifically requested in the submittal requirements. The City is not obligated to evaluate, review, or score any information submitted in the form of a hyperlink or URL. Information and documentation requested for the evaluation process must be submitted in the format indicated in the Bid Instructions and Information section.
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Warranty
The Vendor warrants all materials and workmanship delivered under any resulting contract to be free from defects, damage or failure which the City may reasonably determine is the responsibility of the Vendor, for a minimum of ninety (90) days after final acceptance and without cost to the City for labor, materials, parts, installation or any other costs except where longer periods of warranty or guarantees are specified.
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Background Check And Immigrant Status
Background checks will be required for workers that will be performing the work under this contract. The City has strict policies regarding the use of Background checks, criminal checks, immigrant status, and/or religious affiliation for contract workers. The policies are incorporated into the contract and available for viewing on-line at http://www.seattle.gov/purchasing-and-contracting/social-equity/background-checks
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Bid Opening
Bids shall be publicly opened by the City at the date and time that sealed bids are due to the City. Bidders wishing to attend the bid opening must do so through the link provided in the Bid Timeline.
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Independent Contractor
The City provides contract and project management, managing deliverables, schedules, tasks, and contract performance. This is distinguished from an employer-employee. This contract prohibits vendors from supervising and/or being supervised by a City employee. Supervision includes a City Employee Performance Evaluations, preparing and/or approving City timesheets, administering discipline, and similar actions. Contract workers shall not be given City office space unless provided for below, and for no more than 36 months without authorization from the City.The City will not provide space in City offices for performance of this work. Vendors must perform work from their own office space or in the field, as appropriate to the work.
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Prohibition on Advance Payments
The City cannot accept requests for up-front payment, down payment or partial payment. Maintenance subscriptions may be paid up to one year in advance provided that the payment is reimbursed to the City on a prorated basis upon termination; all other expenses are payable net 30 days after receipt and acceptance of satisfactory compliance.
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Bid and Price Specifications
Vendor shall provide their Offer on the provided City Bid Table(s), indicating unit prices for each item if applicable, attaching additional pages if needed. In the case of difference between the unit price and the extended price, the City shall use the unit price. The City may correct the extended price. Unless specified otherwise, Vendor shall quote prices F.O.B. Destination, with freight prepaid and allowed, US Dollars.
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Worker Retention in City Lease Agreements or Contracts
The successful Vendor must retain, for 90 days, those security employees who maintain and keep safe city-owned real property or facilities, unless layoffs are conducted as specified below. The Vendor will perform a written performance evaluation of each employee retained at the end of the 90-day period. If the evaluation is satisfactory, the Vendor must offer the retained employee continued employment under the terms and conditions established by the City contract specifications or as required by law.If during the 90-day period the Vendor determines that fewer security employees must perform the new contract than were required by the previous vendor, the Vendor must offer positions first to those security employees that are most senior within each job classification. During the 90-day period, the Vendor shall maintain a preferential hiring list of security employees not retained. Employees not retained shall be given a right of first refusal to any jobs within their classification that become available during the 90-day period. Upon contract termination, Vendor shall provide a list of the name, address, phone number, date of hire, and employment classification of each covered employee to the successor vendor within ten (10) working days after receiving notification its contract has been terminated. These requirements do not apply to those employees employed at the specific site for less than ninety (90) days prior to the date the contract is terminated; employees classified as managerial, supervisory, or confidential; employees who work less than eight (8) hours per week at the covered site(s); or to contracts awarded to sheltered workshops as described in RCW 82.04.385. These requirements do not affect the right of the Vendor to discipline or terminate employees as required during the course of the contract, such as terminations for serious personnel infractions, and Vendor shall continue to have the responsibilities normally practiced for personnel management.
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Work Order Quotations
For pool contract awards, City departments may request quotes from one or more contract vendors in the pool. Vendors must issue quotes using unit prices in the contract. The City Project Manager shall describe to the companies the following information: Description of work, Date work must start and/or be completed by, Special materials, parts, or equipment needed to complete the work, Location of the work, Time and date the quotation is due, Name, phone and fax numbers, of the City Project Manager, Other special information required to successfully perform the work. Firms shall respond before quotes are due. Firms who cannot quote are asked to reply back with “no bid.” If multiple quotations were solicited, the City Department will award to the lowest responsive quote and notify others not selected. A purchase order number shall be provided to the selected Vendor. After inspection that approves the completed work, the Vendor will invoice using the departmental purchase order number.
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Do Not Submit Extra Comments, Explanations, Information or Changes
The City will reject bids that take material exception to City specifications and contract. Never add information or explanations on your Offer form. Do not take exceptions, do not offer alternatives (unless City requests), and do not mark the Offer with changes. Do not submit your boilerplate terms. Any of these actions may cause bid rejection in the Buyer’s sole opinion. If the Offer Form doesn’t adequately address your concern, ask the Buyer for direction.
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Collective Bargaining
The City has collective bargaining agreements which govern City utilization of Vendors to perform services and require departments to notify the union before contracting for services.
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Partial and Multiple Awards
Unless stated to the contrary in the Solicitation, the City reserves the right to name a partial and/or multiple awards, in the best interest of the City. Prepare all pricing and Offers accordingly. The City may eliminate an individual line item when calculating award, to meet City needs, if a line item is not routinely available or cost exceeds City funds.
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Prompt Payment Discount
Vendor may provide a prompt payment discount term. A prompt payment discount term of ten or more days will be considered for bid tabulation.
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Fair Labor Standards
The City has mandatory requirements to ensure Fair Labor standards in the products that the City buys.
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List of Manufacturing Locations
The Bidder is to submit a list of all contractors, subcontractors and manufacturing plants that are involved in the manufacturing process of the product. If the Vendor intends to change any company on this list during the course of the Contract, the Vendor will notify the City and comply with contract terms regarding approval of subcontracting.
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Taxes
The City is exempt from Federal Excise Tax. Washington state and local sales tax will be an added line item although taxes are not used in bid tabulation for award.
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Code of Conduct
The City requires that Vendors agree to a Code of Conduct that will apply to the Vendor, subcontractors and manufacturing plants that are involved in the manufacturing process of the product.
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Interlocal Purchasing Agreements
This is for information only and not to determine award. RCW 39.34 allows cooperative purchasing between public agencies, nonprofits and political subdivisions. Public agencies that file an Intergovernmental Cooperative Purchasing Agreement with the City may purchase from City Contracts. The seller agrees to sell additional items at the bid prices, terms and conditions, to other eligible governmental agencies. The City has no responsibility for the payment of such purchases. Should the Vendor impose additional costs for such purchases, the Vendor is to name such additional pricing as a supplement to their offer.
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Sweat Free Monitoring
The Bidder agrees to submit the name of an independent monitor accredited by the Fair Labor Association (FLA) to monitor compliance with the Code of Conduct per FLA Principles of Monitoring for all contractors and manufacturing plants involved in manufacturing this product. Submit with the bid or upon award. If the Bidder waits until award, the Bidder must supply the name timely to avoid delay of contract execution or the City may reject the Offer and proceed to the next Bidder. During the contract, the City may request information about monitoring and compliance, which the Bidder shall provide to the City as a condition of the contract.
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Contract Terms and Conditions
Vendors shall carefully review all specifications, requirements, Terms and Conditions, and insurance requirements. Bid Submittal is agreement to all Terms and Conditions. All specifications, requirements, terms and conditions are mandatory and submittals should anticipate full compliance without exception. Please see Terms and Conditions in Supporting Attachments.
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Incorporation of ITB and Bid in Contract
This ITB and Vendor’s response, including promises, warranties, commitments, and representations made in the successful Bid, are binding and incorporated by reference in the City’s contract.
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Effective Dates of Offer
Offered prices remain valid until City completes award. Should any Vendor object, do so before the bid due date.
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Cost of Preparing Bids
The City is not liable for costs incurred by Vendors in bid preparation and presentation including, but not limited to, costs incurred for demonstrations and pre-Bid conferences.
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Paid Sick Time and Safe Time Ordinance
Be aware that the City has a Paid Sick Time and Safe Time ordinance that requires companies to provide employees who work more than 240 hours within a year inside Seattle, with accrued paid sick and paid safe time for use when an employee or a family member needs time off from work due to illness or a critical safety issue. The ordinance applies to employers, regardless of where they are located, with more than four full-time equivalent employees. This is in addition and additive to benefits a worker receives under prevailing wages per WAC 296-127-014(4). City contract specialists may audit payroll records or interview workers as needed to ensure compliance to the ordinance. Please see www.seattle.gov/laborstandards, or may call the Office of Labor Standards at 206.684.4500 with questions.
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Prohibited Contacts
Vendors shall not interfere in any way to discourage other potential and/or prospective Vendors from bidding or considering a bid process. Prohibited contacts includes but is not limited to any contact, whether direct or indirect (i.e. in writing, by phone, email or other, and by the Vendor or another person acting on behalf of the Vendor) to a likely firm or individual that may discourage or limit competition. If such activity is evidenced to the satisfaction and in sole discretion of the City Purchasing Manager, the Vendor that initiates such contacts may be rejected from the process.
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Vendor Responsibility to Examine Documents
Vendor is responsible to examine all specifications and conditions thoroughly, and comply with specifications and terms and conditions. Vendors must comply with all Federal, State, and City laws, ordinances and rules, and meet any and all registration requirements per Washington State law. By responding to this Invitation to Bid (ITB), Bidder agrees he/she has read and understands all documents within this ITB package.
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Vendor Responsibility to Provide Full Response
It is the Vendor’s responsibility to provide a full and complete written response and Offer Form that does not require interpretation or clarification by the Buyer. The Vendor is to provide all requested materials, forms and information. The Vendor must ensure the Offer accurately reflects Vendor specifications and offering. The City does not accept materials intended to supplement the bid after the bid deadline; however the City may consider additional materials obtained by the City, even if submitted by Vendor, or to seek clarifications from Vendor as needed. However this does not limit the right of the city to consider additional information (such as references that are not provided by the vendor but are known to the City, or past experiences by the City in assessing responsibility), or to seek clarifications by the City.
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Do Not Attach Additional Materials with your Bid
Do not insert material sheets, extra product options, comments on boilerplate, supplemental or suggested contract terms, or other similar materials unless such materials are requested by the City or are necessary to show an “Approved Equal ” product specification. Such additional materials can compromise the clarity of your bid and result in rejection of your offer. If the materials conflict with your Offer, the City will not be obligated to clarify or determine which has priority; the City may instead reject your bid.
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Changes or Corrections to Bids
Prior to the bid submittal closing date and time established for this ITB, a Vendor may change or correct its bid by following the Instructions here: https://opengov.my.site.com/support/s/article/4f4218bf-7da6-4fc6-b0c3-7eade0776ebe. No change to a bid shall be made after the bid closing date and time. Note you cannot change, mark-up or cross-out any condition, format, provision or term that appears on any of the City’s documents.
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Errors in Bids
Vendors are responsible for errors and omissions in their Bids. No such error or omission shall diminish the Vendor’s obligations to the City.
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Withdrawal of Bid
A submittal may be withdrawn by unsubmitting your submittal through the Procurement Portal, up until the closing date and time or by written request of the submitter, prior to bid closing. After the closing date and time, the submittal may be withdrawn only with permission by the City.
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Rejection of Bids and Rights of Award
The City reserves the right to reject any or all Bids with no penalty. The City also has the right to waive immaterial defects and minor irregularities in any submitted Bid.
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Bid Disposition
All material submitted in response to this ITB shall become the property of the City upon delivery to the Buyer.
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Equal Benefits
Seattle Municipal Code Chapter 20.45 (SMC 20.45) requires consideration of whether bidders provide health and benefits that are the same or equivalent to the domestic partners of employees as to spouses of employees, and of their dependents and family members. The bid package includes a “Vendor Questionnaire” which is the mandatory form on which you make a designation about the status of such benefits. If your company does not comply with Equal Benefits and does not intend to do so, you must still supply the information on the Vendor Questionnaire. Instructions are provided at the back of the Questionnaire.
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Women and Minority Opportunities
The City intends to provide the maximum practicable opportunity for successful participation of minority and women owned firms, given such businesses are underrepresented. If a Bidder intends to subcontract any work, the City requires he/she agree to SMC Chapter 20.42 and include with their Bid an Inclusion Plan showing meaningful subcontracting opportunities for minority and women owned firms. The link to the Inclusion Plan is located in the Vendor Questionnaire. The City reserves the right to improve the Plan with the successful Bidder before contract execution. Good faith efforts to perform will be a material contract provision. Bidders should use whatever selection methods and strategies the Prime Bidder finds effective for successful WMBE participation. At the request of the City, Vendors must furnish evidence of the Vendor's compliance, including documentation such as copies of agreements with WMBE subcontractor either before contract execution or during contract performance.
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Insurance Requirements
Insurance requirements in the attached Terms and Conditions shall apply, unless modified by the Insurance Transmittal Form. If formal proof of insurance must be submitted to the City before execution of the Contract, the City will remind the successful Vendor in the Intent to Award letter. The apparent successful Vendor must promptly provide such proof of insurance to the City in reply to the Intent to Award Letter. Contracts will not be executed until all required proof of insurance has been received and approved by the City. Vendors are encouraged to immediately contact their Broker to begin preparation of the required insurance documents, if the Vendor is selected as a finalist. Vendors may elect to provide the requested insurance documents within their Bid.
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Proprietary Materials
The State of Washington’s Public Records Act (Release/Disclosure of Public Records): Under Washington State Law (reference RCW Chapter 42.56, the Public Records Act) all materials received or created by the City of Seattle are considered public records. These records include but are not limited to bid or proposal submittals, agreement documents, contract work product, or other bid material.The State of Washington’s Public Records Act requires that public records must be promptly disclosed by the City upon request unless that RCW or another Washington State statute specifically exempts records from disclosure. Exemptions are narrow and explicit and are listed in Washington State Law (Reference RCW 42.56 and RCW 19.108).Bidders/proposers must be familiar with the Washington State Public Records Act and the limits of record disclosure exemptions. For more information, visit the Washington State Legislature’s website at http://www.leg.wa.gov/LawsAndAgencyRules).If you have any questions about disclosure of the records you submit with your bid, please contact the Buyer.
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Marking Your Records Exempt from Disclosure (Protected, Confidential, or Proprietary)
As mentioned above, all City of Seattle offices (“the City”) are required to promptly make public records available upon request. However, under Washington State Law some records or portions of records are considered legally exempt from disclosure and can be withheld. A list and description of records identified as exempt by the Public Records Act can be found in RCW 42.56 and RCW 19.108.If you believe any of the records you are submitting to the City as part of your bid/proposal or contract work products, are exempt from disclosure you can request that they not be released before you receive notification. To do so you must complete the City Non-Disclosure Request Form (“the Form”) provided by City Purchasing (see Form as part of Vendor Questionnaire), very clearly and specifically identify each record and the exemption(s) that may apply, and submit a copy of your records with the specified exemptions redacted. (If you are awarded a City contract, the same exemption designation will carry forward to the contract records.)The City will not withhold materials from disclosure simply because you mark them with a document header or footer, page stamp, or a generic statement that a document is non-disclosable, exempt, confidential, proprietary, or protected. Do not identify an entire page as exempt unless each sentence is within the exemption scope; instead, identify paragraphs or sentences that meet the specific exemption criteria you cite on the Form. Only the specific records or portions of records properly listed on the Form will be protected and withheld for notice. All other records will be considered fully disclosable upon request.If the City receives a public disclosure request for any records you have properly and specifically listed on the Form, the City will notify you in writing of the request and will postpone disclosure. While it is not a legal obligation, the City, as a courtesy, will allow you up to ten business days to file a court injunction to prevent the City from releasing the records (reference RCW 42.56.540). If you fail to obtain a Court order within the ten days, the City may release the documents.The City will not assert an exemption from disclosure on your behalf. If you believe a record(s) is exempt from disclosure you are obligated to clearly identify it as such on the Form and submit it with your solicitation. Should a public record request be submitted to City Purchasing for that record(s), you can then seek an injunction under RCW 42.56 to prevent release. By submitting a bid document, the bidder acknowledges this obligation; the proposer also acknowledges that the City will have no obligation or liability to the proposer if the records are disclosed.
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Requesting Disclosure of Public Records
The City asks bidders and their companies to refrain from requesting public disclosure of bids until an intention to award is announced. This measure is intended to protect the integrity of the solicitation process particularly during the evaluation and selection process or in the event of a cancellation or re-solicitation. With this preference stated, the City will continue to be responsive to all requests for disclosure of public records as required by State Law. If you do wish to make a request for records, please make your request at the City of Seattle’s Public Records Request Center at www.seattle.gov/public-records/public-records-request-center.