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Highway Maintenance Contracting in Ontario. Presentation to Northeast Association of State Transportation Officials (NASTO) Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Phil Hutton. Topics. Ontario and Provincial Highway Network Highway Maintenance Delivery Area Maintenance Contract Model
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Highway MaintenanceContracting in Ontario Presentation to Northeast Association of State Transportation Officials (NASTO) Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Phil Hutton
Topics • Ontario and Provincial Highway Network • Highway Maintenance Delivery • Area Maintenance Contract Model • Administration and Oversight • Successes, Challenges and Lessons Learned
Ontario • An area of 1,076,395 km2. Population over 13.2 million • More than 90 per cent of residents within 10 km of a provincial highway. • Over 432,000 vehicles use Highway 401 near Highway 400 every day, making it the busiest highway in North America. • Highway Network • 40,000 lane-km of provincial highway. 16,500 centre-line km • Over 2,800 bridges/structures. • 29 remote airports and 8 ferry services • Carry about $3 billion of goods every day. $600M cross border every day. • $59 billion dollar replacement value • Spend $2.0B annually for construction and rehabilitation • Approximately $275 million annually on winter and summer maintenance • Ontario highways are the safest in North America • Maintaining safe roads and keeping traffic moving are key economic and social goals of the Ministry
Highway Maintenance Delivery Pre-1995 • Large staff for in-house delivery of work • Approximately half of winter maintenance work outsourced under direct ministry supervision • 1996 business plan to fully outsource by 1999 1996 to 2009 • A blend of contract types • Area Maintenance Contracts (AMC’s) – lump sum, contractor provides services including planning and scheduling maintenance activities • Managed Outsourcing contracts (MO’s), unit price based contracts with ministry directing maintenance activities • Savings/value for money achieved (~12.5% - Deloitte) • Ministry ensures maintenance quality standards are achieved Current Service Delivery Approach • Shift to 100% AMC model
Area Maintenance Contract Model (2009-2026) • Integrated scope and services to promote asset management approach • Highway Maintenance • Summer and winter maintenance • Condition reports • Low-complexity Capital • Quantities and prices set by item • Data Collection • Facilities, culvert inventory and condition, some pavement distresses • Promote development of asset management competencies by industry • Contractor responsible for determining how to do the work and achieve the required performance outcome or result; opportunity to innovate • Contractor develops capital plan using reports, data, maintenance experience and set items • Contractor plans, ministry modifies/approves, contractor delivers • Reports used for ministry analysis, needs identification and feeding into plans
Performance - Overview • Outcome targets set to achieve ministry quality standards • Promote highway safety • Maintain and preserve the infrastructure • Measurable requirements • Support ministry business practices • Implemented for all service areas, e.g. • Winter maintenance • Pavement maintenance • Roadside features • Based on: • Ministry Maintenance Quality Standards and Best Practices • Ontario Provincial Standards
Performance Requirements - Example Vegetation Control • Method-Based • When vegetation within 2m of any shoulder edge reaches 500mm in height, it shall be mowed and trimmed to a height of 200mm for one (1) mowing swath from the edge of shoulder within 21 days. • Outcome-Based • Vegetation within 2m of any shoulder edge not longer than 60cm.
Quality Contract requires ISO Certification • Quality Management (ISO 9001:2008) • Environment (14001:2004) • Registration within 6-months of contract start and maintained throughout • Contractor develops, documents and registers how they will achieve outcome targets, identify root causes and ensure corrective action • Key step to ensure contractors are responsible for managing their performance and delivering contract requirements • ISO requires annual audits • Results of external and internal audits available to ministry
Current Implementation Status • Six contracts implemented between 2009 and 2011 • Seven new AMCs start in 2012, making it the biggest year for contract start dates. • By Oct 1, 2012, 13 of 21 areas will be performance AMC • In 2013, five contracts start, leaving two areas in 2014 to complete the implementation of the contract model. • Advertising a new contract about every 90 days
Contract Administration/Oversight • Ministry staff are responsible to ensure the contractor meets their contractual obligations • Hands-on training to ministry staff in advance of contract start • Oversight Manual applied Province-wide • Utilize various tools/sources of information: Documentation review, GPS-based monitoring systems, field inspections • Focus on results, not methods • Audit, sampling-based • Administer payment and adjustments • Maintenance and data collection – lump sum price • Capital – set annual quantity and price • Change Orders used to vary amounts or work
Outsourcing to-date - Summary • Strong private sector competition • Healthy contracting industry • Approx 5 bids per AMC • Five large contractors operating in Ontario • Bids received from Ontario’s existing industry base as well as proponents new to Ontario • Growing contractor experience • Competitive and comparable bids • Prices often within 10% of each other • Opportunities for Innovation • Good overall contractor performance
Weekday Detroit-Windsor Cross-Border Commercial Flows, 2000 US to Canada flows have similar characteristics Windsor – Detroit River Crossing
Summary • Philosophy/Concepts in summary • The Work is the same, more efficient, timely and flexible • Service provider is accountable • How the Work is measured changes • Results vs. Methods • Strong and competitive contracting industry • Audit and sampling-based oversight • Maintained maintenance standards for traveling public • Safest roads in North America