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| October
9, 2006 |
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| Audit Recommends Stronger Management of Contract Amendments for Brightwater | |||
| One-third increase in design cost attributed to non-compliance with county policies and industry best practices | |||
| A
new audit
commissioned by the King County Council identifies several areas in which
management of contract amendments and change notices for the Brightwater
treatment plant construction project did not fully comply with countywide
policies, internal procedures or industry best practices.
King County Auditor Cheryle Broom presented her recommendations and findings to today’s meeting of the Council’s Committee-of-the-Whole. Her audit evaluates the management of contracting processes, including contract amendments, for Brightwater design engineering services by the county’s Wastewater Treatment Division (WTD) of the Department of Natural Resources and Parks. The audit also assesses the cost effectiveness of WTD’s contracting methods for design and preconstruction services. “The audit recognizes WTD’s proactive efforts to identify significant cost savings during value engineering,” wrote Broom. “However, the audit also found opportunities to improve contract management and that WTD’s management of the final design contract amendments and associated change notices did not fully comply with countywide policies, internal WTD procedures, or industry best practices.” Among the Auditor’s findings:
The Auditor noted that the design of the Brightwater treatment plant is a particularly complex project that has been managed by a highly-experienced and diligent WTD project team, and that many cost drivers are not under WTD’s control. The Auditor also made seven recommendations to promote cost-effectiveness and accountability for the treatment plant contracting practices, including:
In a written response to the audit, the County Executive’s office generally concurred with the Auditor’s recommendations, while disagreeing with some of the audit findings. The Auditor reported that WTD and the Procurement and Contracting Services Section have already begun implementing a number of the recommendations, including refining countywide capital procurement and contracting policies to improve the efficiency and cost effectiveness of capital project implementation. “Brightwater is the largest public works project in the history of King County, and it is vital we keep an eye on the bottom line,” said Councilmember Larry Gossett, chair of the Committee-of-the-Whole. “If there is an increase in cost, we have a responsibility to the ratepayers of King County to find out why and to ensure that the increases were justified and could not be avoided.” “Oversight is one of the primary roles of the legislative branch,” said Council Chair Larry Phillips. “Cheryle Broom and her staff have identified opportunities to strengthen the management and oversight of this project to make it more cost effective. Our current wastewater treatment system is near capacity, and we need to ensure that Brightwater comes in both on time and on budget.” This performance
audit is the second study of the Brightwater project performed by the
office of the King County Auditor, an independent agency that reports
to the King County Council. The first focused on procurement practices
for professional design engineering services. Brightwater will be King
County’s third wastewater treatment plant, and is expected to be
operational in 2010. |
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Phone: (206) 296-1000 | Fax: (206) 296-0198 | TTY/TDD:
(206) 296-1024 | Toll Free: (800) 325-6165 |
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