Type:
NSW Procurement Board Direction
Identifier:
PBD 2017- 07
Status:
Active

PBD 2017-07 Conduct by suppliers

Description

NSW Government agencies must ensure their procurement processes require suppliers to comply with relevant standards of behaviour and must report findings of dishonest, unfair, unconscionable, corrupt or illegal conduct to the NSW Procurement Board. This Direction updates PBD 2014-01 by including mandatory selection criteria for construction Expressions of Interest and Requests for Tender.

Detailed Outline

The NSW Procurement Board expects that agencies and service providers will conduct their business relationships in accordance with law and accepted standards of behaviour at all times. These requirements are essential to business confidence in the NSW Government’s procurement regime as well as public trust more broadly in the Government’s decision making processes.

Findings of dishonest, unfair, unconscionable, corrupt or otherwise illegal conduct, regardless of whether such conduct occurs in the context of a relationship with the NSW Government, can adversely affect the Government’s reputation as a procurer. Accordingly, agencies are required:

  1. To ensure that their tendering processes require tenderers to:

    a) comply where relevant with the NSW Procurement Policy Framework, the Supplier Code of Conduct and the NSW Industrial Relations Guidelines: Building and Construction, and

    b) provide information concerning any findings of dishonest, unfair, unconscionable, corrupt or illegal conduct against the tenderer, its directors or management.

  2. To use their best endeavours to ensure that they are aware of any adverse findings against a supplier with whom they have an existing relationship, and report such findings to the Board when such findings become known to the agency.

Findings of dishonest, unfair, unconscionable, corrupt or illegal conduct can have a range of consequences for individual suppliers, including as serious as exclusion from contracting opportunities with the Government.


Construction procurement

Government agencies must include the following mandatory criteria in all Expressions of Interest and Requests for Tender for construction projects.

"The tenderer must have a demonstrated ability to deliver a project without exposing the Government or the community to an unacceptable or adverse actual or reputational risk. This includes risks related to:

  • the delivery of previous projects (time / quality /cost)

  • the maintenance of good corporate citizen status (litigation /solvency / media scrutiny / government relations / relationship with sub-contractors)

  • the tenderer's commitment to, and engagement with, the local region / community."

Act

Part 11, Public Works and Procurement Act 1912

Overview

Who needs to know and/or comply with this?

Departments
Executive agencies related to Departments
Advisory Entities (including Boards and Committees)
Separate agencies
Statutory Authorities/Bodies

Compliance

Mandatory

AR Details

Date Issued
Nov 22, 2017
Review Date
Nov 22, 2024
Replaces
Replaced By

Contacts

Contact
Phone
Publishing Entity
Department of Finance, Services and Innovation
Issuing Entity
New South Wales Procurement Board (DFSI)