PROPOSAL:
Execute
Contracts for Rule 2202 AQIP and the 2006 Lawnmower Exchange Program
SYNPOSIS:
At its May 6, 2005 meeting, the Board approved release of an RFP to
solicit pro-jects to meet Rule 2202 Air Quality Investment Program (AQIP)
emission reduc-tion targets for the first semi-annual period of 2005. The
Board also approved issuance of a Program Announcement on October 7, 2005
to solicit electric lawnmower vendors for the 2006 Lawnmower Exchange
Program. The proposals for both funding opportunities have been reviewed.
This action is to (1) fund four AQIP projects in an amount not to exceed
$1,097,606; and (2) to award a contract to Neuton, Inc. to conduct the
Lawnmower Exchange Program in an amount not to exceed $740,000 to exchange
up to 4,000 gasoline powered lawnmowers with cordless electric lawnmowers;
and (3) to allocate $116,000 from the AQIP Fund to administer the
Lawnmower Exchange Program. The rec-ommended actions will exceed the AQIP
emission reduction targets for the first half of 2005.
COMMITTEE:
Mobile Source, February 24, 2006, Recommended for Approval
RECOMMENDED ACTIONS:
1.
Authorize the Chairman to execute the following contracts for a total
amount not to exceed $1,097,606 from the Rule 2202 AQIP Special Revenue
Fund.
a.
A
contract with Connolly-Pacific Company to repower two marine vessels
with seven new engines in an amount not to exceed $355,512; and a
maximum of $4,600 to install two global positioning systems (GPS) and/or
data loggers.
b.
A
contract with Karandan Enterprises to repower a loader and crushing
plant with two new low-emission engines in an amount not to exceed
$132,991.
c.
A
contract with the Science and Technology Development Corporation (STDC)
to generate emission reductions by scrapping old vehicles under
Regulation XVI in an amount not to exceed $354,803.
d.
A
contract with the Pick Your Part Auto Wrecking to generate emission
reductions under Regulation XVI in an amount not to exceed $250,000.
2. A contract with Neuton Lawnmower Company to purchase up to
4,000 electric lawnmowers and to conduct “Mow Down Air Pollution 2006”
Lawnmower Exchange events in an amount not to exceed $740,000.
3.
Transfer $116,000 from the AQIP Special Revenue Fund to Science &
Technology’s FY 2005-06 Budget, Services and Supplies Major Object to
solicit outside business and organizational support to assist in
implementing AQMD’s “Mow Down Air Pollution 2006” program.
Barry R. Wallerstein, D.Env.
Executive Officer
Background
The Rule 2202 Air Quality Investment
Program (AQIP) allows subject employers to participate by electing to invest
in an AQMD-administered restricted fund. Investment can be either $60
annually per employee reporting to the worksite during the
6:00
a.m. to 10:00 a.m. peak window, or $125 triennially per employee. The
restricted monies are to be used by the AQMD to fund proposals that achieve
mobile source emission reductions that would otherwise have been achieved by
implementing a rideshare program. This Board letter contains a discussion
regarding the disbursal of funds from the AQIP compliance option for the
first three quarters of 2003.
Upon registering under this option and
submitting the designated investment amount, an employer is considered to be
in compliance with the Rule and there is no need for the employer to take
further action to reduce mobile source emissions. The collected monies are
used to fund alternative mobile source emission reduction strategies that
reduce mobile source emissions at a more cost-effective rate which could
potentially result in greater overall emission reductions.
The first half of calendar year 2005
participation period ended on
June 30,
2005 with 90 employers participating in the AQIP program. The total amount
of AQIP funds received during this period was $1,876,500, which includes
both annual and triennial participants. In addition, an amount of $481,983
is available from three withdrawn projects (Orange
County and Quinn Shepherd for $261,094; City of
Norwalk for $173,128; unused amount of
$46,951 from the
Lawnmower Exchange Events of 2005). Board authorization at its November 4,
2005 Board meeting necessitated the use of $19,755 from this semi-annual
period. An additional amount of $190,724 is available from interest accrued
in FY 2004-05. Therefore, the total amount available for this quarter is
$2,387,459 (see Attachment 1, Table 4). Staff recommends that $1,953,606 be
used to purchase emission reductions to satisfy the target for the first
semiannual period of 2005.
Proposal Evaluation
During the bidding process for the first
semiannual period of 2005, seven proposals were received requesting funds
ranging from $113,131 to $1,419,210. Attachment 2 gives a summary of
emission reduction targets and the emission reduction credit balance.
Attachment 3 gives a summary of each proposal received and funds requested.
According to the
May 6,
2005 revision of the RFP, the proposals were divided into six different
categories as listed in Attachment 4. This attachment provides an overall
summary of the proposals by category, listing the proposals received, funds
requested, total proposal costs, and emission reductions expected from each
proposal.
All proposals were reviewed and scored based
on the information in the proposal
as submitted to the AQMD. After the
proposals were scored within their respective categories they were ranked by
total score (as
described in the RFP).
Selection Criteria
Attachment 5 provides a summary of the
proposal rankings. After
all the proposals were scored and ranked projects were selected from the
highest scoring proposals with the specific goal of meeting the emission
reduction targets for VOC, NOx, and CO, respectively. Staff selected the
highest ranking projects that would meet the one-year targets for all three
pollutants. As part of the selection process, staff based its selection on
the scoring criteria outlined in the RFP. Reasons for recommendations made
are provided at the end of each proposal summary in Attachment 3.
The proposals were relatively ranked
within each of the four categories (with the most cost-effective proposal
receiving a score of 100) and all proposals were ranked by total score
as provided in the RFP. The top scoring proposals in three of the
categories (Connolly-Pacific Co., Karandan Enterprises, and Science and
Technology Development Corporation and Pick Your Part Auto Wrecking) were
selected as described above to meet the targets of all three pollutants VOC,
NOx and CO. Only one proposal was received in the on-road category and
automatically received a score of 100 since there are no other proposals to
compare with in this category. However, the proposal is not recommended for
award since the proposal provided no emission reductions in VOC and CO.
The
following AQIP proposals are recommended for approval (as
detailed in Attachment 6):
|
1. |
Connolly-Pacific Company |
$359,812 |
|
|
|
County:
Los Angeles |
Connolly-Pacific Co proposes to generate emission reductions by re-powering
seven low emission main and auxiliary engines in a Derrick Barge and a
Tugboat. The cost-effectiveness of this proposal is $1.24 per pound.
(Recommended for funding; Ranked first in its category.)
|
2. |
Karandan Enterprises |
$132,991 |
|
|
|
County: All |
Karandan
Enterprises proposes to generate emission reductions by repowering a loader
and a crushing plant with two new low-emission engines. The
cost-effectiveness of this proposal is $2.43 per pound. (Recommended for
funding; Ranked first in its category.)
|
3. |
Science and Technology Development Corporation |
$354,803 |
|
|
|
County: All |
Science
and Technology Development Corporation proposes to generate emission
reductions by scrapping old vehicles under Regulation XVI. The
cost-effectiveness of this proposal is $2.18 per pound. (Recommended for
partial funding; ranked first in its category.)
|
4. |
Pick
Your Part Auto Wrecking |
$250,000 |
|
|
|
County: All |
Pick
Your Part Auto Wrecking proposes to generate emission reductions by
scrapping old vehicles under Regulation XVI. The cost-effectiveness of
these proposals is $2.23 per pound under both options. (Recommended for
partial funding; ranked second in its category.)
Lawn Mower Exchange
Review
of Proposals for 2006 Lawn Mower Program
A typical gasoline
lawnmower used weekly can produce
as much pollution in a year
as 43
new cars driven 12,000 miles each. For the past three years, the AQMD has
conducted lawnmower exchange programs through which nearly 11,500
gasoline-powered lawn mowers were traded in for cordless, electric mowers
that produce zero emissions. The AQMD proposes to carry out a similar
exchange program in 2006, with a goal of exchanging up to 4,000 gasoline
mowers for electric mowers.
At its October, 2005 meeting, the Board
approved release
of a Program Announcement (PA #2006-08) to solicit bids from qualified
manufacturers to produce and provide up to 4,000 cordless electric
lawnmowers to be used for the AQMD’s 2006 Lawnmower Exchange Program. Two
bids were received by the specified deadline, one from Black & Decker and
the other from Neuton, Inc.
A 3-member review panel evaluated both
proposals based
on the product specifications and cost information. The following table
summarizes the results of that evaluation, with check marks shown where one
proposal clearly excelled over the other.
Summary of Review Panel Evaluations of Lawn Mower
Proposals
|
Proposal Information |
Black & Decker |
Neuton |
|
Specifications |
|
Cordless/Rechargeable |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Battery |
24
V lead acid |
24
V lead acid |
|
Mowing Time |
45
min. |
45-60 min.
þ |
|
Charging Time from Zero Charge |
16
hrs. |
12
hrs.
þ |
|
Lift-out Replaceable Battery |
No |
Yes
þ |
|
Clipping Bag |
Rear Bagger |
Rear Bagger |
|
Cutting Width |
19”
þ |
14” |
|
Cutting Height |
1.5” to 3.5” |
1.0” to 3.0”
þ |
|
Weight (including battery) |
76
lbs |
48
lbs
þ |
|
Service Locally Available |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Warranty Period |
2
yrs. |
2
yrs. |
|
Event Staffing |
15-20 people |
15-20 people |
|
Previous Program w/AQMD |
One Year |
Two Years
þ |
|
Cost Information |
|
Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price (MSRP) |
$449 |
$399
þ |
|
Cost to AQMD |
$399 ($49 off MSRP) |
$285 ($114 off MSRP)
þ |
|
Advertising Assistance |
Signage in Home Depot Stores; Media
Events;
Web link. |
Contributing $10/unit up to $40,000 for ads.
þ
|
The two products were rated equal in
several respects, but the Neuton mower was
rated higher by all the raters for a number of categories (shorter charging
time, easily removable battery, lower cutting height, less weight.). The
Black & Decker mower was rated higher for cutting width
(19” vs. 14”).
The three raters agreed that the Neuton
proposal was
clearly more cost-effective than the Black & Decker proposal. Neuton
discounted $114 off the suggested retail price (the Black & Decker discount
was $49). The AQMD intends to again
offer the mowers to the public for $100 each. Therefore, the cost to AQMD
would be substantially lower for the Neuton mower compared to the Black &
Decker mower. Neuton also offered an additional $10/unit, up to a total of
$40,000, to be used for advertising and promotion of the program.
Based
on product specifications and cost-effectiveness, the review panel
unanimously recommended using the Neuton lawn mower for the 2006 Lawn Mower
Exchange Program.
Outreach
In
accordance with AQMD’s Procurement Policy and Procedure, a public notice
advertising the RFP/RFQ and inviting bids was published in the following
publications:
|
1. |
Antelope
Valley Press |
11. |
La Opinion
|
21. |
Rafu Shimpo
|
|
2. |
Black Voice News |
12. |
La
Prensa Hispana |
22. |
San Bernardino Sun |
|
3. |
Chinese Daily News |
13. |
La
Voz Publications |
23. |
State of
California Contracts |
|
4. |
Desert Sun |
14. |
Los Angeles Daily News |
|
Register |
|
5. |
Eastern
Group Publications |
15. |
Los Angeles Sentinel |
24. |
The Daily Breeze |
|
6. |
El
Chicano |
16. |
Los Angeles Times |
25. |
The
Excelsior |
|
7. |
El
Informador |
17. |
Orange
County
Register |
26. |
The Signal |
|
8. |
Inland Empire Hispanic News |
18. |
Philippine News |
27. |
Wave
Community Newspapers |
|
9. |
Inland
Valley Daily Bulletin |
19. |
Precinct Reporter |
|
|
|
10. |
Korea Central Daily |
20 |
Press
Enterprise |
|
|
Additionally, potential bidders may have been notified
utilizing the Los Angeles County MTA Directory of Certified Firms, the
Inland Area Opportunity Pages Ethnic/Women Business & Professional
Directory; and AQMD’s own electronic listing of certified minority vendors.
Notice of the RFP/RFQ was
mailed to the Black and Latino Legislative Caucuses and various minority
chambers of commerce and business associations, and placed on the Internet
at AQMD’s Web site (http://www.aqmd.gov).
Information was also available on AQMD’s bidder’s 24-hour telephone message
line (909) 396-2724.
Resource Impact
Total
cost of expenditure for the proposed projects and implementation support
shall not exceed $1,953,606 from the Rule 2202 Air Quality Investment
Program Special Revenue Fund.
Attachment(s) (DOC
196 KB)
1.
AQIP
Funding and Participation
2.
Summary
of Emission Reduction Targets and Credit Balances
3.
Summary
of AQIP Proposals Received
4.
Summary
of Proposals by Type
5.
Summary
of Proposal Ratings
6.
Recommendation for Funding
/ / /
|