RTG got highest technical score in Confederation Line bid - Action News
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Ottawa

RTG got highest technical score in Confederation Line bid

Rideau Transit Group, the consortium that built the Confederation Line, scored well above its competitors and came first in the technical evaluationin the bid for the $2.1-billion LRT, newly released documents show.

Coun. Leiper says many issues with LRT won't be revealed through scoring

RTG may be under fire for technical issues that have plagued the Confederation Line since it launched in October, but documents revealed through an access to information request show the consortium easily won the competitive bid. (Giacomo Panico/CBC)

The consortium that built the Confederation Line scored well above its competitors and came first in the technical evaluationin the bid for the $2.1-billion LRTnetwork, newly released documents show.

Rideau Transit Group (RTG) may be under fire these days for technical issues that have plagued the 12.5-kilometre light rail system since it fully launched in early October, but its proposal to build the system easily won the competitive bid.

Considering that RTGled bySNC-Lavalin and ACS Infrastructure won the contract, it's no surprise it scored the highest.

But as we've seen with the procurement process for LRTStage 2, it's possible for a bidder to score poorly in one category and still come out on top. As CBC first reported, SNC-Lavalinachieved a final score of just 67 per cent in the technical round for Stage 2 of the Trillium Line, well below its two competitors, but finished so much further ahead of other bidders in the financial round that it came out on top.

A sign
Construction hoarding for the O-Train Confederation Line sits on Queen Street in Ottawa on August 3, 2017. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

RTGclear winner of financial round

According to documents released through an access toinformation request, RTGscored first in the technical evaluation, although it wasn't far ahead of its rivals, Ottawa Transit Partners and Rideau Transit Partners.

RTG's score was 399.15 out of a possible 500 points, or 79.8 per cent. The other two bidders scored a few points less.

But in the financial round, RTG slaughtered the competition, with a score of 492.5 out of 500, or98.5 per cent more than double the score of second-place Ottawa Transit Partners.

That means RTG's bid would have been significantly less thanits competitors. (Rideau Transit Partners got a negative score of 95.42 points, indicating that it bid over the price set by the city.)

Overall, RTG scored a total 891.85 points out of 1,000, to Ottawa Transit Partners' 626.6 points.

SNC-Lavalin, which was a lead partner in RTG, won the bid to extend the Trillium Line despite not meeting the 70 per minimum technical threshold. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

City had discretionary power

The rules for the procurement, set out in the request for proposals (RFP), stated the bids had to score a minimum of 70 per cent in the technical round and 60 per cent in the financial round.

But the RFP alsogave the city the "sole discretion" whether to disqualify a bid with a failing score.

This wasn't a power the city needed to use for the Confederation Line competition, but it wasinvoked during the Stage 2 procurement. When SNC-Lavalin failed twice to score 70 per cent in the technical round, the city allowed the company to continue in the bidding process, which it eventually won.

A recent city audit of the LRT Stage 2 procurement found the city followed the ruleslaid out in the RFP, but also concludedthe process should have been more transparent. Few people at city hall knew the discretionary power existed let alone had been exercised including the councillors who approved the multi-billion-dollar contract.

Score not the key: Councillor

So how to square the fact that RTG scored so well, but its final product is currently struggling for stability?

The three finalbidders were pre-qualified, so the city already knew they were capable of building an LRT system, said Kitchisippi Coun. Jeff Leiper. The issue was whether the city, through its engineering consultants, asked for all the right things in the RPF.

"If we don't describe that we want a non-slip tile, they're not going to put one in," said Leiper, referring to problematic slippery tiles at some stations.

"We've hired consultants, we have engineers who work on our side who would have developed those projects specifications, but what didn't they think of?" said the councillor. "Did we ask for hand straps on the trains? If we didn't specify that we want a train system delivered with hand straps, so that short people can hold on, the bidders are not going to deliver those.

"Those aren't issues that come out in the course of scoring something."

Leiperpointed to the current challenges with the Confederation Line as the reason he and some other councillors had wanted to hold off on signing the LRT Stage 2 contract.

The hope was that wouldn't happen until the city had dissected what could have been improved from the Confederation Line contract process, he said.