PROCURING RESILIENCE

PROCURING RESILIENCE

EVEN WHEN A CITY KNOWS WHAT IT NEEDS AND HOW TO GET IT, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PROCESSES CAN MAKE IT HARD TO ACCESS NEW, CROSS-CUTTING, OR RESILIENT SOLUTIONS.

Many cities across the United States are home to legacy infrastructure systems, which are not only poorly suited to their current needs but are nearing (or well past) the end of their usable lives. Unfortunately, cash-strapped smaller cities are often forced to make incremental repairs rather than investing in more cost-effective long-term solutions. To break free of this cycle, cities and utilities need new alternatives to access new ideas, new partners, and new money and escape old ‘pieces-and-parts’ procurement approaches. Put simply: cities must be able to buy things differently in order to buy different things.

A number of big cities and counties like Atlanta, Boston, Philadelphia, and Prince George’s County have been experimenting with procurement tools — like Requests for Ideas (RFIs), design competitions and challenges, and performance contracts — to do just that. However, many smaller cities haven’t had the same opportunities to benefit from these tools.

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) brought together city and utility leaders from 7 small- and mid-size cities alongside a select group of private sector water innovators to explore how “big city” procurement tools can be adapted to meet the needs of smaller communities and jumpstart progress towards upgrading legacy water infrastructure systems.

EVEN WHEN A CITY KNOWS WHAT IT NEEDS AND HOW TO GET IT, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PROCESSES CAN MAKE IT HARD TO ACCESS NEW, CROSS-CUTTING, OR RESILIENT SOLUTIONS.

Many cities across the United States are home to legacy infrastructure systems, which are not only poorly suited to their current needs but are nearing (or well past) the end of their usable lives. Unfortunately, cash-strapped smaller cities are often forced to make incremental repairs rather than investing in more cost-effective long-term solutions. To break free of this cycle, cities and utilities need new alternatives to access new ideas, new partners, and new money and escape old ‘pieces-and-parts’ procurement approaches. Put simply: cities must be able to buy things differently in order to buy different things.

A number of big cities and counties like Atlanta, Boston, Philadelphia, and Prince George’s County have been experimenting with procurement tools — like Requests for Ideas (RFIs), design competitions and challenges, and performance contracts — to do just that. However, many smaller cities haven’t had the same opportunities to benefit from these tools.

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) brought together city and utility leaders from 7 small- and mid-size cities alongside a select group of private sector water innovators to explore how “big city” procurement tools can be adapted to meet the needs of smaller communities and jumpstart progress towards upgrading legacy water infrastructure systems.

THE TEAM

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) project is a collaborative program developed and led by re:focus and The Atlas with assistance from the US Water Alliance. Support for this project was provided by a generous grant from The Kresge Foundation.

THE TEAM

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) project is a collaborative program developed and led by re:focus and The Atlas with assistance from the US Water Alliance. Support for this project was provided by a generous grant from The Kresge Foundation.

THE ATLAS

THE KRESGE FOUNDATION (FUNDER)

US WATER ALLIANCE

REPORTS

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) final report builds on the lessons learned from the PRO workshop in May 2018 and pulls together guidance for small- and medium-sized cities across the US. The result is a comprehensive toolkit and decision aid for cities and utilities interested in exploring how different procurement pathways—including Requests for Ideas, competitions, and performance-based contracts—can help their communities tackle critical water system challenges.

REPORTS

The Procuring Resilience Opportunities (PRO) final report builds on the lessons learned from the PRO workshop in May 2018 and pulls together guidance for small- and medium-sized cities across the US. The result is a comprehensive toolkit and decision aid for cities and utilities interested in exploring how different procurement pathways—including Requests for Ideas, competitions, and performance-based contracts—can help their communities tackle critical water system challenges.