In the region's deteriorating bridges and ailing train stations
is lucrative opportunity for a niche of businesses also in need of a helping
hand: small, minority, and female contractors.
SEPTA is trying to play matchmaker.
With the agency planning more than $570 million in
Philadelphia-area capital projects over the next two years - and more than $6.8
billion by 2026 - the transportation agency made a pitch Tuesday to involve
more so-called Disadvantaged Business Enterprises in that work.
About 160 registered DBEs responded to invitations from
SEPTA to attend a morning briefing on its "Rebuilding for the Future"
construction program. The session, at the Bossone Research Center on Drexel
University's campus, also served as the official launch of SEPTA's expanded DBE
program, which helps small-, minority-, and female-owned businesses secure
contracts with the transportation agency.
SEPTA's board in May authorized the expansion of that
program to apply to all procurements over $100,000. Until then, the program
applied only to federally funded projects.
State money is behind SEPTA's ambitious rebuilding program,
made possible from increased transportation funding enabled by the November
passage of Act 89. The new law provides, in part, for the state to gradually
remove the limit on the wholesale tax on gasoline, and for other higher fees on
motorists for services such as drivers' licenses and annual vehicle
registration.
"As a result of the board's action in May, small,
minority- and women-owned businesses will have greater opportunity to
participate in the more than $500 million in state-funded projects SEPTA will
be advancing over the next two years," and the billions of dollars in work
planned for 10 years after that, SEPTA chairman Pasquale "Pat" Deon
said Tuesday. He was joined at the information session by Lt. Gov. Cawley and
Sen. John C. Rafferty Jr. (R., Berks/Chester/Montgomery), a leading proponent
of Act 89.
SEPTA's goal is to have 13 percent DBE participation in Act
89-funded projects, said Mary Connell, director of the DBE Program Office.
The agency already has begun to award some of the $100
million in contracts expected to be issued this year. So those small, minority,
and female contractors interested in some of the work could find themselves
engaged "any day now," Connell said.
"They're turning all the time," she added, saying
that as the Drexel briefing was underway, "there was a pre-bid meeting
that was held almost the same time for one of those state projects."
Eligibility criteria and other information on SEPTA's DBE
program can be found at http://www.septa.org/business/dbe/.
Source: Philly.com
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