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Comprehensive Development Agreements
to Facilitate the Trans-Texas Corridor
By Gregory R. Travis and Dr. Anuj
Shah
Despite the greater purview of
a private entity's participation under a CDA, the same general
provisions that govern contractors in standard public works
projects, delineated in the Government Code, apply to private
entities under CDAs.
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Gregory
R. Travis (pictured) is a shareholder with the Houston-based
Travis Law Firm, P.C. Dr. Anuj Shah is an associate with
the firm. Travis and Shah are members of the firm's construction
law and government relations practice groups. |
The Texas Department of Transportation documents that lane
miles on Texas highways increased by a mere 3 percent in the
1990s, while vehicle miles traveled in the state during that
decade increased by more than 40 percent. Highway expansion
is needed, and as part of the solution, Gov. Rick Perry has
proposed construction of the Trans-Texas Corridor. According
to its official website, the corridor is "a proposed
multi-use, statewide network of transportation routes in Texas
that will incorporate existing and new highways, railways
and utility right-of-ways." Its estimated cost, at present,
ranges from $145 to $180 billion.
With such an ambitious project, the question naturally arises
as to how it should be financed. As Texans have consistently
disfavored gas-tax increases, traditional sources of funding
would prove inadequate. Through recent legislation, however,
Texas has situated itself as a pioneer state by introducing
an innovative paradigm to finance, build, operate and maintain
major highways, the financial heart of which is toll revenue
financing.
In June 2003 the Texas Legislature passed HB 3588, furnishing
the state with financial mechanisms that would accelerate
the desired transportation improvements. The law, ratified
by a state constitutional amendment in September 2003, authorizes,
among other things, a $3 billion bond issue to be used for
highway improvement projects and empowers Regional Mobility
Authorities, entities charged with constructing, maintaining,
and operating regional toll facilities, to issue revenue bonds
backed by tolls as well as to enter into (until August 31,
2011) Comprehensive Development Agreements (formerly Exclusive
Development Agreements) with private entities to design, construct
and operate toll road facilities.
The Texas Transportation Code defines a CDA as "an agreement
with a private entity that, at a minimum, provides for the
design and construction of a transportation project and may
also provide for the financing, acquisition, maintenance or
operation of [such]." While governmental entities have
traditionally relied on private contractors to execute public
works projects, CDAs, as the name suggests, provide a streamlined
project delivery method that significantly broadens the role
and scope of the participation of private entities in public-private
partnerships. Previously, transportation projects relied upon
a bid-build concept. With CDAs, the emphasis shifts to a design-build
philosophy, allowing the private entity a greater degree of
involvement in and control over the transportation project,
resulting, at least in theory, in fewer modifications once
the project is under way.
The same general provisions that govern contractors in standard
public works projects, delineated in the Government Code,
apply to private entities under CDAs. Under the Transportation
Code, such entities entering into a CDA with the appropriate
governmental body must furnish security in order to protect
both the governmental agency and payment bond beneficiaries.
Such security can take the traditional form of performance
and payment bonds, or may take an alternative form. (Note
that no security is generally needed if the private party
has engaged merely in design and planning.)
The legislation on CDAs takes special pains to emphasize
the competitiveness and fairness of the process governmental
bodies undergo to acquire and enter into CDAs. To begin, the
government often solicits proposals for a project, but it
can, following established rules and procedures, accept unsolicited
ones as well.
The ultimate goal for the government is to effectuate a competitive
procurement process to obtain the best value. To this end,
the legislation sets forth a selection process to make a best
value determination. The inquiry includes the proposal price,
but also considers factors such as the technical design or
approach, the level and quality of innovation and the qualifications,
experience and key personnel of the proposing entity.
There are at least two incentives for private parties to
submit proposals on transportation projects. First, the legislation
provides that the majority of information submitted in proposals
and discussed during negotiations is confidential and undiscoverable.
The legislation also mandates that the government pay even
unsuccessful private entities who submit proposals a stipulated
amount specified in its request for proposals for expenses
incurred with proposal preparation.
Despite this payment and the rejection of their proposals,
the unsuccessful entities lose exclusive rights to their work
product. The government jointly owns the rights to any "technologies,
techniques, methods, processes and information" contained
in rejected proposals, while simultaneously disclaiming any
liability incurred by the private entity who may, on its own,
employ any portion of its proposal. In the same vein, once
the governmental body accepts a proposal, it enjoys all rights
to the proposal's content, which becomes the government's
work product.
A governmental body such as an RMA, cannot only prescribe
the general form of the CDA, it enjoys almost unlimited latitude
in including whatever it considers to be advantageous. While
the government and private parties agree to a CDA's terms
only after negotiation, it is clear that the government retains
the upper hand.
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