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Clarify award description #895
Comments
I updated the discussion to focus on semantics instead of terms, because focusing on the 'award decision' term was not compelling in cases where all awards are decided at once. |
Related: #903 |
The discussion above is from the perspective of procurement procedures. Per #903, contracting processes can have a variety of results (e.g. in the case of design contests, or in the case of being added to a supplier list that can be reused in other procedures). In that case, there isn't a direct relationship between items, suppliers, and value. |
General
ProposalDefinition for "Decision by the buyer or procuring entity on which supplier should supply what item and at what value. Typically, this decision leads to a contract, but not always (e.g. the award is appealed at court or the supplier refuses to sign the contract). Depending on the jurisdiction, a single decision may concern a single supplier, item and value; or batches of suppliers and/or items and/or values. Similarly, sometimes the award is published as soon as it is made and sometimes only together with a contract (including only being implicitly covered by the contract). As far as possible, the award should be published at the most granular level (i.e. a given supplier will deliver a given item at a given value) and as soon as it is made." Note: this definition possibly mixes normative and non-normative statements too much. If so, e.g. the last sentence could go into a non-normative section. On the other hand, having information in one place is not that bad... :) Note2: I'm not sure whether the definition takes sufficiently into account framework agreements, design contests and the like. "Decision by the buyer or procuring entity on the supplier with whom it wishes to conclude a contract, including the items the supplier should supply and their price. Note3: We could replace "Decision on" with "Choice of". Definition for "awards" : "Information from the award phase of the contracting process." |
To allow for a variety of decisions (procurement, framework agreement setup, design contest, concession, etc.) we might want a more generic first sentence, and then: "In the case of a procurement procedure, [most of the proposed content]." followed by "An award can also represent the decision to: establish a framework agreement with the selected suppliers; award a prize to a participant in a design contest; ..." (feel free to re-word). I am happy with "long" definitions. In the initial design of OCDS there was an ambitious goal that field titles/descriptions could be used in applications that adopt OCDS, but this has never occurred to my knowledge, and if we wanted to support that, we could instead have an "application-friendly" version of the schema. The focus of the schema should be to maximize semantic clarity. As for award value, we might need separate fields for maximum value and real value depending on the outcome of #896 (comment) |
Strictly speaking, I think the definition covers these options (see Note2 above). But if we want to make it more generic, does "Decision by the buyer or procuring entity on the supplier with whom it wishes to conclude a contract, including the items the supplier should supply and their price." work? Since we are defining contracts in #896 as covering framework agreements, prizes from design contests, etc. I think that would fulfill all the scenarios you mention. We also wouldn't need to add "In the case of a procurement procedure" etc. - the broad definition of contract covers it. For clarity, we could specify "...a contract (incl. a framework agreement or the prize resulting from a design contest).", but I think it may be better not to repeat definitions like that. |
Good point - we can defer a lot to the definition of contract in #896. So, I abandon my preceding comment. Between:
And:
I prefer the first, since it allows that deferral to the definition of contract. |
New question: how are unsuccessful procedures (e.g. where all tenderers were excluded because of exclusion grounds or selection criteria) modelled in OCDS? Specifically, is Related to the above (candidates for new issues?):
Definitions in other contracting standardsThe ePO defines an award as "Resolution of the buyer as to the result of the procurement procedure." UNCITRAL glossary defines an award as: "A final stage of the procurement proceedings regulated by the Model Law, resulting in the conclusion and entry into force of a procurement contract or framework agreement between the procuring entity and selected supplier(s) or contractor(s)." I find both both definitions consistent with our approach above, with the caveat of how to deal with unsuccessful procedures (ePO's award covers decisions on not awarding a contract which corresponds with older TED forms and eForms; UNCITRAL does not.). |
I agree that the description of the awardStatus 'unsuccessful' code needs revision. I opened #1160.
https://standard.open-contracting.org/latest/en/guidance/map/unsuccessful_tender/ gets around to explaining how to model unsuccessful tenders. Basically: set The OCDS for EU profile uses awards in F03. Since there might be many CANs for the same procedure (e.g. one per lot), and it's unknown whether a later CAN will be successful, this approach makes sense. But, it means all awards could be unsuccessful. |
When would |
As discussed in #1149, we would change "wishes" to "intends". |
I have updated the PR, it is ready for review. Changes:
|
(1) (2) (3) OK. (5) Note looks good. (4) I am also inclined to leave it, because it is true, and because both can be (and are) modelled in OCDS. |
Background
awards
in OCDS:Award
in OCDS:UNCITRAL glossary defines "Award of a procurement contract or framework agreement":
and "Public notice of the award":
The eProcurement Ontology has a class for Award Decision:
and for Contract Award Notice:
This was also an "additional note" in #790
Discussion
The schema and documentation are not clear what, precisely, is intended by 'award'. This therefore leaves its precise semantics up to interpretation by publishers, which leads to different publishers choosing different semantics, which reduces the value of the standard in terms of interoperability and comparability.
In OCDS, the
Award
object is intended to communicate a direct relationship between items, suppliers, and values. It should be possible to know, at the award stage, in OCDS data, which items will later be supplied by which suppliers, and what the value of those contracts will be. If all suppliers and all items are put into one object, then there are no direct relationships, and it is not possible to know the breakdown intended to be communicated by the Award object. This is reflected within the description ofsuppliers
:For the sake of clarity, the
Award
object is not intended to match the 'award notice', because some jurisdictions announce all the relationships above at once. It is also not intended to match the 'award decision', because some jurisdictions create all the relationships in one decision. Another reason for confusion is that some jurisdictions have no term matching theAward
object.(See related discussion in #249)
Proposal
A new definition can better describe the intention in the discussion, and align (where possible) with the definitions of the UNCITRAL glossary or eProcurement Ontology.
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