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California Ambulance RFPs: Evaluation and Scoring

California Ambulance RFPs: Evaluation and Scoring. Richard A. Narad, DPA, JD, FACHE California State University, Chico May 30, 2013. Introduction. Purpose of RFPs Models Types of criteria Types of cues given to proposers Types of review Findings from review of RFPs Questions raised

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California Ambulance RFPs: Evaluation and Scoring

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  1. California Ambulance RFPs: Evaluation and Scoring Richard A. Narad, DPA, JD, FACHECalifornia State University, ChicoMay 30, 2013

  2. Introduction • Purpose of RFPs • Models • Types of criteria • Types of cues given to proposers • Types of review • Findings from review of RFPs • Questions raised • Recommendations for improving the process

  3. Conflict of interest statement

  4. Policy context • Ambulance service is a marketplace failure • Potential solutions to market failures • Regulatory approach • Price controls/supply limits • Competitive approach • Create a structured marketplace • RFPs are a tool to select and integrate organizations into the system

  5. Methodology • Started with EMSA’s Ambulance Zones Ground document (July 2012) • Eliminated • Non-exclusive zones • Military • Sovereign nations • RFPs by non-LEMSAs • Non-competitively granted exclusives • Multiple competitions in the same county • Those over 10 years old • Didn’t receive 2 • Performed item analysis on 18 RFPs

  6. Three types of criteria • Legal standards • Objective (absolute) standards • Subjective (competitive) standards

  7. Criterion: Legal standards Criterion: Comply with the LEMSA’s insurance requirements. Response desired: Accept the standard Cue: “Initial each area of agreement or disagreement with minimum requirements and sign the final page.” Evaluation: Pass/fail

  8. Criterion: Objective standards Criterion: At least 51% of the personnel who staff ambulances shall be full-time employees. Response desired: Accept the standard AND describe compliance Cue: “Provide the number of full-term and part time field personnel.” Evaluation: Pass/fail

  9. Criterion: Subjective standards Criterion: Deployment plans shall ensure that the proposed locations and numbers of ambulances to be deployed during each hour of the day and day of the week and shall be sufficient to meet response time standards . . . (etc.). Response desired: Accept the standard AND describe compliance

  10. Criterion: Subjective standards Cue: “Present a proposed deployment plan that complies with all minimum requirements of this Request for Proposal.” Evaluation: Compared to other proposals

  11. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Areas of reviews: • Proposal format and content • Credentials of the organization • Minimum standards • Competitive standards

  12. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Proposal format and content review • Review • Is everything included? • Is it in the proper format? • Are all the required signatures present? • 7/18 included a pass/fail evaluation of responsiveness to the RFP requirements • 2/18 included in scored criteria

  13. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Credentials of the organization • May be staff/consultant or evaluation committee • Review • Prior experience • Financial capabilities • Should notbe looking at how the proposer would meet current RFP’s specifics

  14. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Credentials of the organization • Pre-review • One mentioned a staff review • Two mentioned use of a separate evaluation • 12/18 evaluated credentials as pass/fail • 5/18 competitively scored credentialing criteria • 1/18 wasn’t specified

  15. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Minimum standards • “We agree to . . .” • “We agree to . . . and here’s how we’ll do it . . .” • Review: • Is everything addressed? • Does it meet minimum standards • Are any variations proposed (if allowed by the RFP)?

  16. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Minimum standards • 4/18 had a specific manner of accepting minimum requirements • Many had minimum standards mixed in with competitive standards

  17. How are LEMSAs reviewing RFPs? Competitive standards (rated) • System design/SSM • Quality process • Pricing/subsidy • Review: • Which one is better?

  18. How are competitive criteria being scored? • Relative scoring • Global scoring • Grading • Global ranking • Committee developed process

  19. How are competitive criteria being scored? Relative scoring (7 RFPs; one for financial only) • Each evaluator gives maximum points for the category to the “best” proposal and fewer points to others • “Identify the strongest submission and assign maximum points and • “Award relative points to other submissions consistent with the reviewer's assessment of the relative strength of the competing submissions.”

  20. How are competitive criteria being scored? Global scoring for each criterion (1 RFP) • Each evaluator awards points from maximum for the category • “Scored 0-100 for poor-excellent”

  21. How are competitive criteria being scored? Grading (2 RFPs) • Points awarded in categories • 100% = Excellent (“The proposal successfully addresses all relevant aspects of the element being evaluated. Any shortcomings are minor and the element contributes appropriately to the meeting the requirements of the criterion”) • 75% = Good • 50% = Fair • 25% = Poor • 0% = Fail

  22. How are competitive criteria being scored? Global Ranking (3 RFPs) • Non-points based system • Each evaluator ranks total proposals from best to worst

  23. How are competitive criteria being scored? Committee developed (3 RFPs) • Process not specified

  24. How are competitive criteria being scored? • Process not specified (3 RFPs) • Too confusing to classify (1 RFP) • (Two RFPs used different processes for financial and non-financial areas)

  25. Questions • Do proposers know what the LEMSA is looking for? • Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? • Is the LEMSA able to do good reviews?

  26. Do proposers know what the LEMSA is looking for? Ambiguity • “This RFP requires a well-defined charge system which assures no overcharging." • “Proposer shall provide evidence that the organization has sufficient capital to provide for implementation and start-up of the contract.”

  27. Do proposers know what the LEMSA is looking for? Is what the RFP asks for what the LEMSA really thinks it wants? • “The EMS Agency expects Proposers to establish, in their responses to the RFP, that Proposers have a firm commitment to maintain sufficient financial capacity to commence all services listed in the RFP on July 1, 2009; and, sufficient financial resources to maintain all services for at least the primary franchise period of five years.”

  28. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Credentialing: Pass/fail or competitive? • Ambulance operator business licenses(Graded 0.7%) • Proposal format (2 RFPs; mean 1.5%)

  29. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Point distribution: • Is the LEMSA emphasizing what it really values? • Does the RFP show what the LEMSA thinks makes one proposal better than another?

  30. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Point distribution: • Is treatment of the incumbent workforce (7.8%) really more important than: • Key personnel (4.18%)? • Equipment (5.2%)? • Equipment maintenance (1%)?

  31. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Point distribution: • Are the collection process and cost effectiveness (12.53%) really more important than SSM and System Design (11%)?

  32. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Charges as a major criterion: • “The combined weight of the evaluation criteria is of greater importance than cost in determining the greatest value to the County.” • 11 RFPs used charges as a competitive criterion • Value ranged from 5% to 30% • Median was 16.2%

  33. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Charges as a major criterion • Payer mix

  34. Does the LEMSA get information to make good decisions? Charges as a major criterion • Assuming that the maximum charges are regulated, does the amount charged say anything about the efficiency, effectiveness, or equity of the proposed service?

  35. Is the LEMSA able to do good reviews? Do the evaluators have the correct expertise? • “Current ratio greater than or equal to 1.32.”

  36. Is the LEMSA able to do good reviews? How objectives is the process really? • Are the scores really objective? “The mathematization of subjectivity will founder upon the resplendent fact that we are ambiguous beings.” • Leon Wieseltier, 2013 • Does the process really just mathematize subjectivity?

  37. Is the LEMSA able to do good reviews? • Inter-rater reliability

  38. Is the LEMSA able to do good reviews? • NIH’s grant review process: • Specific rubrics showing what is required for each level of points • Training for evaluators

  39. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Criteria • Develop criteria first • Determine whether it is a legal, absolute, or competitive standard • Be sure that the cue matches • the information that is wanted • the type of review that will be used

  40. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Criteria • Make relative importance of criteria more rational “Unfortunately, most leaders don't differentiate between the critical few measures that will have the greatest impact and the . . .the trivial many.” Dean Spitzer “Rethinking the Measurement of Innovation (2007)

  41. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Criteria • Make relative importance of criteria more rational “Make sure you are measuring the right things!” Peter Drucker (probably paraphrased from the original)

  42. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Criteria • Make relative importance of criteria more rational

  43. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Criteria • Cost v. charges • Charges don’t tell us much • Better to look at the costs • Total system cost • Dollars per unit-hour ($/UH) measures comparative efficiency • Can still have them commit to maximum charges

  44. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • First qualify the organization • Second, ensure that the proposal meets minimum standards • Third, compare a limited number of competitive criteria

  45. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • Change credentialing to pass/fail • The question asked is whether the proposing organization has the ability to comply • Whether one is better than another should be linked to a specific competitive criterion

  46. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • Change credentialing to pass/fail • Could C.A.A.S. accreditation replace the credentialing process?

  47. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • List legal minimums and have them sign off directly • Identify objective (absolute) standards clearly as minimums and evaluate them as pass-fail • Example: “Cost guarantee” (Graded 5%)

  48. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • Limit the number of competitive choices • Pick the important criteria and focus on comparing those • Seek an effective way of rating these criteria

  49. Recommendations for improving RFP evaluation Evaluation process: • The RFP process should allow the LEMSA to make good decisions among proposals and to defend against legal challenges • Let’s accept the subjectivity of the process

  50. Mathematization of subjectivity County grand jury recommendation (2005): • A scoring system be clearly defined in advance to assist in properly and thoroughly evaluating applications and in adhering to the selection process. • Said scoring system/sheet be retained as part of the evidentiary chain in the event of challenges or appeals in awards. • The review committees (sic) receive clear and precise training/information as to their role and responsibilities in reviewing and rating applications.

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