FINAL BILL REPORT
HB 1485
C 492 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Regarding the school bus bid process.
Sponsors: By Representatives Hunter, Jarrett, Wallace, Tom, Fromhold, McDermott, Haigh, Kenney and P. Sullivan.
House Committee on Education
Background:
School districts provide transportation to and from school for many students as part of basic
education. Two hundred and seventy-five districts operate their own bus fleets. About 8,500
school buses operate across the state and about 450 new buses must be purchased to augment
or replace that fleet each year. The districts decide the brands of buses to purchase, the
methods of operation and maintenance, and the replacement timetable for the districts' fleets.
School districts purchase the buses and the state makes annual payments to the districts to
replace the buses. The payments are made on either an eight-year or 13-year depreciation
schedule, depending on the size of the bus. Under the replacement theory, by the end of the
depreciation schedule, the state will have provided each district with enough money to
replace the old buses with new ones.
Before 2004, school districts were able to purchase buses through a non-profit purchasing
cooperative. In 2004, the Legislature limited state reimbursements to buses bought either
through the state bid or through a district's competitive bidding process.
During 2004, the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC) studied the
methods school districts used for bidding and purchasing school buses. The JLARC's
February 2005 report included a series of findings and recommendations for improving the
process.
The JLARC found that many external factors affect the prices of school buses and that it
appears that the prices paid by school districts are in line with the prices charged in states that
use similar purchasing strategies. There are purchasing practices used in some districts and
in other states that could improve the process. The JLARC also found that the wide
variability in the annual payments to school districts for bus purchases is due more to the
payment process than the bidding or purchasing processes. The variability could be reduced
by switching to a financing system.
The JLARC's three recommendations were:
1. The Legislature should make permanent the bidding, purchasing, and payment system
implemented through a proviso in the 2003-05 budget.
2. The Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (SPI) should examine some of the
promising practices identified by the JLARC to determine whether and how to implement the
practices on a statewide basis.
3. If predictable budget levels for bus reimbursements are important, the Legislature should
ask the SPI to examine alternative funding approaches.
Summary:
The requirement is removed that the SPI establish school bus categories that, as a minimum,
are the same as the ones in place at the beginning of the 1994-95 school year.
The SPI will solicit competitive price quotes for base buses and for optional features and
equipment. The prices must be in effect for at least one year. The SPI will publish a list of
accepted quotes in each category. School districts may purchase directly from any dealer on
the list.
The SPI will reimburse school districts and educational service districts for buses purchased
through a lowest-bid competitive process or through the competitive price quote bus process
established by the SPI, using reimbursement rates established for base buses.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 98 0
Senate 45 0
Effective: July 24, 2005