(Reprinted with amendments adopted on April 21, 2003)
SECOND REPRINT A.B. 398
Assembly Bill No. 398–Assemblymen Geddes, Hettrick, Hardy, Beers, Knecht, Anderson, Andonov, Arberry, Buckley, Carpenter, Chowning, Christensen, Collins, Conklin, Gibbons, Giunchigliani, Goicoechea, Goldwater, Grady, Griffin, Gustavson, Horne, Koivisto, Leslie, Mabey, Manendo, Marvel, Mortenson, Parks, Perkins, Pierce, Sherer and Weber
March 17, 2003
____________
Joint Sponsors: Senators Townsend and Amodei
____________
Referred to Committee on Government Affairs
SUMMARY—Establishes temporary alternative procedure pursuant to which certain performance contracts for cost-savings energy measures in buildings occupied by governmental entities are bid. (BDR 27‑1115)
FISCAL NOTE: Effect on Local Government: No.
Effect on the State: No.
~
EXPLANATION
– Matter in bolded italics is new; matter
between brackets [omitted material] is material to be omitted.
Green numbers along left margin indicate location on the printed bill (e.g., 5-15 indicates page 5, line 15).
AN ACT relating to purchasing; establishing a temporary alternative procedure pursuant to which certain performance contracts for the installation or purchase of cost-savings energy measures in buildings occupied by state and local governmental entities are bid; providing the types and terms of such performance contracts; providing limitations on such performance contracts entered into by state agencies; and providing other matters properly relating thereto.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, REPRESENTED IN
SENATE AND ASSEMBLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
2-1 Section 1. Chapter 332 of NRS is hereby amended by adding
2-2 thereto the provisions set forth as sections 2 to 14, inclusive, of this
2-3 act.
2-4 Sec. 2. As used in sections 2 to 14, inclusive, of this act,
2-5 unless the context otherwise requires, the words and terms defined
2-6 in sections 3 to 7, inclusive, of this act, have the meanings
2-7 ascribed to them in those sections.
2-8 Sec. 3. “Building” means any structure, building or facility,
2-9 including any equipment, furnishings or appliances within the
2-10 structure, building or facility, that is owned or operated by a local
2-11 government. The term includes, without limitation, occupied and
2-12 unoccupied structures, buildings and facilities, and any other
2-13 improvements owned or operated by a local government that incur
2-14 operating costs.
2-15 Sec. 4. “Operating cost savings” means any expenses that
2-16 are eliminated or avoided on a long-term basis as a result of the
2-17 installation or modification of equipment, or services performed
2-18 by a qualified service company. The term does not include any
2-19 savings that are realized solely because of a shift in the cost of
2-20 personnel or other similar short-term cost savings.
2-21 Sec. 5. “Operating cost-savings measure” means any
2-22 improvement, repair or alteration to a building, or any equipment,
2-23 fixture or furnishing to be added or used in a building that is
2-24 designed to reduce operating costs, including those costs related to
2-25 electrical energy and demand, thermal energy, water consumption,
2-26 waste disposal and contract-labor costs, and increase the
2-27 operating efficiency of the building for the appointed functions
2-28 that are cost-effective. The term includes, without limitation:
2-29 1. Procurement of low-cost energy supplies, including
2-30 electricity and natural gas.
2-31 2. Procurement of cost savings as a result of outsourcing
2-32 energy needs for electrical power, heating and cooling.
2-33 3. Operational or maintenance labor savings resulting from
2-34 reduced costs for maintenance contracts as provided through
2-35 reduction of required maintenance or operating tasks, including,
2-36 without limitation, replacement of filters and lighting products,
2-37 and equipment failures.
2-38 4. Investment in equipment, products and materials, and
2-39 strategies for building operation, or any combination thereof,
2-40 designed to reduce energy and other utility expenses, including,
2-41 without limitation:
2-42 (a) Costs for materials and labor required to replace old
2-43 equipment with new, more efficient equipment.
2-44 (b) Storm windows or doors, caulking or weather stripping,
2-45 multiglazed windows or doors, heat-absorbing or heat-reflective
3-1 glazed or coated windows or doors, reductions in glass area, and
3-2 other modifications to windows and doors that will reduce energy
3-3 consumption.
3-4 (c) Automated or computerized energy control systems.
3-5 (d) Replacement of, or modifications to, heating, ventilation or
3-6 air-conditioning systems.
3-7 (e) Replacement of, or modifications to, lighting fixtures.
3-8 (f) Improvements to the indoor air quality of a building that
3-9 conform to all requirements of an applicable building code.
3-10 (g) Energy recovery systems.
3-11 (h) Systems for combined cooling, heating and power that
3-12 produce steam or other forms of energy, for use primarily within
3-13 the building or a complex of buildings.
3-14 (i) Installation of, or modifications to, existing systems for
3-15 daylighting, including lighting control systems.
3-16 (j) Installation of, or modification to, technologies that use
3-17 renewable or alternative energy sources.
3-18 (k) Programs relating to building operation that reduce
3-19 operating costs, including, without limitation, computerized
3-20 programs, training and other similar activities.
3-21 (l) Programs for improvement of steam traps to reduce
3-22 operating costs.
3-23 (m) Devices that reduce water consumption in buildings, for
3-24 lawns and for other irrigation applications.
3-25 (n) Any additional improvements to building infrastructures
3-26 that produce energy and operating cost savings, significantly
3-27 reduce energy consumption or increase the operating efficiency of
3-28 the buildings for their appointed functions, provided that such
3-29 improvements comply with applicable building codes.
3-30 (o) Trash compaction and waste minimization.
3-31 5. Investment in educational programs relating to
3-32 occupational behavior that are designed to reduce the
3-33 consumption of energy or water, or both, and the generation of
3-34 waste.
3-35 Sec. 6. “Performance contract” means a contract between a
3-36 local government and a qualified service company for the
3-37 evaluation, recommendation and implementation of one or more
3-38 operating cost-savings measures.
3-39 Sec. 7. “Qualified service company” means a person with a
3-40 record of established projects or a person with demonstrated
3-41 technical, operational, financial and managerial capabilities to
3-42 design and carry out operating cost-savings measures and other
3-43 similar building improvements, and who has the ability to secure
3-44 necessary financial measures to ensure related guarantees for
3-45 operating cost savings.
4-1 Sec. 8. 1. Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter
4-2 and chapter 338 of NRS to the contrary, a local government may
4-3 enter into a performance contract with a qualified service
4-4 company for the purchase and installation of an operating cost-
4-5 savings measure to reduce costs related to energy, water and the
4-6 disposal of waste, and related labor costs. Such a performance
4-7 contract may be in the form of an installment payment contract or
4-8 a lease-purchase contract. Any operating cost-savings measures
4-9 put into place as a result of a performance contract must comply
4-10 with all applicable building codes.
4-11 2. The local government shall prepare and issue a request for
4-12 qualifications to not less than three qualified service companies.
4-13 3. In sending out a request for qualifications, the local
4-14 government:
4-15 (a) Shall attempt to identify at least one qualified service
4-16 company located within this state; and
4-17 (b) May consider whether and to what extent the qualified
4-18 service company, to which the request for qualifications will be
4-19 sent, will use local contractors.
4-20 4. The local government shall use objective criteria in
4-21 selecting a qualified service company. The objective criteria for
4-22 evaluation must include the following areas as substantive factors
4-23 to assess the capability of the qualified service company:
4-24 (a) Design;
4-25 (b) Engineering;
4-26 (c) Installation;
4-27 (d) Maintenance and repairs associated with performance
4-28 contracts;
4-29 (e) Experience in conversions to different sources of energy or
4-30 fuel and other services related to operating cost-savings measures
4-31 provided that is done in association with a comprehensive energy,
4-32 water or waste disposal cost-savings retrofit;
4-33 (f) Monitoring projects after the projects are installed;
4-34 (g) Data collection and reporting of savings;
4-35 (h) Overall project experience and qualifications;
4-36 (i) Management capability;
4-37 (j) Ability to access long-term financing;
4-38 (k) Experience with projects of similar size and scope; and
4-39 (l) Such other factors determined by the local government to
4-40 be relevant and appropriate to the ability of the qualified service
4-41 company to perform the project.
4-42 In selecting a qualified service company, the local government
4-43 shall also consider the financial health of the qualified service
4-44 company as evidenced by its financial statements and ratings and
4-45 whether the qualified service company holds the appropriate
5-1 licenses required for the design, engineering and construction to
5-2 be completed.
5-3 5. The qualified service company selected by the local
5-4 government pursuant to subsection 4 shall prepare a financial-
5-5 grade operational audit. Except as otherwise provided in this
5-6 subsection, the audit prepared by the qualified service company
5-7 becomes, upon acceptance, a part of the final performance
5-8 contract and the costs incurred by the qualified service company
5-9 in preparing the audit shall be deemed to be part of the
5-10 performance contract. If, after the audit is prepared, the local
5-11 government decides not to execute the performance contract, the
5-12 local government shall pay the qualified service company that
5-13 prepared the audit the costs incurred by the qualified service
5-14 company in preparing the audit if the local government has
5-15 specifically appropriated money for that purpose.
5-16 Sec. 9. 1. A performance contract may be financed through
5-17 a person other than the qualified service company.
5-18 2. A performance contract may be structured as:
5-19 (a) A performance contract that guarantees operating cost
5-20 savings, which includes, without limitation, the design and
5-21 installation of equipment, the operation and maintenance, if
5-22 applicable, of any of the operating cost-savings measures and the
5-23 guaranteed annual savings which must meet or exceed the total
5-24 annual contract payments to be made by the local government,
5-25 including any financing charges to be incurred by the local
5-26 government over the life of the performance contract. The local
5-27 government may require that these savings be verified annually or
5-28 over a sufficient period that demonstrates savings.
5-29 (b) A shared-savings contract which includes provisions
5-30 mutually agreed upon by the local government and qualified
5-31 service company as to the negotiated rate of payments based upon
5-32 operating cost savings and a stipulated maximum consumption
5-33 level of energy or water, or both energy and water, over the life of
5-34 the contract.
5-35 Sec. 10. 1. A performance contract must provide that all
5-36 payments, other than any obligations that become due if the
5-37 contract is terminated before the contract the expires, must be
5-38 made over time.
5-39 2. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, a
5-40 performance contract, and the payments provided thereunder, may
5-41 extend beyond the fiscal year in which the performance contract
5-42 becomes effective for costs incurred in future fiscal years. The
5-43 performance contract may extend for a term not to exceed 20
5-44 years. The length of a performance contract may reflect the useful
6-1 life of the operating cost-savings measure being installed or
6-2 purchased under the performance contract.
6-3 3. A performance contract may provide for payments over a
6-4 period not to exceed the deadlines in the performance contract
6-5 from the date of the final installation of the operating cost-savings
6-6 measures.
6-7 Sec. 10.3. If a performance contract entered into pursuant to
6-8 sections 2 to 14, inclusive, of this act requires the employment of
6-9 skilled mechanics, skilled workmen, semiskilled mechanics,
6-10 semiskilled workmen or unskilled labor to perform the
6-11 performance contract, the performance contract must include a
6-12 provision relating to the prevailing wage as required pursuant to
6-13 NRS 338.020 to 338.090, inclusive.
6-14 Sec. 10.7. Notwithstanding any provision of sections 2 to 14,
6-15 inclusive, of this act to the contrary, a performance contract
6-16 entered into pursuant to sections 2 to 14, inclusive, of this act must
6-17 include a clause that sets out the rights of the local government
6-18 and the qualified service company if the local government does not
6-19 appropriate sufficient money for payments to be continued under
6-20 the performance contract.
6-21 Sec. 11. A local government may reinvest any savings
6-22 realized under a performance contract whenever practical into
6-23 operating cost-savings measures provided the local government is
6-24 satisfying all its other obligations under the performance contract.
6-25 Sec. 12. 1. During the term of a performance contract, the
6-26 qualified service company shall monitor the reductions in energy
6-27 or water consumption and other operating cost savings
6-28 attributable to the operating cost-savings measure purchased or
6-29 installed under the performance contract, and shall, at least once
6-30 a year or at such other intervals specified in the performance
6-31 contract, prepare and provide a report to the local government
6-32 documenting the performance of the operating cost-savings
6-33 measures.
6-34 2. A performance contract must identify the methodology that
6-35 the local government will use to validate the cost savings identified
6-36 by the qualified service company.
6-37 3. A qualified service company and the local government may
6-38 agree to make modifications in the calculation of savings based
6-39 on:
6-40 (a) Subsequent material changes to the baseline consumption
6-41 of energy or water identified at the beginning of the term of the
6-42 performance contract.
6-43 (b) A change in utility rates.
6-44 (c) A change in the number of days in the billing cycle of a
6-45 utility.
7-1 (d) A change in the total square footage of the building.
7-2 (e) A change in the operational schedule, and any
7-3 corresponding change in the occupancy and indoor temperature,
7-4 of the building.
7-5 (f) A material change in the weather.
7-6 (g) A material change in the amount of equipment or lighting
7-7 used at the building.
7-8 (h) Any other change which reasonably would be expected to
7-9 modify the use of energy or the cost of energy.
7-10 Sec. 13. A qualified service company shall provide to the
7-11 Office of Energy within the Office of the Governor information
7-12 concerning each performance contract which the qualified service
7-13 company enters into pursuant to sections 2 to 14, inclusive, of this
7-14 act, including, without limitation, the name of the project, the
7-15 local government for which the project is being carried out and
7-16 the expected operating cost savings. The Office of Energy may
7-17 report any energy savings realized as a result of such performance
7-18 contracts to the United States Department of Energy pursuant to
7-19 42 U.S.C. § 13385.
7-20 Sec. 14. A performance contract may include appropriate
7-21 financial mechanisms determined to be necessary to guarantee
7-22 that operating cost savings are realized by the local government if
7-23 the actual cost savings do not meet the predicted cost savings.
7-24 Sec. 15. Chapter 333 of NRS is hereby amended by adding
7-25 thereto the provisions set forth as sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of this
7-26 act.
7-27 Sec. 16. As used in sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of this act,
7-28 unless the context otherwise requires, the words and terms defined
7-29 in sections 17 to 21.5, inclusive, of this act, have the meanings
7-30 ascribed to them in those sections.
7-31 Sec. 17. “Building” means any structure, building or facility,
7-32 including any equipment, furnishings or appliances within the
7-33 structure, building or facility, that is owned or operated by a using
7-34 agency. The term includes, without limitation, occupied and
7-35 unoccupied structures, buildings and facilities, and any other
7-36 improvements owned or operated by a using agency that incur
7-37 operating costs.
7-38 Sec. 18. “Operating cost savings” means any expenses that
7-39 are eliminated or avoided on a long-term basis as a result of the
7-40 installation or modification of equipment, or services performed
7-41 by a qualified service company. The term does not include any
7-42 savings that are realized solely because of a shift in the cost of
7-43 personnel or other similar short-term cost savings.
7-44 Sec. 19. “Operating cost-savings measure” means any
7-45 improvement, repair or alteration to a building, or any equipment,
8-1 fixture or furnishing to be added or used in a building that is
8-2 designed to reduce operating costs, including those costs related to
8-3 electrical energy and demand, thermal energy, water consumption,
8-4 waste disposal and contract-labor costs, and increase the
8-5 operating efficiency of the building for the appointed functions
8-6 that are cost-effective. The term includes, without limitation:
8-7 1. Procurement of low-cost energy supplies, including
8-8 electricity and natural gas.
8-9 2. Procurement of cost savings as a result of outsourcing
8-10 energy needs for electrical power, heating and cooling.
8-11 3. Operational or maintenance labor savings resulting from
8-12 reduced costs for maintenance contracts as provided through
8-13 reduction of required maintenance or operating tasks, including,
8-14 without limitation, replacement of filters and lighting products,
8-15 and equipment failures.
8-16 4. Investment in equipment, products and materials, and
8-17 strategies for building operation, or any combination thereof,
8-18 designed to reduce energy and other utility expenses, including,
8-19 without limitation:
8-20 (a) Costs for materials and labor required to replace old
8-21 equipment with new, more efficient equipment.
8-22 (b) Storm windows or doors, caulking or weather stripping,
8-23 multiglazed windows or doors, heat-absorbing or heat-reflective
8-24 glazed or coated windows or doors, reductions in glass area, and
8-25 other modifications to windows and doors that will reduce energy
8-26 consumption.
8-27 (c) Automated or computerized energy control systems.
8-28 (d) Replacement of, or modifications to, heating, ventilation or
8-29 air-conditioning systems.
8-30 (e) Replacement of, or modifications to, lighting fixtures.
8-31 (f) Improvements to the indoor air quality of a building that
8-32 conform to all requirements of an applicable building code.
8-33 (g) Energy recovery systems.
8-34 (h) Systems for combined cooling, heating and power that
8-35 produce steam or other forms of energy, for use primarily within
8-36 the building or a complex of buildings.
8-37 (i) Installation of, or modifications to, existing systems for
8-38 daylighting, including lighting control systems.
8-39 (j) Installation of, or modification to, technologies that use
8-40 renewable or alternative energy sources.
8-41 (k) Programs relating to building operation that reduce
8-42 operating costs, including, without limitation, computerized
8-43 programs, training and other similar activities.
8-44 (l) Programs for improvement of steam traps to reduce
8-45 operating costs.
9-1 (m) Devices that reduce water consumption in buildings, for
9-2 lawns and for other irrigation applications.
9-3 (n) Any additional improvements to building infrastructures
9-4 that produce energy and operating cost savings, significantly
9-5 reduce energy consumption or increase the operating efficiency of
9-6 the buildings for their appointed functions, provided that such
9-7 improvements comply with applicable building codes.
9-8 (o) Trash compaction and waste minimization.
9-9 5. Investment in educational programs relating to
9-10 occupational behavior that are designed to reduce the
9-11 consumption of energy or water, or both, and the generation of
9-12 waste.
9-13 Sec. 20. “Performance contract” means a contract between a
9-14 using agency and a qualified service company for the evaluation,
9-15 recommendation and implementation of one or more operating
9-16 cost-savings measures.
9-17 Sec. 21. “Qualified service company” means a person with a
9-18 record of established projects or a person with demonstrated
9-19 technical, operational, financial and managerial capabilities to
9-20 design and carry out operating cost-savings measures and other
9-21 similar building improvements, and who has the ability to secure
9-22 necessary financial measures to ensure related guarantees for
9-23 operating cost savings.
9-24 Sec. 21.5. “Using agency” means all officers, departments,
9-25 institutions, boards, commissions and other agencies in the
9-26 Executive Department of the State Government which derive their
9-27 support from public money in whole or in part, whether the money
9-28 is provided by the State of Nevada, received from the Federal
9-29 Government or any branch, bureau or agency thereof, or derived
9-30 from private or other sources. The term includes the University
9-31 and Community College System of Nevada, but does not include
9-32 the Nevada Rural Housing Authority, local governments as
9-33 defined in NRS 354.474, conservation districts and irrigation
9-34 districts.
9-35 Sec. 22. 1. Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter
9-36 and chapter 338 of NRS to the contrary, a using agency may enter
9-37 into a performance contract with a qualified service company for
9-38 the purchase and installation of an operating cost-savings
9-39 measure to reduce costs related to energy, water and the disposal
9-40 of waste, and related labor costs. Such a performance contract
9-41 may be in the form of an installment payment contract or a lease-
9-42 purchase contract. Any operating cost-savings measures put into
9-43 place as a result of a performance contract must comply with all
9-44 applicable building codes.
10-1 2. The State Public Works Board shall determine those
10-2 companies that satisfy the requirements of qualified service
10-3 companies for the purposes of sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of this
10-4 act. In making such a determination, the State Public Works
10-5 Board shall enlist the assistance of the staffs of the Office of
10-6 Energy within the Office of the Governor, the Buildings and
10-7 Grounds Division of the Department of Administration and the
10-8 Purchasing Division. The State Public Works Board shall prepare
10-9 and issue a request for qualifications to not less than three
10-10 potential qualified service companies.
10-11 3. In sending out a request for qualifications, the State Public
10-12 Works Board:
10-13 (a) Shall attempt to identify at least one potential qualified
10-14 service company located within this state; and
10-15 (b) May consider whether and to what extent the companies to
10-16 which the request for qualifications will be sent will use local
10-17 contractors.
10-18 4. The State Public Works Board shall use objective criteria
10-19 to determine those companies that satisfy the requirements of
10-20 qualified service companies. The objective criteria for evaluation
10-21 must include the following areas as substantive factors to assess
10-22 the capability of such companies:
10-23 (a) Design;
10-24 (b) Engineering;
10-25 (c) Installation;
10-26 (d) Maintenance and repairs associated with performance
10-27 contracts;
10-28 (e) Experience in conversions to different sources of energy or
10-29 fuel and other services related to operating cost-savings measures
10-30 provided that is done in association with a comprehensive energy,
10-31 water or waste disposal cost-savings retrofit;
10-32 (f) Monitoring projects after the projects are installed;
10-33 (g) Data collection and reporting of savings;
10-34 (h) Overall project experience and qualifications;
10-35 (i) Management capability;
10-36 (j) Ability to access long-term financing;
10-37 (k) Experience with projects of similar size and scope; and
10-38 (l) Such other factors determined by the State Public Works
10-39 Board to be relevant and appropriate to the ability of a company to
10-40 perform the project.
10-41 In determining whether a company satisfies the requirements of a
10-42 qualified service company, the State Public Works Board shall
10-43 also consider the financial health of the company as evidenced by
10-44 its financial statements and ratings and whether the company
10-45 holds the appropriate licenses required for the design, engineering
11-1 and construction which would be completed pursuant to a
11-2 performance contract.
11-3 5. The State Public Works Board shall compile a list of those
11-4 companies that it determines satisfy the requirements of qualified
11-5 service companies. The Purchasing Division shall work directly
11-6 with any using agency interested in entering into a performance
11-7 contract, using the list of qualified service companies compiled by
11-8 the State Public Works Board. The Purchasing Division, in
11-9 conjunction with the using agency, shall coordinate an
11-10 opportunity for each such appropriate qualified service company
11-11 to:
11-12 (a) Perform a preliminary and comprehensive audit and
11-13 assessment of all potential operating cost-savings measures that
11-14 might be implemented within the buildings of the using agency,
11-15 including any operating cost-savings measures specifically
11-16 requested by the using agency; and
11-17 (b) Submit a proposal and make a related presentation to the
11-18 using agency for all such operating cost-savings measures that
11-19 the qualified service company determines would be practicable to
11-20 implement.
11-21 Based on such proposals and presentations, the using agency may
11-22 select the qualified service company that the using agency believes
11-23 is the most responsive to the needs of the using agency and may,
11-24 under the direction of the Purchasing Division, enter into a
11-25 performance contract with that qualified service company.
11-26 6. A qualified service company selected by a using agency
11-27 pursuant to subsection 5 shall prepare a financial-grade
11-28 operational audit. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection,
11-29 the audit prepared by the qualified service company becomes,
11-30 upon acceptance, a part of the final performance contract and the
11-31 costs incurred by the qualified service company in preparing the
11-32 audit shall be deemed to be part of the performance contract. If,
11-33 after the audit is prepared, the using agency decides not to execute
11-34 the performance contract, the using agency shall pay the qualified
11-35 service company that prepared the audit the costs incurred by the
11-36 qualified service company in preparing the audit, if the
11-37 Legislature has specifically appropriated money for that purpose.
11-38 An appropriation by the Legislature for the purchase and
11-39 installation of an operating cost-savings measure creates no
11-40 presumption that the using agency for which the money was
11-41 appropriated is required to enter into such a contract.
11-42 7. If the staff of a using agency does not possess sufficient
11-43 technical expertise to review and select appropriate operating cost-
11-44 savings measures in coordination with a qualified service
11-45 company, the Purchasing Division, upon the request of the using
12-1 agency, shall procure sufficient funding from the qualified service
12-2 company, through negotiation, to retain the professional services
12-3 of a third-party consultant with the requisite technical expertise.
12-4 Such a third-party consultant must be certified by the Association
12-5 of Energy Engineers as a “Certified Energy Manager” or hold
12-6 similar credentials from a comparable nationally recognized
12-7 organization. A third-party consultant retained pursuant to this
12-8 subsection shall work on behalf of the using agency in
12-9 coordination with the qualified service company.
12-10 Sec. 23. 1. A performance contract may be financed
12-11 through a person other than the qualified service company.
12-12 2. A performance contract may be structured as:
12-13 (a) A performance contract that guarantees operating cost
12-14 savings, which includes, without limitation, the design and
12-15 installation of equipment, the operation and maintenance, if
12-16 applicable, of any of the operating cost-savings measures and the
12-17 guaranteed annual savings which must meet or exceed the total
12-18 annual contract payments to be made by the using agency,
12-19 including any financing charges to be incurred by the using
12-20 agency over the life of the performance contract. The using
12-21 agency may require that these savings be verified annually or over
12-22 a sufficient period that demonstrates savings.
12-23 (b) A shared-savings contract which includes provisions
12-24 mutually agreed upon by the using agency and qualified service
12-25 company as to the negotiated rate of payments based upon
12-26 operating cost savings and a stipulated maximum consumption
12-27 level of energy or water, or both energy and water, over the life of
12-28 the contract.
12-29 Sec. 24. 1. Notwithstanding any provision of sections 16 to
12-30 29, inclusive, of this act to the contrary, a performance contract
12-31 entered into pursuant to sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of this act
12-32 does not create a debt for the purposes of Section 3 of Article 9 of
12-33 the Nevada Constitution.
12-34 2. Except as otherwise provided in this section, the term of a
12-35 performance contract may extend beyond the biennium in which
12-36 the contract is executed, provided that the performance contract
12-37 contains a provision which states that all obligations of the State
12-38 under the performance contract are extinguished at the end of any
12-39 fiscal year if the Legislature fails to provide an appropriation to
12-40 the using agency for the ensuing fiscal year for payments to be
12-41 made under the performance contract. If the Legislature fails to
12-42 appropriate money to a using agency for a performance contract,
12-43 there is no remedy against the State, except that if a security
12-44 interest in any property was created pursuant to the performance
12-45 contract, the holder of such a security interest may enforce the
13-1 security interest against that property. The term of a performance
13-2 contract must not exceed 20 years.
13-3 3. The length of a performance contract may reflect the
13-4 useful life of the operating cost-savings measure being installed or
13-5 purchased under the performance contract.
13-6 Sec. 25. 1. A performance contract must provide that all
13-7 payments, other than any obligations that become due if the
13-8 contract is terminated before the contract the expires, must be
13-9 made over time.
13-10 2. A performance contract may provide for payments over a
13-11 period not to exceed the deadlines in the performance contract
13-12 from the date of the final installation of the operating cost-savings
13-13 measures.
13-14 Sec. 26. If a performance contract entered into pursuant to
13-15 sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of this act requires the employment of
13-16 skilled mechanics, skilled workmen, semiskilled mechanics,
13-17 semiskilled workmen or unskilled labor to perform the
13-18 performance contract, the performance contract must include a
13-19 provision relating to the prevailing wage as required pursuant to
13-20 NRS 338.020 to 338.090, inclusive.
13-21 Sec. 27. 1. During the term of a performance contract, the
13-22 qualified service company shall monitor the reductions in energy
13-23 or water consumption and other operating cost savings
13-24 attributable to the operating cost-savings measure purchased or
13-25 installed under the performance contract, and shall, at least once
13-26 a year or at such other intervals specified in the performance
13-27 contract, prepare and provide a report to the using agency
13-28 documenting the performance of the operating cost-savings
13-29 measures.
13-30 2. A qualified service company and the using agency may
13-31 agree to make modifications in the calculation of savings based
13-32 on:
13-33 (a) Subsequent material changes to the baseline consumption
13-34 of energy or water identified at the beginning of the term of the
13-35 performance contract.
13-36 (b) A change in utility rates.
13-37 (c) A change in the number of days in the billing cycle of a
13-38 utility.
13-39 (d) A change in the total square footage of the building.
13-40 (e) A change in the operational schedule, and any
13-41 corresponding change in the occupancy and indoor temperature,
13-42 of the building.
13-43 (f) A material change in the weather.
13-44 (g) A material change in the amount of equipment or lighting
13-45 used at the building.
14-1 (h) Any other change which reasonably would be expected to
14-2 modify the use of energy or the cost of energy.
14-3 Sec. 28. A qualified service company shall provide to the
14-4 Office of Energy within the Office of the Governor information
14-5 concerning each performance contract which the qualified service
14-6 company enters into pursuant to sections 16 to 29, inclusive, of
14-7 this act, including, without limitation, the name of the project, the
14-8 using agency for which the project is being carried out and the
14-9 expected operating cost savings. The Office of Energy may report
14-10 any energy savings realized as a result of such performance
14-11 contracts to the United States Department of Energy pursuant to
14-12 42 U.S.C. § 13385.
14-13 Sec. 29. A performance contract may include appropriate
14-14 financial mechanisms determined to be necessary to guarantee
14-15 that operating cost savings are realized by the using agency if the
14-16 actual cost savings do not meet the predicted cost savings.
14-17 Sec. 29.3-29.7. (Deleted by amendment.)
14-18 Sec. 30. This act becomes effective on July 1, 2003, and
14-19 expires by limitation on June 30, 2005.
14-20 H