Waimea highway project out for bid again

LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today Mamalahoa Highway between Mud Lane and Mana Road in Waimea.
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KAILUA-KONA — About a month after Hawaii County scrapped a bid solicitation for the Mamalahoa Highway widening project amid concerns about fairness, the county is once again soliciting bids for the work.

And the Department of Public Works is confident work on the Waimea roadway will be able to go forward this time.

The county is accepting sealed bids until 2 p.m. Dec. 28, at which time they’ll be opened and read. Prospective bidders can examine plans and specifications at the DPW administration office in Hilo and the Kona Engineering Division.

The project will widen the highway at 18 intersections along a 2.8-mile stretch between Mud Lane and Mana Road. Other work includes reconstructing the pavement between Mana Road and Mokuloa Drive, building retaining walls, drainage structures and drain lines, relocating water lines and installing pavement markings, signs and guardrails.

The date for the notice to proceed on the contract is March 15, from which time the contractor will have 60 days to get started with physical work, said Barett Otani, information and education specialist for DPW. The project is to be completed by February 2020, weather and construction conditions permitting.

During construction, alternating lane closures will be in effect and, at minimum, a single lane of travel will be provided at all times through the construction area.

In November, the county canceled a bid solicitation after a bidder protested the process. At that time, bids had come back ranging from $19.11 million to $24.10 million.

The complaining bidder took issue with the way the county structured the bid request. The county segmented the bid to include a basic bid plus bids on different portions of the work.

Under the current contract award criteria, the lowest bid will be determined by the total bid amount resulting from adding the total base bid and greatest number of additive alternates without the total exceeding the county’s budget available for the project. That amount is listed as approximately $23 million.

Otani said that figure includes available funds for construction.

Eighty percent of the project’s cost will be federally funded, with the rest being the county’s portion.

Email Cameron Miculka at cmiculka@westhawaiitoday.com.