C-65.1, r. 12 - Engineers’ Fees (Services to Government) Regulation

Texte complet
À jour au 1er septembre 2012
Ce document a valeur officielle.
chapter C-65.1, r. 12
Engineers’ Fees (Services to Government) Regulation
Act respecting contracting by public bodies
(chapter C-65.1, s. 23).
DIVISION I
SCOPE AND INTERPRETATION
1. This Regulation applies to the public bodies defined in section 4 of the Act respecting contracting by public bodies (chapter C-65.1).
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 1; O.C. 533-2008, s. 62; O.C. 195-2023; O.C. 1156-2023.
2. In this Regulation, unless otherwise indicated by the context:
auxiliary staff means the staff of the firm other than the professional and technical staff; it includes typists, technical assistants, chainmem, rodmen and polemen (personnel auxiliaire);
client means the department or body to which a firm supplies professional services (propriétaire);
engineer means a member of the Ordre des engineers du Québec or a holder of a temporary permit issued by the Order practising as an engineer in the private sector (ingénieur);
firm means an engineer who carries on business individually under the engineer’s own name or under a firm name, as well as a partnership and a corporation (firme);
lead engineer means the engineer designated by the firm to manage, coordinate and supervise the engagement, a role which may be carried out by different engineers during the engagement (patron);
support staff means the staff employed by the firm on a daily basis, other than the professional, technical or auxiliary staff; it includes weighmen, tallymen, clerks and lumberjacks (personnel de soutien).
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 2; O.C. 195-2023.
DIVISION II
GENERAL
3. For purposes of this Regulation, professional services supplied by a firm are classified as provided for in this Division.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 3; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 1.  — Advisory services
4. Advisory services include consultations, advice, reports, estimates, evaluations, inspections, tests and other services related to the compilation, analysis, evaluation and interpretation of data and information, for the purpose of drawing conclusions and making specialized recommendations.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 4; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 2.  — Preparatory studies
5. Preparatory studies are used as the basis for a design and for conclusions or recommendations related to the carrying out of the project when, in the client’s opinion, the project requires such studies.
They consist of research, exploration, surveys, detailed programs, measurement of the area of land involved in a program, analysis of conditions of possible solutions, economic studies and studies of development costs and surveys of existing works.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 5; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 3.  — Preliminary plans and specifications
6. The preliminary plans and specifications consist of a graphical presentation of the complete program provided by the client. The services include the following in particular:
(1)  the preparation and presentation of preliminary plans and summary specifications;
(2)  the preparation of cost estimates for the work based on the divisions of the specifications;
(3)  a report explaining the design and the proposed technical solution.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 6; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 4.  — Final plans and specifications
7. The final plans and specifications are prepared after the firm has determined under section 6 the basis for the final technical solution and the client has received it and formally approved it in writing within the prescribed time.
The services include
(1)  the preparation of construction drawings, detailed drawings, the statement of work and descriptive specifications connected to the firm’s area of specialization and needed for the tender and construction;
(2)  the preparation of the general statement of work when the project falls entirely within the firm’s area of specialization;
(3)  the preparation of the other documents needed to issue a call for tenders;
(4)  the preparation of the schedule of requirements with estimated unit prices for the work where it is customary to apply unit prices;
(5)  the review of the cost estimates for the work prepared at the preliminary phase, based on the divisions of the specifications; and
(6)  the issuing of addenda, the analysis of the tenders and the formulation of appropriate suggestions.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 7; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 5.  — Services during construction
8. Services during construction include those rendered in the office and on the worksite. They include
(1)  the preparation of large-scale drawings of details that could not be foreseen during the preparation of the final plans and specifications, but that are required for construction purposes;
(2)  the preparation of notices of changes and negotiations concerning them;
(3)  advice to the client on technical problems arising during the construction;
(4)  the verification of workshop drawings and manufacturer’s drawings to see that they are in compliance with the plans and specifications, in order to make recommendations to the client;
(5)  correspondence regarding construction work;
(6)  the verification of substitute materials, in order to make recommendations to the client;
(7)  depending on the frequency demanded by progress on the worksite, periodic visits to the worksite in order to make sure that the general progress of the work, its execution, and the quality of the materials and workmanship are in compliance with the requirements of the contractual documents, these visits not necessarily implying qualitative, quantitative, thorough and continuous checking;
(8)  on the basis of observations made during periodic visits to the worksite, information to the client about the progress of the work and defects or deficiencies noted in the work of the contractor, and orders for the redoing of work considered not to be in compliance with the contractual documents;
(9)  notices to the contractor about the interpretation of plans and specifications;
(10)  the drawing up of minutes of meetings at the worksite and meetings with the client;
(11)  for a construction contract with a lump sum price, the checking of requests for payment and the issuance of certificates for recommendation of partial and final payments;
(12)  the supervision oversight of operating tests on the machinery and apparatus installed to determine whether they meet the warranties for capacity and performance, for the elements in the firm’s area of specialization; and
(13)  written recommendations to the client regarding the issuance of provisional and final notices of acceptance of the work.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 8; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 6.  — Special services
9. Special services consist of any additional work related to the project requested in writing by the client. In particular they include
(1)  the preparation of a heat budget;
(2)  the preparation of manuals for maintenance and operation of the facility;
(3)  assistance for the commissioning of the facility when the firm does not provide worksite services;
(4)  training for the technical staff members assigned to operation;
(5)  the assignment of permanent staff on the worksite;
(6)  designs, in the form of sketches or plans, and the specifications used to prepare the notices of change required by the client;
(7)  for general engineering engagements, final inspection and oversight of operating tests for the machinery and apparatus installed to determine whether they meet the warranties for capacity and performance;
(8)  services relating to the handing over to the client, at the end of the work, of a copy of the original drawings, on sensitized film, revised to show the works as constructed; and
(9)  any other services not provided for in sections 4 to 8.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 9; O.C. 195-2023.
DIVISION III
METHODS OF PAYMENT OF FEES
10. For the purposes of this Regulation, fees may be paid using
(1)  the hourly method;
(2)  the lump sum method; or
(3)  the percentage method.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 10; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 1.  — Hourly method
11. The hourly method involves payment for the time worked by staff members of the firm on the engagement, excluding the services provided by secretarial staff.
Despite the first paragraph, the time spent on typing final specifications and technical reports directly related to the engagement is not considered as a secretarial service; in such case, the staff assigned to that work is remunerated on the basis of the hourly rate for auxiliary staff.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 11; O.C. 195-2023.
12. Subject to section 11, the hourly method may be used for any of the services provided by the firm. Use of this method must however be limited, and the government department or body must, before awarding a contract, evaluate the qualifications required for the staff and estimate, based on the classification of the staff, the number of hours required to complete the engagement.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 12; O.C. 195-2023.
13. The procedures for the hourly method are as follows:
(1)  the staff assigned to the engagement and their qualifications for purposes of remuneration must have been accepted in writing by the client before the beginning of work on the task;
(2)  the basic hourly rate for each member of the firm’s staff other than the lead engineer must be based on the annual basic salary paid to the staff member, divided by 1,730; the rate may not exceed the maximum hourly rates set by the Conseil du trésor in accordance with the classification to which the staff member belongs;
The basic hourly rate is multiplied by a percentage of 150% to take direct and indirect costs and profit into account.
Despite the preceding paragraph, the percentage applied to the basic hourly rate is 120% for staff members assigned permanently to the worksite and 75% for support staff;
(3)  the hourly rate for the lead engineer is a fixed hourly rate set by the Conseil du trésor in accordance with the classification to which the lead engineer belongs;
(4)  if the firm assigns staff of a higher classification to duties that normally are performed by staff of a lower classification, the hourly rate applicable in such case is the rate corresponding to the classification for the duty;
(5)  any professional, other than an engineer, who is a member of the staff of the firm, and whose participation in the project is approved by the client, receives the same hourly rate as an engineer.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 13; O.C. 195-2023.
14. Firms must record daily the number of hours, to the nearest half hour, worked on each task and the use that the staff made of the time.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 14; O.C. 195-2023.
15. Overtime is not reimbursed, except on written authorization from the client. In such case, where a member of the staff of the firm works more than 44 hours in a week on a single engagement, the payment of overtime exceeding the normal workweek of 44 hours is calculated at the hourly rate paid for the normal working hours, increased by the applicable percentage, and again increased by 25%.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 15; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 2.  — Lump sum method
16. The lump sum method involves the payment of a lump sum negotiated between the client and the firm engaged. The sum is estimated on the basis of the number of hours considered necessary for carrying out the engagement, on the basis of the rates provided for the hourly method, or on the basis of a percentage of the cost of the work or the budget forecast.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 16; O.C. 195-2023.
17. The lump sum method may be used for any services provided by the firm.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 17; O.C. 195-2023.
18. Where the lump sum method is used, the engagement must be explicit and precise in terms of the services to be provided, the results expected and the proposed timetable.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 18; O.C. 195-2023.
§ 3.  — Percentage method
19. The percentage method involves paying the firm fees as a percentage of the estimated cost of the work, as determined in the contract, for the preparation of the preliminary plans and specifications, of any revised estimated cost for the final plans and specifications, and of the actual cost of the work for services provided during construction.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 19; O.C. 195-2023.
20. For the purposes of the percentage method, engineering work must be classified using the groups and classes in the Schedule.
The purpose of the works as a whole, rather than of one of its components, must be taken into consideration for the classification.
Types of works not listed in the Schedule must be placed in the class to which they are most similar, and the choice of the class must be made by agreement between the client and the firm.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 20; O.C. 195-2023.
21. For the purposes of this subdivision, estimated cost of the work and actual cost of the work means the total expenditure by the client for the completion of the work for which the firm provides professional services and for which it is responsible, including the cost of the fixed accessories required for occupation, overheads, administrative expenses, profits of the contractor and all applicable taxes.
Despite the first paragraph, if the client supplies labour or materials at prices lower than current prices, or if used materials are employed, the estimated or actual cost is that of all the materials and labour required to complete the work, as it would have been if all the materials employed had been new and the labour had been paid at the market price at the time when the work was ordered.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 21; O.C. 195-2023.
22. The following are excluded from the “estimated cost of the work” or the “actual cost of the work”:
(1)  the fees or expenditures of the firms engaged for the project;
(2)  the cost of other work for which the preparation of the plans and specifications and the supervision of construction work were entrusted to other firms or to the client’s staff;
(3)  the cost of acquiring immovables;
(4)  the cost of demolishing buildings, except if included in the construction contract;
(5)  the cost of borings, tests, analyses, checking and supervision of materials;
(6)  the cost of moving public utilities carried out by their respective owners;
(7)  expenses resulting from errors or omissions by the firm;
(8)  the cost of works of art.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 22; O.C. 195-2023.
23. The estimated cost of the work may be revised at the time of approval of the preliminary and final plans and specifications, but may not exceed the estimated cost provided by the contract, unless it involves changes to the program specifically required by the client.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 23; O.C. 195-2023.
24. Where, following the opening of tenders, the lowest acceptable tender exceeds the revised estimated cost, the client may require that the firm revise wholly or partly, at its own expense, the plans and specifications, on condition that such requirement be specifically specified in the contract.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 24; O.C. 195-2023.
25. The fees payable must be calculated using the appropriate class in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor and must be allocated as follows: 75% for the services described in sections 6 and 7 and 25% for the services described in section 8.
The costs of the work in the grid of percentages includes taxes.
When calculating fees in accordance with the grid of percentages, a client exempted from certain taxes must, despite the first paragraph of section 21, add an amount equivalent to those taxes to the cost of the work.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 25; D. 1448-93 (French only), a. 1; O.C. 195-2023.
26. If the client asks the firm to provide, during construction, only the services described in section 8 for work for which the plans and specifications were prepared by a third party, the fees are 35% of the fees calculated using the appropriate class in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 26; O.C. 195-2023.
27. When the client proceeds with a new construction using plans and specifications previously used for another project for which the firm provided services, the fees for the first use are 15% of the fees calculated for the appropriate class in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor on the basis of the cost of the new construction. The fees for subsequent uses must be negotiated and may not exceed 15% of the fees calculated using the appropriate class in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 27; O.C. 195-2023.
28. When the services to be provided by the firm concern work consisting solely or mainly of work to recycle, restore, enlarge or renovate a building, and when the client has no defined program, the fees for the preliminary plans and specifications phase may be paid using the hourly or lump sum method.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 28; O.C. 195-2023.
29. When the percentage method is used, the fees for travel time are reimbursed from the second hour onwards, in accordance with the rates established for the hourly method. In no case may the firm claim in travel time more hours than the hours usually prescribed for the daily work of its employees.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 29; O.C. 195-2023.
DIVISION IV
ELIGIBLE EXPENSES
30. The client is required to reimburse only expenses prescribed by this Division, according to the following conditions and procedures.
§1. Expenses for printing plans and specifications
The expenses authorized by the client related to the printing of plans and specifications are reimbursed on the conditions prescribed by the contract.
When the lump sum or percentage method is used, the firm must supply at its expense up to 5 copies of all plans and specifications, printed on opaque paper, for the approval of the preliminary plans and specifications, and of the final plans and specifications. It must also supply, at its expense, a copy of the final plans on sensitized film, and a copy of the final specifications in a form that can be reproduced, for the purposes of calling for tenders.
§2. Communications expenses
The cost of long-distance calls and messenger services are reimbursed if they are incurred at the client’s request.
§3. Travel expenses
Expenses authorized by the client related to travel undertaken by staff of the firm under the engagement may be reimbursed in accordance with the Directive concernant les frais de déplacement des personnes engagées à honoraires par des organismes publics (C.T. 212379; 2013-03-26), including expenses incurred for contracts with the public bodies referred to in subparagraphs 3 to 6 of the first paragraph of section 4 of the Act respecting contracting by public bodies (chapter C-65.1).
§4. Data processing expenses
When the hourly method is used, specialized data processing operations, excluding office automation, required and authorized by the client, are reimbursed as follows:
(1)  where the firm uses its own equipment, the method of reimbursement is the method prescribed by the contract;
(2)  where the firm leases data processing services outside the firm, the cost of use of the equipment is reimbursed on submission of vouchers.
§5. Onsite expenses
For services provided permanently onsite, the firm is reimbursed for expenses authorized by the client related to the supply and maintenance of office facilities on the site and for the coverage of the special risks incurred, on submission of vouchers.
§6. Expenses related to the hiring of consultants
The client reimburses expenses incurred by the firm related to the hiring of consultants at cost, on submission of vouchers, on condition that the client gives prior authorization for the hiring in writing.
In such a case, the fees and expenses for the hiring of consultants may not exceed those prescribed by this Regulation.
These expenses may also be shared between the parties.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 30; O.C. 533-2008, s. 62; O.C. 195-2023; O.C. 1156-2023.
DIVISION V
PAYMENT
31. The firm is paid on monthly submission of a statement of its fees and expenditures, once progress on the engagement has been taken into consideration.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 31; O.C. 195-2023.
32. Despite section 31, where the professional fees of the firm are established using the percentage method, they are paid in accordance with the following procedure:
(1)  for the preliminary plans and specifications, the firm is paid, on monthly submission of its statement of fees and according to progress on the engagement, up to 30% of the fees indicated in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor, calculated using the appropriate class, taking as a base the estimated cost of the work;
(2)  the firm is then paid proportionately to the completed part of its work up to 75% of the fees indicated in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor, calculated using the appropriate class, taking as a base the revised estimated cost of the work;
(3)  for services rendered under section 8, the firm is paid proportionately to the completed part of its work up to 25% of the fees indicated in the grid of percentages established by the Conseil du trésor, calculated using the appropriate class, taking as a base the actual cost of the work.
The maximum amount of the fees set for each of the phases is payable only after the written approval of the client has been obtained for each phase, in accordance with the prescribed timetable.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 32; O.C. 195-2023.
DIVISION VI
MISCELLANEOUS
33. Unless the client has specifically requested the firm to provide them as part of the services prescribed under section 5, the client must provide the firm with the following documents and information:
(1)  a precise survey of the location indicating the public utilities supplying it and the other installations;
(2)  exact plans and other relevant data on existing buildings or works having an effect on the work to be carried out;
(3)  information in its possession that could affect the work to be carried out;
(4)  a copy of the tenders and the contracts for the work for which the firm is responsible and a copy of all the certificates of payment and any final account related to the work, if the documents are not prepared by the firm;
(5)  all correspondence relevant to the project.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 33; O.C. 195-2023.
34. If the engagement of the firm is abandoned or deferred wholly or in part by the client, the firm is paid proportionately for the services rendered, on submission of vouchers.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 34; O.C. 195-2023.
35. The engagement of a firm by the client must be recorded in a contract containing, in particular,
(1)  a clause to the effect that the firm agrees to respect the procedures for applying the Government’s purchasing policy;
(2)  a clause forbidding the total or partial transfer of the contract without the written consent of the client;
(3)  a clause setting the client’s limit of financial liability;
(4)  a clause providing for the establishment of a timeframe for the carrying out and approval of the engagement, which must be determined jointly between the parties and form an integral part of the contract; and
(5)  a specific clause concerning engagements or work paid using the hourly method, stating that the client may inspect and verify the time registers and the accounts of expenditures of the firm at any time convenient to the parties, and that the firm must facilitate such inspections or verifications.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 35; O.C. 195-2023.
36. All drawings, study models, specifications and documents prepared by the firm are instruments of service for the carrying out of the work and remain the firm’s property, whether the work is carried out or not. The client may not use them for other works, unless the firm has given its consent in writing, and is paid for that purpose in accordance with section 27.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 36; O.C. 195-2023.
37. During the carrying out of the work, the firm may, following in this respect the procedures stipulated in the contract, order or have carried out for the client’s account, any emergency work or any that is necessary or advisable in the client’s interest or for the protection of the public.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 37; O.C. 195-2023.
DIVISION VII
TRANSITIONAL AND FINAL
38. This Regulation applies to contracts for professional services made with a firm after 26 August 1987.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 38; O.C. 195-2023.
39. Despite section 38, the client and the firm may agree to apply the provisions of this Regulation, on the date of its coming into force or at any later date, to a contract made before 26 August 1987; in such a case, the contract is governed by the whole of the Regulation and not only by certain parts of it.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 39; O.C. 195-2023.
40. Despite section 38, when the client and the firm agree to use the percentage method for a contract made before 26 August 1987 to replace the target cost method in the contract, the replacement may in no case result in the payment to the firm of fees for which the allocation to design and implementation exceeds 100%.
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 40; O.C. 195-2023.
40.1. The client and the firm may agree to apply the second and third paragraphs of section 25 to a contract in progress on 18 November 1993, but solely for the remuneration of the services referred to in section 8.
D. 1448-93 (French only), a. 2; O.C. 195-2023.
41. (Omitted).
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 41; O.C. 195-2023.
42. (Omitted).
D. 1235-87 (French only), a. 42; O.C. 195-2023.
SCHEDULE
(s. 20)
CLASSIFICATION OF ENGINEERING WORK
GROUP 1: GENERAL ENGINEERING
Class I: bridges and viaducts, small dams (excluding hydrological studies), catchment basins, embankments and retaining walls, storm sewers and surface drainage systems, culverts and channel tubes, irrigation systems excluding pumping stations, domestic and industrial sewage systems, water distribution systems, highways and controlled-access expressways in rural surroundings, including interchanges and other related works, street and highway lighting, landing fields and small airports with minimum facilities;
Class II: tunnels, bridges and viaducts whose non-repetitive elements, curvature, skew, inclination and simple design are important factors, flood control works, retention basins, interceptor, relief and overflow sewers and separate sewer systems, locks, canals, wharves and harbours, streets, sidewalks, controlled-access expressways in urban surroundings including interchanges and other related works, site layout work for institutional, industrial, commercial or sports complexes, including grading, landscaping, water and sewage systems, drainage, parking lots, roads, sidewalks and turfing, large airports with extensive facilities, food processing plants, mines, ore processing plants and foundries, diesel-electric generators under 1,000 kW capacity, railways and industrial assembly plants;
Class III: oxidation ponds, pumping stations, water purification plants, wastewater treatment plans, plans to treat industrial and household waste, gas turbine plants and diesel generators over 1,000 kW capacity, and material handling and conveying systems.
GROUP 2: BUILDINGS
SUBGROUP 1 — FOUNDATIONS AND STRUCTURES
Class I: foundations and structures for warehouses and large open structures of multiple bays, educational institutions without gymnasiums or auditoriums, hangars, public garages, machine shops, multi-family dwellings, row housing, duplexes, multiple housing complexes, reception centres, local community service centres and industrial buildings of a typical bay-construction;
Class II: foundations and structures for educational institutions with gymnasiums or auditoriums, hospitals, penitentiaries, office buildings, research laboratories, courthouses and museums.
SUBGROUP 2 — MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL WORK
Class I: non existent;
Class II: Conventional plumbing and heating, conventional lighting and power distribution, exhaust ventilation with simple ductwork, on all types of buildings.
Class III: Plumbing heating, lighting, power distribution and air conditioning work without ductwork on the following types of buildings: educational institutions, multiple housing complexes, reception centres, local community service centres, office buildings, penitentiaries and courthouses;
Class IV: Electrical and mechanical work for full ventilation systems, air conditioning with ductwork for induction and all-air systems, refrigeration, for all types of buildings.
Also applies to Class III mechanical and electrical work for the following types of buildings: hospitals, research laboratories and museums.
D. 1235-87 (French only), Ann; O.C. 195-2023.
REFERENCES
D. 1235-87 (French only), 1987 G.O. 2, 5473
D. 1448-93 (French only), 1993 G.O. 2, 7448
O.C. 533-2008, 2008 G.O. 2, 2099
O.C. 195-2023, 2023 G.O. 2, 407
O.C. 1156-2023, 2023 G.O. 2, 1899