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MnDOT Contract Number: 1028151 <br />3.2. Professional and Technical Services. A party may provide professional and technical services upon the <br />request of the other party. As defined by Minn. Stat. § 16C.08, subd. 1, professional/technical services <br />"means services that are intellectual in character, including consultation, analysis, evaluation, prediction, <br />planning, programming, or recommendation; and result in the production of a report or completion of a <br />task." Professional and technical services do not include providing supplies or materials except as <br />incidental to performing such services. Professional and technical services include (by way of example <br />and without limitation) engineering services, surveying, foundation recommendations and reports, <br />environmental documentation, right-of-way assistance (such as performing appraisals or providing <br />relocation assistance, but excluding the exercise of the power of eminent domain), geometric layouts, <br />final construction plans, graphic presentations, public relations, and facilitating open houses. A party will <br />normally provide such services with its own personnel; however, a party's professional/technical services <br />may also include hiring and managing outside consultants to perform work provided that a party itself <br />provides active project management for the use of such outside consultants. <br />3.3. Roadway Maintenance. A party may provide roadway maintenance upon the request of the other party. <br />Roadway maintenance does not include roadway reconstruction. This work may include but is not limited <br />to snow removal, ditch spraying, roadside mowing, bituminous mill and overlay (only small projects), <br />seal coat, bridge hits, major retaining wall failures, major drainage failures, and message painting. All <br />services must be performed by an employee with sufficient skills, training, expertise or certification to <br />perform such work, and work must be supervised by a qualified employee of the party performing the <br />work. <br />3.4. Construction Administration. A party may administer roadway construction projects upon the request of <br />the other party. Roadway construction includes (by way of example and without limitation) the <br />construction, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of mainline, shoulder, median, pedestrian or bicycle <br />pathway, lighting and signal systems, pavement mill and overlays, seal coating, guardrail installation, and <br />channelization. These services may be performed by the Providing Party's own forces, or the Providing <br />Party may administer outside contracts for such work. Construction administration may include letting <br />and awarding construction contracts for such work (including state projects to be completed in <br />conjunction with local projects). All contract administration services must be performed by an employee <br />with sufficient skills, training, expertise or certification to perform such work. <br />3.5. Emergency Services. A party may provide aid upon request of the other party in the event of a man-made <br />disaster, natural disaster or other act of God. Emergency services includes all those services as the parties <br />mutually agree are necessary to plan for, prepare for, deal with, and recover from emergency situations. <br />These services include, without limitation, planning, engineering, construction, maintenance, and removal <br />and disposal services related to things such as road closures, traffic control, debris removal, flood <br />protection and mitigation, sign repair, sandbag activities and general cleanup. Work will be performed by <br />an employee with sufficient skills, training, expertise or certification to perform such work, and work <br />must be supervised by a qualified employee of the party performing the work. If it is not feasible to have <br />an executed work order prior to performance of the work, the parties will promptly confer to determine <br />whether work may be commenced without a fully -executed work order in place. If work commences <br />without a fully -executed work order, the parties will follow up with execution of a work order as soon as <br />feasible. <br />3.6. When a need is identified, the State and the Local Government will discuss the proposed work and the <br />resources needed to perform the work. If a party desires to perform such work, the parties will negotiate <br />the specific and detailed work tasks and cost. The State will then prepare a work order contract. <br />Generally, a work order contract will be limited to one specific project/engagement, although "on call" <br />work orders may be prepared for certain types of services, especially for "Technical Services" items as <br />identified section 2.1.. The work order will also identify specific deliverables required, and timeframes for <br />completing work. A work order must be fully executed by the parties prior to work being commenced. <br />Page 3 of 13 <br />CM Master Partnership Contract (CM Rev. 04/10/2017) <br />