§ 10100 State Contract Act
This law tells you that the whole chapter is called the State Contract Act.
This law tells you that the whole chapter is called the State Contract Act.
This law says that certain contracts are left out of this chapter: buying supplies under Chapter 2 (even if the seller does a little extra work) and hiring emergency help to stop a toxic spill.
This law says that any building or work done on state‑owned waterfront land in San Francisco that the Port Commission runs does NOT have to follow the rules in this chapter.
This law says that any work done straight by a public utility company because a public agency told them to do it is not covered by the rules in this chapter.
This law says that work done by prisoners for the Corrections Department or Prison Industry Authority doesn't have to follow this chapter, but if the project costs more than $50,000 for new or added prison buildings, it must first get approval from the State Public Works Board.
This law explains what “mobilization” means – all the work and costs that happen before the real project work starts, like moving people and gear to the site and setting up offices.
This law says a state building project can’t cost more than a set dollar amount; the amount is $250,000 for 2010 and is changed every two years based on a construction price index.
This law tells you what the word “Department” means and who the “Director” is for different kinds of projects.
This law says that if a project isn’t handled by any of several listed departments, the Department of General Services must run it.
This law lets a state agency do a project itself if it will cost $600,000 or less, and says when they have to get bids or can use day labor.