e. That VicRoads consider further outsourcing to the
maximum amount whilst still maintaining in-house
skills etc. This would only be considered after
observation of the results of the initial outsourcing;
. That regions should continue to outsource at the
current levels, i.e. about 35% of local work;
© That all increases in outsourcing would be carried
out by LIS Department, who would also be
responsible for the resultant redeployment of staff;
e. That ongoing discussions take place with the Office
of the Surveyor General (formerly Survey Mapping
Victoria), on increasing co-operation;
e. That opportunities for partnerships with the private
sector be identified and explored.
7. THE PROCESS
As a result of these recommendations the following steps were
taken:
e. all staff were advised of the Department's and
VicRoads' intentions;
. the private survey and photogrammetry industry
asked to submit expressions of interest and capability
statements. This information included staff resumes,
lists of the type of equipment used and who would
use it, hourly rates for various survey and
photogrammetry tasks, and overall costs based on the
relevant guide for fees. These guides were those as
set out by the Association of Consulting Surveyors
Victoria (ACSV) and the Association of Aerial
Surveyors (AASA);
e. firms were required to bring their insurances, such as
professional indemnity insurance, X Workcover
(workers compensation) and Occupational Health and
Safety requirements up to the requirements set by
VicRoads;
. all firms were required to prepare a Quality Plan for
VicRoads' work and to give details as to the status of
their overall quality system;
. the VicRoads standard consultant briefs were revised
and brought up to date to match current standards;
° after perusal of the capability statements, a set of six
test jobs were to be given to a panel of no more than
18 firms;
performance was assessed on quality, time and cost;
each individual job was to be quoted separately each
time.
8. THE OUTCOMES
8.1 Award of a period contract for twelve months
After a period of using consultancy agreements on the basis of
obtaining three quotations for each job, VicRoads decided to
award a formal twelve-month contract to one or more firms in
each geographical region, the maximum number of firms per
region three to cover the metropolitan regions. This contract
had an option for a twelve month extension. Overall, six firms
were selected to provide survey services, and two for the
provision of state-wide photogrammetry services.
96
8.2 The use of Lotus Notes to facilitate outsourcing
arrangements
Initially a paper-based recording system was put in place to
keep track of each job for each firm in each region. This
required a lot of involvement and input from a co-ordinator in
Head Office to keep up to date.
A Lotus Notes database was developed to replace this paper
based system. Each job, or separable part had to have a
unique contract assignment number, and the database gave the
means to automatically generate this number based on the
particular firm being used (each firm had a contract number),
the business area paying for the job, and the region the job was
located in.
Information about each job was entered via a form, with most
information selected from keyword lists, such as Local
government area, Contractor, etc. The performance section
was set up using check buttons to determine an overall 'score'
of performance.
The data were displayed in various ways or 'views', with a
separate view for each firm, geographical region and project,
and special views for such things as overdue jobs.
The advantages of this system were:
. it provided a computerised means of allocating
contract assignment numbers for each job;
° it could keep track of individual contractors and their
performance;
e. it provided means for regional and project staff to
have more control over the jobs they were managing,
whilst allowing Head Office staff to monitor the
overall contract;
e. it provided a means of reporting to the Director and
the Corporate Management Group on both individual
jobs and the overall contract performance, simply by
printing various database views.
8.3 A special module of PARMS
A special module was written for VicRoads' payroll and
resource management system (PARMS) to handle the invoicing
and payment of individual contract assignments.
8.4 MicroStation and InRoads software modules
Additional customised software modules for MicroStation and
InRoads developed by VicRoads staff were made available for
purchase by any of the contractors. These programs made
presentation of the data to VicRoads standard presentation
guidelines easier by semi-automating many of the processes.
These have subsequently been improved with newer versions
of MicroStation which incorporate such things as custom
linestyles, allowing special linestyles for vegetation, title
boundaries, and services information such as
telecommunications and utilities.
This was in addition to some basic non-standard MicroStation
modules such as additional font libraries and cell libraries that
were given to each contractor as part of the contract.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
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