HEALTH & WELFARE: $5.55 per hour, up to 40 hours per week, or $222.00 per week or $962.00 per month HEALTH & WELFARE EO 13706: $5.09 per hour, up to 40 hours per week, or $203.60 per week, or $882.27 per month* *This rate is to be used only when compensating employees for performance on an SCA- covered contract also covered by EO 13706, Establishing Paid Sick Leave for Federal Contractors. A contractor may not receive credit toward its SCA obligations for any paid sick leave provided pursuant to EO 13706. | VACATION: 2 weeks paid vacation after 1 year of service with a contractor or successor, 3 weeks after 5 years, and 4 weeks after 15 years. Length of service includes the whole span of continuous service with the present contractor or successor, wherever employed, and with the predecessor contractors in the performance of similar work at the same Federal facility. (Reg. 29 CFR 4.173) | HOLIDAYS: A minimum of eleven paid holidays per year: New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday, Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Juneteenth National Independence Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans' Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. (A contractor may substitute for any of the named holidays another day off with pay in accordance with a plan communicated to the employees involved.) (See 29 CFR 4.174) THE OCCUPATIONS WHICH HAVE NUMBERED FOOTNOTES IN PARENTHESES RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING: 1) COMPUTER EMPLOYEES: This wage determination does not apply to any individual employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity, as defined in 29 C.F.R. Part 541. (See 41 C.F.R. 6701(3)). Because most Computer Systems Analysts and Computer Programmers who are paid at least $27.63 per hour (or at least $684 per week if paid on a salary or fee basis) likely qualify as exempt computer professionals under 29 U.S.C. 213(a)(1) and 29 U.S.C. 213(a)(17), this wage determination may not include wage rates for all occupations within those job families. In such instances, a conformance will be necessary if there are nonexempt employees in these job families working on the contract. Job titles vary widely and change quickly in the computer industry, and are not determinative of whether an employee is an exempt computer professional. To be exempt, computer employees who satisfy the compensation requirements must also have a primary duty that consists of: (1) The application of systems analysis techniques and procedures, including consulting with users, to determine hardware, software or system functional specifications; (2) The design, development, documentation, analysis, creation, testing or modification of computer systems or programs, including prototypes, based on and related to user or system design specifications; (3) The design, documentation, testing, creation or modification of computer programs related to machine operating systems; or (4) A combination of the aforementioned duties, the performance of which requires the same level of skills. (29 C.F.R. 541.400). Any computer employee who meets the applicable compensation requirements and the above duties test qualifies as an exempt computer professional under both section 13(a)(1) and section 13(a)(17) of the Fair Labor Standards Act. (Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2006-3 (Dec. 14, 2006)). Accordingly, this wage determination will not apply to any exempt computer employee regardless of which of these two exemptions is utilized. 2) AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS AND WEATHER OBSERVERS - NIGHT PAY & SUNDAY PAY: If you work at night as part of a regular tour of duty, you will earn a night differential and receive an additional 10% of basic pay for any hours worked between 6pm and 6am. If you are a full-time employed (40 hours a week) and Sunday is part of your regularly scheduled workweek, you are paid at your rate of basic pay plus a Sunday premium of 25% of your basic rate for each hour of Sunday work which is not overtime (i.e. occasional work on Sunday outside the normal tour of duty is considered overtime work). ** HAZARDOUS PAY DIFFERENTIAL ** An 8 percent differential is applicable to employees employed in a position that represents a high degree of hazard when working with or in close proximity to ordnance, explosives, and incendiary materials. This includes work such as screening, blending, dying, mixing, and pressing of sensitive ordnance, explosives, and pyrotechnic compositions such as lead azide, black powder and photoflash powder. All dry-house activities involving propellants or explosives. Demilitarization, modification, renovation, demolition, and maintenance operations on sensitive ordnance, explosives and incendiary materials. All operations involving re-grading and cleaning of artillery ranges. A 4 percent differential is applicable to employees employed in a position that represents a low degree of hazard when working with, or in close proximity to ordnance, (or employees possibly adjacent to) explosives and incendiary materials which involves potential injury such as laceration of hands, face, or arms of the employee engaged in the operation, irritation of the skin, minor burns and the like; minimal damage to immediate or adjacent work area or equipment being used. All operations involving, unloading, storage, and hauling of ordnance, explosive, and incendiary ordnance material other than small arms ammunition. These differentials are only applicable to work that has been specifically designated by the agency for ordnance, explosives, and incendiary material differential pay. ** UNIFORM ALLOWANCE ** If employees are required to wear uniforms in the performance of this contract (either by the terms of the Government contract, by the employer, by the state or local law, etc.), the cost of furnishing such uniforms and maintaining (by laundering or dry cleaning) such uniforms is an expense that may not be borne by an employee where such cost reduces the hourly rate below that required by the wage determination. The Department of Labor will accept payment in accordance with the following standards as compliance: The contractor or subcontractor is required to furnish all employees with an adequate number of uniforms without cost or to reimburse employees for the actual cost of the uniforms. In addition, where uniform cleaning and maintenance is made the responsibility of the employee, all contractors and subcontractors subject to this wage determination shall (in the absence of a bona fide collective bargaining agreement providing for a different amount, or the furnishing of contrary affirmative proof as to the actual cost), reimburse all employees for such cleaning and maintenance at a rate of $3.35 per week (or $.67 cents per day). However, in those instances where the uniforms furnished are made of """"wash and wear"""" materials, may be routinely washed and dried with other personal garments, and do not require any special treatment such as dry cleaning, daily washing, or commercial laundering in order to meet the cleanliness or appearance standards set by the terms of the Government contract, by the contractor, by law, or by the nature of the work, there is no requirement that employees be reimbursed for uniform maintenance costs. ** SERVICE CONTRACT ACT DIRECTORY OF OCCUPATIONS ** The duties of employees under job titles listed are those described in the """"Service Contract Act Directory of Occupations"""", Fifth Edition (Revision 1), dated September 2015, unless otherwise indicated. ** REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL CLASSIFICATION AND WAGE RATE, Standard Form 1444 (SF-1444) ** Conformance Process: The contracting officer shall require that any class of service employee which is not listed herein and which is to be employed under the contract (i.e., the work to be performed is not performed by any classification listed in the wage determination), be classified by the contractor so as to provide a reasonable relationship (i.e., appropriate level of skill comparison) between such unlisted classifications and the classifications listed in the wage determination (See 29 CFR 4.6(b)(2)(i)). Such conforming procedures shall be initiated by the contractor prior to the performance of contract work by such unlisted class(es) of employees (See 29 CFR 4.6(b)(2)(ii)). The Wage and Hour Division shall make a final determination of conformed classification, wage rate, and/or fringe benefits which shall be paid to all employees performing in the classification from the first day of work on which contract work is performed by them in the classification. Failure to pay such unlisted employees the compensation agreed upon by the interested parties and/or fully determined by the Wage and Hour Division retroactive to the date such class of employees commenced contract work shall be a violation of the Act and this contract. (See 29 CFR 4.6(b)(2)(v)). When multiple wage determinations are included in a contract, a separate SF-1444 should be prepared for each wage determination to which a class(es) is to be conformed. The process for preparing a conformance request is as follows: 1) When preparing the bid, the contractor identifies the need for a conformed occupation(s) and computes a proposed rate(s). 2) After contract award, the contractor prepares a written report listing in order the proposed classification title(s), a Federal grade equivalency (FGE) for each proposed classification(s), job description(s), and rationale for proposed wage rate(s), including information regarding the agreement or disagreement of the authorized representative of the employees involved, or where there is no authorized representative, the employees themselves. This report should be submitted to the contracting officer no later than 30 days after such unlisted class(es) of employees performs any contract work. 3) The contracting officer reviews the proposed action and promptly submits a report of the action, together with the agency's recommendations and pertinent information including the position of the contractor and the employees, to the U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, for review (See 29 CFR 4.6(b)(2)(ii)). 4) Within 30 days of receipt, the Wage and Hour Division approves, modifies, or disapproves the action via transmittal to the agency contracting officer, or notifies the contracting officer that additional time will be required to process the request. 5) The contracting officer transmits the Wage and Hour Division's decision to the contractor. 6) Each affected employee shall be furnished by the contractor with a written copy of such determination or it shall be posted as a part of the wage determination (See 29 CFR 4.6(b)(2)(iii)). Information required by the Regulations must be submitted on SF-1444 or bond paper. When preparing a conformance request, the """"Service Contract Act Directory of Occupations"""" should be used to compare job definitions to ensure that duties requested are not performed by a classification already listed in the wage determination. Remember, it is not the job title, but the required tasks that determine whether a class is included in an established wage determination. Conformances may not be used to artificially split, combine, or subdivide classifications listed in the wage determination (See 29 CFR 4.152(c)(1)).
Demolition of Existing Tile Coping and Installation of New Tile Coping
Federal opportunity from City of Missoula. Place of performance: MT. Response deadline: May 07, 2026.
Support routes that fit this solicitation
Market snapshot
Baseline awarded-market signal across all contracting (sample of 400 recent awards; refreshed periodically).
Related hubs & trends
Navigate the lattice: hubs for browsing, trends for pricing signals.
Applicable Wage Determinations
SAM WDOL references matched to this opportunity's location and scope language.
View more for this contract3 more WD matches and 359 more rate previews.↓
Point of Contact
Agency & Office
Description
Bid Postings • Demolition of Existing Tile Coping and Instal Skip to Main Content Search Government Departments Community Business How Do I? Home Bid Postings Print Sign up to receive a text message or email when new bids are added! Bids, RFPs & RFQs Print Bid Title: Demolition of Existing Tile Coping and Installation of New Tile Coping Category: Request for Proposals (RFPs) Status: Open Description: The City of Missoula Parks and Recreation Department (City) is requesting proposals for the demolition and disposal of the existing tile coping and to provide and install a new tile coping at Splash Montana, located at 3001 Bancroft, MT 59801. The City will select one (1) Supplier to provide the equipment, materials, and labor for the project outlined in this request. Scope of Work Facility Description & Project History Splash Montana is an outdoor water park at 3001 Bancroft Street in Missoula, Montana. Original construction was completed in June of 2006. At this time, the Lazy River and Pond pools were opened to the public. The pools are Gunite and plaster pools with various play features. The max depth of each pool is 3 feet 6 inches. The Lazy River pool has tiled edges (horizontal and vertical) that make up about 3000 linear feet of water line. The Pond has about 50 feet of similarly tiled water line. Both pools have areas where a stainless steel gutter system has been installed. Within a few years of construction, the tile in the Lazy River in large spots began to delaminate and pop off. Most of this would occur in the Springtime after the final thaw cycle. We now believe that much of this was caused by the freeze/thaw cycle. Staff would affect simple, quick repairs to ensure the pool shell was safe for the operating season but would have to repeat the process each year with increasingly larger sections of tile. The Lazy River encircles a dirt and vegetation area that is the ground base for the slide tower (the slides deposit riders into the splash down section of the pool). We now believe that melt water and rain would seep into the concrete and Gunite from behind the tiles, degrading the sublayers and eroding the tile thin set. In the spring of 2016, a retile project was completed to address these issues. At this time new tiles were installed using a cement underlayment. However, the probable cause of the tile delamination was not addressed as the issue was not at that time fully understood. Thus, within a year or two, the tile delamination resumed, and the spring quick fixes continued. This current project is to ensure that the correct tile and underlayment is installed to provide proper adhesion and surface protection. Work to be Performed by the Selected Bidder Lazy River: 1. Demolish and remove water line tile coping. The interior and exterior perimeter of the Lazy River measures out to 1000 linear feet. Width of tile, including vertical and horizontal is roughly 3 feet. Currently consisting of 6x6 inch tile and 8x8 inch tile. This will need to be done without damaging the existing plaster walls and pool bottom. 2. Clean and prepare the underlying shell and edges. Repair Gunite and seal cracks where needed. 3. Identify problem areas which may be the result of melt water intrusion from the planter areas and identify low points. Install proper drainage (field tiling or similar) and waterproofing (waterproofing sealant or similar) on the backside of the Gunite to protect the new tile work. 4. Apply a leveling mortar to create the perfect vertical and curved shape (Brown Mud or similar product). This mortar bed should “true up” the pool’s walls. 5. Apply a Waterproof Epoxy as a secondary barrier to protect the Gunite and brown coat by providing a specialized, non-porous membrane (Use Latapoxy 300 Adhesive, an epoxy adhesive provided by Laticrete, or similar). 6. We are open to most coping options, the bid needs to include submittals for the type of product you will use and it should match all the way around the perimeter. Some of the options we are interested in include 1 inch tile with bullnose (or similar product), an epoxy style pour in place (or similar product), or ecoFINISH (or similar product) 7. Install selected coping around the perimeter of the Lazy River Pool (except for the stainless gutter areas). Install new coping on the vertical and horizontal surface to butt into the existing plaster and concrete. Horizontal surface should be slip resistant rated for standing water (wet DCOF of .6 or R12 or approved equal). Grout installed should be epoxy based and rated for underwater use. 8. Chip out delaminating plaster around the entry steps and tile edges; check for structural cracking and repair with epoxy injection. Replaster areas of delamination. 9. Sweep and dispose of all demolition and construction refuse leaving a turnkey environment. Pond Pool: 1. Demolish and remove 60 linear feet of water line tile coping. Currently consisting of 8x8 inch tile. 2. Clean and prepare the underlying shell and edges. Repair Gunite and seal cracks where needed. 3. Apply a leveling mortar to create the perfect vertical and curved shape (Brown Mud or similar product). This mortar bed should “true up” the pool’s walls. 4. Apply a Waterproof Epoxy as a secondary barrier to protect the Gunite and brown coat by providing a specialized, non-porous membrane (Use Latapoxy 300 Adhesive, an epoxy adhesive provided by Laticrete, or similar). 5. We are open to most coping options, the bid needs to include submittals for the type of product you will use, and it should match all the way around the perimeter. Some of the options we are interested in include 1 inch tile with bullnose (or similar product), an epoxy style pour in place (or similar product), or ecoFINISH (or similar product) 6. Install selected coping around the perimeter of the Lazy River Pool (except for the stainless gutter areas). Install new coping on the vertical and horizontal surface to butt into the existing plaster and concrete. Horizontal surface should be slip resistant rated for standing water (wet DCOF of .6 or R12 or approved equal). Grout installed should be epoxy based and rated for underwater use. 7. Sweep and dispose of all demolition and construction refuse leaving a turnkey environment. Publication Date/Time: 5/6/2026 5:00 PM Publication Information: Missoulian on May 7, 14, and 21, 2026 Closing Date/Time: 5/29/2026 4:00 PM Submittal Information: Parks & Recreation Admin. Building, 600 Cregg Ln, Missoula, MT 59801, Attn: Myles Wilson Contact Person: Myles Wilson, 406-830-4145, wilsonm@ci.missoula.mt.us Download Available: See related documents Business Hours: Mon - Fri, 8 am - 4:30 pm Special Requirements: Pre-bid Site Inspection All interested respondents shall have the opportunity to visit the site prior to responding. Facility has established one date for respondents to meet with the Facility contact and to inspect the site. These dates shall be: May 19, 2026, at 1pm at Splash Montana, 3001 Bancroft. Interested respondents shall come prepared to inspect the work site and provide contact information including: Name, business name, phone & text #, and email address with Facility contact during the prebid site inspection. If any alterations are made to the scope of work or if answers to questions asked during either pre-bid site inspection, the Facility contact will share the information with all perspective bidders no later than May 25, 2026. Miscellaneous: Construction is expected to be scheduled and completed within the time frame of the designated closure of the facility. The closure will take place from September 16, 2026, through May 1, 2027. More timeline details will be discussed upon bidder selection. A Liquidated Damages Clause will be included in the Agreement based on calculated revenue loss per day should the project go past the allotted time frame. Related Documents: Splash Montana Tile Coping RFP Bid Package Return To Main Bid Postings Page Live Edit Agendas & Minutes City Council Board & Commission Neighborhoods Bids & Proposals City Budgets FY2026 Adopted Budget FY2025 Adopted Budget FY2024 Adopted Budget FY2023 Adopted Budget FY2022 Adopted Budget FY2021 Adopted Budget FY2020 Adopted Budget FY19 Adopted Budget FY18 Adopted Budget FY17 Adopted Budget FY16 Adopted Budget FY15 Adopted Budget FY14 Adopted Budget FY13 Adopted Budget FY12 Adopted Budget FY11 Adopted Budget Documents FY10 Adopted Budget Documents FY09 Adopted Budget Documents Currents Aquatics Center Maps & Trails Road Report Splash Montana State of the Community City of Missoula Official Twitter Pages City of Missoula Official Instagram Pages Improve our Site Payments Meetings Jobs Parks & Recreation Licenses & Permits Public Safety Contact Us 435 Ryman St. Missoula, MT 59802 Phone: 406-552-6000 | TTY: 406-552-6131 Quick Links Meet Mayor Davis Meeting/Webcasts Zoning Information Flood Protection Information Meet the City Council /QuickLinks.aspx Site Links Home Contact Us Site Map Privacy Policy Accessibility Employee Only Copyright Notices Improve our Site /QuickLinks.aspx FAQs How do I contact a city/county department? Where can I find the answers to my frequently asked questions? /FAQ.aspx GOVERNMENT WEBSITES BY CIVICPLUS® Loading Loading Do Not Show Again Close Arrow Left Arrow Right [] Slideshow Left Arrow Slideshow Right Arrow
Files
Files size/type shown when available.
BidPulsar Analysis
A practical, capture-style breakdown of fit, requirements, risks, and next steps.
FAQ
How do I use the Market Snapshot?
It summarizes awarded-contract behavior for the opportunity’s NAICS and sector, including a recent pricing band (P10–P90), momentum, and composition. Use it as context, not a guarantee.
Is the data live?
The signal updates as new awarded notices enter the system. Always validate the official award and solicitation details on SAM.gov.
What do P10 and P90 mean?
P10 is the 10th percentile award size and P90 is the 90th percentile. Together they describe the typical spread of award values.