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(1) The purpose of this Procedure is to outline the processes by which the University's purchasing should be done and support the effectiveness and efficiency of the centralised purchasing function. This procedure should be read in conjunction with the Purchasing Policy . (2) This Procedure applies to: (5) A Buyers purchasing decision must consider VU’s Ethical Model of Protecting Country and sustainability. As a general rule, if the Buyer must decide between two or more purchasing options for like goods or services which are similar in price, then the Buyer should choose the supplier that embodies or provides one or more of the following attributes: (6) Suppliers who have received negative publicity or court actions relating to the sustainability attribute should not be engaged. (7) The Buyer should note the justification of their choice in the Purchase Requisition Form. (8) Procurement Policy Exemptions will not be approved on grounds of Sustainability. Alternate quotes must be obtained to demonstrate value to VU. (9) Strategic Procurement processes include mandatory evaluation criteria for Sustainability. (10) Buyers are responsible for undertaking due diligence when engaging with contractors, suppliers, collaborators, business partners and others with whom VU engage so as to minimise the risk of modern slavery in VU’s supply chain. Buyers must acknowledge that they have undertaken due diligence when requesting a Purchase Order. (11) VU Procurement will maintain a database extract of Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) compliant suppliers. If the Buyers supplier is not listed on the database extract then the Buyer must request from the supplier evidence that it complies with the requirements of the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth). This specific requirement is for suppliers who are a subsidiary of a parent company, or is the parent company with a consolidated revenue of $100m or more. (12) While it is the Buyers responsibility to assess the modern slavery risk associated with the purchase, Procurement will undertake the following assessments: (13) The Executive Director Procurement & Finance Operations reserves the right to prohibit the use of suppliers who are charateristic of a modern slavery risk. (14) Purchasing at VU takes place via a controlled system which seeks to maximise efficiency and value for money in the University's spending, leverage large-scale buying power, and maintain a transparent, accountable approach to buying goods and services. (15) Purchasers need to be aware of the following required steps. Each is explained in further detail below. (16) Purchase requisitions (PR) must be raised online for all goods and services, with the exception of: (17) Purchasers must raise a PR on Finance One (F1) or any alternative Procurement approved online portal. All requisitions must be approved by a person with the appropriate financial authority, as detailed in VU's Delegations Framework. (18) Under no circumstances should the University receive goods or services without an approved PR and an approved Purchase Order (PO) unless specifically exempted under clause (7) above. (19) NO PO NO PAY policy applies across the University. (20) The person raising an online PR may not approve the requisition. Similarly, the person approving a new supplier addition may not also be responsible for setting up the financial and banking detail. Segregation of duty must be maintained at all time to ensure Integrity, Respect and Transparency. (21) A PR becomes a PO when the appropriate approval is obtained through the workflow process. An approved PO must be generated prior to the acquisition and delivery of goods and/or services. (22) POs that are not created in accordance with the requirements of the Purchasing Policy will not be approved and will be referred back to the originator. (23) Suppliers are required to quote the relevant PO number on all tax invoices. Organisation units are responsible for validating the F1 PO order details against the PO number quoted on the tax invoice by the supplier. (24) When POs are raised as part of the awarding of a contract, such POs must not be released until the contract or relevant written document has been completed and formally executed in accordance with the University Contract Policy. (25) An open purchase order, also known as a blanket order, is a master purchase order that permits tracking of multiple transactions related to a single vendor and/or agreement. A blanket order must be supported by quotation or contract agreement. (26) Blanket purchase orders can be used when the organisational unit is required to make repeated purchases of specific items over an extended period, usually for periods of at least several months. (27) It is the responsibility of the organisational unit to monitor the orders placed, prices and terms of their blanket purchase order. (28) Blanket orders should only be renewed where there is an ongoing requirement for the goods in question. It is the responsibility of the organisational unit to cancel blanket orders when they expire or goods are no longer required. The organisational unit must review blanket orders for changes prior to renewal. (29) When a PO is approved and generated, the funds are recorded in the Finance System as a commitment. Purchasers must review commitments to ensure they are accurate. If the commitments are no longer required they must be deleted from the Finance system. (30) The Finance Department may terminate any blanket PO that has been inactive for more than 3 months. (31) The Purchased Value requirements table in Purchasing Policy must be strictly complied with. (32) Approved POs cannot be amended without going through appropriate approval process. (33) A Purchase Requisition (PR) becomes a Purchase Order (PO) when a University officer who has the appropriate financial authority approves the requisition. The Procurement Department then reviews the purchasing process to ensure that all required steps have been followed, and the PO can be created. An approved PO must be created prior to the acquisition and delivery of goods and/or services. A workflow in F1 has been implemented to ensure compliance with the Purchasing Policy. (34) The University imposes a standard 45 days payment terms. The payment terms of 45 days is set to provide University with better cash flow and working capital. This payment term is captured in the F1 system as a default payment terms for all suppliers. In the case where a specific agreement in the form of Contract Agreement, the payment terms agreed in the Contract Agreement will be fulfilled. (35) The payment terms in the Purchasing Terms and Conditions, attached to each PO, supersede all payment terms specified unless prior approval is obtained from Procurement or a Contract Agreement following Contract Agreement Policy is signed with a different payment term. (36) The following process flow is implemented for payment of approved invoices (37) Suppliers may be classified as follows: (38) Purchasers must use suppliers in the following hierarchical sequence: (39) The University has a database of suppliers to suit most requirements for the acquisition of goods and services. In order to manage its supplier database, Procurement will actively monitor suppliers and periodically carry out reduction/consolidation activities. (40) The below format can be used as official form of tender to engage supplier/s. (41) The below format cannot be used as an official form of tender to engage supplier. (42) For purchasing by lease or rental, or procurement that does not specify a total price, the basis for estimating the value of the property or services being procured is: (43) Where purchasing is to be conducted in multiple parts with contracts awarded either at the same time or over a period of time, with one or more suppliers, the estimated value of the property or services being procured must include the estimated total maximum value of all of the contracts. (44) Where the total maximum value of a contract over its entire duration cannot be estimated and the purchasing does not fall within an exemption listed, the purchasing must be treated as being valued over the threshold. (45) Purchasing must not be divided into separate parts for the purpose of avoiding a purchasing threshold. The Purchased Value/Threshold can be found in the Purchasing Policy. (46) For the purpose of this procedure: (47) This will provide a step by step guide to identify which process is required based on each threshold spend. (48) There will be cases where judgment is required in deciding whether or not a purchase falls within a particular financial limit, in particular, orders for the purchase of multiple items. (49) The general criterion for deciding whether or not multiple items should be regarded as part of a single order, and therefore a single financial authorisation, is the value of the resultant commitment entered into on behalf of the University. (50) In this context, relevant questions are: (51) If the answer to any of these questions is yes, then the value of that purchase is to be considered as a total to be subject to this policy. (52) Under no circumstances is purchase order splitting is permitted. (53) 'Purchase order splitting' occurs when one purchase transaction is processed on multiple purchase orders in an attempt to make it appear that the various purchase orders are unrelated transactions, when in fact they relate to the same transaction or are a series of related transactions. (54) Order splitting is non-compliance to the Purchasing Policy. (55) Contracted Category/Supplier (57) Procurement will be performing the evaluation of quotations and tenders and provide the analysis to the requestor. (58) When evaluating quotations and tenders the following assessment criteria may include but not limited to: (59) The purchaser is responsible for ensuring that purchases are supported by the appropriate documentation, and that this documentation is forwarded to Procurement. (60) Purchase compliance testing and review will occur periodically. Non-compliance with this policy will be notified to the manager or head of that area. (61) For repeated or deliberate non-compliance with this procedure, the Director, Procurement & Business Operations may recommend to the VP Infrastructure & CIO that sanctions be invoked against the non-complying officer. Sanctions include, but not limited to, the withdrawal of the officer's financial delegation and/or withdrawal of access to the University's authorized Finance system. (62) Purchasers must not be involved in transactions with any suppliers where a conflict of interest, real or perceived, may exist. If, in the normal course of a staff member's duties, they are confronted with a purchasing decision where a conflict of interest may exist with a supplier, the member of staff is to advise their supervisor of the conflict and take no further part in the transaction. (63) Supervisors are to allocate the purchasing decision to another member of staff in such circumstances. The staff member to whom the conflict relates to is to stand down from the purchasing decision and take no further part in the transaction. (64) Examples of conflicts of interest include, but are not limited to: (65) All RFx must be completed through Procurement. Procurement will send RFx invitation to supplier through TenderLink where appropriate. All communications throughout the RFx process will be conducted in Tenderlink. The suppliers will be notified of all communications, clarifications or changes to the tender requirement via Tenderlink. All tender requirements will be specified in the RFx. (66) Tenderlink is used to coordinate the following: (67) All major purchases of $500,000 and greater will require a risk assessment to be performed in accordance with the University's Risk Management Policy and Risk Management Procedure . (68) Example of Purchasing risk profile: (69) In assessing the general principles of probity in relation to the tender process, the following points must be observed: (70) The role of the Probity Advisor is to: (71) The Probity Advisor is appointed by Office of the Director, Portfolio of the Vice Chancellor. The Probity Advisor provides report to the Officer of the Director of Procurement and Business Operations (PBO) and Procurement Authorising Board (PAB). Office of the Director, Portfolio of the Vice Chancellor will provide the report to the Compliance Audit & Risk Committee. (72) The involvement from the Probity Advisor is represented in the diagram.Purchasing Procedure
Section 1 - Summary
Section 2 - Scope
Top of Page
Section 3 - Definitions
Top of PageSection 4 - Policy/Regulation
Top of PageSection 5 - Procedures
Part A - Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
Roles
Responsibility
Procurement Department
RFx process Negotiation and BAFO discussion with suppliers Ensure correct suppliers are used, all quotations and documentations are provided, Purchasing Policy compliance etc.
Purchaser/Originator/Buyer
Raise Purchase Requisitions
Budget Manager/Approver
Approves PRs
Purchaser/Originator/Buyer
Check and approve invoices
Account Payable
Process payment for approved invoices
Part B - Sustainability considerations and purchasing decisions
Part C - Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) and purchasing decisions
Part D - Purchasing Process
Purchase Requisition (PR)
Purchase Orders (PO)
Open or Blanket Purchase Orders
Contracts/Commitment to purchase
Purchase Approval Gate
Payment Terms
Invoice approval and payment
Suppliers
Where an order is placed with a non preferred/approved supplier for goods or services and a preferred/approved supplier is set up for such goods and services, Procurement may, at its discretion, reject such orders and request the originator to use the preferred/approved supplier.Supplier Addition and Modification
Form of RFx
Note: Please consult the Purchasing Policy spend threshold to determine the right RFx process.
Other form of Purchase
Purchase Value requirements
Make transaction through credit card (please refer to Purchasing (Credit) Cards Policy ).
If there is no contracted supplier
Purchase Value of Multiple Items
Quotation Requirements
Evaluating Quotations and Tenders
Compliance
Conflict of Interest Declaration
Part E - Publication of Tender (RFx)
Risk Management
Risk
Likelihood
Consequence
Risk Rating
Mitigating Actions
E.g. Cost increases due to the University's unclear product specifications when the order is original placed with the supplier
Unlikely
Moderate
Medium
Quality staff to develop and review specification requirements.
Probity