The Nonprofit Resource Center for
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Historical Timeline of Job Order Contracting
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Job Order Contracting (JOC) is a project delivery
method utilized by organizations to get numerous, commonly encountered
construction projects done quickly through multi-year contracts for a
wide variety of renovation, repair, and minor construction projects. JOC
is most commonly used to clear deferred maintenance backlog, perform
rapid response for recurring project needs, and construct renovation
projects. |
A Job Order Contract is a competitively bid, fixed price, multi-year construction contract based on established or published unit prices via a unit price book (UPB) or a price list with an adjustment factor (termed coefficient) applied to the unit prices. The unit prices are used to price construction tasks associated with the scope of work. These are often referred to as construction catalogs or automated construction cost databases. The contract is an IDIQ or indefinite delivery indefinite quantity contract for on-call construction services. The contract serves as an umbrella contract with a potential maximum amount of work over a specified term. |
Today, JOC has almost 40-year record of implementation within the United
States Department of Defense. Currently, there are thousands of
successful IDIQ JOC contracts going by the JOC name or SABRE, task order
contracting (TOC), or on-call construction (OCC). The felcible nature
allows entities to modify for highest and best use. |

Featured JOC News |
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