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CHAPTER 7

DESIGNING AN OUTCOME-FOCUSED CONTRACT

In the long run, men hit only what they aim at.

- Henry David Thoreau

Public works departments and other "hard" services have used performance-based contracts for years to ensure that private contractors fulfill certain public functions: for example, roads are paved, buildings and grounds are maintained, or bus service is provided (Savas, 1987). For these types of services, it is relatively easy to write contracts with performance standards for service quality (grade of asphalt used, building cleanliness, bus drivers' on-time record), as well as for desired outputs and outcomes (miles of paved road, number of buildings properly maintained, number of passengers carried). Government agencies use these standards to monitor contract compliance and decide whether to award bonuses or assess penalties for contractor performance.

Performance-based contracts have been used much less frequently in the "soft" area of human services due to the difficulty of specifying desired outcomes and because until recently there was no public or government pressure for human service contractors to demonstrate results (DeHoog, 1984). Performance standards in human services contracts typically have addressed the quality of the service (staff/client ratios, staff credentials, timeliness of response) and the level of effort exerted to provide services (number of workshops conducted, number of calls answered, hours of treatment). Under this type of performance contracting, human service agencies often expend a lot of effort micromanaging contractors' operations-specifying in great detail how they should provide services, then checking to see that they do. Yet, because they do not track outcomes, no one can tell whether the services really had positive effects on people's lives.

Fortunately, child support enforcement, unlike many human services, has a number of measurable outputs and outcomes that can be specified in a contract. Many of these were identified during the pilot of the Government Performance and Results Act by the federal Office of Child Support Enforcement.

The bottom line, of course, for child support privatization contracts in general is increased collections. Many intermediate outcomes that contribute to this overall outcome can also be tracked-for example, the rate of paternity establishment, the percentage of the caseload with support orders, and the percentage of parents with support orders who pay support. Performance-based contracts can be developed that focus on even finer levels of outcomes within each of these areas, such as the percentage of non-custodial parents located or the amount of collections obtained through wage withholding.

This chapter discusses four contracting issues of concern to the Title IV-D agency and its contractors:

  • selecting outcome-focused performance measures for the contract;
  • designing a payment and incentive system;
  • balancing risks between the agency and the contractor; and
  • developing contingency plans to prevent disruption of services.



Step 8: Design a Performance-based Contract to Improve Outcomes

SELECTING PERFORMANCE MEASURES

The key to managing a contract-and, perhaps more importantly, to developing a successful partnership with the contractor-is to have a system for measuring results (Brizius and Campbell, 1991). With outcome and performance data in hand, the contract manager and the contractor can jointly determine how well the privatized operation is working and pinpoint areas that need improvement. Part of the contract negotiations should include deciding which outcomes will be tracked, how they will be measured, and how frequently the results will be reviewed.

Types of Performance Measures

Most government programs that have established outcome and performance measurement systems have tried to incorporate the five types of information recommended by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB, 1990). These are:

1. Input indicators-Inputs are (1) the customers served by a program and (2) the resources expended on a program, such as the amount of money spent or the total number of staff needed to deliver a service.

2. Output indicators-These report the quantity of products or units of service provided to a service population.

3. Outcome indicators-These measures report the results of programs and services.

4. Efficiency and cost-effectiveness indicators-These measure the cost per unit of an output or outcome.

5. Explanatory information-This is information on factors affecting an organization's performance. These factors might be outside the control of the organization or substantially within its control.

In addition to these five recommended types of information, performance measurement systems also frequently track and report another type of indicator:

6. Process indicators-These measure how well the program operates in terms of responsiveness to customers or the quality of the service provided.

By requiring contractors to report these six types of information, contract monitors can determine what the contractor is accomplishing, how efficiently it is done, how cost-effective the service is, and what factors affect efficiency, costs, and performance.

Performance Indicators for Child Support Enforcement Services
Each contract will have its own unique set of performance indicators depending on the outcomes to be measured and the level of detail needed to monitor and manage the contract. It is generally recommended that the number of measures be kept at the minimum level needed to adequately monitor the contract, thereby avoiding unnecessary reporting burdens for the contractor. The following discussion uses the five child support enforcement components discussed in Chapter 4 (see Figure 4-1) to illustrate the types of measures that could be specified in a contract.

Primary Performance Measures

Table 7-1 lists the primary performance measures needed to indicate how well a local child support enforcement program is working. These are the "bottom-line" indicators that can be used to judge and compare both privatized and publicly operated child support programs. Most of these measures are already used by Title IV-D agencies and the federal government to gauge program performance at the state and local levels. In addition, most are also included in the set of performance measures recommended by the Office of Child Support Enforcement's state-federal workgroup on performance measures.

In the performance measurement arena, true program outcomes-that is, the real changes in people's lives-are seldom measured directly due to the difficulty and expense involved in gathering such data. Child support enforcement is no exception. Rather than directly measure the outcomes for non-custodial parents, custodial parents, and children, the outcome indicators in Table 7-1 are proxy measures for the real thing. It is assumed that if these rates improve more children will have "regular, uninterrupted financial and medical support" throughout their youth.


Table 7-1

PRIMARY PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR CHILD SUPPORT PROGRAMS


Input Indicators

Outcome Indicators

Efficiency Indicators

Customers
Total number of cases

Number and percent of cases by type:

Public Asst. (PA)

Foster Care

Medical Asst. Only

Non-Public Asst. (NPA)

Incoming Interstate

Expenditures
Payments to contractor

CRA contract costs

Total dollar amount collected in IV-D casesa

IV-D collection rate for current supporta

Percentage of IV-D cases with orders where some child support is paida

IV-D collection rate for arrearagesa

Percentage of IV-D cases where medical coverage is provided as ordereda

Survey of both parents' satisfaction with the IV-D programa

Total dollars collected per $1 of expenditurea

Ratio of PA case dollars collected to total expenditures

Ratio of NPA case dollars collected to total expenditures

aMeasures recommended by the federal Office of Child Support Enforcement's performance measures workgroup

When looking at the contractor's bottom-line performance-usually on an annual or quarterly basis-it is not necessary to examine process or output indicators. Outcome and overall cost-effectiveness indicators are sufficient to tell whether the contractor is doing a poor, adequate, or better than average job. In reporting these results, however, the contractor should include some explanatory information regarding the level of performance, particularly if it is below average. The contractor should briefly describe the factors that have inhibited performance, note which ones are within the contractor's control to correct, and advance a plan for overcoming these obstacles.

Performance Measures for Five Service Components

Table 7-2 lists input, process, output, and (mostly intermediate) outcome measures for the five service components discussed previously: intake/locate, establishment, enforcement, collection, and disbursement. The Title IV-D agency could use these measures to examine a contractor's performance and quality of service in greater detail than is possible just using the primary performance measures presented in Table 7-1.

The purpose of collecting this information is twofold. First, much of it is already required for federal reporting. This is particularly true of the many process indicators. The second reason for collecting (or having the contractor report) this information is to help troubleshoot problems and promote continuous improvement. By jointly reviewing program performance on a quarterly or monthly basis using these indicators, the contract manager and contractor can catch problems early, identify potential solutions, and ensure that the program is moving in the right direction. As with the primary indicators, the main focus should be on the outcomes for each component rather than on the process or output measures.

Table 7-2 does not include efficiency indicators. These are usually expressed as a ratio of outputs to inputs (resources); for example, the average number of non-custodial parents located per locator staff position each month or the average amount of collections per agent. Efficiency indicators can be easily calculated once the amount of staff resources for each component is known. In general, however, this information is more useful to the contractor for managing the program than to the Title IV-D agency for overseeing the contract. In a privatized system, the agency should be able to focus on the outcomes and let the contractor worry about the details.


Table 7-2

PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR
FIVE CHILD SUPPORT SERVICE COMPONENTS

1. CONDUCT INTAKE
Input Indicators Process Indicators Output Indicators Outcome Indicators

 Number of PA referrals (includes Foster Care, etc.)

Number of NPA applications

Percent of IV-D applications provided on day requested or within five working days if requested by phone or maila

Percent of cases with case record established within three working days of receiving a referral or applicationa

Percent of cases with intake completed within 20 days of case opening, including referrals for location attempts if necessarya

Percent of cases with `service of process completed within 90 days of location of the non-custodial parent or repeated quarterly if initially unsuccessfula

Percent of PA referrals with intake interview completed within x days

Percent of PA referrals sanctioned for non-cooperation

Number of intake interviews completed (PA and NPA)

Number of cases opened as civil complaints

Number of cases opened as paternity petitions

Number of non-custodial parents located

Number of establishment interviews scheduled

Percent of PA referrals in which intake was completed and the case referred to establishment

Percent of NPA applications in which intake was completed and the case referred to establishment

Percent of non-custodial parents located and process of service completed

2. ESTABLISH OBLIGATION
Input Indicators Process Indicators Output Indicators Outcome Indicators

Number of cases sent to establishment unit for paternity establishment

Number of cases sent to establishment unit for support order establishment

Percent of cases in which paternity was established within one year of successful service of process or within one year of the child reaching six months of age, whichever comes firsta

Percent of cases in which a support order was established or service of process completed within 90 days of location of the non-custodial parent or of establishing paternitya

Percent of cases in which all appropriate location services were used within 75 days, including State Parent Locator Service and Federal Parent Locator Servicea

Percent of cases in which initial locate effort was unsuccessful and location efforts were repeated quarterly or when new locate information was receiveda

Number of establishment hearings completed

Number of paternities acknowledged

Number of genetic tests conducted to establish paternity

Number of paternities established through court hearings

Number of consent orders negotiated by child support staff and approved by court

Number of support orders established through court hearings

Number of wage withholding orders approved by court

Percent of children in the IV-D caseload with paternity resolvedb

Percent of children in the IV-D caseload born out of wedlock for whom paternity has been established or acknowledgedb

Percent of IV-D cases with support ordersb

Percent of IV-D cases with medical support ordersb

3. MONITOR CASE AND ENFORCE ORDER
Input Indicators Process Indicators Output Indicators Outcome Indicators

Number of new and open cases with support orders

Number of customer requests for information about case status

Number of requests from custodial parent for case review and adjustment

Number of requests from non-custodial parent for case review and adjustment

Number of PA cases with status or grant amount changes

Number of cases referred to enforcement unit because non-custodial parent is in arrears

Percent of PA cases reviewed at least every three years

Percent of cases with criminal orders reviewed at least every three years to renew court order

Percent of NPA cases reviewed promptly upon request of either party

Percent of delinquent cases with enforcement actions taken within time frames required by regulations

Percent of cases closed in accordance with regulations regarding closure criteria and time frames

Number of PA cases reviewed as scheduled or as a result of change in status

Number of cases reviewed at customer's request (PA and NPA)

Number of cases modified, adjusted, or closed as a result of review

Number of customer service inquiries answered

Number of non-custodial parents

re-located if necessary

Number of delinquent cases in which action is taken to collect support (intercepts, contempt hearings, etc.)

Number of employers complying with wage withholding requirements

Percent of IV-D cases with appropriate and up-to-date support ordersb

Percent of customers (custodial and non-custodial parents) who are aware of case status and their

rights and obligations

Percent of cases in which location and income status of both parents is known

Percent of employers in compliance with wage withholding requirements

4. COLLECT PAYMENTS
Input Indicators Process Indicators Output Indicators Outcome Indicators

Number of IV-D cases with a support order

Number of IV-D cases with a medical support order

Procedures established for receipts processing and documenting payments

Procedures established to safeguard payments and deposit receipts in bank account within 24 hours as required by state regulations

Generally accepted accounting procedures followed in managing fiscal operations

Percent of cases in which collections are made through wage withholding

Percent of cases in which other regular payment methods are used to collect payments

Percent of cases in which payments are collected by other states

Percent of cases in which intercepts and other methods are used to collect payments

Percent of cases in which payments are for other states

Dollar amount of collections from each method

Percent of cases in which child is covered under non-custodial parent's medical insurance

Total dollar amount collected in

IV-D casesb

IV-D collection rate for current supportb

Percentage of IV-D cases with orders where some child support is paidb

IV-D collection rate for arrearagesb

Breakdown of above statistics by PA and NPA cases

Percentage of IV-D cases where medical coverage is provided as orderedb

5. DISBURSE PAYMENTS
Input Indicators Process Indicators Output Indicators Outcome Indicators

Dollar amounts collected for payments to:

- NPA clients

- Offset public assistance costs

- Other states

Percent of checks distributed on same day as received

Manual checks for refunds to payors issued within time frames established by IV-D

Generally accepted accounting procedures followed in managing fiscal operations

Number and amount of transfers from contractor's bank to IV-D bank accounts for check preparation

Number of EBTS (IV-D bank cards) issued to NPA clients to gain access to payments through bank machines

Number of manual checks cut to refund payors or for emergency releases to clients

Total dollar amount of payments distributed to NPA clients

Total dollar amount of payments transferred for PA recovery, tax offset fees, etc.

Total dollar amount transferred to other states under interstate agreement

aMeasures currently used to determine compliance with federal standards

bMeasures recommended by the federal Office of Child Support Enforcement's performance measures workgroup

System Outcomes

In addition to delivering services, contractors must also do a number of other things to ensure that services are delivered efficiently and effectively. These include organizing the office, hiring and training staff, upgrading automated systems, and developing cooperative relationships with partnering agencies. Early in the contract, the contractor will probably expend a lot of time and resources on these functions, which do not have an immediate payoff in service productivity but will produce benefits later. It is usually sufficient to have the contractor indicate progress on these activities through monthly or quarterly narrative reports.

For some high-priority areas-such as hiring staff, training, and automation-the Title IV-D agency may want the contractor to develop implementation plans with measurable goals or deliverables. The plans should be sufficiently detailed so the agency can monitor progress. Outcome indicators for these plans might include measures such as the percentage of staff trained by a certain date, the number of automated case records converted to a new format, or the percentage of personal computers linked to a local area network.

Recommended Measures

At a minimum, the following elements should be considered for inclusion in the performance measurement system:

  • measures needed to determine compliance with current state and federal standards for case processing;
  • outcome measures appropriate to the service privatized that are recommended by the Office of Child Support Enforcement's state-federal work group on performance measures (see Table 7-2);
  • state-specific measures already used to assess outcomes and performance in other jurisdictions;
  • a customer satisfaction survey of both custodial and non-custodial parents;
  • a satisfaction survey to be administered to other agencies that work with the contractor, as well as one administered to the contractor to rate satisfaction with those agencies (including the Title IV-D agency).

PAYMENT AND INCENTIVE SYSTEMS

Objectives of a Payment and Incentive System for Child Support Enforcement

The payment and incentive system should be designed to achieve three objectives. First, the system should promote an overall increase in the outcomes of interest-for example, collections. Second, the system should motivate the contractor to increase performance on critical factors that affect the outcome (parent locations, wage withholding orders, etc.) and for which the federal government holds the state accountable (number of days to locate, etc.). Third, the system should prompt the contractor to provide high-quality services at a reasonable cost to the state. Using the performance measures described in the previous section, Title IV-D agency can determine whether the contractor achieves these objectives.

In addition, the payment and incentive system should be designed so that it is-

  • fair to contractors, allowing them to make a reasonable profit;
  • no more expensive to the taxpayer than a publicly run program;
  • fairly easy to understand and operate-not encumbered by complex payment formulas or excessive reporting requirements;
  • resistant to "gaming," cheating, or abuse by contractors;
  • prompt in its payments to contractors; and
  • effective in maximizing the potential for the contractor to meet or exceed performance targets.

How States Have Structured Payments and Incentives

Contracts privatizing child support enforcement are seldom like other human services contracts, which are usually fixed-fee or cost-reimbursement contracts. Typical child support enforcement contracts for collections and for full-service privatization use a contingency fee mechanism in which the contractor is paid a percentage of total child support collections. Of the 20 full-service contracts we reviewed from eleven states, 14 used this method to reimburse contractors. The prevalence of this payment mechanism may owe to the fact that many of the initial efforts to privatize child support services focused on the collection of arrearages. Most firms that received these collections contracts work on a contingency fee basis. Over time, contractors added other child support enforcement functions, but the basic payment model remained unchanged.

Table 7-3 summarizes the payment terms for the full-service contracts we reviewed. Three of the states (six contracts) do not use the percentage-of-collections method of payment. Oklahoma uses a standard cost-reimbursement type contract because the contractors-two community action agencies-are prohibited as tax-exempt organizations from earning a profit. Wyoming has one contract in a rural district that is a fixed-fee contract that also offers the contractor an 8 percent bonus for all collections above a certain target. The three contracts in Arkansas are unique in that they are fixed-fee contracts that also offer a package of incentives for exceeding performance targets in a number of enforcement areas. Each of these payment and incentive models are discussed in detail in the following sections.

Percentage-of-Collections Models

Basic Model

Conceptually and administratively, this model is the simplest because it focuses almost exclusively on the main indicator of program outcome-collections. Beyond requiring contractors to comply with federal performance standards for timeliness and appropriate action on cases, Title IV-D agencies using this method generally have not embellished their contracts with additional incentives or bonuses. They do not, for example, pay more for improvements in intermediate outcomes such as the establishment of support orders, paternity establishments, or improved customer service. The logic behind this approach is that in order to improve the collection rate and make more profit the contractor will improve performance on these intermediate outcomes anyway. Thus, the contractor is rewarded for producing the ultimate result, not for taking the steps necessary to get there.



Table 7-3

PAYMENT TERMS FOR FULL-PRIVATIZATION CONTRACTS

(Annual Percentage-of-Collections Rate Unless Noted)
 Contracts Based on Percentage of Collections
State Year One Year Two Year Three Year Four Year Five
Arizona

32

28

26

24

-

Colorado

 19

 15

 13

 11

 10

Georgia a,b

11.5

10.75 average across all years

10

MD-Urbanc

22.95

21.95

20.95

20.95

-

MD-Ruralc

 9.67

9.67

9.67

9.67

-

Mississippid

Fixed fee

40.1

36.6

32.6

27.6

Nebraska

15

14.5

 14

13.5

13

TN-Dist 10a

 13.5

 13.5

 13.5

 13.5

 13.5

TN-Dist 7a

16

16

16

16

16

TN-Dist 29a

19

17

16

15.5

15

TN-Dist 27a

17

16

15

14.5

14

TN-Dist 20a

12

11

11

10.5

10.5

Virginiae

11.45

10.5

10.45

10

9.95

WY- Dist 1,2,3a

17.5

17

16.5

16

-

 Contracts Based on Other Payment Methods

Arkansas

3 Contracts

Fixed fee; reimbursable expenses; performance incentives for PA case obligation percentage, collections, collection/cost ratio
Oklahoma Cost reimbursement for two community action agencies
WY-Dist 8,9 Fixed fee plus 8% of collections over targeted amount

aState performs payment processing

bNPA cases only

cPilot program; rate capped by pre-privatization cost per dollar collected

dVendor able to negotiate high rate due to lack of competition in bidding process

eRate reduced 1 percentage point for each $500,000 below annual collections goal


The percentage payment amount for the contract is established through the RFP process. The bidder is usually required to indicate the percentage of reimbursement sought for each contract year. The percentage can be the same from year to year or variable. An exception is Mississippi, which used a fixed fee for the first 15 months of the contract before switching to a straight percentage-of-collections payment method. The bidder with the lowest overall percentage generally wins the contract.

As shown in Table 7-3, the average first-year reimbursement percentage is around 15 to 16 percent when the extremely high and low contract percentages are excluded from the calculation. The average percentage for the final contract year is around 13 percent. Generally, the contracts for rural areas (Arizona, Wyoming, and all but District 20 in Tennessee) have higher reimbursement percentage rates than in the more urban areas. This is due to economies of scale that can be achieved in the larger districts. The exception to this trend is found in the two Maryland contracts, where the maximum payment level is capped by legislation to prevent the costs of privatized services from exceeding the cost per dollar collected when services were provided by public employees. Since the rural office had been more cost-effective than the urban office, the reimbursement rate was capped at a lower level.

Contract Length

Most percentage-of-collections contracts for full privatization are for five years including two or three one-year renewal options. Due to the typically high start-up costs for these programs, the minimum contract length preferred by private contractors is three years. This helps ensure that the contractor will make a profit over the life of the contract, if not during the first year or two. It is also typical for contractors to receive a higher percentage rate on collections during the first year of the contract and for the reimbursement percentage to decline over time. This arrangement helps the contractor defray start-up costs and, in some instances, may ensure that the contractor remains solvent. Tennessee initially let contracts in which the payment percentage was the same for each year, but switched to a declining percentage rate in later contracts.

Payment

Payment under this type of contract is straightforward. Each month the contractor reports to the state the total amount of child support collected for all cases, and the state reimburses the contractor at the current contract rate.

Some contracts include a cap on the state's maximum liability for payments to the contractor, which is often a requirement under state procurement regulations. If a contractor is particularly productive, the contract must be amended to allow payment for the extra collections.

Nebraska has capped the amount it will pay for non-public assistance (NPA) collections by tying reimbursement to the collection amounts for public assistance (PA) cases. For every $5 collected for NPA cases, the contractor must collect $1 for PA cases. If NPA collections exceed PA collections by more than the 5:1 ratio, the contractor simply is not paid for the additional NPA collections. The purpose of this provision is to ensure that the contractor works the PA cases. The contractor has challenged the provision as being antithetical to welfare reform and counterproductive to program goals in the areas of paternity and support order establishment. The contractor argues it is penalized for doing a good job in these areas when the client leaves welfare as a result.

Penalties

Nearly all of the contracts include penalties in the form of reimbursement reductions if the contractor is not in compliance with federal case processing standards. These are monitored though semiannual audits of a representative sample of cases. Most states require the contractor to submit a corrective action plan within 30 to 60 days if an audit reveals deficiencies. If the contractor fails to submit a plan on time, 10 percent of each subsequent monthly payment is withheld until the plan is submitted. Further penalties may accrue when the contractor fails to correct deficiencies within the corrective action period (15 percent in the first month with an additional 10 percent for each month the deficiencies persist). Some states require contractors to pay a proportionate share of penalties assessed against the state as a result of deficiencies found through federal audits.

Virginia, in addition to requiring compliance with state and federal standards, also requires the contractor to maintain a cost-effectiveness ratio of 1.25 to 1 (total annual collections for PA cases to annual privatization contract costs). If the contractor fails to maintain this ratio, a corrective action plan is required as described above with the same penalties imposed if necessary. The contractor also gave the state an unsolicited performance guarantee that total collections would increase by a minimum of 10 percent for each year of the five-year contract. The contractor promised to reduce its annual percentage fee by 1 percent for each $500,000 it was below the targeted amount in a contract year.

Maryland set minimum performance standards that increase each contract year for the following outcomes: PA collections, NPA collections, paternity establishment, cases with support orders, cases in which support is paid, and the ratio of child support collected to support due. (The state tracks performance in all other jurisdictions on these standards as well.) Collection amounts are required to increase at least 10 percent per year in the privatized jurisdictions for both PA and NPA cases. Failure to meet any of the performance standards, which are monitored quarterly, requires corrective action and the usual application of penalties if necessary. The state has the option to refund some or all of an assessed penalty if the contract has been brought into compliance.

Fixed Fee Plus Incentives

The states of Arkansas and Wyoming have contracted for full privatization of child support enforcement services in small- to medium-sized judicial districts through contracts that pay the contractor a fixed fee plus incentive payments for exceeding certain performance targets.

Wyoming

The Wyoming model is the simpler of the two. A small, locally based contractor operates a fully privatized child support program in two sparsely populated rural districts in the state. Because the contractor has relatively high costs associated with serving a caseload of less than 6,000 in a large geographic area, the state pays the contractor a fixed fee. In addition, the contractor can earn an 8 percent reimbursement on any collections in excess of $2.5 million for the contract year.

The contractor bills the state monthly and is subject to the same types of penalties as described above for not meeting a 75 percent compliance rate on federal standards for timeliness and appropriateness of case actions.

Arkansas

The state has three full-service contracts in place in which private contractors receive a fixed fee and are reimbursed for 100 percent of expenses up to a set amount. In an effort to improve performance in all stages of enforcement, child support officials in Arkansas implemented a payment system that includes a variety of outcome-based incentives and performance bonuses.

Contractors are able to earn incentives and bonuses for the following:

  • PA collections - 6 percent incentive payment on all PA collections paid to the state to offset public assistance costs.
  • NPA collections - 6 percent incentive payment on NPA collections (capped at 115 percent of PA incentive).
  • Cost-efficiency - bonus incentive earned when the ratio of PA collections to total expenses is:

- between 1.00 to 1.24 (1% bonus on PA collections)

- between 1.25 to 1.49 (2% bonus)

- 1.50 or above (3% bonus)

  • Support order percentage for PA cases* - 1% bonus incentive on PA collections when the percentage of PA cases with support orders exceeds the state average.
  • Paying PA cases* - 1 percent bonus incentive on PA collections when the percentage of PA cases for which some child support is paid exceeds the state average.
  • Collections on current support owed in PA cases* - 1 percent bonus incentive on PA collections when the percentage of collections on current support owed in PA cases exceeds the state average.
  • Paternity establishment - $25 bonus for each order obtained establishing paternity on a child or children.
  • Support orders - $25 bonus for each order obtained resulting in the initial award of child support.

The contractor reports monthly on the PA and NPA collection amounts and the cost of service. Bonuses and incentives are calculated each month based on these data and the state averages for that month for the three cases marked with an asterisk above. Contractors are reimbursed for their costs monthly and paid earned bonuses and incentives quarterly.

If a contractor is below the state average on any of the cases with asterisks at the end of a quarter, a 1 percent reduction on reimbursements is imposed for the next three months. This penalty is not imposed if the contractor has shown an improvement of 3 percent or more during the quarter on any indicators that were also below the state average at the end of the previous quarter.

Contractors must achieve a 75 percent compliance rate on federal performance standards, as well as meeting standards for delivering child support enforcement services "in a professional and courteous manner which demonstrates sensitivity to customers and the public." The state uses a combination of contractor- and state-maintained complaint and resolution logs, case records, and client survey instruments to assess the quality of customer service. Unlike the 10 percent and 15 percent reimbursement penalties other states assess for being out of compliance, Arkansas does not assess penalties. The contractor must, however, submit a corrective action plan within 15 days and demonstrate substantial improvements within nine months or the contract is terminated.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Various Payment Models

Each of the payment and incentive models described above has advantages and disadvantages that should be considered carefully when developing a payment system for a full-service contract. Table 7-4 summarizes the pros and cons for each model from the perspective of the Title IV-D agency.


Table 7-4

ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF CURRENT PAYMENT MODELS
FOR FULL-SERVICE PRIVATIZATION CONTRACTS

Model Advantages Disadvantages

Standard Percent of Collections

(AZ, CO, GA, MS, TN, WY)

Contractor paid percentage of total collections each month

State may set cap on maximum amount of contractor payments

Penalties for failure to comply with federal and state performance standards

Contractor motivated to increase total collections

Contractor accountable for meeting federal and state performance standards

Ease of administration - payment structure straight-forward

Major contractors already familiar with this method

Lower percentage payment rate possible in urban areas due to economies of scale

Does not emphasize PA collections; contractor tempted to focus on easier NPA cases

Achievements in intermediate outcomes not directly rewarded or penalized

Does not address quality of customer service directly

Higher percentage payment rate may be necessary in rural areas

Cap on total payments may inhibit productivity if set too low; may exceed Title IV-D agency's budget if uncapped and collections soar

Only companies with deep pockets can afford the risk

Virginia Model

Same as above with these enhancements:

Contractor required to maintain cost-effectiveness ratio (PA collections to total contract costs) of 1.25 to 1

Contractor guarantees 10% annual growth in collections

Contractor's payment percentage reduced if doesn't meet collections target

Same as above with these exceptions:

Keeps contractor focused on PA collections

Contractor highly motivated to improve performance each year

Same as above (except it does emphasize PA cases)

Cost-effectiveness ratio may be hard to maintain if welfare rolls drop; ratio creates perverse incentive to not notify welfare office of support payments

Maryland Model

Same as Standard Model with these enhancements:

Contractor sets total annual collection target at or above a state-set minimum that increases 10% per year

PA and NPA collection goals

Penalties for failure to meet collection goals and minimum performance standards for: paternity and support order establishment, paying cases, and collections on amount due

Penalties refundable if corrective action taken

Cost per dollar collected capped at pre-privatization rate

Contractor motivated to increase both PA and NPA collections each year

Contractor accountable for meeting outcome-related performance standards as well as federal and state case processing standards

Ease of administration - payment structure straight-forward

Lower percentage payment rate possible in urban areas due to economies of scale

Extra incentive to take corrective actions

Cost per dollar collected capped without restricting total amount contractor may earn

Does not address quality of customer service directly

Higher percentage payment rate may be necessary in rural areas

Costs may exceed Title IV-D agency's budget if collections soar

Only companies with deep pockets can afford the risk

Wyoming Rural Model

Contractor paid fixed fee plus percentage of collections over targeted amount

Penalties for failure to comply with federal and state performance standards

Contractor motivated to exceed collections target if percentage reimbursement set sufficiently high

Contractor accountable for meeting federal and state performance standards

Ease of administration - payment structure straight-forward

Attractive to small contractors

Does not emphasize PA collections

Achievements for intermediate outcomes not directly rewarded or penalized

Does not address quality of customer service directly

Contractor paid same base amount even if collections goals not met

Arkansas Model

Contractor paid fixed fee and can earn incentive payments for meeting various performance goals

Cash bonuses for paternity and support order establishments

NPA incentive payment capped at 115% of PA incentive paid

Penalties for being below state averages on: percent with support orders, percent of paying cases, and percent of current obligations paid for PA cases

Corrective action plans (but no immediate penalties) required if not in compliance with federal and state performance standards, including customer service

Keeps contractor clearly focused on PA cases

Contractor incentives similar to current federal incentives for state

Achievements for intermediate outcomes directly rewarded or penalized - can help bring poor performing districts up to par

Addresses quality of customer service directly

Attractive to small contractors in rural areas

Complex payment formula - hard for state and contractor to anticipate payment amount

Difficult to reward contractors in poor performing districts for improvements if state averages also move upward

Assumes intermediate outcomes would not improve without incentives; may pay contractor extra for goals that would have been achieved anyway

Federal incentive program could change before contract period over


Other Models to Consider

In deciding on a payment and incentive system for a contract, the Title IV-D agency is determining the degree of financial risk it will assume and the how much will be borne by the contractor. A contingency-based contract in which payment is tied solely to performance is quite risky for a contractor. The firm can lose a lot of money-or it can reap windfall profits. Either way there are elements of risk to the Title IV-D agency as well. If the contractor is losing money, it probably means that service quality is suffering, results are below par, and the agency will soon be looking for a new contractor. If the contractor makes a considerable profit, the agency is accused by privatization opponents of wasting taxpayer money or "giving away the store."

Contractors in our focus groups pointed out other financial risks that are built into some current contingency-based contracts:

Indeterminate level of effort. One risk occurs when the contractor is required to perform a task for which the level of effort is unknown-for example, converting case records to the format required by the new statewide automated system or initiating a job referral program for non-custodial parents. If the RFP does not clearly specify the level of effort required for such tasks and the contractor seriously underestimates the amount of work involved, the firm can lose money.

Unknown nature of workload. Caseload statistics provided by child support enforcement agencies in their RFPs are sometimes inaccurate. This is particularly problematic for contractors who-after committing to the contract-receive fewer cases than anticipated or find that the cases are predominantly of a type that requires extra effort to work.

Dependence on partnering agencies. Other risks arise from the contractor's depending on other agencies to fulfill their responsibilities. When the social service agency, for example, does not refer the expected number of PA cases to a contractor, it severely hampers the contractor's ability to meet collection goals for this population. The financial risk of such an occurrence is exacerbated when the incentives paid for NPA collections are capped in relation to PA collections.
To help reduce some of these risks, contractors suggested consideration of several alternative models:

Mixed Model

Under this model, core child support enforcement services are reimbursed on a contingency basis. Payment for other functions, such as case conversions or establishing a job referral program, are based on a fixed-fee contract or other negotiated agreement that can be amended or adjusted as the scope of work becomes more clearly defined.

Multiple Contingency Fees

The Title IV-D agency and the contractor negotiate one contingency fee for "regular" cases and a higher fee for cases that require significantly more effort to work. This approach helps reduce risk when there are no reliable statistics to predict the mix of cases the contractor will receive. It also provides an incentive for the contractor to tackle harder cases and helps prevent "creaming."

Partial Cost Reimbursement Plus Incentives

In this model, the contractor is paid a portion of its costs, say 80 percent, and an additional incentive payment based on results obtained. This way, the contractor is assured of recouping most of its costs and is motivated to perform as well as possible.

Fixed Contingency Fee Plus Competitive Incentives

This model is applicable to services such as collections when there are two or three providers under contract and work can be distributed among them equally (same mix of NPA and PA cases, equivalent amount of arrearages, etc.). The Title IV-D agency sets a fixed contingency fee-for example, 25 percent for a collections contract-that is paid to all contractors. The top performer each quarter receives a 2 percentage point bonus, and the second-place performer a 1 percent bonus. This method uses competition among providers to spur superior performance rather than tying incentives to performance targets.

Finally, regardless of the model considered, contractors in the focus group agreed that incentives work better than penalties in motivating private sector firms to excel.

Contracting and Federal Incentive Funding

In designing a payment and incentive system, the Title IV-D agency must take into account the impending changes in the federal incentive funding formulas for child support enforcement. The welfare reform act required the Secretary of Health and Human Services, in consultation with the directors of the state child support enforcement programs, to recommend to Congress a new incentive funding system to be based on program performance. In February 1997, an incentive funding work group composed of federal and state officials recommended that the current incentive system be modified to provide incentive payments to states based upon state performance on five measures (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1997). The recommended measures are:

  • establishment of paternities,
  • establishment of child support orders,
  • collections on current child support due,
  • collection on past child support due (arrears), and
  • cost effectiveness.

Under the proposed plan, each state will receive a separate incentive payment for each of the five measures that meets or exceeds a minimum standard, with better performance netting larger payments. The state can receive a maximum incentive payment for each measure of either .75 percent or 1 percent of its child support collections depending on the particular measure. Unlike the current incentive system, the state can count all of its collections for NPA cases when computing its "collections base" for calculating these incentives. The plan, however, recommends that collections for current and former PA cases be given twice the weight of NPA collections when the collections base is computed. In this way, states still have a strong incentive to work PA cases.

In light of these proposed changes, which could take effect in fiscal year 2000, Title IV-D directors will want to ensure that privatization contracts produce results that help the state earn incentive payments. They should consider setting performance standards for outcomes related to the five proposed measures as Maryland did for its full-service pilots.

USING THE CONTRACT TO BALANCE RISKS

Public officials are often reluctant to contract out a service for fear that the contractor will fail to perform adequately or will fail completely, resulting in an interruption of service. One method of reducing public risk is to include provisions in the contract that shift the risk of failure to the contractor. Title IV-D agencies have employed a variety of commonly used contract provisions to reduce their risk as well as creating some special provisions unique to child support enforcement.

Provisions Commonly Included to Reduce Public Risk

Specific provisions can be added to the contract to guarantee performance or to protect the agency against changes in circumstances after the contract is signed:

Performance bonds. Posted by the contractor, performance bonds are commonly required to guard against service interruption due to bankruptcy or other factors. Bonds vary according to the degree of difficulty that would be imposed by service failure and can range from 10 percent to 100 percent of the contract's value. Sometimes interruption insurance is available for purchase by the agency or contractor for the same purpose.

In child support enforcement, a number of agencies have required performance bonds for full-service contracts. Lately, however, some agencies have reduced the amount of bonds they require or eschewed the requirement altogether. Using performance bonds increases the price of the contract and may preclude smaller companies from bidding since they have to put the entire amount up in cash. An alternative approach is to withhold 10 percent of the contract funds until the end of the contract year to be released if performance is acceptable.

Reduced or suspended payments. The agency may reserve the right to reduce or suspend payments to the contractor for failure to meet standards. This is a common provision in child support enforcement contracts.

Power to terminate the contract. Privatized child support enforcement programs are vulnerable to changes in annual federal or state appropriations. The agency can protect itself by reserving the right to terminate the contract without penalty if funding is radically reduced or eliminated.

Power to change service level. The agency may also want to reserve the right to increase or decrease the level of service provided by the contractor, depending on changes in funding, policy direction, or public need.

Short-term contract/frequent rebidding. By keeping the contract period short, the agency is able to quickly replace a poor-performing contractor. This has the additional advantage of promoting competition, since other vendors are aware that the service is frequently rebid. Short-term contracts are more expensive, however, because of recurrent costs associated with the bidding and start-up. Also, contractors need to recoup their capital investments in a shorter period.

Unilateral extension. The agency reserves the right to extend the contract unilaterally for a given period of time at the current pricing structure. This technique is used to counteract "low-balling" in which a firm obtains a contract with an artificially low bid with the intention of raising its price on subsequent contracts when the agency is dependent on that contractor. The extension period allows the agency to seek additional contractors.

Special Provisions of Child Support Enforcement Contracts

Quality standards. Agencies can include various other quality standards in their contracts. They might require, for example, that all telephone calls be answered before the third ring or that data cleaned up for entry on automated systems be 99 percent accurate. Slightly higher levels of performance can sometimes cost substantially more to achieve. For instance, one estimate is that it costs 25 percent more to obtain 99 percent accuracy on data clean up than to achieve a 95 percent rate. The Title IV-D agency needs to consider carefully just how high it needs to set each quality standard and how much it is willing to pay for this level of quality.

Disclaimer on workload accuracy. Because of difficulties in generating reliable statistics on collection potential and caseload composition, some Title IV-D agencies have included a clause in the RFP stating that its figures are not necessarily accurate. This provision is intended to protect the agency from legal challenges by the contractor if the numbers turn out to be substantially wrong-although, it has yet to be tested. Bidders naturally object to this provision as placing inordinate financial risk on the winning contractor. They want the bid data to be audited and accurate before the RFP is released. Some states are countering by allowing bidders to complete their own analyses of the data.

Payment of federal sanctions. Another performance guarantee is to require the contractor to pay federal penalties or sanctions that are imposed due to failure of the contractor to perform to federal standards. Contractors find this provision reasonable, provided the penalty is proportional to the contract amount. Requiring the contractor to pay the total federal penalty-which may equal the contract amount-can result in few providers bidding on a contract.

While these contract provisions can protect the agency financially, they may do little to improve the quality of service while the provider is still under contract or to prevent an interruption of service. In addition, such protections make the contract potentially less profitable for the contractor, drive up costs, and sometimes prevent qualified providers from bidding. The use of these provisions should be well thought through and fit the circumstances and anticipated risk of failure. Rehfuss (1989) observes, "Picturing a contract with all these provisions stretches the imagination. Such a contract would certainly cost more than if the agency itself provided the service."

Balancing the Risk for the Contractor

If the goal of privatizing child support services is to create a public-private partnership to better serve the customer, then a contract that attempts to place all the risk on the contractor provides a weak foundation for the relationship. The Title IV-D agency can take several steps to reduce contractor risk to an acceptable level and promote a true partnership:

Define and fulfill responsibilities. In developing the RFP, the Title IV-D agency has identified the responsibilities of the contractor, the agency, and the partnering agencies and organizations. The agency must ensure that all parties fulfill their responsibilities. For example, if the agency has promised to train contractor staff on policies and procedures or to provide certain facilities or equipment for contractor use, it must make good on its promises as scheduled. Similarly, if the contract states that the clerk of courts will process documents submitted by the contractor and the sheriff's office will serve warrants-and if the Title IV-D agency has cooperative reimbursement agreements with these agencies to perform the functions-then the agency must hold these partnering agencies accountable for fulfilling their duties. The agency should make their contracts performance-based as well. For agencies not under contract, the Title IV-D agency should use memoranda of agreement, facilitate meetings between these agencies and the contractor, jawbone, or take other actions to help ensure that they work cooperatively with the contractor.

Guarantee a minimum workload for the contractor. Without abrogating its right to adjust the service level in response to changing circumstances, the Title IV-D agency should specify in the contract the minimum workload the contractor should reasonably expect to receive. It should also describe the steps it will take to ensure that other agencies, such as the local social service office, make necessary referrals so that the minimum workload is met. If it becomes necessary to reduce or increase the workload substantially, the time frames for notifying the contractor of impending changes and the options available to the contractor for renegotiating or modifying the contract should be clearly spelled out.

Allow for renegotiation if information in the RFP proves inaccurate. Set a tolerance level-for example, that the caseload estimates in the RFP will vary no more than 15 to 20 percent from the actual caseload to be worked by the contractor-and allow a contract modification if this level is exceeded. Also allow for modifications if the actual level of effort to perform certain tasks, such as case clean up and data conversion, exceed the levels estimated in the RFP by a certain amount.

Be willing to negotiate quality standards. With the exception of state and federal performance standards, the Title IV-D agency should entertain proposals from the contractor on how high to set other quality standards: telephone response time, data accuracy, etc. One approach is to require the contractor to include a quality assurance plan in its technical response to the RFP that describes the quality standards the contractor proposes to achieve. During contract negotiations, the proposed standards can be adjusted if necessary. Alternatively, bidders can be asked to propose costs for different performance levels.

Specify how disputes will be resolved. State procurement regulations usually govern the resolution of disputes between the contractor and the contracting agency. However, the process should be clearly specified in the contract or RFP document so that both parties know what to expect if they cannot reach agreement. Ideally, the process is conducted by a neutral party and streamlined.

DEVELOPING CONTINGENCY SERVICE PLANS

In addition to using contract provisions to protect itself and its clients, the Title IV-D agency may also need to develop backup service capability. According to Rehfuss (1989), public agencies can use the following methods to prevent or reduce service disruption in case of a contractor failure or other emergency:

Contingency contracts. These contracts bind a second contractor to provide service in the event the primary contractor cannot or does not perform.

Partial contracts. A service is divided into sections, usually geographically, and different contractors are used. Failure by any one contractor can be met simply by having a competing contractor expand operations to the unserved area.

Agency sharing. Similar to partial contracting, except that some portion of the service is always delivered by the public agency. In this way, the agency maintains in-house expertise and does not become overly dependent on the private sector for service delivery.

As with the protective contract provisions, each option has its costs. Each also requires foresight and planning and must be arranged well in advance of any potential service disruption.

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