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County updates purchasing policy to reflect state law raising bid threshold to $100,000
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Summary
The court approved a revision to the county purchasing policy to align with a new state law (Senate Bill 1173) that raises the competitive-bid threshold to $100,000, effective Sept. 1, 2025.
Taylor County on Aug. 26 approved changes to its purchasing policy to align with a state law that raises the competitive-bid threshold to $100,000. County staff presented a single, focused amendment to change references from $50,000 to $100,000 in the county’s purchasing policy.
“Senate Bill 1173 passed, and it’ll be effective on September 1. It raises the bidding threshold to $100,000 instead of $50,000,” a county purchasing staff member said while describing the policy change. The staff presentation said statutory purchases above the $100,000 threshold will still require competitive bidding or the use of purchasing co-ops, as allowed by law.
Commissioner Bertram moved to approve the changes, Commissioner Williams seconded, and the court approved the revision (vote recorded 4-0 in the meeting record). County staff noted pricing changes in construction and equipment procurement as a reason the threshold adjustment was appropriate; the staff speaker cited examples such as vehicle cost increases.
The court’s action updates internal policy language to match state statute; the change does not itself obligate current procurements but changes the dollar threshold at which sealed bids or cooperative purchasing become mandatory.
