chicago star

Chicago Supplier
Development program

chicago star

 

Creating fair, equal, and equitable access to public contracts in Chicago.

The Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP) supports and advocates for our small business ecosystem by creating robust initiatives and programs that targets small business enterprises, assisting their increased participation in economic development and government contracting.



The Chicago Supplier Development Program: 

  • Cultivates a competitive and diverse economic environment that drives equitable access to contracts and supports growth for success.
  • Increases equal access to public contracts that results in closing the wealth gaps for business suppliers in Chicago.
  • Serves as an advocacy to promote fair and equitable access to contracting, capital, business and technical assistance.

Through partnerships with our local chambers of commerce, non-for-profit community, neighborhood business development service centers and business services organizations, the program provides trainings, workshops, counseling, and mentorship resources to assist entrepreneurs, small business owners and professional service firms prepare for the successful participation in public contracting.


rfp Opportunities

Chicago Supplier Development Program

Closes on Friday, May 17, 2024 at 12:00 P.M. (noon)

RFP #10188 (for reference use only)

Pre-Submittal Conference: April 25, 2024 at 10:30 A.M. Register for the Webinar.


chicago supplier Development program 

 

The Chicago Supplier Development Program will provide targeted support to small businesses interested in contracting with the City of Chicago.

The program will include weekly group trainings and 1:1 individual counseling Capacity-building services to be provided are:

  • Accessing Capital
  • Bonding and Insurance
  • Business Planning/Strategies
  • Understanding Contracting Fundamentals
  • Estimating and Bidding
  • Finance and Financial Management
  • Financing to Scale Business Operations
  • Finding Contracting Opportunities
  • Understanding Government Contracting
  • Human Resources
  • Marketing and Sales
  • How to Obtain M/WBE Certification
  • Project Management


research

In 2021, legal consulting firm Colette Holt & Associates was retained to perform a disparity study for The City of Chicago regarding its Minority- and Women-Owned (“M/WBE) Business Enterprise Construction Program. The study was designed to review The City’s policies and procedures regarding the implementation of race and gender conscious programming, to provide recommendations for program improvements, and to implement current national best practices.

Based on research, contract and procurement spending during the years 2015 through 2019, totaling approximately $1.55B were awarded to prime contractors. Businesses considered M/WBE and “socially disadvantaged” under the City’s ordinance, prime contractors’ utilization of subcontractors was 54.2 percent. Out of that percentage, 7.7 percent were Black-owned, 17.1 percent Hispanic-owned, 16.4 percent Asian-owned, 0.0 percent Native American-owned, and 13.0 percent White woman-owned. The other 45.9 percent were non-M/WBE owned businesses. The study found that M/WBEs are much more reliant on subcontracts compared to non-M/WBEs. For Black, Hispanic, and White woman-owned firms, over 90 percent of their work is as subcontractors. In contrast, for non-M/WBE-owned firms, just under 73 percent of their work is as subcontractors.

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