The Hawaii County Department of Water is tasked with ensuring the reliable operation, maintenance, and expansion of the island’s public water supply infrastructure. Its core mission centers on safeguarding potable water delivery through the construction, repair, and modernization of critical systems...
The Hawaii County Department of Water is tasked with ensuring the reliable operation, maintenance, and expansion of the island’s public water supply infrastructure. Its core mission centers on safeguarding potable water delivery through the construction, repair, and modernization of critical systems including wells, pipelines, treatment facilities, and emergency power systems. Strategic priorities include enhancing system resilience against natural disruptions, upgrading aging infrastructure, and securing uninterrupted service through redundant power and mechanical systems. Key programs focus on deepwell maintenance, raw water valve replacement, emergency generator deployment, and site preparation for hydraulic infrastructure upgrades.
The agency frequently procures construction and installation services for water and sewer line systems, alongside electrical contracting for critical infrastructure power integration. It also acquires specialized equipment such as motors, pumps, generators, and storage structures essential to water system functionality. Contracts are typically issued as direct solicitations without set-asides, indicating a preference for open competition based on technical capability and operational reliability.
Primary procurement activity targets NAICS categories related to water infrastructure construction (237110), electrical installation (238210), and the manufacturing and repair of motors, generators, and HVAC equipment (335312, 333415, 811310). The agency also relies on temporary staffing services (561320) to support project execution and warehousing (493110) for equipment logistics. Vendor relationships emphasize technical expertise in hydronic systems, industrial maintenance, and emergency power solutions, with no indication of formal diversity or small business set-aside preferences.
As a county-level department under Hawaii State Departments, it operates across the Island of Hawaii, managing municipal water systems independently while coordinating with state-level utilities. It utilizes standard competitive solicitation vehicles for capital improvements and operational support, prioritizing performance-based outcomes over procurement type.