During the April 6 oversight hearing at Guam Memorial Hospital, operations and engineering staff showed senators the facility’s motor control center, chillers and distribution equipment and summarized procurement status for critical electrical upgrades.
What GMH described: Hospital engineers said the electrical distribution system — not just individual panels — is the scope of work. Three invitations for bids (IFBs) were issued, in partnership with the Guam Power Authority, to remove and replace automatic transfer switches, motor control centers and the hospital’s three backup generators. Due to vendor requests the hospital extended bid submission dates to April 24; hospital and GPA staff said vendor interest had increased with more than 10 prospective suppliers expressing interest.
Timeframe and risk: GMH described the required components as long‑lead items and estimated about an 18‑month timeline from award to full replacement and commissioning of all major equipment. Hospital staff said some legacy MCC and panel components are obsolete and must be custom‑sourced or adapted while the full contract is executed.
Why it matters: The electrical distribution system is essential for continuous operation and for maintaining oxygen and critical clinical systems. Hospital staff cited a recent motor failure and the need for redundancy in generators and transfer switches to avoid future service disruptions.
Next steps: GMH will proceed with bid evaluation after the April 24 submission date and expects procurement and delivery schedules to drive implementation timeframes. The committee requested a procurement timeline and regular updates during the extended procurement process.
Attributions: Chief Engineer Sali Dare and operations staff guided senators through the MCC and plant areas and provided the 18‑month estimate and IFB status. Senators asked for clarity on procurement ownership between GMH and GPA and on vendor selection timing.
Ending: The hospital framed the work as part of a broader electrical distribution upgrade funded in part by a $5 million appropriation; lawmakers and hospital staff agreed on continued oversight through procurement milestones.