Home Business & FinanceBusiness Subscribe to RSS
 

To Let A Contract. What Does That Mean?

Answer Question

1 Answer - Sort by: Date | Rating

    I worked in contract administration in a State Highway Agency for many years and the term "let" was used frequently.  I checked a few legal dictionaries and one said "allow" which is just the common def. Of let.  The other said "to award a contract".

    To me, awarding a contract means the work was advertised, bids were submitted by contractors, bid were analyzed, bidders were determined to be legitimate (responsible), the successful bidder signed all the nec. Documents (the contract), and the State said to the contractor--This is your contract and you are to begin work on________ (a date about two weeks in the future).

    Maybe let comes from:  Let the contract work begin.  The last part is strictly a guess by me.

    Others speaking in general might say--The State let a contract to build a bridge right over there.  But that could mean many diff. Things.
    It could mean anything from design, advertised, accepted bids, opened bids, verified bids, awarded, signed documents or gave notice to proceed.  My state had terms for every step of a contract.  Let was not one of the official terms.
    1 1

    Freedom1st 

    answered 11 months ago

      Answer Question - Answers are editable for 5 min.

      If you do not Sign-in or Register your answers will be anonymous,

      your answers may also be checked before going online.

      More

      More

         
         

        Ask a Question via Twitter

        Send a question to @askblurtit and we will publish it online and send you a reply everytime you receive an answer.

        Blurtit Store

        Get T-shirts, hoodies, caps and more at the Blurtit store

        Blurtit International