Opportunity
SAM #1240LR26Q0014
USDA Forest Service Disaster Recovery Procurement: Corrugated Steel Pipes and Bands for Salmon-Challis National Forest
Buyer
USFS Intermountain Region
Posted
April 24, 2026
Respond By
May 01, 2026
Identifier
1240LR26Q0014
NAICS
332322
The USDA Forest Service is procuring corrugated steel pipes and galvanized coupling bands to support disaster recovery in the Salmon-Challis National Forest following the Moose Creek Fire. - Government Buyer: - USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region (CSA Intermountain 6 office) - Contracting office located in Ogden, Utah - Products Requested: - Helical galvanized corrugated steel pipes (CSP) in multiple diameters and gauges - 72" diameter, 16 gauge (80 feet total) - 18" diameter, 16 gauge (1000 feet) - 24" diameter, 16 gauge (640 feet) - 30" diameter, 16 gauge (360 feet) - 36" diameter, 16 gauge (200 feet) - 48" diameter, 16 gauge (160 feet) - Galvanized coupling bands for each pipe size - 72" diameter, 16 gauge, 24" wide (2 sets) - 18" diameter, 18 gauge, 12" wide (25 bands) - 24" diameter, 18 gauge, 12" wide (16 bands) - 30" diameter, 18 gauge, 12" wide (9 bands) - 36" diameter, 18 gauge, 12" wide (5 bands) - 48" diameter, 18 gauge, 12" wide (4 bands) - One band part number specified: 7540-01-152-8067 - Delivery Locations: - Salmon-Challis National Forest, Idaho - Challis Admin Yard (311 US-93, Challis, ID 83226) - Jesse Creek Admin Yard (62 Roosevelt RD, Salmon, ID 83467) - Unique Requirements: - All items must meet Federal Highway Administration specifications FP-14 707.02 and FP-14 106.03 - Firm-fixed pricing required; 90-day price hold from offer receipt - Total small business set-aside under NAICS 332322 - Technical acceptability and past performance will be evaluated - Delivery required by June 30, 2026; early delivery accepted - No specific OEMs or brands are named; industry-standard galvanized CSP and bands are requested.
Description
This project is to provide corrugated steel pipes (CSP) to the Salmon-Challis National Forest for its disaster recovery efforts from the effects of the Moose Creek Fire