Business support
Community engagement roster
Hennepin County maintains a roster of organizations who provide community engagement services. The roster is generally used to award contracts for projects costing $200,000 or less.
Roster overview
When a need arises for community engagement services, Hennepin County departments will request proposals from vendors on the roster who have indicated they are able to provide the type of services needed.
Roster details
- Contract opportunities for this roster are not advertised and are only available to organizations on the roster.
- Organizations indicate their area(s) of expertise by selecting the types of community engagement work they are qualified to perform.
- Each organization is required to sign an agreement with the legal terms for working with Hennepin County before being added to the roster.
- When an organization submits a proposal for a specific job, they will be required to verify they are qualified to perform the type of work needed and will be required to submit the appropriate insurance.
- Getting on the roster is not a guarantee of work.
Small business preference
The county gives first consideration to small and emerging small businesses certified by CERT. Eligibility for the emerging small business enterprise (ESBE) program is the same as small business enterprise (SBE) qualifications, except the size standard for ESBE eligibility is greatly reduced.
CERT is a small business certification program administered by the county, and several other local governments in the metro region. It certifies small, minority-owned, and women-owned businesses. To apply to become CERT certified visit the CERT website.
Get on the roster
Organizations need to complete the application process to be added to the roster. Applications for participation in the community engagement roster are accepted continuously. Getting on the roster is not a guarantee of work.
Steps for getting on the roster
Step 1
Complete all fields on the community engagement roster application form.
Make sure you are registered to do business with the Minnesota Secretary of State. Your company must appear as "Active/In Good Standing". You do not have to register your business if you are an individual or sole proprietor.
After you submit your application, you will receive an email from Hennepin County acknowledging your application was received.Step 2
Register with our Supplier Portal.
- When registering, use the same email and tax ID used in your application.
- If you need help registering, refer to the Supplier Portal help page.
Step 3
A principal agreement (PDF, 1MB) will be emailed to the person with signing authority, as indicated on your application form.
Note:
- The email will be sent from the email address 'adobesign@adobesign.com' with the subject line: Signature requested on
. - Additional information on electronically signing a contract can be found in the guide signing a Hennepin County contract (PDF, 1MB).
The principal agreement establishes the terms, conditions, and technical provisions related to the community engagement roster. It is valid for five years from execution.
Step 4
Once all required signatures are obtained, a copy of the principal agreement will be sent to the person with signing authority via email. At this point your organization will be eligible to be solicited for community engagement contract opportunities.
You may update contact information and areas of expertise at any time by sending an email to engagementroster@hennepin.us.
What to expect if selected for work
You may receive work by submitting proposals in response to contracting opportunities. You may also be directly selected to perform work for the county. In either case, the county will reach out with next steps as follows:
Notice of award
The county will notify you via email that you have been selected to perform work. The email will outline what is required before the county can award a work order contract.
Work order contract
The organization(s) chosen to perform the work will be awarded a work order contract (PDF, 1MB). The work order is an electronically signed document that will describe the specific details of the job that needs to be done. The county and the vendor are required to follow the terms and conditions in both the principal agreement (PDF, 1MB) and the work order contract. An organization can be awarded multiple work order contracts under their principal agreement.
The work order will not be routed for signatures until the organization has fulfilled all requirements in the notice of award.
Insurance
Vendors must have the appropriate level of insurance in place before they can start work. Insurance requirements for the roster are lower than the county's standard contracts. The requirements are outlined in the principal agreement (PDF, 1MB) that organizations sign when applying to be on the roster.
The county does not require organizations on the roster to provide proof of insurance until the organization is selected for work. If the organization does not already have insurance on file with the county, proof of insurance will be requested. The county must have a certificate of insurance issued from an insurance company.
The certificate must:
- List Hennepin County as additional insured
- List Hennepin County as the certificate holder
- Be signed by the insurance agency
- Be dated during the policy period
Diversity and inclusion
Contracts over $100,000 have diversity and inclusion requirements, which vary by contract type. Organizations may be asked to provide documentation that they are meeting the requirements. Learn more about contracting with diverse vendors.
Training and resources
Roster overview
- Roster overview slides from training session (PDF, 2MB)
- Roster overview questions and answers (PDF, 1MB)
How to submit a proposal
Using plain language to write effective proposals
Areas of expertise
On the application form you will be asked to identify your areas of expertise based on the following categories.
Types of engagement services you provide
Communications
- Creating and implementing communications for a community audience
- Reviewing county communications and making recommendations for community friendly communications
- Amplifying county messaging to community networks.
Community assessment research
Research community for a specific project such as:
- Demographics
- Languages groups
- Cultural groups
- Key stakeholders and other key information – qualitatively and quantitatively
Community storytelling
Document community voice through social media, video, and in writing.
Engagement planning
Create plans for specific projects that includes strategic approaches and outcomes for authentic engagement.
Engagement training
Run training sessions on engagement services skills including cultural diversity and inclusion.
Engagement report on activities and outcomes
Document community engagement outcomes and activities in a report form.
Event planning and implementation
Create and implement community events that successfully engage the community(s) of focus and achieve the identified outcomes.
Facilitation
Facilitate, virtual and in-person:
- Meetings
- Listening sessions
- Open houses
- Focus groups
- Large group community meetings, and
- Other engagement sessions
Implement and lead engagement plan
Lead and manage a community engagement plan.
Mediation
Manage the interaction between community and county along with facilitating open communication that navigates tensions and conflicts.
Other services
Describe other community engagement services you provide on the application.
My organization is a topic expert on these issues
- Community Economic Development
- Community Safety
- Criminal Justice System
- Education
- Employment
- Environment
- Health
- Housing
- Racial Equity
- Transportation
- Other – describe other topic expertise on the application
Communities you serve
- African Immigrant – if selected the following options appear:
- Somali
- Kenyan
- Sudanese
- Liberian
- Oromo
- Nigerian
- Other – please describe
- Asian Pacific Islanders – if selected the following options appear:
- Hmong
- Lao
- Vietnamese
- Chinese
- Thai
- Karen
- Asian Indian
- Other – please describe
- Black/African American
- Elders/seniors
- Latino/Hispanic
- LGBTQIA
- Native American and Alaska Native
- People experiencing homelessness
- People with disabilities
- Russian
- Youth
- Other – please describe
Languages you provide services in
- American Sign Language (ASL)
- Chinese
- English
- French
- Hmong
- Lao
- Oromo
- Russian
- Somali
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Thai
- Vietnamese
- Other – please describe
Hennepin County districts you serve
District 1
Brooklyn Center, Brooklyn Park, Crystal, New Hope, Osseo, and Robbinsdale
District 2
Golden Valley, Medicine Lake, southeast Plymouth, St. Anthony, and north and northeast Minneapolis, including the North Loop and Bryn Mawr neighborhoods
District 3
St. Louis Park, and parts of southwest Minneapolis
District 4
Minneapolis as its border lines extend south from Downtown to the Minneapolis/St. Paul International airport, west to Highway 35 and east to the Mississippi River; it also includes the Unorganized Territory of Fort Snelling
District 5
Bloomington, Eden Prairie, and Richfield
District 6
Deephaven, northern Eden Prairie, Edina, Excelsior, Greenwood, Hopkins, Long Lake, Minnetonka, Minnetonka Beach, northern Mound, Orono, Shorewood, Spring Park, Tonka Bay, Wayzata and Woodland
District 7
Champlin, Corcoran, Dayton, Greenfield, Independence, Loretto, Maple Grove, Maple Plain, Medina, Minnetrista, southern Mound, Rogers, St. Bonifacius, Hanover, northwest Plymouth, Rockford
Current roster participants
View the current community engagement roster.
You may update your organization's information at any time by sending an email to engagementroster@hennepin.us.
If you did not elect to be paid by direct deposit when you applied for the roster, you can do so at any time by completing a new W-9 form. Enrolling in direct deposit enables vendors to receive payment faster.