Discover opportunities months before the RFP drops
Learn more →Key metrics and characteristics
Government ID for mapping buyers across datasets.
Full-time equivalent employees.
Population size to gauge opportunity scale.
How easy their procurement process is to navigate.
How likely this buyer is to spend on new technology based on operating budget trends.
How likely this buyer is to adopt new AI technologies.
How often this buyer champions startups and early adoption.
Includes fiscal year calendars, procurement complexity scores, and strategic insights.
Active opportunities open for bidding
Travis County
Travis County is seeking proposals for a Learning Management System and future Workforce Agility Platform under RFP 2606-002. The solicitation seeks a comprehensive LMS solution to enhance course delivery and support workforce agility needs for county operations. Proposals are due by July 21, 2026, via the Texas SmartBuy procurement system, and the opportunity is currently open for vendor responses.
Posted Date
Jun 20, 2026
Due Date
Jul 21, 2026
Release: Jun 20, 2026
Travis County
Close: Jul 21, 2026
Travis County is seeking proposals for a Learning Management System and future Workforce Agility Platform under RFP 2606-002. The solicitation seeks a comprehensive LMS solution to enhance course delivery and support workforce agility needs for county operations. Proposals are due by July 21, 2026, via the Texas SmartBuy procurement system, and the opportunity is currently open for vendor responses.
AvailableTravis County
Provide 2026 hmac overlay program.
Posted Date
May 8, 2026
Due Date
Jun 22, 2026
Release: May 8, 2026
Travis County
Close: Jun 22, 2026
Provide 2026 hmac overlay program.
Travis County
Travis County, Texas is soliciting bids for the FY2024 and FY2025 High Density Mineral Bond (IFB 207-PH) for pavement and roadway resurfacing work. The solicitation was published on April 29, 2026, with a public bid opening scheduled for May 21, 2026, at 2:00 PM CDT. Interested vendors must access the Travis County Purchasing solicitation page or the Ariba Network for full documentation and submission instructions.
Posted Date
Apr 29, 2026
Due Date
May 21, 2026
Release: Apr 29, 2026
Travis County
Close: May 21, 2026
Travis County, Texas is soliciting bids for the FY2024 and FY2025 High Density Mineral Bond (IFB 207-PH) for pavement and roadway resurfacing work. The solicitation was published on April 29, 2026, with a public bid opening scheduled for May 21, 2026, at 2:00 PM CDT. Interested vendors must access the Travis County Purchasing solicitation page or the Ariba Network for full documentation and submission instructions.
Get alerted before the bid drops, know which RFPs to pursue, and generate compliant drafts with AI.
Procurement guidance and navigation tips.
Lower scores indicate easier procurement processes. Created by Starbridge.
Sole Source: If sale is less than $50,000, use sole source.
Coops: If your product is on Texas DIR or another active cooperative, ask Purchasing to buy through it.
Travis County, TX allows sole source when the offering is genuinely proprietary with exclusive maintenance needs.
Track vendor wins and renewal opportunities
Travis County
This document outlines a license agreement (Contract ID: 4400005810) for JOTFORM SOFTWARE between JOTFORM INC (Supplier) and Teri Mendez (Buyer). The agreement is currently "Released" and is set to expire on June 30, 2025.
Effective Date
Jul 1, 2024
Expires
Effective: Jul 1, 2024
Travis County
Expires:
This document outlines a license agreement (Contract ID: 4400005810) for JOTFORM SOFTWARE between JOTFORM INC (Supplier) and Teri Mendez (Buyer). The agreement is currently "Released" and is set to expire on June 30, 2025.
See expiring contracts, renewal risk, pricing history, and competitor awards — then sync the data to your CRM.
Board meetings and strategic plans from Travis County
The proceedings involved passing a resolution in honor of National Hispanic Heritage Month, which was read aloud and then handed off for further acknowledgment. The session included recognizing various elected officials present. A significant portion of the event focused on celebrating the Hispanic community in Travis County, acknowledging their diverse roots and contributions across various sectors. Commissioner Gomez expressed pride in the community's growth and representation in office. The event also featured performances by the Del Valle ISD group and an artist named Jorge, with thanks extended for their participation and for providing refreshments.
The joint subcommittee meeting focused primarily on legislative updates following the recent session. Key discussion points included details on the school funding bill (HB 2), which provided increased allocations and new allotments for basic costs and teacher retention, as well as increased funding for school safety mandates. The group reviewed the student discipline bill (HB 6), which grants teachers more authority to remove students, caps out-of-school suspensions, and modifies rules regarding expulsions and e-cigarette possession. Significant time was dedicated to the passage of the Education Savings Accounts (voucher) bill, detailing funding levels and eligibility. Other topics included Travis County legislative priorities such as the Austin State Hospital initiative (which did not pass), new rules for medical examiner next-of-kin information disclosure, changes to early voting timelines (SB 2753), and the controversial passage of SB 8 requiring 287G agreements with ICE. Land use and development bills were also discussed, noting that several bills attempting to limit local government authority, such as those concerning self-permitting and fee collection, did not pass. Finally, ongoing concerns regarding homelessness, mental health services funding by the state, and the need for local entities to implement numerous new state requirements were addressed.
The meeting addressed several key items. The record of decisions for the May 10, 2024 meeting was approved. A major update concerned the 15-year BCCP permit extension application submission to the US Fish and Wildlife Service and the commencement of coordination meetings for administrative changes and clarifying updates to the 1996 BCCP Habitat Conservation Plan. These updates will include preparing a climate change adaptation strategy and assessing potential take for newly listed species. The committee provided recognition and history of the BCCP Scientific Advisory Committee (SAC) and Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC), acknowledging their crucial roles in the plan's development and implementation, noting that their external advisory roles typically diminish as internal agency capacity grows. A presentation detailed the historic 2024 Black-capped Vireo season in Travis County, noting the exceptional success of the season and emphasizing that the plan is critical for the species' survival, which relies on habitat management. Additionally, the large scale of conserved lands involving the City, County, and federal government was reviewed, along with their contribution to water quality protection for Barton Springs.
The Wildfire Preparedness and Mitigation Townhall focused on actionable steps across three levels: individual homeowners, HOA/POA neighborhoods, and public lands/preserves. Key discussions involved home hardening techniques such as protecting roofs, vents, decks, siding, and managing the 0 to 5-foot zone around the home to defend against embers. Challenges such as cost, time, and DIY effort for home hardening were addressed. Information was provided on requesting home risk assessments and resources for further education, including the Firewise program framework.
The joint subcommittee meeting between Travis County, the City of Austin, and AISD, addressed the financial well-being of Austin school districts, particularly Austin ISD. Discussions included the potential passage of Proposition A in November to alleviate budget shortfalls, the creation of an ad hoc budget committee, and the need for financial support from the city and county for nursing and health professionals, as well as for new immigrant families. The committee also discussed the tax rate election proposition to add 2 and 1/2 cent to the tax rate to provide child care. Additionally, the meeting covered the transition of resilience hubs to a resilience network model to better meet community needs during disasters.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
Track Travis County's board meetings, strategic plans, and budget discussions. Identify opportunities 6-12 months before competitors see the RFP.
Keep your public sector contacts fresh and actionable. No more stale data.
Premium
Win more deals with deep buyer insights
Premium
Access the largest public sector contact database
© 2026 Starbridge