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ContractRadar Adds 10 More Local Procurement Portals

By ContractRadar

We just added 10 more local procurement portals to ContractRadar, spanning 5 states — Texas (the Rio Grande Valley via Brownsville, and Central Texas via Waco), metro Atlanta (Sandy Springs), Oregon for the first time (Bend), the Florida Keys (Monroe County), and four California cities across the Inland Empire, LA County, and Silicon Valley. Every one of these jurisdictions posts solicitations on its own portal, separate from its state system, so those opportunities never appear in a statewide search. ContractRadar now syncs them all daily.

Why local coverage matters

City and county governments buy constantly — construction, public works, IT, professional services, facilities, parks, water and wastewater — and they post those solicitations on their own portals, not their state’s. A contractor watching only a statewide system never sees the city next door. For small and local businesses, this municipal work is often the most winnable: smaller contracts, local-vendor preferences, and less national competition than federal bids. ContractRadar now monitors all of these portals daily so you don’t have to check each one by hand.

1 new county portal

This batch includes one county portal, covering the Florida Keys:

  • Monroe County, FL Monroe County, FL procurement portal (~0.08M) — the Florida Keys, seat Key West. Monroe County is a distinct buyer from every other Florida source ContractRadar already covers. The county publishes solicitations for tourism infrastructure, facilities, and public works across the Keys archipelago.

9 new city portals

These nine cities each publish solicitations on their own procurement portal, which we sync automatically every day:

  • Moreno Valley, CA City of Moreno Valley procurement portal (~0.21M) — Riverside County, Inland Empire. The largest pick in this batch, Moreno Valley is a distinct buyer from Riverside, San Bernardino, Fontana, and Ontario, all of which ContractRadar already covers. See our California state contracts guide for the statewide context.
  • Brownsville, TX City of Brownsville procurement portal (~0.19M) — the Rio Grande Valley, Cameron County. Brownsville opens a new Texas region for ContractRadar — we cover DFW, Houston metro, Austin metro, Lubbock, and the Panhandle, but the RGV was a gap. It is a distinct buyer from every other covered Texas source.
  • Rancho Cucamonga, CA City of Rancho Cucamonga procurement portal (~0.18M) — San Bernardino County, Inland Empire. A distinct buyer from Fontana, San Bernardino, and Ontario, all already covered. This is the city’s general public-bid procurement portal.
  • Torrance, CA City of Torrance procurement portal (~0.15M) — LA County, South Bay. The most active pick in this batch at the time we added it. Torrance is a distinct buyer from the City and County of Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Glendale, all of which ContractRadar already covers.
  • Pomona, CA City of Pomona procurement portal (~0.15M) — LA County, San Gabriel Valley, eastern. A distinct buyer from every other covered LA County and Inland Empire source.
  • Sunnyvale, CA City of Sunnyvale procurement portal (~0.15M) — Santa Clara County, Silicon Valley. Sunnyvale migrated onto its current procurement portal in 2025, and it’s a strong Bay Area add — we cover San Francisco and Santa Rosa, but not the South Bay until now.
  • Waco, TX City of Waco procurement portal (~0.14M) — McLennan County seat, Central Texas. Waco is a distinct buyer from Brownsville and every other covered Texas source.
  • Sandy Springs, GA City of Sandy Springs procurement portal (~0.11M) — Fulton County, metro Atlanta. Sandy Springs is a distinct buyer from the City of Atlanta and from Gwinnett, Forsyth, Columbia, Cobb, and DeKalb counties (all covered). See our Georgia state contracts guide for the statewide picture.
  • Bend, OR City of Bend procurement portal (~0.10M) — Deschutes County, central Oregon. Bend is ContractRadar’s first Oregon city — we monitor the Oregon state portal via OregonBuys, but Bend’s city solicitations were previously invisible to users watching only the state system.

How to register and bid

Each portal lets anyone browse open solicitations, but to download full documents, receive addenda, ask questions, or submit a response you register as a vendor. Registration is free on all of these portals. The single most important step is keeping your commodity and service categories accurate — that’s what controls whether the portal notifies you about a relevant opportunity. Many of these jurisdictions also run local or small-business preference programs; if you qualify, get certified before the solicitation you want shows up.

How ContractRadar monitors these portals

ContractRadar syncs all 10 of these portals daily and scores new solicitations against your business profile. Matches appear in your opportunities dashboard and your daily email alert, alongside federal, state, and every other local source we track — so you see everything in one place without checking a dozen separate portals. See our full coverage map for every monitored source, including the state portals that complement these new jurisdictions: Texas, California, Georgia, Oregon, and Florida.

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