Specifications include, but are not limited to: Contractor shall be responsible for: 1. Providing, maintaining, and updating as necessary all equipment necessary to provide pharmaceutical services to inmates at all correctional facilities on all islands in the State of Hawaii. This includes medication carts, blister pack sorting and storage devices, and facsimile, computer, printers, and/or other communication equipment necessary to transmit prescriptions to the Contractor. 2. Maintaining and providing to the Department’s Health Care Division, copies of current license(s) to provide pharmaceutical services in the State of Hawaii. If Offeror is an out-ofstate pharmacy, Offeror shall have a miscellaneous permit to conduct business by mail order in the State of Hawaii. 3. Maintaining all pharmaceutical standards and conforming to all applicable State and Federal laws governing pharmaceutical operations. 4. Providing inmate pharmacy coverage for all facilities, eight (8) hours a day, from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Hawaii Standard Time (HST), seven (7) days a week; including same day drug access for urgent pharmacy coverage, twenty-four (24) hours per day, seven (7) days per week on an on-call basis. 5. Prescriptions that shall be prepared off-site and shipped to the facility within twenty-four (24) hours of ordering. Contractor shall deliver medications ordered by express mail / courier (i.e. Federal Express) or in person. All deliveries shall arrive at the ordering facility destination, Monday through Saturday only, between the hours of 7:45 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. for non-24-hour facilities, and between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. for 24-hour health care facilities. Contractor shall not have any deliveries arrive on Sundays or State Holidays. 6. Packaging medications in unit-dose blister cards containing two-part, peel-off, reorder labels unless specifically designated otherwise by the Department. 7. The return to pharmacists of pharmacy medications that are unadulterated, pursuant to Section 461-11, Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS), for repackaging and re-dispensing or redistribution back to the Department of Public Safety. The Department of Public Safety shall be charged only for the repackaging and re-dispensing of returned unadulterated medications, and not for the medications themselves. 8. The proper disposal of unused or outdated medications. The Department of Public Safety shall not be charged a fee for the return for disposal of any unused or outdated medications. 9. Having information systems that are able to electronically exchange prescription information or accept electronic prescriptions interactively on a real-time basis. 10. Having a quality assurance tool to monitor and measure accuracy of the ordering and delivery of medications process. 11. Providing in-service training and consultation to Department’s health care personnel on the following topics: a. Proper disposition of unused substances as required by law. b. Proper administration of medication. c. Monitoring and documentation of drug administration and drug utilization in the correctional setting. d. Procedures for management of controlled drugs, according to the law. e. Specified topics such as drug actions / interactions and common medication administration errors.