School Leaders Construction

Subcontractors

Build California's schools with us

We're always looking for qualified trade partners for our K-14 public-works projects — lease-leaseback, CUPCCAA, and general contracting across Southern California. Get on our bid list.

Why partner with us

Steady public-school work, run the right way

A steady pipeline

A consistent flow of California public-school work — modernizations, new construction, and modular classroom programs across Southern California.

Open-book, fair bidding

We solicit multiple proposals per scope and run an open-book process — competitive, transparent, and reviewed with you and the district.

Bonded, reliable payment

Public-works projects backed by bonded funding and disciplined progress billing — and a clean payment and performance record.

Long-term partnership

We build lasting relationships with subs who deliver quality, hit the schedule, and stay compliant on occupied campuses.

What we look for

Qualified and compliant

  • Active CSLB license in your trade classification
  • Current DIR / Public Works Contractor Registration (PWCR)
  • Prevailing-wage and Skilled & Trained Workforce capability (Ed. Code §17407.5 / PCC §2600)
  • General liability insurance and bondability
  • A strong safety record and K-12 / public-works references

How our bidding works

From bidders list to award

  1. 01

    Get on the list

    Submit the form below with your trade, license, and DIR registration. We add you to our bidders list.

  2. 02

    We post plans & specs

    Projects are advertised to our plan room with full documents, addenda, and a pre-bid RFI deadline.

  3. 03

    Submit your bid early

    Send complete, full-scope proposals as early as possible — we review for gaps so nothing is missed.

  4. 04

    Open-book award

    We confirm scope with you and the district, then award competitively and transparently.

Get on our bid list

Tell us about your firm

Send your trade, license, and registration details and we'll reach out when a matching scope comes up.