Anonymous wrote:Probably Request for Occupancy
Request For Offers.
Means you aren't committing to do anything specific, but will entertain offers, and if one is good, will accept it. Generally the offers are general and outline big ideas, broad goals, etc.
As opposed to an RFP, Request for Proposals. This means you have a specific task or thing to do, and want specific proposals to do it. It's more formal and legal, in that you outline a way you will score/grade proposals, and if one meets the criteria and is the best proposal, the city is legally bound (in some ways) to accept the proposal.