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It's a bird, it's a plane, it's LEONIE |
In a startling reversal, the city’s
Department of Education has canceled a $637 million contract it approved
only a month ago for a private firm to provide computer services to all
public schools, the Daily News has learned.
The
Panel for Educational Policy voted on Feb. 24 to award the five-year
contract — one of the costliest in school system history....
The critics jumped
into action after Leonie Haimson, director of the watchdog group Class
Size Matters, came across a tiny reference to a proposed $1.1 billion
contract for Custom, one that was published on the school system’s
website less than two weeks before the Feb. 24 meeting.
Haimson quickly alerted Public Advocate Letitia James and Helen Rosenthal, head of City Council’s contracts committee.... NYDN
Leonie never stops working. She needs to give herself a Skinny Award this year.
“It
is good news for taxpayers that the city decided to stop this egregious
contract,” Haimson said. “Now we need institutional reforms, including a
new law requiring the Department of Education to publicly disclose all
proposed contracts at least one month before being voted on.”
I can't even talk about some of the amazing stuff Leonie has done. Can someone do a Superhero logo with a big L or H or both on it?
After City
Councilwoman Helen Rosenthal threatened a City Council oversight
hearing, aides to de Blasio and Fariña began to reconsider their
actions.
In a startling reversal, the city’s
Department of Education has canceled a $637 million contract it approved
only a month ago for a private firm to provide computer services to all
public schools, the Daily News has learned.
The
Panel for Educational Policy voted on Feb. 24 to award the five-year
contract — one of the costliest in school system history — to Long
Island-based Custom Computer Specialists, Inc.
But on Thursday,
the agency unexpectedly notified Custom that it was rescinding the
award, rejecting three other competing bids, and will instead seek new
requests for proposals.
The Department of Education
“believes that its objectives can be better met by a new procurement
that affords greater flexibility,” David Ross, director of contracting
for the city’s schools, said in a letter, a copy of which The News
obtained.
“It’s better to get things done right than to get them done quickly,” one city official said.
The about-face marks an unusual admission by the de Blasio administration that it botched a major initiative.
It
follows a flurry of meetings in the past few weeks between school
officials, City Hall aides, and a handful of elected officials furious
at the way Custom was chosen.
The critics jumped
into action after Leonie Haimson, director of the watchdog group Class
Size Matters, came across a tiny reference to a proposed $1.1 billion
contract for Custom, one that was published on the school system’s
website less than two weeks before the Feb. 24 meeting.
Haimson quickly alerted Public Advocate Letitia James and Helen Rosenthal, head of City Council’s contracts committee.
Both
immediately demanded more information from the Education Department.
They especially wanted to know how Custom had been chosen, since the
firm had previously been cited in a criminal probe for looking the other
way while a corrupt school system consultant stole millions of dollars
from the city.
School officials only made matters
worse by waiting until the eve of the Feb. 24 vote before releasing any
details about the contract. Those details showed Custom had been
selected despite lower bids from two other competitors.
Even
more surprising, they announced at the eleventh hour that they had
somehow managed to negotiate a sharp reduction in Custom’s final price —
to a still-whopping $637 million.
At the actual
actual vote, several members of the educational panel openly complained
about the lack of transparency from school system staff and questioned
the rush to award the contract.
Ross and Schools
Chancellor Carmen Fariña told them the city could lose up to $23 million
in federal reimbursements for Internet funds if the contract was not in
place by the end of the March.
But with Rosenthal
threatening a City Council oversight hearing and with several Panel for
Educational Policy members still unhappy following their vote, aides to
de Blasio and Fariña began to reconsider their actions.
The
Education Department heard from the panel “as well as elected
officials, about their concerns regarding the procurement process and
decided that issuing a new restructured procurement . . . will allow us
to reach the best possible outcome,” Ray Orlando, the schools system’s
financial chief, said in a statement.
“I’m happily stunned the administration actually listened to our concerns and acted on them,” Rosenthal said.
“It
is good news for taxpayers that the city decided to stop this egregious
contract,” Haimson said. “Now we need institutional reforms, including a
new law requiring the Department of Education to publicly disclose all
proposed contracts at least one month before being voted on.”
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