Tuesday, May 20, 2014

"VA Official admits to 64 Counts of Construction Bribery"


Friends:

An obscene bribery scandal added to the VA's recent "secret list" affair.  It is not getting any play to the best of my knowledge, so thought I'd show you what we're facing in public procurement bribery.

The problem is in fact systemic, and why I fight so hard against "Exclusion" in competitive bid scenarios.  People like this don't give a second thought to stealing your money, and using it for a lifestyle of conspicuous consumption.

http://www.durabilityanddesign.com/news/?fuseaction=view&id=11089&nl_versionid=3894
Thank you to the fine people of "Durability And Design"
VA Hospital Exec Admits Contract Fraud
Tuesday, March 11, 2014 





 
A former director of two Veterans Affairs hospitals has admitted taking nearly $400,000 in bribes and kickbacks to steer contracts to a nationwide design-build firm—apparently, just the beginning of what the firm saw as a long and lucrative relationship.
William D. Montague, 61, of Brecksville, OH, former director of the Cleveland and Dayton VA Medical Center, pleaded guilty Feb. 20 to 64 federal criminal counts related to trading confidential construction information with the as-yet-unidentified firm in exchange for cash and gifts.

A former director of two Veterans Affairs hospitals has admitted taking nearly $400,000 in bribes and kickbacks to steer contracts to a nationwide design-build firm—apparently, just the beginning of what the firm saw as a long and lucrative relationship.
William D. Montague, 61, of Brecksville, OH, former director of the Cleveland and Dayton VA Medical Center, pleaded guilty Feb. 20 to 64 federal criminal counts related to trading confidential construction information with the as-yet-unidentified firm in exchange for cash and gifts.



 As Acting Medical Center Director of the Dayton VA Medical Center, Montague had "extraordinary access" to project information that would benefit bidders, said one of those firms.
The firm had been bidding on a series of fixed-price services contracts (known as Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity, or IDIQ, contracts) with the VA. Among other things, Montague "solicited money and a consulting contract" from the firm "in exchange for information related to VA contracts and projects."

'Business 75'

The FBI has so far identified the firm only as Business 75, "an integrated design firm with offices throughout the United States, including New York, Illinois, Virginia, Missouri, and California."

The company performed work for the VA directly and through joint ventures and other teaming agreements, according to the indictment.

Montague pleaded guilty Feb. 20 to conspiracy to commit honest services mail fraud, violating the Hobbs Act, money laundering, multiple counts of wire fraud, mail fraud, disclosing public contract information, and a host of other charges, the FBI announced.

Montague served as director of the Cleveland VA Medical Center from 1995 until Feb. 3, 2010. On March 11, 2011, he began working as director of the Dayton VA Medical Center, a position he held through Dec. 17, 2011, according to the indictment.





Email Trail

The superseding indictment details interactions between Montague and Business 75, including internal emails by both parties, the FBI said.

In one email in March 2011, a Business 75 executive noted one $15 million contract that would include $12 million in sales, leaving a $3 million fee for the firm "on the table... ."
"[O]ne of MONTAGUE’s jobs will be to fill up the bucket by directing task orders toward our contract, Going forward, we have two $15M buckets to fill (Central and Eastern regions). That’s a lot of shoveling to get to $30M…BILL has the relationships to help us maximize the contracts…"




William Montague was director of the new Louis Stokes VA Medical Center in Cleveland in 2010 when Rear Adm. Julius S. Caesar (right) toured the facility.
The same email noted that five additional VA hospital projects totaling more than $1.2 billion were in the pipeline, adding: "Montague told us about these before they were advertised, which has allowed us to get an early start in developing the team. If we bring him on board, he can help us pull in one or two of these large projects."

House of Montague

Montague used a financial-services firm he created, called House of Montague, to facilitate the scheme, according to the FBI.

For example, on March 1, 2011, Business 75 issued a $20,000 check to Montague, which he deposited into the House of Montague’s account.

Ten days later, the FBI said, Business 75’s principal emailed employees with Montague’s consulting agreement, explaining: “His job is to help us bring in more work from the VA, in part by helping us access key decision makers,” according to the indictment.

The indictment also spells out double-dipping by Montague.

On May 26, 2011, it says, Montague traveled to Washington, D.C., on VA business. Several weeks later, he submitted a government expense report for $1,204 for the trip. Even before he submitted that report, however, he also invoiced Business 75 for $2,741 for “consulting services” related to the same trip, including the hotel bill for which he also later billed the government.

Montague also deceived other VA employees into providing him with documents and information later shared with Business 75, the indictment said.

'The Motherlode'

On another occasion, the indictment says, Montague boasted by email to another firm (identified as Business 74) that he had "obtained the priority scored list of all scored projects for next fiscal year. It is unpublished and unavailable elsewhere."
Did that sting?
Our Federal Procurement Laws allow people like Montague to game the system.  Beautifully illustrated by Montague's greed, and organized scheme.
The VA buys from Purchasing Cooperatives who eliminate fair competition for "Preferred Vendors".
 "Exclusion" creates a sucking vortex for taxpayer dollars.  It is ALL by "Design" folks, and I see it every day.
Anytime you see a firm bragging about how much public work they get, ask yourself why.  In many cases, there is a "Montague" facilitating the lopsided "Capture Ratio".
Humbled by those of you who make time to read what I have to say, and much appreciation to my gentle friends across the globe.
Please reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to keep looking "UP".
Respect,
Robert R. "Ron" Solomon
Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance (3,700 Members)
Public Procurement Analyst
CCC 1325620



Saturday, April 26, 2014

"ROOFING and ROOFING SERVICES ABUSED by PURCHASING COOPERATIVES"

Friends:

I do this because it affects YOUR schools, YOUR courthouses, YOUR fire departments, YOUR police stations, and YOUR hospitals and subsequentially, YOUR children.

I do not derive 1 cent of income from this site, from the 3,700 members of Roof Consultant's Alliance, or anywhere else.  It is easy enough for me to produce record confirming my statements.

It's been proven time and again that Purchasing Cooperatives have no business in construction services.  They are non-credentialed, non-supported, without authority to exclude competition as they do.

PURPOSEFULLY, they exclude fair competition, and replace it with a perverted "line item" structure that is contrary to the public's interest.  Most people I believe, would choose the acceptable, "fair competition" theme.  This requires "Invitation to Bid" in the local newspaper, a roofing consultant to determine best method as well as write specifications that are inclusive of at least 4 manufacturers.  That done,  contractors may choose from the manufacturers base then submit their responsible bid.

Fair competition bids are read from a sealed envelope aloud in a public forum, where even YOU are welcome to attend.  Doesn't that seem forthright and transparent?

Does the purchasing cooperative get paid their 4% commission to "Save" money?  Construction money is big, and that 4% can be further increased by choosing "Preferred Vendors" with inflated pricing.  No different than a car salesman (apologies).

The "end around" game is costing taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars in the roofing discipline.  I won't render an estimate of the overall damage as it pertains to other trades.

IT IS A SCAM. They will even teach you how to get around that nasty "Competition" thing.  The one thing standing in their way, that prohibits them from being more outrageous than they already are?   YOU! 

No matter how hard anyone tries, it will always come down to that, so they must create a "Diversion" which is their "Interpretation" of what FAIR competition means.

The LAW is clear. The spirit of the law is clear.

I may be rambling again but I am also offering support data to back it up, as I always do.

"Miami Today"

http://www.miamitodaynews.com/2014/03/19/taxpayers-businesses-losers-bid-preference-legislation/

"Texas Insider" :

http://www.texasinsider.org/%E2%80%9Cbuyboard%E2%80%9D-official-admits-tasb-administered-agency-allowed-vendors-to-write-own-bid-specs/

"News Channel 4 - Oklahoma City"

http://kfor.com/2013/03/13/allegations-leveled-against-state-roofing-program/

"The GSA needs a top to bottom Gutting".

http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/gsa-top-to-bottom-gutting-article-1.1062586

I think you will find this informative piece by the FBI interesting.  In it, they list their "Priorities".

http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2010/march/corruption_032610


Public Corruption
Why It’s Our #1 Criminal Priority
03/26/10

public_corruption.jpgPublic corruption is a breach of trust by federal, state, or local officials—often with the help of private sector accomplices. It’s also the FBI’s top criminal investigative priority. To explain why the Bureau takes public corruption so seriously and how we investigate, we talked with Special Agent Patrick Bohrer, assistant section chief of our Public Corruption/Civil Rights program at FBI Headquarters.
Question: Why is public corruption so high on the FBI’s list of investigative priorities? 
Answer: Because of its impact. Corrupt public officials undermine our country’s national security, our overall safety, the public trust, and confidence in the U.S. government, wasting billions of dollars along the way. This corruption can tarnish virtually every aspect of society. For example, a border official might take a bribe, knowingly or unknowingly letting in a truck containing weapons of mass destruction. Or corrupt state legislators could cast deciding votes on a bill providing funding or other benefits to a company for the wrong reasons. Or at the local level, a building inspector might be paid to overlook some bad wiring, which could cause a deadly fire down the road.
Read the full article:  http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2010/march/corruption_032610
I am going to break down individual purchasing cooperatives, using their own words, on my next post.  It will include common offenders AEPA, Keystone, TCPN, U.S. Communities, and others.
As you watch the news tonight, you will observe the damage visited upon you by  "closed door" meetings, "no bid" contract awards, and the astonishing waste of your money in other ways.  You will see it as a "culture", rather than a service, or true function on your behalf.
I advise all public administrators, FM departments, schools, fire, police, courthouse, and hospital to conduct a "Fair and Open Bid".  Do not accept an 'interpretation" of a purchasing cooperative. It is against the law, and you are the ones "signing off" on it .  You are betting your career.
Like the person who pretended to be a civilized director of two VA hospitals in the Cleveland area.  WARNING:  If you are having a good day, don't read it.  It is almost too vicious for me to imagine, but here he is:
http://www.durabilityanddesign.com/news/?fuseaction=view&id=11089&nl_versionid=3894
Already confessed to more than 20 counts of bribery.
I'll bet that $500,000.00 in kickbacks doesn't seem so appetizing now.  I will work hard to find out who "Business 75" is, and report back.
If anyone wishes to share an experience, you may write to my central address:
RobertRSolomon@aol.com
The sad part is, I can go on with this for days.
Working on a couple of new concepts for this blog, to include audio/video, so I can expose the criminals on "YouTube".
I  bring the data.  You be the judge.
I am overwhelmed with emotion as I see over 40,000 views from across the globe.  Humbled that you care one bit about what I have to say. I am thankful many times over.
Friends, I encourage you to reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to  keep looking "UP".
Respect,
Robert R. "Ron" Solomon
Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance
Public Procurement Analyst
CCC 1325620





Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Roofing Industry Backlash Against "Purchasing Cooperatives"

Friends:

It is always my intent to provide  the truth, with supporting documentation (public record), and without influence of any kind.  I do not pass judgement, and leave that to your study, and evaluation.

Simply put:  Roofing Industry Leaders, and Roofing Industry Organizations,  DO NOT want to participate in Purchasing Cooperative "Schemes' that bring dishonor to our discipline.  We DO NOT want anything to do with defrauding taxpayers, schools, or any public entity.

We seek FAIR COMPETITION for our own tax dollars.  We promote bidding laws already in place in all 50 states, all territories, and Provinces of Canada.  Our friends and colleagues in Europe suffer as well.

Today, I will feature the wonderful people at VARP (Virginia Association of Roofing Professionals).  



Before reading their "Official Position Paper", I will thank Ms Heather Greenwell, Director of Membership Services for VARP.   This is the "Unity of Message" I often talk about, and illustrates the opposition to "Predatory Sales Models".

ANYONE who diverts money intended for our schools, and our children,  are without "Honor", and may not circulate among us. 

VARP is fighting for fairness, transparency, and a right to "compete' for our own tax dollars.  I admire them, and I admire Hunter Merrill of Mountain Roofing. 

Men like Mr. Merrill LEAD our industry, as the "World's Largest Roofers" sit on their hands, and do NOTHING.  Mr. Merrill promotes honor, and fairness, and I highly recommend him to anyone seeking those traits in a contractor.

Respect to Mr. Merrill, and his honorable firm:






  
"Hi Robert,

You have VARP’s permission to use or post our position paper on cooperative procurement.  Here is the updated link dated February 2014 that we used at our Lobby Day:


As you know, VARP is active on cooperative procurement in Virginia.  As a quick update for you, the Virginia General Assembly has appointed a “Special Subcommittee” to study the Virginia Public Procurement Act in its entirety.  VARP is monitoring this subcommittee closely and our Government Affairs Committee Chair, Hunter Merrill of Mountain Roofing, has been appointed to the subcommittee’s construction work group.  

Here is a link to more information about the procurement subcommittee:  http://dls.virginia.gov/interim_studies_procurement.html.

Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions related to VARP’s efforts around the use of procurement in Virginia.  Keep up the great work!"

Heather


Heather Greenwell, Director of Member Services
Virginia Association of Roofing Professionals
2415 Westwood Avenue, Suite B, Richmond, VA 23230
----------
804-497-5917 (office)
804-288-3551 (fax)



 February 2014

The Virginia Association of Roofing Professionals (VARP) has developed the following position on theuse of cooperative procurement in construction:

While VARP believes that procurement can offer competitive purchasing of commodities, it
strongly advocates that procurement does not work for construction projects. No two
construction projects are the same. There needs to be a free, open and competitive bidding
system for any capital project or new construction.

VARP believes that the use of procurement for construction projects can often lead to some or all of the following unintended consequences:

• A lack of transparency in the bidding process.

• Improper influence from those that have a contract through a cooperative.

• Proprietary specifications excluding all but one manufacturer of building materials.

• Limited ability to challenge bid awards from excluded bidders.

• Exclusion of third-party consultants to evaluate projects.

• Non-compliance to local building codes.

• Overpriced projects that are passed along to the tax payers.

As an example of the flaw in using procurement for a capital project, a December 8, 2008 Roanoke Times article reported that the Roanoke City School District overpaid for the re-roofs of three schools, costing taxpayers at least $575,000 on a $2.3 million job.

As a direct result of what occurred in Roanoke, VARP lobbied successfully in 2010 to have 2.0-4304 Cooperative Procurement restrictions in place that limits the use of “piggybacking.” That code reads in part:

A public body may purchase from another public body’s contract even if it did not participate in the request for proposal or invitation to bid, if the request for proposal or invitation to bid
specified that the procurement was being conducted on behalf of other public bodies, except for:

1. Contracts for architectural or engineering services; or

2. Construction in excess of $200,000 by a local public body from the contract of another local
public body that is more than a straight distance of 75 miles from the territorial limits of the local public body procuring the construction. 

The installation of artificial turf or other athletic surfaces shall not be subject to the limitations prescribed in this subdivision. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to prohibit sole source or emergency procurements awarded pursuant to subsections E and F of § 2.2-4303.

In instances where any authority, department, agency, or institution of the Commonwealth desires to purchase information technology and telecommunications goods and services from another public body’s contract and the procurement was conducted on behalf of other public bodies, such purchase shall be permitted if approved by the Chief Information Officer of the Commonwealth.

Any public body that enters into a cooperative procurement agreement with a county, city, or
town whose governing body has adopted alternative policies and procedures pursuant to
subdivisions A 9 and A 10 of § 2.2-4343 shall comply with the alternative policies and procedures adopted by the governing body of such county, city, or town.

The $200,000 and 75 mile distance restriction in the current code greatly reduces the Commonwealth’s exposure to misuse of the procurement system, but still leaves Virginia open for abuse.

At a minimum, however, VARP’s position is one that the code not be changed."


THANK YOU to all members of VARP!

I encourage all roofing organizations with honorable intentions to follow suit.

VARP members should be proud of this initiative, and knowing you are protecting taxpayers, our schools, and most of all, our children.

I, and the 3,600 members of Roof Consultant's Alliance stand with you.

Friends, I know how laborious all of this seems, but the premise is not debatable.  Public structures must be competitively bid, and NOT influenced by Purchasing Cooperatives, "Preferred Vendors", "Sole Source", "No Bid", "Proprietary", SCAMS.

Public administrators may not give the slightest hint of "Favoritism".

 Public administrators have no authority to circumvent public purchasing law through the alleged "Pre-Compete" mantra of Purchasing Cooperatives.

These are but a few examples of Purchasing Cooperatives eliminating competition for their preferred vendor, and costing (routinely) 50% MORE.

Note this is a Seattle City purchasing department link that references a Cobb County, Georgia bid document.

http://www.seattle.gov/purchasing/bids2009/ITB095408USCommunities.pdf

Florida project

http://pompanobeachfl.gov/assets/pdfs/commission_backup/2014/2.11.14/3_items/11.pdf


David Kidd - Lobbyist and USC Program Director

http://www.floridaleagueofcities.com/Assets/Files/TarponSprings_USCSeminarFlier_2013_Final.pdf


And:

http://www.dadeschools.net/schoolboard/lobbyist.asp


And:

https://www.uscommunities.org/contact-us/


And:


https://www.uscommunities.org/news-events/customer-appreciation/


And:

https://www.uscommunities.org/fileadmin/hb/usc/Suppliers/Garland/Garland-Price-Increase-Approval-Letters_12_12_12.pdf


And:

http://mm1.co.fulton.ga.us/cache/00010/313/2013-0486.PDF



All you have to do is type "School Roofing Scam' into your browser, or on YouTube.  You will see the two manufacturers (Garland and Tremco) in every investigative report.

Tremco was just fined 61 Million dollars by the DOJ for abusing GSA Contracts.

Garland's top salesman in 2011 made 5.5 million dollars in commissions.  THAT'S where your tax dollars are going!

Purchasing Cooperatives must drop roofing, and roofing services from their offering immediately!

Note:  Retired 2003, do not solicit, nor accept compensation, or personal advancement of any kind.  That includes manufacturers, distributors, consultants, or contractors.

I know your time is precious, and am thankful for every moment you spend with me here.  If I've said anything that is factually wrong, please share thought with me here:

RobertRSolomon@aol.com

Reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to keep looking "UP".

Respect,

Robert R. "Ron" Solomon
Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance
Public Procurement Analyst
CCC 1325620

Tampa, Florida








Sunday, March 23, 2014

"THE Roofing Book to Own" By: Mr. Chuck Osterman

Friends;

As you are well aware by now, I do not buy, nor sell things.

When I come upon something exceptional however, I must bring it to your attention.

Mr. Osterman is a well respected roofing professional, with vast experience in all things roofing.  This book sits on my desk, and will highly recommend it to anyone who may be in the roofing discipline.

The book is very substantial, and covers virtually all aspects (including some things you cannot imagine), and is different from the $1,500.00 I spent on roofing books.  The books required for the Florida State Certification (that's the CCC 1325620 number following my name), are (to me, dated, and rather cold).

Mr. Osterman brings you a great deal of knowledge gained over 62 years in the discipline, and speaks with authority.  You will be well served to include this book in your library.


 

 

Ordering information for this book:

Amazon.com
 
 
You can read all the manuals, manufacturer's specifications, and anything else you like.  You will not find the "Real Life" aspect, and the applicability standard Mr. Osterman provides.
Worth every penny in my view, and cannot offer a higher endorsement of both the man, and the book.
As always, I am deeply grateful you care enough to visit with me here.  I know your time is precious, and try my best to make this site relevant for you.
 
Reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to keep looking "UP".
Respect.
 
Robert R. "Ron" Solomon
Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance
CCC 1325620
Public Procurement Analyst
 

Sunday, March 9, 2014

"The Future of Ohio State Term Schedules is Questionable"

Friends:

This is a MAJOR ADVANCEMENT for fair roofing competition everywhere.  The post previous to this one shows the arrogance of school administrators, and purchasing cooperatives.  They are PLAYING with money intended for our children's schools, and safe learning environment. 

When a purchasing cooperative/proprietary manufacturer are involved, your tax dollar is immediately cut to 71 cents BEFORE we even get started.  I, and others like me, are fighting for fair competition in lieu of "Favoritism", and "Exclusion" of competition.

WE want the money to reach it's intended purpose, not buy fancy boats and cars for "Salesmen".

I'll make this short, and very direct:

Duro-Last announcement on OHIO:

"February 21, 2014

Re: Ohio State Term Schedules

Dear Ohio State Term Schedule Customer:

Duro-Last Roofing has been informed that the future of Ohio State Term Schedules is questionable. The state may be phasing out state term schedules. At this time, the state has not indicated what the alternative means of procurement will be.

Duro-Last Roofing’s Ohio State Term Schedule #800085 has been renewed through
June 30, 2014. We can accept purchase orders through this date for state term schedule projects.

I apologize that currently there is no definite information available. Duro-Last will continue to communicate any new developments with our authorized contractors.

If I can be of any assistance, please feel free to contact me at (800) 248-0280 ext. 2223 or csauer@duro-last.com. You may also contact Duro-Last’s Independent Sales Representatives Mike Gottron at (614) 402-2255 or Bryan Gottron at (937) 604-0377.

Best Regards,

Chenelle D. Sauer

Government Sales Administrator
Duro-Last Roofing"

Let's take a look how your government, and certain vendors scam everyone.

http://www.garlandco.com/procurement/ohio-contract.html

Notice, emblazoned across the page is:

Projects Awarded on “Best Value” Rather than Lowest Price

This contract is based off of the General Services Administration (GSA) contracts, allowing state and local agencies to purchase goods and services with the assurance that the competitive bid process has been completed.

Projects are awarded on the basis of “best value,” which is based on system life, warranty, maintenance availability, past performance, and environmental/energy efficiency.
For additional information regarding Garland’s Ohio State Term Schedule, please contact Kathryn Kerber at 800-321-9336 ext. 3518.


Who within that administration possesses a roofing credential of any type?  Who determines "Best Value"?  What "Measurable Unit" may the taxpayer depend upon?

This is nothing more than the circumvention of public bidding laws.




The answers to those questions in order , are: Nobody, and Garland themselves.  UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCE may they legitimately compete with mainstream manufacturers (read: honorable) like Carlisle Syntec, GAF, or Firestone.
If you FAIRLY bid a public roof system, Garland would NEVER be competitive.  How can they when paying 25% "Salesman" commissions, when other manufacturers representatives are salaried?
In 2011, Garland['s top "Salesman" (New Jersey), made $5.4 million dollars.  Ask yourself if you (as a taxpayer) received the slightest benefit from that?
I'd bet "NO". 


Someone in Ohio is standing up for taxpayers, and as soon as I find out who it is, will publicly thank them here.

Roofing, and Roofing Services do not fall within the purview of  "Purchasing Cooperatives".  I think I've illustrated that point many times now, and apparently lawmakers are beginning to agree.

I am happy to share this wonderful news with you, and we'll see if the other domino's fall behind them.  My prediction is "Yes, they will".

Thank you OHIO for looking into these scams.

Your wellfare is my only concern.  I am thankful you care about what I have to say, and spend valuable time with me here.

Reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to keep looking "UP".

Respect,

Robert R. "Ron" Solomon
Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance
CCC 1325620 (Florida)
RobertRSolomon@aol.com




Monday, March 3, 2014

Tremco Sticks It to Pennsylvania Schoold district for $2.2 Million"

Friends:

I have no idea how many times I must repeat this, but public administrators do not have the authority to "Exclude" all competition, in favor of a preferred vendor.

They MAY NOT "EXCLUDE" fair competition.  They will make every attempt to circumvent the law through a "Purchasing Cooperative", the singularly most destructive ploy to literally steal from our schools.

It is against the law in all 50 states, and all territories/provinces of Canada.  I can prove that if someone wants to give it a try.

Tremco, and Garland depend upon a "No Compete" predatory sales model through "Purchasing Cooperatives".   The Cooperative gets paid a commission (4%), and the Tremco or Garland "Salesman" gets 25%.  IMMEDIATELY reducing your tax dollar to .71 and diverting the 29% straight to a salesman.

Your "Dollar" just turned into two quarters, two dimes, and a penny.


I am of the "opinion" (a word I rarely use) Purchasing Cooperatives present a "Socialistic" theme of exclusion.  You are under the impression they "save" you money, while the opposite is true.  That is not an opinion, and I can prove it.

MAJOR, MAINSTREAM, MATERIAL MANUFACTURERS DO NOT USE THIS PREDATORY CONCEPT!

Manufacturers like GAF, Firestone, and Carlisle Syntec ARE honest manufacturers that offer products equal to, or superior to Tremco.  NEVER will you see them stealing from schools, and they fight fair.

They COMPETE through open, transparent, bidding practices as we all should.  Our schools do not receive serviceability and value through Purchasing Cooperatives, they receive it through competitive bidding.

The following story is one of the most heinous examples of school waste I have ever seen.

http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2014/02/lower_dauphin_school_roofs_to.html?goback=%2Egmp_2781278%2Egde_2781278_member_5842082006267084803

Lower Dauphin school roofs to be replaced, restored.

Monica Von Dobeneck | Special to PennLiveBy Monica Von Dobeneck | Special to PennLive 
on February 17, 2014 at 10:13 PM, updated February 18, 2014 at 4:00 PM




"The Lower Dauphin School Board has agreed to pay more than $2.2 million to replace the middle school roof and restore the high school roof.

Randy Kline, representative of roofing supplier Tremco's Inc.'s Weatherproofing Technologies division, gave a presentation at the beginning of Monday's school board meeting.

He said the middle school roof is 20 years old and beyond the ability to restore. He said it has been leaking for several years. It is “hemorrhaging,” he said.

The high school roof, at 18 years old, is in somewhat better shape and can be restored at about one third the cost of replacing it, he said.

“If you let it go another two to three years, it will need to be replaced,” he said.
The middle school roof comes with a 20 year maintenance agreement at an up front cost of $73,840 and the high school roof with a 12 year maintenance agreement at a cost of $82,714.

That is obscene.  You can use an honorable manufacturer offering 20 year "No Dollar Limit" warranties, backed by billions in assets, for virtually NOTHING!.  The "Maintenance" package is the BIGGEST RIPOFF you can imagine. 

School officials will also look at adding a maintenance agreement for a portion of the high school roof, including the auditorium, that was replaced in 2008.

Cost for the middle school roof will be $1,143,756. The high school work will be $928,023.
Kline said the roof work was bid through the Keystone Purchasing Network, a cooperative of school districts.

It was not "Bid" to anyone.  Keystone used a "line item" form, similar to the one Tremco was fined $65,000,000.00 by the DOJ for abusing GSA.  Keystone used the ONE manufacturer, GUARANTEEING Tremco the job.  Period.


NO OTHER MANUFACTURERS WERE ALLOWED TO BID, NOR WERE THEY CONSIDERED.


Funds were set aside for the work in last year's capital budget.

Contractors will be Hauck Services for the high school restoration and David Maines & Associates for the middle school.

Work will start the day after students leave for summer vacation and should be essentially done by the time they return in the fall, Kline said".

What a complete and total abuse of taxpayer funds.  The administrators who did this should be fired immediately.

Here they are:  http://www.ldsd.org/Page/1

Write to her at:  ssmith@ldsd.org.




Dr. Sherri L. Smith, Superintendent
Welcome to Lower Dauphin School District's Web site. It is the mission of Lower Dauphin School District to provide a thorough and efficient public school education for all school age residents of the district. The District is committed to excellence, high expectations, and fiscal responsibility. We believe that the School District must be accountable to its students as well as its public. As part of our quest for excellence, we believe that:
  • All students can learn and succeed.
  • A highly qualified and dedicated professional and support staff is a vital factor in the educational process.
  • The home shares a significant responsibility for the education of each student. Family involvement in the schools is encouraged through cooperative planning and a cooperative approach to implementation of school programs.
  • We must be committed to providing an environment which encourages the desire for learning, fosters creativity, promotes respect for self and others, and demonstrates a spirit of cooperation and a concern for safety.
  • Quality resources and facilities promote the success of the educational process.
  • The School District must be a partner with the community and recognize the community's contributions to a strong educational program.
Through the promotion of these beliefs, the Lower Dauphin School District will meet the challenging needs of a global society and prepare its students to succeed in the 21st Century.
Sherri L. Smith, superintendent
Sherri L. Smith, Ed.D.
 Superintendent
Last Modified on June 14, 2012

Write to her at:  ssmith@ldsd.org.

Write to her at:  ssmith@ldsd.org.

Write to her at:  ssmith@ldsd.org.

Check out: School Roofing Scams on your Browser, or on YouTube.  There will be no shortage of Tremco investigations there.

This school district should have done their homework.  the Superintendent certainly didn't.

Thank you for spending time with me here, and I am humbled to bring you the information through research.

Reject negativity in all forms, and always remember to keep looking "UP"


Respect,


Robert R. Solomon

Director, Roof Consultant's Alliance
Public Procurement Analyst
CCC 1325620