Jumping to Conclusions

November 16, 2012

The headline of the El Paso Times Wednesday (Nov. 14, 2012) was “Region 19 director grills EPISD trustees”.  The article however did not report any heavy questioning from the Region 19 director.  There evidently was some lecturing on his part though.  From what I have been able to figure out about this school board mess, the director was spot on.

My issue with the headline is that it is misleading, but then again I have a dictionary.  Intense questioning was in order and I would have liked to read about it.

Unfortunately the article went on to say that the Region 19 director asked “How do you get a company and don’t find out that they don’t know how to do what your’re paying them for?” in referring to a $375,485 contract the district was required to issue “to oversee and monitor test administration and test security for this school year…”.  The director evidently told the board that the leader of the company they awarded the contract to called him after the contract was issued  and asked Region 19 to provide training to the company.

That sounds pretty bad.  It appeared that the board issued a sizable contract to a company to perform a critical function and that the company did not know how to do it’s job.

Then on Thursday the Times headline was “State test-monitoring company followed EPISD bid requirements” which I took to mean that the bid was defective.  The rather long article did a pretty good job of explaining that the contract required the vendor to receive some kind of training from the director’s education service center.  I suspect that some lawyers helped the El Paso Times understand the need for clarification.  It appears that the vendor was doing what was required of them.  Then it turns out that the education service center does not offer that kind of training.

So what did they do?  “Representatives from [the vendor] participated and observed EPISD training on these procedures on November 1”.  Let’s get this straight.  The company that is supposed to oversee and monitor the process gets trained by the group that they are supposed to oversee and monitor.  Only at EPISD.

The bidding process was defective.  Only one bid was received.  This is typical.  The school district wrote a bid request that could not be complied with and that was so restrictive that only one firm responded.  In all probability any local CPA firm would have been able to do the work, but then again they probably don’t want to get involved with the school district.

So what do we have here?  First we have a newspaper that goes through the motions of helping watch a defective school district but relies on emotion instead of fact.  Second we have the director of an education service center making highly misleading accusations.  Third we have the EPISD that has thoroughly failed in the past and that cannot even handle a bid fairly.

By the way, I remember when is was called Region XIX Education Service Center.  I guess somewhere along the line they stopped teaching children Roman numerals.  For all I know they don’t teach where Rome is anymore either.

Our children deserve better!


Camping Out At City Hall

November 14, 2012

The El Paso Times yesterday had an article where the City Manager was informing us that they would be moving city departments to recreation centers and the airport for some number of months while construction is finished on the buildings that they plan to move into after tearing down City Hall.

Recreation centers?

What about the people who use the recreation centers?  Will the centers be available for use as before?  If the answer is no we (the citizens) need to stop this nonsense now.

If the answer is yes then we have vast amounts of unused recreation center space that could be used by the public.  Why is it available for offices?  Are we out of money?  If so, maybe we should stop buying gadgets and invest in our children.

As far as doing business with the city I guess customer service (yes they are supposed to work for us) and efficiency are out of the question with this group running our city.

They evidently knew about this disaster before the bond election but chose not to tell us.  This is another example of their “two step” process whereby we do not get the whole story until after it is too late to do anything about what they are up to.

I also note that the Times continues to report the cost of the move at 30 million dollars, when the spending already totals 37 million dollars.  See City Hall Relocation.

We deserve better.

Our children deserve better!


City Management

November 12, 2012

I liked the editorial in the El Paso Times yesterday.

You can read it here: http://www.elpasotimes.com/opinion/ci_21972302/city-manager  (It may take a minute to show in your browser but it does show in mine after about 50 seconds).

Maybe the Times will start reporting the happenings at City Hall with a bit more independent analysis.

City staff works for the City Manager and what they do is a direct result of the tone set by the boss.

The result is that what we see during City Council is often just a stage show.

They frequently use a two step system where a presentation is first made before Council making certain representations.  In the second step they proceed to do something different from what they promised (an example will follow in a later post).

Sometimes they claim that they do not have time to do something the right way because time will not allow it.

Or they will claim that something needs to be bought “sole source” without bidding when the facts do not support avoiding bidding.

As the editorial points out some members of Council correspond privately with staff during open meetings.  An exchange of electronic mail during an open meeting is considered a form of deliberation and must be open to the public.

Watch a City Council meeting.  See how they react when a member of the public addresses them.  Council needs to start listening to the public.

Staff and Council need to start following the rules.

We deserve this.

 

 

 


Actual Election Numbers

November 7, 2012

I was disappointed that in reading both the paper and electronic versions of the El Paso Times this morning I did not see actual numerical results.

Maybe I missed them.

My recollection is that in prior years the Times did a good job of getting us the numbers the morning after the election.

I wonder what the decision process was.


Talk About The Times

November 6, 2012

We would like to hear what you are thinking!

Use this post to comment upon what you are thinking about The El Paso Times.

Please keep your comments civil and do not get personal.

Certainly you can express yourself without being crass.