Monday, December 31, 2012

No-bidsville: same old same old

Tom Fuentes with boss, Ron Caspers, c. 1973
     Just read Frank Mickadeit’s column in the Reg. He reports that the public relations firm Forde & Mollrich will be losing their lucrative contract with the Great Park:
     Over the weekend, Councilman Jeff Lalloway gave me a copy of the memo he will send to the [Irvine] city manager this morning calling to immediately terminate the contract that guarantees F&M at least $600,000 a year and allows it to make up to $900,000.
     Lalloway's memo will place the termination vote on the Jan. 8 City Council agenda. Lalloway also will be asking his fellow council members to terminate a $201,000-a-year contract with Great Park lobbyist Townsend Public Affairs.
     This, of course, was the inevitable result of the election outcome in November, when Larry Agran lost to Steven Choi for Mayor and also lost his “majority” on the Irvine City Council. It was a stunning defeat.
     F&M enjoyed a no-bid contract, and that’s what irked Mickadeit:
     I've railed about this contract for years. It's not the product I groused about – everything I saw looked very professional. Rather it was that nobody else ever got a chance to bid on it. My files show that I was questioning F&M's contract back in 2005 when it was a mere $564,000. At the peak of the absurdity, the contract was up to $1.5 million a year.
     You’ll recall that the “Forde” of F&M is the dirty trickster and Super Crony so intimately involved in the rise of Ron Caspers to political office (Board of Supervisors) in 1970. A young Tom Fuentes ran Caspers’ ugly campaign and soon became Caspers’ chief assistant at the county and even an employee at his S&L. In 1974, Caspers perished in a mysterious boating accident off the coast of Baja. Fuentes was slated for Caspers’ replacement until a residency requirement nixed the deal.
     Fuentes was supposed to be on that ill-fated boat trip but ultimately declined the invitation, though he did provide a cooler full of goodies for his boss.
     Another person invited to join the trip was another Supervisor's aide, Lyle Overby, who jumped ship after its first leg (at Cabo).
     He must feel like a lucky guy.
     Overby, too, has flourished. He’s a top lobbyist.

     Three days ago, the Reg’s Watchdog reported that
     Two political action committees with links to CR&R Waste and Recycling Services have spent thousands to re-elect public officials who supported lucrative contracts with the company, public records show.
     …[They] spent more than $33,000 to support—and on one occasion oppose—candidates running for the Costa Mesa Sanitary District and city council seats in Rancho Santa Margarita and Tustin.
     Most of the money went to support incumbent candidates who voted on CR&R contracts during their most recent terms in office, according to public records. The candidates voted to maintain or extend the trash hauler’s contracts without opening the process to bidding [my emphasis]. These two contracts have so-called evergreen clauses that automatically renew for terms of five or six years, without additional votes or competitive bids.
. . .
     “It’s not illegal, but in my mind it just shows the influence of campaign money on the governmental process,” said Bob Stern, president of the Center for Governmental Studies.

     Who do you suppose CR&R’s lobbyist is?
     Lyle Overby, a registered lobbyist for CR&R who had links to both PACs, also said campaign contributions were unlikely to influence public officials’ votes.
     “These tiny amounts of dollars don’t buy anybody,” Overby said.
     But there’s more:
     Along with his work as a lobbyist for clients including CR&R, Overby served for more than a decade as treasurer for the Committee for Improved Public Policy, a PAC funded in part by contributions from CR&R.
     The trash company contributed $25,000 to the Committee for Improved Public Policy between April 1 and June 30, campaign finance records show. Overby gave the committee $8,000 in independent contributions.
. . .
     The committee also contributed $7,500 to another PAC, Concerned Californians for Effective Government, campaign finance forms showed. Overby gave Concerned Californians for Effective Government $5,000 in June.
     Contributions from Overby and the Committee for Improved Public Policy accounted for more than half of the$17,946 Concerned Californians for Effective Government brought in between Jan. 1 and Oct. 20, records showed.
     Et cetera. Ad nauseum.

SEE ALSO
Fuentes, Michelena & Overby: plump mosquitoes from the same swamp
The corruption files: early seventies (Fuentes, Michelena, et al.)
Tommy Tales: lobbying plus piety. Genius!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

None of this should surprise anyone who has closely followed OC politics over the years. Money is one link to successful corruption.

Roy Bauer said...

THAT, 6:05, is why the post is entitled "same old same old."

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...