| The delay is unfortunate, but I think it's good that they withdrew a potentially iffy procurement. |
| Guys - write to the Board of Education. This sounds like a recommendation from the system to them to rescind the RFP. Perhaps you can make your point about throwing out Discovery's bid and carrying on to the Board to speed things along. |
Fair enough, but I thought the letter said they recused themselves. Would be curious to see some clear reporting on this, as the reason to stop an entire process all seems a bit flimsy. |
NO ONE at that level is ever a boy scout. |
Even if Discovery recused themselves, the procurement is still potentially flawed. For example, if the people wrote the RFP so that Discovery would score highest, then the other bidders' scores would be affected too. |
Couldn’t agree more. I suspect there are more conflicts of interest looming, including some involving the team JHU assembled to do the curriculum audit. More to come. What a mess. |
interesting connections . . . Discovery = "MCPS 2.0" |
David Steinberg - Did I read that name in the 2.0 report? Can someone refresh my memory? |
| Erick Lang is definitely the Associate Superintendent of the Office of Curriculum and Instructional Planning. Too bad Jack Smith couldn't just fire him before the whole RFP process. Coincidence that he has a job offer from a company submitting a bid? How ridiculous, he screws us over with 2.0, now he is screwing over the schools and teachers who will be piloting the new curriculum. I think they should just drop Discovery from the running. If they want him, they can have him- but not our money too. |
Terrible. |
+1. Plus they were at the stage of having presentations by the vendor finalists. If they rejected strong proposals to make it easier for Discovery, that would be problematic. I wish there were some strong local reporting being done on these issues, but sadly Bethedsa Magazine seems only to report on press releases. |
What connections? |
| I think MCPS's high priced lawyers could give them solutions on how to fix this procurement issue properly. A conflict of interest isn't great, but can be repaired with proper steps, and not affect the substance. But delaying the roll out of a better curriculum on account of a conflict of interest in contracting is HORRIBLE for our kids. |
It’s not clear what happened in this case, but it can be hard to fix a tainted procurement process. Maybe they could accelerate a replacement process (shorter turnaround times), but I don’t know whether MCPS bylaws would permi that. |
| It is one thing if there is actual evidence that someone pandered to a bidder in order to secure a job opportunity and rigged the bidding process; it is another if everyone is acting out of "an abundance of caution" and to "avoid the appearance of impropriety." If there was ACTUAL impropriety, fine restart the process. But if they are concerned about appearances, I encourage them to keep their eyes on the prize - obtaining a solid curriculum. |