Anonymous wrote:The proximity of greenbelt to “main Justice” misses the point. This will BE main Justice.
And the person who said it’s above Nina Albers pay grade is basically admitting the decision became political. I mean that’s exactly the problem. It should not have been political. Procurement is not supposed to be political and that is why this stinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fairfax County Development Association President Gerry Gordon’s comments at a forum went too far.
According to the Washington Business Journal, Gordon said the FBI would be appropriate for Prince George’s County because that’s where the agency would find the people it picks up.
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Controversial-Comments-in-Campaign-to-Land-New-FBI-Headquarters-197704711.html
Three strings of robberies in our GF neighborhood. All three times, perps were from - and picked up in - PG county.
Truth hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A PP already posted above, I am posting an excerpt from the NY Times:
Christopher A. Wray, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Thursday blasted the Biden administration’s selection of Greenbelt, Md., for the bureau’s new headquarters, citing a flawed process and suggesting that a top federal official had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Wray’s efforts to cast doubt on the selection could have serious implications for a long-awaited plan whose announcement late Wednesday seemed to mark the end of a decade-long bureaucratic scrum.
In an unusually blunt rebuke of the Biden administration, Mr. Wray claimed that officials with the General Services Administration, which oversees the management and development of federal properties, demanded that the F.B.I. relocate to suburban Maryland, even though an alternative site in Springfield, Va., scored better on a checklist of selection criteria.
“I had hoped this message would include our enthusiastic support for the way G.S.A. arrived at its selection,” Mr. Wray said in a statement. “Unfortunately, we have concerns about fairness and transparency in the process and G.S.A.’s failure to adhere to its own site selection plan.”
I think this is totally inappropriate from Wray unless he's got evidence of bribery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenbelt is an odd choice. Any location in PG county is an odd choice.
Makes zero sense.
Greenbelt is a lot closer to main Justice than the Fairfax County site.
Anonymous wrote:$$$ matter? Then build it in Kansas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A PP already posted above, I am posting an excerpt from the NY Times:
Christopher A. Wray, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Thursday blasted the Biden administration’s selection of Greenbelt, Md., for the bureau’s new headquarters, citing a flawed process and suggesting that a top federal official had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Wray’s efforts to cast doubt on the selection could have serious implications for a long-awaited plan whose announcement late Wednesday seemed to mark the end of a decade-long bureaucratic scrum.
In an unusually blunt rebuke of the Biden administration, Mr. Wray claimed that officials with the General Services Administration, which oversees the management and development of federal properties, demanded that the F.B.I. relocate to suburban Maryland, even though an alternative site in Springfield, Va., scored better on a checklist of selection criteria.
“I had hoped this message would include our enthusiastic support for the way G.S.A. arrived at its selection,” Mr. Wray said in a statement. “Unfortunately, we have concerns about fairness and transparency in the process and G.S.A.’s failure to adhere to its own site selection plan.”
I think this is totally inappropriate from Wray unless he's got evidence of bribery.
He’s way over-stepping here. It’s not his decision.
What would be the point of “bribery”? It’s transferring the land from one government entity (WMATA - created by Congress) to another government entity (DoJ for benefit of FBI). There’s no private land owner involved here.
Such a dumb line of argument to bring up “conflict of interest.”
What Wray is really worried about is that this move will like change the future culture of the FBI by attracting a more diverse work force. All those clowns in the IC who ignored J6 are going apoplectic that they have to go to PG County.
The administration official was the head of GSA’s Public Building Service. Funny how she bolted from GSA just a few short weeks before this announcement. Anyway, she has ties to greenbelt. More importantly, in procurement the basic rule is you don’t change the evaluation criteria after receipt of proposals. And that is exactly what Nina Albert did. So Wray is NOT off base at all on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A PP already posted above, I am posting an excerpt from the NY Times:
Christopher A. Wray, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Thursday blasted the Biden administration’s selection of Greenbelt, Md., for the bureau’s new headquarters, citing a flawed process and suggesting that a top federal official had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Wray’s efforts to cast doubt on the selection could have serious implications for a long-awaited plan whose announcement late Wednesday seemed to mark the end of a decade-long bureaucratic scrum.
In an unusually blunt rebuke of the Biden administration, Mr. Wray claimed that officials with the General Services Administration, which oversees the management and development of federal properties, demanded that the F.B.I. relocate to suburban Maryland, even though an alternative site in Springfield, Va., scored better on a checklist of selection criteria.
“I had hoped this message would include our enthusiastic support for the way G.S.A. arrived at its selection,” Mr. Wray said in a statement. “Unfortunately, we have concerns about fairness and transparency in the process and G.S.A.’s failure to adhere to its own site selection plan.”
I think this is totally inappropriate from Wray unless he's got evidence of bribery.
He’s way over-stepping here. It’s not his decision.
What would be the point of “bribery”? It’s transferring the land from one government entity (WMATA - created by Congress) to another government entity (DoJ for benefit of FBI). There’s no private land owner involved here.
Such a dumb line of argument to bring up “conflict of interest.”
What Wray is really worried about is that this move will like change the future culture of the FBI by attracting a more diverse work force. All those clowns in the IC who ignored J6 are going apoplectic that they have to go to PG County.[/quote
The administration official was the head of GSA’s Public Building Service. Funny how she bolted from GSA just a few short weeks before this announcement. Anyway, she has ties to greenbelt. More importantly, in procurement the basic rule is you don’t change the evaluation criteria after receipt of proposals. And that is exactly what Nina Albert did. So Wray is NOT off base at all on this.
Anonymous wrote:Fairfax County Development Association President Gerry Gordon’s comments at a forum went too far.
According to the Washington Business Journal, Gordon said the FBI would be appropriate for Prince George’s County because that’s where the agency would find the people it picks up.
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Controversial-Comments-in-Campaign-to-Land-New-FBI-Headquarters-197704711.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A PP already posted above, I am posting an excerpt from the NY Times:
Christopher A. Wray, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Thursday blasted the Biden administration’s selection of Greenbelt, Md., for the bureau’s new headquarters, citing a flawed process and suggesting that a top federal official had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Wray’s efforts to cast doubt on the selection could have serious implications for a long-awaited plan whose announcement late Wednesday seemed to mark the end of a decade-long bureaucratic scrum.
In an unusually blunt rebuke of the Biden administration, Mr. Wray claimed that officials with the General Services Administration, which oversees the management and development of federal properties, demanded that the F.B.I. relocate to suburban Maryland, even though an alternative site in Springfield, Va., scored better on a checklist of selection criteria.
“I had hoped this message would include our enthusiastic support for the way G.S.A. arrived at its selection,” Mr. Wray said in a statement. “Unfortunately, we have concerns about fairness and transparency in the process and G.S.A.’s failure to adhere to its own site selection plan.”
I think this is totally inappropriate from Wray unless he's got evidence of bribery.
Anonymous wrote:A PP already posted above, I am posting an excerpt from the NY Times:
Christopher A. Wray, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Thursday blasted the Biden administration’s selection of Greenbelt, Md., for the bureau’s new headquarters, citing a flawed process and suggesting that a top federal official had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Wray’s efforts to cast doubt on the selection could have serious implications for a long-awaited plan whose announcement late Wednesday seemed to mark the end of a decade-long bureaucratic scrum.
In an unusually blunt rebuke of the Biden administration, Mr. Wray claimed that officials with the General Services Administration, which oversees the management and development of federal properties, demanded that the F.B.I. relocate to suburban Maryland, even though an alternative site in Springfield, Va., scored better on a checklist of selection criteria.
“I had hoped this message would include our enthusiastic support for the way G.S.A. arrived at its selection,” Mr. Wray said in a statement. “Unfortunately, we have concerns about fairness and transparency in the process and G.S.A.’s failure to adhere to its own site selection plan.”