Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Village Voice Nails Bloomberg Over CityTime

Our teflon mayor may be losing some of his coating - he's starting to get directly blamed for the CityTime mess:

Mayor Bloomberg's "slipped through the cracks" explanation for the massive fraud and cost overruns at the CityTime payroll computerization project was already pretty lame when he gave it. Today it's looking a whole lot lamer.


That's because of a tough letter dug out of the cracks of the city's archives by city comptroller John Liu and reported today by the Times and Juan Gonzalez in the News . It shows that more than seven years ago, the former director of the Office of Payroll Administration had scathing criticisms of the outside contractor overseeing the project which was supposed to cost $63 million and has since soared to more than $600 million. Richard Valcich tagged Science Applications International, Inc. as being chronically and purposely late in order to boost profits. "SAIC has repeatedly been late on virtually every deliverable," wrote Valcich in his February, 2003 letter. The company's "commitment to quality is almost non-existent and is reflected from the top down," Valcich stated.

At one point in the six-page techno-rant, Valcich sarcastically suggests that SAIC would probably be trying by the end of the year to stick the city for "8,000 hours" pay for shoddy work.

That's pretty tough language for a bureaucrat. But it apparently had zero effect on Bloomberg and his high-tech technocrats who so pride themselves as cost-conscious managers. When Valcich retired in 2004, he was replaced by Joel Bondy, who had worked as a consultant for another company involved in the stunningly bungled project which is still two-thirds incomplete. Bondy was suspended without pay last week after owners of two CityTime subcontractors were charged with stealing $80 million by inflating their hours and costs.

Last week, Bloomberg went on the radio to bemoan how hard it is to keep track of these things. "You can't look everyplace," he told John Gambling on Friday. The mayor insisted that he wasn't offering any excuses, but then went ahead and gave one: "If you want to know how big projects have big things that slip through the cracks, this is as good an example as you need," he said.

But the Valcich letter shows that at least someone on the mayor's team was trying back then to make sure the problem wasn't ignored. City unions, especially Local 375 representing city technical workers, were also trying to blow the whistle, to no avail.


Here's how a commenter on the NY Times website described Bloomberg's liability in this mess:

More evidence of Mayor Bloomberg’s Mismanagement: ex-Payroll boss Richard Valcich blew the whistle on CityTime Fraud in 2003, but NOTHING was done until Comptroller John Liu elected to his office in January 2010 and immediately began an audit on this massive CityTime Fraud.

And Bloomberg shamefully said last week he can run this country better than the sitting President. Ridiculous B.S.! This massive CityTime fraud sat for at least 7 years and Bloomberg did nothing about it. Letting taxpayers get robbed & run over by fraudsters – that’s really excellent management by the “greatest” Mayor on earth by whose standards? Bloomberg’s definition must be: “Greatest” Mayor in terms of his GREATEST leniency toward fraudsters robbing taxpayers than any Mayor in the history of New York City. Oh, did Bloomberg get his share from CityTime cronies too?


And we still have to see more about the contract the NYCDOE gave the company connected to the CityTime scandal.

This isn't over for Bloomberg - not by a long shot.

3 comments:

  1. May the third term curse do to him what he would do to us.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I will sit here and watch as the karma unfolds....

    ReplyDelete
  3. The Lizard Queen begins to unravel...?

    ReplyDelete