Stringer urges de Blasio to restore contract oversight

New York City's comptroller wants the mayor to pull the executive order he issued in March, when the city needed to quickly purchase ventilators and other coroavirus-related equipment.

New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer wants Mayor Bill de Blasio to reinstate to his office oversight powers for the city’s procurement process.

De Blasio issued an executive order March 17, when the city needed to quickly purchase ventilators and personal protective equipment as the COVID-19 pandemic escalated, suspending the requirement that Stringer’s office sign off on most city procurement contracts.

“Now that our city is in Phase 4 of reopening, the suspension of the checks and balances that govern our emergency procurement process can no longer be maintained,” said city Comptroller Scott Stringer.

The city has already paid out more than $1.5 billion on these emergency contracts.

“Now that our city is in Phase 4 of reopening, the suspension of the checks and balances that govern our emergency procurement process can no longer be maintained,” Stringer said in his letter to the mayor.

An increasing number of contracts, he said, “have unclear direct relevance” to the pandemic. Whereas in April, 19% of registered COVID-19 emergency contracts were for PPE, according to Stringer, in June, PPE accounted for only 3% of all contracts.

“It has been reported that a number of COVID-19 related contracts worth tens of millions of dollars have been canceled or not fulfilled,” he said. “These same reports also indicate that many of these contracts were with vendors that lack the necessary capacity or relevant experience, or even have criminal backgrounds.

Advertisement

“Given these facts, it is imperative that my office resume its charter-mandated role of safeguarding taxpayer funds.”

CORONAVIRUS IMPACT: ADDITIONAL COVERAGE
By Jon Prior
March 31, 2020 2:51 PM

Weak demand for oil and gas, brought on by the economic fallout of the coronavirus outbreak, has raised concerns of energy firms missing loan payments or even going bankrupt. Here’s how banks and regulators are trying to get ahead of potential problems.

4 Min Read
BB-040120-VOL (1).png
Aaron Weitzman
March 31, 2020 2:02 PM

Municipal bond issuance was $67.88 billion after the first two months of 2020 and was on pace to easily eclipse the $400 billion mark — then COVID-19 completely turned the market upside down.

7 Min Read
“Combating the COVID-19 crisis demands the full attention and all available resources from the public, from state, local, and federal government entities, as well as all industries, including the vital financial services industry,” said ICBA CEO Rebeca Romero Rainey.
CRA
Brendan Pedersen
March 31, 2020 1:57 PM

The ICBA chief’s plea for a six-month halt to regulations not related to the pandemic followed similar calls by community groups and a key Senate Democrat.

2 Min Read

Stringer’s report followed revelations that several COVID-19 related contracts worth tens of millions of dollars have been canceled or left unfulfilled by vendors lacking the capacity or relevant experience.

Several New York media outlets reported that Digital Gadgets LLC founder and chief executive Charles Tebele, who donated to de Blasio’s failed presidential campaign, did not deliver on a $91 million contract for N95 masks and ventilators in March.

“All our agencies had to work together to get whatever PPEs we could for a period of time,” de Blasio said at his daily briefing on Tuesday. “We worked with a variety of companies. My understanding is the companies we worked with were able to produce a lot for us when we needed it.

“The larger point is I haven't seen the specifics of what the comptroller put forward, but I would say the obvious, this crisis isn't over," he added.

The coronavirus has claimed the lives of 23,662 New Yorkers as of Monday, according to city data. Health officials include deaths reported as COVID-19 or equivalent, without positive laboratory tests.

The city is also facing a $9 billion operating budget gap through the next fiscal year due to a massive drop in tax revenue.

At the end of the fiscal 2020 second quarter, the city had about $38 billion of general obligation debt outstanding. The Transitional Finance Authority and Municipal Water Finance Authority carry about $39 billion and $31 billion, respectively.