Public Advocate Banner
Home About Press Policy Contact
About the Office
Betsy Gotbaum
Contact
News
Press Releases
Policy
Reports
Reports
Reports
Get Help
How We Can Help
Commission on School Governance
Public Advocate's Blog
 
 
 

Releases & Statements

 

For Immediate Release: Tuesday, August 29, 2006

 

Public Advocate Calls on DOE to Suspend No-Bid Contract
With Alvarez and Marsal, Pending Investigation

 

Today, on behalf of the 1.1 million children in New York City public schools, I’m calling on the Department of Education to suspend its no-bid contract with the corporate “turnaround” firm Alvarez and Marsal, pending a thorough investigation of the firm’s work in other school systems around the country.

 

It is clear that the DOE didn’t do its homework before going ahead with this $17 million, no-bid give-away. Even a cursory check of Alvarez and Marsal’s track record would be enough to set off alarm bells.

 

Here’s how it ended in St. Louis, the firm’s first public-sector assignment, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: “The turnaround firm was going to put the district on a solid financial and organizational footing…Instead, there is vague talk of a plan…The financial mess the turnaround firm was going to fix? It’s still with us.”

 

Under Alvarez and Marsal’s management in St. Louis, 16 schools were closed and class sizes grew. Now the firm is overseeing the “recovery school district” in New Orleans, appointing a former Defense Department contractor and oil executive with no education experience to be the district’s chief financial officer. The New York Times reports that the New Orleans public school system has been “replaced by a small but labyrinthine system of state, city, and charter-operated schools, each with its own rules, applications, and starting dates.” In some cases, students are being turned away because of low grades or special needs.

 

And this is the firm the DOE is handing $17 million in taxpayer money with no competitive bidding process? These are the consultants who will each make $1 million at the unheard-of rate of $450 an hour, while our teachers and administrators are still paid less than their counterparts in the suburbs and across the country? Do we really want a company with this track record telling us how to reorganize our school system?

 

In the conclusion of its editorial, the St. Post-Dispatch noted that “several other school systems have expressed interest in the turnaround firm,” then added, “For [the firm’s] sake, let’s hope they don’t ask for references.” Unfortunately, that appears to be exactly what’s happened.

 

The DOE must put on the brakes before it makes a costly no-bid blunder. We’ve seen what Alvarez and Marsal did in St. Louis and New Orleans. New York City public schools cannot afford that kind of help

 



Back to top