The Platte Perspective

"If there is any one secret of success, it lies in the ability to get the other person's point of view and see things from that person's angle as well as from your own."

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Abstaining from vote should have been call

We’ve probably all experienced the consequences of sacrificing quality for price. Whether it’s been in food purchased at the grocery store, repairs made on our home, or other areas of daily life. We want the cheapest price possible, but in making that the sole factor in our decision, it can end up costing more in the long-run if we choose a lower quality product. So even though the construction contract awarded to J.E. Dunn for the community center expansion was about $300,000 above the lowest bid, many of us understand price alone cannot be the only factor. After all, out of the projected cost of $21 million, that $300,000 or so only accounts for about 1.5% of the total construction cost. It could be considered a premium well worth the cost if it avoided any number of mistakes costing much more later on from errors due to poor workmanship, bad planning, or corner cutting of an unqualified contractor, right? Maybe that’s what the County Commission believed they were doing. For this situation, that argument can’t convincingly be made though.

In order for a decision like that to be justified, the process itself must have credibility, transparency, and uniformity. If that takes place, the decision defends itself and this is where the questions begin to arise regarding the Commission’s selection of contractor J.E. Dunn.

J.E. Dunn’s campaign contribution to Presiding Commissioner Jason Brown alone is not enough to suggest it was given in return for a future contract, but Brown’s previous employment with the company, which was not widespread knowledge, does bring up a conflict of interest. Not the kind that suggests wrong doing, but one which could be perceived and the kind that should require him to abstain from the vote. No matter how objectively Brown weighed the bids, his familiarity with the firm and inside knowledge should have been enough to remove himself from the process. Even had Brown abstained from the final vote, if J.E. Dunn was the most qualified and presented the best value for the taxpayer dollar, it would have been reinforced with a staff recommendation and support from 2nd District Commissioner Jim Plunkett. It received neither. At the minimum, an explanation should be available to stand on its own as to why the lowest bid was rejected from a clearly qualified Universal Construction. In fact, it seems like several people or groups of people involved in the process had varying opinions on which contractor was best for the project, despite all seeing the same analysis and numbers.

Now, the Commission can’t and shouldn’t always streamline county staff’s recommendations, but in the event a decision is contrary to that recommendation, it should have credible and strong reasoning. Awarding a bid to any company, not just JE Dunn, because ‘they built it originally’ and ‘we like them’ should not be acceptable reasons on their own to choose a contractor for such a substantial project. Doing so could even be considered lazy because many contractors use this type of reasoning to gain repeat business. It’s applicable, but not a deal breaker. If you pick a contractor based on that line of thought, it makes you wonder why county staff and resources were used for a competitive bid process in the first place.

In the end, J.E. Dunn may truly be the best contractor for the job. But with a divided vote from a usually unified three-member Commission, a perceived conflict of interest, a different staff recommendation, and no supporting back-up for the decision, it’s easy to see why people may question the final selection. Overall, it seems to cancel out many of the touted financial gains that came from the Commission’s decision to lower the tax levy last fall and the heavily debated budget cuts which occurred in January.

South soccer hits skid, before stretch run

If the Park Hill South Lady Panthers were going to hit a losing skid this season, their past couples games wouldn’t necessarily be a bad time to do so. In the middle of a five game stretch over eight days, the Panthers have lost the first two. The first was a close 1-0 loss to Liberty, which was rained out after one half of play. The second came Monday night in a 2-0 loss to Staley. Luckily for South, none of those games will have an effect on their district seeding and neither will the next three with play against Fort Osage still taking place as The Citizen goes to press Tuesday night and a match with Park Hill scheduled for Thursday.

Normally, this week would play a huge role in shaping the district tournament seeding, but with much of the Panther schedule arranged several years in advance, the games remained in place despite new districts being established in the meantime. With that in mind Coach Joe Toigo isn’t worried about his team’s recent string of losses.

“It’s a tight stretch. We thought these would be district games because they were two years ago when we scheduled them,” Coach Joe Toigo said. “More or less these are just scrimmage games. I think we’re ok. I’m not worried about anything right now.”

One opportunity Toigo is using during this stretch is to see what lineup he’ll be able to use once postseason play comes around. With the loss of senior Haley Shelton in last Friday’s loss to Liberty, seeing who can fit where comes with an even added importance. Learning now, even if it includes losing, will hopefully lead to wins at the end of the season.

“My kids have to overcome my approach right now, which is to play a lot of kids in pressure situations so we know who we can rely on when districts start. This is a good run for us to evaluate those players,” Toigo said.

Aside from a 9-0 win over Fort Osage last week, the Panthers have been out of sync offensively over recent weeks and will try to get back their offensive attack over their last three regular season games next week. The Panthers, now at 11-3-2, begin district play the week of May 14th.

Spring Roundup: Apr. 23-30

Park Hill South Boys Golf
…blasted away the competition at the Class 4, District 8 golf tournament last week as they combined for a team score of 300, good enough to clinch them a first place finish and district title. Nick Sobba took first individually after shooting under par, the only person in the field to break par. Matt Barry and Nick Schleisman tied for fifth place, shooting four over par. Austin Dorrell (+5) and Luke Becker (+9) weren’t too far behind with seventh and eleventh place finishes, respectively.

“Our team score reflects on all of the players and how each of them played extremely well,” Coach Larry Torgerson said. “It was a great day, but now we have to refocus for Sectionals.”

All five Panther golfers qualified for the sectional tournament being played Wednesday at Winterstone Golf Course in Independence for the right to move onto the state tournament next week.

Park Hill Boys Golf
…shot a team score of 375 at the Class 4, District 8 golf tournament last week, good enough for a seventh place finish in the eleven team field. Adam Meisch led the way for Park Hill with a score of +15 and 18th place finish. Colby Buehler took 24th place with score of +20. Both will advance to the sectional tournament this week. Other scores for Park Hill include Jordan and Logan Lashbrook (+26) who both tied for 32nd while Andrew Butler came in 46th place with a score of +50.

Park Hill Girls Soccer
…went 2-1 in the Oak Park Tournament last weekend with a 3-1 win over O’Hara and a 2-1 win over Oak Park. The Trojans were led by two goals from Olivia Nowakowski and one from Regina Bolin. Karra Kennedy and Mackenzie Maxwell scored Park Hill’s two goals against Oak Park. A doubt overtime loss to Platte County from penalty kicks in the championship game accounted for the Trojans one loss. Park Hill is now 9-12 on the season with a game against Park Hill South scheduled Thursday.

Park Hill Baseball
…improved their record to 12-6 on the year after a 17-1 thumping of Ruskin to end last week with Ryan Winter driving in three runs on two hits along with a number of other Trojan offensive contributors. Earlier in the week Park Hill beat St. Joe Central 6-2 before hitting a two game skid against Liberty losing 12-3 and Lee’s Summit West 2-1 in eight innings.

Jake Jones is leading Park Hill is offense on the year with a .367 batting average and 13 RBI’s. Pitcher Dalton Moats continues to dominate on the mound. In his 34 innings, he’s recorded four wins, 61 strikeouts, and only given up one run.

Park Hill plays Kearney and Platte County at home this week before playing at North Kansas City Friday.

Park Hill Boys Track
…took first place in their own Park Hill Invitational last week with 127 team points as they tuned up for the Conference meet this week. First place wins included Anthony Arens in the 100 meter run, Devon Belew in the 400, Riley Fahrenholz in the 800, Joey Walton in the 1600, Kainen Utt in the 3200, Devonte Thornton in the high jump, Logan Chevalier in the pole vault, and Neal Sampson in the long jump. In addition to their first place finishes, Park Hill’s Kyle Pudenz and Nate Huffer took second and third, respectively, in the 800, and Cain Winebrenner placed second in the 1600.

The Conference meet will be held at Lee’s Summit West on Friday.

Park Hill Girls Track
…placed second behind North Kansas City in the Park Hill Invitational last week with 96 team points. Katie Ebbrecht and Joanna Grauberger took first and second respectively in the 800 meter run while Kim Rau and Mercedes Robinson did the same in the 1600. Other first place finishes included Robinson in the 3200, Bailey Cation in the triple jump, and the 4x800 relay.

Park Hill/Park Hill South Boys Tennis
…Zack Royle, who has been dominating in his junior season, continued that success last weekend at the Northland Tournament as he defeated Park Hill’s Mike Jones 10-2 in the title match of the singles bracket. Park Hill South’s doubles team of Jim Geary and Josh Robaska advanced to the title match of the doubles bracket, but fell to Liberty 10-6.

Park Hill and Park Hill South will play in the Brandon McPherson Memorial Tournament Wednesday on the Country Club Plaza before looking to district play next week.

Park Hill South Baseball
Park Hill South lost games against Fort Osage 7-6 and Raytown South 11-3 before pulling out a victory against Belton to end the week 4-1. The Panthers are now 7-14 on the season and continue to look for the right consistency to bring all parts of the game together for a winning combination. They play at William Chrisman Wednesday before hosting Winnetonka Friday afternoon.