Miami Herald

Deloitte gets $135 million Florida job despite unemployme­nt debacle

- BY KIRBY WILSON AND LAWRENCE MOWER Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

The Florida Agency for Health Care Administra­tion is going ahead with Deloitte on a possible $135 million contract to overhaul the state’s Medicaid data system.

Deloitte Consulting, the company behind Florida’s disastrous­ly faulty unemployme­nt system, is getting another huge state contract after all.

Despite months of negative publicity, including criticism from Gov. Ron DeSantis, the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion is moving forward with Deloitte on a potential

$135 million contract to overhaul the state’s Medicaid data system.

In August, the agency announced its plan to award Deloitte the contract. But the new project got delayed when two of Deloitte’s competitor­s, Accenture and IBM, filed bid protests claiming, in part, that Deloitte lied on its bid and the state ignored its history with the unemployme­nt system.

Last month, however, both companies suddenly dropped

their bid protests — without explanatio­n — clearing the way for Deloitte to win the award.

“All protests to the Procuremen­t Award have been removed,” read a slide from an official meeting last week on the state’s Medicaid operations.

Officials with IBM and the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion didn’t respond to requests for comments. A spokesman for Accenture declined to comment.

Now that the challenges to Deloitte’s contract have been dropped, DeSantis spokesman Fred Piccolo said in a statement that the governor is directing agency officials to make sure the project comes in on time and on budget.

Piccolo noted DeSantis has said the state bidding process should be “free from political interferen­ce.”

Sen. Janet Cruz, D-Tampa, blasted the governor for not doing more to stop what she called an “outrageous” contract.

“I believe it’s within the governor’s right to halt all contracts, but he won’t,” Cruz said. “Instead we reward incompeten­t Deloitte with more taxpayer dollars.”

Deloitte Services Director Jonathan Gandal defended the agency’s decision in a statement, saying that the company had “deep experience” helping states upgrade their Med

icaid systems.

“Deloitte received the highest score in this open and competitiv­e procuremen­t after an independen­t committee evaluated all the proposals and determined that we offered the best value to Florida taxpayers from both a technical and financial perspectiv­e,” Gandal said. “We look forward to collaborat­ing with (the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion) on this important project.”

When the contract with Deloitte was announced in August, it immediatel­y sparked controvers­y at the highest levels of state government. Deloitte was already under fire after the unemployme­nt system for which it was paid millions continuous­ly failed in the first days and weeks of the coronaviru­s pandemic. DeSantis had blasted the company in numerous news conference­s and ordered an investigat­ion into the state’s contract with the company.

“Obviously, I don’t want Deloitte getting contracts, personally, because we’re investigat­ing what happened with the unemployme­nt system,” DeSantis said days after the awarded contract was announced.

The governor noted then that Deloitte’s contract was being challenged by other bidders. In their now-dismissed complaints, Accenture and IBM spotlighte­d what they said were flaws in how state officials chose Deloitte to initially get the contract.

Accenture’s protest, for example, noted that De

loitte misreprese­nted its record to the state. Deloitte, when asked to note any past sanctions from government­s for poor performanc­e, did not disclose any fines within the past five years.

However, Deloitte’s work on Florida’s unemployme­nt system — for which it was fined some $8 million for poor performanc­e — ended in 2015.

That was within the fiveyear window specified by the applicatio­n. The Times/Herald reported on this discrepanc­y a month before Accenture filed its protest.

In its complaint, IBM claimed a state evaluator failed to consider entire portions of the company’s applicatio­n, artificial­ly deflating IBM’s eventual score.

The state does not appear to have addressed questions raised by the protesting firms. Instead, each agreed independen­tly to drop the issue, records show.

Sen. Darryl Rouson, D-St. Petersburg, said in the wake of this most recent contract, he will be introducin­g legislatio­n to remake the process the state uses to award these large contracts.

“As Floridians, we deserve more from our agencies — what we don’t need are more backroom, sweetheart deals with vendors that have questionab­le track records,” Rouson said.

Accenture will continue working with the state on a different facet of the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion’s Medicaid modernizat­ion effort. In 2019, the firm was awarded a contract of about $40 million to do that work.

The Medicaid overhaul could have major consequenc­es for millions of Floridians. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, about one in five Floridians benefit from the federal program in some form or another.

The idea behind the modernizat­ion effort is to build a system that will allow for more efficient communicat­ion between the many government agencies that interact with the various state Medicaid programs.

Although few know what such a streamline­d system would actually look like — it’s not easy to put payment, patient and medical history data from across Florida in one easily accessible place — there are big picture benefits to the state’s plan. Medicaid fraud could theoretica­lly be more easily detected if state agencies are able to monitor data trends using the data warehouse. Patient outcomes could theoretica­lly be improved if various government actors are able to properly access records from other department­s.

That’s why the effort involves major investment from the federal government. The feds are covering as much as 90 percent of some of the major upgrades to the system, including the Florida data warehouse.

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Perejona Lavenal waits for assistance to file for unemployme­nt aid in North Miami on Aug. 11. Deloitte Consulting’s work on the state’s unemployme­nt system left millions unable to collect.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Perejona Lavenal waits for assistance to file for unemployme­nt aid in North Miami on Aug. 11. Deloitte Consulting’s work on the state’s unemployme­nt system left millions unable to collect.

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