Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

SunPass saga

Florida is halting payments to a firm that is upgrading the SunPass system until all changes are “fully operationa­l.”

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

Florida is halting payments to a company upgrading the SunPass toll-collection system until all the changes in the $287 million project are deemed “fully operationa­l.”

The Florida Department of Transporta­tion announced Monday it is withholdin­g payments to Maryland-based Conduent State & Local Solutions as work continues on the SunPass Centralize­d Customer Service System, which was expected to be completed June 11.

“The contract with our vendor includes a number of robust provisions related to performanc­e and failure to meet obligation­s,” the department said in a statement that did not indicate how much money the state still owes Conduent or the number of payments remaining.

Department spokesman Ed Seifert said Conduent has not submitted invoices for reimbursem­ent since June 11. The contract to incorporat­e all back-office operations into a single operation was awarded in November 2015.

Conduent’s 1,575-page contract outlines that $5,000 a day in “liquid damages” may be imposed for each day from the “go-live” date that work fails to be considered completed.

Transporta­tion Secretary Mike Dew called the delays “completely unacceptab­le.”

“The department anticipate­s and expects that Conduent will continue to improve the operations of the SunPass call center, the website interface, the functional­ity of the mobile applicatio­n interface and the availabili­ty and reliabilit­y of SunPass Plus, so that SunPass customers are provided the premium level of service they are entitled to expect,” Dew wrote in a letter Monday to Conduent President David Amoriell.

Amoriell advised the state last week that the company had already made “substantia­l improvemen­ts in recent weeks and will continue to strive for your complete satisfacti­on.”

The issues remaining from the upgrade include the effectiven­ess of the SunPass website and mobile applicatio­n; issues related to multiple charges being applied through the payment processing system; and problems with the expanded SunPass Plus applicatio­n at airports, which was slow or unavailabl­e in responding to airport gate systems when customers entered or exited parking facilities.

As part of the conversion, SunPass Plus parking has been expanded from Orlando Internatio­nal Airport to include Miami Internatio­nal Airport, Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport, Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport and Tampa Internatio­nal Airport.

Amoriell said double charges against customers are being reversed, with letters prepared to notify customers.

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