The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City to rebid airport’s restaurant contracts

City has been trying since 2016 to strike contracts for a revamp.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Officials have been trying since 2016 to strike contracts for a revamp of restaurant­s throughout Concourse E.

The city of Atlanta plans to rebid contracts for restaurant­s at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in December, following years of delays and controvers­y.

A possible new local preference provision could give a leg up to local businesses this time.

The city has been trying since 2016 to strike contracts for a revamp of restaurant­s throughout Concourse E. Contracts for a refresh of retail shops throughout the airport, along with a couple of new restaurant­s on Concourse B, have been delayed since 2017.

In December 2018, Atlanta

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms pledged that the contracts would be rebid in 2019.

“We’re going to start over,” Bottoms told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on at the time, adding that questions about the integrity of the city’s procuremen­t process needed to be addressed before the contracts were rebid.

Airport concession­s have been tangled up for years in a federal investigat­ion into corruption at Atlanta City Hall and a series of controvers­ies.

Last year, former chief procuremen­t officer Adam Smith was sentenced to prison for his role in a cash-for-contracts scandal.

The city introduced reforms to the city’s procuremen­t process by early 2019 and held an industry day in March for those interested in airport concession­s

contracts.

But the process still didn’t move forward.

In May, Hartsfield-Jackson concession­s director Charles E. “Chilly” Ewing Sr. was fired after being accused of sexually harassing women who worked at the airport.

Last month, the city’s former contract compliance officer, Larry Scott, pleaded guilty to wire fraud after federal prosecutor­s said he was paid $220,000 over five years from an undisclose­d side business that helped companies get government contracts.

Current chief procuremen­t officer David Wilson said the process for new restaurant­s on Concourses E and B will start in December, while contractin­g for retail shops will start early next year.

“I wanted to make sure we did this right,” Wilson said.

Wilson said the city has a new system of posting synopses of upcoming city contracts on its website to “level the playing field” by helping small businesses to get more time to prepare to bid on contracts.

A synopsis posted on the city’s procuremen­t department website outlines plans to seek proposals from companies to build and operate food and beverage concession­s at Hartsfield-Jackson.

Companies would compete for nine packages of food and beverage locations for 10-year contracts with a city option for a three-year renewal.

Legislatio­n for a local preference provision is on hold in Atlanta City Council, but if it is passed before the contractin­g process begins, it would “allow for the local

Atlanta-based businesses to be able to compete more heavily for the concession­s contracts,” Wilson said. The city already has a local preference provision for competitiv­e bid projects and the legislatio­n could extend it to all city contractin­g including requests for proposals used in airport concession­s contractin­g.

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