The Oklahoman

MADE IN CHINA

MARBLE CITY UPSET ABOUT CHINESE VENDOR WINNING CAPITOL BID

- BY DALE DENWALT Capitol Bureau | ddenwalt@oklahoman.com

Locals in Marble City, a small community near the Arkansas border, are upset with the state’s decision to restore the Oklahoma Capitol using marble from a Chinese vendor.

The state, however, said it followed its own law by picking the lowest-cost bid that met the project’s specificat­ions.

“It’s the Oklahoma state Capitol, so I feel like it should have marble from the state of Oklahoma and not another country,” said Marble City Mayor Tamara Hibbard. “The marble from Marble City is helping our residents that work there, and they’re putting money back into our economy.”

Over the next four years, workers will replace parts of the Capitol’s lowest floor, eventually laying down about 25,000 square feet of marble. The Capitol Restoratio­n project wanted to spend $3.5 million on a flooring surface, and asked for subcontrac­tors to submit bids.

One of the bids was linked to Polycor, a manufactur­ing company that produces marble from a quarry in Marble City.

“Unfortunat­ely, the initial bid utilizing Polycor marble came in at $2 million over that budget amount,” Project Manager Trait Thompson wrote in an email to lawmakers. “After consulting with the state, the bid was rejected, which is allowable under (state law).”

The project’s primary contractor, Manhattan Constructi­on rebid the flooring contract.

“In the second bid package, Polycor’s prices were so high that no subcontrac­tor chose to use their product in their submission. All respondent­s chose to use marble sourced from other areas,” Thompson wrote.

A ‘superior’ product

Manhattan picked the winning bid, which came in $10,000 under the budgeted cost. Thompson noted that the Chinese marble is “superior to the quality of the Polycor product in every measuremen­t category,” including bulk density,

water absorption and strength. There is a law that requires state projects to use materials manufactur­ed within the state, but only if they are available and are less costly than other options.

When Hibbard learned that another vendor would be used, she reached out to fellow members of the Eastern Oklahoma Developmen­t District and even to lawmakers, who told her they would look into the issue.

“The state’s responsibi­lity in this matter is to ensure the project is completed within the allotted budget, ensure that all applicable bidding laws were followed, and ensure the quality of the workmanshi­p and materials used on the Capitol Restoratio­n Project,” Thompson wrote in response to those inquiries. “In all instances, we are satisfied and find no reason to deviate from the selected course of action.”

However, Hibbard remains unmoved.

“By selecting foreign materials over local materials for our own state Capitol building, what message is that sending to Oklahomans?” she said. “Does supporting ‘Made in Oklahoma’ businesses mean something different when it comes to our own state Legislatur­e?”

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED BY TAMARA HIBBARD] [PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE AND ILLUSTRATI­ON BY TODD PENDLETON, THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? Polycor, which operates the quarry in Marble City, donated two of these stone corner pieces to the town for its centennial celebratio­n in 2003. The renovation project at the state Capitol continues this month with the scaffoldin­g on the building’s...
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY TAMARA HIBBARD] [PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE AND ILLUSTRATI­ON BY TODD PENDLETON, THE OKLAHOMAN] Polycor, which operates the quarry in Marble City, donated two of these stone corner pieces to the town for its centennial celebratio­n in 2003. The renovation project at the state Capitol continues this month with the scaffoldin­g on the building’s...
 ?? [PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE, THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? The marble flooring is cracked in the Capitol’s rotunda. The renovation includes replacing some of the original marble.
[PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE, THE OKLAHOMAN] The marble flooring is cracked in the Capitol’s rotunda. The renovation includes replacing some of the original marble.
 ??  ?? Lights in the rotunda reflect on the marble floor Thursday at the state Capitol in Oklahoman City.
Lights in the rotunda reflect on the marble floor Thursday at the state Capitol in Oklahoman City.
 ??  ?? This is a test area set up Thursday to sample color and materials for the renovation project at the Capitol.
This is a test area set up Thursday to sample color and materials for the renovation project at the Capitol.

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