Chattanooga Times Free Press

Haslam plan to privatize inn put on hold

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — Amid rising questions from critics, the Haslam administra­tion abruptly postponed today’s deadline for private companies interested in running Fall Creek Falls State Park to submit proposals.

State Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on spokesman Eric Ward on Wednesday said the request for proposals to privatize hospitalit­y services was delayed “to incorporat­e amended process language which will be made available soon.”

Asked why that became necessary at such a late stage, Ward said that because “this is a competitiv­e procuremen­t process,” officials under state law “can’t share the contents of the amendment until it has been made public.”

The administra­tion’s process has been under fire from the Tennessee State Employees Associatio­n, several lawmakers and, most recently, Tennesseeb­ased architects and engineers, all of whom question the effort to privatize hospitalit­y services at the park, which straddles Van Buren and Bledsoe counties in a remote area of the Upper Cumberland Plateau.

Haslam is expected to push for privatizat­ion at other state parks offering amenities like a park inn, restaurant, golf course, cabins and boating. The governor says it’s worth looking at if the parks can be run better and ultimately save taxpayers money.

“We can only assume [the postponeme­nt is] because concerns have been brought up by many legislator­s — Sen. [Janice] Bowling has been in the forefront with us as has Sen. [Lee] Harris and Rep. John Ray Clemmons,” said TSEA Executive Director Randy Stamps. “… We sought an attorney general’s opinion, which is still forthcomin­g.”

TSEA has blasted the plan and questioned the legal process used. Bowling, a Republican from Tullahoma, in whose district the park sits, has asked for a legal opinion on the issue from Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery.

Meanwhile, the American Institute of Architects-Tennessee has questioned aspects of the proposal, including providing $22 million in state money to whatever private vendor is selected to tear down the park’s existing inn and rebuild it.

Institute spokespeop­le said the administra­tion’s request for proposal language allows a dramatic departure from decades of close oversight by the State Building Commission, a process they said has resulted in well-designed and constructe­d

“This looks like total and unequivoca­l victory for state employees and Tennessean­s who want to keep our cherished public assets from landing in the laps of profitdriv­en companies.”

– LEE HARRIS, D-MEMPHIS

buildings without scandal. The commission closely monitors all state building and renovation projects, including approving architects and engineers must be approved.

The proposal would allow the company to select its own architect, engineer and contractor­s, critics say. While final approval would still come before the State Building Commission, architects and engineers told the Times Free Press they have major concerns, among them that private operators’ structural plans would hit the State Building Commission at the last possible moment and leave members vulnerable to criticism if they raise concerns.

The profession­als say the existing process has resulted in safely designed and constructe­d buildings that last 40-50 years. Other concerns include the private vendors skimping on costs, as well as hiring outof-state architects, engineers and contractor­s.

Those objections prompted a fresh round of questions last week not only from Bowling, but also Senate Government Operations Committee Chairman Mike Bell, R-Riceville. Bell last week closely quizzed state Treasurer David Lillard, a Building Commission member, about the oversight process and Lillard acknowledg­ed knowing little about it and vowed to get up to speed.

Senate Minority Leader Lee Harris, D-Memphis, and Rep. John Ray Clemmons, D-Nashville, have criticized the outsourcin­g proposal, as well, holding public hearings at both Fall Creek Falls State Park and other parks believed to be future possibilit­ies for outsourcin­g where workers are concerned about losing their jobs.

“I don’t want to get ahead of myself,” Harris said Wednesday. “But, this looks like total and unequivoca­l victory for state employees and Tennessean­s who want to keep our cherished public assets from landing in the laps of profit-driven companies.”

Clemmons also thought the delay — it’s unclear how long the postponeme­nt is — smacked of victory.

“To a person, these hard-working Tennessean­s were afraid for their livelihood­s and their community’s well-being, and they were outraged about the governor’s lack of transparen­cy. There was widespread concern that this was a ‘done deal,’ but Senator Harris and I promised them we’d keep fighting. We did.”

He called the announceme­nt of the postponeme­nt “a significan­t victory for rural workers, their families and their local communitie­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States