Miami Herald

Official: State to dump SunPass vendor

Florida’s transporta­tion secretary said he will refuse to renew a contract with Conduent, which flubbed its handling of the SunPass tolling system last year.

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Florida’s transporta­tion department won’t renew its contract with the company that botched its takeover of the SunPass tolling system last year, Transporta­tion Secretary Kevin Thibault told the Herald/Times during a Wednesday interview.

State officials will instead re-bid the second half of what had been a 14-year deal with Conduent after the New Jersey company’s failures led to customers getting overbilled and suffering long wait times at the tolls.

“It is not our intent to renew it,” Thibault said, though he didn’t elaborate on the reasons behind the decision. “I’ve al

ready told the team, ‘Let’s start talking about the next procuremen­t.’ ”

Conduent would remain the SunPass contractor through 2022, which covers the first seven years of its contract with Florida. But Thibault said Florida won’t exercise its option to renew with Conduent for the second half of the contract, which extends to 2029. Cutting the contract short would cause Conduent to miss out on hundreds of millions of dollars in public money.

Thibault’s announceme­nt came two days after the Herald/Times reported that SunPass problems persisted at Florida’s airports, where malfunctio­ns and server outages caused recent backups and customer overbillin­gs.

Thibault said he was unaware of some of the problems until seeing the article, including a detail about how Orlando Internatio­nal Airport was still waiting to be reimbursed for $1 million in SunPass parking fees.

“On the executive level, we were not aware of that at all,” he said.

The Herald/Times reviewed thousands of Tampa Internatio­nal Airport emails, which revealed airport officials were frequently frustrated by Conduent’s responses — or lack of responses — to problems with SunPass. Airport guests can use SunPass transponde­rs to pay for parking at the airport. Officials at South Florida’s airports also reported problems with SunPass.

Thibault did say that many of the airport issues were not Conduent’s fault. But, Thibault said, Department of Transporta­tion officials should have been made aware of those conversati­ons between Conduent and airport officials to make sure problems were resolved.

In response to the story, Thibault said he has asked the director of Florida’s Turnpike Enterprise, which oversees SunPass, to reach out to the airports to make sure they’re dealing with state officials with their problems.

“Our goal is always to try to work with our partners to try to help get to some resolution,” he said. “If you’ve got an issue and you need to elevate it, let’s work with us so we can have the right people in place to make sure you’re getting that response that you need.”

He added, “There were some conversati­ons that we weren’t made aware of until it bubbled, or kind of elevated [this week].”

Thibault also announced a new promotion: Heavy users of the state’s toll-byplate system will get a free SunPass transponde­r in the mail with their bill along with an encouragem­ent to sign up for automatic tolling.

Thibault said that despite SunPass’ history in the past year, it’s now working well on the state’s

THE ANNOUNCEME­NT CAME TWO DAYS AFTER THE HERALD/TIMES REPORTED THAT SUNPASS PROBLEMS PERSISTED AT FLORIDA’S AIRPORTS.

toll roads and is easier for customers than the toll-byplate system. The department is still working out the details of the plan.

“We need to be as proactive as we can with our customers,” Thibault said. “And this is an excellent opportunit­y to be able to do that.”

In 2015, Conduent won an estimated $600 million contract to process SunPass transactio­ns. But it beat out competitor­s that were both cheaper and scored higher with state evaluators. Two companies filed bid protests that revealed state transporta­tion officials had lowered the minimum requiremen­ts and deviated from department policies to award Conduent the job.

Last year, one of Conduent’s major shareholde­rs hosted a fundraiser for former Gov. Rick Scott, who had also invested in the company. And Gov. Ron DeSantis received $35,000 from the same family for his campaign for governor.

DeSantis appointed Thibault to the job in January, and since then, the Department of Transporta­tion has fined Conduent more than $8 million.

Thibault said there will be an “open and fair procuremen­t” for the second seven years. Conduent will be able to bid for it, but one of the key metrics for winning will be the company’s history, Thibault said.

“Clearly, it’s going to be past performanc­e, and it’s going to be their capabiliti­es. Do they have the strong capabiliti­es that we’re looking for?” he said.

Conduent has had similar failures with its tolling systems in other states.

Under the terms of the contract, the most that the state can withhold from the company is 25 percent of its invoices, and that’s what has been done so far, Thibault said.

Conduent isn’t the only company that could face additional penalties. Transporta­tion contractor­s HNTB and Atkins oversaw parts of the bid process and the rollout of Conduent’s system.

A state inspector general is investigat­ing what went wrong with Conduent’s system, and Thibault said he expects that the inspector general is looking into the performanc­e of HNTB and Atkins, too.

“If there’s failure to perform, each one of those contracts have performanc­e expectatio­ns,” Thibault said.

He said he expects the inspector general’s report by the end of the summer.

 ?? Miami Herald file ?? Conduent won a $600 million contract to run SunPass, but customers were overbilled and suffered long wait times at the tolls.
Miami Herald file Conduent won a $600 million contract to run SunPass, but customers were overbilled and suffered long wait times at the tolls.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States