The Capital

Lawmakers call for more spending oversight

Action sought after state canceled contract for medical equipment

- By Luke Broadwater and Pamela Wood

After Maryland officials terminated a contract with a politicall­y connected firm, lawmakers are calling for greater oversight of the millions of dollars the Hogan administra­tion is awarding to companies through emergency purchases during the pandemic.

“I appreciate the Governor’s quick actions to protect Marylander­s, but we need to safeguard taxpayer dollars from unscrupulo­us companies, no matter what their connection­s,” said House of Delegates Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, a Baltimore County Democrat. “I’ve asked [the] Appropriat­ions [Committee] to take a longer look at this issue in the coming months.”

Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, last week asked the attorney general’s office to investigat­e Blue Flame Medical LLC, which the state paid to provide millions of dollars’ worth of medical equipment that never arrived.

The Hogan administra­tion signed a $12.5 million deal April 1 with Blue Flame for 1.5 million N95 respirator masks and 110 ventilator­s. The masks and ventilator­s were supposed to ship April 14, according to documents provided by the state. The state paid half of the money up front, but the goods never arrived, and Maryland formally canceled the contract Monday.

Blue Flame received the money as part of a push to quickly award dozens of contracts worth more than $230 million to companies that supply emergency equipment and supplies needed in the pandemic.

Mike Ricci, a spokesman for Hogan, said the state has not had similar issues with other vendors.

“With this exception, all vendors have provided up-to-date informatio­n regarding order status, and even in some cases, we have been able to expedite orders,” Ricci said.

Some of the larger deals include a $28.5 million contract with Vanguard LED Displays Inc. to supply ventilator­s, a $13.5 million contract with Empire Managed Solutions to provide surgical masks, and a $16 million contract with Warwick Equipment & Supply Co. for outfitting tents, state records show.

State Sen. Jill P. Carter, a Baltimore Democrat, said she’s concerned small businesses and minority contractor­s might be cut out of the process as the Hogan administra­tion moves quickly to award contracts.

“I’m certain Blue Flame is not the only politicall­y connected company to benefit from the state’s emergency procuremen­t process,” Carter said. “The process has no oversight with everything funneled through [Maryland Emergency Management Agency]. We should create a nonpolitic­al Emergency COVID-19 Contractin­g Oversight, Equity, Accountabi­lity & Transparen­cy Board to ensure efficient use and distributi­on of available resources, as well as inclusion.”

Blue Flame was founded just weeks ago by Mike Gula, a former fundraiser for Republican candidates and consultant whose resume shows no experience in the medical field.

A spokeswoma­n for Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, a Democrat, confirmed receiving a referral from the governor’s office about the contract.

Blue Flame officials did not respond Monday to requests for comment from The Baltimore Sun, but defended themselves over the weekend. They said via text that they had trouble getting supplies out of China and have kept Maryland officials apprised of the situation.

A sudden rise in demand for masks, gowns, gloves, ventilator­s and testing supplies because of the coronaviru­s pandemic has left hospitals and states scrambling to find suppliers.

Gula started Blue Flame in late March with John Thomas, also a Republican consultant and former candidate, according to multiple news reports.

Ricci, a spokesman for Hogan, said Blue Flame won the contract by emailing a “pitch to an administra­tion official who was an acquaintan­ce.”

“Our procuremen­t team had no knowledge of or previous working relationsh­ip with Blue Flame principals,” Ricci said. “While Blue Flame Medical was referred to [the Maryland Department of General Services] as a new entity, [the department] vetted Blue Flame’s proposed partner, Hakim Unique Group, and found them to be a legitimate consulting firm based in Hangzhou, specializi­ng in medical management.” Hangzhou is a port city in eastern China. Ricci said state officials made at least nine attempts in April to obtain informatio­n from Blue Flame and did not receive reliable answers.

“This is unlike any experience we have had with vendors throughout the pandemic,” he said.

Patrick Moran, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Maryland Council 3 union, which represents correction­al officials and other state employees, said many of his workers are still without protective gear.

“A lack of planning and transparen­cy is going to lead to more first responders getting sick and those they oversee dying,” Moran said. “If there were ever a time for honesty and competence, it is now.”

Emergency state contracts of more than $50,000 must go before the Maryland Board of Public Works within 45 days of being awarded. That means the first of the emergency contracts awarded during the pandemic should go before the panel this month.

Hogan has earned national acclaim — and criticism from Republican President Donald Trump — for leveraging his connection­s with South Korean officials to buy 500,000 coronaviru­s tests from a South Korean company.

The state still needs to obtain swabs and other supplies to put many of the tests into use, and has been rolling them out in “high-priority hot spots” such as nursing homes and at a test site on the Eastern Shore targeting poultry industry workers.

“I’m certain Blue Flame is not the only politicall­y connected company to benefit from the state’s emergency procuremen­t process.”

— State Sen. Jill P. Carter

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? After a contract is canceled, there are calls for more oversight of the millions the state of Maryland is spending during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE After a contract is canceled, there are calls for more oversight of the millions the state of Maryland is spending during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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