"Independent" study of 121 bid shows Price Waterhouse cozy with Cintra

Link to article here.
It’s no longer a surprise to see yet more conflicts of interest and ethical violations when it comes to these highway contracts. The taxpayers are getting sold out by crooks and thieves and only through government in the sunshine, tossing the bums out, and active citizens pressing our law enforcement officials will we EVER get justice!

Cintra’s auditor assessed 121 bids
Price Waterhouse’s ties to firm it endorsed for toll road not disclosed
Saturday, June 16, 2007
By MICHAEL A. LINDENBERGER and JAKE BATSELL / The Dallas Morning News
mlindenberger@dallasnews.com; jbatsell@dallasnews.com
An accounting firm’s evaluation of rival bids to build and operate the lucrative State Highway 121 toll road may not have been as independent as first billed, according to some public officials who will vote on the bids.

Corporate records show that Price Waterhouse Coopers, which was hired to evaluate the bids, has served as outside auditor to the Spanish firm Cintra since 2003. Cintra also paid the accounting firm $100,000 to develop financial models for the controversial Trans-Texas Corridor highway project in 2004.

Mike Eastland, executive director of the North Central Texas Council of Governments, defended his agency’s hiring of Price Waterhouse. He said many council members knew about Price Waterhouse’s work as Cintra’s auditor but acknowledged that he or his staff should have informed the 39-member Regional Transportation Council about the accounting firm’s work with Cintra on the Trans-Texas Corridor.

“We did fail, apparently, to convey that to the board, and I’ll take responsibility for that,” Mr. Eastland said. “It’s an oversight on our part. I can see nothing in the [Price Waterhouse] analysis or their way of presenting it that would say we’re trying to slant this one way or the other.”

Executives at the North Texas Tollway Authority, Cintra’s rival for the Highway 121 contract, said Price Waterhouse’s assessment, delivered to the transportation council on Thursday, was biased.

“Our point is incredibly obvious,” NTTA board chairman Paul Wageman said. “The judge of a competition should not be in business with one of the contestants. How can Price Waterhouse Coopers possibly be unbiased and fair in evaluating its partner’s proposal against a competitor’s?

“What the NTTA, the RTC members and the region didn’t know is that Price Waterhouse Coopers is part of Cintra’s team on a [Trans-Texas Corridor] project worth billions of dollars,” Mr. Wageman said.

“That’s sour grapes,” said Cintra’s Jose Lopez, president of the company’s North American operations.

Cintra’s proposal came out looking better simply because it is, Mr. Lopez said. He said Cintra’s partnership with Price Waterhouse on the Trans-Texas Corridor was minor and concluded in 2005.

The council of governments paid Price Waterhouse about $200,000 for its report, which was highly critical of NTTA’s proposal.

Many members of the Regional Transportation Council had considered the report’s conclusions essential. It was to be their only chance to have an independent firm assess the bidders’ billion-dollar claims.

By Friday, however, word of the potential conflict had circulated among council members who had gathered in Arlington for an annual luncheon. Some members said they were aware of at least some of Price Waterhouse’s ties to Cintra. Others said they learned about them only Friday.

“I just found it out as we were sitting down to lunch here today,” said John Murphy, a Richardson City Council member who sits on the RTC. “I’m very disappointed, quite frankly, that we did not have that disclosure made to us, because it does change the perception, and it may change our feelings regarding what is the right picture of the Cintra and NTTA bids.”

Given Price Waterhouse’s business relationship with Cintra, it’s hard to believe the firm could render an objective analysis of the two bids, Mr. Murphy said.

The discussion about Cintra’s business relationships with Price Waterhouse comes at a critical time.

The Regional Transportation Council is scheduled to vote Monday on whether to endorse Cintra or NTTA. The Texas Transportation Commission, which sets policy for Texas highways, will meet on June 28 in Austin and is scheduled to make a final decision on the Highway 121 project.

Limited choices

Mr. Eastland said the North Central Texas Council of Governments selected the best accounting firm it could on short notice. The job entailed reviewing highly complex proposals that are hundreds of pages long. The firm had about two weeks to complete its review.

“The fact was we weren’t going to get anybody that didn’t have a conflict that was capable of doing the work. And then it got down to degree of conflicts. Do we do the study, or do we not do it? … Were we better off not to have any analysis work done?” Mr. Eastland said. “Or do we take the best that we can get, the most distant from the process?”

Council of Governments transportation director Michael Morris said in an interview earlier this week that the agency had difficulty finding qualified bidders for the analysis the RTC wanted done. Mr. Morris said seven of the nine accounting firms invited to bid on the work declined.

But Barry J. Epstein, an expert in accounting standards of conduct and a lawyer specializing in cases about accounting practices, said Price Waterhouse should never have bid on the contract since it is Cintra’s auditor.

“This is beyond the pale,” Mr. Epstein said. “They should not have bid for the job, given that one of their clients was a candidate [for the road contract].”

Rigorous protocols

Price Waterhouse defended its decision to evaluate the bids for the RTC, insisting that the Spanish office that audits Cintra’s books is separate from the U.S. firm.

“The Spanish audit relationship was fully disclosed to the North Central Texas Council of Governments,” said Steven Silber, a spokesman for Price Waterhouse in New York. “In accordance with our independence standards, at no time was there any sharing, or mutuality, of personnel or project information between the teams conducting the bid analysis in Texas and the team auditing Cintra.”

Mr. Silber also said the firm rigorously evaluated its relationships with Cintra before submitting its bid.

Some NCTCOG members who agreed to hire Price Waterhouse without knowing about its work in Texas for Cintra said Friday that they might have hired the firm anyway.

“What decision would we have made had we known about the advisory services? I don’t know,” Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley said. “That’s water under the bridge. I can’t tell you what we would have done at that point.”

Mr. Whitley said the fact that Price Waterhouse audits Cintra doesn’t concern him.

“When you talk about the separateness of that office in Madrid versus this office in this particular area, I do not think that would in any way cause there to be that conflict. The size of the fee that we’re talking about here, Price Waterhouse is not going to risk their reputation over a couple hundred thousand dollars’ worth of fees.”

Mr. Wageman said Thursday’s meeting left him and the NTTA “concerned” about the likelihood of getting a fair vote on Monday.

HIGHWAY 121 BID EVALUATIONS
Price Waterhouse Coopers wasn’t the first consultant to assess the complex proposals submitted by Cintra, a company based in Spain, and the North Texas Tollway Authority, a tax-exempt operation. Were the evaluations independent and objective? Draw your own conclusions:

• The North Central Texas Council of Governments hired Price Waterhouse to evaluate the State Highway 121 bids. Price Waterhouse is Cintra’s outside auditor and has provided financial advice to Cintra, which was awarded a state contract in 2004 for preliminary development work on the Trans Texas Corridor. Price Waterhouse found Cintra’s bid superior to NTTA.

• NTTA hired Bernard Weinstein, a University of North Texas economist, to evaluate the proposals. He concluded that NTTA’s bid is better for North Texas. He said Cintra would return Highway 121 toll profits to shareholders. By comparison, he said, NTTA would keep its excess revenue to build future roads in the region. The eight-page study did not address whether NTTA’s decision to borrow heavily to finance the 121 project would reduce its ability to borrow more money to finance future projects.

• Cintra hired Nobel Prize-nominated economist Ray Perryman of Waco. His company concluded that the region would gain almost twice as large an economic benefit if Cintra wins the contract. He argues that fewer roads ultimately will be built in North Texas if NTTA wins the 121 contract. The reason, he said, is that NTTA will have exhausted some of its borrowing capacity on the 121 project.

• Cintra hired Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor and lawyer John B. Miller, who also is associated with the powerhouse Washington, D.C., law firm Patton Boggs. Mr. Miller concluded that North Texas would benefit from Cintra’s plan to invest $763 million to build the 121 toll road as opposed to the NTTA plan to borrow all of the up-front money it has pledged to the state.

Weyrich: NAFTA Highway and Privatization of Roads – Politicians Beware!

Link to article here.NAFTA highway and privatization of roads — politicians beware!


Paul Weyrich

Paul Weyrich
May 31, 2007


One question has always eluded me as I have examined public policy questions these past four decades. That is why when propositions are presented to the public so many people are outraged yet the legislators who approve them have absolutely no clue.

The latest example of this is the Immigration Bill. Both Republicans and Democrats who negotiated it expressed utter shock at the public reaction. When many of us worked on the Panama Canal Treaty, Senators who unexpectedly were defeated in both 1978 and 1980 could not believe the public anger over their votes. I recall the statement of Senator Thomas J. McIntyre (D-NH) when confronted with outrage over his vote for the Panama Treaty. He allowed as how he was elected to use his judgment and he knew better than the voters of New Hampshire. An Allegheny Airlines co-pilot, Gordon J. Humphrey, who never had held office at any level in New Hampshire, became Senator Humphrey in the 1978 election.

I suspect that a number of Senators, especially the Republicans, will not be in the next Congress. Senator Saxby Chambliss (R-GA) had no likely opposition before his work on that Immigration Bill. Now there is talk about finding a first-tier opponent for the November 2008 election.

I mention this because there are two issues on the horizon which are certain to outrage voters but will no doubt confound the legislators which approve of the issues under consideration.

The first is the so-called NAFTA Highway. I am a Commissioner for the major study taking place to make recommendations for fifty years forward on surface transportation. I raised the issue of the NAFTA Highway with the Department of Transportation. I was told, “Not us.”

Who then? Why are there states which are looking toward interstate compacts? The idea is to approve of a 12-lane highway, six lanes in each direction, to run from Mexico to Kansas City, then in due course all the way to Canada.

A 12-lane highway built for trucks is bound to raise the ire of the voter. Yet I am willing to wager (although I am not a betting man) that state legislators who might vote for this monstrosity will be absolutely astounded by the negative public reaction. And if some of them are defeated in the process, so more the bewilderment.

Just wait and watch it happen. Meanwhile, there is another issue, again at the state level, which is confounding its proponents. My old friend Mitchell E. (Mitch) Daniels, White House Political Director in the Reagan days, Director of the Office of Management and Budget during the first Bush term and (more relevant to Indiana) Chief of Staff to Senator Richard G. Lugar when Lugar was Mayor of Indianapolis, was elected Governor of Indiana while Bush was being re-elected in 2004.

Daniels made some mistakes but he was reasonably popular. Then Daniels, a good free-enterpriser, proposed to the Republican-controlled Legislature to sell the Indiana Toll Road to the Macquarie Infrastructure Group/Cintra for $3.8 billion.

It appeared to be a good deal for Indiana. The buyer would be required to perform all maintenance. With rising spending requirements for Medicaid, education and other matters, the sale seemed to be, in the words of George Tenant, a slam dunk.

Yet when the sale went through Daniels suddenly appeared to be in big trouble. It is hard to identify why the voters were so angry with Daniels. It appeared to be a vague feeling that having invested the money to build the toll road they thought of it as theirs and didn’t want it owned by someone else. Facilities such as the Indiana Toll Road, however, are being sold all over. The Chicago Skyway Toll Road also has been sold. The difference has been that the Chicago sales have not been accompanied by the severe political fallout as was the case in Indiana.

Perhaps voters trust big-city liberals more than they do conservative Republicans with connections to big business. Anyway, the Pocahontas Parkway has been sold for $611 million by the Parkway Association and the Virginia Department of Transportation to Transurban with zero political fallout. Virginia has had back-to-back Democratic Governors.

Despite Daniels’ dip in popularity the Indiana Lottery is up for sale with a price tag of from $3 to $5 billion. Perhaps voter attachment to a lottery will be less than it was to a toll road.

Meanwhile, if you ever have had the necessity to drive northerly to New York or New England, you may well have had the opportunity to use the New Jersey Turnpike and perhaps the Garden State Parkway. It along with the Atlantic City Expressway is for sale by the very liberal Governor Jon Corzine of New Jersey. A cool $10 to $49 billion will make you the owner.

The question is why? It appears that such investors find the guaranteed stability of a highway-related facility quite attractive. On the other hand, as voters in Indiana have demonstrated, there could be a political price to pay with the sale.

So far it would appear that there currently are more properties available than there are buyers. So it is not clear how the privatization idea will play out. In any case, legislators who vote in favor of such an idea had better be prepared. In Texas both Houses of the Legislature, controlled by the Republicans, have voted a two-year moratorium in privatizing state toll roads. Do they know something about the feelings of the voters?


Paul M. Weyrich is Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation. He served as President of the foundation from 1977 to 2002.

Trade corridor linked to immigration policy, North America 'partnership' fast-tracked in border bill

Link to article here. For those still trying to claim the North American Union and Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) are a “conspiracy theory,” they need to wake-up and smell the legislation. Not only have 13 states adopted resolutions opposing the formation of a North American Union and NAFTA superhighways (Trans Texas Corridor), but also the new “compromise” immigration bill promotes further open border, free trade policies that the Trans Texas Corridor would so nicely facilitate….

PREMEDITATED MERGER
North America ‘partnership’ fast-tracked in border bill
Calls for speedier regional economic integration between U.S., Mexico
World Net Daily
May 20, 2007

WASHINGTON – The controversial “Secure Borders, Economic Opportunity and Immigration Reform Act of 2007,” which would grant millions of illegal aliens the right to stay in the U.S. under certain conditions, contains provisions for the acceleration of the Security and Prosperity Partnership, a plan for North American economic and defense integration, WND has learned. The bill, as worked out by Senate and White House negotiators, cites the SPP agreement signed by President Bush and his counterparts in Mexico and Canada March 23, 2005 – an agreement that has been criticized as a blueprint for building a European Union-style merger of the three countries of North America.

“It is the sense of Congress that the United States and Mexico should accelerate the implementation of the Partnership for Prosperity to help generate economic growth and improve the standard of living in Mexico, which will lead to reduced migration,” the draft legislation states on page 211 on the version time-stamped May 18, 2007 11:58 p.m.

Since agreement on the major provisions of the bill was announced late last week, a firestorm of opposition has ignited across the country. Senators and representatives are reporting heavy volumes of phone calls and emails expressing outrage with the legislation they believe represents the largest “amnesty” program ever contemplated by the federal government.

President Bush yesterday attempted to tackle the concerns of those opposing the bill – denying again he would ever support an “amnesty” bill. The Senate is expected to begin debating the measure this week.

In its current form, the bill would offer probationary legal status to the estimated 15 million to 20 million illegal aliens who were in the U.S. before Jan. 1, 2007. Those who then met a series of requirements — including payment of a $5,000 fine and $2,000 in processing fees — could gain citizenship within an estimated 12 to 13 years.

In his weekly radio address, Bush said the plan “will help us resolve the status of millions of illegal immigrants who are here already, without animosity and without amnesty.”

Bush said under the bill, those who “come out of the shadows” of illegal immigration will qualify for a special visa if they “pass a strict background check, pay a fine, hold a job, maintain a clean criminal record and eventually learn English.”

To become citizens, he said, they must pay an additional fine, “go to the back of the line [of applications], pass a citizenship test, and return to their country to apply for their green card.”

Among other provisions, including increased hiring of Border Patrol officers, the bill would establish a temporary worker program.