Board reopens swap meet bid
Deirdre Newman
The Orange County Fair Board decided Thursday to reopen bidding for
the lease of the fairgrounds’ high-end, weekend swap meet, despite
lingering reservations from some directors who wanted to negotiate
solely with Tel Phil Enterprises, the founder and 35-year operator of
the Orange County Market Place.
The board also approved hiring an outside consultant to help
design an equitable and impartial process for requesting bids, which
is an about-face from a January decision it made not to look outside.
Tel Phil is competing against Delaware North Co. for the lease.
They were the only two companies to submit bids when the original
request for bids went out. The board nixed that bidding process in
July after it became tainted by various charges and allegations.
Tel Phil had requested the board negotiate directly with it since
it has provided a high-quality, profitable service for more than
three decades. The state Department of Food and Agriculture, which
has to approve the contract, and Delaware North urged an open bidding
process.
Many board members said they felt conflicted about the choice, but
ultimately decided an open bidding process would be the fairest way
to handle the leasing process.
“It’s been a very difficult issue,” said director Luis Pulido. “I
didn’t talk to anyone. I made the decision on my own.... In this
case, I can’t get over the fact that I don’t own this property, the
board doesn’t own this property -- it’s government land. So it’s our
duty to send it back to the [open bidding process].”
Jeff Teller, president of Tel Phil Enterprises, said he respected
the board’s decision.
“I appreciate the need of this board to do what they feel is in
the best interest of the state and the city of Costa Mesa -- I think
they take that seriously,” Teller said. “By the same token, I don’t
think they want to compromise that quality and risk losing an Orange
County institution.”
Jeff Flint, a consultant for Delaware North, said he was pleased
with the outcome.
“We look forward to the opportunity to put a bid in when the
process is ready and not only do we think we have a strong financial
component, but I don’t think we take a second seat to anyone in terms
of quality,” Flint said.
Before it approved hiring an outside consultant, the board tweaked
some of the language in the goals of the request. Instead of keeping
the goal of preserving and maximizing the district’s revenue, the
board changed “maximize” to “enhance” to remove the perception that
the board is only interested in the bottom line. It also removed the
outside consultant from coordinating the scoring process, since that
is the board’s responsibility, said director Ruben Smith. Scoring is
the process of rating the bidders in various categories.
In the previous bidding process, Delaware North had offered to
give the fair district 50% of all swap meet revenues, an increase of
more than $2 million per year over the 35% that Tel Phil currently
gives the district. Stuart Suchman, an attorney for Tel Phil,
declined to disclose how much Tel Phil had offered.
A preliminary timeline shows the new request for bids being issued
in July.
As a result of the board’s decision to open the bidding process
for the swap meet, the board will consider opening the bidding
process for the speedway contract the next time the lease is up.
International Speedway has been holding events at the fairgrounds for
the last 35 years and there has never been an open bidding process,
said fair spokeswoman Pam Highwart.
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