Saturday, June 16, 2007

NCTCOG hired Price WaterhouseCooper as "independent auditor" on SH121 knowing they were on Cintra payroll

Cintra's auditor assessed 121 bids

Price Waterhouse's ties to firm it endorsed for toll road not disclosed
Cintra's auditor assessed 121 bids
Price Waterhouse's ties to firm it endorsed for toll road not disclosed

By MICHAEL A. LINDENBERGER and JAKE BATSELL - The Dallas Morning News - - Saturday, June 16, 2007

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.

Fair Use

FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Material from diverse and sometimes temporary sources is being made available in a permanent unified manner, as part of an effort to advance understanding of the social justice issues associated with eminent domain and the privatization of public infrastructure. It is believed that this is a 'fair use' of the information as allowed under section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 USC Section 107, the site is maintained without profit for those who access it for research and educational purposes. For more information, see: http://www.law.cornell.edu/ To use material reproduced on this site for purposes that go beyond 'fair use', permission is required from the copyright owner indicated with a name and an Internet link at the end of each item. [NOTE: The text of this notice was lifted from CorridorNews.blogspot.com]

See ARCHIVE on side bar

Content is being archived weekly. Many pertinent articles regarding Transportation in the DFW Region are in the archives.

A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson

The Opnions On this Site are Diverse

DFW Regional Concerned Citizens attempts to examine issues from all directions. When a story says "By Faith Chatham" it contains my viewpoint. When it is by others, but posted by Faith Chatham, it is from someone else's viewpoint. When I discover contents which is on topic for this site, I frequently link to other sites. Usually those sites contain content which differs from my viewpoint (and frequently that of other members of DFW-RCC).