Bluebird rocket ship project caged, for now
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Mike Swanson
The City Council approved the second-lowest bid submitted for the
Bluebird Park Renovation Project Tuesday, with more than $200,000
shaved from the proposed contract to approach the amount budgeted by
the city.
The bid, submitted by 4-Con Engineering, totaled $1,266,000
against the city’s available budget of about $850,000.
United Contractors Company Inc., the lowest bidder at $1,113,000,
was dismissed by the City Council and city staff because of
inconsistencies among its five references, Director of Public Works
Steve May said.
Deletions from 4-Con’s contract included $118,000 for a
replacement rocket ship and $72,480 to replace the chain link fence.
The rocket ship was the hottest issue Tuesday.
“This is the rocket ship park,” Mayor Toni Iseman said, “not the
Bluebird Park. When you’re taking a look at where a city spends its
money, you recognize that we’re putting on a short track $4.5 million
to move the corporate yard, which will accomplish nothing but a
parking lot that won’t be done for 10 years. This is the children’s
park, the citizens’ park, the locals’ park. It should be a priority.”
President of United Contractors Company Inc. Alexander A. Marjani
said that had the city employed his company, it wouldn’t be worrying
about deleting the rocket ship.
May said United listed the city of Laguna Beach as two of its five
references, with May as the contact person, but the company had a
different name, so it wasn’t a viable reference.
Because the references weren’t verifiable, May said, it was deemed
not responsive and denied in favor of 4-Con’s bid.
“They’re wasting more than $100,000 because I have a new partner,”
Marjani said. “I’ve worked for the city of Laguna Beach as Marjani
Construction in the past, and I don’t understand why I can’t use that
as a reference. It doesn’t make sense to punish someone for expanding
his business, and the city is paying for their mistake.”
Funds were taken from two storm drain projects, a street parking
structure project, a street curb ramp project and a street drain
modification project to help cover the contract. Ken Frank said
$5,000 from existing Arts Commission projects and a $1,200 donation
from Music in the Park would also be used to fund the Bluebird Park
Renovation.
“[The city] is wanting to spend 8% more for a project that its
already having to take from other projects to even do this one
project,” United Contractors Company Inc. estimator Roy Lee said. “It
just doesn’t make good fiscal sense.”
Marjani said the business expanded to become United Contractors
Company, Inc. about 18 months ago.
Baglin expressed concern that May’s and City Manager Ken Frank’s
explanation of why they were going with the second-highest bid was
well grounded, which City Atty. Philip D. Kohn affirmed.
“I believe steps taken by the staff were sufficient to reach the
determination of non-responsiveness of the [lowest] bid,” Kohn said.
The council also amended the motion, which passed unanimously, to
include the removal of $20,000 in contingency funds because of its
trust in 4-Con and landscape architect Ann Christoph.
The rocket ship and five other areas of renovation will be put on
hold until the city has the money to move forward.
Some residents weren’t happy about the deletions, but Frank said
that by approving the motion now, the park should be ready by next
spring.
“The rocket ship is a symbol to many in Laguna Beach,” said
Melinda Powers of the Laguna Beach MOMS club, “and it would be a
profound shame to see it deleted from the renovation project.”
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