Friday, August 22, 2014

Internal emails show LA school officials started iPad talks with software supplier a year before bids | 89.3 KPCC

Internal emails show LA school officials started iPad talks with software supplier a year before bids | 89.3 KPCC:



Internal emails show LA school officials started iPad talks with software supplier a year before bids








Emails obtained by KPCC show Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent John Deasy personally began meeting with Pearson and Apple to discuss the eventual purchase of their products starting nearly a year before the contract went out to public bid.



Detailed in dozens of emails, the early private talks included everything from prices - about $160 million over five years - to tech support.



"On behalf of those involved in Pearson Common Core System of Courses, I want you to know how much we are looking forward to our partnership with LAUSD," Pearson staffer Sherry King wrote the head of curriculum for L.A. Unified at the time, Jaime Aquino, in November 2013. "We have begun to work closely with your leadership to help make the transition to the  common core smooth for everyone."



Emails show Deasy met with CEO of Pearson in May 2012 and later told her it led him to have "excited" conversations with his staff upon his return.



After that meeting, Deasy and other high ranking officials exchanged emails about using Pearson as part of its transition to the new Common Core learning standards.



Emails show Deasy also met with Apple officials, in July 2012.



"The meeting went very well," he wrote to a Pearson official. He said Apple "was fully committed to being a partner."



Told about the emails, L.A. Unified school board member Steve Zimmer said the emails raise the question of whether administrators “made a decision in search of a procurement, rather than the other way around.”



He vowed to look into it.



“We have to make sure this is completely ethical and above board,” he said.



Reached by phone Thursday evening, school district officials said they were unprepared to comment on the email discussions between L.A. Unified and Pearson. They continued to decline comment Friday morning.



Pearson and Apple officials could not be reached for comment Friday.



Michael Josephson, of the Josephson Institute of Ethics in Los Angeles, said it’s possible Pearson was the best choice and school officials didn’t mean to play to favorites - but it doesn't look good.



“You absolutely don’t want a situation where contracts are being steered to Internal emails show LA school officials started iPad talks with software supplier a year before bids | 89.3 KPCC: