Friday, August 29, 2014

LA schools iPads: Officials on bid committee got free tablets, resort trips | 89.3 KPCC

LA schools iPads: Officials on bid committee got free tablets, resort trips | 89.3 KPCC:



LA schools iPads: Officials on bid committee got free tablets, resort trips






Los Angeles Unified officials who evaluated bids for its massive technology project received iPads from Pearson, met with a Pearson software executive and attended a weekend sales pitch for that software — all ahead of the public bid process, documents show.
The revelation is important because Superintendent John Deasy has repeatedly said the bid process was not affected by early conversations on the software — which he asserts were limited to a small pilot project.
According to travel reports received through a public records act request, Susan Tandberg and Gerardo Loera, top administrators in the district's office of curriculum and instruction, attended a Pearson conference at a Palm Desert resort in July 2012 where all attendees were given iPads loaded with Pearson's learning software.
A third office of curriculum and instruction staffer, Carol Askin, also attended the conference and would have received an iPad, records show.
Both Tandberg and Askin later sat on committees that directly reviewed bids for the $500 million one-to-one technology contract. Loera served as a "technical advisor" to those evaluation committees.
In addition, Tandberg, Loera and their boss, Jaime Aquino, agreed to met with Sherry King, vice president of Pearson's iPad software initiative, in October 2012, according to internal emails.
King also suggested the L.A. Unified team meet with her twice more in November, "to start some planning," the emails show.
Tandberg, Loera and Askin issued a joint statement through district's office of communication, saying their attendance at the conference "in no way influenced [their] decision" in evaluating bids.
"In our profession, we talk to numerous education companies and vendors every day," the statement said.
L.A. Unified Superintendent John Deasy canceled the iPad/Pearson contract on Monday after KPCC published emails showing he and other L.A. Unified officials had meetings and conversations with Pearson and Apple executives starting a year before the contract was awarded.
California's Fair Political Practices Commission bars gifts from a single source exceeding $440 in a year. L.A. Unified purchasing policy also prohibits companies from making gifts of that size.
Apple's suggested retail for new iPads at the time was $500-$700, depending on storage capacity. Pearson quoted L.A. Unified $50 per year per device for its software, which is still in development.
Loera did not declare the iPad on the school district's mandatory gift disclosure forms. Tandberg declared $500, what she estimated Pearson covered of her food and lodging, but also did not disclose the iPad.
Testifying in public hearings before a school board committee in the 2013-14 school year, Loera explained that because the district paid for a portion of the conference, he LA schools iPads: Officials on bid committee got free tablets, resort trips | 89.3 KPCC:



For some immigrant parents, keeping kids home better than preschool
Dina Khalil accompanies her two young daughters to their early education classes at Shenandoah Elementary school in West LA. She is able to be with them in the classroom which greatly eases her anxiety about putting them into preschool. ; Credit: Deepa Fernandes / KPCC Dina Khalil and her family left behind political turmoil in Egypt when they moved to Los Angeles in 2010. Khalil and her husband