The legislation is Assemblyman Kevin de Leon's noble but futile effort to deal with the LAUSD payroll fiasco - a classic case of ineffective government begetting more ineffective government.
To his credit, de Leon has been a persistent critic of the
But as a member of the state Assembly, de Leon, D-
Under the bill, any contractor that a court finds liable for breaching an information-technology contract worth more than $1 million - resulting in a judgment of more than $250,000 - would be barred from bidding on any new business with the state or local governments for five years.
Get past that clunky legal formulation, and it's clear that de Leon has one specific contractor in mind - Deloitte Consulting, which billed the LAUSD $95 million to roll out the payroll system, then sought a $9.4 million contract to fix it. De
But even if AB 730 became
That's because under the terms of the legislation, the penalty against failed contractors kicks in only after a lawsuit has been filed and a stiff judgment rendered. Yet in the LAUSD case, one of the key problems is that the LAUSD hasn't filed suit in the first place.
And absent litigation and judgment, AB 770 would have little effect over the LAUSD or Deloitte Consulting. De
Nonetheless, De
Meanwhile, there seems to be no easy fix for the LAUSD's payroll mess or the leadership that made it possible - unfortunately.
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