Thursday, June 23, 2016

FIRST BISD, NOW TSC: ANOTHER $1 MILLION INSURANCE FLUB

(Ed.'s Note: Mark Yates, currently Cameron County Planning and Program Development direcgtor, got in hot water in a previous stint as a county nauditor when he renewd an insuranc e contract without commissioners court approval. He ended up in an orange jumpsuit and state charges. A similar thing happened to Lucio Mendoza at the Brownsville Independent School District with an insuranc contract that was "about to lapse." Now it's Texas Sothmost College president Lily Tercero's turn. Blogger Jim Barton wrote the post and we represent it here in its entirity and without his permission. Can we Jim?)

By Jim Barton
www.thebrownsvilleobserver.blogspot

TSC President Lily Tercero did little at Wednesday's meeting of the Board of Trustees to alter the perception that she functions "unilaterally," not in tandem with the board.

Tercero backers got jobs at TSC After the "Call to Order," acting chairperson Trey Mendez opened discussion on windstorm insurance, a key issue for TSC considering its geographic location. What riled several board members was President Tercero has renewed the windstorm policy without sending the item out for bids or even consulting the board.

Tercero's action, inappropriate at best, illegal at worst, put a majority of the board in the mood of rescinding the contract with the insurer which currently runs from April 7, 2016 to April 6, 2017.

Young Carlos Pecero, a TSC administrator in Business Services, Finance & Administration, tried to deflect criticism of Tercero and any push to rescind the windstorm contract.

"When it was discovered" the policy was about to lapse, there were only two weeks left in the policy, according to Pecero. Of course, it the duty of President Tercero and her administrators to keep tract of the expiration date of insurance contracts just as every family in Brownsville must do.

Pecero hinted that rescinding the contract might lead to recovering a very small amount of the premium, "possibly only $40,000." Two buildings, currently on the policy as qualifying for a "superior construction discount," no longer qualify for that discount and would have to be insured at a higher rate.

Tercero agreed with Pecero, saying her actions were intended "simply to protect the college."

Recently elected Trustee Ruben Herrera wanted an attorney's opinion as to if the contract was even legal. TSC attorney Frank Perez danced around that issue, not describing the contract as illegal, but possibly "void or voidable." He said he would have to look at the video of past meetings to give a definitive answer.

When Ruben Herrera directly asked Tercero who authorized her to enter into contract without consulting the board, she simply replied "staff."

BTW, the annual premium for basic windstorm protection is $829,789, but, adding the excess windstorm protection for damage beyond a certain threshold, adds another $214,000, taking the premium to over $1 million annually. A suggestion was made to allow the current contract to remain in place until December 2, 2016, just after hurricane season. Trustee Trey Mendez suggested aiming for an August termination, not liking the thought of a company benefiting from an illegal, unlawful or voidable contract.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh, oh. Don't "edit" this Jim Barton mess or he'll cry all weekend! ja ja ja

Anonymous said...

Enough of the "pity" postings supporting unreliable Jim Barton. His blog is useless, now worse than Wightman's. I insist: He's the Town Pussy!

Anonymous said...

Amazing!! Oh, I forgot a million dollars; but its not mine, it belongs to the stupid tax payers. These officials making big bucks are not "good stewards" of our tax dollars.

Anonymous said...

I am an insurance broker, in South Texas, over 40 years now. Me & most others know it is a waste of time to try to compete for this business, because of the dirty nature of those that control the process. For the general public's consumption, be it known taxpayers, an experienced insurance firm can get coverage at prices that will be honestly competitive on less than one week's notice. But it is work that is wasted effort when people like me know the fix is in, that even if we can offer coverage for $600-750,000 that currently costs over $1M, our offer will not be considered. The last 4-5 years have seen huge decreases in windstorm insurance along the entire Gulf Coast. How much have Brownsville taxpayers saved during this time? This post is not for my benefit. I will never try to bid this account.

rita