Friday, December 6, 2013

FIRE DEPT.-EMT FIASCO: STUDENTS FLUNK ASSESSMENT; CITY OUT AT LEAST $250,000; ADIEL GARCIA, DAVID GARZA OUT

By Juan Montoya
Remember the fiasco involving the 15 firefighters who the city paid $67,000 to a company to teach them a basic Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) course only to have the state shut it down when the enforcement division of the down Texas Department of State Health Services discovered they had applied under false pretenses under a University of Texas licence number?
The students and Fire Chief Lenny Perez were disappointed when the state stopped the course because they were within a week of finishing .
Well, we have some good news, and some bad ones.
The good news is that all the students performed in the assessment as well as could be expected since their studies were interrupted.
The bad news is that they all flunked the assessment and if the city wants to train them to be paramedics, it will have to fork over an additional $67,000. On top of that, it will also have to pay other firefighters overtime to cover the absence of the 15 students as it did the first time.
All told, the fiasco over the bogus course will end up costing city taxpayers an estimated $250,00 to certify them as EMT, a requirement for them to provide the service to local residents in need of emergency medical care.
The state examiners found out in August that Pan American Institute Emergency Medical Sciences did not meet the requirements for the training and had fraudulently applied under the guise of a UT Brownsville-taught course.
The firm founded by UTB instructor Adiel Garcia and Lead Instructor David Garza in early April was awarded the contract to teach the 15 Brownsville firefighters a basic Paramedic Training Program and was approved by the city commission during their April 16 meeting based on the recommendation by Fire Department Chief Lenny Perez and a five-person evaluation committee.
At the time, the commissioners were not told that Pan American Institute had not yet been approved as a training provider by the Texas Department of State Health Services. Neither Perez nor Garcia told the commissioners that the firm had submitted its proposal to teach the course to the state using a UTB course number already approved by the state.
The university was apparently unaware that the instructors – including Garcia – did not notify the university that they were going to apply to teach the course off campus using university course materials and UTB logo apparel.
"For all practical purposes, the students thought that they were being taught by UTB instructors and that the course counted the same as the one taught at UTB," said a firefighter with knowledge of the matter. "But the university knew nothing about it and did not know that its course number had been used by Pan American to land the city contract."
The motion to approve the contract with the new firm formed by Garcia was made by commissioner Rose Gowen and seconded by commissioner Rick
Longoria. They did so largely based on a letter that Perez attached to the agenda packet where he assure them thatr "PAIEMS...meets all the requirements for conducting this course."
When TSDHS officially ordered a "pause" on the instruction of the course by PAIEMS pending the investigation, it said it would send in an assessor to determine the skills level of the 15 students.
Some city hall observers say that Perez, as fire chief, Sam Oretega, Assistant Fire Chief/EMS Director, and Javier Quiroga, Lt. EMS Training Officer should have known better. All three were on the evaluation committee and along with the city's Oscar Salinas, Human Resource Director and Cruz Lopez, Assistant Fire Chief/Training officer, recommended that PAIEMS be awarded the contract.
In their report, they noted that of the 50 companies on the Texas Bid System that received an invitation to participate, five accessed and downloaded the Request For Proposals package issued March 3 and only one (PAIEMS) submitted a proposal.by March 20. The pre-proposal meeting was held March 20 and its proposal was the only one reviewed.
"Lenny, Ortega and Quiroga should have known better," said the city source. "PAIEMS was going to teach a course that normally requires between 1,000 to 1,200 hours in only about 576 hours according to their proposal to the city. The company was not certified to teach that course. A the end of the course the students had to pass a national test. It's highly doubtful that they would be ready to take it."
Ever since Perez has been fire chief he has garnered a reputation for hogging the spotlight and making decisions that ultimately are overturned on appeal by his targets. He, for example, took credit for the heroic deeds of firefighters and EMS paramedics at the Queen Isabella Causeway disaster by accepting the congressional proclamations and making sure that the real heroes of the day were kept away from City Hall when  they were issued.
Just recently, Cameron County held a ceremony honoring first responders who had fallen in the line of duty. As usual, Perez did not inform local firefighters and paramedics of the event but showed up to receive the honors on their behalf decked out in his finest service uniform.
Will this proven perpetrator of stolen valor now take the center stage and own up to the fact that once again he has failed miserably in doing his due diligence in protecting the city and its citizens? And will Gowen, Longoria and the rest of the city commission take appropriate measures to control the damage caused by his latest foible?

9 comments:

Dags said...

Who gives a shit???

el chupacabra said...

juan its ok, its no ones money but the taxpayers and no one will complain and the city, city manager staff and city commission wont do a darn thing to blame anyone, why rock the boat, let it sail along and yes lets hire someone new to do the same stuff over and over and over. chupie

Anonymous said...

Where is the Dalmatian?

Abelardo said...

Luckily Perez is not held accountable by the commish. With a vote of no confidence a yes man is hard to find. Right chale?

Anonymous said...

Seems to me that someone in the city's business office should have screened out the proposal before it was ever submitted to the review committee. That is assuming that the city requires that all proposals go through a city department that both announces the need in the appropriate places and receives and screens all proposals. If I was on a selection committee I would expect that all proposals that made it to the committee had already been found to meet the minimum requirements.

Anonymous said...

You should dumb ass its your money!

Anonymous said...

SR ALCADE....ABRA LOS OJOS YA ES TIEMPO DE CONTRATAR JENTE PROFESIONAL,LA CUIDAD NO PUEDE SE ADMINISTRADa POR UNA BOLA DE PENDEJOS.ANTES QUE TERMINE SU MANDATO HAGA UNA LIMPIA.

Anonymous said...

David Garza is under state investigation for fraud. David quit his job at Medical High School this week because he was hired at Brownsville Independent School District. Who is responsible for allowing this man to continue commiting fraud?

Anonymous said...

WHAT !

David Garza and Joseph Menard need to be investigated for fraud.

rita