Email List

CBS12 RADARROAD TRIPPINCBS NEWS LIVESUN SENTINELCRIME TRACKER
WPEC-TV CBS12 News :: News - Waste Watch

Is Delray Beach getting short-changed on the sun and sand?

DELRAY BEACH, Fla. -- If you go to the beach in Delray you don't have to bring a beach chair or umbrella. There's a service that rents you those things. The company pays the city for the rights to operate on the beach. But our investigation shows the city may be getting short-changed.

The sand, the waves, the sun...Delray Beach is admittedly beautiful and attacts tourists from around the United States and the world. When those tourists want to stay on the beach, but get out of the sun, they head to Oceanside Beach Service which pays the city $170,000 a year for the right to rent beach chairs and umbrellas to tourists. You can pay by the hour or even buy a season pass.

JEFF BULMER, BOYNTON BEACH: It's expensive but the service that we get in order not to have to schlep this stuff around is important to us.

Oceanside won the right to provide beach services in a heated bid process in 2009. Documents show they paid the city $510,000 over a three year contract. At the time, another company offered to pay even more, $585,000, but the city threw out that bid over a technicality.

This year, Oceanside's contract was set to expire, with the city getting a chance to put the service out for bid again. But they didn't. Instead, the city signed a three year extension with the same company, at the same price, for the same three year period.

DAVID HARDEN, DELRAY BEACH CITY MANAGER: There's just no reason for us to go out to bid again.

Delray Beach City Manager David Harden tells CBS 12 Managing Editor Tony Theissen that getting additional money for the city isn't the issue. He said it's all about service.

DAVID HARDEN: Again the money is not the only consideration. The service is very important. The beach is a valuable asset to the city and it's important to have a cabana vendor that provides good service and treats the customer right.

Unlike other cities, Delray doesn't ask for an accounting of what Oceanside makes from the rentals, so it has no idea whether it's getting a fair deal or not.
The company that lost the bid three years ago tells is Delray is being irresponsible.  

CBS 12: Did the city talk with Oceanside, even though you had the option to extend it? Did you discuss trying to get better rates out of them?

DAVID HARDEN: No.

CBS 12: Was there any kind of discussion like that?

DAVID HARDEN: No.

Although he didn't want to do an interview on camera, the president of the company that lost the bid three years ago, says Delray is definitely leaving money on the table. He says he'd offer upwards of $250,000 a year compared to the $170,000 Oceanside is paying.Is Delray Beach getting short-changed on the sun and sand?

Friday, May 18 2012, 08:36 PM EDT

Links

Local Video Stories

National Video Stories

    What did Taxpayers get for $50 million?

    Big Government

    IRS Conferences

    Disability Nation

    Teaching Fish how to Survive

    Teaching Poetry to Prisoners

    Do We Still Need DHS?

    Free Phones

    Feds and Meds

    Pole Dancing

    Payday Loans

    The Cost of Amnesty

    Making Tough Cuts

    The Business Reality of Obamacare

    Federal Government Duplication

    Taxpayers Pay for Nothing

    Abusing a Federal Program

    Medicaid Mess

    Victims of Government

    Taxpayers Bail Out Carnival

    Congress is Still Flying the World Over

    The Show Goes on at the White House, Despite Sequester

    The Cost of Redundacy

    A Long Wait for Veterans

    Presidents Cost Millions

    Graphic Federal Ad Campaign to get People to Stop Smoking

    Tax Liens Could Doom Federal Workers

    The IRS Star Trek Spoof

    Golf but no Tours

    How Taxes Mold a State

    Congress and Pay

    The Rich and Taxes

    Immigration Reform

    Job Training

    Missed Taxes

    Congressional Perks

    Tracking Federal Money

    The 112th Congress

    Good Deal or Dud for Taxpayers?

    Some Lawmakers are Addicted to Tobacco Cessation Money

    Loan a Drone

    Sen. Coburn Says Yes to Tax Hikes

    Spending at the Department of Homeland Security

    Waste at the Pentagon

    Sandy Relief

    Utility Waste

    Fiscal Cliff

    Mortgage Interest Deduction

    Fourth Major 'Green' Company Files for Bankruptcy Under the Obama Administration

    The Waste Book

    Tank Spending

    Medicare Fraud, Waste & Abuse

    Fiscal Cliff

    Romney Remarks Backlash

    The Federal Environmental Protection Agency Funds a Newspaper

    Production Halted on the Chevy Volt

    Senator Tom Coburn Talks About Waste at the Congressional Level

    Federal Pay Freeze Extended

    Making Money Off a Storm

    Political Ads or the Official Business of the White House?

    A Federal Program Designed to Help Disabled Veterans Grow Small Businesses Handed Out Tens of Millions of Dollars to Everyone but Disabled Veterans

    The Food Stamp Program Costs Taxpayers About $80 Billion a Year and Critics Say a Large Percentage of that is Tied to Waste, Fraud and Abuse

    GSA Caught on Another Spending Spree

    How Much Did that Rap Video Cost You?

    Taxpayers Shell out Millions for the House and Senate

    Do Lawmakers Spend too Much Time and Money on Resolutions?

    Congress Spends Millions on Printing Costs

    Senate Dems Spend Millions Debating Bill That Won't Pass

    Fisker Gets $200 Million Grant But Produces No Cars

    Congress Spending Thousands of Dollars Every Month on Bottled Water

    Congress Spending Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars on Calendars

    Lawmaker Call For End of Free Cell Phone Program

Tips

CBS 12 is stepping up.
You can join our "Waste Watch".
If you have a government waste story,
Call us at 800-310-WPEC (9732), or submit a tip below.

Submit a Waste Watch Tip

Your Name:
Address:
City:
State:
ZIP:
E-Mail:
Daytime Phone:
Evening Phone:
Waste Watch Tip:
Please re-enter the code shown in the image below.
Retype
Thank you!
You will be returned to the home page upon submission.
(Please only hit the submit button once.)