- Joined
- Jan 22, 2012
- Messages
- 5,078
- Reaction score
- 1,656
I might be totally off-base, but don't they technically have to put it up for bid after the contract runs out? I thought MBCR just never had competition for the bidding...
I might be totally off-base, but don't they technically have to put it up for bid after the contract runs out? I thought MBCR just never had competition for the bidding...
No, because there are renewal options in the contract (per the news article). Keolis could have had 4 more years uncontested if the options were exercised.
It all depends on the contract terms; this one happens to have renewal options in it.
In house means union, which would make it a non-starter for the Baker administration.
Exactly. This isn't even Keolis' fault. They're doing the best job so far out of any of the previous ownership. Keolis inherits pathetic broken equipment from decades of underfunding the T only to get blamed for everything that is really the T's & legislatures' fault.
Keolis tweeted out a rebuttal saying that Sec. Pollack said this has nothing to do with performance and that they are welcomed to rebid:
Keolis Boston Team @KeolisBoston
@Steph_Pollack: “Decision not to extend current 8-year contract is not reflection of Keolis’ performance; fully expect Keolis would compete
https://twitter.com/KeolisBoston/status/817161516759842819
This got sensationalized by the media BIG TIME. Nicole Dungca at the Globe got the story right.
Got it, thanks. Are there any indications that there are other operators who could feasibly take over? MBCR dissolved, correct? Did anyone else besides Keolis compete the last time around?
The commuter rail bidding process has been shrouded in secrecy since August, when proposals were submitted by the Massachusetts Bay Commuter Railroad, which has been running the system since 2003, and the sole challenger, Keolis Commuter Services.
They finally demolished the ratty old turnstile repair shops?
Quite the Baker-aggrandizing piece of literature. One might think the commuter rail is the engine driving the majority of commerce in the region and that Baker has thought up a revolutionary way to fix it. The improvements and innovation the piece talks about come at a price. That price is still born by the Commonwealth in some fashion, not the contractors. What a fanciful notion that locking someone in long term will fix everything when the real issue is that the whole system is poorly funded to begin with; privatizing does nothing if we low-ball the contract and don't want to pay the full bill that needs to be paid.
I noticed some differences on the new articulated MBTA buses. The one I rode yesterday didn't have a plexiglas driver shield and didn't have a weird single seat within the articulated area. The one I was on this morning had the plexiglas and had the weird single seat within the articulated area.
Such a small thing to notice, but it's peculiar. Did they change their mind?
I thought the driver shields were a limited pilot program?