DPP city councilors file lawsuit against
Hau
By Vincent Y. Chao and Mo Yan-chih
STAFF REPORTERS
Friday, Aug 27, 2010, Page 1
“The Taipei City government is either very good at
spending money or simply careless in how it chooses to spread it. Regardless,
it’s a sloppy waste of taxpayers’ money.”— Yen Sheng-kuan, Democratic
Progressive Party Taipei City councilor
Democratic Progressive Party Taipei city
councilors wait outside the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday
morning to file a lawsuit against Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin over the purchase of
high-priced plants and flowers.
PHOTO: CNA
Six Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Taipei City councilors yesterday filed a
lawsuit against Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin (郝龍斌), accusing him of negligence
after a city contractor was found to have been paid about 30 times the market
price for roadside flowers.
Documents obtained from the New Construction Department at the city’s Bureau of
Public Works show a contractor working on an overpass beautification project
billed the city millions of dollars above market prices routinely paid by
government agencies to buy plants and flowers.
In one case, Join Engineering Consultants (昭凌工程顧問), billed the city more than
NT$120,000 (US$3,748) for planting 400 Wedelia underneath the Xinsheng Overpass.
The tiny yellow flower normally retails for NT$9.
The company also billed the city government more than NT$425 each for bulbs of
an evergreen vine for which the city’s parks department normally pays about
NT$100.
A small seashore ardisia bulb that routinely sells for NT$38 was billed for
NT$580.
The price differential has left DPP councilors wondering whether the contract
involved kickbacks to city officials or if the officials in charge of screening
the costs simply failed to take a close look.
“The Taipei City Government is either very good at spending money or simply
careless in how it chooses to spread it. Regardless, it’s a sloppy waste of
taxpayers’ money,” Taipei City Councilor Yen Sheng-kuan (顏聖冠) said.
The city councilors also accused Hau of illegally giving the contractor special
benefits.
The entire sum under question is just under NT$24 million, part of a NT$262
million contract to beautify the Xinsheng Overpass.
The cost of the flowers has also raised questions over their relationship to the
Taipei International Flora Exposition because the overpass runs alongside the
main site.
Yen said the beautification contract, while not counted in the expo budget,
should still be seen as a flora expo project, adding that there could be other
cases of excess inside the expo budget.
Taipei City Government spokesperson Chao Shin-pin (趙心屏) said the Join
Engineering Consultants contract was part of the Xinsheng Overpass
reconstruction project.
The overpass underwent a renovation in 2008 at a cost of NT$1.3 billion and was
reopened last year, she said, adding that the flowers and plants were used to
decorate the bridge.
“The project has nothing to do with the flora expo, we will not allow anyone to
criticize the expo using information that is incorrect. We will exercise our
legal rights against politicians, talk show guests or media outlets that spread
rumors about the expo,” she said.
The city urged the city councilors to apologize both to Hau and for wasting
judicial resources.
Taipei Deputy Mayor Lee Yong-ping (李永萍) said the overpass project was handled by
the New Construction Department and supervised by the Bureau of Public Works.
Join Engineering Consultants should also be held responsible, she said.
“DPP councilors know that we have divisions of labor in the city government and
that the budget and the implementation of the project was handled by the [New
Construction] department. How would Mayor Hau know details of the project?” Lee
asked a press conference, slamming the DPP councilors for politicizing the issue
by suing Hau.
Meanwhile, the bureau held a disciplinary committee meeting yesterday morning
and announced that it would be reprimanding New Construction Department chief
engineer Chang Li-yen (章立言) and section chief Chen Chih-sheng (陳智盛) for their
poor supervision.
The city’s Department of Ethics said it has also reported Join Engineering
Consultants to prosecutors for investigation into whether corruption had been
involved.
A spokesperson for the company told the Taipei Times they had not received any
information on the city’s investigation.
Speaking on condition of anonymity due to a privacy clause in the contract, the
spokesperson denied over-billing the city for flowers and was considering a
lawsuit.
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