The ‘fair’ thing to do at the Market Place
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Ding! It’s the end of this match -- a bidding rather than a boxing
match for who gets to operate the Orange County Market Place.
And after being entrenched in controversy since last year about
how to most fairly lease Orange County Fairgrounds parking lot space
for a popular weekend swap meet, a grand total of one bidder for that
lease remains standing.
We’re glad that it’s the homegrown Tel-Phil Enterprises, which has
established the Market Place. Out of three potential contenders, it
was only Tel-Phil Enterprises that submitted bids earlier this month
for a lease on the property and seems poised to enter yet another
term running the market.
On the hometown level, we’re satisfied that Tel-Phil Enterprises
remains the right fit to run the market. The local company deserves
that chance, since its employees have made it a staple of weekend
life in the area.
Bob Teller started the swap meet 35 years ago, and since then it
has evolved into a high-caliber operation selling almost everything,
including fruits and vegetables and Rolls-Royces.
Tel-Phil Enterprises has maintained a level of success at the
market that has been unrivaled. But it can also thank some committed
fans for boosting its profile in the area. Earlier this year at a
fair board meeting, several speakers touted the Tellers’ commitment
to the Market Place and the community in a meeting that turned into a
kind of pep rally for the Tellers.
“I think when we talk about fairness of process, [it’s] also
fairness to reward the organization that does so much to the
community and gives back so much,” Vanguard University President
Murray Dempster said.
In 1991, when the lease was last up for bid, eight companies vied
for it. Fair officials insisted that the board chose Tel-Phil
Enterprises based on the highest overall score, not the highest
financial return.
Still, we urge the fair board to be vigilant when it comes to
opening up the process for accepting bids, if only to keep Tel-Phil
Enterprises on its toes.
In this round of drawing up proposals for bids, it got ugly and it
was slow. First, last year the board scrapped the bidding process
after tension arose between Tel-Phil Enterprises and Delaware North,
a New York-based company that operates hospitality and event venues
at large-scale sites such as Kennedy Space Center and Yosemite
National Park. Delaware was bashed. Then the board sought outside
consultants to draw up a more equitable process of requesting
proposals for bids. But the board then rejected all the bids from
consultants because fair officials said none of them had the needed
experience with lease agreements. So, fair officials drew up the
requests in-house.
Delaware North consultant Jeff Flint said in a recent Pilot
article that Delaware officials believed there was a “bias in favor
of the incumbent.” We’re not so sure about that, but the process
could use some streamlining to make sure that all bidders are given a
fair hearing.
After all, what kind of marketplace is it without competition?
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