Lawmakers Approve $8M More For Education Contract Amid Commissioner’s Potential Conflict

Lawmakers approve $8M more for education contract amid commissioner’s potential conflict

Lawmakers Approve $8M More For Education Contract Amid Commissioner’s Potential Conflict

Photo: Department of Education Commissioner Penny Schwinn, pictured at right with Health Commissioner Dr. Lisa Piercey. Photo Credit: John Partipilo

By Sam Stockard [The Tennessee Lookout CC BY-NC-ND 4.0] –

The Legislature’s Fiscal Review Committee extended a contract Tuesday to $16 million with New York-based TNTP Inc. despite a potential conflict of interest for the state’s education commissioner.

At the Education Department’s request, the Fiscal Review Committee approved a two-year extension for another $8 million through 2024, adding to an $8 million contract the state signed in March.

TNTP is training teachers for early childhood literacy as part of a program designed to help students emerge from a learning lull in the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The initial contract signing came a full month before the Central Procurement Office gave final approval to a “mitigation” plan by Education Commissioner Penny Schwinn to avoid conflicts since her husband, Paul, works for TNTP.

The contract process also started before the Legislature held a special session to approve funding for the teaching training program. Lawmakers had held up the program because they were worried that the Education Department was trying to steer a contract to a certain vendor.

The Department of Education did not provide documentation Tuesday showing Schwinn submitted a new “mitigation” plan for the contract extension. 

Sen. Heidi Campbell, a Nashville Democrat who serves on the Fiscal Review Committee, pointed out in Tuesday’s meeting that the contract with TNTP has been “problematic” because of the potential for a conflict of interest. She asked that the department provide the committee with more information on the teacher training program.

But Education Department spokesman Brian Blackley said it is “substantively the same plan as before.” He noted the department took a “by-the-book approach to ensure precautions were in place” when the state contracted initially with TNTP.

Department officials also said Tuesday the program is extremely successful, with some 10,000 teachers taking the courses last summer and 96% saying it helped them teach students how to read. The Education Department hopes to have student reading scores by late December to show whether children improved their reading skills.

Sen. Heidi Campbell, a Nashville Democrat who serves on the Fiscal Review Committee, pointed out in Tuesday’s meeting that the contract with TNTP has been “problematic” because of the potential for a conflict of interest. She asked that the department provide the committee with more information on the teacher training program.

Sen. Heidi Campbell, D-Nashville, said the contract with TNTP has been “problematic” because of the potential for a conflict of interest.” (Photo: John Partipilo)

Sen. Todd Gardenhire, chairman of the Fiscal Review Committee, was concerned about the potential conflict at first but said Tuesday he believes Schwinn handled the matter correctly.

“I’ve talked to her a number of times about the perception and the problem,” Gardenhire said. “The governor’s aware of the optics. I’m aware of the optics, almost everybody up here is aware of the optics. She’s overly aware.”

Gardenhire, a Chattanooga Republican, added, “I think there’s been so much light shined on this … I don’t want to say it doesn’t concern me, but it doesn’t raise any red flags for now.”

In late December 2020, the Department of Education submitted a conflict of interest disclosure for Schwinn associated with the request for proposals that led to TNTP getting the contract, according to documentation obtained by Tennessee Lookout. Only one other company turned in a bid for the work. 

The department made another disclosure in late February connected to the request for proposals. The Central Procurement Office then sent guidance on how she should handle the matter. In March, the Central Procurement Office sent a clarification letter deeming the “mitigation strategies satisfactory.”

New York-based TNTP, Inc. was given a two-year extension for another $8 million through 2024, adding to an $8 million contract the state signed in March. Paul Schwinn, husband of Education Commissioner Penny Schwinn, works for the company.

Schwinn’s electronic signature was affixed to the contract with TNTP in March.

Not until April, though, did the Education Department submit the disclosures again with a proposed “mitigation” plan in line with state policy. The Central Procurement Office found those satisfactory in April.

The department then “re-upped” the disclosure for the latest contract in late November, according to the letter documenting the matter.

In a January 2021 special session, the Legislature provided $160 million for four programs designed to bolster education as children emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic, mainly to help them catch up on reading skills after months out of school.

As part of her disclosure, Schwinn wrote a separate letter to the Central Procurement Office disclosing that her husband works for TNTP as a contractor for school systems. She said in the letter her husband discloses projects with her to make sure they don’t concern work in Tennessee and noted he is not part of any solicitation with the state, nor does he work in the state.

The commissioner also told the central procurement office she would not be involved in evaluating solicitations for the contract and would delegate final approval to a deputy commissioner.

Franklin

Sam Stockard is a veteran Tennessee reporter and editor, having written for the Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro, where he served as lead editor when the paper won an award for being the state’s best Sunday newspaper two years in a row. He has led the Capitol Hill bureau for The Daily Memphian. His awards include Best Single Editorial from the Tennessee Press Association. You can contact Stockard at sstockard@tennesseelookout.com.

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4 Responses

  1. I’m sorry but why does everything go to pay for education? There is other problems in Tennessee. Health care needs to be helped. Fixing Tennessee highways and secondary roads, not just interstate either.

  2. How did such a contract get started in the first place? Did the Dept of Education request it? Why? And why would it go to a New York organization? Are there no educators in Tennessee smart enough to figure out how to train teachers for this task? TEA maybe. Did anyone even ask? This seems like a chance to dip into taxpayer funds for a solution seeking a problem. And a legislature so neutered by the “pandemic” that it would take any action to show how much it cares. The success of this project is yet to be proven. Why not wait to see? Tennessee’s education policies seem to be dragged further into the DEI mode by an education department determined to make it happen.

  3. Agree with Mr Roark. As a former procurement fraud investigator for NCIS for Navy Marine Corps procurement this doesn’t have red flags but red cluster flares. I’d love to see the original solicitation and the response by the only other vendor.

  4. This is Gov Lee’s pick, he backs her when legislators do not, she is not from TN, it does not pass the smell test, why doesn’t anyone do something?????

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