#2230 Postby TexasStooge » Wed Jul 27, 2005 7:27 am
Vendors donated $25,000 to Price
Trustee says contracts not aided; 1 of the 3 let tech chief use boat
By JESSICA LEEDER and PETE SLOVER / The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS, Texas - All of Dallas school trustee Ron Price's $25,000 in political donations last year came from three closely associated computer contractors, including the one who gave the district's top technology boss years' worth of free fishing trips and use of a yacht.
Mr. Price, who has played down the school official's sea trips, reported in a campaign filing that Frankie Wong, president and chief executive of Houston-based Micro System Enterprises, gave him $10,000 in October.
On the same day, Mr. Price got $10,000 from Larry Lehman of Giddings and $5,000 from Frank Trifilio of Houston, according to the filing.
Asked why he believed Mr. Wong and his business partners would make the donations, which are large by local school board standards, Mr. Price said Tuesday: "He's a great guy. I'm a good guy.
"I think Frankie Wong is a hell of a person," said Mr. Price, who was not up for re-election last year.
State corporation records show the three donors, in various combinations, run a web of interrelated computer companies.
Micro System is the head company in a consortium that is designated to receive more than 96 percent of federal technology grants DISD has applied for – $369 million in all. Mr. Trifilio also runs a member company in that group.
The donors did not return calls seeking comment Tuesday.
Among DISD trustees, Mr. Price has been outspoken in playing down revelations in The Dallas Morning News that Ruben Bohuchot, the district's associate superintendent over technology services, had regular use of a 59-foot yacht owned by Micro System.
In a TV interview last weekend, Mr. Price chalked the issue up to dirt being dispensed by vendors who competed with Micro System.
"This is a case of another vendor upset because they did not win the award," Mr. Price said. "They're upset about it and want to strike back at individuals by putting stuff out in the media."
District spokesman Donald Claxton said officials have started a preliminary investigation into Mr. Bohuchot's activities. Mr. Bohuchot has acknowledged taking trips on the boat but denies wrongdoing.
Price's chairmanship
Until May, Mr. Price was chairman of the trustees' business briefing panel, which considers technology and other contracts before they are reviewed and voted upon by the entire school board.
Mr. Price said he could not recall whether his committee ever discussed contracts for Mr. Wong's company. And, he said, the committee he led did not have final control over who was awarded tech deals under the federal E-rate program, under which districts submit proposed contracts to be funded mainly with federal money.
"All you do is chair the meetings," Mr. Price said, adding that Mr. Wong's contributions had "zero" effect on the multimillion-dollar contracts Micro System has been awarded by the district.
Mr. Price said friends at the Houston Independent School District, including trustees, told him that individuals wanted to give to his campaign and that "people in Houston like what you're doing."
He declined to identify individuals in Houston but said: "You've gotta check out the Houston school board members. We get nothing compared to those guys."
Mr. Price said when the campaign money came to him last fall, he had scant knowledge of the men who provided the bankroll.
"I never met them," he said.
Mr. Price said he has since been introduced to Mr. Wong – at a fundraiser thrown for him by a Houston school trustee.
"I wanted to meet whoever helped my campaign," he said.
However, nine months after getting the money, Mr. Price said he still knows nothing about Mr. Trifilio or Mr. Lehman, nor of their business links to Mr. Wong.
Mr. Price said that before accepting the donations, he consulted a lawyer in Austin and the Texas Ethics Commission. He said he was told that as long as the donations were from individuals rather than companies, he could take them.
The largest recipient
The three donations put Mr. Price easily at the top of the list for trustee campaign contributions in 2004. Hollis Brashear pulled in the second-largest total, just over $18,000. No other trustee reported donations from Mr. Wong or his associates last year, according to documents on file at DISD.
Campaign reports show Mr. Price spent $7,500 that the men gave him on officeholder expenses, keeping $17,500 as cash on hand.
Trustee Jack Lowe said he has received campaign donations from people he didn't know in the past but mainly for small amounts: "Never anything near $25,000."
Mr. Lowe, the current business panel chairman, said he believed it would be difficult for a committee member to influence contracts.
"I'd be very disappointed. I don't believe that board members are swaying contracts."
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