Tel Phil offers the one and only bid
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Deirdre Newman and Alicia Robinson
A second round of bids to lease the fairgrounds parking lot -- where
a weekend swap meet takes place -- concluded on Friday, and there was
only one name in the pot. It was the current swap meet operator, Tel
Phil Enterprises.
A first round of bidding was abandoned last year after it became
mired in controversy.
Bids, submitted to Orange County Fair officials, were for a
10-year lease of the property.
What’s significant is who did not submit a bid -- Delaware North,
a privately-owned company based in New York that operates hospitality
and event venues at large-scale tourist attractions like the Kennedy
Space Center and Yosemite National Park.
Delaware North was the only bidder to compete against Tel Phil
last year. It was frequently bashed by vendors and supporters of Tel
Phil’s swap meet, known as the Orange County Market Place, during
public hearings on the previous bidding process. Delaware North was
criticized for wanting to take over a homegrown success and for
mismanaging swap meets it has run in other parts of the country.
The company did not submit a bid this time, because officials
didn’t feel they had an opportunity to maximize their financial
contribution to the fair, Delaware North consultant Jeff Flint said.
“Delaware North feels they do a very quality operation and can put
together a proposal to show that,” Flint said. “But we feel there was
a bias in favor of the incumbent. So the opportunity to distinguish
ourselves would have been on the financial proposal, where we think
the incumbent did not offer the district fair market value. And when
they chose to cap the percentage of royalties that a swap meet
operator could give to the [fair] district, it really restricted
Delaware North’s opportunity to distinguish themselves from Tel
Phil.”
Representatives of Tel Phil could not be reached for comment
Friday.
Bob Teller founded the Orange County Market Place in 1969. His
son, Jeff, now runs it through Tel Phil.
Renewing the lease has been an elusive process. The fair board
threw out a round of bids in July 2003 after the process became
bogged down in controversy. Earlier this year board members also
scrapped proposals from consultants hoping to help with the bidding
process. Fair board members ended up creating a new request for bids
themselves, with the help of legal counsel and staff members.
This time around, three companies attended a pre-bid meeting: Tel
Phil, Delaware North and Newport Diversified, said fair chief
executive Becky Bailey-Findley.
“Until the deadline passed [Friday], we did not know if all or
none of those bidders were going to participate,” she said.
Tel Phil’s bid will be evaluated under the same timeline and rules
as if it were competing with additional bidders. The fair board is
likely to discuss awarding a contract at its Jan. 27 meeting,
Bailey-Findley said. Board members still have the option of rejecting
the bid.
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