Jilted Contractor
The unfortunate case of Cromuel Contractor is a sad one to read. This is said because the detailing of the events surrounding the contract bidding war seemed to show that Ridley was the clear winner and that BFE was the clear loser. Given that Cromuel was a subcontractor under the Ridley bid, that would seem to have been a boon for Cromuel. However, what ended up happening was basically the opposite. The end result was so diametrically opposed to what seemed to be the initial arrangement post-award that there are legitimate questions about whether Cromuel was intended to be a partner or a pawn. While a lot of what is insinuated in the case study is about appearances and conjecture rather than hard truth, the confluence of all of the circumstantial evidence that exists should lead anyone to conclude that Cromuel was treated very poorly and that Ridley and BFE were clearly in cahoots the entire time even though they were bidding opponents at one point.
Analysis
There is indeed one thing that works against Cromuel, so that will be mentioned first. It is mentioned within the case study that Cromuel is very much in its nascent stages as the company is a scant five years old. It is also mentioned that Cromuel is not experiences when it comes to the building of prisons. However, this is more than mitigated by the fact that they are not the primary contractor that was bidding. Of course, the main bidder was Ridley and this was clear from the onset. Despite the dearth of prison experience from Cromuel, the Ridley bid was the clear favorite and clearly superior in both rounds of the contract bid process. A good upside for Cromuel being involved in the process is that they are a minority-owned firm. Any time that a minority- or female-owned company that has traditionally been dominated by white males, that would be a good thing. This would include industries like construction, computers in general, doctors and so forth. Diversity for diversity's sake is not the answer either as the quality of the work has to be on par. However, the quality of the bid that Ridley put forth makes it clear that Cromuel was not a drag on the bid as they were far and away scored better than the BFE bids. To summarize, Cromuel was clearly not the most experienced bidder among the Ridley group but they clearly were not a net drag on the overall bid as Ridley won the bid going away. Also, Cromuel was the only local firm in the bidding collective. That surely improved their standing during the bidding process as there is much to be said from an ethics and corporate social responsibility standpoint to include a company that is both minority-owned and local in terms of its workforce. Wages paid to people in Richmond means more money spent locally with Richmond businesses. However, everything that happened after the awarding of the bid clearly points to bad faith and collusion. Even if the hard evidence is not conclusive, the totality of the circumstantial evidence is staggering. These pieces of circumstantial evidence that point to Cromuel being the victim and Ridley and BFE being in cahoots in a way that clearly are as follows:
The first sign of trouble comes very early in the case study and that was the inclusion of seven employees from BFE, which happens to be the company that lost out to Ridley. In other words, Ridley brought on seven employees from the company that they had literally just defeated in the bidding process. This is no small thing given that it is stated clearly elsewhere in the case study that if BFE had been the only bidder that arrived at the table, the entire bidding process would have been scrapped and started over with a fresh pool of applicants. Even with the confusing optics of this move, it is what happens soon after that which really makes this move with BFE very suspect (Monckza, 2011).
Not long after BFE is brought on and despite the fact that Cromuel was assured that it was just an administrative move, Cromuel is excised from the project entirely by Ridley and this happens concurrent to a "thirty days' notice." Those three words are in quotes because the manner in which the notice was executed runs counter to what "thirty days' notice" means in just about every legal realm and field when it comes to doing business,...
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