Zinke told a different House committee last week that the department has negotiated the price to half of the original contract and the cost will now be about $75,000.
Secretary Ryan Zinke/TwitterSecretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke in his office in a photo posted to his Twitter account, March 1, 2018.
“The Secretary has directed that the contract be modified to change the scope of the project for a substantial cost savings,” department spokeswoman Heather Swift said in a statement.
When the department first confirmed the purchase after it was first reported by the Associated Press, it said that the $139,000 cost was to repair three sets of double doors in Zinke’s office. The director of the department’s office of facilities said in a statement that two sets of doors led outside and were in need of repair because water leaked in during bad weather and damaged the wood floors.
Kevin Lamarque/ReutersInterior Secretary Ryan Zinke speaks prior to President Donald Trump signing an executive order reviewing previous National Monument designations made under the Antiquities Act, at the Interior Department in Washington, April 26, 2017.
Swift also said that he was not aware of the cost earlier this month but that the secretary thought it was too expensive.
“This project was requested by career facilities and security officials at Interior as part of the decade-long modernization of the historic FDR-era building. The secretary was not aware of this contract but agrees that this is a lot of money for demo, install, materials, and labor. Between regulations that require historic preservation and outdated government procurement rules, the costs for everything from pencils to printing to doors is astronomical. This is a perfect example of why the Secretary believes we need to reform procurement processes,” Swift said in a statement earlier this month.
Zinke testified last week that the cost was driven up by government purchasing rules and guidelines for preserving historic buildings, though he did not go into detail.
“But a lot of the issue is on historic buildings, you have to follow such stringent rules, even though some of them don’t make common sense, then it just cost the taxpayers to – and we’re bound by those rules. I don’t even have a choice,” Zinke told the House Natural Resources Committee in a hearing on the department’s budget Thursday.
Sourse: abcnews.go.com