That pool with a dark coating, and being so shallow will heat up fast, which in turn fosters bacterial growth, algae growth and likely an unpleasant smell during warmer months.
MAROON said:
aggiehawg said:
That pool with a dark coating, and being so shallow will heat up fast, which in turn fosters bacterial growth, algae growth and likely an unpleasant smell during warmer months.
Deerdude said:aggiehawg said:
That pool with a dark coating, and being so shallow will heat up fast, which in turn fosters bacterial growth, algae growth and likely an unpleasant smell during warmer months.
It's DC there's already an unpleasant odor, it will blend right in.
txags92 said:
That last picture with the bikes could have easily been mine when I rode in our city's parade in 1976. Cool memories!
🚨 Obama spent $34 MILLION of your tax dollars renovating the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.
— Alec Lace (@AlecLace) May 11, 2026
No Media meltdowns.
Here’s some reactions when it reopened 👇 pic.twitter.com/wV8wiNEM3U
flown-the-coop said:
Tell me there really is not a lawsuit over the color. I mean, not that it's beyond their antics.
Quote:
A 'preservation' group filed a lawsuit to block President Trump from painting the Reflecting Pool blue.
"The vivid blue coating will fundamentally alter the visual and experiential character of the pool and the broader Lincoln Memorial Grounds landscape," the group said in a complaint.
"The new coloration will cause the pool to resemble a large swimming pool rather than the reflective civic landscape it was designed to be, distorting the experience of the site for the millions of visitors who come to it each year," the complaint said.
This is the same nonprofit group that sued to stop the construction of President Trump's privately-funded White House Ballroom.
Quote:
easy my arse. Lawyers and PIA/FOIA requests take time and many times money. Even then you will not get down to the exact evaluation process.
Source: I have done this for nearly 20 years for bids we won and didn't win.
I also have done single source procurements that were not emergency based. As others have mentioned, there are a whole hosts of exemptions for not competitively bidding a project.
Has anyone determined the special treatment and kickback about this award and why the awardee was not qualified and is charging exorbitant rates?
oh no said:🚨 Obama spent $34 MILLION of your tax dollars renovating the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.
— Alec Lace (@AlecLace) May 11, 2026
No Media meltdowns.
Here’s some reactions when it reopened 👇 pic.twitter.com/wV8wiNEM3U
Look who’s in charge of maintaining the reflecting pool 👀😭 pic.twitter.com/pG9fNiREYB
— Gizmo Memes (@GizmoMemes) May 10, 2026
nai06 said:
I'm curious to hear how this will stop algae blooms. My pool had a tinted surface and it would still turn green and grow algae if I didn't run the pump or treat the water. How is painting the surface blue going to stop a largely stagnant body of water from developing algae blooms?
If this company has it figured out, kudos to them.
FIDO_Ags said:Quote:
easy my arse. Lawyers and PIA/FOIA requests take time and many times money. Even then you will not get down to the exact evaluation process.
Source: I have done this for nearly 20 years for bids we won and didn't win.
I also have done single source procurements that were not emergency based. As others have mentioned, there are a whole hosts of exemptions for not competitively bidding a project.
Has anyone determined the special treatment and kickback about this award and why the awardee was not qualified and is charging exorbitant rates?
I too have been in the procurement side for over 20 years and started a nice consulting gig for it.
You are already starting out wrong. As a FYI, Construction bids don't usually have an evaluation if it was a bid. Now if it was construction RFP associated with a D-B or CMAR, yeah, probably an evaluation.
Won't throw a rock at Trump on this one. If previous bids for the same work didn't achieve the desired outcome, he is well within bounds to ask for a sole source to do the work. The key would be knowing what the scope of the work was in previous bids and whether the desired outcome was achieved.
Also, FOIA requests are usually responded to quickly unless nobody understands the request or you're asking for something from multiple sources. Also, they do take staff time to complete in addition to normal staff duties so there is a cost and it is real. Contrary to what this board thinks, agencies don't have staff sitting around waiting for FOIA requests to come in.
aggiehawg said:nai06 said:
I'm curious to hear how this will stop algae blooms. My pool had a tinted surface and it would still turn green and grow algae if I didn't run the pump or treat the water. How is painting the surface blue going to stop a largely stagnant body of water from developing algae blooms?
If this company has it figured out, kudos to them.
Duh. There is a filtration system also being replaced and massively upgraded. Water is not stagnant.
Also when we lived in Austin had several friends with lap or volleyball pools with that dark gray or black plaster. They had to put dry ice into them just to use them during summer.
Our pool was very large and deep (over 12 feet) and had a light blue plaster. Stayed cool and pleasant during the summer. The Hubs was in that thing every day he was not on duty.for about 9 months of the year.
Quote:
In all seriousness, I have seen that rumor. I would think the color shown in most resent photos is not the final color.
FIDO_Ags said:
Actually, pagerman is correct. Competitive Construction bids are easy to verify if you doubt the process.
FIDO_Ags said:Quote:
easy my arse. Lawyers and PIA/FOIA requests take time and many times money. Even then you will not get down to the exact evaluation process.
Source: I have done this for nearly 20 years for bids we won and didn't win.
I also have done single source procurements that were not emergency based. As others have mentioned, there are a whole hosts of exemptions for not competitively bidding a project.
Has anyone determined the special treatment and kickback about this award and why the awardee was not qualified and is charging exorbitant rates?
I too have been in the procurement side for over 20 years and started a nice consulting gig for it.
You are already starting out wrong. As a FYI, Construction bids don't usually have an evaluation if it was a bid. Now if it was construction RFP associated with a D-B or CMAR, yeah, probably an evaluation.
Won't throw a rock at Trump on this one. If previous bids for the same work didn't achieve the desired outcome, he is well within bounds to ask for a sole source to do the work. The key would be knowing what the scope of the work was in previous bids and whether the desired outcome was achieved.
Also, FOIA requests are usually responded to quickly unless nobody understands the request or you're asking for something from multiple sources. Also, they do take staff time to complete in addition to normal staff duties so there is a cost and it is real. Contrary to what this board thinks, agencies don't have staff sitting around waiting for FOIA requests to come in.
FIDO_Ags said:
Pithy answer but you do you. If you indeed worked in that space, you would know better. I have my doubts.
schmellba99 said:FIDO_Ags said:Quote:
easy my arse. Lawyers and PIA/FOIA requests take time and many times money. Even then you will not get down to the exact evaluation process.
Source: I have done this for nearly 20 years for bids we won and didn't win.
I also have done single source procurements that were not emergency based. As others have mentioned, there are a whole hosts of exemptions for not competitively bidding a project.
Has anyone determined the special treatment and kickback about this award and why the awardee was not qualified and is charging exorbitant rates?
I too have been in the procurement side for over 20 years and started a nice consulting gig for it.
You are already starting out wrong. As a FYI, Construction bids don't usually have an evaluation if it was a bid. Now if it was construction RFP associated with a D-B or CMAR, yeah, probably an evaluation.
Won't throw a rock at Trump on this one. If previous bids for the same work didn't achieve the desired outcome, he is well within bounds to ask for a sole source to do the work. The key would be knowing what the scope of the work was in previous bids and whether the desired outcome was achieved.
Also, FOIA requests are usually responded to quickly unless nobody understands the request or you're asking for something from multiple sources. Also, they do take staff time to complete in addition to normal staff duties so there is a cost and it is real. Contrary to what this board thinks, agencies don't have staff sitting around waiting for FOIA requests to come in.
Incorrect.
CSP's have a qualification based evaluation and proposal, of which the bid is a portion of. I'm working on 3 CSP proposals right now.
D-B, CMAR, Progressive D-B, etc are almost exclusively quals based with negotiations after firm selection to develop a budget and eventually a GMP.

Quote:
CSP's have a qualification based evaluation and proposal, of which the bid is a portion of. I'm working on 3 CSP proposals right now
nai06 said:
I'm curious to hear how this will stop algae blooms. My pool had a tinted surface and it would still turn green and grow algae if I didn't run the pump or treat the water. How is painting the surface blue going to stop a largely stagnant body of water from developing algae blooms?
If this company has it figured out, kudos to them.