Sure, but they'd also like to get paid for their work, and I doubt Schine has that kind of money to throw around. An entry level programmer is generally going to run you around $50k a year, one you could trust not to screw up if they aren't watched constantly is going to run more in the $75k a year range. Someone you'd want to actually head up a project like this is easily in the $100k+ a year range.
Not many professional programmers are going to devote a couple years of their career to a game if they aren't getting a full salary for it. Us programmers gotta eat too, you know.
Hell, I'm a computer programmer with minor experience in game creation (I've written some card games with AI players, took a few college courses in basic game design, etc), but I've got a day job with a major national company. No way is Schine going to be able to pay me what they do, so the best I could do is "Whatever free time I have to toss their way on the side", and that is TERRIBLE when it comes to program deadlines. If you're going to bring people in, you need people that can reasonably be expected to stay on target and meet deadlines. "I might be able to do something this week, or it might be next week before I have time to even look at it" is generally not acceptable in this kind of environment.