Who decided that the best way to ventilate a tunnel ceiling was to suspend the basement floor over our heads?
On a simmering Tuesday morning I learned of the death of a Jamaica
Plain woman. A 3-ton concrete section of the Central Artery Tunnel
connector ceiling crashed into her car while she and her husband were
traveling to Logan Airport on Monday night. By Thursday we learned that
at least 50 more such problem areas exist in just the eastbound lane of
the Turnpike connector to the Ted Williams Tunnel and more than 300
problem connector bolts that suspend the concrete slabs were revealed
this week. From 1990-1996 I chronicled the development of The Big Dig
in a series of documentaries for WGBH and the City of Boston, Community
Development ( www.polarisproduction.com/about.html ). I felt a deep
regret over this Big Dig failure, sadness for Milena Del Valle who lost
her life and for her husband, Angie, who escaped the accident but may
never escape the memory.
In the early years it was hard to find fault with the CAT project. The
Big Dig helped to bail out Boston in the wake of political and economic
recession following Mike Dukakis failed race for the Presidency. The
Big Dig provided high paying jobs for managers, engineers, designers
and skilled building union workers. The money flowed from the federal
spigot and most people were happyeven the neighbors who were mitigated
out of the neighborhood into financially greener meadows. Word was out
in the media to not rock the gravy boat and to keep coverage positive
or access would be denied. Media access was highly controlled at
building sites. So what happened to turn our rosy, cozy dream of a
snarl free Boston into todays CATmare? The same thing that seems to
happen every time people have an opportunity to spend federal money-
insufficient due diligence.
The Republican administration put Bechtel-Parsons-Brinkerhoff in place
to manage the project and to dole out contracts to Republican
cronies. The Democratic Legislators and Congressmen made certain that
every worker had to join a skilled building union including those
working for tiny contracting firms. Altogether this was a recipe for
graft and corruption. As the pockets of the politicians grew with
donations from contractors, union halls and pension funds, the will to
open the Washington wallet remained. Oversight was overlooked. State
managers, joint venture partners, contractors and union bosses got so
busy counting the money that they forgot to ask what was happening with
the project. Sometimes we would show up with cameras at embarrassingly
empty sites and have to wait for workers to be assembled by the public
relations team that always accompanied us. Taxpayers paid managers too
much money to pay attention to the project. None of us paid
enough attention to the fact that it was too much money for the project.
Has anyone stepped up to the mike and apologized to Angie Del Valle and
Milenas family for the 12 tons of concrete that landed on her besides
Mayor Menino of Boston? I have no desire to participate in the finger
pointing blame game that is going on right now in Massachusetts between
Governor Romney, Turnpike Chair Matt Amorello and Attorney General Tom
Reilly. They should all resign in shame for not providing the
leadership needed for due diligence of this project from the minute
they each took office. The CAT budget raced from 2.3 billion in 1988
with a 3 year timeline to over 14.6 billion and almost 18 years to
completion. No one noticed? When leaders of both major parties do
nothing to stop a runaway train, its obvious that the fix is in on
both sides of the aisle.
Tom Reilly says he knew there were problems with ceiling panel bolts
since a report warning about the bolts was made available in 1999. Why
did he wait until someone was killed to investigate? As Attorney
General hes supposed to protect the public and now he's running as a
Democrat for the Governors job? I am just as incredulous at the
Independent candidacy of Christy Mihos who was on the Turnpike Board.
Republican Governor Romney wants to be President? Well, he would fit
right in with today's Republican administration and a Congress that
supported Bechtel-Parsons-Brinkerhoff in Boston, Enron in Texas and
have handed the keys for the port-a-potty to Haliburton in Iraq.
I shudder to think of compromises made in Washington. Its amazing that
the Massachusetts Democratic delegation stopped at 14.6 billion-or
maybe they didnt. Perhaps now that the project is nearing an end it
will simply live indefinitely through a series of mishaps and
investigations, roadway fixes and criminal investigations, lawsuits and
political maneuvers. Each of these twists, turns and efforts to fix
the tunnels will, of course, cost a tidy sum of funds from the state
and federal coffers, but will be necessary to restore public
confidence and prevent more lives being taken.
Translation -its time for the trial lawyers to get their share of the
spoils. Its amazing how valuable a life becomes to politicians after
its gone and how our daily lives seem to mean very little to these
people except when they look for campaign contributions.