By Tara Servatius
The
last time two of the consultants overseeing Mecklenburg County's light rail and
mass transit plan worked on a large-scale project together, they were
responsible for an 80-foot sinkhole, thousands of lawsuits totaling over $1
billion, and a trail of fraud and corruption so long that even the FBI couldn't
untangle it. Now they're advising Charlotte Area Transit Officials on our
transit plan and helping to design it.
The two design, construction and engineering
firms, Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade & Douglas, Parsons Transportation Corp.,
and their smaller business units are directly responsible for projects widely
regarded as the biggest transit debacles in the nation's history. Both have stark histories of deceiving the
public and government officials about the true costs of transit projects, and
then benefiting directly from project cost overruns.
These
histories are alarming enough to call into question every figure, fact and cost
estimate ever given to the voters and elected officials of
Charlotte-Mecklenburg by these companies. And it's enough to make one wonder
why the Metropolitan Transit Commission and Charlotte City Council approved
consultant contracts with them in the first place.
Members
of the MTC we spoke to say they were unaware of the companies' past scandals,
but are determined to get answers from Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) CEO
Ron Tober. CATS spokespersons said no one there was aware of the companies'
past scandals when the contracts were proposed. It's still unclear who did
background checks on the companies. (See "What They're Saying"
sidebar.)
Boston's Notorious "Big Dig"
In
1998, before Parsons Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas prepared
Charlotte-Mecklenburg's first transit plan for voter approval, the company, in
a joint venture with another firm called Bechtel Civil Inc., oversaw the design
and construction of Boston's Big Dig. The legendary project, a multi-billion
dollar effort to bury 7.5 miles of Boston's central artery roadway underground,
would eventually become the mother of all US transportation project fiascos.
While the project was highly complex and didn't involve light rail like
Charlotte-Mecklenburg's transit plan does, the fraud and cost overruns that
have come to be associated with Big Dig have made national news -- and call
into question the corporate practices of the company that to date has played a
major guiding role in our own city's transit plan. In 1985, when
Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff was hired to oversee it, the project had an
estimated cost of $2.6 billion and a completion date of 1998. Today, the
project has a projected completion date of 2005, and its price tag has
ballooned to $14.6 billion and climbing. And that doesn't even count the
millions of dollars various state and federal agencies have spent on more than
15 separate investigations of the project's managers, which included
Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff, for shoddy design, construction and engineering,
fraud and corruption.
"You
do have to monitor them," Massachusetts Former Secretary of Transportation
Frederick Salvucci told the Boston Globe about Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff in
September 1994. "But the most important role of your monitoring is to make
sure that you're getting what you paid for, and yeah, you don't want them going
crazy on costs. You need a lot of public employees to do that."
Three
months later, a report released by Massachusetts State Inspector General Robert
Cerasoli's office proved Salvucci right. The report blamed the state highway
department and Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff for cost overruns and systematic
problems on the project. It also suggested that Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff
and another contractor attempted to cover up costly charges in several cases
and presented incomplete and inaccurate information to project officials about
the work.
It
would be six more years before the truth about Big Dig would finally become
widespread public knowledge. In 2000 -- the year our local transit officials
and the Charlotte City Council awarded four contracts worth $2.6 million to
Parsons Brinckerhoff for transit advisory services for CATS, the North and
Northeast Corridor Major Investment studies, pedestrian controls along the
South Corridor, and North Corridor rail assistance -- the company's reputation
hit rock bottom in Boston.
Almost
every month in 2000, there was one shocking revelation or another about Big
Dig.
It
started with a report released by State Auditor Joseph DeNucci in February of
that year which concluded that, because of failures by Bechtel-Parsons, at
least $19 million was wasted on useless design work in the Fort Point Channel
section of the project because the company ignored concerns about unusually
soft soils in the area. Had DeNucci's earlier warnings to transit officials to
take cost control responsibilities away from Bechtel-Parsons been heeded, things
might have turned out differently. Instead, DeNucci went on to make a career of
sniping at the Bechtel-Parsons and transit officials. In 11 other reports, he
documented $446 million in additional waste on the project because
cost-reduction methods weren't applied.
But
by year's end, DeNucci's findings would be dwarfed by reports and accusations
of large-scale corruption that reached the highest levels of government.
In
April 2000, a Federal Highway Administration audit concluded that
Bechtel-Parsons and state officials misled the federal government, which was
funding part of the project, about $1.4 billion in cost overruns. (The true
figure was later discovered to be $2.2 billion.) That announcement prompted a
US Senate probe overseen by Sen. John McCain, who blistered Bechtel-Parsons'
representatives during hearings for open-ended cost hikes on the project. Not
to be left out of the action, a fraud and corruption investigation was launched
jointly that June by the FBI's Public Corruption Unit, the Department of Labor,
the Federal Highway Administration and the Federal Department of
Transportation. By the end of the month, the Securities and Exchange Commission
piled on as well, launching an investigation into whether Big Dig officials and
Bechtel-Parsons failed to disclose the project's real cost to bond investors in
financial statements prepared in 1999.
When
asked if the company had a responsibility to inform the public about the true
costs of the project, a company spokesman who asked not to be named told The
Boston Globe that Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff didn't have a responsibility to
share that information with anyone except their clients, the Massachusetts
Highway Department and the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority.
In
July, a whistleblower filed a federal suit against Bechtel-Parsons
Brinckerhoff, charging the companies had made at least $10 million in false
claims while billing the government for costs.
The
same month, a memo from Big Dig project counsel Anthony Battelle surfaced
indicating that Big Dig officials and Parsons Brinckerhoff knew they may have
been violating the state's prevailing-wage law by underpaying truck drivers for
more than three years before they were forced to add $20 million to the project
budget to pay them back wages. (When the scandal broke in 1996, Bechtel-Parsons
Brinckerhoff and state transportation executives denied any knowledge of
violating the law. The memo proving otherwise was dated October 1, 1993.)
Then
in August, a Boston Herald investigation revealed that Massachusetts Governors
Paul Celluci and William Weld and numerous other state and city politicians had
had numerous relatives and cronies added to Big Dig's payroll by getting them
assigned to the payrolls of Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff and other
subcontractors who then billed the state for their salaries despite the fact
that many of them didn't actually show up for work. By October, Attorney
General Tom Reilly had hired a high-powered private international detective agency
to help ferret out corruption within Big Dig.
Things
only got worse in 2001 -- the year Parsons Brinckerhoff was awarded two more
transit contracts totaling $1.8 million for work on Mecklenburg County's
transit system. In January 2001, a Massachusetts state inspector general's
report came out showing that Big Dig officials had done little to recoup money
from Bechtel-Parsons after mistakes by engineers caused $83.5 million worth of
change orders. The report recommended that the Turnpike Authority cut ties with
Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff, but by then it was too late. Transit officials
had already scrambled to renew Bechtel-Parsons' contract for another five
years.
It
wasn't just the Turnpike Authority that Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff had
somehow managed to wrap around its finger. Another state inspector general's
report released in March showed the stunning reach of the company's political
power and influence.
According
to the report, Big Dig project officials and Bechtel-Parsons had conspired with
state officials and the Federal Highway Administration to hide the true $14
billion cost of the project from the public, bond investors and Wall Street.
According to the inspector general's report, Bechtel-Parsons accurately
reported to then-governor Bill Weld in 1994 that the project's true cost would
be $13.8 billion.
"After
Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff presented its $14 billion estimate in 1994, state
managers directed state and Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff staff to undertake a
cooperative effort to maintain the fiction of an "on-time' and
"on-budget' $8 billion project," the report said. "Records show
that they did so by applying a largely semantic series of exclusions,
deductions, and accounting assumptions that covered up the $6 billion
difference."
The
next month, Inspector General Robert Cerasoli released a 1995 memo written by a
budget manager at Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff that summarized instructions
that Bechtel-Parsons received from then-transportation secretary James
Kerasiotes.
"It
should be noted that Secretary Kerasiotes at the Federal Highway Administration
briefing stated that he expected this value to be below $8.0 billion prior to
releasing to the public," the memo read. Not surprisingly, the cost figure
officially unveiled to the public was $7.997 billion.
That
revelation sheds new light on a July 2002 report in the Charlotte Observer
headlined "Price Tag of Transit is Soaring, Projections More Than Double,
Critics Say the Public Was Had," in which the paper reported that it was
still a mystery why the original cost estimate for our transit plan drawn up by
Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade & Douglas did not account for inflation, despite
the fact that former Charlotte City Council members Mike Jackson and Don Reid
repeatedly questioned whether it had been factored in.
At
the time, Parsons Brinckerhoff didn't return the Observer's calls for comment.
When Creative Loafing tried to get a comment from the company on this
oversight, we were referred back and forth between their Charlotte and Raleigh
offices. The only Parsons Brinckerhoff official willing to talk to about the
situation, a manager from the Raleigh office who asked that his name not be
used, said that the employee who oversaw the project is no longer with the
company and no one knows why inflation wasn't factored in.
Despite
the confusion over the real cost of the project, in 2002, the company was
awarded two more contracts by Charlotte City Council totaling $3.5 million for
work on CATS' New Bus Maintenance Facility and a transit-oriented development
workshop.
Meanwhile,
in Boston, the Turnpike Authority board of directors also awarded contracts to
two consultant groups. Their job, as described in the Boston Herald, was to act
as "independent watchdogs" and to "baby-sit" Bechtel-Parsons
Brinckerhoff for the remainder of the Big Dig project.
Flirting with Disaster In LA
Before
the Big Dig officially went bad in Boston, Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade &
Douglas was up to its knees in trouble on the other side of the country. In
1995, the world watched as a massive sinkhole swallowed 80 feet of Hollywood
Boulevard and buildings began to crack, buckle and sink several inches. In its
wake, more than 1,000 lawsuits totaling more than a billion dollars in damages
were filed against the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) by angry business
and property owners. When the dust cleared, a forensic engineering firm hired
by the MTA reported that EMC, an engineering partnership between principal
partners Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade & Douglas and a company called Daniel
Mann Johnson & Mendenhall, had signed off on the faulty digging plan blamed
for the disaster.
A
former tunnel digger, Rocky Woody, who was employed by one of the
subcontractors on the job, told the New Times of Los Angeles that he was amazed
by the problems Parsons-Dillingham inspectors ignored.
"They
sat right up there the whole time while we were mining and, no matter what was
happening, they turned their heads and looked away," Woody told the paper.
"We poured four to six inches of concrete where there was supposed to be
12, and they just turned their heads away."
By
the time the boulevard collapsed, the people of Los Angeles were used to the
sudden sinkage of parts of the famous roadway. In August 1994, tunneling was
halted on the Los Angeles Red Line, the 4.4-mile stretch of subway that's
supposed to be the centerpiece of hundreds of miles of transit lines in the
Metro rail system. Sidewalks along Hollywood Boulevard above the project had
begun to sink and crack, eventually dropping up to 10 inches in some places. An
engineering firm hired by the MTA eventually reported that the substitution of
wood wedges for steel supports was approved by engineers employed by Parsons
Brinckerhoff and the project's construction manager, Parsons-Dillingham.
Parsons-Dillingham is a partnership between Dillingham Construction and Parsons
Corp., a separate company with no relationship to the similarly named Parsons
Brinckerhoff. Parsons Corp. is a parent company of Parsons Transportation
Group, the consultants hired in 2000 by CATS and the Charlotte City Council to
do the engineering, environmental studies and the planning for stations and
land use for the South Boulevard light rail line, for which they're being paid
$5.8 million.
Multiple
whistleblower lawsuits have shed some light on how engineering snafus might
have caused the hole in Hollywood Boulevard. In 1994, Ben Pate, a former Metro
Rail tunnel quality control inspector, was awarded $1.38 million by a Superior
Court jury in a suit against his former employer, Parsons-Dillingham. In the
suit, he alleged he was fired for refusing to approve what he called
"shoddy and improper workmanship."
Engineer
James Hamilton won a settlement of $200,000 in a lawsuit against Parsons
Dillingham and the MTA's construction arm after claiming he was fired for
raising concerns about health and safety violations on the Metro Rail Line.
Another worker, Nelson McIntire, alleged that he was fired from the project for
exposing the threat of gas explosions and other safety hazards on the
construction site. McIntire's claim was settled for less than $200,000.
But
construction flaws were the least of the MTA's problems with the two companies.
By 1998, when Parsons-Dillingham and EMC began wrapping up the project, it was
$900 million over the original subway budget established in the mid-1980s and
MTA auditors still couldn't account for what happened to all the money.
What
is known is that 11 of the 12 design, engineering and management contracts for
the project grew from a starting price of $227 million to $670 million; most of
the cost increase -- $428 million - came from a contract with Parsons
Dillingham for construction oversight and a contract with EMC to design Metro
Rail, according to a report prepared for the Federal Transportation
Administration.
After
questions were raised by the media about the escalating costs of the project,
the MTA put out a statement which said that as the scope of rail projects was
further defined, the company's contracts were altered through change orders.
But the scope of those change orders was often staggering. An investigation by
The Daily News of Los Angeles found that in one case, EMC initially reported
committing just over $500,000 worth of work to four subcontractors but wound up
paying them over $43 million. In another case, an MTA inspector general's audit
showed that EMC billed $14 million for "unidentified subcontractors doing
unspecified work" on a rail line.
Accountant
J. Martin Gerlinger won a $300,000 settlement with Parsons Dillingham in a suit
in which he claimed he was fired after pointing out in a meeting with
supervisors that the firm had illegally overcharged the MTA by $20 million.
How They Get Away With It
By
now, readers are probably wondering how these companies have managed to stay
afloat in the transit world and hang on to their contracts. The answer to that
question is a complex one.
Despite
the numerous scandals Parsons Brinckerhoff has weathered over the years, the
company has a rich history in American transit engineering. It was responsible
for the New York subway system, the Hoover Dam and the Alaskan Oil pipeline.
Since it was founded in 1885, it has been one of the oldest continually
operating consulting engineering firms in the US and its more than 9,000 employees
have been responsible for thousands of projects on six continents. Ditto for
Parsons Corp., whose more than 9,000 employees have been operating in 50 states
and 40 foreign countries since the company was founded in 1944.
Over
time, the companies appear to have grown to be adept at two things:
manipulating the boards that oversee them and negotiating ambiguous, open-ended
contracts that make it difficult to fire them or hold them responsible for
anything that goes wrong on the project.
It's
not surprising that company money seems to find its way into the pockets of
politicians who oversee transit projects. A 1994 Los Angeles Times
investigation revealed that, over the previous decade, the handful of elected
officials who served on the MTA board -- similar to the MTC board here --
accepted more than $500,000 in campaign contributions from subcontractors,
lobbyists, lawyers and other firms connected to Parsons-Dillingham and EMC.
Former LA Mayor Tom Bradley alone collected $45,000 from Metro Rail contractors.
Has
it gone on here? How much if any money these companies have donated to the six
mayors from the Mecklenburg towns and cities who sit on the MTC board here is
hard to tell. The campaign reports of Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory and former
county commission chair Parks Helms, who chaired the MTC until recently, are
riddled with donations from individuals whose employer isn't listed, as the law
requires. During the 2002 election cycle, NC Senator Elizabeth Dole accepted
$5,000 from the Parsons Corp. PAC.
The
firms' ability to bond with the boards that oversee them seems to go beyond
just doling out campaign cash. Both firms are known for becoming so intermeshed
with the government transit agencies that hire them and the transit boards that
oversee them that it's difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins.
In California, some critics refer to the MTA, the board that was supposed to be
overseeing the contractors, as a "front for the EMC." What they're
trying to describe is the almost eerie way in which public officials seem to
avoid any oversight of the contractors, even after embarrassing public
revelations that the companies were deliberately over-billing them, withholding
information from them or causing other problems.
At
times, the sheer brazenness of the "Teflon contractors" and the MTA's
response to them was almost comical. The same month Hollywood Boulevard caved
in, for instance, MTA auditors discovered, while auditing EMC's books, that the
consortium spent nearly $2 million of taxpayer money on changes to a planned
rail line in Pasadena without bothering to get MTA authorization. But despite
incidents like this, again and again public officials overseeing both Big Dig
and the Los Angeles Red Line turned their heads, despite multiple promises to
the public to fire them.
At
one point, MTA CEO Franklin White publicly vowed to cut Parsons-Dillingham
loose after federal officials threatened to permanently take away over $1
billion in federal funding for the Red Line. But it was White, not the
companies, who would eventually lose his job over the cost and construction
fiascos on the project. While Parsons-Dillingham did lose a part of its
contract worth about $50 million as punishment, the MTA board went on to award
them another $58 million contract for three more portions of the Red Line.
Despite investigation reports that showed that EMC and Parsons-Dillingham
signed off on the wood-for-steel substitution, the MTA fired one of their
less-connected subcontractors for supposedly causing the fiasco and then paid
Parsons-Dillingham $7 million to oversee repairs to the Hollywood streets the
company was responsible for sinking. EMC was paid nearly $900,000 to design
sinkhole repair work.
In
Boston, where public officials have never bothered to attempt to reclaim the
tens of millions Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff illegally billed them for fixing
its own design errors, the companies remain on the job today.
Part
of the problem here is that firing these companies once they've become
entrenched in a project isn't easy. In August of 2001, Boston Turnpike
Authority officials exploring ways to boot Bechtel-Parsons Brinckerhoff from
the project and still meet their completion date ran into a common problem.
There were only a handful of firms in the world capable of completing the
project, and the long legal battle necessary to terminate the contract would
have dragged the project out even further. A similar thing happened in Los
Angeles after state legislators blasted MTA officials for allowing Parsons
Dillingham and EMC to stay on the job after numerous mishaps. An Arthur
Andersen audit concluded that the MTA would risk a bruising court battle if it
attempted to fire EMC because its contract was riddled with
"ambiguity." The MTA also discovered it couldn't afford to dump
Parsons-Dillingham either because the agency needed the company on its side in
court as it battled the more than a thousand lawsuits the two companies left in
their wake.
Perhaps
the most powerful asset these companies have in their court is their political
pull. Over time, the companies developed powerful federal political connections
they continue to nurture every year by donating hundreds of thousands of
dollars to national politicians and the two political parties. Those
connections in turn can be used to help municipalities looking to win money in
the highly competitive battle for the federal transportation dollars without
which most rail projects, including ours, won't happen. Lobbying by Parsons
Brinckerhoff Chairman Marty Rubin in Washington in the 1980s was one of the
reasons Congress approved billions for the LA transit project the company later
worked on.
The
companies' power appears to extend far beyond just jockeying for federal
dollars. Both appear to be virtually immune to federal civil or criminal
investigation. The Los Angeles New Times reported in 1997 that investigations
into the Red Line announced by the FBI, the US Attorney's office and the US
Department of Transportation have never yielded any public results. Ditto for
the 2000 joint investigation launched by Federal Highway Administration, FBI's
Public Corruption Unit, the Department of Labor and the Federal Department of
Transportation -- an investigation that was tainted by the state inspector
general's report findings that Big Dig project officials and Bechtel-Parsons
had conspired with state officials and the Federal Highway Administration to
hide the true $14 billion cost of the project from the public. In fact, the
vast majority of the dirt that's been uncovered on both projects has been the
result of investigations by the media, by independent state auditors or
inspectors or by the boards that oversaw these projects after public opinion
demanded it.
Where the Money Goes, Nobody Knows
Given
the history of large transit projects around the world, it may be that
officials everywhere have trouble getting a handle on the half-dozen or so
construction companies in the world capable of overseeing the creation of mass
transit systems. In a worldwide study of the cost estimating on 258 transit
projects called "Underestimating Costs in Public Works Projects: Error or
Lie?" Danish professor Bent Flyvbjerg and his colleagues found that
underestimating costs and overestimating rail ridership in initial studies of
whether an area needs a mass transit system seems to be an industry tradition.
In 9 out of 10 transportation infrastructure projects, Flyvbjerg found, costs
are underestimated and for rail projects actual costs are on average 45 percent
higher than estimated costs. The situation is not a product of lack of
experience with a certain type of transit, either. The average percentage by
which the cost of these projects is underestimated hasn't varied in 30 years.
Excluding cases in which major design changes were made as the project went
along, Flyvbjerg found that project promoters routinely "ignore, hide, or
otherwise leave out important project costs and risks in order to make total
costs appear low" and sell the public on the project.
Overseeing companies this powerful, experienced and well connected isn't easy for any municipality working on a transit project. Most of the cost overruns on American transit projects come in the form of change orders that alter the original contract of the contractors working on the project. To have 10 to 20 percent of the project's final cost come from change orders is fairly standard in the transit construction industry. On a project like Charlotte-Mecklenburg's with a $2.1 billion price tag, the documentation on change orders can fill whole rooms and require a full-time staff just to process. Over-billing by contractors is another way millions of dollars can go out the door undetected. That, too, requires a full staff of auditors to keep up with. Without this kind of structured oversight, things go awry. MTA officials still can't account for what happened to all of the $900 million in cost overruns on the Red Line and Big Dig officials have forfeited millions of unaccounted-for dollars to contractors because the statute of limitations on filing claims to get the money back has run out.
Source: Urban Transport Fact Book
Editor's Note: Though they have changed their name many times, this article is about Parsons Brinckerhoff. Recently they changed their name again to PB Americas and they were chosen by the City of Coronado to work on the "tunnel".
The news about our proposed Coronado "Big Dig" tunnel project just gets worse.
Stop Tunnel Spending Committee of Coronado
www.stoptunnelspending.com
Posted by: STSCoC | March 08, 2010 at 08:21 AM
Why would the city of Coronado want to work with these crooks? I think some accountability is in order!
Posted by: CHS1990 | March 08, 2010 at 09:44 AM
"Over-billing by contractors is another way millions of dollars can go out the door undetected."
Ever notice that Coronado projects are always at least double of what they should be? And PB is involved with a lot of them.
"It's not surprising that company money seems to find its way into the pockets of politicians who oversee transit projects."
That might explain why Mayor Tanaka and Councilmembers Woiwode, Downey and Ovrom keep voting in favor of all the studies, despite what the facts and the residents say. It makes no sense whatsoever. Barbara Denny appears to be the only honest, trustworthy one of the lot. We need more people like her to run for office.
Posted by: samiam | March 08, 2010 at 10:52 AM
Boondoggle! Hope the feds step in soon and follow the money.
Posted by: JM65 | March 09, 2010 at 06:06 AM