Mayor Nutter ordered the city's inspector general Monday
to investigate if the Department of Licenses and Inspections has followed new
safety rules put in place after the deadly Center City building collapse.
The mandate stems from a report in Sunday's Inquirer that
L&I failed to properly inspect more than 80 percent of private demolitions
over the last nine months.
Nutter called the Inquirer report "tremendously
troubling." He vowed to hold officials and inspectors accountable,
depending on what Inspector General Amy Kurland discovers.
"We must get to the bottom of it to find out whether
or not inspections were conducted," Nutter said at a Monday afternoon news
conference. "Are there pictures? Are there details and data and the like
that are supposed to be in place as a result of past, or even more troubling,
new regulations and laws that have been put into place."
After the collapse of the Market Street Salvation Army
thrift store in June 2013, which killed six people and seriously injured 13,
the Nutter administration and City Council created new demolition requirements
in an attempt to prevent another tragedy.
Sunday's article showed that many of those requirements
were not being followed. Out of 82 private demolitions, only 14 were correctly
inspected following the new guidelines, according to L&I inspectors who
examined the records for The Inquirer.
More coverage
What new building inspection guidelines?
L&I chief of staff Beth Grossman disputed the story's
findings but offered no details. She declined further questions Monday, citing
the pending investigation.
Sunday's report followed a series of Inquirer articles in
the last year pointing out L&I failures, including construction completed
without inspections, demolitions without permits, and uncertified building
inspectors.
City Controller Alan Butkovitz has also released various
reports citing persistent problems at L&I. On Monday, Butkovitz questioned
Nutter's delay in taking action.
"These very same findings have been presented in
several investigations and reports by my office over the last two years, and
it's alarming that the mayor waits until the last few days in office to address
them," Butkovitz said in a statement. "It's another deflection by the
mayor to avoid the real issue."
Neither Nutter nor Kurland would predict how long the
audit would take. Nutter will leave office in January. The investigation could
continue into the next administration.
Former City Councilman Jim Kenney, who is widely favored
to win the mayoral election, has said he would replace L&I Commissioner
Carlton Williams.
Williams was not at Monday's news conference. Nutter has
defended Williams' leadership as recently as last month, when Butkovitz called
for his firing.
On Monday, Nutter said that Williams was complying with
the investigation.
"I'm not going to prejudge," Nutter said.
"I do not know ... which is frankly why we are here today."
Nutter said there are "too many unknown pieces of
information" and wants Kurland to take a deep look at the demolition
oversight process.
"What's troubling here is that these are inspectors,
they know what their job is, they've been trained, they know what the law
is," he said. "What I want to get to is the bottom line of what
happened or didn't happen, and then we'll let the chips fall where they
may."
Source: Philly.com
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