Pennsylvanians
wondering when the $400 million, concrete State Correctional Institution
Phoenix will finally open can wonder a lot more, after reviewing the
denunciatory letters exchanged by the prison's builder and the state's private
agent monitoring the work.
The
largest prison ever built in a state whose incarcerated population has lately
declined, Phoenix will house nearly 4,000 Philadelphia-area inmates, including
its women's and death-row units, next to what Corrections Commissioner John
Wetzel says is the badly outdated stone Graterford prison, in
pleasant Skippack Township north of the city.
After
the state rebid the job and early construction was delayed by weather, Phoenix
was scheduled to open in November 2015. Contractor Walsh Heery Joint
Venture, the Pittsburgh-based alliance of Chicago and Atlanta builders that
has been overseeing construction since Tom Corbett was governor, has run
up more than $14 million in "liquidated damages" it will have to pay,
after blowing past that deadline, the state says.
On
Nov. 3, Ed Kerber, one of Walsh Heery's senior project managers, wrote to the state's construction
managers at Hill International in Philadelphia that his group
was at last "ready and willing to turn over a first-class facility"
to Pennsylvania and was just waiting for "a timely and efficient final and
closeout inspection."
But
Walsh Heery's claim that the prison was ready "is grossly inaccurate and
misleading," wrote back Mark D. Dickinson, vice president at Hill,
which represents the state Department of General Services in managing
construction of Phoenix so it can be run, when it's ready, by Wetzel's
Department of Corrections.
Walsh
Heery officials have not responded to my calls and messages (some
subcontractors have said they have that problem, too), and Hill spokesman John
Paolin said his firm declined to comment.
So
I asked for the written record. General Services sent me copies of scores of
reports and letters, a partial account that helps one appreciate the complexity
and conflicts of building a safe, secure modern facility to multiple and
sometimes changing and conflicting guidelines, on budget, through an array of
private contractors.
The
documents are heavily edited, for what state officials call security
reasons.
How
bad are the problems? Old inspection reports from 2014 and 2015 list trouble
with insulation, door closings, pipe corrosion, fire-alarm installation,
concrete cracking and staining, and other issues requiring sometimes-costly
do-overs or work-arounds.
I
wish I could say most of these have been resolved. But that is not clear. For
example, a report on lighting problems is almost completely blacked out.
The
Inspector General's Office sent me a separate seven-page refusal,
stating among other things that revealing anything about a 2015 investigation
it conducted at the site "would chill government self-evaluation,"
"make future investigations more difficult," "harm [the
Inspector General's] internal deliberation and investigative process," and
even "reveal the mental impressions, conclusions or opinions" of
taxpayer-paid lawyers. Which, they wrote, would be bad for the commonwealth. We
like the dark.
So,
back to the recent letters.
Before
declaring that his firm was ready to turn over the site for opening, Walsh
Heery's Kerber complained that Pennsylvania "has repeatedly failed"
to document any quality concerns at the site.
Instead,
he wrote, the state's agents at Hill have been putting out "general and
conclusory" critical statements not backed by detailed evidence.
To
be sure, the contractor acknowledged, "there are 43 items" still
under discussion in weekly quality-control meetings. But "this is a very
small list, considering the size and complexity of this project," Kerber
added.
A
further 204 questions raised by the contractor itself remain open, but 20,000
more "have been closed," and Walsh Heery has been "very
diligent" solving more, he concluded. He also objects to the state trying
to get his firm to pay for field inspections in advance of the final
walk-through: "The state has no right to attempt to
back-charge."
Hill, in its Dec. 12 reply, calls
Kerber's claims "incorrect." Hill and state corrections
officials have spent "extensive time" helping Walsh Heery
"execute your contract," Dickinson insists.
Besides
the 43 "open" items the contractor cites, Hill has a list of 428
additional "site-wide issues" and other problems Dickinson says the
contractor isn't counting. Plus 10,000 more potentially "unresolved"
issues from Walsh Heery's own list (besides the 20,000 the contractor says it
has solved.)
The
state Department of Labor and Industry has found additional
"unresolved" issues, Dickinson writes. And about 50 of 121 required
reports from specialized professionals haven't yet arrived.
In
short, while acknowledging that most of the work is done, Hill says it can't be
sure it's been done well, and concludes that Walsh Heery is still
"struggling to deliver this project within the quality and performance
requirements of the contract."
The
big thing missing from these records, and still unaddressed by the state
agencies overseeing this job: a plan and schedule for how they're going to get
past the paperwork, accusations and penalties, and get Phoenix open.
Source: Philly.com
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