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This photo from June 12, 2003, shows a bent gusset plate on the I-35W bridge that is visible to the eye.
Photo courtesy of NTSB
Two companies the state accuses of
negligence that contributed to the Interstate 35W bridge collapse
have won a combined $50 million in new highway and bridge contracts
since the deadly disaster two years ago.
Minnesota's continued reliance on engineering consultant URS
Corp. and paving company Progressive Contractors Inc. (PCI) is drawing
attention amid a slew of lawsuits filed by collapse victims, the
state and the contractors themselves.
Lawyers for the state are trying to recover at least $37 million
-- the amount a government settlement fund paid to the 145 people
injured and relatives of the 13 killed on Aug. 1, 2007.
While some legal experts doubt whether transportation officials
could have stopped either company from bidding or signing new
public contracts, one lawmaker said the deals pose yet another
public relations headache for an agency still on the rebound.
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"It looks awfully odd to the public that you have got
the state suing them on the one hand for doing a lousy job, and on
the other hand you keep giving them business," said Sen. Ron Latz, DFL-St. Louis Park, who is involved in crafting the compensation fund. "Either
they're capable of doing the job right or not."
In a final report last fall, federal investigators blamed the
collapse on poorly designed connector plates that held together the
span's steel beams. But they also cited the weight of construction
materials on the bridge as a factor.
"You have the state suing them on the one hand for doing a lousy job, and on the other hand you keep giving them business."
The Minnesota Department of Transportation declined to comment
on its relationship with the vendors because the agency is now
involved in litigation with them.
Last week, the state sued URS, claiming it "violated the
applicable engineering standard of care" and failed to warn the
state "of the substantially compromised and urgent hazardous
condition of the bridge."
The San Francisco-based company was
hired four years before the collapse to inspect the 1960s-era
bridge and to suggest ways to shore it up.
Since the disaster, URS has entered into $6.2 million in
contracts with the transportation agency, the most recent coming
four days before the state filed its lawsuit. The company, which
also declined comment, is involved in at least three bridge
projects.
PCI, based in St. Michael, Minn., was resurfacing the bridge
when it broke apart during rush hour. The company and its
subsidiaries have taken on more than $42 million in new contract
work in the last two years, with seven projects including bridge
repair.
PCI attorney Kevin Hart said that the contracts demonstrate the
state agency's trust in the company's work, despite a lawsuit the
state filed against PCI in May that takes issue with the way the
company staged heavy loads on vulnerable areas of the bridge.
PCI
previously filed a legal claim against the state for failing to keep its workers safe.
"We don't believe that the state actually believes that we did
anything wrong," Hart said, arguing that the state's case was "a
knee-jerk reaction to being sued."
Terry Ward, a MnDOT construction official, defended the
continued use of PCI last year when the AP reported that the
company was hired to do surfacing work on the replacement 35W
bridge.
"They are qualified to bid work. They are qualified to sub-bid
work," he said at the time. "There hasn't been any direction
given to us that they are not capable or qualified at all."
Neither PCI nor URS are on a list of contractors disqualified
from receiving state jobs. That "debarred vendor" list is
generally reserved for contractors who engage in criminal activity,
violate antitrust laws, perform unsatisfactorily or commit other
errors deemed serious and compelling.
As long as the companies prove they have adequate manpower,
experience and insurance, they are positioned to chase new
contracts, said Christopher Belter, vice chairman of the
construction law committee for DRI, an organization of civil
defense attorneys.
"You couldn't shut someone out of the bidding process without
having a legitimate reason, because the state would be subject to a
suit if they didn't allow them to bid without justification,"
Belter said. "This in it of itself wouldn't provide the state with
justification given these are based on unproven allegations."
Gallery
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This photo from June 12, 2003, shows a bent gusset plate on the I-35W bridge that is visible to the eye.
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