A Year After 6/10 Contamination, Investigation Continues -- and Frustration for Those Impacted

GoLocalProv News Team

A Year After 6/10 Contamination, Investigation Continues -- and Frustration for Those Impacted

PHOTO: GoLocal
In June of 2020, a mammoth pile of contaminated materials started being dumped in the Olneyville neighborhood in Providence by a Rhode Island Department of Transportation contractor.

The pile grew, and was stacked two stories high next to adjacent homes — homes with pregnant women and small children.

Whistleblower James White, President of Local 57 of the International Union of Operating Engineers, began raising concerns. White contacted the RI Department of Transportation and the RI Department of Environmental Management urging them to investigate the contaminated material.

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RIDOT Director Peter Alviti (R) repeatedly denied on Gene Valicenti's (L) talk radio show that the material dumped in Olneyville was clean -- it wasn't PHOTO: RIDOT
White received little response and no action from RIDOT or RIDOT officials.

RI Department of Transportation Director Peter Alviti claimed the material was clean. He wrote in letters, and made public comments and repeatedly on his weekly appearances on talk radio, that there was no contamination.

“So basically we've proven that the fill that was brought in is OK, but we're concerned and I think the investigation is going to continue, because we're concerned that another agenda is going on here. We don't know what it is,” said Alviti on the Gene Valicenti radio show, two days after the first GoLocal investigative story in September of 2020.

The GoLocal series has sparked both state and federal investigations, including a federal grand jury.

 

SEE THE TIMELINE OF THE 6/10 CONTAMINATION BELOW

Only after a barrage of articles by GoLocal did the material get tested properly -- and the material was proven to be contaminated.

Rhode Island landfills refused to take the contaminated material for disposal.

Finally, nearly six months after it was dumped — GoLocal followed trucks to a Superfund site in central Massachusetts where the contaminated material from Olneyville was ultimately moved.

 

 

State investigators at the Pawtucket-Central Fall train station project -- tracking materials that ended up in Olneyville PHOTO: GoLocal
A Year Later

More than a year after the material was dumped next to home, no charges have been filed.

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha’s office said in an email to GoLocal that their investigation is "ongoing.”

GoLocal reported that federal investigation that had issued subpoenas in the fall of 2020 -- and federal agents had interviewed an employee of the contractor Barletta Engineering as recent as March of 2021.

The U.S. Attorney’s office in Providence said on Tuesday regarding that investigation that "there is no information available at this time.”

The RI Department of Environmental Management’s spokesperson Michael Healey said this week in an email to GoLocal, “The Office of the Attorney General’s investigation into the contaminated soils related to the 6/10 Interchange construction project is ongoing and confidential and DEM is not privy to it.” 

Special Agent Susan Murphy of the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

The Carmona family at a happier time before the contaminated material was dumped next to their home.
However, who is definitive about the situation is Virginia Carmona. She and her husband Teofilo own one of the homes adjacent to the contaminated soil.

“I have heard nothing. Nothing from the state, nothing from investigators — nothing from anyone,” said Carmona.

For months the contaminated soil blew non-stop onto her home, backyard, and their cars. They could not open their window or use their backyard.

Another neighbor impacted by the contaminated material is Miriam Bonilla. Her home is also adjacent to the site, and like the Carmonas, was subject to the material being spread all over her home and across her backyard.

Bonilla tells GoLocal, "No, nothing. I have heard nothing. No one has come to talk to us."

 

Barletta  - $349 Million in RIDOT Contracts and Growing

Massachusetts-based Barletta is part of the "6-10 CONSTRUCTORS JOINT VENTURE" and secured $247,630,000 for the 6/10 improvement project awarded in 2017; also in 2018 Barletta was awarded the Pawtucket/Central Falls Commuter Rail Station and Bus Hub, which was $35,796,000.

In 2020, Barletta was awarded the Bridge Group 49 - Henderson  Bridge project for $65,964,000 — bringing the company's total of recent Rhode Island projects to $349,390,000. Since those initial contracts were awarded, the company has been awarded tens of millions in additional RIDOT contracts.

 

SEE THE TIMELINE OF THE 6/10 CONTAMINATION BELOW


TIMELINE: 6/10 Contamination GoLocal Investigation

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