Investigation of 6/10 Contamination Linked to RIDOT Contractor Barletta Expands to Second Site

GoLocalProv News Team

Investigation of 6/10 Contamination Linked to RIDOT Contractor Barletta Expands to Second Site

RIDEM Enforcement Division on site in Pawtucket on Wednesday
Wednesday morning, Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (RI DEM) investigators with a court-ordered search warrant were on site at the Pawtucket/Central Falls Train Station property — a Rhode Island Department of Transportation project site.

It is all part of answering the question of how contaminated material got dumped in a Providence neighborhood and spread throughout one of the state’s largest most expensive public works developments — the 6/10 project.

RI DEM told GoLocal in an email, "Further soil sampling at the Pawtucket train station project is being conducted today as part of an ongoing criminal investigation. For further information, please contact the Attorney General’s office."

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"While we cannot comment on the substance of the investigation, we can confirm that DEM is executing a state court-authorized search warrant at the site," said the Rhode Island Attorney General's office.

 

Latest in 6/10 Investigation 

In addition to the ongoing state investigation, the U.S. Attorney’s office in Rhode Island has issued subpoenas relating to the contamination at the 6/10 project.

At the center of the investigation is the contractor on both the 6/10 project and the development of the Pawtucket/Central Falls Train Station — combined the Canton, Massachusetts contractor in just the past two-plus years, Barletta Engineering and Heavy Machine has been awarded $349 million in contracts.  

The company recently won the Henderson Bridge project.

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. Earlier this year Barletta was awarded the Bridge Group 49 - Henderson  Bridge project for $65,964,000 — bringing Barletta's total to $349,390,000.

Trade publication ENR reported in January 2018, "A four-company design-build team has been awarded a $410 million contract to design and rebuild the Routes 6-10 Interchange in Providence, the Rhode Island Dept. of Transportation announced late last year. RIDOT awarded the project—the largest single contract in the agency’s history—on Dec. 21 to 6/10 Constructors, which comprises of Barletta Heavy Construction, O&G Industries, DW White Construction, and Aetna Bridge Co., the agency said in a statement. A project commencement ceremony is scheduled for Jan. 8."

A notification sign by RIDEM
GoLocal unveiled on Monday that in a RI DEM email, it showed that the agency had ordered in July of 2020 that RIDOT ensure that Barletta remove materials brought from the Pawtucket/Central Falls Train Station project to the Providence neighborhood.

The sampling at the Pawtucket site of material by DEM investigators comes more than three months after a whistleblower raised concerns about the transfer of materials believed to be contaminated from the Massachusetts sites and the Pawtucket/Central Falls Train Station project — a site that is known to have multiple sources of contamination.

 

 

Barletta Ordered to Remove Material in August, Soil Still Onsite

The August 3, 2020 letter to Barletta from RIDOT stated:

“During recent excavation on the referenced project, Barletta Heavy Division, Inc. removed soil from the project site [Pawtucket/Central Falls Train Station project] and trucked it to the RIDOT Route 6/10 Reconstruction project. The RI Department of Environmental Management (RIDEM) Remedial Approval Letter for Permit Number SR-26-1938, approved on January 3, 2020, only allows soil removal to a licensed disposal site for the referenced project. This action has resulted in a formal complaint to RIDEM that needs to be addressed immediately. Based on this complaint and violation, please remove the soil from the Route 6/10 project and legally dispose of said material by August 17, 2020. The Pawtucket project will not accept the return of this material.

In the interim, please place and maintain the stockpile on a suitable barrier, erosion control the perimeter, and securely cover to prevent contamination to a surrounding area. Also, per direction from RIDEM, please provide documentation (material shipping records and manifests) providing the exact number of truckloads that were removed from the Pawtucket site by the close of business August 4, 2020."

GoLocal over the past few months has secured thousands of documents from Rhode Island and Massachusetts agencies.

SEE THE TIMELINE OF THE INVESTIGATION BELOW


TIMELINE: 6/10 Contamination GoLocal Investigation

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