VIDEO: GoLocal's Nagle Confronts Federal Highway Official on Investigation Into 6/10 Contamination

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

VIDEO: GoLocal's Nagle Confronts Federal Highway Official on Investigation Into 6/10 Contamination

Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Deputy Administrator Stephanie Pollack. PHOTO: GoLocal
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Deputy Administrator Stephanie Pollack came to Rhode Island for a site visit on the controversial 6/10 project on Thursday.

The visit by Pollack  — the Biden appointee and former Massachusetts Department of Transportation Director — comes two years after dozens of truckloads of contaminated soil were transported into the Olneyville neighborhood and dumped next to homeowners — homes with small children and a pregnant woman.

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SEE TIMELINE OF CONTAMINATION AND INVESTIGATION BELOW

 

For months after the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) was warned about the contamination, RIDOT Director Peter Alviti denied the claims; made false charges against the whistleblower union official James While; and minimized the impact on abutting homeowners.

White is the President of Local 57 of the International Union of Operating Engineers and sparked the ongoing investigation by GoLocalProv.

 

RIDOT Director Peter Alviti repeatedly denied the contamination. PHOTO: GoLocal
GoLocal Asks About Status Off Investigation

Pollack, when confronted by GoLocalProv news editor Kate Nagle, said the investigation is ongoing.

“You know, the Department of Transportation's independent inspector general is taking a look at the claim so [I am] not going to talk about those today but we have a process when there is a complaint made,” said Pollack.

“We take those very seriously,” said Pollack.

But, Pollack would not answer questions about the ongoing federal investigation far broader and deeper than the investigation now with the U.S Attorney's' office in Providence and RI Attorney General's office.

That investigation has been led by Susan Murphy of the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General, Office of Labor Racketeering & Fraud Investigation

Alviti interrupted the questions by Nagle claiming his agency has been proactive.

 

No One Held Accountable to Date

Testing at the site contamination in February of 2022 PHOTO: GoLocal
Alviti claimed the contaminated material was cleaned from the site.

But, the site is fenced off, and as GoLocal reported an environmental testing firm and RI Department officials were onsite taking samples and testing soil as recently as February of 2022.

When asked by Nagle if any RIDOT staffing changes have been made as a result of the illegal dumping by the contractor under RIDOT's supervision, Alviti said no.

The Olneyville neighborhood is one of the poorest in the state and overwhelmingly minority.

The contractor — Barletta Heavy Division — is still on the project and has been awarded hundreds of millions in additional work by the RIDOT.

The Carmona family's home has been impacted by the contamination. PHOTO: Carmona family
Some of the neighbors who were hit hardest by the dumping have filed suits. The civil cases could take years to resolve.

The suits were filed in Providence Superior court on behalf of the homeowners of two adjacent houses — Teofilo and Virginia Carmona and their adjacent neighbor Miriam Bonilla.

The families have filed suit alleging in part that “…the actions of the State on the Adjacent Parcel have resulted in the distribution of soils containing toxins and pollutants onto the Property and into the Building as a result of the storage soil and operations conducted by the State on the Adjacent Parcel."

The lawsuit asserts that “the Property and Building has been contaminated by such toxins and pollutants as a result of the operations conducted by the State on the Adjacent Parcel. And damage was done by the construction on the site loading and unloading the contaminated materials."

It is now two years since the dumping and the contamination were flagged by White to Alviti and then-Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management Director Janet Coit.

Alviti and Coit both refused to take action until the first GoLocal report in September of 2020.


TIMELINE: 6/10 Contamination GoLocal Investigation

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