Gencarella & Bishop: Billion Dollar ‘Big Dig’ - Fewer Bridges, Fewer Cars, Nearly Double The Cost

Pam Gencarella, Brian Bishop, GoLocalProv MINDSETTERS™

Gencarella & Bishop: Billion Dollar ‘Big Dig’ - Fewer Bridges, Fewer Cars, Nearly Double The Cost

Budget Already Busted.

Rep Morgan
When Governor Raimondo first unveiled her cost projections to support placing tolls on trucks, the 6/10 Connector repair was estimated at $800 million with new bus lanes adding some $300 million of that cost.  Director Alviti says that’s a minor marginal addition. We’d hate to see a major change.

Is there really a need for a dedicated bus lane?  Representative Morgan, at the House Finance Hearing on Toll legislation, tried to inquire about the assessment that surely was commissioned to support such a need.  However, Chairman Gallison shut her down before she could pose that question to Director Alviti. But we digress. . .

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Now, under the new grand design of Disneyland-style bridges and tunnels, all capped off with green space created to put a soft edge on a hard plan, DOT claims it won’t cost much more. These are the same folks who suggest close to doubling the cost is a marginal increase. And they are rushing off to Washington chasing what is a rigged federal highway grant for another $150 million. What kind of fools do they take us for.

It wouldn’t be the first time transportation officials low-balled a controversial project: The Massachusetts Big Dig was originally estimated to cost $2.8 billion. Just last year, a final tally put the cost at $21 billion, 7 times the original estimate. A 2015 Boston.com article cited a Boston University associate professor as saying that “engineers knew the original projections were far too low, but politicians covered up their actual estimates. They told everybody who would listen, including politicians, and those people kept it quiet.”  Do you have confidence that our elected leaders are providing us with their best estimate?

The Larger The Project, The Greater The Risks.

If the federal government is paying for 60% of the 6/10 ‘Big Dig’ and the DOT incurs cost overruns of just 10%, that means an extra $100 million.  Will the federal government fork over $60 million more for overruns or will the RI taxpayers pick up that entire additional $100 million?  Imagine if the costs were to double, another $1 billion?

They Want You On Their Side, But Don’t Want Your Input.

To make us feel that we are part of the process, the DOT set out to provide the appearance of public input on the reparations needed for the 6/10 Connector bridges. But review the few seconds of an exchange at the Warwick public workshop for yourself. It reveals the underlying hostility to plans on which the DOT has already decided. Under scrutiny from one elderly gentleman, DOT Director Alviti shows his ‘receptiveness’ to public input with a finger pointing declaration of, “… .Let me tell you something pal” .  

And therein lies the problem with RI government - they know best, citizens have no place in the decision making process and if they think they do, they will be bullied into submission. Is this what you consider transparency?  

Open Mind or Open Wallet

As they rush forward in this sham grant process -- without a friendly face or supportive voice in the room at these public workshops -- Director Alviti has begun to insist that nothing is cast in stone. All alternatives will be considered. But the night before, in an interview with Channel 10’s Brian Crandall, Alviti all but said that a true Boulevard will not work.  It looks like he prefers to open DOTs wallet rather than its minds.

Of course there are questions about how the traffic would be diverted if a less expensive, true boulevard were to replace the 6/10 Connector but that conversation should be had.  Brian Bishop, opponent of the ‘Big Dig’, explains that twenty years ago, the Connector didn’t even tie in to Route 95 and traffic managed.  Certainly, RI’s population has not grown and in fact, has been stagnant for some time.

But Director Alviti has not seriously considered this. His department staff at the workshops have no grasp on how to find traffic counts from 1990 to see how traffic moved before the 6/10 connector. And Alviti comes to Providence to discuss this project and has never heard of the Olneyville Circulator, the local plan to help surface traffic around Olneyville in which DOT participated! The plans for the Boulevard coordinate perfectly with that approach.  And other local road improvements including left turn lanes and traffic management techniques, in as much as a five mile radius around the connector, as well as much less expensive transit augmentation, factor strongly in imagining how traffic would respond to the true Boulevard proposal.  And to top off the lack of integrated thinking, DOT plans the northbound viaduct independently and without contemplating savings that could be achieved by eliminating the cost and congestion of rebuilding the northbound 6/10 interchange at Route 95.

Illustrating how little stock the department puts in alternatives, the Director couldn’t even bring forward an estimate for the cost savings for the half-hearted depiction of the true Boulevard he did present. Somehow DOT and Director Alviti devoted untold resources to creating a Disneyland plan for the 6/10 connector in a couple of weeks to present at these workshops, and with the ink barely dry, says he knows what this boondoggle will cost. But they haven’t looked seriously at the cost of a true Boulevard plan.

How about a Rhode Map for Rhode Works

And we don’t trust them to look seriously at the true Boulevard option. The Director has already said a true Boulevard is not up to the task, so can he be trusted to work hard on that alternative and not to inflate those estimates while minimizing those for his preferred plan?  DOT cannot be tasked to plan this alternative because they don’t believe in it. Rather the governor should ask Statewide Planning (in the Department of Administration) to formulate and coordinate advancing a Boulevard alternative and provide the resources needed from DOT.

That’s right, Statewide Planning, they of the Rhode Map RI controversy, so eager to plan in our back yards, yet when a real question of public planning arises they have no voice. Apparently, it wasn’t politically expedient to question the extravagant approach to the 6/10 Connector when its cost was being used to justify tolls.

The outcome will ultimately be a combination of local and state political will, but perhaps playing out in the ‘courtroom’ of the Federal Highway Administration which must enter a “Record of Decision” for this project. These approaches must each have strong institutional advocates in that process. Despite our disagreements with Statewide Planning in the past, what is a more logical locus for considering alternatives to such a vast commitment of our resources?

Further, Director Alviti has continually said the billion dollar plan only covers 7 bridges in the 6/10 interchange itself, not the connector to 95! That’s another boondoggle waiting to happen.

For comparison, the IWay, that stretch that comprises the mile and a half stretch of I-195 and the mile stretch of I-95, includes 14 new bridges, one with an 8-lane mainline bridge, 25 lane-miles of new interstate, a new interchange with I-95, five miles of new city streets, 4,100 feet of new pedestrian river walks, and to boot, the bridge itself was floated down 12 miles of the bay.  And this system of bridges and highways helps move 160,000 vehicles from the East Bay and eastern Massachusetts, to Boston and points north and to Connecticut and New York and points south.

According to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) that project only cost $610 million and that was to help 160,000 vehicles travel across the bridge daily.  We've heard of inflation, but we've also heard of inflated ambition. Can RI really justify creating a road/bridge/tunnel system that costs $1 billion for regional convenience that may not even be the most convenient solution?  

You Do Have A Voice.

While many people feel they do not have a voice, recognize that your voice was heard after the roll out of “Cooler & Warmer”.  Let your voice be heard again.  Contact Governor Raimondo and let her know how you feel about the 6/10 ‘Big Dig’.


RI Truck Tolls Controversy -- 2016

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