Boston Herald

SOUTHIE PROJECT ON PAUSE

Safety check to be completed before work continues

- By Sean Philip Cotter sean.cotter@bostonhera­ld.com

The big constructi­on company running the demolition at the former Boston Edison power plant where a collapse injured three workers has ordered a “safety standdown” pause of all constructi­on projects as it investigat­es the incident that has locals on edge.

“This Safety Standdown will include a comprehens­ive review and evaluation of existing safety standards and procedures,” Suffolk Constructi­on CEO John Fish said in a Thursday statement, saying this is a “voluntary action” the day after the incident that sent three to the hospital with non-fatal injuries.

“We will also use this Safety Standdown as an opportunit­y to reinforce jobsite safety awareness and provide our teams the opportunit­y to secure, evaluate, clean and organize their jobsites for the restart of work,” Fish said, adding that the pause goes through Friday. “In the event this evaluation requires more time for an individual job site, that site may remain closed until the review is complete and prepared to safely re-open.”

Suffolk is demolishin­g the building for Hilco Partners and Redgate, who are undertakin­g a massive redevelopm­ent effort to get rid of the giant long-vacant pink power plant in South Boston and replace it with hundreds of apartments, a hotel and commercial space.

The companies are taking the bulk of the big power plant down now, leaving some of the lowerslung buildings to include as part of the redevelopm­ent. On Wednesday, per Suffolk, a catwalk collapsed.

OSHA is investigat­ing, and Boston’s Inspection­al Services Department has requested stability reports from the developers.

Among the three injured workers was one man who was caught under the collapse for hours and required a complicate­d rescue to avoid further collapse. A Boston Medical Center surgeon came to the job site to help free the man, and Boston EMS said they were able to get him out without an amputation on-site, though BMC declined to comment further or make the responding doctor available.

City Council President Ed Flynn, a city councilor who represents and lives in Southie, said he’s spoken to the Boston Public Health Commission and made it clear they need to continue to monitor the air in the area near the old coal plant as it’s taken apart.

“We need to monitor the air quality in the South Boston neighborho­od,” Flynn told the Herald, saying he’d heard concerns from locals. “It needs to be investigat­ed and it needs to be documented.”

He noted that the old plant “itself has caused high rates of respirator­y issues in the neighborho­od.”

Two decades ago, a big fire tore through the plant — and is blamed for leaving many of the firefighte­rs who fought it suffering from long-term health issues including cancer.

Boston firefighte­rs union president John Soares, head of Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Fire Fighters Local 718, said he remembers working that “crazy” night, and said the building is “a long time coming to come down.”

Now, he said, the safety measures are better.

“We had our guys on respirator­s and air the whole time,” Soares said. “Yesterday I thought the guys did an amazing job.”

He added, “When a building is going up or a building is coming down, that’s the most dangerous time for a firefighte­r.”

Among the three injured workers was one man who was caught under the collapse for hours and required a complicate­d rescue to avoid further collapse.

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 ?? NANCY LANE PHOTOS / HERALD STAFF ?? AFTERMATH: Workers and, below, police are seen outside the former Edison plant the day after a collapse injured three workers.
NANCY LANE PHOTOS / HERALD STAFF AFTERMATH: Workers and, below, police are seen outside the former Edison plant the day after a collapse injured three workers.

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