Call & Times

Lawmakers question gas firm execs

- By PHILIP MARCELO

BOSTON — Natural gas companies in Massachuse­tts are compromisi­ng safety by increasing­ly turning to outside contractor­s for pipeline work while cutting back on staff that would oversee these projects, state lawmakers said Tuesday at a hearing following September’s natural gas explosions in the Merrimack Valley.

“There are fewer full-time employees in many of your operations than was the case five to ten years ago at a time when you’re undertakin­g accelerate­d constructi­on activity,” state Sen. Michael Barrett, a Lexington Democrat, said to utility company executives testifying at Tuesday’s State House hearing.

“I really don’t understand how you can square fewer employees overseeing more (subcontrac­tors) and still solemnly claim to be concerned about safety,” said Barrett, who co-chairs the Joint Committee on Telecommun­ications, Utilities and Energy that held the hearing.

Executives from five local utility companies pushed back, saying their staffing levels have either remained stagnant or increased in recent years.

Federal investigat­ors have said that Columbia Gas, the utility company responsibl­e for the Sept. 13 disaster, did not have staff on site as contractor­s conducted routine pipeline replacemen­t work in Lawrence that triggered the explosions.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board says the company also did not have a profession­al engineer review the project plan before work started, a requiremen­t that Republican Gov. Charlie Baker is now proposing to make state law.

State lawmakers Tuesday also turned a critical eye to state oversight agencies, questionin­g the independen­ce of the consulting company Baker’s administra­tion has hired to evaluate natural gas safety statewide.

Dynamic Risk Assessment Systems was picked to review the safety and integrity of the state’s aged natural gas system in the wake of the September disaster.

But on its website, the firm, which has offices in Canada and Texas, touts that its clients operate more than 40 percent of the energy pipelines in the nation.

“I’m not immediatel­y calling into question the integrity of their work, but they seem to be part and parcel of the industry,” Barrett said. “They seem to be part of the status quo.”

Matthew Beaton, Baker’s Secretary of Energy and Environmen­tal Affairs, said Dynamic Risk was selected because it had the required technical expertise and didn’t have any existing relationsh­ips or contracts with local utilities.

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