Chattanooga Times Free Press

Who’s really to blame for Atlanta bridge collapse?

- BY CRAIG SCHNEIDER, DAVID WICKERT AND DAN KLEPAL NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA — Years ago, several tons of high-density plastic piping were stored under an I-85 bridge, left largely out of sight and forgotten.

It’s a similar story for much of Atlanta’s homeless.

On March 30, the two came together with catastroph­ic results. Police say a 39-yearold homeless man, Basil Eleby, set fire to an upholstere­d chair, which then ignited the coiled plastic conduit stacked in rows under I-85 near Piedmont Road.

The resulting fire was so large and intense that it chewed through the concrete bridge and its steel beams, eventually causing a large section of the interstate to come crashing down.

Now, Atlantans are grappling with a two-month traffic nightmare while the interstate is repaired. The price tag will easily reach tens of millions of taxpayer dollars. The fiasco has many asking who is to blame.

Inherent in that question is another: Was this fire something that could have been prevented, or was it a freak occurrence?

In a handful of press conference­s, state transporta­tion officials acknowledg­ed that the agency placed the materials there, but contended no one could have foreseen the danger. They also said storing materials under bridges is common around the country.

“I don’t think anyone would have ever thought this kind of thing would happen,” said Russell McMurry, commission­er of the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion.

Police have arrested Eleby, a

hapless street dweller who supported himself through odd jobs for local shops. He worked for dollars, sweeping a floor here, washing a few cars there. He also had a rap sheet 19 arrests long and steeped in illicit drugs.

Eleby is charged with arson and criminal damage to property. Late Friday, authoritie­s indicted him and said he had consumed drugs under the bridge before allegedly setting the fire.

He had told police he left the area before the fire began.

Many in the community say he is responsibl­e regardless of his personal problems.

But others say it’s too simple to lay the blame on Eleby alone. They criticize GDOT’s decision to stack burnable material in a location known to attract the homeless.

“Irresponsi­ble, No. 1. Negligent at a minimum,” said Marcus Coleman, a civic activist who is helping Eleby obtain legal counsel. “There’s no secret that the homeless regularly burn fire outdoors. … The narrative needs to go deeper than just a homeless individual allegedly smoking crack.”

As metro Atlantans think through who is accountabl­e, the state fire marshal and federal investigat­ors with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board are doing the same.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on spent the past week examining what happened under that bridge, as well as why the materials were stored there and what drew Eleby to that place. The newspaper found security at the site lacking and determined that officials don’t know what’s stashed under other bridges around the state.

SKATEBOARD BOWL SHOWS UNDERPASS UNSECURED

In the wake of the fire, GDOT assured the public that the site — which they owned along with the material — was secured with a chainlink fence and a gate.

But an AJC review of pictures of the site before the collapse as well as a walk-through of it afterward found it was hardly secure.

Photos show the gate bent enough to render the attached padlock all but useless. The fence could be easily climbed.

McMurry, the GDOT commission­er, acknowledg­ed the fence was really there to keep people from stealing the conduit rather than to keep people out of the area.

The backside of the underpass, meanwhile, was completely unsecured, the AJC found.

Not far away from the site of the fire, a surreal sight raises even more questions about security under the bridge — a concrete skateboard bowl, about 30 yards long with high walls, humps and dips.

Nearby were the unmistakab­le signs of homeless encampment: plastic coolers, shopping carts, an abundance of plastic bottles, stray shoes and sneakers, the skeletal remains of a bicycle.

GDOT spokeswoma­n Natalie Dale acknowledg­ed there was no fencing or other barriers between the skateboard bowl and the conduit. The skateboard area was not permitted nor did GDOT grant permission for its constructi­on, she said.

Gerald Griggs, an attorney with the NAACP, said GDOT has a legal responsibi­lity to keep the public safe from “hazardous” materials. The skateboard bowl, he said, proves GDOT “knew or should have known people were there and it was a potential hazard.”

“When you house a hazardous material in an open and obvious manner, you owe a duty to protect the public,” Griggs said. “Simply saying the material is not hazardous is not protecting the public.”

But some transporta­tion officials say the bridge fire was such an isolated incident that it was impossible to anticipate.

“In hindsight, you go, ‘Geez, why did we do that?’” Maryland Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Rahn said. “But if it’s never happened anywhere else, it’s very hard to [predict] something that unusual.”

SOME STATES DON’T ALLOW STORAGE UNDER BRIDGES

The AJC called a handful of states to see if they store materials under bridges. Though it was a small survey, some said they don’t.

Minnesota doesn’t allow it, said transporta­tion spokesman Kevin Gutknecht.

“It’s not a policy, it’s a practice — a best practice,” he said.

Pennsylvan­ia bars the storage of flammable, explosive and other dangerous materials. PennDOT spokesman Rich Kirkpatric­k said that includes high-density polyethyle­ne, which is the material that caught fire under I-85.

So, just how common is it to store material under Georgia’s bridges? And what’s under there?

GDOT told the AJC it does not have records showing inventorie­s of materials stored under bridges around the state, or policies for such storage. The agency has no inventory of the material that caught fire.

GDOT Commission­er McMurry has defended his agency’s storage of the plastic piping under the bridge. But considerin­g what happened, he’s now thinking twice about the idea.

“If we knew then what we know now, we wouldn’t have the material stored in the fashion it was stored,” he said.

CONDUIT LEFT OVER FROM ABORTED CONTRACT

The high-density polyethyle­ne and fiberglass conduit that would go on to ignite was left over from an aborted 2007 contract to install cameras, ramp meters and other electronic traffic devices on Ga. 400, between I-85 and I-285.

McMurry said the state planned to use it in the future to save taxpayers money. GDOT initially stored the conduit at a site at Sidney Marcus Boulevard and Buford Highway. It moved the material under I-85 near Piedmont Road sometime in 2011.

The conduit will burn, but not easily, officials said.

So does GDOT assume any responsibi­lity for the fire?

Dale, the spokeswoma­n, declined to comment when asked that question, citing the ongoing National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ion.

LOCALS TOOK ELEBY UNDER WING

Many communitie­s have a Basil Eleby. He’s the aimless guy who has nobody, no place to go, and no way to support himself.

Store owners around the intersecti­on of Piedmont Road and Lakeshore Drive took Eleby under wing, giving him errands and chores. They got a good feeling, and he pocketed a few dollars.

Menge Gizachew, who runs GT Auto Service, started years ago by letting Eleby clean the shop floor, vacuum cars and collect garbage.

“That guy is a hopeless guy,” Gizachew said. “I helped him. He respected me.”

Over time, he let Eleby use the shop refrigerat­or and bathroom. Then he let him sleep in a broken-down Mercedes in the back. Eleby threw some ratty blankets in the back seat. The driver’s seat held his toiletries — a tube of toothpaste, a toothbrush.

He was harmless, but sometimes showed flashes of anger, said several shop owners. He didn’t say much, and he seemed a little absent-minded. They didn’t know what he did at night, and they didn’t ask. He seemed sober when they saw him.

Day after day, Eleby rode his bicycle around the area, stopping in place after place, doing a little work here, and there.

Bill Turner, who used to repair cars in the neighborho­od, tried to help Eleby get in the Army through a recruiter friend. But after one conversati­on with Eleby, the recruiter said no way.

“I know people gave him bicycles and he sold them,” Turner recalled. “I gave him an iPod. He said he lost it.”

ANNETTE ELEBY:

‘I HAD TO KICK HIM OUT’

Eleby was born at Grady Memorial Hospital, his mother, Annette Eleby, told the AJC. Her family was poor, and lived in housing projects in Atlanta. Basil had a sister and four brothers. The boys fought all the time. By the time Basil was in his late 20s, he was taking drugs, she said.

“I had to kick him out,” she said.

He’d come back, sometimes breaking into the house when nobody was home. She knew it was him. When he’d leave he’d made sure to lock the front door, protecting the place from other intruders.

His rap sheet indicated Eleby not only had a temper, but could be violent. There were charges of battery and assault. He also was charged with traffickin­g and possessing cocaine, but never spent more than a few months in jail. Then he was back on the street, riding his bicycle, sleeping in the Mercedes.

At a nearby substance abuse counseling center called the Triangle Club, Eleby was often seen grabbing a cup of coffee and occasional­ly attending noontime meetings, where he said little.

“He was a creepy guy,” said Michael Kelly, 56, who attends meetings there. “I never involved myself with him.”

The most damaging story about Eleby comes from the homeless woman who ties him to the fire. Sophia Brauer told Channel 2 Action News that she saw a sofa on fire after Eleby placed it on a shopping cart and then reached underneath.

Shortly thereafter, as black smoke mushroomed skyward, she said she ran into Eleby.

“He looked at me,” she told the Channel 2 reporter. “He gave this evil smile and said, ‘Ha, ha, ha. I did that.’”

JOHNSON: FEDERAL REGULATION UNLIKELY

Some people may have thought such a fire unfathomab­le before. That has changed.

A flurry of action and review is occurring in Atlanta and elsewhere in the country, as officials act to prevent another such conflagrat­ion.

McMurry has asked the state insurance commission­er and the state fire marshal to review GDOT’s practices for storing constructi­on material. He said he is unaware of any similar material stored under other Georgia bridges.

There are no federal regulation­s related to storing material under highway bridges, according to a spokesman from the Federal Highway Administra­tion.

Transporta­tion officials aren’t the only ones seeking answers. Law enforcemen­t officials and elected officials wonder what can be done to corral repeat offenders and better care for the homeless.

Dave Wilkinson, president of the Atlanta Police Foundation, said repeat offenders such as Eleby are law enforcemen­t’s biggest challenge. “It does not surprise me at all that that individual was a repeat offender,” he said.

But the criminal justice system can only do so much, said Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter.

“You can arrest people who break the law. You can try and develop an appropriat­e punishment for that crime,” Porter said. “But it’s really too blunt an instrument to all of a sudden change someone’s life.”

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Basil Eleby

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