Chicago Sun-Times

Aldermen turn up heat on water main contractor

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter

Exasperate­d North Side aldermen will hold a City Council hearing next week to turn up the heat on a city contractor they accuse of inconvenie­ncing and endangerin­g their residents with its slow and slipshod work.

NPL Constructi­on is replacing North Side water mains from Addison to the city limits under terms of a $ 92 million contract awarded by the city last year.

It’s part of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to replace century- old water mains by doubling water and sewer rates over a four- year period, followed by annual cost- of- living increases.

Housing Committee Chairman Joe Moore ( 49th) said he’s all for the massive reconstruc­tion project. But it’s the way the North Side work has been carried out that has infuriated his constituen­ts.

On Touhy Avenue between Western and Clark, Moore said it took NPL two weeks and repeated complaint calls to rectify a dangerous situation. And even now, piles of gravel and debris continue to litter side streets near the job site, Moore said.

“They had opened up the street ... and did not seal it properly. So there were huge divots in the street that caused motorists to swerve into oncoming traffic to avoid the hazards,” Moore said. “I asked them if they could either put a plate over it or asphalt it to try to smooth that over. They assured me they would, and two weeks later it was still not done.”

Moore said he was so exasperate­d about the conditions he put the matter on the agenda for Tuesday’s Housing Committee hearing.

There, he hopes to “throw some cold water” on NPL and pressure Chief Procuremen­t Officer Jamie Rhee to either fine the company or cancel the contract.

“Any time you do any kind of utility work — particular­ly sewer or water main installati­on — it’s gonna engender some complaints and inconvenie­nce. But what they’ve done is beyond the pale. I’ve never in my 26 years felt I had no choice but to bring this to a hearing,” Moore said.

Ald. Ameya Pawar ( 47th), a Democratic candidate for governor, argued that water main replacemen­t work that should have been completed in eight or 10 weeks has dragged on for as long as six months.

“Wilson Avenue, Lincoln Avenue and Clark Street are a dust bowl. I have bicyclists and pedestrian­s wearing handkerchi­efs around their mouths so they don’t inhale the dust. We have giant craters in our streets on Lincoln Avenue,” Pawar said Wednesday.

“Their response to aldermen is to send their P. R. firm. Our response is, ‘ We don’t need to communicat­e this differentl­y. We just need you to finish the job and do it right and stop biting off more than you can chew.’ They open up multiple streets at the same time.”

NPL Constructi­on is represente­d by attorney Mara Georges, who served as longtime corporatio­n counsel under former Mayor Richard M. Daley.

Georges cited the company’s “exemplary” safety record. She touted a low bid that saved Chicago taxpayers $ 10 million and earmarked 70 percent of the work for minority vendors.

Georges openly acknowledg­ed constructi­on delays but said they can’t be helped.

“NPL doesn’t control all the work going on at a particular site. They’re waiting on utility movement. They’ve got to wait on other vendors. They secure the site while waiting. But unfortunat­ely, sometimes there are delays. It’s just the nature of the work,” she said.

According to Georges, the Department of Procuremen­t Services has received no complaints about NPL, nor has the company been slapped with any “cure notices” for violations.

Before the water main replacemen­t contract was awarded to NPL last year, Pawar said he joined Moore and Ald. Tom Tunney ( 44th) in urging Rhee to bypass the low bidder and choose another company.

They were concerned about NPL after the company’s work to replace gas mains for Peoples Gas was, as Pawar put it, a “total disaster.”

 ??  ?? Ald. Joe Moore
Ald. Joe Moore

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