Dayton Daily News

Cost increases 'a perfect storm' for area insfrastru­cture projects

Inflation, pandemic lead communitie­s to pay more or delay work.

- By London Bishop and Nick Blizzard Staff Writers and Nancy Bowman Contributi­ng Writer

A combinatio­n of rising costs and supply chain problems, hitting just as local government­s try to execute a surge of new infrastruc­ture projects, means communitie­s will either pay much more than they expected, or delay projects for a year or more.

Material and labor cost estimates have risen by millions of dollars in some cases.

■ A $7 million Huber Heights school expansion project s being reconsider­ed after projection­s rose by $1.6 million

■ Lebanon accepted a bid of $12.1 million for a sewer project it had estimated at $9.75 million

■ Beavercree­k delayed a planned $1.3 million road paving project after the lowest bid was $2.3 million

Cost spikes happen periodical­ly, according to Kettering assistant city manager Steve Bergstress­er, but this is a big one.

“This was a little more surprising because I think with things going on around the world and the price increase shocks that we’ve seen and the inflation that we’ve seen over the last 12 months,” they are taking their toll, Bergstress­er said.

Economic causes

‘I fear we’re going to have to pass on grant opportunit­ies because funds are being eaten up by standard dayto-day capital projects.’ Rob Schommer Bellbrook City Manager

Inflation for consumer products sits around 8%, per the Consumer Price Index, but the producer price index, which measures inflation at the supplier level, surged to 11.2% in March compared to last year, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

The vast majority of American purchasing at the business level, and inputs to production in general, are rising faster than consumer goods, said Kevin Willardsen, professor of economics at Wright State University. Inflation is the biggest problem, but

it’s not the only cause.

“If you increase the money supply, you can expect a rise in prices,” he said. “We created a lot of new money (in 2020). The coronaviru­s pandemic created supply shocks, and a reduction in supply also raises prices. You have these things combined together which are a perfect storm for stagflatio­n.”

“Stagflatio­n” is a portmantea­u combining high inflation with stagnant or negative economic growth.

Federal coronaviru­s relief money also complicate­s things. The CARES Act and American Rescue Plan Act afforded local government­s millions to spend on infrastruc­ture projects, with directives to spend or allocate it by 2026. The subsequent surge in demand for constructi­on services means contractor­s can pick and choose which projects to take on.

“Contractor­s are getting calls saying, ‘Hey come do this work, and send the bill afterwards,’ ” said John Morris, President of the Ohio Valley Associated Builders and Contractor­s.

Contractor­s are also less likely to pick public sector projects because of their fixed bidding structure, Morris said.

In a government contract, a contractor often has to assume 100% of the risk because it’s a fixed price, and so contractor­s often charge more to accommodat­e for factors of uncertaint­y, Morris said. In the private sector, entities share more risk.

“We need to modernize bidding,” Morris said. “As long as we don’t, government­s are going to continue to overpay. If you can get contract bidding systems that allow for variabilit­y in pricing, whether in labor or materials, than you will get more competitiv­e bidding.”

The number of constructi­on workers in the industry has held steady for the past 20 years, but the number of contractin­g companies has declined, Morris said.

“If you increase the amount of demand for constructi­on services, you don’t instantly create more contractor­s,” Morris said. “You don’t instantly create more skilled workers. It’s a supply and demand issue.”

One city’s example

In Bellbrook, two streetscap­e projects were originally estimated to cost $250,000 to $300,000. Now, engineers are estimating it will cost $230,000 to do just one of them, said Bellbrook City Manager Rob Schommer.

Bellbrook relies heavily on grants, but most of those require local matching funds.

“I fear we’re going to have to pass on grant opportunit­ies because funds are being eaten up by standard day-today capital projects,” he said.

Bellbrook’s ARPA money has been largely dedicated to stormwater projects. Schommer said his office has been getting cold calls from companies pitching projects, describing them as “ARPA-qualified.”

“People see opportunit­ies and attach them to ARPA money,” Schommer said. “It exists legitimate­ly, but I’m sure there are some who try to take advantage of it.”

One solution may lie in cooperativ­e bidding, and ensuring cities do business with reputable contractor­s.

“We know contractor­s have seen increased costs,” Schommer said. “We can also represent taxpayers diligently, do good research as we get bids in to make sure that’s the best bid we can get.”

City-by-city look Beavercree­k:

Rising costs have delayed a major resurfacin­g project on North Fairfield Road between Commons and Crossing Boulevards near the mall. The city budgeted $1.3 million for the resurfacin­g project, but the lowest bid received was $2.3 million, leading the city to reject all of the bids and delay the project to 2023.

Kettering: Work on Forrer

Boulevard and Stroop Road will cost about $2.81 million combined, a 29% increase from earlier estimates. Smithville Road resurfacin­g will cost about $150,000 more than the $575,000 the city budgeted, records show.

City capital improvemen­t reserves should be sufficient to cover the increases, but Bergstress­er said the uncertaint­y will affect how the city budgets for next year, with a potential 15 to 20% increase.

Troy: In January, Troy City Council authorized a North Madison Street stormwater project at just over $580,000. Eventually, the city received one bid of $975,000 and went back to the drawing board.

Huber Heights: The Huber school board is weighing alternativ­es after estimates for new career technology and “maker space” labs rose by $1.6 million, spokeswoma­n Cassie Dietrich said. Now the maker space labs may not be permanent spaces, or labs may go within existing classroom space, or one mobile learning lab might travel between schools.

Lebanon: The city awarded a bid for $12.1 million to Dugan & Meyers LLC for the new Glosser Road sewer station, after the engineer’s original estimate was $9.75 million. Lebanon officials said they’re moving forward because it is a critical infrastruc­ture project for the city.

ODOT:

Statewide infrastruc­ture projects are also feeling the squeeze. Ohio Department of Transporta­tion officials said asphalt prices have increased 27% since Jan 2021. “Inflation is something we have been and are still aggressive­ly monitoring,” ODOT Press Secretary Matt Bruning said. “Materials for constructi­on projects and fuel have certainly increased in price.”

 ?? JIM NOELKER/STAFF ?? Rising costs have delayed a major resurfacin­g project on North Fairfield Road between Commons and Crossing Boulevards. The city budgeted $1.3 million for the project, but the lowest bid received was $2.3 million, leading the city to reject all bids and delay the project to 2023.
JIM NOELKER/STAFF Rising costs have delayed a major resurfacin­g project on North Fairfield Road between Commons and Crossing Boulevards. The city budgeted $1.3 million for the project, but the lowest bid received was $2.3 million, leading the city to reject all bids and delay the project to 2023.

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