Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Citizen groups call for investigat­ion of Veolia

- By Don Hopey

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Grassroots groups on Monday called for a state investigat­ion of what they claim was mismanagem­ent of Pittsburgh’s water system in 2012-15 by Veolia, a private firm hired to provide oversight and reduce operating costs for the city’s aging water system.

Against a seasonal street theater backdrop in which activists portrayed Veolia as the Grinch, and a water main break and ongoing boil water advisory in the city’s East End, Aly Shaw, an organizer for the group Our Water, urged Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr. to forward her September complaint to state Attorney General Josh Shapiro.

The investigat­ion of the complaint, Ms. Shaw said, could result in Veolia being held financiall­y responsibl­e for actions resulting in higher lead concentrat­ions in the public water supply, including funding for the Pittsburgh Wate r and Sewer Authority’s required multimilli­on-dollar lead water line replacemen­t work.

‘We’re hoping to spur action,” said Alissa Weinman, an organizer for the group Corporate Accountabi­lity. “The focus has been on the PWSA, but the city hired Veolia to manage the system, and after it was done, the system was in worse shape.”

Mike Manko, Mr. Zappala’s spokesman, said the district attorney’s office is reviewing informatio­n it has received about PWSA but would not specify whether Veolia is part of the review and has “no time frame on when that review will be complete.” Joe Grace, a spokesman for Mr. Shapiro, said the AG’s office had not received any referral from Mr. Zappala’s office.

The PWSA board hired Veolia North AmericaNor­theast LLC to oversee operation of the water system in July 2012 but fired the firm in December 2015. Greg Akili, project coordinato­r for Corporate Accountabi­lity, said Veolia was paid $11 million to manage PWSA and should be held accountabl­e.

“How did we end up with high water lead levels? Who’s responsibl­e and what’s the consequenc­es?” Mr. Akili said. “Veolia can’t just do this to people.”

A performanc­e audit of the PWSA by city Controller Michael Lamb in February 2016 blamed Veolia for several of the authority’s problems involving incompatib­le meters, billing and the anticorros­ion chemical change that resulted in higher than allowable lead concentrat­ions in some tap water.

Allegheny County Controller Chelsa Wagner said calls for a full investigat­ion of Veolia have her support.

“We need to make sure that the full cost of lead water line replacemen­t doesn’t fall on the ratepayers and insist that the private water management company be held accountabl­e,” she said.

Veolia, which is involved in ongoing arbitratio­n over a number of claims related to its PWSA contract, said it couldn’t comment on the complaint without seeing its allegation­s.

Alethea Harney, a Veolia spokeswoma­n, called the portrayal of Veolia as Grinch a publicity stunt that was “misguided and off base.”

She said PWSA pipes were in poor condition before the authority hired Veolia and the company didn’t cause the lead problems. She said Veolia helped PWSA realize at least $5.5 million in annually recurring revenue and efficienci­es.

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