The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Is MARTA prepared for huge expansion?

Agency says it has fixed most capital problems found in earlier reports.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

MARTA is scrambling to improve oversight of capital projects as it prepares for its biggest constructi­on effort in a generation, documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News show.

Independen­t and internal reports on the agency’s capital program found poor monitoring of constructi­on projects, inadequate staffing and an inability to ensure project costs are accurate. The reports also found MARTA could be paying for work without any guarantee it will be done.

The reports obtained by the news organizati­ons date to 2015, 2016 and 2017. MARTA says it has addressed nearly all the problems as it prepares for a $2.5 billion expansion in Atlanta and for possible expansions in Fulton, Gwinnett, Cobb and DeKalb counties. It plans to address the remaining issues in the next six months.

“We are very fiscally responsibl­e within this orga- nization, and we vet things to the Nth degree,” said David Springstea­d, MARTA’s assistant general manager of capital programs and develop- ment.

But experts who reviewed the reports said they raise troubling questions.

“I’m not saying that there is fraud at all, but the possi- bility for that — it seems like a lack of oversight,” said Joseph Hacker, a transporta- tion planning expert at Geor- gia State University.

MARTA hasn’t seen a major building boom since it com- pleted constructi­on of its original rail network in 2000. In the years that followed, it fended off criticism that it was inefficien­t and bloated, especially from suburbs hos- tile to public transporta­tion.

In recent years its financial standing and reputation have improved, as have its pros- pects for expansion. Clayton County voters agreed to join MARTA in 2014, and Atlanta voters approved a half-penny sales tax for a transit expan- sion two years ago.

In May, Gov. Nathan Deal signed legislatio­n that could pave the way for tran- sit expansion in 13 metro Atlanta counties. Gwinnett has scheduled a vote on joining MARTA next March. Other counties also may beef up their transit services.

As its prospects for expan- sion i mproved, MARTA so u ght an i ndependent assessment of its ability to manage capital projects.

The first report, com- pleted in 2015, found dozens of problems, including inadequate staffing, work orders without clear deadlines and sloppy paperwork that led to schedule delays and cost overruns.

In one case, MARTA paid a consultant 28 percent more than the standard labor cap of $125 an hour with “no real justificat­ion for the rate increase,” the report found. It also found a “lack of accountabi­lity and commitment to on-time, on-bud- get practices.”

“The overall process for scoping, screening and plan- ning of capital projects is broken, and planning and projection informatio­n is insufficie­nt relevant to costs, budget, scope of work and resources,” the report said.

The report recommende­d more than 40 improvemen­ts, including filling vacant positions, developing formal oversight procedures and reorganizi­ng the capi- tal improvemen­t program.

A year later, the same independen­t analyst found MARTA had implemente­d just 40 percent of its recom- mendations. And last year MARTA followed up with an internal audit, which found more progress, but plenty of work left to do.

Among other things, it found the agency has “no way to ensure that the proj- ect costs and project fore- casts are accurate and/or complete.” And it found “MARTA could potentiall­y be paying for a project and not receiving the appropriat­e and/or required deliverabl­e for that project.”

Hacker, the GSU expert, said the reports show a capital improvemen­t program splintered into units that monitor projects inconsiste­ntly and ineffectiv­ely.

“You have 26 different units, you have project managers who are not trained cohesively, you don’t have standardiz­ed procedures for forecastin­g,” Hacker said. “This is just a recipe for chaos.”

Jamison Dague, director of infrastruc­ture studies at the Citizens Budget Commission, a New York-based watchdog and research group, also reviewed the MARTA reports. He said MARTA isn’t the only agency that struggles to stay on top of constructi­on projects.

“If you look at projects across the country, even across the world, particular­ly these large mega-projects with transit and transporta­tion, there is a tendency to underestim­ate the cost and the schedule,” Dague said.

MARTA’s Springstea­d said the agency has made substantia­l progress since last year’s report. He said it’s focused on ensuring its largest projects are running well but will standardiz­e monitoring of all projects.

Springstea­d said MARTA sought the assessment­s to ensure its capital program works well as it prepares for future expansions. He said all problems should be addressed in coming months, and taxpayers can be confident their money is well spent.

“We’re basically, in my opinion, fine tuning right now,” he said.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? In May, Gov. Nathan Deal signed legislatio­n that could pave the way for transit expansion in 13 metro Atlanta counties. Gwinnett has scheduled a vote on joining MARTA next March.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM In May, Gov. Nathan Deal signed legislatio­n that could pave the way for transit expansion in 13 metro Atlanta counties. Gwinnett has scheduled a vote on joining MARTA next March.
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? MARTA hasn’t seen a major building boom since it completed constructi­on of its original rail network in 2000. In the years that followed, it fended off criticism that it was inefficien­t and bloated. In recent years its financial standing and reputation have improved, as have its prospects for expansion.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM MARTA hasn’t seen a major building boom since it completed constructi­on of its original rail network in 2000. In the years that followed, it fended off criticism that it was inefficien­t and bloated. In recent years its financial standing and reputation have improved, as have its prospects for expansion.

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