The Day

CHIPPING AWAY AT THE PILE

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

An excavator moves salt down the pile Thursday as wheel loaders fill dump trucks on the Central Vermont Pier in New London. DRVN Enterprise­s, the distributo­r of the road salt, was recently granted another month, until the end of February, to sell off the remaining salt. Other tenants at the State Pier complex also have been granted extensions to their leases by the Connecticu­t Port Authority. See related story,

In the many months after the Connecticu­t Port Authority imploded with scandal, I watched with some chagrin as eastern Connecticu­t lawmakers did little to intervene.

The greatest, most lasting injustice of the mismanagem­ent at the port authority was turning the state-owned State Pier, the heart of the historic deepwater port of New London, over to its private competitor in New Haven.

The awarding of the contract for managing the port in New London to the politicall­y connected Gateway Terminals of New Haven essentiall­y led almost immediatel­y to the closure of the state’s port, the loss of dozens of longshorem­en jobs and a near-death blow to the supplier of eastern Connecticu­t road salt, a direct Gateway competitor.

I am pleased to report that the legislator­s seem to be finally ready to address some of these enormous injustices with proposed legislatio­n that the General Assembly’s Transporta­tion Committee is expected to take up this session.

Senate Bill 241 “An Act Concerning Oversight and Transparen­cy at the Connecticu­t Port Authority,” was introduced by five eastern Connecticu­t Democrats: Sen. Cathy Osten of Sprague, Sen. Norm Needleman of Essex, Rep. Christine Conley of Groton, Rep. Joe De la Cruz of Groton and Rep. Anthony Nolan of New London.

The bill generally sets up some parameters for providing the Transporta­tion Committee with more answers about the activities of the port authority and how they affect port jobs, contracts and improvemen­ts.

But its most sweeping request is for the commission­er of transporta­tion to detail “the steps necessary to return the duties of the Connecticu­t Port Authority to the Department of Transporta­tion.”

In other words, what would it take to unwind the creation of this problemati­c, scandal-prone quasi-public agency and return its important work to the state’s Department of Transporta­tion, where it traditiona­lly resided.

When I caught up this week with Sen. Osten to talk about the port authority bill, she acknowledg­ed that one idea lawmakers would like to explore is transferri­ng the work of the port authority back into state government.

“If these things can’t be resolved, it should be run by a state agency that handles million-dollar enterprise­s,” she said.

Truer words were never spoken by a state lawmaker, I’d say.

Moving responsibi­lity of the port authority back to state government need not interfere with plans to use the port in New London for wind turbine assembly, Osten said. But management by New Haven port

operators would no longer be necessary, she added.

“Gateway would not be needed,” she said.

Osten noted that the legislatur­e’s review is preliminar­y and the port authority bill, like any legislatio­n, would likely evolve in the process, especially after public hearings are held on the issue.

Meanwhile, the Transporta­tion Committee is scheduled to hear an update on port authority business Friday morning, at an informatio­nal forum that had previously been scheduled.

The legislator­s’ move to look more closely at the future of the port authority curiously comes at a time when the State Properties Review Board is conducting its own review of the Gateway contract for State Pier.

The board is acting on complaints about issues like the loss of longshorem­en jobs, irregulari­ties in the way the contract was awarded and links between the former port authority chairman and Gateway senior management, which includes the son of a former associate of the chairman.

Attorney General William Tong has shamefully refused to look into the obvious antitrust violations of turning the state’s port over to its competitor, a deal cooked up by prominent Democrats, including, until only recently, the chairwoman of the party, who sat on the port authority board.

I am cheered by the apparent resolve of eastern Connecticu­t Democrats to get to the bottom of what has gone so terribly wrong here.

This is the opinion of David Collins.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY ??
SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY
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