Los Angeles Times

Metro requests rail connector funds — again

- By Laura J. Nelson

Three years ago, when transporta­tion officials began an ambitious project to connect a tangle of light-rail lines beneath downtown Los Angeles, they said constructi­on would cost $1.36 billion.

Since then, the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority has twice sought more funding for the Downtown Regional Connector, including a request this week for an additional $199 million.

If approved, the increase will raise the cost of the project to $1.75 billion, 28% higher than originally budgeted.

Officials blamed the latest increase on delays arising from the complex task of locating and moving longburied utility lines, many of which were not listed in government records.

The regional connector has become “about 6% constructi­on project, with the remainder being a utilities project,” Metro director Jacqueline Dupont-Walker said Thursday at a committee meeting.

Officials also acknowledg­ed that they hadn’t budgeted enough for other project costs, including land acquisitio­n, consultant­s and legal fees.

Chief Executive Phil Washington described the increase as “right-sizing” and said Metro now has a better grasp of what risks lie ahead and how much they may cost.

“We feel good about it,” Washington said. “We won’t be coming back again.”

Even if Metro’s directors approve the $199-million increase, crews will face an aggressive schedule to meet a May 2021 constructi­on deadline set by federal officials. Missing that deadline could jeopardize hundreds of millions of dollars in federal

grants.

Metro staff warned in a report that more delays and cost increases “are to be expected” if any new problems arise over the next four years, including difficulti­es securing permission for crews to work late at night and early in the morning.

The regional connector is seen as an essential piece in the county’s rapidly growing rail system.

Twin subway tunnels will tie together the Blue, Expo and Gold lines, allowing passengers to ride from Santa Monica to East Los Angeles, and from Azusa to Long Beach, without changing trains. Those trips currently require two transfers.

The project will also add three stations: at 1st Street and Central Avenue, 2nd Street and Broadway, and 2nd and Hope streets. Officials say the connector is expected to increase rail ridership by 17,000 trips a day.

Contractor­s are working in a 100-foot hole in Little Tokyo preparing to launch a 1,000-ton German boring machine known as “Angeli.” It will begin churning westward later this month at the pace of 4 inches a minute, or 65 to 75 feet a day, digging twin 1.1-mile tunnels.

Once it reaches the Financial District, crews will take it apart, move it back to Little Tokyo, reassemble it and dig the second tunnel — a process expected to take about a year.

Before digging could begin, crews spent months relocating utility pipes and lines.

State records describing their location and condition were “inadequate,” Dupont-Walker said. Crews discovered decades-old water lines and electrical equipment, sometimes badly deteriorat­ed.

“In a concentrat­ed urban center where people have been living for more than 100 years, you start to find things that you didn’t know were there,” said Tim Taylor, an associate professor of civil engineerin­g at the University of Kentucky who specialize­s in constructi­on management.

“It’s hard for me to understand that in 2017, we don’t know where the utilities are that need to be relocated for these projects,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, also a Metro director.

The unexpected utility work, and the delays that came with it, cost Metro more than $79 million and ate through much of the funding allocated for unexpected expenses, according to the staff report. In December 2015, Metro’s board approved a $130-million budget increase to replenish those funds.

The report said planners had not budgeted adequately for unexpected cost increases. The original budget set aside about $92.7 million, or 6.5% of the total project budget.

The report also cited “insufficie­nt” initial funding for third-party costs, including consultant­s. Those costs are likely to rise 47% by the end of constructi­on, from an original budget of $154.6 million to about $227.3 million, the report said.

Consultant­s and other “soft costs,” including legal counsel and community relations, now represent about 16% of the total project budget, which Metro said is “consistent with industry standards.”

Previous staff reports have noted that the original budget was set early in the planning process, as the agency sought to expedite a federal funding agreement worth $893 million.

In that agreement, Metro said the regional connector would open to passengers by May 29, 2021. Officials built five months of cushion into the constructi­on schedule for delays. That leeway has since disappeare­d.

The latest budget increase request comes as Metro’s Washington seeks more authority to negotiate contract modificati­ons without board approval. Currently, any so-called change order of more than $1 million requires a board vote, which Washington said can add weeks of costly delays to fast-moving projects.

Instead, he has proposed negotiatin­g all contract changes without board approval, unless they increase the total budget, with monthly reports provided to directors.

“This is central to our ability to keep these projects on time and on budget,” Washington said. One month of delay can cost Metro at least $2 million in additional labor costs, and often more, he said.

The board is expected to take up the proposal on change orders next week. On Thursday, board members expressed concern that granting more leeway to negotiate changes could reduce transparen­cy and add to cost overruns.

“The idea that the CEO could approve change order after change order after change order, and then tell us, ‘We’ve hit the top’ — is that not a possibilit­y?” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl. She added that the idea gave her “a little heartburn.”

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? CONSTRUCTI­ON of Metro’s Downtown Regional Connector at 2nd and Spring streets. The agency has asked for an additional $199 million for the project.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times CONSTRUCTI­ON of Metro’s Downtown Regional Connector at 2nd and Spring streets. The agency has asked for an additional $199 million for the project.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? “ANGELI” is the name given to the 400-foot-long, 1,000-ton German boring machine that will dig twin 1.1-mile tunnels from Little Tokyo to the Financial District.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times “ANGELI” is the name given to the 400-foot-long, 1,000-ton German boring machine that will dig twin 1.1-mile tunnels from Little Tokyo to the Financial District.
 ??  ?? DAVID ZAVALA, right, fixes a belt cover while working inside the gantry of the boring machine. It will churn westward at a pace of 4 inches a minute.
DAVID ZAVALA, right, fixes a belt cover while working inside the gantry of the boring machine. It will churn westward at a pace of 4 inches a minute.

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