Los Angeles Times

New rail line delayed again

Crews must redo work on Crenshaw route, now set to open mid-2021

- By Laura J. Nelson

The Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority acknowledg­ed Friday that flawed constructi­on on a $2.06-billion rail line through South Los Angeles will delay its opening until mid-2021, two years later than originally promised.

The Crenshaw Line is about 95% complete. But constructi­on will not conclude until the end of this year or early 2021 because crews have been forced to redo work along the 8.5-mile route, Metro officials said.

The issues include settlement in walls that support a rail bridge over La Brea Avenue near downtown Inglewood and flaws in the steel support structure that is supposed to anchor the train tracks on bridges and in tunnels, officials said.

Once constructi­on ends, Metro will need about five months to test the line and train the rail operators. That means passengers will not be able to ride between El Segundo and Mid-City any earlier than May 2021, officials said.

The yearlong delay is the longest yet for the Crenshaw Line. Once slated for the fall of 2019, the opening date was delayed until spring 2020 after Metro and the contractor wrestled with problems with electrical substation­s, sidewalks and gas lines.

“We’re disappoint­ed with the schedule,” Metro Chief Executive Phil Washington said in an interview. “Anybody would be.”

Metro plans to ask the agency’s directors this month to approve $90 million more for the Crenshaw Line. Without the increase, according to a draft report reviewed by The Times, Metro won’t be able to pay staff or consultant­s to manage the project after June.

The proposed budget increase would add about 4% to the project’s cost. The $90 million should cover Metro’s expenses through December, said chief program management officer Rick Clarke. He said the contractor, Walsh/Shea, will pay for some of the work that needs to be redone.

The contractor, a joint venture of Walsh Constructi­on and J.F. Shea Constructi­on, did not return a request for comment.

“We are going to demand a quality project, period,” Washington said. “We are insisting that all of this work gets done and that it actually works. If we have to delay the project, then that’s what we’ll do.”

Washington said it is “becoming more and more difficult” to know when major projects with multiyear schedules will be finished. Metro is juggling half a dozen major transit constructi­on projects, including the downtown Regional Connector subway and three phases of the Purple Line subway to the Westside.

The Crenshaw Line delay is a frustratio­n for drivers and bus riders who have waited decades for a more reliable transit option between the Westside and the South Bay. The line will run through Inglewood and the neighborho­ods of Baldwin Hills, Hyde Park, Leimert Park and Westcheste­r.

The Crenshaw Line is “undeniably complex,” with street-level, undergroun­d and elevated sections of track, said L.A. County Supervisor Mark RidleyThom­as, who represents most of the project area. But the contractor’s “performanc­e and timeliness has left much to be desired,” he said in a statement.

The Metro board, RidleyThom­as said, must “do a deep dive to understand what has gone wrong.”

Los Angeles City Councilman Herb Wesson, who is running to succeed RidleyThom­as on the Board of Supervisor­s, said residents in L.A.’s “historical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s” will be forced to wait even longer for a high-quality transit option.

Metro currently manages most of the constructi­on projects it funds. Wesson said that “it’s time to consider reopening the discussion” of using independen­t authoritie­s to oversee major rail projects, similar to groups formed to oversee the constructi­on of the Gold Line and the Expo Line to the Westside.

Metro Chairman and Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts Jr. did not return a request for comment. Nor did Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, the first vice chair of the Metro board.

Concrete slabs that are used to stabilize and anchor the Crenshaw Line’s tracks on bridges and in tunnels were installed incorrectl­y, Clarke said. The slabs, called plinths, are supposed to be tightly anchored, using steel reinforcem­ents called rebar, to a platform beneath the tracks.

In “a few hundred locations” along the line, the rebar was installed incorrectl­y, Clarke said. Because the tracks have already been installed on top of the plinths, crews may have to lift up each section of track, fix or replace the rebar, and reinstall the rails, he said.

“I know it sounds bad — it sounds bad to us,” Clarke said. “It’s something that we’re concerned about and watching very closely.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A BORING machine for the $2.06-billion, 8.5-mile Crenshaw Line breaks through at a station site in 2016.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A BORING machine for the $2.06-billion, 8.5-mile Crenshaw Line breaks through at a station site in 2016.

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