BOSTON, Jan. 23, 2008

Big Dig Contractors To Pay More Than $450M

Contractors Agree To Settle Lawsuit Filed By State Over Fatal Tunnel Collapse

  • Workers walk from a Big Dig tunnel in Boston Tuesday, July 11, 2006.

    Workers walk from a Big Dig tunnel in Boston Tuesday, July 11, 2006.  (AP /The Boston Globe, George Rizer)

  • Photo Essay Tunnel Tragedy

    Tons of concrete fall from ceiling of Boston tunnel, crushing a woman in a passing car.

(CBS/AP)  Contractors who worked on the long-troubled Big Dig highway project have agreed to pay more than $450 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the state over a fatal tunnel ceiling collapse and to cover the costs of leaks and design flaws.

Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff, the consortium that oversaw design and construction of the nation's costliest public works project, has agreed to pay $407 million, while several smaller companies will pay about $51 million collectively, U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan said in announcing the deal.

"Massachusetts Highway and the citizens of Massachusetts entrusted Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff to act as their eyes and ears on the Central Artery Project," Sullivan said. "They grossly failed to meet their obligations and responsibilities to the citizens of Massachusetts and the United States."

Under the agreement, Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff will not face criminal charges for the Interstate 90 tunnel ceiling collapse that killed Milena Del Valle, 39, of Boston. She was crushed by 26 tons of concrete as she and her husband drove to Logan International Airport in July 2006.

The settlement does not have a direct effect on a separate lawsuit filed by Del Valle's family.

The deal also does not bar the consortium from receiving future government contracts.

Under the deal, if there's a "catastrophic event" that costs more than $50 million to repair, the federal and state governments can sue again, reports CBS News Justice Department producer Stephanie Lambidakis. Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff's liability would be capped at $100 million.

Sullivan said Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff, which was paid more than $2 billion to manage the project over 20 years, made $150 million in profits.

"We believe that today's global agreement is the best possible resolution. I do not say perfect, but the best possible resolution at this time," Attorney General Martha Coakley said.

Powers Fasteners Inc., a Brewster, N.Y. company that provided the epoxy blamed for the ceiling collapse, remains the only company that has been criminally charged. The company, which has been charged with involuntary manslaughter, has denied responsibility for the tunnel collapse.

If convicted, Powers faces a fine of $1,000 - the maximum penalty for a company charged with manslaughter in Massachusetts - and could be banned from getting public contracts in Massachusetts. No individuals were indicted, but prosecutors did not rule out future indictments against individuals.

Powers Fasteners Inc. also is the only one out of 15 companies and agencies that have reached a settlement with the Del Valle family, having agreed to pay $6 million.

Max Stern, the company's lawyer in the criminal case, criticized the decision by prosecutors to allow Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff, a multi-billion-dollar consortium, to avoid criminal charges while pursuing charges against Powers, a smaller, family-owned business.

"Obviously, this is out of Powers' price range," Stern said of the $407 million settlement.

"The sheer size of this settlement underlines what we think is the undeniable fact that Bechtel bears the real responsibility for this accident. After all, Bechtel was responsible for the design, it was responsible for the construction and it was responsible for the inspection of the tunnel, and yet, it escapes all criminal charges."

Coakley said the "culpability of Bechtel and Parsons was different in kind than the actions and omissions of Powers." She also said Bechtel and Parsons reacted differently than Powers when told there was enough evidence to indict them all.

"Bechtel and Parsons immediately, and I would argue in a very sincere and eager effort, said 'What can we do?' " she said.

"Their willingness to acknowledge certain responsibility and take on what has ended in today's agreement, I believe is in the best interest of the Commonwealth," she said.

Coakley said, given the maximum penalty in a criminal indictment, it made sense to pursue an agreement with Bechtel and Parsons.

"The amount of money that has been paid and will be paid over the next several months far outweighs when we could have accomplished, certainly in a criminal indictment and perhaps even in a complicated ... civil matter," she said.

The next two largest contractors behind Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff - Modern Continental Construction Co. and Gannett Fleming Inc. - were not part of the settlement.

Del Valle's death sparked a flurry of finger-pointing and investigations.

The National Transportation Safety Board found that the wrong type of epoxy was used to hold up concrete ceiling panels that collapsed and fell on Del Valle's car. The NTSB concluded the collapse could have been avoided if designers and construction crews had considered that the epoxy holding support anchors for the panels could slowly pull away over time.

Dec. 31 officially marked the end of the joint venture that teamed Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff with the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority to bury the old elevated Central Artery that ran through the heart of Boston with a series of tunnels, ramps and bridges.

The $14.79 billion Big Dig, which had an initial price tag of $2.6 billion, has been plagued by problems and cost overruns throughout the two decades it took to design and build.



© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by ladyephesus1 January 24, 2008 2:57 PM EST
6 million is quite a bit of money for the family.

Also, it pretty much covers everything.
Reply to this comment
by griking January 23, 2008 11:41 PM EST
So the government gets 450 million because of their losses but the family of the woman who was killed only gets 6 million? The government should embarrassed by this.
Reply to this comment
by prinzowhales January 23, 2008 11:37 PM EST
Seems like Bechtel was behind the price overruns that drove up rates of Washington utilities when this hydro-power collossus of a state forked itself and went nuk-kle-ar.
Reply to this comment
by prinzowhales January 23, 2008 11:34 PM EST
Bechtel already has a great reputation for cost overruns in the nuclear industry. Let''s see if we can ''dig'' up some business for the Boston shrinks...

''Big Dig'' commuters...look up...see those little drips of water?....to get that far the water has to work its way through cracks and crevices that extend from ''wet'' side to ''dry'' side...all of that pressure...all that force suspended above your Honda Civic...tic-tock...tic-tock...drip-drop...drip-drop...

How much is too much sand in the concrete...oh, dear me...did I put one too many zeros in my calculation?...what happens when you press on an arch of a fancy beach sand castle?...Drip-drop...Drip-drop....Don''t look up...tick-tock...tick-tock...what''s that rumbling I hear behind me...Did I pay my term life policy premium?...............
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 January 23, 2008 10:12 PM EST

Re: "Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff, the consortium that oversaw design and construction of the nation''s costliest public works project, has agreed to pay $407 million..."

Bechtel was one of the primary war profiteers in the criminal war of aggression against Iraq.

Their assets should be seized, liquidated, and used to form a reparations fund for the U.S. and Iraqi victims of this illegal debacle, and Bechtel leaders should be tried, convicted, and sentenced for their collusion with the Regime.
Reply to this comment
by cdfoxtrot January 23, 2008 9:18 PM EST
If I recall correctly, Powers sold two kinds of epoxy and clearly stated which kind was to be used for which purpose; if the purchased epoxy was used improperly, how are Powers responsible, criminally or civilly? Simply because they can''''t afford the best lawyers?

Posted by gmond

As I understand it, they knew how the glue was to be used, and said nothing. I''m fairly sure they can afford good lawyers, but if their position is indefensible, it''s maybe better to play the poor mouth, pretending to be a victimized mom-and-pop small business. I don''t have much sympathy for these people or for any of the companies involved.


Reply to this comment
by cdfoxtrot January 23, 2008 9:15 PM EST
How much money do they make that they can afford to pay a fine this big?

Posted by fstop100

Read the story. "Sullivan said Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff, which was paid more than $2 billion to manage the project over 20 years, made $150 million in profits." We don''t know the details of how they''re paying the fine. Maybe it''s over 30 years, and they can just put some much smaller sum of money aside now which will get invested, and the return will pay much of the fine. The $450m fine is a nice headline, but let''s see the details.
Reply to this comment
by talkingham January 23, 2008 8:24 PM EST
Largest public works project my a..- where I live we are being billed 2-billion for a crooked sold-out politicos (some are on their way to prison!) sewer remodeling project.
Reply to this comment
by dowjones20k January 23, 2008 8:00 PM EST
As a Ma resident, and one who uses these leaky shoddy constructed tunnels, it is unconscionable that Coakley has settled with these contractors and allowed them to circumvent the legal process for the roof panel collapse ..

For a 15 BILLION dollar project that the federal government shared in, only in Ma does this kind of back room deal making happen at the expense of the taxpayers .. hopefully the feds will not be so forgiving ...

SHAMEFUL !!!
Reply to this comment
by fstop100 January 23, 2008 7:14 PM EST
How much money do they make that they can afford to pay a fine this big?
Reply to this comment
See all 11 Comments
  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. Tempers Flare In Climate Change Flap

    (717 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: