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Public
Employee Press
Under intense pressure from DC 37 and Local 375, Mayor Giuliani scrapped his plan to contract out engineering work. By GREGORY N. HEIRES The Giuliani
administration backed away from its final effort to privatize public jobs and
decided to keep Local 375 members in charge of the most critical engineering work
at Ground Zero. The union victory
means that 60 civil service engineers who work at the Dept. of Design and Construction
will continue to oversee the construction companies at the disaster site. The
politically powerful, San Francisco-based Bechtel Group was to receive $27.5 million
to supervise the job. By sticking with union members, who have
demonstrated their dedication and expertise on the job, the city is saving millions
of dollars, said Claude Fort, president of Civil Service Employees Technical
Guild Local 375. The citys decision is a
testament to the tremendous job municipal employees have done overseeing the cleanup,
DC 37 Deputy Administrator Zachary Ramsey said. Both the Federal
Emergency Management Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers recognized the highly
professional work of our members, who are helping bring in the project ahead of
schedule, Mr. Ramsey said. Critics of the attempted deal suggested
that the firm was using its Republican Party connections to get the work. George
Shultz, secretary of state during the Reagan administration, is a director, and
former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger was general counsel. DC
37 worked with the local media and politicians to highlight the dedicated service
of the city workers at Ground Zero and expose Bechtels troubling track record
and political ties. The Giuliani administration announced its decision
to keep the work in-house one day after the City Council Contracts Committee held
a hearing on the plan. The committee, chaired by Kathryn E. Freed, called the
hearing at the suggestion of Council member Bill Perkins. At the hearing,
DC 37 Deputy Administrator Zachary Ramsey attacked the Giuliani administration
for negotiating the deal in secret and not following procurement procedures required
by the City Charter. He cited research by DC 37s Kate Pfordresher on Bechtels
history of cost overruns in public infrastructure projects, such as the Boston
highway where the price skyrocketed from $3 billion to $14.5 billion. We
do not need this firm, or other profit-hungry firms with political connections,
taking over work that is being done cost effectively and safely by city engineers,
said Mr. Fort in his testimony. Mitchell Feder, chair of the locals anti-privatization
committee, and Local 375 retiree Leon Soffin, an adviser to the local, also testified. At the hearing, Frank McArdle of the General Contractors Association spoke
on behalf of the firms working under the supervision of the Local 375 members.
This has been a public-private enterprise, he said. This has
worked well. After Mr. Giuliani announced his decision to keep
the work in-house, Mr. Ramsey said, The controversy surrounding the citys
possible contract with Bechtel cast doubt upon the wisdom of privatization, which
often amounts to a financial windfall for politically powerful businesses without
providing savings for taxpayers or improving the quality of work.
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