Monday, June 7, 2010

Fwd: [Urban Politics] WHO PAYS FOR TUNNEL COST OVERRUNS? Urban Politics #294 - 6-7-2010

Hmmm, I agree with Nick Licata.
Mark that one down on your calendar.

Have a great day,
Mike Baker

Sent from my iPhone

Urban Politics #294, 6-7-2010

By City Councilmember Nick Licata


WHO PAYS FOR COST OVERRUNS? TUNNEL AGREEMENTS AND CONTRACT

The question that has dominated the discussion of the deep bore tunnel replacement for the Alaskan Way Viaduct has been: who will pay for any cost overruns? The answer is the State with regards to the contract for the tunnel. The reason is that the contractor that wins the design-build contract for the tunnel will be signing a contract with the State of Washington, not the City of Seattle. The contract will oblige WSDOT to cover risks associated with the tunnel.  The City of Seattle will not be contractually obligated to cover cost overruns for the tunnel.

Think about it for a moment, the contractor could care less who pays the bill, as long as they get paid. They are not going to sign a contract in which this is left in doubt. Since the City is not a party to the contract, there would be no legal standing for either WSDOT or the contractor to look to the city to cover any of the bill spelled out in the contract.

That said, what does the $2.8 billion cap that the State legislature set on the entire tunnel project mean? The cap is real in the sense that the Governor cannot spend more state money than the legislature has approved. So let's assume that the $1.96 billion tunnel goes over budget; the State is on the hook, not the contractor. The state could pay them and still be under the $2.8 billion cap. However, what happens to the other parts of the overall tunnel project?

The most important project element for Seattle is taking down the current Viaduct to free up the waterfront to pedestrians. The State funding toward viaduct removal and rebuilding Alaskan Way is $290 million, but the State could use this money to cover any additional tunnel costs. The City could argue that the State was still obligated to do the project, but if the money isn't there, the State Legislature would have to approve funding, which would put Seattle in a weak position. This problem could be solved by the State and the City agreeing in advance to put aside the money for the waterfront, thus creating a separate locked box for it.

Another major part of the tunnel project, to be tackled after the tunnel is completed, is to reconnect Thomas, Harrison and Republican streets across Aurora Avenue, to "reconnect" the street grid between Queen Anne and South Lake Union. It is a critical engineering task, necessary to avoid congestion problems on Mercer and facilitate access to the tunnel. The same approach of separate funding should be undertaken with this project as with the waterfront; in a worst case scenario, this is the portion of the tunnel project that could be sacrificed - it would be the most difficult one to convince the State Legislature to fund if this money is used for the tunnel.

Seattle and the State are negotiating agreements to allow the tunnel and related projects to proceed. Hopefully they will protect funds for the waterfront and reconnecting the grid. We will need to see what is included before knowing how well or whether this is addressed.



COUNCIL MEMBERS & MAYOR'S EMAIL ADDRESSES

Sally.Bagshaw@seattle.gov
Tim.Burgess@seattle.gov
Sally.Clark@seattle.gov
Richard.Conlin@seattle.gov
Jean.Godden@seattle.gov
Bruce.Harrell@seattle.gov
Nick.Licata@seattle.gov
Mike.OBrien@seattle.gov
Tom.Rasmussen@seattle.gov

Citizens are directed to the following website to complete a form to send an email to the Mayor's Office. http://www.cityofseattle.net/mayor/citizen_response.htm


URBAN POLITICS SUBSCRIPTION INSTRUCTIONS

To subscribe, send a message to: urbanpolitics-subscribe@speakeasy.net
To unsubscribe, send a message to: urbanpolitics-unsubscribe@speakeasy.net
You do not need to include anything in the body of the messages.