Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” - Martin Luther King, Jr.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

More on Wastewatergate ... The Poisoned Project

The Town of Mooresville’s request to dismiss the case against it by two former town employees was not heard as scheduled yesterday, April 7.

The town’s “motion for summary judgment” was supposed to go before a Superior Court Judge in Statesville. And while it’s unclear the exact reason why the case didn’t make it to court, one could speculate that either the hearing was postponed, or a settlement has been reached.

Either way, in the eleventh hour, the Town of Mooresville amended its motion for summary judgment with a “declaration of Tonia Wimberly,” the town’s current engineering division supervisor. Wimberly began working for the town in August 2004, and she worked beside the two former town employees, Engineering Director Richard McMillan and Utilities Director Wilce Martin, until former Town Manager Jamie Justice fired the two men in February 2006.

Both men had publicly opposed the town’s 2004 hiring of engineering firm CH2M Hill to design the town’s Rocky River Wastewater Treatment Plant expansion. Of all the engineering firms that submitted “Statements of Qualifications” to the town, CH2M Hill was the least qualified for the project, according to town staff -- including Wimberly. The 2004 town board hired CH2M Hill anyway, saying that an official with that firm was a local person who had once worked at the town’s wastewater treatment plant.

That official, David Wagoner, is no longer employed by CH2M Hill. Neither is the firm’s original manager for Mooresville’s project, Mike Osborne, nor (according to new reports) the project principal, Joe Stowe. Engineer Derek Slocum left the town last year. And Justice resigned as town manager in February 2008 per the request of Mooresville’s town board.

These are among the reasons we have dubbed this issue The Poisoned Project … or Wastewatergate -- take your pick. Almost every person who touched this doomed project has either jumped ship or "walked the plank."

In her “declaration,” Wimberly – who took over leadership of the town’s engineering department after McMillan was fired – states that she, McMillan, Martin and Slocum “were responsible for narrowing the Statements of Qualifications down to a ‘short-list’ of engineering firms who were qualified to do the project.

“We narrowed the list to six engineering firms, all of whom were qualified to do the project,” she states.

CH2M Hill “was among the six engineering firms on the short-list,” Wimberly adds.

Stop the bus. What is conveniently missing in Wimberly’s “declaration” is that several Mooresville commissioners in 2004 explicitly instructed town staff to include CH2M Hill on that “short-list.” In other words, the reason CH2M Hill was included was not because it was among the six most qualified. Wimberly also failed to mention that town board members were reportedly pressuring town staff to select CH2M Hill and that commissioners had already decided to hire CH2M Hill before town staff narrowed the field of firms to six.

Moving on…

Wimberly states in her “declaration” that “All of the short-list engineering firms … have performed similar work in the past. Based on their licensing and their experience, any of the six engineering firms on the short-list could have designed the Rocky River Treatment Plant.”

Actually, here’s how three of the six firms on that “short-list” – Black & Veatch (which town staff ultimately recommended to the town board), CDM (which was ranked second by town staff) and CH2M Hill (which the town board ultimately chose for the project) – stacked up to the town’s requirements, based on the firms' own submitted qualifications:

  • Black & Veatch listed six projects in which it provided similar services as Mooresville’s in the region within the past eight years. CDM listed four. CH2M Hill listed one, which involved design improvements, modifications and upgrades to a treatment plant, not an expansion which is what the Town of Mooresville needs.
  • Black & Veatch listed five treatment plant expansions similar in size to Mooresville’s that it had designed in the region within the past eight years. CDM listed one. CH2M Hill listed none.
  • Black & Veatch’s proposed team included 19 employees that had worked together on a project, which was substantially more than the proposed teams of any other firms. Additionally, the teams listed in the proposals from Black & Veatch and CDM contained more professionally licensed individuals than the team proposed by CH2M Hill.
  • Though it wasn’t addressed in the Statements of Qualifications, we have discovered in the past year that Black & Veatch, had it been hired instead of CH2M Hill, also would have known to consider phosphorous requirements before it began designing the town’s treatment plant expansion. CH2M Hill, on the other hand, said it was "unaware" of the phosphorous limits until its design was 60 percent complete. And that meant that the firm was going to need to go back and change some things in its design – to the tune of a requested additional $2 million from the Town of Mooresville ... as if we, the town's sewer customers, are expected to pay for the learning curve of such an "experienced, qualified firm." Wimberly was fully aware of the pending $2 million request for at least two weeks before she and CH2M Hill presented it to Mooresville's town board in August 2007. Yet Wimberly did not disclose the amount when a town commissioner specifically asked for it at a public meeting. But that’s another soap opera, for another day…

Back to the firm grading process:

So far, we've established that Wimberly, along with the other three town staff members (McMillan, Martin and Slocum), independently reviewed and graded the firms in 2004. Their review and grading was supposed to be based solely on the information in the firms’ own Statements of Qualifications – and how well those listed qualifications met town standards.

Judging from the first three bullet points above, Wimberly’s information in her “declaration” about CH2M Hill’s experience clearly did not come from the Statement of Qualifications that CH2M Hill itself submitted to the town’s engineering department.

And of all five engineering firms selected as finalists, CH2M Hill was ranked last -- that's right, last -- by all four town staff members, including – you guessed it – Tonia Wimberly.

In fact, Wimberly herself gave Black & Veatch a score of 51. She gave CDM a score of 43. She scored two other firms at 32 and 28. And her score for CH2M Hill: 27.

The highest attainable score was 55. The lowest was 11.


But, interestingly, Wimberly doesn’t mention any of that in her “declaration.” Instead, she states: “CH2M Hill was an engineering firm that was and is qualified to perform the work on the project.

“The Town of Mooresville,” she added, “was required to select a qualified engineering firm based on that firm’s demonstrated competence and qualification for the type of professional services required …”

Again I ask: Where exactly was that “competence and qualification” demonstrated? It certainly wasn’t in CH2M Hill’s own Statement of Qualifications submitted to the town, which was the only information town staff was supposed to use in grading and recommending the firms.

Wimberly is correct when stating in her “declaration” that “The Board of Commissioners for the Town of Mooresville had the final say in selection of the engineering firm that the Board believed was best qualified to perform the work on the Project.”

And, indeed, that board in 2004 hijacked the professional opinion of our town staff -- including Wimberly -- who recommended Black & Veatch for Mooresville’s treatment plant expansion. Town commissioners instead chose CH2M Hill, the firm that town staff – and (should I state it again?) Wimberly herself – ranked least qualified for the job.

Wimberly states in her “declaration”: “The Board’s selection of CH2M Hill was in compliance with the requirements of” state statutes. She doesn't mention, though, that the board was supposed to, but didn't, follow state statutes that regulate the selection of an engineering firm.

Even if the town board's selection of CH2M Hill was 100 percent compliant with state statutes, the question is: was its selection the best one for our town?

And Wimberly doesn’t address that either. Why? Well, I could speculate a number of reasons. Among them:

  • Wimberly fears repercussions from town administration and/or elected officials. After all, her colleagues, McMillan and Martin, were fired for standing up for the taxpayers of this town. Why would she risk that?
  • The town’s “Manager of Engineering” position – once held by McMillan – is vacant and currently being advertised.
  • Wimberly is friends with JD Solomon, the Vice President and Carolinas Area Manager of CH2M Hill. (Solomon is the same guy, by the way, who put on a show at two different board meetings, saying per the advice of CH2M Hill “counsel,” he would need permission from town commissioners to speak to them since the town and CH2M Hill have a communication protocol which states that CH2M Hill will converse about the project only with town staff. Interestingly, Commissioner Frank Rader, in one of those same public meetings, disclosed that he had a lunch meeting with Solomon that week to discuss some aspects of the project. And rumor has it that Solomon at least tried to meet with other town commissioners, also outside the presence of the public, town staff and administrators. Hmph. So much for Solomon’s “above-board adherence” to the communication protocol…)

But Solomon isn’t the subject here.

The Rules of Professional Conduct for Engineers and Surveyors, Section 21 NCAC 56.0701 (d)(1), states that a licensee – which would include Tonia Wimberly – “shall issue public statements only in an objective and truthful manner and ... shall be objective and truthful in all professional reports, statements or testimony."

Is Tonia Wimberly being truthful and objective? You decide.

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

It all depends on what your definition of "is"--is! I think someone is trying for the permanent position like Mr. Smith, but what the hell, the ends justify the means. I think that Ms. Gatton should receive an award for excellence in investigative journalism! I would recommend going to print with your blog, but no one in town would sell your papers because of fear of the "rat pack".(Rader,Abraham, and T-burg) I do wish you wouldn't pick on Frank Rader, he only went to lunch to further the interests of the citizens of Mooresville.(It only seems improper.) The only thing for sure is that the citizens/taxpayers of Mooresville are getting hosed!!! I don't think we could get a better script from Hollywood--it screams of Jerry McGuire --show me the money!! Well--keep on looking--where there is smoke--there is fire!! At the least stupidity and incompetence!!

Anonymous said...

Right on Jamie. Good job. Many of us have been critical of this ignorant Board and Mayor, and finally there appears to be light at the end of the tunnel. It's too late to do anything about these officials at this time, but, next election, they all should be booted out on their a----.(excluding Miles Atkins who just came on board)Time will tell on his record and he too will pay the price if he doesn't stick with his present convictions.
I attend every board meeting and see these clowns at work. It's pathetic to see how they operate, and think all of us are stupid.Rader is the worst cancer, along with the no back bone Mayor. The rest of them are like sheep and follow the leader.
It's only by keeping them accountable, will we have a chance to take back our town and move out of the dark ages. Thanks again, and if you require my help, you can email me at nichjac1@yahoo.com

Anonymous said...

Jaime...You are amazing, I think this is what you were born to do!! Keep it up!!

Anonymous said...

very informative article.
Who's Mr. Smith? (referred to in the first comment)

Anonymous said...

The part that scares me to death is the fact that we just had an election a few months ago and elected most of this group ALL OVER AGAIN. Simply amazing.

Keep up the good work...maybe one day the town will wake up.

6:26p guy

Anonymous said...

Erskine Smith/Wanna-Be-Town Manager.

Anonymous said...

Erskine Smith as town manager? Fat chance! There's enough dirt on the guy to bury most people. Word on the street is they made him interim just so that they can fire him when they're good and ready.

Anonymous said...

Cat's out of the bag, Miss Wimberly. Interesting that people like this keep their jobs in Mooresville. We need some serious change.

Anonymous said...

For the April 8 the commenter:

ditto. Only thing for me, and I can only speak for myself. What I feel for the RAT pack isn't fear, it's just barely contained contempt. Abraham led us down the rabbit hole with wastewatergate. Why? Because he had a "friend" at the company. Riiiight. I'm sure he took all that heat out of the goodness of his heart for a friend.
Then Rader and Thunberg took us down the Cable rabbit hole AND backed the rotten wastewater deal, or as Ms. Gatton calls it the Poisoned Project! And I've read the other pieces and it looks like these same problem children want to keep everything behind closed doors as much as they can. I wonder why.

Anonymous said...

To everyone,

Someone Sees You

Once upon a time a man decided to sneak into his neighbor's fields and steal some wheat. "If I take just a little from each field, no one will notice," he told himself, "but it will add up to a nice pile of wheat for me." So he waited for the darkest night, when thick clouds lay over the moon, and he crept out of his house. He took his youngest daughter with him. "Daughter," he whispered, "you must stand guard, and call out if anyone sees me." The man stole into the first field to begin reaping, and before long the child called out,"Father, someone sees you!" The man looked around, but saw no one, so he gathered his stolen wheat and moved on to a second field. "Father, someone sees you!" the child cried again. The man stopped and looked all around, but once again he saw no one. He gathered more wheat, and moved to a third field. A little while passed, and the daughter cried out,"Father, someone sees you!" Once more the man stopped his work and looked in every direction, but he saw no one at all, so he bundled his wheat and crept into the last field. "Father, someone sees you!" the child called again. The man stopped his reaping, looked all around, and once again saw no one. "Why in the world do you keep saying someone sees me?" he angrily asked his daughter. "I've looked everywhere, and I don't see anyone."
"Father," murmured the child, "Someone sees you from above."
This folktale reminds us that an act of dishonesty is never truly hidden.

Anonymous said...

I thought in your last article about Morrison Plantation you may have been referring to the town engineer taking a bribe of golf tickets from developer. After re-reading both articles, it is clear that you are implyng that the current engineer and Smith (town-manager wannabe) have turned a blind eye to a number of things. Do you think there are deals being cut? Cozy relations? It does not sound good for the taxpayers, but great for developers and sewer treatment plant engineers!

Anonymous said...

And now the cable rabbit hole that Rader and Thunberg led us down is going to cost $12 million more for "upgrades". Since they wound up with more subscribers than they thought they were going to have, couldn't this surplus pay for itself? that's what "Rader-math" used to say.

Anonymous said...

Watch out now--Rader graduated from Davidson College--and if you don't know that, I'm sure he wants you to know that! As for his math, I think back to something I heard long ago--" If you can't dazzle them with knowledge, baffle them with bull_ _ _ _! If Rader is selling it--there is a reason--perhaps he is after a free lunch!

Anonymous said...

Mr.Rader has never mentioned Davidson to me....though he has talked to me like I was too stupid to understand his little pet projects just because I questioned him. I love being talked down to by somebody I'm paying....which brings me to today's "Ask Jaime" question (don't you appreciate your loyal readers coming up with more work?)....
How much does Thunberg and the board get paid? (I know..the quick answer is "TOO MUCH".)

6:26 guy

Jaime Gatton said...

Dear 6:26,

(I'm trying to make this read like a dignified response from the "Ask Jaime" column, by the way -- ha.)

Actually, I *love* when folks ask me questions ... as long as I'm able to answer them ... or find the answer. ;o)

I'll check on the commissioners'/mayor's salaries on Monday. Last time I checked, they actually don't get paid that much. Of course, "not that much" is relative, I guess.

I'll be back in touch...

Sincerely,

Jaime

Heh.

Anonymous said...

So....it's kind of like running for president on a much smaller scale. (You spend 100 times what the job pays to get elected because you'll get free golf for life.....and some free lunches...and dinners...and you get to judge the weiner dog race...and....)

Rader once made a smart ass comment to me about what he was paid and I looked and looked but could never find it. Warning...the first "Ask Jaime" is a toughie... (or at least it was for me.)

6:26

Anonymous said...

Carney told me one day it was $400.00 and some change. I also remember my high school history which stated that elected officials (other than the sheriff,Register,Clerk,Judge,etc.)were paid by legislating themselves a salary, but that most were of independent means and donated their legislative pay to charity. How refreshing it would be if our elected officials donated their pay to the soup kitchen, christian mission,homeless shelter, etc.,but ours expect a spread of food for most meetings, all they deserve is "ice water!"

Jaime Gatton said...

6:26,

I haven't forgotten about your question. I e-mailed the town clerk and the town's finance director and human resources director. The finance director responded promptly, as usual, saying on Monday that the human-resources director should respond to my question. She said, however, that she had not seen the human-resources director in the office on Monday ... which could have explained the reason I didn't get a response that day.

That doesn't explain why I didn't receive one today, though.

The town clerk has responded to another e-mail that I sent, but not the one asking about the commissioners'/mayor's salaries.

Sometimes, it's like pulling teeth.

Nevertheless, I'm still working on an answer. I'll get back with you soon...

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Jaime for your answer. If I could follow up that question with another (don't you hate that when people don't let you answer the first one to "Ask Jaime" before they start with #2)...if these esteemed leaders only make $400 a year..are there other perks besides free lunches with lobbyists....like free golf? free cable? free internet? free water? special parking at the Wal-Mart?

thanks for your answers....your loyal readers need to pick an office for you and write you in...

6:26

Anonymous said...

sorry. coming in late into this conversation. liked what 4/9 12:06 am wrote. you're right about Thunberg and Rader railroading rest of board. i also think Thunberg is the one pulling Rader by the nose without Rader even knowing it. either way they're both arrogant as all getout. but we've seen arrogant before and booted them out and we can do it again.

Jaime Gatton said...

Hot off the press:

According to figures provided by Town Human Resources Director Jackie Moore: the mayor makes $10,065 annually. The mayor pro-tem (currently Mitch Abraham) makes $6,842. And the commissioners make $6,083.

I also had a chat with Commissioner Chris Carney today, who said he was happy to answer (to the best of his knowledge, at least) some of the more detailed questions about "perks."

He said the town provides elected officials with a BlackBerry wireless device, including phone and e-mail service. If an elected official has a fax machine at home, the town will pay for the fax line, and it also pays for home Internet service. Carney said that's mainly because an elected official's home is considered a "home office."

Carney also said that the town in the past has offered computers (laptops) for elected officials' use. However, he said he's not sure if that's still the case. "I don't have one," he said. "Some might have them."

If an elected official does not have health insurance, the town offers to provide that. Like town employees, Carney said, the town will cover the cost of medical insurance for the elected official/employee, but if that person wants his/her dependents on the plan, then the official/employee must pay for that.

As for free golf, Carney said he doesn't believe it's free, but he does believe it's discounted for town employees and officials.

Carney also said the elected officials do not receive free cable. In fact, he said, he pays about $130 a month for his cable bill. "I purchased the mack-daddy plan through MI-Connection to help offset the cable cost," he said.

The town also offers mileage reimbursement for trips made on town business. But Carney said he personally doesn't take advantage of that offer "because it's just part of the job."

When elected officials go out of town for town business, the town pays for the hotel and meals on a per diem basis.

"It's the same guidelines as for town employees," said Carney, adding with a laugh: "In Washington D.C., where the meals are really expensive, I always eat chicken.”

Free bottled water? I forgot to ask Carney about that one. But my own personal response would be that you may be confusing elected officials with CH2M Hill employees.

Ouch. ;o)

And special parking at WalMart?

Well, only if they're pregnant. And let's hope, at least for the current board, that that's not the case.

Heh.

And, hey, don't thank me. It's all in a day's work. :o)

Anonymous said...

Nothing like paying someone to abuse you, their is a definition for that one, but I won't write it.

Anonymous said...

As an old aquaintance of Tonia's I have to say, she has never been honest and truthful in her personal life so she can't be expected to do so in her professional life. What else can you expect from someone who married their cousin?

Anonymous said...

I think some things that should also be considered is Jeff Carpenter is also wasting alot of money on getting repairs done. Prior to his arrival and shortly after all of the pumps that went down were serviced by a local business in the outskirts of town. This company would come out anytime day or night and keep the system in operation, and would rebuild the pump locally. Now Carpenter has decided to use the buddy system. He is now buying new pumps from his "pal" down near monroe, and he is also getting a few of them rebuilt there. Lets think is it closer to drive 3 miles out of town or past Monroe? Now that is wasting fuel money if you ask me. Also how do you feel about your tax money that you pay being spent outside of town when it could stay inside our town for the same price if not cheaper? I bet his friend is loving it, but is it the best for the taxpayers?