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Environmentby Mark Reutter9:52 amJul 12, 20180

At hearing on reservoir projects, councilman asks: “Where’s Rudy Chow?”

Few questions answered at hearing on two large infrastructure projects at Druid Hill Park and Hanlon Park

Above: DPW’s Marcia Collins writing down questions she could not answer at the Council hearing. To her right is aide Kristyn Oldendorf. (Mark Reutter)

Last night, the City Council convened an oversight committee to get answers about two of the most costly infrastructure projects underway in Baltimore.

As detailed in The Brew yesterday, the city’s biggest drinking water reservoir, at Druid Hill Park, has been shut down because of persistently high turbidity levels caused by construction at the site.

Residents in Ashburton, meanwhile, are up in arms about the removal of hundreds of trees at Hanlon Park, where two large underground water tanks are planned.

The Council got few answers, beginning with a question posed by Councilman Leon F. Pinkett III at the start of the hearing:

“Where’s Rudy Chow?” he asked, referring to the director of the Department of Public Works that is managing the projects.

“Director Chow?” exclaimed Marcia Collins, DPW’s chief of legislative affairs. “I don’t know.”

“Wasn’t it understood that he would present this evening?” Pinkett said.

“No, usually – I apologize – usually when the Council wants the director, they let us know,” Collins answered.

The exchange over Chow’s whereabouts was emblematic of the dearth of information provided to the Council.

Pinkett wondered why “two projects of such significance to the city and the public welfare” would not warrant the director’s attention.

“I apologize if you had that impression” Collins said, repeating, “I’m not sure where he is today.”

The exchange over the whereabouts of Chow – who attended yesterday morning’s Board of Estimates meeting with his boss, Mayor Catherine Pugh – was emblematic of the general dearth of information provided to the Council.

“I’ll Have to Get That”

Repeatedly, Collins answered, “I’ll have to get that,” to questions from Pinkett and the committee’s chairman, Eric Costello.

The other DPW representative who testified, Lauren Swiecicki, said, “I’m not sure,” to many questions. She was hired three months ago as the agency’s chief of engineering and construction.

Absent before the City Council late yesterday, DPW Director Chow was front and center at yesterday' morning's Board of Estimates meeting. (Charm TV)

Absent before the City Council, DPW Director Chow was front and center at yesterday morning’s Board of Estimates meeting. (Charm TV)

Asked what had caused the high level of turbidity at the Druid Lake reservoir, Collins said, “It was stimulated by the construction, absolutely,” before adding, “The contractor did everything we asked him to do.”

The reservoir’s shutdown – ordered by the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) last January but not disclosed to the public until yesterday’s Brew article – has forced the city to institute emergency repairs at a filtration plant to make sure that Baltimore’s drinking water supply remains adequate.

Chromium Not a Problem

Druid Lake was supposed to continue as a drinking water reservoir until 2022, when the nearby water tank project is expected to be completed.

Asked how the lake got contaminated with suspended particles, Collins said, “We are investigating that now,” hastening to add:

“I don’t know when that will be done. But we will be glad to get that to you when we get that investigation done. What I think you need to keep in mind is that whenever you do construction, you have unintended consequences.”

Regarding Hanlon Park, Swiecicki said the levels of hexavalent chromium discovered in soil samples did not warrant community concern because they were 75% below the threshold level established by MDE.

Linda Batts, vice president of the Hanlon Improvement Association, testified that the community has been trying for months to enter into an agreement with DPW to set environmental safeguards for the water tank project.

Construction at Hanlon Park is expected to continue for the next four  years and will include 50-foot-deep excavations of the solid rock that lies under the property.

So far, Oscar Renda of Roanoke, Texas – the same contractor doing the Druid Lake tank project – has cut down about 300 trees at the park, Batts said, turning the park’s perimeter along Hilton Street and Liberty Heights Avenue into “a wasteland.”

Dirt has been piled along Hilton Street as work starts on underground water tanks at Hanlon Park. (Mark Reutter)

Dirt plowed and piled in Hanlon Park, near Hilton Street and Liberty Heights Avenue, as work begins on the underground water tanks. (Mark Reutter)

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