Seattle burns through money on fire-station construction

  • Source: Seattle Times
  • Published: 10/09/2015 09:19 PM

There was a small news item out of West Seattle this week that should serve as a big warning about how the city of Seattle has been doing business. The West Seattle Blog, spurred by a curious reader, noted that the community’s Fire Station 32, which was to be replaced in 2007 after passage of a levy, still sits there, empty, while the firefighters work out of a tent-like temporary station a few blocks away. That’s right — the project already is eight years behind schedule. That’s bad enough, but it turns out the project’s cost also has ballooned — to 150 percent over what city officials advertised in 2003 when selling voters on a tax levy to rebuild Seattle’s firehouses. The levy’s motto: “Making Seattle the most prepared city in America.” Twelve years into a nine-year mission, the fire-station program has grown from its original $197 million budget to $306 million — a cost overrun of 55 percent. Even more head-shaking: Of 33 fire house rebuilding projects around the city, only one — Fire Station 39 in Lake City — has come in on budget. The other 32 all blew past the original estimates, often by more than 100 percent.



Comments

We welcome comments from registered users. Comments are solely the responsibility of those who post them; their viewpoints are not endorsed by the Daily Dispatch and DailyDispatch.com. (read more)
Highlight
ship name
no comments have been added


FREE QUICK SUBSCRIBE
Sign up to subscribe to custom state Daily Dispatch emails for free

click to subscribe