Saturday 2 September 2023

'Substantially over budget' bid halts construction of Fredericton courthouse

 

'Substantially over budget' bid halts construction of Fredericton courthouse

EllisDon submitted bid valued at $93.27 million for main phase of construction

The Department of Transportation and Infrastructure cancelled the main tender for construction of the new courthouse on King Street after EllisDon, the only company to submit a bid, listed a price tag that was "substantially over budget."

"The closing price did not represent good value for the Province and so it was cancelled," department spokesperson Tyler McLean said in an email.

WATCH | Here's what a critic wants to know after the Fredericton courthouse construction was stalled: 
 

Critic asks what went wrong with Fredericton's overbudget courthouse

Duration 1:38
A new justice building in Fredericton has ground to a halt, after a bid was submitted that was millions of dollars over budget.

Shovels hit the ground in December 2021 to build a new $60 million justice building on King Street near the corner of Regent Street.

Site preparation was completed in May 2022, and the foundation work and steel framing were completed this past spring.

According to the province, "the largest contract" to complete the construction was supposed to see work continue this past spring.

But according to information on the government's online tenders portal, EllisDon submitted a bid of $93.27 million for that contract.

McLean said the cancellation of the tender means the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure will "proceed in an alternate format" for the final phase.

"At this time, the Phase 2 contractor is beginning to demobilize from the site. There will be a short period of inactivity on the site until the Main Tender begins," he said.

Another setback

The delay in the years-long project appears to be yet another setback in a plan to build a courthouse to replace the aging justice building on Queen Street and the one in nearby Burton.

The government under former premier Brian Gallant had planned to refurbish the Centennial Building on King Street and build a new courthouse attached to it, at a projected cost of $76 million.

The Centennial Building in downtown Fredericton. The provincial government axed its plan to refurbish the Centennial Building in fall 2018 and later sold it. (John Leroux/ Supplied)

Construction got underway but was halted not long after, when Blaine Higgs became premier and axed it in late 2018.

The cancellation cost taxpayers $13 million for work that had already been done, but Bill Oliver, who was transportation minister at the time, said the province was saving approximately $60 million in construction costs.

Subcontractors left in lurch, says Opposition

With the cancellation of the main tender for the courthouse project, many subcontractors who bid as part of phase three have been left in an awkward situation, said Chuck Chiasson, Victoria-La Vallée MLA and Liberal opposition critic for the transportation and infrastructure.

Chuck Chiasson speaks into a microphone. Chuck Chiasson, MLA for Victoria-La Vallee and Liberal critic for transportation and infrastructure, says he's concerned about the subcontractors affected by the cancellation of the tender for the main phase of construction. (Facebook/Chuck Chiasson)

"It leaves them in the lurch because they actually have to start over, and that's what I'm trying to look into — is, is there a way that we can protect them because number one, they've put resources into preparing their bids," Chiasson said.

"They've gone out and costed and did everything that they need to do to prepare their bid and and they were the successful bidders, yet now they have to start all over again and they've lost their competitive advantage because everybody knows exactly what their bid was."

Chiasson said he expects the cancellation of the tender to delay the project by three to four months.

"They have to actually go out with another [request for proposals], and my understanding is that they'll be looking for a management firm instead of a general contractor."

The province did not say how long the delay would be.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Aidan Cox

Journalist

Aidan Cox is a journalist for the CBC based in Fredericton. He can be reached at aidan.cox@cbc.ca and followed on Twitter @Aidan4jrn.

With files from Karissa Donkin and Rachel Cave

 
 
 
32 Comments 
 
 
 
David Amos 
Interesting revelation just as everybody is quitting for the long weekend
 
 
 
Aaron Saunders 
Clowns, all of them.
 
 
David Amos 

Reply to Aaron Saunders 
Welcome to the circus
 
 
 
Al Clark
Another partisan vendetta that has cost US bigtime to soothe someone's ego 



Murray Brown  
If our micro-managing premier hadn't stuck his foot into the DTI's ongoing project to replace the outdated Justice Building, the province would have an already completed courthouse by now on the former Centennial Building property, with additional space to house departmental offices that are currently being leased at exorbitant prices from Kings Place and the Brookside mall. Instead they have a blatant eyesore that was formerly the Centennial building, and an unfinished courthouse that will end up costing double the amount of building the courthouse on the Centennial building location. The good news... The Irving's are making money, and for our premier... That's all that really matters. And the owners of Kings Place and Brookside mall will make many more millions from NB taxpayers. 
 
 
Archie MacDaniel 

Reply to Murray Brown  
Exorbitant prices? Where is the article to back that up? Can you show how it is costing more there than it would have to spend millions on the Centennial building? Of course you can't. I love the Irving slant, obsession is such a nasty trait to have. 
 
 
 
 
Pete Spence
Perhaps the provincial government could partener with the city of Fredericton and build a multi-function facility - courthouse by day / playhouse by night !

Optimizing money fling!

Would require recognizing which audience you were playing to.

 
 
Dianne MacPherson 
I can't understand why there was only ONE Bidder chosen

when the job first went to Tender.

I'm talking about Mr. Ellis NOT any Sub-contractors .

Mr. Ellis can't proceed so Sub-Contracting is

out of the picture.

 
 
Andrew Clarkson
Worked in the construction industry from the mid 1970's, and for the next 40 sum odd years. Went to tender openings on numerous occasions with more than one envelope in hand incase there were no envelopes in the box and you were the only bidder!
 
 

Corrie Weatherfield
I have always why the "centennial building" could not have lasted more than a century . . . after all, buildings built long ago, even of wood, have often lasted more than 100 yrs . . . and as for asbestos, I'm pretty sure it was known to be hazardous long before 1967 . . . Dr. google said something like 1935 in US ?? 
 
 

Marcel Belanger
The fiscal genius has found a way to spent triple the money on a building that would be finished by now and operational if he’d just left it alone. I predicted this very thing when he canceled the original contract, can’t say I’m happy I was right.




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