Guest guest Posted July 12, 1999 Report Share Posted July 12, 1999 Building problems and no quick fixes Officials regroup, tackle costly repairs BY TRACEY KAPLAN Mercury News Staff Writer It was a warm day outside, but inside Chief Tim 's office, it seemed like winter. Santa Clara County's jail warden cranked his space heaters to ``high'' and slipped into a faux-fur parka. He had just a few minutes to warm up before the heaters blew a fuse and the power shut down in part of the 43-year-old jail. knew it was no use complaining to overworked county maintenance crews. They had more important priorities. That day, they were fixing leaky shower stalls. The Main Jail South building, where has an office, is perhaps the most extreme example among county-owned buildings that are showing signs of deterioration. This year, the county had to close the moldy San courthouse, make extensive repairs on a leaking courthouse in downtown San and replace a courtroom ceiling in Santa Clara that suddenly collapsed. Flaws in building design, construction and inspection contributed to the recent problems, but county officials acknowledge that some of the deterioration stems from nearly two decades of slack maintenance. Those officials blame chronic under-funding and bureaucratic disorganization for the maintenance shortfall. Alarmed that years of neglect may finally have caught up with the county, they are struggling to make up for lost time before more of the county's 159 public buildings fail catastrophically. But problems ranging from worn-out electrical cables to aging plumbing won't be fixed overnight and the work is certain to cost more now than it would have if maintenance had been a priority all along. Even with a recent increase in spending, it's doubtful that the county will ever catch up with its ballooning maintenance backlog. ``We're very lucky those things don't happen more of the time,'' said Mike Howorth, chief steward for the General Services Agency, whose employees include plumbers, electricians and other maintenance workers. ``We've kept things together with bubble gum and tape.'' The neglect began in 1978 when Proposition 13, which cut property taxes dramatically, gutted local government budgets. Like many other Bay Area counties, Santa Clara County opted not to cut human services. Instead, it drastically cut spending for routine maintenance and indefinitely postponed major projects, such as replacing roofs and window sealants. More cuts were made during the recession in the early 1990s, when the state raided county coffers to fund education. In 1997, the county spent about $8 million on building maintenance, the same amount as 18 years earlier despite substantial increases in the number and age of county buildings. By that time, the county had amassed a deferred maintenance backlog of $55 million. In addition to increasing the annual maintenance budget in 1997, worried county supervisors allocated $27.5 million over a five-year period ending in 2002 to reduce the backlog. But little was done to correct inefficiencies in the way the building department was run or to substantially enlarge the staff, which receives 25,000 emergency repair calls a year and maintains thousands of pieces of equipment, from fire alarms to elevators. Funding increased Now that economic times are good, a new group of county building officials and politicians have renewed efforts to catch up. In March, eight years after an outside auditor recommended the building department make significant organizational changes, the reorganization was launched. The plan calls for hiring 29 new employees, increasing the current staff of 104 by about a third. And last month the county board of supervisors allocated an extra $1 million for maintenance, bringing the total for next year to $13.5 million, plus $5.5 million for deferred projects, the highest it's ever been. But that still falls about $5 million short of the level the supervisors concluded last summer was needed. ``We have substantially increased our resources,'' said McKinsey, GSA director. ``We want to move the culture here away from fixing things when they are broken to being proactive, and we're doing that.'' In a sign that the changes are already making a difference, county employees who call in to complain about everything from jammed windows to leaks are getting much faster service, building officials say. Last summer, 2,700 emergency service calls were stacked up. Now, there are about 975 complaints waiting in the pile. And callers whose complaints are not emergencies now wait 20 days rather than four months for a response. But by another measure, the effort so far has had less of an impact. Despite making significant progress on major jobs, such as fixing emergency generators, crews are still finding it tough to keep up with ongoing maintenance. There were 3,497 tasks at last count. The less maintenance now, the more potential breakdowns later, said Jay , former manager of building operations who resigned last month in a dispute over how the department is run. But the backlog could be even higher because half of the buildings still need to be inspected to determine what needs to be done, said. The plan is eventually to assign 50 workers to do preventive maintenance if the backlog of emergency service calls continues to drop, he said. ``To do it all, we'd really need 105 people,'' said. Pay now or pay later Bureaucrats often complain about being understaffed. But in this case, it's pay now, or pay more later, according to Supervisor Joe Simitian, who wants the county to increase spending on maintenance. For example, the financially strapped building department neglected the county's parking lots during the lean years, patching potholes only when they became big enough to attract attention. As a result, many of the lots have disintegrated to the point where they will have to be resurfaced after 20 years instead of 40 years at a higher cost to taxpayers. ``It's like if you never changed the oil in your car, there's an impact that can't be undone,'' said Carruth, facilities director. ``But if you start now, it's much better than not doing anything.'' Lack of sufficient maintenance also contributed to the problems at courthouses in Santa Clara, San and downtown San . In Santa Clara, the ceiling collapsed because water was gushing out through a gummed-up air valve on an overhead heating pipe. The valve was improperly installed and had not been replaced in 23 years. The county is now inspecting these valves in about 80 of its oldest buildings. The valves cost about $95 each, not including labor, while the damage to the courtroom was estimated at $27,000. Until recently, the building department was so busy that crews would probably have replaced only the obviously defective valve before they had to move on to other jobs, Howorth said. Ballooning costs In San , the $7.5 million courthouse shut down only four years after it opened in 1995 because it is infested with a potentially toxic mold triggered by leaks that county officials allege in a lawsuit were caused by design and construction flaws. The county has spent more than $2.8 million so far to relocate employees to portable offices. The Hall of Justice in San also is leaking so badly that county officials allege in a lawsuit that it could cost $10 million to fix, one-third the cost of the building. Both buildings apparently started leaking right away, but it took building officials years to realize the problems were widespread, partly because they were so short-staffed. Up until two years ago, the department had only 84 workers, the same number of employees it had 18 years before when the county owned half as much square footage. ``The budget cuts hit us like a neutron bomb,'' said ez, a phone operator for the department. ``The people died, but the buildings remained.'' Other Bay Area counties experienced similar cutbacks and also have begun to spend more on maintenance. In Contra Costa County, for instance, a courthouse leak four years ago that cost $600,000 to repair was the wake-up call, said Kathy Brown, deputy director of that county's General Services Agency. ``The lesson is, if you take care of buildings, they'll last maybe 30 years longer than if you just let them fall apart,'' Brown said. In Santa Clara County, the budget cuts were exacerbated by the inefficient way the department operated, according to a 1991 independent audit. Workers wasted time making long trips from remote locations to the department's San headquarters on Berger Drive instead of working out of satellite offices. Carpenters and other skilled workers who make about $60,000 spent precious time standing in line at Orchard Supply Hardware to buy their own supplies, a practice that continued until this March. And, until this spring, the department was organized by trades, so jobs that required a carpenter, plumber and electrician took weeks to coordinate because the workers worked for different supervisors. The system was so inefficient that officials at Valley Medical Center, the county's public hospital, formed an independent maintenance crew in 1994. ``I just didn't get the productivity I expected for the money,'' said Duane Oberquell, facilities director for the Santa Clara Valley Health and Hospital System. To change the system, building officials last year met 22 times with the department's unions. Now, the county can put a crew together to repair a problem with one phone call instead of having to go through several shop supervisors. Longtime employees also say that political considerations are not as important as they used to be in assigning work crews. In the past, powerful county officials often got better service, they said. For instance, a crew once installed a special paging system so former County Executive Sally could summon two corner elevators in the 11-story Government Center. was afraid of heights and did not want to ride in the building's glass-sided elevators. But change doesn't happen overnight, at least when it comes to county politics. Nothing had been done about 's meat locker of an office for years until building officials learned the Mercury News wanted to photograph the chief huddled over his space heaters. The next day, the problem had been fixed. The jail still needs at least $6.9 million worth of repairs, but won't spend the summer shivering. ``Gosh, it's amazing the way the timing of this thing worked out,'' mused. ``My secretary Carol tells me this is the first time in 10 years it's worked.'' ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- Contact Tracey Kaplan at tkaplan @sjmercury.com or (408) 295-3984. Previous Story | Next Story Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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