Labor Shortages Increasing Cost, Delaying San Angelo Area Road Projects

 

SAN ANGELO, TX — Some members of the San Angelo City Council expressed concern that local road construction contractor Reece Albert is gouging the City of San Angelo for road work Tuesday, Nov. 6, at the regular meeting of the San Angelo City Council.

The discussion was initiated by Councilman Harry Thomas. He noted that no matter what the project, Reece Albert is the only road construction contractor that bids on the job. And the bid price is always higher that what the City engineers originally estimated, he complained.

Mayor Benda Gunter defended Reece Albert, explaining that the red hot economy makes skilled labor scarce and expensive and there is a ton of work to be done elsewhere. Gunter’s argument was based upon supply and demand.

The discussion started when council was asked approve spending $1.760 million on the West Concho Avenue Improvements. The project will add a turn lane and widen the entrance to Historic Downtown from Koenigheim/U.S. 277.

In a previous report, City Engineer Russell Pehl told the Council he estimated the project will cost $1.347 million. The bid presented today was $413,000 over Pehl’s original estimate.

Councilman Tom Thompson suggested that the City use its ability to decline projects, since no additional contractors seem interested in bidding on City roads except Reece Albert, Inc.

Reece Albert was the only contractor to bid on the large Bell St. reconstruction project now underway. The San Angelo-based construction company also just completed the reconstruction of S. College Hills north from the intersection with Valleyview.

After the discussion, Council approved the Concho Avenue at Koenigheim Street improvements, $1.76 million and all, unanimously. TxDOT will reimburse the City $597,977.87 once the project is complete, lowering the total cost to the City to $1,162,503.74.

Major Hofheins, Director of the San Angelo Metropolitan Planning Organization, said the shortage of road construction contractors is a statewide problem, and not just a San Angelo issue. He said the Texas Department of Transportation has several projects approved with money allocated locally, but TxDOT is being forced to move much of the construction into the next decade because of labor shortages.

Some roadways in San Angelo are maintained by TxDOT, including Knickerbocker Rd., Sherwood Way, and Loop 306/Houston Harte Expressway.

Old Christoval Road, from S. Chadbourne St, to the southern portion of Loop 306 and U.S. 277, is also maintained and funded by the State, but the shortage of road construction contractors has TxDOT pushing the date to open bids for its rehabilitation back for years.

Hofheins said that TxDOT road construction will soon begin widening he portion of U.S. 67 near Howard College to “interstate grade” roadway, complete with overpasses within weeks, however. That portion of U.S. 67 is considered a portion of the Ports-to-Plains and could become part of the I-27 designation should the federal government, led by Congress, act.

Subscribe to the LIVE! Daily

The LIVE! Daily is the "newspaper to your email" for San Angelo. Each content-packed edition has weather, the popular Top of the Email opinion and rumor mill column, news around the state of Texas, news around west Texas, the latest news stories from San Angelo LIVE!, events, and the most recent obituaries. The bottom of the email contains the most recent rants and comments. The LIVE! daily is emailed 5 days per week. On Sundays, subscribers receive the West Texas Real Estate LIVE! email.

Required

Most Recent Videos

Comments

As a former employee of Reece Albert, I can say that part of the problem is that they do not pay worth a darn. The management all the way up to ownership treat you poorly and allow workers who have been around for years to treat the others poorly. It is a toxic workplace and not worth the $11 an hour they pay skilled cdl drivers. I doubled my pay by driving 20 mins away doing the same kind of work.

Yep, big time, anybody that is barely breathing can be working in the oil filed for better money. Don't forget the former illegals that worked for less dollars have been sent home by the BP. It is progress, we are enjoying a great economy, if you want good roads then, suck it up and pay the piper.

don't hire local and bitch if local contractors charge too much.
Truth is RA is probably cheaper in the long run.
I sure wish we had paid them to resurface this town instead of the outsiders.
I always thought that 11 bucks an hour was better than laying my ass on the couch.
Some of this worthless young generation needs to git to work.
I can't imagine TxDot being a bad place to work.
Not everybody is cut out to work in the oil patch.

Thanks to my councilman Harry Thomas for seeking the truth. Go watch All the Queen's Horses on Amazon. The lady in charge of that little town's finances stole a cool $53 MILLION over a 20year period.
I suspect someone in Angelo's government has dropped the ball in the last 20 or so years...
The very first thing you have to remember when you start something is this: There will be maintenance costs! So you better plan for it and plan well. It always costs more tomorrow than it did when you first started.

Post a comment to this article here:

X Close