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Gov. Moves Funds for Patriots Bridge

Fri December 18, 2009 - Northeast Edition
Glen Johnson - ASSOCIATED PRESS


BOSTON (AP) Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick moved Dec. 4 to defuse a potential political time bomb by announcing he will no longer use federal economic stimulus money to pay for a pedestrian footbridge sought by the billionaire owner of the New England Patriots.

An administration aide briefed on the decision said the $9 million project “will be funded with other non-ARRA dollars,’’ using the acronym for the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The person spoke on condition of anonymity before the decision was formally announced.

The reversal came just three weeks after the Metropolitan Planning Organization approved using stimulus money for the project despite criticism from state legislators and the Massachusetts Republican Party. Patrick is up for re-election next fall, and another of his critics was Treasurer Timothy Cahill, a former Democrat now running for governor as an independent.

A month before the approval, team owner Robert Kraft and his wife, Myra, made the maximum allowable campaign contributions to Patrick and the Massachusetts Democratic Party. In the case of the governor, that was $500 each; in the case of the party, that was $5,000 each.

A year earlier, Robert Kraft gave similar donations to Patrick and the party as the state was designating his property a special growth district. The donations were Kraft’s first to the governor and first in four years to the party. About the same time, Patrick was seen with Kraft in a luxury box at Gillette Stadium.

At the time, Patrick denied a quid pro quo. He did so again last month, telling The Associated Press, “There’s no ’there’ there.’’

The governor added: “We’re making these decisions on the merits. ... There are others who have asked for investment of Recovery Act dollars or federal bonding dollars who have contributed to us and we’ve said no because those projects did not stand on their own.’’

The Krafts are proposing to use a 500-acre site across the street from Gillette Stadium for an office park. The planned bridge would connect parking lots on both sides of busy Route 1 and allow patrons of the office site to reach not only the stadium, but also the Krafts’ Patriot Place entertainment plazas.

Patrick said the project would create 4,500 permanent jobs and 4,000 construction jobs. He proclaimed the project “shovel-ready’’ during the Nov. 13 interview, but the aide said Friday the footbridge funding was being switched because it cannot be built quickly enough.

Instead, the stimulus money will be spent on other work.

The aide said two other projects in Amherst and Worcester also will no longer be financed with stimulus money but other funding. The aide would not identify that funding source.

A Patriots official said the team was not involved in the decision.

“That decision is coming from the Statehouse. That doesn’t affect us at all. We’re not involved in that process,’’ said team spokesman Stacey James.




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