Gayanga Co. laborers Richard Allen of Detroit, left, and Eric Cox of Detroit wet down a demolition on Detroit's west side on Monday, July 9, 2018. Detroit's Land Bank demolition program seriously lacks diversity. Just 16% of the hundreds of millions in federal dollars awarded since 2014 have gone toward Black-owned companies. Gayanga Co. has received more than $4 million in contracts and nearly 90% of its staff are Detroit residents. We follow them on a commercial demolition on Detroit's west side.
Gayanga Co. laborers Richard Allen of Detroit, left, and Eric Cox of Detroit wet down a demolition on Detroit's west side on Monday, July 9, 2018. Detroit's Land Bank demolition program seriously lacks diversity. Just 16% of the hundreds of millions in federal dollars awarded since 2014 have gone toward Black-owned companies. Gayanga Co. has received more than $4 million in contracts and nearly 90% of its staff are Detroit residents. We follow them on a commercial demolition on Detroit's west side.
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Detroit inspector general suspends demolition contractor for contaminated dirt

Detroit’s Office of the Inspector General suspended Detroit-based demolition contractor Gayanga Co. after investigators found it was using contaminated dirt to backfill residential properties in the city.

Gayanga, along with its owner Brian McKinney, are suspended from doing work or receving new contracts in the city for 90 days, or until the inspector general makes a final determination on whether the company should be barred from work. The inspector general on June 5 initiated the investigation, which alleges Gayanga used unapproved dirt from a Northland Mall redevelopment in Southfield. The suspensions are effective as of Thursday, Sept. 11.

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A message seeking comment was left with Gayanga on Thursday, Sept.11.

Based on a preliminary review, the inspector general’s office requested the city’s Construction and Demolition Department conduct testing of the dirt, which found that the soil in more than 80% of properties Gayanga worked on failed to meet the state’s residential standards, according to a news release.

“As the agency mandated by the Charter to uphold honesty and integrity in city government and contracting, and given the significant health and safety concerns presented, we determine that it is in the public interest to suspend Gayanga and Brian McKinney from engaging in further business with the city,” according to a Sept. 11 news release from the inspector general’s office.

Gayanga has been awarded numerous contracts in Detroit, particularly for demolitions under Proposal N, a voter-approved bond to tear down 8,000 dilapidated homes and rehab another 6,000 homes. The company, in 2018, also pushed for more Black contractors and other minorities to have opportunities to take on large-scale infrastructure projects in the city following a Free Press investigation that found Detroit’s demolition program lacked diversity among its bidders. Following the investigation, the city saw an uptick in participation from minority-based contractors, though city officials also attributed those efforts to getting more companies certified.

Since seeing a surge of contracts, Gayanga has performed at least 1,000 blighted structure demolitions in Detroit, according to its website. The company also took part in preparing a 167-acre site for construction of the Port of Entry for the Gordie Howe International Bridge.

The company also developed a trade school in an effort to teach Detroiters the skills needed to handle underground utilities, heavy excavating, truck driving and demolition work.

Dana Afana is the Detroit city hall reporter for the Free Press. Contact: dafana@freepress.com. Follow her: @DanaAfana.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit inspector general suspends demolition contractor for contaminated dirt

Reporting by Dana Afana, Detroit Free Press / Detroit Free Press

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

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