The Connecticut Port Authority has faced substantial criticism in regards to its State Pier project in
New London, due to numerous cost escalations and delays. In July 2021,
Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont has stated that the project's development has been "a little longer and it was more expensive than we wanted", and by May 2022, said he was "mad as hell" about the increasing cost projections. In July 2021, a
Republican official in the
Connecticut House of Representatives criticized the project's high costs and "lack of transparency on the part of the Port Authority". An audit in late 2019 found that the Connecticut Port Authority spent thousands of dollars in previous fiscal years on expensive meals and liquor, incurred excessive legal fees and generally acted without clear policies governing purchases, personnel matters and ethics. During this time, it found that the Connecticut Port Authority had an improper relationship with a contractor called
Seabury Capital. The Connecticut Port Authority paid Seabury Capital over $1 million, including a $523,000 "success" fee. A Managing Director of Seabury Capital had served on the Board of the Connecticut Port Authority during this time. Said Managing Director agreed to pay an $18,500 fine to the Connecticut Office of State Ethics for this scheme. Later, Seabury Capital was fined $10,000 for improper gifts to Connecticut Port Authority employees, and a board member, including
National Hockey League tickets, and overnight stays at a club in the affluent town of
Greenwich. Previous Chairman David Kooris testified in May 2022 that his predecessors knew that a previous cost projection of $93 million was an unrealistic figure. Kooris stated that "there probably should have been more nuance conveyed at that time that it was a preliminary estimate", and that said estimates did not include "
soft costs", like architectural and engineering fees, and permitting and legal expenses. ==References==