05/31/10
From The Boston Herald
What's In Your Wallet?
Frills, not jobs, filling posh IRS digs
By Renee Dudley
The $92 million renovations at the IRS compound in Andover will include a
reflecting pool, an art gallery, indoor gardens, a 7,000-square-foot cafeteria
and an amphitheater, but it remains unclear what new permanent jobs, if any,
will come to the center.
The Herald reported last month that the IRS received $80.5 million in stimulus
funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for “green upgrades” to
the 400,000-square-foot complex.
The IRS already had $11.4 million on hand for the work. During a tour of the
50-year-old federal complex Thursday, the architect called the project
“visionary” and said the building “will be relevant 50 years from now.”
IRS spokeswoman Peggy Riley said in an e-mail that “nothing has changed” since
April, when she said it was premature to say whether permanent jobs would come
to Andover once construction is complete in August 2012.
Architect Jonathan Levi, whose firm received $8.3 million to design the
renovations, said planners have taken that uncertainty into account by designing
“flexible” workspace with movable partitions that could be rearranged for a
variety of activities.
“It will be a comfortable, collaborative environment” that would foster
“community and belonging,” Levi said. “It will be welcoming for the people who
use it.”
Levi said the upgraded building will have have room for 2,000 employees, more
than double the 900 that work there. About 1,400 employees were laid off last
year because an increase in electronic tax submissions meant fewer workers are
needed to process paper returns. The remaining employees serve primarily in
customer service at the IRS call center.
Last month, critics blasted the project as a “boondoggle,” saying the $92
million would have been better spent fixing roads, bridges and dams. Supporters
said renovating the site would be an incentive for bringing permanent jobs
there.
Officials from the U.S. General Services Administration, the federal agency that
channeled stimulus money to the IRS, said in a statement the Andover site was
chosen to “put people back to work quickly” and transform “federal buildings
into high-performance green buildings.”
Article URL:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1258234
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That warm feeling you get when you see your taxes used to provide IRS workers with a "visionary, welcoming, belonging" place to work? - Go see your doctor, it's acid reflux.