Sat Dec 23 23:37:13 CST 2000 Col. Mudd goes on record By Barb Arland-Fye, QUAD-CITY TIMES -- December 24, 2000 Retired Col. James Mudd is fuming. For the three years as chief of the Army Corps of Engineers' Rock Island District, he believes he tried to bring a massive, bogged-down navigation study to a fair, timely conclusion. Now his reputation has been damaged, he believes, because of a whistleblower's victory in a complaint launched against top Corps officials responsible for the study. "Twenty-six years in service, one whistleblower and all of a sudden, everything I worked for goes down the chute. Thank you very much United States of America," he said. A Pentagon report released earlier this month accused Mudd, 48, and two generals of swaying the study in favor of more than $1 billion in unnecessary navigation improvements on the Upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers. On Thursday, he received a letter of admonishment from the Army's vice chief of staff. It essentially criticized his actions as reflecting poorly on the Army, he said. Nothing could be further from the truth, said Mudd. "I stood up for what was right." He left the Quad-Cities five months ago, after an emotional farewell and change of command ceremony on Arsenal Island. With his wife, Toni, he walked away from center stage on a hot July afternoon and boarded a tow that assists in the maintenance of locks and dams on the river. The song "Happy Trails" played over the loudspeaker as the tow moved slowly up the Mississippi. His trail has been anything but happy. The whistleblower investigation still was under way and his dream of advancement was unfulfilled after what he said had been a very satisfying, 26-year career. He and Toni have moved out of state to a town he asked not to be disclosed. He believes the federal investigation of the navigation study has vilified his family. "It has everything to do with politics," added Mudd, who questioned the timing of the investigation report's release in the midst of a topsy-turvy presidential election and the amount of time -- 10 months -- it took to complete. "This investigation took longer than it took us to kick Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait," said Mudd, who served with the U.S.-led coalition that drove Iraq out of Kuwait in the 1991 Gulf War. He shouldn't have been surprised, given the complexity and controversy surrounding the 7-year-old, $57 million study. The navigation industry insisted the improvements were necessary ASAP, while the environmentalists countered they were not and urged the Corps to take more time to research. Congress was expecting a recommendation on a study that seemed to be growing out of control. The aging study "had become a serious problem for the Corps, almost to the point of being an embarrassment," Mudd said. The Corps had to be able to move on with it. The whistleblower's complaint In February, a Corps economist blew the whistle on his bosses, claiming they manipulated a navigation study to favor more than $1 billion in unnecessary improvements on the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. The federal Office of Special Counsel decided whistleblower Donald Sweeney's allegations had merit, and ordered an investigation. On Dec. 6, the Pentagon released a 168-page report from the Army inspector general's office that was damning to the Corps as an agency and to three top Corps officials individually, including Mudd. While the report found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing, investigators said that Mudd, Corps deputy commander Maj. Gen. Russell Fuhrman and division commander Maj. Gen. Phillip Anderson all helped taint the most extensive and expensive study of navigation improvements in Corps history. The investigation also found that Corps officials gave preferential treatment to the barge industry and that the agency demonstrated an institutional bias for large-scale construction projects. "They're trying to make institutional changes to the Corps of Engineers and they're doing it on the backs of three good officers," Mudd said. Singling out the "green suits" Why, he asks, were the military officers, what he calls the "green suits," implicated in the investigation but civilian employees were not? "What did the environmental community want in February?" he asks rhetorically. "They wanted the green suits out of the Corps and they wanted it to be civilian run." Some members of Congress and environmental groups did urge Congress at that time to consider converting the Corps into a civilian organization. An environmentalist who often was at odds with Mudd agrees that the military leaders were singled out in the report. "I assume the Army felt more capable of dealing with its military people and throwing the blame on them," said Mark Beorkrem, a Mississippi River Protection co-director with the Sierra Club. Fuhrman, Anderson and Mudd "were the most guilty of the guilty and everybody else got a pass," Beorkrem added. Mudd "firmly believed that (the Corps) needed to take care of the navigation industry, so his whole approach slanted to the industry on anything that would come up. His interpretation of Corps regulations always favored the navigation industry," Beorkrem added. Beorkrem also believes that the report, conducted by an agency that oversees the Corps, pointed out the crux of the problem: Servitude to navigation. "Corps projects are usually initiated at the community or state level as a result of industry interests at having something done or community interests at having something done." He puts as much blame on Congress. Certainly, Congress uses the Corps as its main pork barrel vehicle now," Beorkrem said. "That's why we had such a hard time in the summer and fall of even getting Corps reform discussed because there are very powerful people in Congress that want the client-service philosophy to be the way the Corps operates." "Silence is guilt" Mudd believes the whole issue has been taken out of context, but Corps officials won't talk about it. He thinks that's bad policy. "Corps employees may discuss their personal views on personal time but cannot be Corps spokespeople regarding the issue under the current guidance of the Department of the Army," said Justine Barati, a public affairs specialist with the Corps' Rock Island District. While the investigation was under way, all media requests were referred to the Department of the Army, said Lt. Col. Eugene Pawlik, with the Corps' public affairs office. That is "relatively standard procedure," he added. "Silence is guilt," said Mudd, who bristles at what he called a gag order during his final months on the job. "Did the Secretary of the Army violate my freedom of speech rights?" he asks. >From the day Mudd took command of the Corps' Rock Island District on July 9, 1997, he thought the navigation study would be the challenge of his military career, he said, but now he believes it was the unraveling of it. "It was a bit of a worry and the reason it was a worry is because for the first four years someone else was working on it," he added. "It should have had a year's worth more of getting done and that was it." Congress was expecting a final recommendation in late 1999 on the feasibility of lock construction and improvements. The deadline was extended to the end of this year. Missing that deadline might very well mean risking his credibility, said Mudd, who aspired to advance in the Army. "You fail at a rather large project, it wouldn't look good," he said. Failure wasn't something Mudd experienced in the military career he began after graduating from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. His success at such tasks as developing models for war games in the Persian Gulf helped get him promoted and eventually, a command with the Corps' Rock Island District. As he thinks about it now, it seems ironic that another modeling exercise -- pertaining to barge traffic movement on the Upper Mississippi -- became the final chapter in the only career he had known and loved. The testimony There is testimony that Mudd participated in "what-if" drills to determine what value of a mathematical formula would produce net positive benefits for large-scale construction. "The evidence established: Col. Mudd directed Mr. (Richard) Manguno to develop economic analysis supporting an alternative supporting large-scale construction when there was no previous analysis to support such a recommendation." -- U.S. Army Inspector General Agency Report of Investigation Mudd said he did not tell Manguno or anyone else to justify large-scale improvements. "That was basically just telling Manguno to spread out a menu of alternatives, ranging from don't do anything to build large-scale improvements on the Mississippi," he said. Sweeney's economic model provided only one alternative, which was to do small-scale improvements, Mudd said. That model, he added, was new, untested and "underestimated the benefits" of lock expansion based on the Corps' standard model for justifying navigation improvements on the Ohio River, Mudd said. He said he removed Sweeney from a leadership position on the economics group because the economist repeatedly missed deadlines to provide the critical information needed to move the economics part of the study forward. The navigation industry was pressuring the Corps to produce results and its representatives were very critical of the Corps' work on it. Mudd insisted that pressure did not sway him. "Every day I was in Rock Island I had pressures," he said. "I had agricultural interests screaming in my ear. I had environmentalists screaming in my ear. Congress was screaming in my ear ... that's what I get paid for, to make the hard decisions in spite of the pressures," he said. Barge industry representatives, strong advocates of lock expansion because of worldwide competition for grain markets, criticized the Corps for not moving quickly enough. They were convinced lock expansion was justified, even though Sweeney had concluded a need for small-scale improvements only. "Prior to the May 1999 meeting between the Corps and industry, they were scheduled for public disclosure of the study findings. Mr. (Chris) Brescia, a navigation industry official, pulled some strings and got the public meetings postponed. He thought the meeting with industry was appropriate because industry had a legitimate interest in the study outcome. -- Dudley Hanson's testimony in the Army Inspector General's report "We clearly disagree with the conclusion that we were given undue access," Brescia, of Midwest Area River Coalition, or MARC 2000, told the Times. The group is a coalition of agricultural producers, shippers, processors, waterway carriers and other industrial entities that use the river for the movement of commercial bulk commodities. "All we were trying to do was show what was wrong with their analysis," he added. Anderson, then the Corps' commanding general of its Mississippi Valley Division, called the meeting between Corps employees and barge industry representatives "because folks were calling him," Mudd said. But he and navigation study project manager Gary Loss of the Rock Island District were uncomfortable about having a meeting with just those two groups. They asked to have representatives of environmental groups join them. Anderson said no, Mudd recalled, because the meeting was a listening session. "He said, 'We're going to listen.' " The meeting in St. Louis, with more than 50 people, got ugly, Mudd said. In his testimony to investigators, he said the May 5, 1999, meeting seemed to be "Corps bashing" by the barge industry. Anderson and Mudd remained silent, but Anderson eventually called a halt to the meeting when it broke down into an argument. He called for another meeting, a few days later in Chicago, with industry economists and Corps economists to try to resolve the differences. Pick a number Mudd said, "We told Brescia to query his farm folks to come up with opportunity costs without project conditions -- what happens when they don't have locks and dams and can't ship in a rather cheap manner? We said, bring us their bills, their income tax forms. We weren't telling him to do analysis. We were asking him to get data." Eventually, a value was plugged into Sweeney's economic model -- a value that investigators claim Mudd fudged to justify lock expansion. That galls him. If he had wanted to cook the books, he said, he wouldn't have used such a conservative number in the economic formula. He would have picked a number that would have justified lock expansion from "St. Paul to St. Louis," he said. No one -- Sweeney nor the Corps -- has the information that would provide the value with certainty, agrees everyone interviewed for this story. Mudd challenges anyone, specifically the panel members of the National Academy of Sciences, who are doing a separate review of the study, to accurately forecast grain traffic variables for decades to come. He firmly believes the value that investigators called mathematically flawed will be found to be accurate. That's why he plans to send a letter of rebuttal to the Army's vice chief of staff, who admonished him. "I'll tell him, 'If I made the right decision, he better be prepared to make reparations.'" One week ago, Mudd put on the same military uniform he wore at his change of command ceremony. This time he wore Army green to commission his son, Ryan, as an ensign in the Navy during ceremonies at the University of Illinois. As a part of the ceremony, Mudd asked his son to raise his hand in the air. Then, Mudd said, his son "swore to God that he would defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic."_ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]