Sandy soil Apex says it mostly encountered trying to drill a sewer line. Credit: Image courtesy Apex Directional Drilling

Apex Directional Drilling, the company that earlier this year abruptly halted work on part of the Martin Slough Interceptor, a massive sewer system upgrade, is suing the City of Eureka for upwards of $6,280,000, according to a complaint filed May 23 in Humboldt County Superior Court.

The complaint alleges breach of contract for construction of public work, breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing, and breach of warranty and fraudulent concealment.

Apex’s argument centers around its claim that the city misrepresented the soils that Apex would be drilling in. Apex says its drillers encountered mainly sand, which prolonged the work and made it more difficult; the company even left its expensive drill steel behind, inside Pine Hill, saying the hole had collapsed around it. The complaint seeks damages plus interest and costs of the suit.

In April, after Apex’s accusations became public, city staff declined to discuss in detail Apex’ accusations. But City Engineer Charles Roecklein did offer that the city “worked very hard trying to come up with a reasonable way forward with Apex.” 

You can read our previous coverage of the dispute here and here. And here’s a link to the complaint:

Heidi Walters worked as a staff writer at the North Coast Journal from 2005 to 2015.

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1 Comment

  1. I have been drilling for 30+ years who in right mind would think there would no sand near the ocean
    I think a contractor should have a contingency plan for most reasonable scenarios, sand would be one.
    City has some culpability for not getting a contractor that can finish job no matter what the conditions

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