Archive for June, 2011
MTA IG uncovers chain-link fence fraud
Posted by: | CommentsDid you hear the one about the chain-link fence company submitting bogus work claims? That’s the focus of Pete Donohue’s column today, and the story is an odd one. Apparently, the MTA contracted with Long Island-based the American Chain Link & Construction company in the “early 2000s” to provide fencing around various transit properties. The company submitted invoice “devoid of any backup documentation to explain what expenses the company had incurred for such things as materials, equipment rentals and labor, according to the inspector general’s office” and got paid anyway.
At some point, the MTA Inspector General got wind of the fraud and began investigating. Only 14 of 100 invoices had enough detail to allow the IG to examine the work, and all but one of those were deemed fraudulent. Suffolk County authorities claim the lack of documentation meant they could pinpoint only $31,000 in fraudulent charges while the case settled for a guilty plea and the forfeiture of $60,000 the MTA still owes American. Donohue even mentions that “bus managers in the same transit agency, meanwhile, routinely challenged American’s bills and paid less than what the company initially sought.” What a strange story.
In NJ, proximity to rail becomes alluring
Posted by: | CommentsA few days ago, UBS made headlines when it announced its interest in moving back to Manhattan. While the cynical among us wondered if this was just a ploy to gain more favorable tax breaks by playing Connecticut off of New York, company sources claimed the move is necessary in order to attract young talent. Stamford, after all, isn’t exactly a happening city for good minds right out of college.
In New Jersey, a different story is unfolding: Transit-oriented development has become all the rage. Dana Rubinstein reports in The Journal today:
As New Jersey slowly emerges from the economic downturn, its office market is beginning to transform into one concentrated around train stations. Businesses have been leasing space in areas served by train stations at a higher rate than those only accessible by car, according to real-estate firms. The trend reflects demographic shifts and higher gasoline prices as well as changes in worker priorities.
For example, businesses are beginning to recognize that many employees care less about living in sprawling estates and more about living in diverse areas with restaurants and entertainment within walking distance, notes Robert Puentes, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program. “All these things are starting to add up and companies are very attuned to it,” he says…
The average vacancy rate in so-called transit hubs in New Jersey was 14.7% in the first quarter of this year, compared with 29.7% in areas not considered transit hubs, according to real-estate brokerage Jones Lang LaSalle. The report defines transit hubs as the 40 million square feet comprising office space in Newark, Elizabeth, Jersey City, Hoboken, Paterson, East Orange, New Brunswick, Trenton and Camden, Morristown and Metropark, all cities with rail service.
At the same time, asking rents in transit hubs were higher, averaging $27.43 compared with the rest of the suburban market’s $23.51, according to the Jones Lang LaSalle report. Since 2009, more than 20% of all leasing has occurred in the transit hubs, compared with 15 percent before 2009. Further, of the 52 leases larger than 100,000 square feet signed in New Jersey since 2008, 22 of them were in transit hubs.
Panasonic recently made headlines when it decided to move from Secaucus to Newark. While the decision has been driven, in part, by a generous tax credit, company officials say accessibility played a role in the move as well. “We have literally 1,000 people driving cars every day,” Peter Fannon, a company VP, said. “The key element for us, which really brought the focus back to Newark, were the environmental benefits, specifically the ability to be in an urban center where there are housing, restaurants, hotels, and most importantly, mass transit facilities, all within a three- or four-block radius of our new location.”
With these trends emerging and with policies in place to encourage hub-based growth and transit-oriented development, it would be an ideal time for New Jersey to move forward with a plan that will greatly improve trans-Hudson commuter rail access while cutting down travel time. Unfortunately, private businesses and state leaders aren’t seeing eye-to-eye. As development policies and economic realities push TOD, the ARC Tunnel plans, which will look more and more necessary as time passes, remain dearly departed.
Technology and the law of unintended consequences
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Countdown clocks at Bergen Street offer a glimpse into the MTA's true headways.
As regular readers know, I am a big supporter of the MTA’s new countdown clocks. In fact, outside of those people who rabble over money spent on something they personally deem superfluous without understanding the rationale behind the expenditures, I’ve never met anyone who doesn’t find the countdown clocks calming. We know how far away the next train is; we know the trains are moving closer as time ticks away; and we no longer have to deal with the mysteries of waiting and peering into darkened tunnels.
Yet, the countdown clocks allow us to sneak a peak at the MTA’s operations, and now and then, we see things we do not like. Let me tell a story that I’ve told in various forms before. I wish I didn’t have to keep repeating myself, but this type of incident happens far more regularly than I would like.
To set the stage, it is Friday night at 11:38 p.m. I have just taken the 4 train back to Brooklyn from Yankee Stadium, and I am hoping that I won’t need to wait long for a connecting 2 or 3 train that will take me to Grand Army Plaza. When we slowly pass Hoyt St., I can see the countdown clocks threatening a 13-minute wait until the next 2 train is due to arrive, and I hope that there is a train at Nevins awaiting connecting passengers.
When we pull into Nevins St., I get my hopes up. There’s a 3 train across the platform, but the 3 train has its doors closed. At that hour of the night and with the next train so far behind, I had hopes that the operators would grow less worried about adhering to the MTA’s fantasy idea of a schedule and more concerned with customer service. Instead, as the doors on the 4 open, the 3 train pulls away. So much for those poor saps who have to get to Bergen St., Grand Army Plaza or Eastern Parkway. Instead of waiting for 12 minutes at Nevins, I opted for the 20-minute walk back home from Atlantic Ave.
To me, there is nothing quite as frustrating as watching a local depart as an express pulls in when nighttime headways at their worst. We’ve heard frequently from the MTA about improving on-time performance, but as I’ve said in the past, on-time performance means little if customers aren’t inconvenienced by it. On Friday night, more than a few of us sighed audibly or cursed under our breaths as that 3 train pulled out. We were inconvenienced by it, and because of the countdown clocks, we knew that the next local train would be an interminable 12 minutes away.
Enter the law of unintended consequences. In the days before countdown clocks, I likely would have waited for that next 2 train, growing more and more impatient with every passing minute and thinking ill of the train operator who left us stranded at Nevins. With the countdown clocks, I could better plan my trip home, but I also knew with certainty that the local train should have waited 20 extra seconds for a connecting express because the next train wasn’t particularly close.
Meanwhile, the countdown clocks gave me a glimpse of the MTA’s true headways as well, and I’ve noticed this problem with some frequency. Ideally, headways at 11:40 p.m. on a Friday at Nevins St. would be around 8-10 minutes per train, and technically they are. There is, however, a catch. The countdown clocks told me that the next 2 train was 12 minutes away while the next 3 was 17. Two trains in 17 minutes makes sense, but no trains in 12 minutes doesn’t. When different routes — in this case the Flatbush Ave.-bound 2 and the New Lots Ave.-bound 3 — share a track, the headways might sound convenient, but often, bunching happens. The countdown clocks lay it all out there for everyone to see.
Ultimately, my trip home lasted a few minutes less than it would have had I waited for the next train, and I was able to take a nice walk on a warm evening to let out my frustration. But with technology that allows us to see just when the next train is coming, the MTA should ask its train operators to think about customers when its late at night and headways are long. The extra few seconds would make for many more satisfied customers.
Weekend work impacting travel on seven lines
Posted by: | CommentsLight weekend of work. Here you go.

From 12 noon to 5 p.m., Saturday, June 11, the 116th Street station is EXIT ONLY due to the 116th Street Festival. Customers will not be allowed entry into this station in order to prevent overcrowding on platforms and stairways. For Manhattan or Bronx-bound service, customers should use the 110th or 125th stations instead.

From 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday, June 12, 77th Street station is EXIT ONLY due to the Puerto Rican Day Parade. Customers will not be allowed entry into this station in order to prevent overcrowding on platforms and stairways. For uptown or downtown service, customers should use the 68th or 86th Street stations instead.

From 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, June 11, Flushing-bound 7 trains skip 82nd, 90th, 103rd, and 111th Streets due to the installation of cable trays, surface prep and elevated structure painting at 111th Street.

From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, June 11 to 5 a.m. Sunday, June 12, Manhattan-bound A trains run on the F line from Jay Street-MetroTech to West 4th Street, then local to 59th Street-Columbus Circle due to platform edge, mechanical and electrical work at the Fulton Street Transit Center. Note: During this time, there is no A train service at Fulton Street in either direction.

During the overnight hours, from 11 p.m. Friday, June 10 to 6:30 a.m. Saturday, June 11, and from 11 p.m. Saturday, June 11 to 5 a.m. Sunday, June 12, uptown A trains skip 72nd, 81st, 86th, 96th, 103rd, 110th, and 116th Streets due track work south of 110th Street.

From 6:30 a.m. to midnight, Saturday, June 11, uptown C trains run on the F line from Jay Street-MetroTech to West 4th Street due to platform edge, mechanical and electrical work at the Fulton Street Transit Center. Note: During this time, there is no C train service at Fulton Street in either direction.

From 6:30 a.m. to midnight, Saturday, June 11 uptown C trains skip 72nd, 81st, 86th, 96th, 103rd, 110th and 116th Streets due to track work south of 110th Street.

From 11 p.m. Friday, June 10 to 5 a.m. Sunday, June 12, Queens-bound F trains skip 14th Street and 23rd Street due to track work north of 23rd Street.

From 11 p.m. Friday, June 10 to 5 a.m. Sunday June 12, there are no G trains between Hoyt-Schermerhorn Sts. and Church Avenue due to track work north of Hoyt-Schermerhorn Sts. G trains operate in two sections:
- Between Court Square and Bedford-Nostrand Avs and
- Between Bedford Nostrand Avs and Hoyt-Schermerhorn Sts. (every 20 minutes)
Note: During this time, service at Smith-9th Sts. is limited to one direction. For service from this station, customers should take a Coney Island-bound F to 4th Av-9th Street and transfer to a Manhattan-bound F.

From 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 11, Brooklyn-bound N trains skip 30th Avenue, Broadway, 36th Avenue and 39th Avenue due to structure painting.

From 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 11, N trains run local between DeKalb Avenue and 59th Street in both directions due to structure painting.
Veolia chosen for LI Bus contract
Posted by: | CommentsVeolia Transportation will take control of operations for Long Island Bus beginning in 2012, Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano announced today. The Illinois-based subsidiary of a French company bested MV Transit and First Transit in the bidding, and they have promised to “keep existing fares and levels of service through the end of 2012,” Newsday reports. After 2012, it’s anyone’s guess what Nassau County’s bus service and fare structure will look like.
The decision, of course, is not without controversy. While transit advocates and local politicians do not believe that Veolia will be able to maintain service levels and fares, the company apparently has close ties to Nassau County’s politicians. As Newsday notes, “Veolia hired D’Amato’s firm, Park Strategies, as consultant during the county bidding process. Park Strategies vice president Robert McBride, a well-known GOP lobbyist who hosted a fundraiser for Mangano in McBride ‘s home in January, headed the effort locally.”
Meanwhile, Veolia does not have a stellar safety record, and Nassau Country representatives do not believe that the company can provide the same service as the MTA without a greater subsidy from the county or higher fares. “This is going to end up costing us so much more money,” County Legislator Kevan Abrahams said. “One way or the other, we’re going to have to put money into this. And I hate to think that it’s going to come from the riders.” What a mess.
Finding the trains least air conditioned
Posted by: | CommentsAhhhh, the first heat wave of summer. Time for a rush on air conditioners, the stench of garbage to return to the streets and, of course, articles about how hot it is in the subway system. Today’s piece comes to us from the Daily News, and it serves as a guide to the hottest and coldest trains. Pete Donohue reports that 93 percent of subway cars had temperatures “within MTA guidelines” last year. That’s defined as a temperature between 58 and 78 degrees.
While those numbers are reassuring, Donohue discovered that the worst trains for beating the heat are the above-ground Franklin Ave. Shuttle and the C train cars. Only 83 percent of the shuttle cars were properly climate-controlled while the air conditioner failed on the C’s aging R32s nine percent of the time. The L, meanwhile, had 100 percent compliance with the temperature guidelines.
For its part, the MTA is optimistic that fewer cars will be too hot this summer. A spokesman told Donohue that mechanics along the C line “replaced all of the compressors and made other fixes over the winter.” So now which New York news outlet will cover the story about how hot subway platforms get first? My money’s on this guy.
A case study in being nearby
Posted by: | CommentsWhile discussing the suburban payroll tax revolt last night, I briefly alluded to USB’s looming decision to move back to Manhattan. I went to spend a little bit more on that story tonight as it highlights the importance of both fast transit for the suburbs and the allure of being close to it all.
The story goes a little bit something like this: In 1996, UBS garnered headlines when it became one of the first major financial institutions to move its headquarters out to Stamford, Connecticut. Thanks to some generous tax breaks by the state as well as the promise of subsidized office construction, the company parked its trading floor, the largest in the world, nearby the Stamford Metro-North stop.
Now, they want to move back. And why? Because they’re just too far away from where people live. Charles V. Bagli has more and his writing is very telling:
Now, though, UBS is having buyer’s remorse. It turns out that a suburban location has become a liability in recruiting the best and brightest young bankers, who want to live in Manhattan or Brooklyn, not in Stamford, Conn., which is about 35 miles northeast of Midtown. The firm has also discovered that it would be better to be closer to major clients in the city.
As a result, UBS is seriously considering a reverse migration that would bring its investment banking division and up to 2,000 bankers and traders back to Wall Street and a new skyscraper at the rebuilt World Trade Center, according to real estate executives and city officials.
“They just can’t hire the bankers and traders they need,” said one landlord who has spoken with UBS but requested anonymity so as not to alienate a potential tenant.
A piece in today’s Times delves even further into the employee reaction to this news. “I live in Manhattan, so I do the reverse commute,” Jon Gimpel, a UBS employe, said. “The train ride is like 45 minutes, then I ride my bike through Central Park to get home. If UBS moves back to Manhattan, I’ll save $300 a month in train fare and major aggravation. Awesome.”
And that’s the truth of it. Right now, people — especially younger people — want to be close to the city. They want to be able to commute to work with one fare card or walk or bike. They don’t the aggravation of a long train ride to and from work every day. They want, in a nutshell, the pinnacle of transit-oriented development.
Now don’t get me wrong; for some people, the Connecticut suburbs are a few place to live. One of my friends found himself working for a financial institution up there around four or five years ago, and he made it work. But the nightlife was very limited, and the restaurants varied from overpriced to mediocre. And transit-oriented development can work in the suburbs if the jobs draw from the resident base. Here, though, the jobs drew from Manhattan, and that doesn’t work.
I doubt UBS’ actions are going to signal some grand trend of big companies repatrioting to urban areas, but it’s worth dwelling on development priorities. The ‘burbs might be willing to grant the tax break, but the people want an urban life, transit and all. Once-an-hour commuter rail just doesn’t cut it.
LI Bus fate to be determined tomorrow
Posted by: | CommentsAs the MTA has already voted to withdraw funding from Long Island Bus by the end of the year, Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano is moving forward with a plan no one thinks will succeed. According to Newsday, Mangano will unveil the private company picked to operate the popular Nassau County bus service. The winning bidder will be Veolia Transportation, MV Transit or First Transit and will have to be approved by the county legislature before it can begin to operate the buses next year.
The MTA and Mangano have been at odds over Long Island Bus funding for a while. Despite funding agreements fund the transit network, Nassau County contributes just $9.1 million to the bus system’s operations, and the MTA has asked for upwards of $26 million more. Mangano has refused to do so and has insisted that a private company acting without increased subsidies and turning a profit will be able to offer the same service for the same fares.
Transit advocates are rightly skeptical, but the county executive is moving forward with the plan anyway. “Financially, it doesn’t make sense,” Kate Slevin of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign said. “They’ll have to contribute a lot more money if they want it to function even remotely like it does now.” For more on this long-simmering dispute, check out my archives. I don’t think Nassau Country commuters are going to think too highly of the entity that emerges from this move.
MTA going to the dogs
Posted by: | CommentsIf you smell something, bark at something. That could be the newest MTA slogan after their K-9 unit took him first place at the U.S. Police Canine Association 2011 trials for explosives detection. The authority announced that Officer Kevin Pimpinelli and his pup Mullen won the crown last month. The trials tested human/canine enforcement teams on the speed and accuracy with which they can locate explosives while “adhering to accepted searching practices and procedures.” The team beat out 28 others at regionals and seven pairs in the finals.
Pimpinelli spoke glowing off his dog. “I’ve been working with him for five years, and right from day one he’s had an excellent temperament for a police canine,” he said. “I could bring him into a classroom full of kindergarteners and he’d be the gentlest dog you can imagine. And then if I gave the command, he’d instantly be searching for explosives.”
The MTA, meanwhile, praised its K-9 unit overall. “Canines are invaluable partners with capabilities that no human or machine can duplicate” Douglas Zeigler, MTA Director of Security, said. “This national honor helps to confirm that the efforts we have made since 9/11 to create a strong anti-terror canine force have been effective. But the real confirmation can be seen every day on the front lines, where our canines help to keep our railroad customers and employees safe and secure.” So there you go.
Musings on footing the bill for transit service
Posted by: | CommentsDespite the fact that the State’s legislative year ends in just 11 days, Senators Lee Zeldin and Jack Martins aren’t going to give up on their attempts at repealing the state’s payroll mobility tax. Doing so would rob the MTA of $1.3-$1.5 billion annually that it needs to meet its budget mandate, and while these State Senators seem to think the MTA can just make these cuts materialize without further impacting fares or service, they are also quite content to shift more of the funding burden onto the backs of New York City residents. It just doesn’t make sense.
So what have Zeldin and Martins done? With the help of a bipartisan group of Senators and Assembly representatives, they have introduced a bill that would gradually repeal the payroll tax in the suburban counties while lessening the percentage but keeping it in place for New York City residents. If you care to read the memo or the full text of the bill, you can check it out right here.
As Martins explained, the proposal basically boils down to three topline actions:
- Small businesses and non-profits with 25 employees or less and schools would be completely exempt from the MTA payroll tax as of Jan. 1, 2012.
- Starting on Jan. 1, 2012, the remaining MTA payroll tax for Nassau and Suffolk Counties would begin a gradual reduction, resulting in a $35.4 million in savings to Nassau County taxpayers in that first year alone.
- This would lead to the complete elimination of this onerous tax by 2014. The resulting savings to Nassau and Suffolk county taxpayers is projected to be $220 million per year. That’s $220 million back in our local economy.
As NewsLI.com noted, “within New York City’s five boroughs, the tax would be reduced to .28% on January 1, 2013 and .21% beginning on January 1, 2014. The payroll tax would remain in effect at the .21% rate for New York City’s five boroughs.” We’ll return to this tax discrepancy in a second.
The argument these representatives are making are identical to the ones I discussed in this post back on June 1. Basically, after speaking with MTA officials and examining the agency’s budget documents, these state officials think the authority can somehow cut over 10 percent of its costs. The proposals Zeldin has put forward are laughably inadequate and would, as I noted, generate tens of millions of dollars of savings and not $1.3 billion. Without a replacement funding solution — a more equitable tax, bridge tolls, congestion pricing, higher fares, less service — the MTA simply cannot afford to lose the payroll tax.
That’s an old story, though, and I want to take a quick look at a new story. Essentially, because they campaigned on the issue, these state representatives are proposing something fairly outrageous: They want to eliminate the tax in suburban counties while New York City folk continue to prop up the transit system to a great and substantial degree. They want us to pay more than we already do.
Right now, New York City Transit riders are shouldering more of the funding burden than anyone else. New York City Transit’s farebox operating ratio is clocking in at 64 percent while Metro-North and the LIRR are seeing figures of 58.7 percent and 48.6 percent, respectively. Already, dollars spent in New York City are subsidizing transit trips. By eliminating the tax outside of the suburbs and keeping it in place in the city, our dollars will further subsidize commuter rail travel. Maybe we should ask Zeldin and Martins to guarantee that any payroll mobility tax generated in New York City be siphoned only to Transit operations. We’ll see how long commuter constituents last as service degrades and fares climb.
In laying out an argument for repealing the tax, Martins further claims that the MTA “has the luxury of approximately $1.3 billion in cash reserves from which they can draw if for some reason they are unable to balance their budget through cost savings measures alone.” This though is a claim not backed up by evidence. The MTA’s latest budget projects show a reserve fund of $100 million in the adopted 2011 budget. If the MTA has that much of a cash reserve, they would risk defaulting on debts if they started using it to pare down the operating deficit, but I see no evidence that it exists in the first place.
Eventually, suburban politicians will have to come to terms with a tradeoff. They can claim that the payroll mobility tax is a “job stifling” “iniquitous” one as Martins contends, but they have to recognize that worse or more expensive transit service will also have a calamitous effect on jobs. Just ask UBS how they feel off the beaten track of reliable transit. Without a source of replacement funds, the payroll tax, for better or worse, simply cannot be eliminated, and suburban representatives cannot eat their transit cake without footing the bill.










