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Former MTA CEO Sander Defends Agency In Op-Ed

Lee Sander, who resigned as MTA CEO last month, has an op-ed in the NY Times today and goes to town on the state lawmakers that dragged out the process for an MTA bailout, writing, "In the political process that led up to this rescue, damage was inflicted on the M.T.A.’s reputation." He elaborates:

Elected state and city officials leveled the old and discredited accusation that the agency keeps two sets of books, one real and one for public consumption, and suggested that agency officials were untrustworthy and corrupt, comparing them to Bernard Madoff, the self-confessed mastermind of an enormous Ponzi scheme. These false charges landed enough sensational headlines to help camouflage the politicians’ own inability to reach a timely agreement on how to finance public transportation.

The M.T.A.’s shortcomings are well known: crowded subway cars (ridership has increased by 50 percent in the past decade), outdated signal technology that limits the number of trains that can run per hour, decaying subway stations, buses stuck in traffic, the still incomplete Second Avenue line. But long-time New Yorkers who remember the transit system’s sorry state during the 1970s know how much it has improved in 25 years. Even today, despite a global recession, the agency continues to make progress.

Sander goes on to tout how quite a few subway lines have improved recently and point out the MTA is "burdened by convoluted and overlapping operating charters, work rules and politically dictated mandates." He hopes for that whoever is selected to lead the MTA next has the full support of elected official and warns, "If, on the other hand, politicians continue to run against the M.T.A., their rhetoric may become self-fulfilling prophecy, and the system may devolve into the state of dysfunction they denounce."

Second Avenue Sagas calls Sander a "sacrificial lamb" and suggests, "We all should push Albany for a fully-funded five-year capital plan and a true commitment to public transit." And here's a bit about the "ghost of two sets of books."

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Comments [rss]

  • Outter Burrougher

    in the people's defense, most people don't buy the 2 sets of books argument - we believe there is just one highly mismanaged set of books.

  • Trilby16

    Sorry, Elliot, but it doesn't matter who says it-- the MTA has been poorly run and our real-life experience of commuting gets worse and worse. Facts are facts. However much money gets poured into the system, it's never enough, so that is discouraging. Yes, the system is better than in the 70's but that is not saying much at all!

    This op ed was terribly self-serving and intellectually dishonest, IMO.

  • PKMKII

    But he's still right, in that politicians do use the MTA's problems as a red herring to distract from their own incompetence and inability to make Albany even remotely functional.

  • Trilby16

    Sanders is a big cry-baby.

  • Trilby16

    It's not much of a red herring if the politicians charges against the MTA are true, which I believe they are. Plus, politicians have been dissing the MTA recently because of the recent staggering shortfalls, the recent cuts in service, and recent threats of huge fare increases.

    It's not like they picked it out of a hat to hide behind. Their complaints are timely and for the most part accurate, even if they may stink on ice themselves.



  • Gringcorp

    I never understood why the guy who knew how to run a transit system was out and the real estate developer kept his job during this rationalisation.

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