Under Sander, How “Bloated and Wasteful” Is the MTA?

sander.jpgPhoto: Brad Aaron

A Monday editorial from Crain’s questioned the wisdom of sacrificing MTA head Lee Sander as part of any transit rescue plan, as rumors swirl that Governor David Paterson wants Marc Shaw to return to the agency’s top spot.

While making the seemingly obvious argument that maintaining a healthy transit system is vital to the region’s economy, the piece (behind the Crain’s pay wall) lays blame on the Pataki administration — during which Shaw previously served as MTA CEO — for having "loaded up the MTA with debt that’s now coming home to roost."

[Sander] has become a target for those who believe the MTA is bloated
and wasteful. In truth, Mr. Sander has wisely streamlined
operations and cut costs in his two years in the post. He hasn’t solved
all of the MTA’s problems. Who could in such a short time? And he hasn’t been
the most effective politician in selling what he has done. But is that
really a fault? Shouldn’t the job go to a seasoned transportation
professional rather than a politician?

We asked MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan about cost-cutting measures
initiated under Sander. The list is pretty extensive. Donovan points to the following efficiencies imposed "even as demand is at levels not seen since the early 1950s": elimination of 410 administrative positions;
establishment of Regional Bus Operations, merging three companies into one; creation of a Business Service Center to "consolidate duplicative back office functions"; assignment of managers to oversee individual subway lines;
formation of a blue-ribbon panel to "encourage competition and increase
bidding on capital construction projects"; and increases in advertising
revenue "from $38 million in 1997 to $125 million in 2008."

In addition, says Donovan:

Budget increases in recent years have come from uncontrollable factors
like increases in debt service, which cost the MTA $793 million in 2002
and is projected to rise to $2.3 billion by 2012. But we are
successfully trimming the expenses that we have control over. From 2004
to 2007, the MTA reduced its controllable costs by five percent. Building on that
reduction, Lee Sander called on the MTA and its agencies to cut our
budgets by six percent over four years. As the economic picture has
darkened, he accelerated that six percent cut so that it is now required to take
place over three years instead of four. All told, these cuts will
result in a cumulative 11 percent budget cut.

Crain’s editors also called on local business leaders — Republicans in particular — as well as the Real Estate Board of New York, to get behind the "fair and equitable" Ravitch plan to bolster MTA finances.

Do the likes of, say, Carl Kruger, care about Sander’s streamlining efforts as long as they can continue to cast the MTA as the villain of the funding debacle?

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