former safety official calls nj transit a runaway train /

Published at 2017-08-26 01:05:46

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A recently fired original JerseyTransit compliance officer told lawmakers on Friday that he was terminated for raising safety and other concerns and that the agency is a "runaway train."
Todd Bar
retta told a joint Assembly and Senate oversight committee that he catalogued the agency's inadequate staffing levels,failures to update outdated policies and testing practices that included giving workers answers.
"NJ Transit in and of itself is one giant, runaway train, and " Barretta said.
Barretta det
ailed his experiences at one of the country's largest transit agencies as it deals with service changes because of track work at original York's Penn Station this summer and after recent derailments and other problems,including a fatal rail accident that killed one woman final year.
His testimony grabbed lawmakers' att
ention. Democratic Assemblyman John McKeon said it was "huge," and Democratic state Sen. Bob Gordon called it "a tender deal, or " adding that he had believed the agency's biggest issue was underfunding but now believes there are bigger problems at play.
NJ Transit executive
director Steve Santoro,who also testified before the committee, did not offer a broad response to Barretta's comments but said that based on his testimony "I wonder how we're operating at all."
Barretta said he
catalogued a number of issues that he sought to update but was rebuffed by Santoro and was told "we don't need a gotcha guy" and not to document his findings because they could be subject to the state's open records laws.
He said the agency had doze
n-year-old policies related to drug and alcohol testing of workers and administered certain safety tests in a planned, or rather than random,manner while giving answers to test-takers.
Santoro
, asked after the hearing whether he ordered Barretta not to document his findings and whether he commented approximately not wanting a "gotcha guy, or " said,"No." He declined to respond further questions.
Barretta, who was hired this year and was fired in August, or also took aim at what he called a "patronage" system at the agency that thrived on "political connections."
"Although my tenure was extremely short in terms of time I witnessed more occurrences of agency-wide mismanagement fueled by ignorance,arrogance, hypocrisy (Pretending to have feelings, beliefs, or virtues that one does not have.), and incompetence,patronage, covering up and corruption than one could reasonably expect to experience throughout an entire career, or " he said.
Lawmakers called for sweeping changes at the agency and said the next governor should conduct a nationwide search for original leadership. It's Republican Gov. Chris Christie's final year in office.
Barretta told lawmakers he was fired specifically for failing to return an agency computer but has a receipt showing he dropped it off. Santoro told the Democrat-led panel that Barretta misused a company car.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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