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Barack Obama

Want a Clean Bill of Health for the MTA? Call Obama.

11:28 AM EDT on May 8, 2009

    Former MTA CEO Lee Sander spent the last two-and-a-half years doing his best to make the MTA a transparent, accountable public agency, and in doing so restore its reputation. He let the sunshine in, but was unable to undo the damage to the agency's image caused by years of attacks from transit advocates, unions and politicians.

    In politics, reputation matters. The scapegoating of the MTA has undermined the political case for
    transit funding and given cover to the hypocrites in Albany who blame the
    MTA, instead of themselves, for the agency's funding woes. Looking forward, it
    is critical that the MTA burnish its reputation as an effective and
    accountable public agency and excellent investment for public funds. There are many political forces that benefit
    from keeping the MTA as a scapegoat, its reputation besmirched. So, a clean
    bill of health for the MTA requires an unimpeachable, politically formidable force
    far above the gutter of the New York political fray. How about President Obama?

    The president has
    spent enormous energy restoring public confidence in the banking
    system. A key
    part of his efforts has been the Treasury Department’s careful scrutiny of bank
    management and finances. Mayor Bloomberg and Governor Paterson should
    ask President Obama to help restore public confidence in
    the MTA by ordering the Federal Transit
    Administration to send in a team of management, finance and policy
    experts. The MTA
    receives millions in
    federal support and the U.S. government has a strong interest in seeing
    that money well spent. The FTA team would definitively and publicly
    assess
    the state of the MTA, detailing both its good and bad management
    practices while clarifying and vetting agency finances.

    Most transit experts
    believe the MTA is a relatively well run public agency which compares favorably
    with other big American and foreign transit systems. The agency’s biggest problem is that the state
    and city have spent the last two decades reducing their financial support,
    loading the agency with debt, and making it overly dependent on volatile, cyclical
    funding like the mortgage recording tax. The FTA's assessment would bring these
    facts to the fore and lay the political groundwork for a stronger case for
    transit funding.

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