MTA Disbands Unit Following Audit;
Findings Referred to MTA Inspector General
Metro-North Railroad employees that were supposed to monitor
train conditions and crew performance were not on the job when they
were scheduled to work and performed poorly when they were, according to
an
audit
released today by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.
Auditors and investigators also found that a relative of a manager was
hired at an inflated salary over other more qualified employees, a
possible violation of the New York State Public Officers Law.
"The public got taken for a ride," DiNapoli said. "When
workers in this unit did bother to show up for their jobs, they did
shoddy work or personal tasks when they should have been ensuring that
trains were operating safely and smoothly. The MTA needs to do more to
tighten up accountability. I am pleased that this audit brought an end
to this situation."
The audit covered the period January 1, 2009 through June
20, 2011 and examined whether employees in Metro North's On-Board
Services Unit fulfilled their duties and performed their assigned tasks.
As of July 2011, the unit consisted of a supervisor and five employees
who earned a total annual compensation of $832,676.
Auditors and investigators examined 300 rides that were
expected to be taken and documented, of which 29 percent (89 rides) had
no logs to support that any work was done. In 14 percent of all rides,
staffers were not on the job, though they were scheduled to work and
were paid for those hours. None of the 211 logs that did exist reported
any significant performance or safety issue, raising serious questions
about the quality of oversight provided by the unit.
Staff was supposed to take six train trips daily to work an
eight-hour day, but auditors found that staff averaged only four train
trips daily. Auditors and investigators estimate that four unit staff
members were paid in excess of $170,000 annually for work that might not
have been performed.
Supervision was also almost non-existent, with no log of
time and attendance records, no observation of staffers on trains and no
written schedule of trains to be monitored. Auditors and investigators
also found that staffers surfed the internet during work hours,
including spending 6.5 hours on firearm sites and Google and 5 hours on
various commercial sites such as Chuck E. Cheese. Reviews of cell phone
usage found little communication between staff members and their
supervisor but did find out-of-state calls and calls home.
Auditors and investigators learned that an assistant vice
president in charge of the unit had referred a relative to work under
her supervision. The person was hired despite receiving a lower rating
than two other applicants for this position and was paid $84,700 despite
a posted starting salary of $57,226. This employee and the assistant
vice president had their paychecks deposited into the same bank account.
Counsel for Metro-North investigated this issue and gave
three separate reprimands to the assistant vice president. As a result,
operating procedures were changed regarding the hiring of relatives.
However, the Comptroller's Office has referred the matter to the Office
of the MTA Inspector General (OIG) for further investigation.
Auditors recommended that:
- MTA investigate time and attendance of the unit supervisor
and staff, take disciplinary action and take steps to recover any funds
paid for time not worked or charged to accruals and ensure that any
salary overpayment is taken into account for future pension payments;
- Evaluate the necessity of staffing for the unit, considering its demonstrated productivity and effectiveness to date;
- Re-examine whether the assistant vice president's relative should be transferred to a different work unit.
In response to the audit, the MTA disbanded the on-board
service managers unit and folded personnel into existing departments.
The authority also asked the OIG to review the records of the unit to
determine what additional actions should be taken. The MTA has agreed
to cooperate fully with the OIG regarding the allegations of
inappropriate hiring. The MTA's full response is included in the audit.
This report is the second in a series stemming from a
forensic audit of overtime practices at the MTA announced in 2010 by
DiNapoli. A forensic audit examines practices or organizations in which
there is a reasonable risk of fraud or illegality. Since 2007,
DiNapoli's office has completed 18 audits of MTA practices and
organizational structure. In the coming months, the Comptroller will
release further findings from the OSC's continuing forensic audit of
overtime practices.
DiNapoli encourages the public to help fight against fraud
and abuse. New Yorkers can report allegations of fraud, corruption and
abuse of taxpayer money by: calling the toll-free fraud hotline at
1-888-672-4555; filing a complaint online at
investigations@osc.state.ny.us;
or mailing a complaint to: Office of the State Comptroller
Investigations Unit, 110 State Street, 14th floor, Albany, NY 12236.
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