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michael_scarn_21 t1_jdzw4dh wrote

"It's the best transit system in the world and that's why I'm here," Eng said at his introductory news conference at a Green Line station in Newton.

Wow way to show you're either deluded or stupid in your first press conference.

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tryingkelly t1_jdzz5yg wrote

He seems like he’s got some good experience. But this isn’t a “one person” problem. The legislature is going to have to fund both service and the large amount needed to fix the system, and I just don’t see that happening. Best of luck to Phil

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NickEggplant t1_je037i5 wrote

Maybe I’m too optimistic but maybe he’s just trying to show love for the MBTA & its history as the oldest subway in the US. It may not be at its best right now, but the T has a lot of character and a rich history.

I love the MBTA too, that’s why I want it to be better!

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Pinwurm t1_je03dxy wrote

That’s low, considering the level of engineering and management skills required in the industry/for-profit equivalents.

It’s part of why it’s so hard to find talent.

But many people that run big city-transit companies don’t do it for the money. Especially if they’re already retired like Eng is. If he fixes the T, he does it for legacy.

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TorvaldUtney t1_je03sys wrote

There is some of this - but also, you need to pay highly to attract high level talent. Why would someone go to the MBTA when they would go to private corporations/engineering and make $500k instead? the MBTA offer needs to be commensurate with competitive private offers to actually attract someone talented/qualified.

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Unfair_Isopod534 t1_je049gz wrote

He is in the process of moving. Sounds like he has trouble finding a house. Good luck to you. Hopefully that won't discourage you from fixing MBTA.

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WinsingtonIII t1_je04byp wrote

Someone with this much responsibility in the private sector (essentially the CEO of a company with $2.55 billion annual budget and 2,700+ employees) would almost certainly make much more than that. For that reason, I tend to have a hard time getting outraged about paying very high level government employees with lots of responsibility a reasonable salary for that level of position (and still way below what someone similar in the private sector would get).

If you want a decent candidate with enough relevant experience to actually take these sort of jobs, you have to pay well. There aren't that many people out there who have experience leading a large transit organization.

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cycler_97 t1_je04e2y wrote

I despise this low IQ take. Any working professional like a software engineer, doctor, or lawyer in the late stage of their career can make that much or more.

This dude with 40+ years of engineering experience is hired to turn around an entire public transit system. I understand the potential for political corruption of civil servants but at the same time our bureaucracy is crippled because we can’t provide competitive financial incentive to hire top talent.

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Illustrious-Nose3100 OP t1_je04mlh wrote

Well, I don’t know anything about football but yes, that’s also crazy.

If they’re a winning coach then whatever.. but if they’re getting paid that to lose every game…

Edit: and my crazy I mean I’m salty I’m apparently in the wrong field of work but alas

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WinsingtonIII t1_je04w40 wrote

I also find it kind of funny how reddit always gets outraged about government employees making a decent salary for their level of responsibility, but then turns around and talks about how private sector workers deserve to get paid more.

And as you point out, for the level of experience and responsibility involved here, this salary isn't actually that crazy. He could certainly make more in the private sector for a similar level role.

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No_Judge_3817 t1_je050hf wrote

You'll all feel like fools taken for a ride when we get a Red Sox vs Mets World Series and suddenly an "emergency Fenway area transit shutdown" happens and some stoner jazz rock musician from Berklee is playing right field

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ForwardBound t1_je05x45 wrote

"Hey reddit, moving from NYC to Boston for a job, looking for a place. Ideally near the train. Budget is $11k a month. Would like to avoid roommates. Is Springfield too far away? Not familiar with the area. TIA."

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thebruns t1_je07crs wrote

Isnt LIRR known for spending $11 billion on a dead-end terminal 100 feet below an existing 100 track station that they couldnt be bothered to use?

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eaglessoar t1_je0853m wrote

should be more, with the amount of money they touch

imo govt jobs should be among the highest paying, i think this would lower costs overall

in MA the Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services spent 18B, if you can pay someone 1M a year to lower those expenditures by 1% you just paid that person's salary for 180 years

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dkharms t1_je0864m wrote

It's kind of low? A well running MBTA will generate billions in additional wealth, a poorly running MBTA will destroy the same. What's the cost of 100,000 people losing a 30 minutes of their day? That's just immediate cost, not downstream effects.

Pay them a few million, if they can do the job.

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RentAscout t1_je091je wrote

Can he fix the Big Dig debt dumped onto the MBTA books? Isn't that the big reason for lack of investment?

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Bryandan1elsonV2 t1_je0957h wrote

As a wise man once said, you can’t make a tomelette without breaking a few Gregs. If that salary is what’s necessary, then let’s do it. This is what I actually want my taxes going towards: making sure it actually works.

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RandyCheeseburgers01 t1_je09ski wrote

I cackled at that when I watched the press conference yesterday. Could we (as Americans) for once admit that we're flailing when it comes to implementing safe, reliable and effective public transit? There's so much to learn from other cities in Europe, east Asia and elsewhere. The whole "we're #1... at everything!" shtick is so tiresome, to me at least.

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sinoforever t1_je0a2wv wrote

470k is not a lot for a person with this resume

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Unfair_Isopod534 t1_je0a601 wrote

I don't have the numbers and i am definitely not an expert. I do wonder if the line would reduce traffic coming from Western Mass which could help reduce traffic within Boston itself. Plus it could open western MA as housing market. I am not disagreeing with you, just seeing positives of that connection.

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just_planning_ahead t1_je0b9js wrote

If it is more the any "one person" that can help, then let him fall on the sword in the attempt.

I don't mean I actually want him to fail, but even seeing someone even trying would be nice. Like for example, in Milton, their stairs to their train station being removed with no timeline to replacement implying years to even decades, the alleged issue is repairing the stairs triggers ADA compliance so the MBTA needs funding and thus a legislature issue. Milton seem to have tried to pull every string they have between political avenues and even lawsuits. But the MBTA barely responds back to Milton, much less than actually act like their hands are actually tied rather than acting like one tying hands by stonewalling to even give a response.

If the issue is the legislature, then it would be nice to see the MBTA actually act like that implying that it wants to improve but can't rather than the above which implies they just have no interest. If we look back to just Poftak, then just remembering during the year before the pandemic, he even used to say that the MBTA doesn't need more money as more money don't speed up their "fixes".

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tryingkelly t1_je0bmku wrote

I feel weirdly like I need to defend the T here and I don’t want too. He’s probably going to fail. Massachusetts politics are insular and corrupt, and notoriously unfriendly to outsiders, and he’s gonna need political cooperation to succeed.

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Commercial_Board6680 t1_je0bwsu wrote

I'm glad that Healey got someone who seems to be somewhat of an expert, but no one person has the power or authority to turn the MBTA into something we can be proud of. It's going to take a Legislature who have the guts to go forward with rail improvements.

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DarthNobody t1_je0f015 wrote

Maybe they'll finally finish the wholey unnecessary Courthouse Station renovation that's put one of the escalators out of commission for over a year now.

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Unfair_Isopod534 t1_je0f952 wrote

From my experience, Pike it's extremely busy. I think all the way to 84 junction. If we were to add stop in between Springfield and Boston, maybe some congestion would go away. Like i said not an expert, and like it was mentioned before, Boston itself has enough of problems.

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Marco_Memes t1_je0gefr wrote

I think he’s just trying to be enthusiastic, obviously we all know it’s not the best in the world. With proper funding and management maybe top 10 in the US but we’ve got a loonnnggggg way to go before we crack the top 50 in the world

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snorkeling_moose t1_je0hhsl wrote

Complete with the obligatory rampant hostility towards anyone asking that sort of question on this sub.

"Learn how to google" "use the sidebar idiot" "$11K? Go live in the seaport you finance/tech bro douchebag" "Don't move here, we're full"

MBTA Guy: You know what? Fine. Fix your damn trains on your own.

r/Boston: "No not like that."

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snorkeling_moose t1_je0hzym wrote

Right? Imagine if he opened his first speech like this:

"Look, this thing is a fucking turd, and I'm not gonna pretend polishing it is gonna help. You're gonna have to learn to enjoy shit sandwiches, losers. If anyone here actually cared about mass transit you wouldn't have let it get to this point. I have half a mind to privatize the entire thing and turn the tunnels into lab space."

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ta-dome-a t1_je0ikun wrote

Truly a smooth-brained take. For this level of responsibility and accountability you need someone with this kind of resume and experience, and that is expensive. If anything he is underpaid, and he surely could make a lot more doing a lot less in the private sector.

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citylightmosaic t1_je0iscq wrote

This is honestly much better than I expected

Not going to let my hopes get the best of me, but will remain cautiously optimistic

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Spirited-Pause t1_je0iw1f wrote

As a Long Islander who moved to Boston a few years ago…this should be interesting to watch

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RandyCheeseburgers01 t1_je0ki1u wrote

Four hours?? I'm not sure it's that long. But I hear your point. The idea still being tossed around; here's a recent Globe article on it. The general public seems to interpret it as a way to alleviate the housing crisis in Greater Boston. People will use any excuse they can get to avoid upzoning and building more housing in Boston and the inner suburbs and to appease the NIMBYs. I know some people are open the idea of supercommuting (I am not one of them). A Springfield-Boston commute would really only be viable if it's high speed rail, not the current iteration of the T commuter rail trundling along. I'm not holding my breath on that.

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johnmcboston t1_je0km4p wrote

I'm on the fence. Ch 25 did some 'man on the street' interviews in NY with LIRR riders who were less than impressed, but the could of course choose who to put on air. Fact wise, I'm curious if he 'fixed' the system, or just moved the goalposts.

I think back to David Gunn, who fixed every transit system he touched (and Amtrak) - except Boston, his only failure. Unions and politics prevented him form making any meaningful changes. Curious if the environment now is truly changed.

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UltravioletClearance t1_je0l2kh wrote

God I hope this doesn't become a reality. Opening up Springfield to the masses of rich-yet-not-rich-enough-for-Boston people will just lead to mass displacement of Springfield's existing residents and turn Springfield into yet another overpriced bedroom community of Boston that lacks any local economy on its own. Already seeing this down in New Bedford.

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jamesland7 t1_je0l2qr wrote

I mean ya get what you pay for, so that seems like an appropriate salary. But here's hoping he succeeds.

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therealrico t1_je0oe1x wrote

Right? This is a massively important job. Guy is in charge of how many with average daily ridership of 678k.

What he does has a massive impact on the city. If he’s able to help turn around the T and increase ridership, it could help traffic.

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Maxpowr9 t1_je0tdv0 wrote

Yep. It's why the State Legislature fought so hard against the FTA taking over. Same reason they're fighting against being audited. Corruption is likely rampant in State Government and MBTA.

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roar8510 t1_je0uenw wrote

I'll believe it when I see it. Poftak was covered as the "transit guy" when Ramirez was kicked out of the job. I have no faith in MBTA.

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IVGen_67 t1_je0xq3o wrote

The "crisis" was that stinking city's own doing.

Now they've got a self inflicted mess on their own hands that will only get worse, and is beyond all hope of fixing.

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hopefulcynicist t1_je0xtvn wrote

Not a one person problem for sure, but if this guy comes in with an actual agenda he can publicly call out / turn the screws on the legislature.

Some public/official finger pointing back at the legislature is long overdue.

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william-t-power t1_je0zinf wrote

I don't know, trains aren't supposed to turn around. That's what the tracks are for.

Jk

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nottoodrunk t1_je0zptr wrote

Oh sorry i was slightly wrong.

https://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/2012/02/29/mbta-big-dig-debt/

> The key point is that despite the moniker “Big Dig Debt,” all of these projects directly relate to transit expansion or improvements like extending the commuter rail on the South Shore and to Worcester, adding parking spaces, building out the Fairmount Line — not roadways and, certainly, not the Big Dig. They came about as a result of an agreement that had to be signed in order for the environmental permitting around the Big Dig to take place.

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miraj31415 t1_je0zqel wrote

In 2008 and 2009 LIRR on-time performance was a little above 95%. It declined to 90.4% in 2018 (the worst since 2000). Eng took over in 2018 after his predecessor’s improvement plan was mocked. Eng led creation of the “LIRR Forward” improvement plan in 2018, and in 2021 LIRR set the highest on-time performance record in 50 years (2020: 95.9%; 2021: 96.3%; 2022: 95.8%).

Eng did oversee a time where the LIRR performance went back to where it had been. So, much credit goes to Eng and I hope he did turn around LIRR but there may have been other factors, such as changes in budget or cuts in service that people don’t talk about.

Eng has been working in New York transportation for his whole career, from Junior Engineer up to Executive Deputy Commissioner of DOT and President of LIRR. It seems possible that he might bring assumptions and approaches from NY that are not a fit for MBTA. But I hope that Eng finds and fixes the right problems — godspeed!

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william-t-power t1_je0zy5x wrote

One person can be the solution. One person who has a clear perspective of the problem(s), a vision to move forward, and the power to do so; solves problems by the perspective and vision being good and getting people on board from the top down. That's how one person solves a big problem. They find the solution, get people to agree and work in concert, and sideline the people in the way.

Most people, though, aren't capable of this. Hopefully this guy is.

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resonant_waves t1_je0zz1m wrote

That's one of the two major issues arising from the major restructuring of the MBTA's finances two decades ago. The other is that it's funding was set based on the projected growth of state sales tax revenue, which is responsible for most of the MBTA's funding. However, sales tax revenues grew much more slowly than projected.

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Khearnei t1_je10ken wrote

I never quite understood why we don’t go overseas for stuff like this. Like, get me some people from the Swiss’s train system and have them weigh in. America’s public infrastructure lies on a spectrum of “well, it exists” to “serviceable”. There is no truly exceptional public transportation here. The big boys are all overseas. Call them in.

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dancognito t1_je135kq wrote

My wife works in municipal government and there does seem to be a mentality on the positive side that while you won't make as much, your job is very secure and you are entirely off the clock after 5pm (except for very specific days), but on the negative side some people take advantage of that and will not do any extra work no matter how minute and become almost completely useless but not quite useless enough to get fired.

And then there are things that I do or buy that I don't think twice about, whereas she would have to convince so many people for approval or it might technically be illegal to do the same thing.

Sometimes it feels like towns and cities could be so much better if they paid just a little bit more. Doesn't have to be the same as the private sector, but they'd open up themselves to such better candidates if they paid a couple grand more across the board.

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MassholeAsswhole t1_je15ypj wrote

> It seems possible that he might bring assumptions and approaches from NY that are not a fit for MBTA.

Bring on whatever the fuck he has. I feel like at this point ANYTHING is better that whatever shitshow is going on at the moment.

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SkiingAway t1_je16wpa wrote

  • Waterproofing repairs in the station - which is I believe what's put the escalator out of commission.

  • Building a new headhouse to the Northeast, basically in front of the District Hall building.

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SkiingAway t1_je17fq2 wrote

> Eng acknowledged that "it's clear MBTA service is not at the level it should be," and hasn't been for a long time. He did not list specific steps he would take on day one, but cited several broad areas that need immediate attention at the T, including safety, reliability, scheduling and finding more workers.

That sounds a lot like someone who is aware it is currently none of the things you mention.

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calinet6 t1_je1dizl wrote

Yes, correct, it’s complex and there are a lot of dependencies, but at the same time the difference a good leader can make even mired in challenge is night and day compared to a bad one.

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CaesarOrgasmus t1_je1dn1r wrote

Especially when you compare it to what it will ultimately cost to fix problems of this magnitude. Can't wait for a bunch of "fiscal conservatives" to start complaining about paying this guy half a mil when he hasn't personally reconstructed the T in his first six months

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Doctrina_Stabilitas t1_je1dzva wrote

That’s because of poor engineering, water infiltration would cause longer term and even more expensive damage if it wasn’t fixed

So completely necessary

There’s also flood resiliency work going on, also completely necessary because of climate change and the location of the seaport

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amo1337 t1_je1j6f3 wrote

Amityville, Copiague, Lindenhurst, Babylon, baby!

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MongoJazzy t1_je1oc8f wrote

There is no need to go to Switzerland to find people who are capable of operating a commuter rail system.

Our major impediment is that we typically recycle political hacks who have no idea what they are doing and are largely incompetent. That is why we see people like Pete Buttigieg as transportation secretary - he's totally inexperienced and incompetent at Transportation. So was his predecessor Elaine Chao.

Both parties do this - its not a partisan issue: they put incompetent people in important jobs and then wonder why government services are a complete failure.

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UserGoogol t1_je1u78f wrote

In many states the head coach of some sport at a public university is the highest paid state employee, but in Massachusetts it is the chancellor of UMass Medical School. Both are in professions with very sharp competition from the private sector, of course.

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Accurate-Temporary73 t1_je1wtsl wrote

I wonder what his solution will be to get out from under the terrible CRRC contract for the new trains

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wittgensteins-boat t1_je1x2kq wrote

I agree that it is the case, thanks to the settlement of the Feingold suit in 2006, and the two decades of investment since then.

New York only in the last year settled a similar accessibility suit, and is three decades away from coming into substantial compliance, under the settlement funding process.

And has another active suits relating to buses.

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bojangles312 t1_je1xwom wrote

Note to all Bostonians the LIRR is still a shit show.

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genius96 t1_je1z9s8 wrote

And because we don't pay government workers enough, we don't have capacity so we hire overpriced consultants. Like 2/3rds of the 7.7 billion spent on the SAS in NYC went to consultants. So we're barely penny-wise and just massively pound-foolish.

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SilverCyclist t1_je2bs2i wrote

A wise man once said that on your first day as MBTA chief you should hit the longest serving employee with a chair to show everyone else you mean business.

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sageagios t1_je2fuj9 wrote

They need a federal takeover like the Washington DC metro got in 2015. This is not purely a leadership issue. This is a system wide issue.

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wittgensteins-boat t1_je4z4cj wrote

Not the legislature's move.

A crisis of repairs needed for new rolling stock to be able to operate on the line, after an egregious fire.

That is safety compliance expenditure, even if inadequate, compared to decades of inadequate funding for capital maintenance.

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NoButThanks t1_je50qpp wrote

It's the only way to attract talent. Many arguments are: "just get European rail heads to come and fix it since the trains are so great there.". We can't afford them. Their salaries are higher. Pay trash and get trash. This seems like a good middle ground of getting an experienced rail manager with direct experience of turning a system around. He's still fucked here, but it's a start.

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