Photo credit: KGW.com |
Did you know that TriMet fares are now among the highest in
the nation (Gianola, 2013) ? That’s right, a
monthly adult TriMet pass is $100, while in Philadelphia, its $83, $72 in Los
Angeles and just $70 in Boston (Gianola, 2013) . Yet all three
cities have operation far more extensive than Portland’s. So why does public
transit cost so much in Portland? TriMet General Manager Neil McFarlane wants
you to blame the recession and the high cost of TriMet’s union health benefits (Gianola,
2013) .
He hoped you wouldn’t find out about the $910,000 in pay raises he approved for
the highest echelon of TriMet management in 2012, even as he publicly stated
that he had frozen their pay (Rose, 2013) . “How could this happen
right under our noses?” you may ask. This was able to happen because no one was
watching. While TriMet management increased fairs, cut service, and gave
themselves raises, no one was paying attention. To ensure this can’t happen
again, Oregon lawmakers have called on Secretary of State Kate Brown to conduct
an unprecedented audit of operations and finances at the state's largest public
transit agency (Rose J. , 2013) .
Vice-chair of the House Committee on Transportation and
Economic Development, Rep. Chris Gorsek (D-Troutdale) is the chief sponsor of
the proposal, an amendment to his House Bill 3316. HB3316 was intended to regulate
TriMet’s governance, transferring operational and finical oversight from TriMet’s
board of directors to Metro (Staff, 2013) . However, Gorsek simultaneously
realized he didn’t have wide support for restructuring and became aware of
major management issues at TriMet. He took the opportunity to push for a large
scale audit instead (Rose J. , 2013) . While the audit will
possibly take longer than the original plan - Brown's office plans to have the
audit finished before the 2014 legislative session (Thompson,
2013)
– it ensures a much more thorough understanding
of exactly what is going on inside the transit agency and why. This is
an extremely prudent step, prior to taking any major action which could have unforeseen
repercussions. While it’s obvious that things need to change inside TriMet, I believe
it’s worth taking the time to do it right.
Jamie Francis/The Oregonian |
Obviously, investigation is needed. While TriMet is not
explicitly a public agency, it does receive 57% of its operating funds from
taxes while another 24% comes from fares (Staff T. ) . If TriMet expects
to receive public dollars, its management must submit to the full extent of the
public process.
Resources:
Gianola, J. (2013, May 16). TriMet execs receive hidden raises, while fares go up. Koin.com
Rose, J. (2013, June 07). Oregon lawmakers call for a full state audit of TriMet finances, operations. The Oregonian, p.
Rose, J. (2013, March 19). TriMet execs received big pay increases, even as transit agency increased fares, cut routes. The
Oregonian
Staff, N. (2013, June 06). Lawmaker calls for outside audit of TriMet. Koin.com
Staff, T. (n.d.). How TriMet is Funded.
Thompson, J. (2013, June 06). Ore. legislator orders emergency TriMet audit. KGW.com
Excellent post!
ReplyDeleteI concur, well done.
ReplyDelete