MTA

Pol Overseeing MTA Hearing Says He'll Grill Agency Over High-Paid Execs

“The fact that there are 2,500 individuals that made over $300,000 within the administration deserves a very close look,” Sen. Tim Kennedy said

What to Know

  • Sen. Tim Kennedy, the head of the New York State Senate Transportation Committee, is presiding over an MTA budget hearing Wednesday
  • Kennedy says he plans to ask the MTA about its executives' salaries, saying many employees are making six-figures
  • The agency is seeking tens of billions of dollars in funding to modernize and replace signals throughout the subway system

The head of the New York State Senate’s transportation committee said he will take a “very close look” at MTA employees who earn six-figure salaries during a budget hearing scheduled for this week.

Sen. Tim Kennedy, whose district includes Buffalo, was appointed chair of the committee this past December and will preside over an MTA budget hearing Wednesday.

In an exclusive interview with News 4 on Tuesday, Kennedy said he planned to ask the MTA about its own executives’ salaries.

The agency is seeking tens of billions of dollars to modernize and replace signals throughout the subway system.

“The fact that there are 2,500 individuals that made over $300,000 within the administration deserves a very close look,” Kennedy said. “We are going to be asking questions about that.”

The MTA disputed Kennedy's figures -- and the original New York Times analysis of federal data. According to the agency, subway managers make $240,000, on average -- $135,600 in salary/wage and $104,400 in fringe benefit. All subway workers, on average, make $155,000 a year -- $87,600 in salary/wage and $67,400 in fringe benefit.

"As the data we sent over reflects, these figures were based off of inaccurate salary data and the news report that cited the study, incorrectly, has been corrected," a statement from the MTA said.

The MTA didn't say how many personnel make that $240,000 annually.

For his part, Kennedy said the committee's job "is to hold the MTA accountable." 

"And you're going to see accountability demanded," he said.

The senator also addressed the fact that his upstate New York district is hours away from the New York City subway system, noting that he frequently takes the subway, the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North.

As for the governor, Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday there were only two possible sources for MTA funding. 

“There are only two options. Either the fares go up, or you have congestion pricing,” Cuomo said in an interview with Brian Lehrer. “Pick it. And make the politicians pick it. It’s A or B. There is no C.”

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