Ninety two million dollars, at last report, is the cost to
the City to underwrite the three companies’ operations.
Wow!
Getting information about the subsidy, the cost of operating
City buses, and the terms of the franchise/contracts has not been easy.
We don’t believe anyone is trying to conceal the
information, we just believe the information is so convoluted and confusing that
the guys in charge of regulating the bus companies have inherited a nightmare.
The Comptroller’s Office has been cooperative with us but at times has
expressed frustration in figuring out the whole thing. They are digging out cost
figures, but apparently it’s not as simple as one plus one equaling two.
We’re committed to researching the subject — we feel
someone has to.
And in our research, we did what we thought the logical thing
and asked the City Department of Transportation for copies of the contracts with
the bus companies.
Well, we were told, there are contracts for each company;
then there are contracts for each route. But finally – after a day of or two
of back and forth – it was determined that there is a "master
contract" for each company. And so we requested it.
The document giving the three Queens bus companies the right
to operate their franchises in the City arrived at our office by messenger.
Wrapped in two very, very large envelopes and fasted together in almost a dozen
sections, hundreds of small print filled pages comprise the operating
agreements.
We didn’t know where to begin — we still don’t. But our
staff shall plod on.
Our ability to quickly find what penalty exists for failure
to provide service is no better than the folks who work for the City. You see,
we’ve been informed that these documents predate present DOT staff and that no
one was around back when these contracts were first drafted.
Not surprisingly, when renewed or updated, they apparently
just added onto the mammoth document. Want a new route? Draft another document
and attach it to the huge pack of paper.
Now remember, the hundreds of pages we are attacking make up
the master contracts and do not contain the individual route franchise
agreements.
We’re not sure if our terms are correct or if we understand
much except that the lawyers sure must have cost a lot.
Those City lawyers sure worked very hard generating all those
pages. But did they protect the City and bus riders?
On a page marked 43 of what apppears to be the body of the
main contract, headed Article XVI "Termination and Cancellation,"
Section 16.2 reads: "The Company shall not be deemed nor declared to be in
default under any conditions, provisions, requirements or limitations of this
contract in any case in which the performance of any such condition, provision
requirement or limitation is prevented by reason of strikes, injunctions or
other causes beyond the control of the Company, provided that the Company shall
not have instigated such strike, or shall not have been responsible for suits or
injunctions or other causes of delay."
Perhaps, the solution is as simple as reading the appropriate
section of the contract — only maybe, nobody can find it.
We asked the DOT press office to let us know how many times
copies of the contract have been requested since the labor dispute began back in
January.
"Your request is the first," was the response.
Perhaps the solution will require a clean sweep: throw out
the contracts; throw out the bus companies; throw out the union.
But first, throw out the lawyers.
Hey Mayor Mike, all the other boroughs have bus service, why
don’t you get involved and help the folks in Queens who have been taken for a
ride.
Shame On The Queens
GOP
And The Dems Are Not Any Better
By MICHAEL SCHENKLER
Okay,
politics is about power. But in this country, it is also about
participating in the greatest democracy in the world. We have a system
that offers voters a choice.
We have matured into a two party system with a
number of vital third parties. But no matter what, you know that the
Republicans will challenge the Democrats and the Dems will return the
favor. Having opposition keeps everything honest.
There are no free rides here. The United States
stands proudly as one of the few great democratic nations where the
person in office is always challenged at election time.
Not so in Queens.
The Republican Party which last year lost two of
their three City Council seats has become less and less competitive.
This year with 31 legislative seats up in Queens,
the Republicans have only managed to field candidates in a little more
than half the seats — 17. There is no Republican challenger for Greg
Meeks’ Congressional seat. Three State Senate Seats go without GOP
candidates. And shamefully, in the Assembly – the smallest of
districts where races are the easiest and least costly to run – the
Queens Republican Party has only found candidates for seven of the 18
seats.
Now, the Dems own this County. But they are either
lazy or cut deals. There are only two Republicans seats up while 29 of
the 31 are owned by the Dems. So you think the Dems would want to take
the two missing links.
No! State Senators Frank Padavan and Serf Maltese
(who also happens to be Republican County Chair) do not face
Democratic challenges this year. Do we smell a rat?
Is Serf getting a free ride in exchange for
something?
Are the Dems just too lazy to make Frank and Serf
work for their seats?
Or is it all just one big comfy cozy family of
incumbents?
The chart below presents the names of the
candidates who filed petitions for each seat. The Board of Elections
has not yet ruled on the validity of these petitions. There will be
challenges.
If the Democratic County Organization holds true to
form, you can bet there will be extreme scrutiny of any challenge to
an incumbent office holder.
As you review the list below, remember that the
Dems win in Queens. It’s nice to have third party candidates and
they further our exercise in Democracy, but eliminate the two
incumbent Republican Senators and the Democrat will win all the rest
of the contests in November. So it is the Democratic Primary that will
really decide the other 29 seats.
And right now there are only 10 seats with
Democratic Primaries. And you can be pretty sure when County (the Dem
organization) and the Courts get done, there will be lots fewer.
The sad story about our democracy is that the
people aren’t getting a chance to decide.
With 31 open seats, there will be fewer than 10
contests. In fact, we can absolutely name the winner (the incumbent)
in all but five of the 31 seats. And we have a pretty good guess at
those.
The only five worth watching: the 13th Senate which
has no incumbent and a three-way Democratic Primary; the 16th Senate
as incumbent Toby Stavisky is challenged in the Democratic Primary by
former Assemblywoman and Councilwoman Julia Harrison; in the 22nd
Assembly district, a five-way Democratic Primary for a newly drawn
(Asian) seat representing Downtown Flushing; the 31st Assembly
district, which pits newly elected Assemblywoman Michele Titus against
six Democratic challengers; and in the newly drawn Latino 39th
Assembly District there is a four-way Democratic Primary.
Sorry political
junkies, with 31 seats, there are only five games in town.
WHO
FILED PETITIONS?
D = Democratic Party
R = Republican Party
C = Conservative Party
I = Independence Party
L = Liberal Party
W = Working Families Party
G = Green Party
RTL=Right To Life
* = incumbent
|
CONGRESS
|
|
5th District (no primaries)
*Gary L. Ackerman - D,I,L,W
Perry S. Reich - R,C
6th District (no Repub)
*Gregory W. Meeks - D,L,W
Rey Clarke - D,I
|
7th District
*Joseph Crowley - D,W
Jon S. Branning - D
Dennis Coleman - D
Kevin Brawley - R,C
9th District
(no primaries)
*Anthony D. Weiner
– D,W
Alfred F. Donohue – R,C
|
12th District (no primaries)
*Nydia M. Velazquez – D,W
Cesar Estevez – R,C
14th District
*Carolyn B. Maloney – D,I,L,W
Jeff Brauer - D
Anton Srdanovic – R, C
|
|
NYS
SENATE |
|
10th District (no Repub)
*Ada L. Smith - D,I,L,W
Lawrence T. McClean - D
11th District (no Democratic challenger)
*Frank Padavan – R,I,C
12th District (no primaries)
*George Onorato - D
Marie Lynch - R
Ann Eagan - G
13th District (no incumbent)
John D. Sabini - D
Charles Castro - D,I,L,W
Nestor H. Diaz - D
Giash Ahmed - R
|
14th District (no nothing! - Repubs have endorsed the Dem)
*Malcolm A. Smith D,R,C,W
15th District (no Dem challenger)
*Serphin R. Maltese – R,I,C
Dorothy Williams-Pereira - G
Pamela A. Peters -W
16th District (no Repub)
*Toby Ann Stavisky - D,W
Marcia Lynn – D
Julia Harrison – D,I,L
Mark Ralin - C
|
|
ASSEMBLY |
|
22nd District (no incumbent)
Ethel T. Chen – D,L
Barry S. Grodenchik - D
John P. Albert – D,W
Jimmy Meng – D,C,I
Richard Jannaccio - D
Meilin Tan - R
Evergreen C. Chou - G
23rd District (no Repub, no
primaries)
*Audrey I. Pheffer – D,L,W
Kenneth Huhn - I
24th District (no primaries)
*Mark Weprin – D,L,W
Stacey Kaplan-Vila – R,I,C
25th District (new District but
no Repub, no contest)
*Brian M. McLaughlin – D,L,W
26th District (no primaries)
*Ann Margaret E. Carrozza - D,W
John D. Ottulich – R,I,C
27th District (no Repub, no
contest)
*Nettie Mayersohn – D,L,W
28th District (no primaries)
*Michael Cohen – D,L,W
Todd C. Bank – R,C
29th District (no primaries)
*William Scarborough – D,L,W
Gerard Borriello - R
30th District (no Repub, no
race!)
Margaret M. Markey – D
|
31st District (new Assemblywoman
gets challenged)
*Michele R. Titus – D.L,W
Charles A. Pringle Jr. - D
Bryan J. Block - D,C
Henrietta Fullard - D
Michael Duvalle - D,I
Taj Rajkumar - D
Marina Rejas - R
32nd District (no Repub)
Vivian E. Cook – D,L
Rachel A. Gordon – D,I
33rd District (no primaries)
Barbara M. Clark – D,L,W
Rolaine F. Antoine – R,I,C
34th District (no Repub, no race)
Ivan C. Lafayette – D,L,W
35th District (no Repub, no race)
Jeffrion L. Aubry – D,L,W
36th District (no Repub)
Michael N. Gianaris – D,W
Gerald F. Kann - G
37th District (no Repub)
Catherine T. Nolan – D,W
Patrick J. Langhenry - G
38th District (no Repub)
Anthony S. Seminerio – D,C
Darius Pereira – G
39th District (new seat)
Jose Peralta – D,L,W
Isabel Guzman – D
Willaim Salgado – D
Francisco Moya – D
Charles Gonzales – R,C,I,Rtl |