Shortly after he came to office, I
wrote something critical of newly elected Governor Malloy. Nothing new there. I’d certainly questioned Republican
governors in years past, usually to little response. But this time the reaction was different.
A Malloy confidant, a senior State Senator
from Fairfield County, took me aside and threatened me. Not physically, but legislatively. “You know, we could eliminate the Commuter Rail
Council if you keep this up,” he said in Machiavellian tones. “Bring it on,” I said, half-shocked at this
political threat.
Well, it took a couple of years (and
more criticism), but the threat has come true.
The Governor has submitted a bill (HB 6363)
that would wipe out the existing Metro-North
Commuter Rail Council and its 15 members.
In its place, a new Council would be appointed and the Governor, not the
members of the Council, would choose its Chairman.
Further, the new Commuter Council’s
mandate would turn from investigation and advocacy on behalf of fellow
commuters to a PR advisor to the CDOT.
While the current Council has the power to request information and is required
to receive cooperation from any state or local agency, that power would be
eliminated under Malloy’s bill.
The Commuter Council isn’t the only
pro-transportation group affected by the bill.
The CT
Public Transportation Commission would also be eliminated just as last year Malloy erased the Transportation Strategy Board.
This obvious power-grab by the
Governor has so far gone unchallenged in the legislature, buried in a 66-page
Christmas tree of a bill. If it becomes
law, my 15+ years as a member of the Commuter Council (the last four as its Chairman)
will be history.
But why is the Metro-North Commuter Council
singled out for such harsh treatment?
It’s not that the Commuter Council has
been wasting state money. We operate on
a budget of zero dollars, even dipping into our own pockets to pay for design of
a logo and pay for postage. And I don’t
think it can be argued that we haven’t been doing our jobs… meeting monthly
with Metro-North and the CDOT to address commuter complaints and push for ever better
service.
No, I think the real problem is that
we’ve done our job too well, calling
out CDOT, the legislature and yes, even the Governor, when they did things that
we felt screwed commuters. That’s our
mandate.
I guess Governor Malloy didn’t like it
when we pointed out that as a gubernatorial candidate he promised to never raid
the Special Transportation Fund to balance the state’s budget, but then did
just that when he took office. And I
guess he wasn’t happy when I noted that his budget took new fare increases from
Metro-North riders but didn’t spend the money on trains, in effect making the
fare hike a “commuter tax”.
And I’d imagine the Commissioner of
the CDOT… the fifth Commissioner in my 15+ years on the Council… would be happy
to see the current Council gone, critical as we have been about their Stamford
Garage project which we see as selling
out the interests of commuters to private developers.
It’s sad that the Governor feels the
way to answer legitimate criticism is to eviscerate those who question
him. But I can promise you that his
proposed elimination of the Metro-North Commuter Council won’t silence me. Bring it on, Governor.