Tom Kaminski is like an omniscient guardian angel, floating in the heavens and keeping motorists in the tri-state area safe from motoring mayhem.
For 34 years Kaminski has been
a traffic reporter for WCBS 880 radio, heading a team of producers, spotters
and tipsters covering traffic and transit from his vantage point 1500 feet above
the city in the station’s Bell 206 helicopter.
Most of the time he’s in the
chopper, but always with a pilot and, more recently, a camera operator for his
twice hourly updates for PIX-11 TV. Six
times each hour (“on the 8’s”) from 5:30 am to 9 am and again from 4:30 to 7 pm
his live weekday traffic reports on WCBS 880 help steer thousands of travelers
on their way to and from work.
“The rush hour never really
ends in Connecticut,” he tells me. So
even when he’s not flying, the station is still staffed with traffic
reporters. “Fairfield County is a huge
audience for us,” says WCBS News Director Tim Scheld.
Mid-day construction on I-95
or the Merritt Parkway can turn even off-peak travel into gridlock, so WCBS’s
traffic reports are must-listening whenever I’m on the road. And for rail commuters, Kaminski and crew
have a direct line to Metro-North checking on Twitter tips about transit delays.
“I want our listeners to think
‘This guy has my back’, so I’m always on call should conditions warrant special
reports,” says the 59 year old traffic veteran, one of the last live traffic
reporters in and on the air.
Kaminski’s typical day starts by
waking at 3:30 am. He checks in with the
station’s traffic producer by 4:30 am and is airborne from Linden airport in
New Jersey in time for his first live report at 5:30 am.
“Then we head to where conditions are the worst,” he says. Often, he hears from loyal listeners who call in tips (212-975-8888) in addition to the ground team back at the station monitoring police scanners, live traffic cams, Google Maps and WAZE.
Kaminski doesn’t see new traffic
apps as competition. “You look at WAZE
and see an icon where delays begin. But
you can’t tell if it’s a stalled car or an overturned truck, so I’m their eyes
in the sky painting the word pictures.”
By 7 am the chopper has to
land to refuel, but the traffic reports continue. When weather conditions are bad… low ceiling,
gusty winds, poor visibility… Kaminski works from his base station either at
the airport or his tech-equipped home.
Despite decades of flying in all sorts of weather conditions he claims
“I’ve never been airsick”.
Working a split shift,
Kaminski is off from mid-morning until early afternoon. “I always try to catch
a nap,” he says, before diving into his PM drivetime duties.
Since COVID forever changed our
commuting habits, he’s noticed a major change in traffic. “Fewer people are taking the train, opting
instead for the perceived safety of driving, despite the traffic. But the increase in speeding accidents has
led to some horrendous accidents: really
violent stuff”, he says.
“The worst accidents seem to
be when the traffic is lightest and people are driving way too fast,” he
laments. His best advice for motorists
is his signature sign-off line after his last report in the morning.
“Still on the road? Easy does it!”