Tag Archives: Metra

Metra ‘Observers’ Monitoring Ticket Collection on Crowded Trains

Ticket collection on a Metra train (vxla/Creative Commons)

It’s a common scene on Metra after events such as Lollapalooza and the Navy Pier fireworks: hoards of passengers pile into train cars, conductors can’t easily navigate through the crowded aisles to collect fares and hundreds if not thousands of passengers end up riding for free.

But facing a massive budget shortfall and the prospect of raising fares, the commuter rail agency is getting tough with its employees to make sure all riders pay their fare share, the Better Government Association has learned.

Not only have conductors been instructed to start collecting every dime, Metra is keeping a closer watch on them, assigning anonymous “observers” to ride train lines and see if the ticket collectors are reaching everyone, Metra spokeswoman Judy Pardonnet said.

What’s more, conductors are being told they could face discipline – perhaps termination – if caught giving freebies, even to off-duty Metra personnel, Pardonnet said.

“Recently, the number of concerns and complaints about this problem has increased,” she said. As a result, Alex Clifford, Metra’s new executive director, “is taking this very seriously because of budget concerns.”

A ticket to ride (Sugar Sweet Sunshine/Creative Commons)

“We’re putting forth a more concerted effort to put trained observers on board to monitor fare collections,” Pardonnet added. “It’s being communicated to the crews and employees that [letting riders skate] is an unacceptable and dismissible offense.”

The crackdown started in early August, shortly after the BGA began inquiring about fare-collection practices. But Pardonnet said that’s not what sparked the tough new approach.

Metra conducted an online consumer survey in August that garnered more than 7,000 responses. Some people indicated they wouldn’t support a fare hike because Metra does not collect existing fares from everybody, Pardonnet said.

Although Metra didn’t tally the complaints, there were enough to assign observers to monitor the situation, she said. (Observers aren’t new to the agency, but Metra ramped up their use after Metra’s Aug. 12 board meeting.)

Clifford has sent memos to Metra employees on the subject. So far no employees have been let go for violating the edict, although at least one worker is being disciplined. “The idea is not to single people out, but to alleviate the problem,” Pardonnet said. “Hopefully the warnings serve as a deterrent right then and there.”

Union officials had no immediate comment.

But conductors interviewed by the BGA said it can be difficult to get fares from all riders when a train is packed.

Post-event Metra train runs can make ticket collection harder. (Jordan Fischer/Creative Commons)

“The crazier and more crowded the trains are, the harder it is for us to collect everyone’s tickets,” said a conductor interviewed recently at Union Station in downtown Chicago. “It’s like a police officer trying to radar everyone that speeds. Sometimes it’s just impossible to catch everyone.”

Another conductor said a lack of manpower is another reason fares sometimes don’t get collected. He said there are supposed to be three conductors on his train, but it’s common for one to be transferred to another train to fill a vacancy, making it tough to get to all the riders.

Metra seems to lag in collection efforts during train delays, inclement weather, and big events such as music festivals (including shows at Ravinia in the north suburbs) and sports games (including horse races at Arlington Park), which cause trains to be packed and the crews to be sometimes unprepared. But passengers interviewed by the BGA said they’ve witnessed conductors neglect fare collection even when it wasn’t crowded.

“I recently took a late afternoon train from Lake Forest to Chicago,” said Davis Anderson, of Chicago. “Occasionally, a conductor would come through, and people would attempt payment, only to have the conductor say he would come back and get it. I am not sure how many people had a free ride, but in my car alone there were a lot.”

It’s hard to quantify how often fares actually go uncollected, and how much money is at stake; Metra apparently has not studied the issue in depth, although Metra officials have speculated that, over the years, the total is in the millions of dollars.

It’s worth noting that on the CTA, fare collection is done in rail stations, at turnstiles, and not on board.

“It seems like a lot of money is being missed out on,” said Jeffrey Durkes, of Chicago, who takes Metra to watch Northwestern University football games. “If you ride the CTA and know you’re going to get hit up 100 percent of the time, why not just go down to the Metra and get the possibility of a free ride?”

This story was written and reported by BGA Editor of Investigations Robert Herguth and BGA Investigative Intern Melanie Zanona. Contact us with tips, suggestions and complaints at (312) 821-9030, or at rherguth@bettergov.org.

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McHenry County: A Political Podunk No More?

We used to see McHenry County as a sleepy Illinois outpost; a simple, aw-shucks cousin to the fast-talking, wink-and-a-nod, wheeling-and-dealing city of Chicago.

A screenshot from VisitMcHenryCounty.com

But consider just the past few months:

  • The McHenry County state’s attorney gets indicted for alleged misconduct.
  • Metra (long the domain of McHenry County Republicans) finds itself under scrutiny as the executive director is accused of various misdeeds, and then kills himself.
  • The State Police launch an investigation into alleged corruption within the McHenry County sheriff’s office ——

—— Wait, hadn’t heard about that last one yet?

Yes, a State Police investigator has interviewed at least a few people in recent weeks about a range of things supposedly going on in the sheriff’s office, sources tell the BGA. The probe appears to be in the early stages, and nothing has been substantiated.

Keep in mind that the sheriff, Republican Keith Nygren, is in a re-election battle with Democrat Mike Mahon, so it’s fair to view things through that prism. Also keep in mind some of the same allegations were raised a year or two back — well before this election cycle — with a different investigative agency, sources tell us. It’s unclear what happened with those leads.

One thing that is clear: McHenry is sleepy no more.

Postscript: We called Nygren to ask if he’d heard of the probe and to mention what we’d heard. He didn’t take it very well. “This is nonsense. We’re not even talking, goodbye,” he said, hanging up.

This blog entry was reported and written by Robert Herguth. Contact him with tips, suggestions and complaints at (312) 821-9030, or at rherguth@bettergov.org.

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ROUNDUP: Give and you shall receive + sleuthing from the inside

>> RIDING THE GRAVY TRAIN
Maybe he should be dodging these types of campaign donations.

Metra board member James V. Dodge (Photo/Village of Orland Park, Ill.)

Metra board member Jim Dodge — in his unsuccessful run for Illinois comptroller earlier this year — accepted $2,750 in campaign money from a Rosemont company called Christopher B. Burke Engineering, state records indicate. Wait, Christopher B. Burke Engineering? That sounds familiar . . .

It should sound familiar to Dodge: Burke Engineering does a lot of business with Metra, has for years. And it serves as “village engineer” in Orland Park, where Dodge sits on the village board.

This is the same Jim Dodge who accepted campaign money and other assistance from an employee of the Acquity Group — after Dodge voted on giving the Chicago company a lucrative contract to revamp Metra’s website.

Is it us, or is the Metra board becoming tiresome?

It’s worth recalling that, like a yardman working the midnight shift, board members were asleep at the switch as former Executive Director Phil Pagano pillaged the commuter rail agency before killing himself this past May.

>> A ‘GRACE-FILLED’ LIFE?
By the way, a different “Burke” is listed in the police reports related to Pagano’s death: Ed Burke.

One of those reports logs a “sealed plastic evidence envelope containing one note pad sheet of paper with the names and numbers of Carole Dorrs . . . and Ed Burke . . . recovered from the kitchen countertop of the residence . . .”

14th Ward Alderman Edward M. Burke (Photo/Office of the Chicago City Clerk)

“Dorrs” apparently is a reference to Metra board chairwoman Carole Doris. We wondered if “Ed Burke” was the Ed Burke, the powerful Chicago alderman.

It’s unclear because the McHenry County sheriff’s office redacted potentially identifying information. “We didn’t attempt to identify who that was,” a police official told the BGA.

But as we poked around, we confirmed through a well-placed source that Pagano and the alderman indeed were pals, which makes sense if you read the memorial resolution put forward by Burke at the May 12 City Council meeting (Page 50 of 409), just days after Pagano’s death. It reads in part:

“Be It Resolved, That we, the Mayor and the members of the Chicago City Council . . . do hereby commemorate Philip A. Pagano for his grace-filled life . . .”

>> SUBURBAN SLEUTHING
We hope you folks enjoy this blog and the material produced by the investigative unit of the BGA. The BGA is here to fight for the public by exposing corruption, waste and ineptitude — among other problems — in government across Illinois.

But clearly we can’t do it alone. Your help is critical. And that’s why we created the Citizen Watchdog Program, which recruits and trains regular folks to attend government meetings and keep tabs on public officials.

It’s worth mentioning someone “unusual” who showed up at one of our first watchdog training sessions: David Stachura, who serves on the board of education in Schiller Park District 81.

Yes, he’s a public official, but make no mistake: this guy is a watchdog, and a thorn in the side of his own agency.

When Stachura’s district was getting rid of old furniture in a school and buying new things, he raised flags, partly by filing dozens of Freedom of Information Act requests with his own organization.

He also zeroed in on Christmas party expenditures by the district, alleging taxpayers had coughed up around $30,000 since 2004.

District Supt. Roberta Taylor challenged that assertion and said Stachura fashions himself a “taxpayer watchdog,” but one “whose perspective is . . . difficult to change.”

Perhaps a polite way of saying the guy’s a pain in the butt.

Either way, people like him are important, especially as community newspapers cut staff and close their doors, and governmental agencies are less scrutinized.

This is how Stachura puts it: “The school district is just tax and spend. There is no respect for the taxpayers’ money whatsoever.” To hear more from Stachura, and learn more about the Citizen Watchdog Program, watch this short video:

This blog entry was reported and written by Robert Herguth, Pat Rehkamp and Joel Ebert. Contact us with tips, suggestions and complaints at (312) 821-9030, or at rherguth@bettergov.org.

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