Thursday, April 22, 2010

Investigation Finds High Crime Rates at TRAX Lots - KSL April 26, 2007


Investigation Finds High Crime Rates at TRAX Lots
April 26th, 2007 @ 9:54pm
Debbie Dujanovic Reporting
Produced by Kelly Just
The light rail costs hundreds of millions in tax money and it brings in millions of dollars in fares. An Eyewitness News Investigation exposes a hidden cost -- the price you pay when you park at the TRAX lot.
Angry riders called us, claiming crime is out of control and UTA's not doing enough. Debbie Dujanovic has spent months investigating.
Jason Corless is a TRAX customer. He said, "My truck was broken into once, gas siphoned, my truck was stolen. There's actually been a line of people waiting to see a police officer when they get off the train."
Jonathan Despain told KSL, "I came out, and the car was missing."
Jason Corless' routine seems to be: park, pay, get pilfered. Jonathan Despain thought his $50 TRAX pass made financial sense, but after a car break-in, another car stolen, not once, but twice, the real cost is more like $1,000.
Their stories sent us digging. We spent weeks poring over police reports from several different TRAX lots. We never expected to find this much crime. In just two years at least 300 cars were stolen or vandalized. Plus there were dozens of robberies, multiple acts of lewdness and, even worse, sexual assaults.
Last January a woman was followed off the train after dark and raped at the edge of a TRAX parking lot. The police report says she screamed "fire," to attract attention, but there was no one around to hear her cries. That, we discovered, is the problem.
UTA has its own police force of 23 officers. From the beginning they've promised to keep TRAX lots safe with frequent patrols. To see if UTA is keeping that promise, we spent several days staking out TRAX lots. During 18 hours, we saw only two UTA patrol cars, for a grand total of seven minutes. We had to visit headquarters to snap a photo of a UTA patrol car we could show riders.
We took what we found to UTA Police Chief Ross Larsen. He said, "I feel like we are delivering for the safety of our passengers."
Police officers in Salt Lake, Murray, Midvale and Sandy might disagree. The police logs reveal that in just two years, they've responded to TRAX lots more than 1,300 times -- that's nearly two incidents a day.
Larson said, "Our primary focus is always the safety of our passengers as they travel."
UTA admits it devotes more of its law enforcement resources to making sure passengers pay. "If we take care of the little things, such as people who evade a fare, then other lawlessness is suppressed," Larson said.
We found out that's a philosophy not all transit authorities share. In Denver, to decrease parking lot crime, they put up cameras. "If you have cameras in lots does it increase safety of cars? I don't personally believe it does," Larson said.
In Denver, the numbers tell the story: crime dropped 312 percent. In Utah, the main crime-fighting strategy is yellow report cards stuck on windshields. They remind riders to hide valuables and lock up. UTA says customers are getting the message.
The Despains don't feel like they should take the blame for their troubles. "We've had two different cars stolen. I don't want a yellow card. I want my car."
UTA says it only hands out those yellow report cards twice a year.
Remember if criminals hit your car, UTA doesn't pay, you do. UTA claims crime is just as bad in other lots, like malls. So we checked police reports on car thefts and burglaries at major malls. In four malls there were nearly a third fewer crimes than those committed in TRAX lots.

CYCLOPS - Davis County Clipper April 8, 2010



CLOPS: Davis rail shouldn’t be opposed to using scare tactics
by Bryan Gray
Apr 08, 2010 | 668 views | 4 4 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Bryan Gray
Bryan Gray
As readers know, I’m not a fan of the Utah Transit Authority. The organization is top-heavy in executive pay and sets prices too high to achieve an effective ridership for FrontRunner trains.

I’m also opposed to UTA’s attempt to bring light rail trains to Centerville and Bountiful Main Streets. However, I’m appalled at one of the reasons given for opposing UTA – and it says something about the changing nature of society.

I agree that light rail in Davis County is a frivolous expense of tax dollars. There’s not a crying need for residents in Centerville to have another public transit option to downtown Bountiful. Cars, buses, and even bikes fill that nonexistent “need”. Construction would also harm local businesses; many would never recover from the lost sales from tearing up an already narrow street.

But rational thought wasn’t good enough for some light rail detractors. One of the ringleaders opposed to the UTA plan bellowed out a dire warning at a demonstration last week: light rail in Centerville and Bountiful would attract an undesirable element, ushering in a potential crime wave to the good citizens of southern Davis County - the trains loaded with unsavory characters. To hear this guy, our children wouldn’t be safe from invaders from the hinterlands.

How silly! How narrow-minded! Bringing buses into a neighborhood doesn’t translate to a crime wave. TRAX trains are not the chosen transportation for would-be rapists, drug peddlers, and kidnappers.

Idiots like this guy make Rocky Anderson appear sane and stable!

And his comments represent fears so many parents pass on to their children: Be afraid of others who don’t look like you or don’t have the same beliefs…Stay in your room and play computer games; beware of social contact.

Essayist Garrison Keillor mourned the loss of traditional childhood in his newspaper column last week. “Children don’t wander free and mess around in vacant lots the way we used to…One worries about a certain loss of verve and nerve among the young who have been under constant supervision for too long.”

As a young boy, I took buses from my suburban home to Salt Lake’s downtown; for “baseball card money” I delivered errands in back alleys and downtown streets. I didn’t take unreasonable risks; I was aware of my surroundings. But neither did I worry that every stranger was a sexual predator.

My friends and I walked for miles in pursuit of “adventures”. It gave us a foundation of independence. It enabled us to think for ourselves. When we shared stories that evening with our parents, they weren’t worried or preoccupied that we might be meeting people from different neighborhoods.

Granted, life is more challenging today. But that doesn’t mean we should place ourselves or our children in a cocoon. Kids grow up when they can explore and personal growth is hard to achieve when you have adults engaging in scare tactics and fear-mongering. 


Read more: Davis County Clipper - CYCLOPS Davis rail shouldn’t be opposed to using scare tactics 

Monday, April 19, 2010

Outcry Over UTA Salaries Growing Louder - KSL - April 19, 2010


Outcry over UTA salaries growing louder
April 19th, 2010 @ 6:05pm
By John Daley
SALT LAKE CITY -- Salaries for executives at the Utah Transit Authority are among the top in the nation.
The CEO and other top administrators at the agency are slated to take on new responsibilities and new titles. While their compensation will remain the same*, there are growing concerns about that pay, which equals or tops their counterparts in much larger cities.
The highest paid state employee at $496,700 is Richard Spencer, Clinical Director for the Dept. of Human Services. -UtahsRight.com
UTA is considering a reshuffle of its top executives. The highest salaries are $339,000 for the man in its top job, John Inglish, and in the range of a quarter million each for his two lieutenants. Critics of those numbers are not mincing words.
"I just think it's appalling," says Barbara Toomer, with the Disabled Rights Action Committee. "I go back to the fact that it's my money. It's my sales tax money. It's my federal tax money. It's my state tax money. It's money that belongs to the people of the state of Utah, and we're paying for this guy to make more money than our governor is."
Top UTA Salaries
NamePositionSalary
John InglishGeneral Manager & CEO$339,179
Michael AllegraAsst General Manager/CCDO$250,940
Bruce T JonesGeneral Counsel$237,752
Kenneth D MontagueChief Financial Officer$202,821
Jerry R BensonChief Operating Officer$188,804
Source: UtahsRight.com
"I'm very troubled by them. It's incomprehensible to me how UTA can justify these exorbitant salaries, especially in the economic times we're faced with," says Rep. Janice Fisher, D-West Valley City.
But UTA leaders say the salaries are reasonable and competitive with other transit agencies regionally and non-profits nationally. They say with UTA's dramatic growth, it pays to keep seasoned hands on board.
"You look at other salaries throughout businesses and organizations, and I think if people would look at those and be astounded -- in terms of being much more than we are here," says Larry Ellertson, chairman of the UTA Board of Trustees.
KSL News contacted transit agencies around the country and found UTA's top salary easily tops the No. 1 salary in Chicago, Vegas, Phoenix, Washington D.C., Denver and San Francisco.
Salaries of Transit CEOs/GMs in other states
CitySalaryDaily ridership
New York City$350,0008.7 million
UTA$339,000143,000
San Francisco$308,000672,000
Denver$306,000331,121
Chicago$196,0001.7 million
New York City's top transit executive makes $350,000 overseeing a system with nearly 9 million riders daily and an $11 billion budget. That dwarfs UTA's 143,000 daily ridership and $180 million budget.
"I would say the board is comfortable with these numbers at this point," Ellertson says.
As for UTA General Manager John Inglish, he says he's fine with his and other top salaries as well.
"I am comfortable with it, yes," Inglish says. "I think the public is entitled to best management and leadership that be provided."
According to a website that tracks salaries in Utah, UTA's top job is higher than nearly every other non-medical public employee. Also, Inglish's salary tops his counterpart at the Utah Department of Transportation by more than $100,000 and is three times what the governor makes.
UTA's board will vote on the new salaries April 28.
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*Editors note: In an earlier version of this story, KSL incorrectly reported that UTA officials would be receiving raises. This script has been corrected to show that their compensations will remain the same.