A good boss cares about his
customers. He wants to keep them happy
and actively seeks out their feedback.
Such is not the case at the Connecticut Department of Transportation.
The CDOT’s new Commissioner,
Joseph Giulietti, has missed several important opportunities to interface with
riders in his first 100 days in office.
Not that he hasn’t been working.
He just hasn’t been meeting with customers.
Remember that Giulietti came
to his new job after a stint as President of Metro-North and in that role he
held a number of “meet-the-commuter” events, handling himself quite well in
answering questions and defusing angry riders.
A year ago, after leaving
the railroad, he became a consultant to T Y Lin’s study of how to improve
running times on the railroad to achieve the “30-30-30”
dream espoused by the Fairfield Business Council’s Joe McGee. That $400,000 study, using Giulietti’s input,
said it could be done.
But if it was going to be so
easy to cut running time from Stamford to Grand Central (now 51 minutes at
best) to just a half-hour, you’d think he’d have done so as President of the railroad.
But he didn’t.
Instead, as of the new
timetable, running times were increased by as much as 16 minutes, angering and confusing commuters. But the Commissioner has been silent.
He did accept an invitation
to attend the April 17th meeting of the official Connecticut
Commuter Rail Council, only to cancel on short notice. Council Chairman Jim Gildea says a staffer
promised to reschedule but has never called back.
Days later the new timetable
came out, including a nasty surprise for Waterbury branch riders. Their usual 4:42
train from GCT arriving in Bridgeport at 5:58 used to connect to their
Waterbury train. But under the new
timetable the Waterbury shuttle leaves four minutes before the NY train arrives.
The next train wouldn’t be for three more hours.
Alternatively, would-be
Waterbury riders could make the 6:03 pm Bridgeport connection if they left GCT
at 4:11 pm. Try explaining that to your
boss.
How could such a mistake in
scheduling be made? Where was Giulietti?
When the Commuter Council
asked for answers, they got excuses. Not
until US Senator Chris Murphy wrote a letter to MNRR was the mistake corrected.
Then, on Thursday April 26th
Commissioner Giulietti and Metro-North President Catherine Rinaldi took a train
ride. Last December Hearst reporter Jacqueline
Smith had challenged them to ride the Danbury line to see the current conditions.
Accepting the “invitation”,
the Giulietti and Rinaldi boarded the post rush-hour 9:05 am train from Danbury, but only after a meet-and-great with that
city’s mayor Mark Boughton who must have known they were coming. At Bethel, First Selectman Matt Knickerbocker
came aboard to lobby for transit-oriented-development.
Smith interviewed the pair
all the way to South Norwalk and wrote of the trip.
But when I asked Smith what had happened when the railroaders talked with
commuters, she said they didn’t. They
were too busy being interviewed and lobbied, I guess.
That’s sad.
When they finally had a
chance to ride the rails and talk to their customers, Giulietti and Rinaldi turn fact-finding into a PR photo op.
Giulietti’s predecessor as
Commissioner, Jim Redeker, was a constant presence in public (and to his
employees). He attended numerous
Commuter Council, business group and community meetings.
But where’s Joe?
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media.
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