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  2. Popular MTA Worker Says Farewell To Inwood After Promotion

    patch.com/new-york/washington-heights-inwood/...

    INWOOD, NY — A popular MTA employee who worked within an Inwood station for nearly a decade is moving on after landing a promotion. For the last eight years, Neil Harrigan, 58, has worked as a ...

  3. Court Refuses To Hear MTA Payroll Tax Appeal - Patch

    patch.com/new-york/newcity/court-refuses-to-hear...

    The state’s highest court refused to hear an appeal of the MTA Payroll Tax. Tuesday’s ruling of the New York Court of Appeals means businesses within the Metropolitan Transportation Authority ...

  4. State Group Joins Rockland's Fight Against MTA Payroll Tax

    patch.com/new-york/newcity/state-group-joins...

    State Group Joins Rockland's Fight Against MTA Payroll Tax - New City, NY - Rockland wants tax scrapped, better service from MTA and $220M in damages.

  5. MTA Employee Ran Brothel Out Of Brooklyn Apartment, DA Says

    patch.com/new-york/brooklyn/mta-employee-ran...

    David Blakis, 46, of Greenpoint, walked into a Brooklyn courtroom Friday, facing a pair of criminal charges. The MTA employee, accused of running a brothel out of his apartment at 1083 Manhattan ...

  6. Op-Ed: Sen. Skelos Talks Tax Cap, MTA Payroll Tax

    patch.com/new-york/rockvillecentre/op-ed-sen...

    Op-Ed: Sen. Skelos Talks Tax Cap, MTA Payroll Tax - Rockville Centre, NY - Senate Majority Leader talks about strides made in 2011 and the direction he hopes to lead in 2012.

  7. 2 MTA Employees Arrested In BK On Reckless Driving, DWI ...

    patch.com/new-york/brooklyn/2-mta-employees...

    Pedro Nunez-Delacruz, 43, an NYPD auxiliary police officer, was charged in the 83rd Precinct in Bushwick about 4:41 a.m. Saturday with driving while intoxicated and refusal to take a breath test ...

  8. Empire Center for Public Policy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_Center_for_Public...

    One employee reported 74 hours of overtime alone per week and was paid over $450,000 for the year. Some Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) employees were using handwritten time records instead of electronic systems, which are easier to track and prevent abuse. MTA had no reliable system for verifying hours worked.