Pennsylvania is not getting its fair slice of the pie at the
bistate Delaware River Port Authority, DRPA commissioner and Philadelphia union
leader John Dougherty said Thursday.
About 76 percent of the DRPA's employees live in New Jersey,
and Dougherty said the agency needs to hire more Pennsylvania workers.
"The numbers are pretty much out of whack,"
Dougherty, business manager of IBEW Local 98 who represents Pennsylvania
auditor general Eugene DePasquale on the DRPA board, said at Thursday's board
meeting. "Let's create a process in which some of the higher-paying jobs
are more fairly distributed."
The DRPA, long a patronage haven for the politically
connected in both states, employs 667 residents of New Jersey, 197 residents of
Pennsylvania, and 12 Delaware residents, according to a new accounting by the
agency that was requested by Dougherty.
"I have personally carried resumes over here" for
Pennsylvania job candidates who have not been hired, Dougherty said.
The DRPA, which operates four toll bridges and the PATCO
commuter line between Center City and South Jersey, has its headquarters on the
Camden waterfront. The governing board is made up of eight residents of each
state.
Jeffrey L. Nash, the Camden County freeholder who is vice
chairman of the DRPA board, acknowledged the job disparity but said more New
Jersey residents apply for jobs, so more get hired.
Andrew Reilly, a Media lawyer who chairs the board's labor
committee, agreed with Dougherty that Pennsylvania deserves more hires.
"If two people are equally qualified, I'm pushing for
the Pennsylvania person," Reilly said. "We're just looking for more
equity."
A disadvantage for Pennsylvania residents, Pennsylvania
board members said, is that many of them have to pay the $5 bridge toll to
drive to work each day, since Gov. Christie eliminated free passage for workers
in 2010. Most New Jersey residents can drive to work at the DRPA for free since
they don't have to cross a bridge.
Union-represented DRPA workers, including toll collectors,
train operators, mechanics, and police officers, had their free rides restored
in 2011 by an arbitrator, who ruled that Christie violated the provisions of
their labor contracts by eliminating the perquisite.
Source: Philly.com
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