Here's perhaps a little insight into the real reason Metro just can't seem to get their act together with escalators.
According to a source intimately familiar with Metro's escalators, twice a year, Metro maintenance personnel bid on the escalators for which they’ll be responsible. Workers with the most seniority get the first choices.
This is called the "pick" system, and it was referred to as a "critical" problem, albeit in a somewhat sugar coated way, in the recent report on Metro's escalator woes:
- Management is limited in its ability to use best qualified field labor by “Pick” system. To be effective, management must be able to use best qualified field labor to meet equipment service needs. While the “Pick” system would appear to be beneficial in theory, its success is solely contingent upon the performance of the individual worker. The intent of the “Pick” system is to expose each worker to the broadest range of equipment and service scopes, maintenance, service repair, troubleshooting, and adjusting, by rotating work stations semi- annually. It must be realized that not all workers have the ability to perform effectively within each scope.
- As WMATA’s labor force is drawn from a union base, the ability to implement modification of the “Pick” system would require negotiations with the appropriate union representatives. While difficult, the establishment of a mutually beneficial labor relationship is critical to support the implementation of any changes within the current operational model substantial enough to demonstrate significant improvement.
- Accountability for conditions of the equipment when received after “Pick” rotation were expressed.
The source said it’s very common for someone with seniority to bid on escalators they know to be well maintained so they can slide and and not do anything for the six months it's under their "care."
“They can coast for a while,” the source said. “Then when problems start, they can move on,” leaving an ailing escalator under the supervision of someone with less experience.
This way of doing things, the source said, "destroys the incentive" of the younger workers who know that if they do a good job, their escalators will be taken away by someone with more seniority.
“There’s a culture in which you don’t really have to perform to keep your job,” they said.
Similar pick systems are used by ATU 689 members to bid on bus routes, station manager slots and train operator shifts.
In another scenario, one could easily imagine that operator slots on the Red Line, Metro's oldest, which is plagued by circuit problems, would be the scraps leftover to the least experienced operators.
"Picking" jobs is common practice among unions, but at Metro, it sure doesn't seem to encourage high performers or hard workers and it most certainly doesn't seem to be increasing the reliability of Metro's escalators.
East Falls Church was 0-3 yesterday during both rush hours.
anonymous · 746 weeks ago
Matt G · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
jacob · 736 weeks ago
Caretaker · 669 weeks ago
· 746 weeks ago
Lacosse is a thief · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
@Phdelicious · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
Anon · 746 weeks ago
ZZinDC · 746 weeks ago
Anon · 746 weeks ago
Matt G · 746 weeks ago
DeeDee · 745 weeks ago
Corresponding Toads · 746 weeks ago
No but seriously, metro "seniors" or "veterans" get to "pick" their escalators 'cuz they're old as crap and brittle so yeah of course they will maintain the shortest, most reliable escalators.
And don't worry E Falls Church butt crunchers, I'll be comin your way when it gets warm again.
Matt G · 746 weeks ago
Corresponding Toads · 746 weeks ago
Plus, Ballston has all the homeless people. They're so great! I envy their lifestyle - just wandering around, bumming cigarettes off people. Met a great fellow just yesterday while waiting for the 1A (1B, 1C, etc)! He was speaking to me although I had my headphones on and was staring about two miles in front of me. He kept goin on about how he was going to "knock the f***" out of some guy, and how he doesn't "give a f***!" at the top of his lungs. he proceeded to shadow box anyone who would cross his path, then he'd fake stumbling to the ground like HE just got punched. pretty sure he was reenacting/reliving a drug-deal-gone-wrong from a previous year's begging.
So come on guys, escalators were made to be broken, quit crying over spilled milk WAAAH WAAAH!
Metro is like a big ole butt: everyone wants it, and everyone wants to complain when they don't get it!!!
Matt G · 746 weeks ago
yatesc · 746 weeks ago
VeggieTart · 746 weeks ago
@kara_h · 746 weeks ago
Yeah · 746 weeks ago
Anon · 746 weeks ago
John · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
horseydeucey · 746 weeks ago
"constant discussion of how shameful the CEO's salary is"
Do you contest that the CEO in this case deserves every penny of his salary? The chief executive of WMATA is doing a bang up job, right?
"You'll have very little support from... the riding public if the union goes on strike"
Not exactly a bold prediction here. Our culture has been generally anti-strike for some time now. Surely you remember the NY transit strike of 2005? It was ruled illegal by a judge. In America. Workers were told they had to work or union leaders would face imprisonment. As a matter of fact, the shop president was thrown in jail.
Jim · 746 weeks ago
GlenmontGirl · 746 weeks ago
Doc · 746 weeks ago
@kara_h · 746 weeks ago
Okay, let us assume all the downtime and such is 'proper maintenance'/. Even though anyone who has ever ridden an escalator elsewhere or seen no progress (or even evidence of someone being in there since yesterday) when a metro one is down knows that is down.
Please explain how the recent escalator brake failures were 'proper maintenance'. In particular, the one which had the brakes all pass 30 days before but a post-mortem found pads that would have *never* passed.
Jim · 746 weeks ago
Doc · 746 weeks ago
anon · 745 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
mr metro · 741 weeks ago
Doc · 746 weeks ago
@kara_h · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
I think if Local 689 ATU would take a 3% pay cut it would show a real effort to balance the budget and show the tax payers the Union is concerned. Pay is inflated and bloated.
Then management should take a 5% pay cut across the board to balance the budget.
Salaries are inflated and bloated. This is the problem with the deficit.
anon · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
mr metro · 741 weeks ago
let me be the first to pray at the local 10 alter.
Doc · 746 weeks ago
oily · 746 weeks ago
Mogden · 746 weeks ago
mr metro · 741 weeks ago
Doc · 746 weeks ago
MetroRider · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
Local 689-ATU has a "No Strike" clause in the CBA and agreed to by a past ATU President.
Poor over site and slow work daily is par for DC.
Wake-up man! Where have you been?
The only way to get adequate service started up again is to re-hire the competent company who used to service Metro Escalators, Schindler Elevator and Escalator Inc.
Other than that your broke down escalator problems will continue.
Work ethics at Metro start with Management. Solved.
@kara_h · 746 weeks ago
anon · 746 weeks ago
I say let each state run their parts of Metro in (3) parts. PG County the bus has mechanics, Fairfax and DC have mechanics.
The Federal Government will not continue to fund Metro!
bob smith · 745 weeks ago
jameson.burt · 658 weeks ago
The purchasers of things like metro card protocols,
exit machines, add-value machines (no receipts at all machines for months at Smithsonian),
new elevators, and new train cars (whoever chose Italian cars originally?),
appear to have not seen good systems run.
Has management ever seen Boston's metro system free transit cards (smartrip or untearable paper).
Have they ever seen Hong Kong's MTR metro system repairing elevators over night,
so day passengers never see elevator problems.
Or ahve they seen Hong Kong's train cars refurbished by an Australian company?
Has DC management run models that produce failure across the world's subway systems?
This evening, one train passeed empty, and amongst other train problems,
I was 15 minutes slower going from Smithsonian to Vienna.
At Vienna, the South garage closed one entrance,
closed one of two lanes at the only remaining entrance,
the one gate open rejected almost all Smartrip cards and then kept the gate closed,
so I was in Metro's parking exit line from 5:57 until 6:21 -- 24 minutes!
Metro should enter the equivalent of bankruptcy, so most management and employees could be disbanded.
Competition would be good
-- competition like that in Blacksburgh, Virginia, which has both private and public garbage services.
I have seen no worse subway system;
I know no-one (Chinese, Czech, German, Mexican) who has seen a worse metro system;
and DC Metro has been bad for 20 years.
Even Congress could run our metro system better!
MetroBackward · 599 weeks ago
This seems to be phrased in a way to imply that such a practice is EVER a good idea. Unions always, ALWAYS will result in crappier service for customers. Now maybe the socialists here will think twice when they criticize people who want to abolish unions (at least the legal protections for them).