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Sanitation Workers Targeted Specific Neighborhoods In Slowdown – Including Boro park


The following is a NY Post Exclusive:

There was a method to their madness.

The selfish Sanitation bosses who sabotaged the blizzard cleanup to fire a salvo at City Hall targeted politically connected and well-heeled neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn to get their twisted message across loud and clear, The Post has learned.

Their motives emerged yesterday as the city’s Department of Investigation admitted it began a probe earlier this week after hearing rumblings of a coordinated job action.

Sources told The Post several neighborhoods were on the workers’ hit list—including Borough Park and Dyker Heights in Brooklyn and Middle Village in Queens—because residents there have more money and their politicians carry big sticks.

“It was more targeted than people actually think,” said a labor source. “Borough Park was specifically targeted [because of] . . . its ability to sort of gin up the p.r. machine.”

The plan worked. Residents of those neighborhoods—who, after three days, were still trying to dig out their cars—are apoplectic.

In Brooklyn, Democratic Assemblyman Dov Hikind called the clean-up “an absolute disaster.”

“You have the most unbelievable anger I’ve ever seen,” he said of his Borough Park constituents.

The revelation came as:

* A Queens baby was brain dead last night after poorly plowed roads hampered efforts to rescue him.

* Sources said Sanitation bosses issued verbal directives during the clean-up to give priority to streets near the homes of agency heads and other city bigwigs. “This happens all the time,” one Sanit worker said. “They make sure the bosses and politicians get taken care of.”

* Despite Mayor Bloomberg’s insistence that all roads would be plowed at least once by yesterday morning, many were untouched, with snow still piled high. “We still have work to do,” Bloomberg later said.

* Even as streets in the outer boroughs waited for a single plow to arrive, crews were clearing bicycle lanes on the Upper West Side. Bloomberg, however, insisted that was not happening.

Across the city, residents still confined to their homes by the storm’s after-effects had plenty of blame both for Bloomberg and the rogue Sanitation workers.

Moshe Pollack, 55, of Borough Park, said, “It’s disgusting. And we pay them overtime for this? People could have died.”

Hikind said his phone had been ringing off the hook.

“I just know that something went wrong, and God is not to blame,” he said.

Hikind said he had been told months ago that Sanitation Department unions were planning some sort of slowdown or job action to protest budget cuts.

Chaya Schron, who lives in Midwood, Brooklyn, said she didn’t hear any plows passing by her bedroom window Sunday night or Monday morning.

“I suspected a slowdown from the very beginning. It didn’t make sense,” she said.

On Monday, she saw a plow drive down her street with its blade up.

“When we asked why his plow was up, he said he had instructions not to plow side streets because it wastes gas,” she said. “I was in disbelief.”

Gov. Paterson yesterday morning called for a criminal investigation, and Bloomberg said such a job action would be an “outrage.”

A DOI spokeswoman told The Post her agency has been probing the actions of plow drivers and supervisors all week, trying to determine “whether there was intentional misconduct in connection with snow removal. We are in the throes of that.”

The slowdown was confirmed Wednesday by City Councilman Dan Halloran (R-Queens), who met with a group of guilt-stricken plow drivers and supervisors who dropped a dime on their colleagues.

Yesterday, Halloran provided The Post with two videos showing a plow driver in Queens driving his truck on a snow-covered road without plowing it.

The snitches said they were told to leave many roads unplowed and skip streets that were not on their routes.

The hostility stems from a series of labor and budget cuts that are culminating today with demotions—and resulting salary declines—for 100 supervisors.

The president of the sanitation supervisors union continued to deny any subversion.

And Harry Nespoli, president of the union that represents the Sanitation Department’s rank and file, also denied a slowdown and welcomed all investigations. He admitted, though, that some plow drivers could be slowing down on their own.

“Look, individually, if you walk around, you’re going to see a truck doing something [wrong]? Yeah,” Nespoli said. “You’re going to have people that are annoyed.”

Not as annoyed as the people whose streets were left buried.

“It makes my blood boil. Those people should be reprimanded,” said Marlon Singh, 33, who lives on 94th Street in Middle Village.

“They made us feel like we live in a Third World country.”

(Source: NY Post)



9 Responses

  1. Forget the side streets not being plowed. Ave. L still has not been plowed. The frustrations are bringing people to their boiing point.
    All those who were involved should be fired and charged with manslaughter for all the deaths that can be attributed to the stupidity of the workers.

  2. Criminal investigation with jail time for the union bosses
    who allow this. Also any workers involved should be fired.
    Any union boss involve and any workers involve open to civil
    judgements for damage cause to any and all individuals like
    the baby being brain damage. All people charged with any involvement suspended until trail over. Give some weight to this and it will never happen again if not; next snow storm the same thing

  3. Remember Reagan’s tough stand when the air traffic controllers went off the job? He fired them all!! That’s what we should do with sanitation workers who did not do their jobs. There are many unemployed who would love to have these jobs along with the middle-class salaries and
    world-class benefits!

  4. I HOPE EVERYONE WILL REMEMBER NOT TO GIVE ANY TIPS TO ANY SANITATION WORKERS THIS HOLIDAY SEASON. PLEASE REMEMBER THAT THESE SANIT GANGSTERS HAVE BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS THEIR INACTION CAUSED PEOPLE TO DIE.

  5. I’m a long time union member, but if the allegations are true the union and union leadership should be severely punished.

    It is certain that deaths resulted from the inability of emergency services to reach their destinations within a reasonable time, thanks to the sanitation workers action. Isn’t this involuntary manslaughter?

  6. If the charge is true, it would be a very simple matter to prosecute, or certainly to bring a discrimination action.
    Unlike Israel, American courts are designed to bring the truth out, so as soon as the lawyers get dug out they can sue away, and we’ll find out.

  7. The plan worked, because, instead of our local politicians screaming at the Sanitation dept the Chachomim go and scream at Bloomberg ( for rightfully demoting 200 sanitation workers ).

  8. To #7:

    Unless the Chachomim had inside information BEFOREHAND that there was going to be a slowdown, the address to whom all complaints HAD to be addressed was the Mayor!
    Now that we (seem to) know that this was an inside job, of course the anger should be directed at the D.O.S. But not ALL of it – if the man on top has NO CLUE as to what’s going on in at least 3 different neighborhoods? Do you think that his Commissioner didn’t know about it by Monday night??? What the heck do they do in the Emergency Bunker that Rudy built anyway?
    I drove on a roller coaster street Friday afternoon on E. 13 between L-K that hadn’t been touched! By, the way, neither had my cul-de-sac. ALL ARE TO BLAME!!!

  9. #8- It’s called a chain of command. If the top people in the DoS were involved (or even the supervisors under them) then they wouldn’t have been told! The Mayor hardly calls every truck driver to ask what he plowed that day- he gets reports from the director who gets reports from each borough supervisor, etc. If one person decides to “forget” to mention these streets, the report will go up the chain the same way.

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