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DOT Commissioner Points Finger At NYPD Commish Over Snow Emergency


Defiant Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan—who failed to call a snow emergency in the post-holiday blizzard but escaped unscathed in the public storm that followed—has now dragged NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly into the slush.

“Frankly, [the Police Department] wasn’t there, and they’re responsible for emergency tow operations,” Sadik-Khan told The Post, which questioned her Friday on the perception that she skated through City Council hearings.

She added: “The Police Department could have called a weather emergency, and Ray Kelly wasn’t there.”

Shortly after The Post con veyed Sadik- Khan’s com ments to the NYPD for re action, DOT officials called The Post to beat a hasty retreat, underscoring Kelly’s presence at storm press conferences and the fact that he was never called by the council as a witness in the hearings, and sent two ranking representatives to them.

They further claimed Sadik-Khan was not criticizing Kelly, but simply drawing a comparison between herself and the police commissioner—heads of two agencies with only secondary responsibilities in the storm.

City Hall’s reputation for crisis management was battered by the 20-inch snowstorm, with Mayor Bloomberg suffering a steep drop in polls.

EMS chief John Peruggia, who failed to inform Bloomberg of a 1,300-call 911 back log, was demoted.

The Sanitation Department, criticized for a plowing slowdown during the storm, saw a supervisor shakeup.

But Sadik-Khan, a Bloomberg favorite, appeared unblemished in the blame game.

“She’s heavily protected,” said a high-ranking city source.

At a five-hour hearing last Monday, council members grilled Sanitation Commissioner John Doherty and Deputy Mayor Stephen Goldsmith, both of whom apologized for the city’s performance after the Dec. 26 storm.

Sadik-Khan sat in the second row, virtually ignored.

She told The Post she took marching orders from Doherty on the snow-emergency decision, a classification that would have banned vehicles from parking on 250 major thoroughfares.

Doherty confirmed, “I advised her that I didn’t need to move cars parked on 250 snow-emergency streets in order to plow them.”

“I would never second guess John Doherty,” Sadik-Khan said.

She said all agencies learned valuable lessons from the storm, and that “everyone came out of this dinged up.”

(Source: NY Post)



2 Responses

  1. She certainly is “She’s heavily protected”. That’s why we have those idiotic “pedestrian safety” islands providing no safety and impeding traffic flow and snow plowing. Once she and Bloomberg leave office I expect that they will be quickly demolished.

  2. the question is simply who is responsible for declaring a snow emergency? that’s the first person responsible for this disaster

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