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Tag: TWU

  • Union urges U.S. Department of Transportation to deny Brightline federal funds over alleged anti-union tactics

    Union urges U.S. Department of Transportation to deny Brightline federal funds over alleged anti-union tactics

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    Photo via Brightline/Twitter

    A labor union seeking to represent onboard attendants for Brightline in Florida is urging the U.S. Department of Transportation to deny the for-profit passenger train company federal funds over Brightline’s alleged anti-union tactics.

    The president of the Transport Workers Union, representing 155,000 U.S. workers in the rail, transportation and airline industries, wrote a letter to Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sept. 19 accusing Brightline of “abusing the public coffers and denying workers their fundamental labor rights.” Union president John Samuelsen, in his letter, also urged the DOT to investigate whether funds previously awarded to Brightline “should be clawed back due to the railroad’s non-compliance with federal law.”

    “Faced with workers’ desires to unionize, Brightline and its president, Patrick Goddard, have deliberately chosen the path of confrontation and acrimony,” Samuelsen declared.

    “Although Brightline bosses are anti-worker, President Joe Biden is not,” Samuelsen continued. “The U.S. DOT now must give funding priority to companies that don’t interfere with workers seeking to unionize.”

    A majority of the roughly 100 attendants for Brightline Florida who serve food and drinks to passengers onboard the company’s high-speed rail line filed a petition last month with the National Mediation Board, seeking to unionize with the TWU. Filing such a petition requires signed cards of support from at least 30 percent of employees, although the union says more than 50 percent have filed cards. Since then, Brighltine has retained legal counsel through the notoriously anti-union law firm Littler Mendselson, who have allegedly sought to delay workers’ vote on forming a union and are “actively pressuring” workers against unionization according to union representatives. Such behavior, the union argues, stands in clear conflict with pro-labor stances taken by the Biden administration.

    An executive order from President Joe Biden, released Sept. 4, called on federal departments, including the DOT, to specifically prioritize awarding federal funds to companies that demonstrate high labor standards such as paying competitive wages, ensuring worker safety, and demonstrating pro-union policies such as “voluntary union recognition and neutrality by the employer with respect to union organizing.”

    Brightline Florida has already received or benefited from $36 million in grants through the Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements program, according to the union, while the affiliated Brightline West — a high-speed rail project that will run from Las Vegas to Southern California — has received at least $3.5 billion in federal funds. Local governments in Florida, including Brevard County, have also dedicated public funds for Brightline projects.

    In Florida, Brightline runs a high-speed passenger train from Miami up through Aventura, Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach and Orlando, where its higher-fare service has been especially popular. The rail system is expected to further expand to Tampa, the Treasure Coast (if local government officials can reach a deal with Brightline) and Cocoa.

    Onboard attendants for Brightline Florida are the first to seek unionization, but union president Samuelsen previously told Orlando Weekly that other Brightline employees have also reached out to the union to discuss joining. The Transport Workers Union also represents employees of other rail companies, including Amtrak, whose onboard attendants recently won a union contract delivering a 34 percent compounded wage increase over seven years, plus paid parental leave and stable healthcare costs.

    President Biden has declared himself the “most pro-union president” ever, and secured endorsements from many major labor unions — including the TWU — before he dropped his bid for re-election earlier this year. The union has since endorsed Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, along with other major unions that include Unite Here, the Service Employees International Union and the United Auto Workers, among others.

    The union’s letter to the DOT calls for further investigation into funds Brightline has received so far. It states that while Brightline has benefited from federal funds allocated specifically for rail projects, the company is now claiming it is not a rail carrier under the Railway Labor Act (RLA) and therefore does not fall under the jurisdiction of the National Mediation Board, which governs labor relations specifically in the rail and airline industries.

    Brightline’s lawyers have used this argument to dismiss the workers’ petition to unionize with the NMB, arguing such a petition should instead be filed with the National Labor Relations Board, which oversees the rest of the private sector. The union has decried this argument as a targeted delay tactic.

    “If the company sincerely believes these arguments, it should be obligated to repay the more than $36 million it has inappropriately received or benefited from out of monies reserved for use by or for RLA-covered carriers,” the letter reads.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • ‘Brightlies’: Passenger railway Brightline Florida hires union avoidance lawyers to discourage organizing workers

    ‘Brightlies’: Passenger railway Brightline Florida hires union avoidance lawyers to discourage organizing workers

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    Photo via Brightline/Twitter

    Florida’s high-speed passenger train Brightline has responded to their onboard attendants’ newly announced effort to unionize by hiring lawyers from the notorious union avoidance law firm Littler Mendelson and internally communicating that they would prefer for Brightline to remain union-free. (Shocker!)

    Patrick Goddard, president of Brightline, sent an internal company email to Brightline employees earlier this month, informing employees that while it is their “right” to seek union representation, he believes a “direct relationship” between the company and its employees — without a union — is “in the best interest of all of us.”

    “The fact that many Onboard Teammates have inquired about representation is their right, and it’s clear to me, that many feel unheard,” wrote Goddard, according to screenshots of the internal email, obtained by Orlando Weekly. “I believe the best way to approach these matters is by working together, without a third party involved.”

    Goddard’s use of the phrases “third party” and “direct relationship” are telling. They come directly from the union avoidance industry playbook, and from rhetoric encouraged by anti-union law firms like Littler Mendelson, which is representing Brightline as their legal counsel during the unionization process.

    This kind of language, which downplays the direct role that workers have in forming a union in their workplace, was also used by Howard Schultz, former CEO of Starbucks — another client of Littler Mendelson.

    “One hundred million people come in to Starbucks. The customer experience will be significantly challenged and less-than if a third party is integrated into our business,” then-Starbucks CEO Shultz told the New York Times during a live interview in 2022, as cafe employees at dozens of corporate-owned locations, including in Florida, were organizing to join Starbucks Workers United.

    Goddard, who helped oversee Brightline’s $2.7 billion expansion project to Orlando, worked in the hotel industry before joining Brightline. He founded and led luxury hotel management companies, and worked for hotel groups like Hilton Hotels — a multinational company that has historically spent hundreds of thousands of dollars (more likely, millions) on anti-union labor consultants (some of whom are attorneys, but not all).

    Goddard’s email to the Brightline employees earlier this month goes on to offer a brief rundown of “Frequently Asked Questions” concerning the process of forming a union, union dues, and warnings that, if onboard attendants democratically vote to unionize, contract negotiations between the union and Brightline could take years. “There will be legal limitations on Brightline’s ability to work directly with you to make changes,” he adds.

    The Transport Workers Union, the labor organization that some Brightline employees are seeking to join, emailed its own response to Brightline employees after Goddard sent his email, which they titled “Brightlies.”

    “Straight out of their high-priced attorney’s playbook, [Goddard] brought forward the argument that by forming a Union, the Onboard Workers would disrupt the ‘direct relationship’ that he so much enjoys having with all of you,” the union’s email reads. “The truth is, what you have all set out to do is exactly that: Form a Real Direct Relationship where the company will have to sit and listen to your concerns and demands.”

    Anti-union bingo card sent to Brightline employees, in response to Brightline's anti-union email to employers earlier this month (August 2024) - Transport Workers Union

    Transport Workers Union

    Anti-union bingo card sent to Brightline employees, in response to Brightline’s anti-union email to employers earlier this month (August 2024)

    The union’s email includes its own responses to Goddard’s list of frequently asked questions, which they describe as more truthful. The union, for instance, clarifies Goddard’s claims on union dues, sharing that no union member would be required or asked to pay union dues until a union contract has been successfully negotiated. The union also denies Goddard’s claim that dues would amount to $600 for each employee, annually.

    According to TWU, union dues are equal to two hours of pay per month, and under Florida’s right-to-work law, signing up to become a dues-paying union member would presumably be completely voluntary anyway. The union quips that Goddard would need to give Brightline employees a raise in order for dues to cost $600 annually, and further explained what members’ dues would support.

    “70% of the dues remain with your Local to use to run the union. 30% goes to TWU International to help further grow the union and to fight for rulemaking with agencies like the Federal Railroad Administration to improve the livelihoods of railroad workers despite rail companies fighting like hell to reduce safety and working standards,” the email reads.

    The company’s effort to frame the union as a third party is a “smokescreen,” the union argues. “YOU AND YOUR COWORKERS are the union and YOU all will directly negotiate with the company with TWU’s help!”

    click to enlarge Screenshot of an email sent by Brightline Florida to employees. - Email screenshot obtained by Orlando Weekly

    Email screenshot obtained by Orlando Weekly

    Screenshot of an email sent by Brightline Florida to employees.

    Delay tactics at a price

    The notable unionization effort first publicly kicked off earlier this month, as the Transport Workers Union — an international labor union representing more than 155,000 workers — announced that a majority of the roughly 100 onboard attendants for Brightline Florida had signed authorization cards in support of unionizing — signifying a historic organizing effort.

    The Transport Workers Union then filed those cards with the National Mediation Board — a federal government agency that oversees railroad and airline labor relations — requesting a union election for the employees.

    According to TWU, however, Brightline’s Littler Mendelson lawyers are making the argument that a union election needs to be requested through the National Labor Relations Board — which oversees private sector labor relations in other industries — not the NMD. Neither Brightline nor the two lawyers the company has retained have responded to a request for confirmation or comment.

    The union, in a separate email to Brightline employees, described this argument as a “poorly written objection” and a purposeful delay tactic based solely on the position that this union election is not under the jurisdiction of the rail industry.

    The union also claims the move will ultimately just serve to pad the pockets of Littler Mendelson, whose attorneys have been known to bill clients hundreds of dollars per hour. The firm is one of the oldest in the country that specializes in “union avoidance” and one of the largest, with dozens of locations around the world.

    Their lawyers have historically been used to help fend off organizing efforts such as the Fight for $15 campaign organized by fast food workers (a project of the Service Employees International Union, which recently rebranded as Fight for a Union) and have represented clients such as Starbucks, Apple, Amazon and Trader Joe’s that have been accused of labor law violations.

    According to TWU president John Samuelsen — who is an elected official, chosen by TWU membership — Brightline Florida employees reached out to the union within the last three months, after first having organizing talks among themselves. “The motivation is similar to every other work group that seeks to unionize: to build collective power in a workplace,” Samuelsen told Orlando Weekly earlier this month.

    Workers are dissatisfied with their pay — as many Floridians continue to struggle to afford basic living expenses — and their current benefits, and are also concerned about safety issues, according to Samuelsen.

    Headlines reporting deadly accidents between Brightline trains and vehicles emerge nearly on a weekly basis. Samuelsen told the Palm Beach Post that workers don’t feel like Brightline is taking into consideration the trauma this creates for employees.

    “As opposed to other rail operators, Brightline has an indifference to its workforce after the trauma that comes when a Brightline train runs somebody over,” he claimed.

    Brightline, a for-profit passenger train that also operates on the West Coast, has courted both the state and federal government for grants to help support their projects in Florida, which have been highly anticipated by the public. Out west, the company has received billions of dollars in federal grants for a much larger project that will run from Southern California to Las Vegas, and has developed an amicable relationship with labor unions, including the TWU.

    Brightline Florida runs a high-speed train line running from Miami to Orlando, first expanding to the Orlando area last fall. Further expansion is also in the works, as Brightline courts commuters to make up for recent quarterly losses.

    “Brightline made a strategically stupid decision in hiring a union-busting law firm, Littler Mendelson, infamous for their anti-labor tactics at Starbucks,” Samuelsen told Orlando Weekly. “Brightline — which glommed huge sums of government assistance — is now using taxpayer money to fight the democratic desire of its workers to form a union.”

    Samuelsen has shared that more Brightline employees — not just the onboard attendants, who help passengers with bags and serve food and drinks — have also approached the union, similarly interested in organizing.

    At this time, union officials have been unable to connect Orlando Weekly with rank-and-file Brightline employees they have been communicating with, citing a wish to protect the employees from employer retaliation — an issue that’s common during union drives. A similar concern was shared back in April, when airline JetBlue began (allegedly) posting anti-union flyers at airports, including Orlando International Airport.

    Statewide, just 6.1 percent of Florida’s workforce is represented by a union, according to federal data, and a new state law has further undercut unions’ presence in the public sector. Just about 26 percent of Florida’s public sector workforce had union representation as of last year, but tens of thousands of employees have seen their unions decertified, or dissolved by the state, since.

    If you’re a Brightline Florida employee with thoughts on the union drive among onboard attendants, we want to hear from you. Contact reporter McKenna Schueler at [email protected].

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • JetBlue accused of anti-union intimidation tactics at Orlando International Airport

    JetBlue accused of anti-union intimidation tactics at Orlando International Airport

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    Orlando International Airport (MCO) Facebook

    Low-cost airline JetBlue has been called out for alleged interference in employees’ organizing efforts, with at least two local members of Congress joining a call from the Congressional Labor Caucus to cut it out.

    Orlando’s U.S. House Rep. Maxwell Frost joined a bipartisan group of 160 members of Congress in penning a letter to JetBlue Wednesday, asking the company to cease “anti-union” tactics alleged by the country’s largest airline workers’ union, and to allow their employees to have a “free and fair choice” to join a union.

    “As is required by law, unionization efforts must be permitted to occur free from interference, whether from supervisors or organizations at-large,” reads a letter led by members of the Congressional Labor Caucus, sent to JetBlue CEO Joanna Geraghty, on Wednesday.

    “It has come to our attention that there have been instances of anti-organizing interference at JetBlue from management,” the letter adds.

    Over the last year, two groups of aviation mechanics and air dispatchers forJetBlue have been organizing with the Transport Workers Union, a labor union that represents over 155,000 workers in the railway, airline, transit, university, and service sectors, including Jet Blue flight attendants.

    According to the union, the workers’ organizing campaigns have faced consistent opposition from JetBlue management, despite provisions of the Railway Labor Act that strictly prohibit employers from interfering with workers’ right to organize and collectively bargain.

    In light of that, a sizable group of Democrats and even some Republicans in Congress have urged JetBlue to adopt what’s known as a union neutrality agreement.

    This would essentially establish a commitment from JetBlue not to interfere with, or attempt to sway employees on matters related to their lawfully protected right to organize.

    “Your commitment to neutrality would ensure that management does not pressure workers into voting against unionization or delaying the election process, and it would signal to workers that supporting an organizing drive would not negatively impact their employment,” the letter from the Congressional members reads.

    Notably, Maxwell Frost is the only Central Florida-area member of Congress who officially signed onto the letter.

    Orlando Weekly reached out to Rep. Darren Soto — also an ally to organized labor — who confirmed in a statement that he similarly supports the union’s efforts “to give JetBlue workers the opportunity to unionize free from intimidation and harassment.”

    However, instead of joining his colleagues, Soto decided to write his own, separate letter to JetBlue yesterday. In this letter, Soto asked the company to please follow the law, while adding that  he “appreciate[s] JetBlue’s continued commitment to and investment in Orlando.”

    According to Transport Workers Union president John Samuelsen, who’s based out of New York, the letter featuring signatures from 155 members of Congress (not including Soto) is a direct response to what Samuelsen describes as a “draconian crackdown” on JetBlue employees’ union drive.

    “They have responded to every single organizing drive with the most anti-trade union, anti-worker aggression of any employer in the country,” Samuelsen told Orlando Weekly, “especially of any employer in the airline industry.”

    And that’s saying something. Delta Airlines is notorious in the labor movement for its yearslong effort to remain the only major U.S. airline without a unionized workforce of flight attendants.

    “They’re worse than Delta,” Samuelsen said.

    Photos posted online Wednesday by the TWU show anti-union flyers and other materials ostensibly posted in employee break rooms, airport lounges, and other spots that workers frequent, including areas at Orlando International Airport (MCO), one of the busiest air hubs in the country.

    “There’s a reason union promises may sound too good to be true — they often are,” one white-and-blue flyer, apparently posted somewhere at MCO, reads. “A union can promise whatever it wants, but can’t guarantee anything,” the flyer adds (which is ironic, since — unlike a union contract — neither can the boss!)

    click to enlarge An anti-union flyer reportedly posted by JetBlue management at MCO. - Transport Workers Union

    Transport Workers Union

    An anti-union flyer reportedly posted by JetBlue management at MCO.

    In some ways, the company’s opposition is unsurprising, since they’ve opposed union drives before. The TWU, for instance, already represents JetBlue flight instructors and JetBlue flight attendants — who voted to unionize with TWU in 2018, despite opposition from the company then, too.

    Back in 2019, The Guardian reported on anti-union messaging that JetBlue had continued to pass along to a separate group of airport operations agents and others who were similarly organizing with the union.

    Over email, for instance, JetBlue CEO Geraghty reportedly urged employees in 2019 to decline to sign a union card, arguing the union would never be able to provide them with the same “accomplishment” that JetBlue has.

    According to an email reviewed by The Guardian, this included things like holiday parties, a new app launch, and bag scanners.

    “Don’t be fooled — the grass is not greener on the other side of the fence and you don’t have to look over that fence to see what unions have done (or failed to do) at other airlines,” Geraghty reportedly wrote.

    When reached for comment Thursday, a spokesperson for JetBlue called TWU’s allegations of anti-union behavior from company management “inaccurate.”

    “After hearing from union organizers, our crewmembers often ask us to share our perspectives so that they can consider multiple points of view and we have a responsibility to participate in the discussion,” an unnamed spokesperson shared over email. “We work very hard to make JetBlue a great place to work, and in many cases, our crewmembers have preferred the direct relationship over unionization.”

    JetBlue also denies any unlawful behavior. “Our track record shows that we fully comply with the law and respect our crewmembers’ right to decide without interference,” the company spokesperson added.

    Samuelsen, however, said that JetBlue employees have told union staffers they’re being intimidated on the job. “JetBlue is in the process of trying to intimidate the living daylights out of every single worker not to sign a card,” he shared.

    “They have responded to every single organizing drive with the most anti-trade union, anti-worker aggression of any employer in the country”

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    Job termination, for instance, has been a big concern. According to Samuelsen, the issue of job security is what sparked “renewed interest” in organizing among the airline’s nonunion workforce. This reared its head especially when JetBlue announced plans to acquire Spirit Airlines back in 2022. Such a merger, Samuelsen said, “would destabilize everything.”

    The controversial merger was called off last month, weeks after a federal judge blocked the deal, but Samuelsen says the desire for better job protections and job security that a union can lock down in a contract is unchanged.

    “Workers have stepped up and embraced the moment,” he said. At this point, their campaign — spread across different air hubs throughout the country — is largely being driven by rank-and-file committees of employees at these different sites and full-time staff union organizers who help spread the word on-the-ground.

    Meanwhile, members of the Transport Workers Union at Southwest Airlines this week just ratified a new contract covering more than 21,000 of Southwest’s flight attendants, after a majority rejected a previous deal reached in December that members felt wasn’t up to par.

    According to the union, the deal delivers a 22.3 percent raise for Southwest flight attendants, effective May 1, as well as paid maternal and parental leave, additional pay for work done on the ground (instead of solely on the plane), and pay protections for flight attendants who are injured on the job.

    This post has been updated to clarify that the congressional letter was signed by 160 members of Congress. An earlier version stated 155.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Transport union honcho formally demands prosecutors probe MTA boss amid contract fight

    Transport union honcho formally demands prosecutors probe MTA boss amid contract fight

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    The head of a powerful transportation workers union is formally calling on prosecutors and two inspectors general to probe MTA honcho Janno Lieber for alleged conflicts of interests involving his real estate investments.

    John Samuelsen, president of the Transport Workers Union, made the demand Thursday in a letter to New York State Attorney General Letitia James, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams and the inspectors general for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the U.S. Department of Transportation.

    Samuelsen’s union is now locked in a bitter contract dispute with the MTA. On Thursday — the same day Samuelsen sent his letter — the TWU took out a full page ad in The News accusing Lieber of being an “ethically challenged fraudster.”

    In his letter, Samuelsen attempts to elaborate and cites two Daily News stories that revealed Lieber holds financial stakes in properties that could potentially be impacted by MTA decision making, as well as investments in his stock portfolio — all of which Lieber has disclosed as required under state rules.

    The properties — which Lieber has a financial stake with his former employer Silverstein Properties — include a plot of land on the West Side that Silverstein is eyeing as a site to develop a full-fledged casino and two high-rise buildings in the mass transit-rich World Trade Center complex.

    “I urge you – if you have not already done so – to begin investigating the disturbing pattern of self-dealing and conflict-of-interest that has emerged within the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), the country’s single largest transportation agency under the administration of MTA President John ‘Janno’ Lieber,” Samuelsen writes in the letter.

    “Lieber, a former President of Silverstein Properties’ World Trade Center division, potentially violated anti-corruption statutes, public disclosure requirements, and agency policies governing the previously undisclosed overlap between his governmental position and his extensive personal investments,” Samuelsen continues.

    Transport Workers Union Local 100 President John Samuelsen speaks during the third annual New York Daily News Hometown Heroes in Transit Awards at the Edison Ballroom on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015 in New York City. (James Keivom / New York Daily News)

    The MTA did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The two inspectors general also did not immediately respond, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment.

    The attorney general’s office confirmed receiving the letter, and an official there said it’s “reviewing” it.

    In the letter, Samuelsen ticks off a laundry list of potential conflicts.

    The first is Lieber’s 3% financial interest stake in a parcel in Manhattan’s West Side Silverstein is planning to develop for a casino. As The News reported, the MTA and Amtrak both have easements on the property, meaning those agencies would have to sign off on aspects of development at the site. Records show Lieber also met with lobbyists representing the Related Companies, which is proposing its own, competing casino plan atop a rail yard owned by the MTA.

    “Given that Related Companies requires the rail yard decking to build its casino, it is impossible for Lieber to separate the issue of the infrastructure itself with the developer’s motivation for building the infrastructure,” Samuelsen contends in his letter.

    The union leader also points to Lieber’s 3% financial stakes in 3 World Trade Center and 4 World Trade Center, both steps away from the WTC Cortlandt subway station that was destroyed during 9/11. For years, during Lieber’s tenure at Silverstein, reconstruction of the station hit snags and was delayed. In 2017, after Lieber had begun working for the MTA, he said he made the work “a priority,” following up on the agency’s long-standing plan to prioritize upgrades to the station.

    MTA

    MTA Chair Janno Lieber speaks at the MTA headquarters in Lower Manhattan last year.

    Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News

    MTA Chair Janno Lieber speaks at the MTA headquarters in Lower Manhattan in 2022. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News)

    Samuelsen claims in his letter that Lieber’s involvement in the project flies in the face of his assertion that he’s recused himself from work that might benefit Silverstein. The MTA would need release Lieber’s recusal documents to The News.

    The letter goes on to reference “other unreported conflicts.” According to Samuelsen, they include four companies “that have either recently received or attempted to secure MTA contracts [and] have performed work on the parcels co-owned by Lieber.” Those companies are Langan Engineering, Gensler Architecture, the Syska Hennessy engineering firm and the WSP engineering firm.

    “Given the [MTA’s] reputation for cost overruns, it is not difficult to imagine a contractor submitting a low bid for work on one private sector job in the hopes of influencing the selection process for more lucrative MTA work,” Samuelsen notes.

    He also asks that prosecutors probe Lieber’s stock holdings and other financial investments, citing the possibility of “insider trading based on knowledge of procurement and budget.”

    Samuelsen specifically points to financial disclosure forms that show Lieber holds “five- and six-figure investments in publicly traded companies with MTA business, including Express Scripts, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.”

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    Michael Gartland

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