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MARTA chief's payout swells
$455,609 'to walk away': Severance package exceeds original estimate as agency faces $43 million deficit.


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 07/23/08

MARTA paid $455,609 in severance pay and benefits to then-General Manager Richard J. McCrillis last year, when the transit agency's board fired him about midway through his contract to make way for a new leader.

That is well above the $250,000 in severance pay plus benefits MARTA officials floated when they announced the change last year.

A 22-year veteran, McCrillis was entitled to most of that pay under the terms of his two-year contract to run the organization. But the taxpayer-funded transit agency gave him $34,550 extra as part of an agreement he signed not to badmouth or sue the organization, according to records obtained under Georgia's Open Records Act. That agreement also prohibited McCrillis from talking about it except as required by law.

Further, less than a month after offering his job to current General Manager Beverly Scott, the board gave McCrillis a $25,000 raise —- to $275,000 —- and a $22,500 performance bonus.

McCrillis, who was entitled to be considered for annual raises and bonuses under his contract, had received many glowing performance reviews from MARTA, according to his personnel file.

Also among McCrillis' payout was $102,559 in cash for roughly 90 days of unused paid time off —- including vacation and sick leave —- he had accumulated during his career, MARTA general counsel Charles Pursley said.

In all, MARTA paid McCrillis $775,342 in salary, severance pay and benefits in 2007.

Last month, MARTA's board approved an annual budget that leaves the transit agency with a $43 million deficit and plans to cut staff. The average salary for a full-time MARTA employee was about $43,000 in 2007, according to agency payroll records.

About 180 positions throughout MARTA —- roughly half of which were unfilled —- are being eliminated as part of the budget shortfall.

MARTA officials blamed the deficit on inflation and declining sales tax revenues, the largest source of revenue for the transit agency.

Jill Chambers (R-DeKalb County), chairwoman of the state Legislature's MARTA oversight committee, said the board's actions make her want to probe more of its spending.

"If the board is going to be that free-spending with the taxpayers' money —- and now they are showing they have got a big deficit —- I think we probably need to start digging in closer to some of their other spending habits as well," Chambers said.

Walter Kimbrough, who signed the $34,550 settlement agreement with McCrillis as chairman of the board last year, referred questions to the current chairman, Michael Walls.

"I was not really a part of any of those negotiations at all, but in my real life I am a labor lawyer, and I can tell you that goes into every situation where. . . somebody is leaving employment," Walls said of some of the contents of the agreement with McCrillis. "That is just as routine as you can get."

Hollie Manheimer, executive director of the Georgia First Amendment Foundation, offered a different view after reviewing state law.

"Settlement agreements with a public agency may not be kept confidential," Manheimer said. "The point of the Open Records Act is to allow citizens to monitor their public officials. Expenditure of public money is an area of keen interest to taxpayers."

Walls said the board voted to replace McCrillis, 62, last fall because McCrillis planned to retire at the end of his contract.

Plus, Scott, who has more than 30 years' experience in the transit industry, was in the market for a new job and MARTA wanted to hire her before someone else could.

At the time, Scott, who then worked in Sacramento, was a finalist to lead the Bay Area Rapid Transit system in the San Francisco area, Walls said.

"She is one of the stars of the industry and we feel really lucky to get her," Walls said.

MARTA's board signed a five-year contract with Scott on Sept. 28, giving her a $300,000 salary.

McCrillis said he is proud of the work he did for MARTA and was upset by the board's decision to end his contract early.

"I was disappointed and kind of shocked at it," he said. "But, on the other hand, if someone is willing to pay you to walk away, then it is a little tough to say no, if they don't want you to stay."

Staff writer Megan Clarke contributed to this article.

PAID IN FULL

MARTA paid then-General Manager Richard J. McCrillis $455,609 in severance pay and benefits last year when he was fired and replaced by Beverly Scott.

$318,500: Salary plus benefits for second year of contract

$102,559: Cash for unused paid time off, including vacation and sick leave

$34,550: Negotiated settlement

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Comments

By I'm out of here

Jul 24, 2008 12:15 PM | Link to this

I have decided that the ignorance, corruption, secret sweetheart deals, fraud and political bafoons are irreversable at this point. I am leaving this cesspool and not looking back.

By GrtaCustomer

Jul 24, 2008 7:53 AM | Link to this

Another day, another Marta scandal. When will GRTA take over Marta? Marta has proved time and again that it can't manage an out house, let alone Atlanta's transit system. It's not race or crime that frightens the suburban counties, it's mismanagement.

By GrtaCustomer

Jul 24, 2008 7:51 AM | Link to this

Another day, another Marta scandal. When will GRTA take over Marta? Marta has proved time and again that it can't manage an out house, let alone Atlanta's transit system. It's not race or crime that frightens the suburban counties, it's mismanagement.

By luigipizza

Jul 23, 2008 8:38 PM | Link to this

Is this the same joker that disgraced himself in the airport restroom soliciting sex - or is that fool STILL on the payroll?

By Hey DeanN

Jul 23, 2008 5:48 PM | Link to this

"Further, less than a month after offering his job to current General Manager Beverly Scott, the board gave McCrillis a $25,000 raise ý- to $275,000 ý- and a $22,500 performance bonus."

C'm DeanN, defend that...defend the indefensible.

By Get over yourself DeanN

Jul 23, 2008 5:37 PM | Link to this

Blah, blah, blah, DeanN. You're not nearly as smart and clever as you think you are.

By Bill B

Jul 23, 2008 5:17 PM | Link to this

I guess I'm just jealous that I never made it to the Board of any company. These people are all in an exclusive "club" where the normal laws of compensation do not exist. The Boards appoint the CEO's and there seems to be no accountability. Case in point: a few days ago, I believev it was Forbes, listed the top 100 public companies. It showed the CEO's salaries and how the stock had performed over the past year. There was absolutely no corrolation between the two. As a matter of fact, the top pqaid CEO, for Citibank, had stock that had perfomed the worst. Go figure?

By DeanN

Jul 23, 2008 5:16 PM | Link to this

I see why Georgia is rated 49th out of the 50 states in educational achievement. Most of these bloggers are so ignorant it's scary. MARTA is consistently rated one of America's best transit agencies. It's only the Atlantans who don't see this. And that's exactly why you idiots spend valuable personal and family time sitting in traffic.

No one complained when the former GDOT commissioner was handsomely compensated so GDOT could hire Abramson (and the mess he left GDOT in). For those like corruption fighter, who try to make this a racial issue, what do you have to say about GDOT or the State of Georgia going broke?

This does not seem like an excessive severance package to me. The 90 sick days were actually combined sick/vacation days earned over 22 years.

If MARTA was state-funded, instead of having to appeal to every backwards county for funds, they could do a lot more. Dr. Scott, one of the best transit executives in America has a vision of what MARTA could be, based on the fact MARTA is one of the country's best transit agencies. When gas gets to $10 a gallon, like in Europe, all of you MARTA haters will be trying to shed your ignorance and get onboard.

By working mom

Jul 23, 2008 5:05 PM | Link to this

I was for Marta in Gwinnett before this article,but I now know I will be voting against it. We need to have a transit system to ease the traffic congestion,but Marta is not the answer. I work too hard to give my money away!!

By Prootwadl

Jul 23, 2008 5:04 PM | Link to this

$102,559: Cash for unused paid time off, including vacation and sick leave.

Wow. How much vacation did that position provide? 20 months a year??

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