Metro Magazine

SEP-OCT 2012

Magazine serving the bus and rail transit & motorcoach operations since 1904

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WOMEN IN TRANSPORTATION Helena WILLIAMS TITLE President ORGANIZATION Long Island Rail Road CITY New York, N.Y. Helena Williams' keen interest in labor relations is what eventually made the current Metropolitan Transportation Authority's (MTA) Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) president a key player in today's transportation industry. After graduating college, Williams earned her J.D., with a specialty in labor law, from St. John's University School of Law. She started as a summer intern working for Mayor Ed Koch in the Of- fi ce of Municipal Labor Relations. Upon graduation, she was appointed assistant general counsel before leaving to accept a job as an attorney in the private sector. "Having an employment and labor law background in legal training helps you really approach problems with a very strong eye for what the issues are and what the response needs to be," says Williams. "It also gives me a sense of how to move things forward." After her brief stint in private practice, Williams began her career at the MTA in 1986. She rose from labor counsel to chief of staff of Long Island Bus, and in 1993, Williams became president. "I really had an understanding of how transit services are provided and the as- sociated costs with my background in labor," says Williams. "It was really a natural progression." Williams oversaw efforts to introduce environmentally friendly bus fl eets, up- grade Metrocard technologies and cut costs for the organization all around. She then became the Nassau County Deputy County Executive and served in the administration of Tom Suozzi, working on major commercial devel- opment issues in the Nassau Hub and helping to turn around the county's nearly bankrupt fi nances. Five years later, in 2007, Williams was appointed president of the LIRR. The system, which transports people in and Williams has been recognized for improving customer communication and service, cutting costs and commencing modernization projects that benefi t passengers. out of New York City, serves more than 81.5 million customers per year and em- ploys approximately 6,500 people. During the course of her term, Wil- liams has been recognized for improv- ing customer communication and service, cutting costs, and commenc- ing modernization projects that bring on-time performance and service reli- ability to riders. She has also overseen a reorganization of key departments as part of an MTA-wide effort to improve effi ciency. In addition to daily rail operations, Williams is currently overseeing the cap- ital program investments needed to sup- port the East Side Access project, a $7 bil- lion project connecting the LIRR's Main and Port Washington lines in Queens to a new terminal 140 feet beneath Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan. "This project is history in the mak- ing," says Williams. "Every time I do an inspection of the Eastside Access, I feel like I'm marking history for one of the biggest public works projects that will ever exist. It will go down like the Hoover Dam as a tremendous civic 56 < mETRO mAGAZINE SEPTEMBER • OCTOBER 2012 achievement." When complete, the East Side Access plan will drastically shorten commut- ing time into the east side of Manhat- tan and give people more access to the area's growing job market. The project will also protect the Long Island hous- ing market. "One of our great accomplishments is working to grow Long Island's economy and housing opportunities," says Wil- liams. "We're trying to become a walk- able community where new housing and commercial opportunities are being developed closer to the stations. We've been creative in trying to help the Long Island community fi nd strategies for transit-oriented development." A mother of three, Williams is the fi rst female president in all 177 years of LIRR's operation. "Customers don't care about gender; they just want to get where they need to go on time," says Williams. "But women need to recognize that there's a place in transportation for them. It's an exciting opportunity for all women to see what they can achieve." metro-magazine.com

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