Grand Central ‘man cave:’ Three railroad workers set up a room inside the New York station
The room was furnished with a wall-mounted TV connected to a transmitter, futon sofa, refrigerator, air mattress and microwave, according to a Thursday report by Metropolitan Transportation Authority Inspectorate Caroline Bukorni.
“Imagine a lot of New Yorkers taking back a cold beer in a prime piece of Manhattan estate – especially those close to good transportation,” Buchorni said in a statement online. “But few of them would have the nerve to take over a secret room below the Grand Central Station and make it their own cave equipped with MTA resources, maintained at the expense of our passengers.”
The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found:
Half beer is consumed in the fridge and an empty canister in the trash
– A clear plastic bag filled with sheets and a duvet
– A cupboard in a storage area for the locksmith store concealed a rollaway bed
The RTA said there is an overwhelming amount of evidence that three Metro-North Rail employees: a wireman, carpenter foreman, and electrician have used the unauthorized break room multiple times. It is not clear if the staff used the room while they were around the clock.
The RTA report stated that the three individuals were arrested without pay until the disciplinary hearings.
The room was reported anonymously last year
The MTA’s Inspector General’s Office said it received an anonymous complaint in February 2019 about the room. That complaint described the same three designated employees that they would “hang out, get drunk and celebrate.” A second similar complaint was filed in late June 2019.
It is unclear when the unauthorized break room was first constructed and for how long.
These complaints were handed over to the Northern Metro Rail Security Administration for investigation, according to the MTA report, but the MTA’s Office of the Inspector General found during its investigation that the complaints were not considered again.
“The behavior described in the IG report is outrageously inappropriate and inconsistent with Metro-North’s values and our commitment to providing a safe, reliable and cost-effective service to our customers,” said Kathryn Rinaldi, president of Metro-North Railroad.
Grand Central Station management told investigators they did not even know the room existed, let alone that it was the locker storage room, according to the report. Officials said that television and broadcast equipment connections created a potential fire risk, and that “the multinational movement’s fire brigade considers an unassigned room that no one who has the key appears to be too dangerous.”
“The risks associated with personnel hiding in that room with the door closed create a variety of risks, including rescuers being unable to quickly get into the room.”
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