For Immediate Release
Transportation Commission Honors Excellence in Motion at 25th Awards Ceremony
CONTACT:
Catalina Alvarado
510.817.5783
Ellen Griffin
510.817.5854
OAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 24, 2002...The Metropolitan Transportation Commission honored
a group of individuals and organizations from around the Bay Region on Wednesday, Oct. 23, at the
Commission’s awards ceremony. From the Grand Award winner who steered a massive transit system
with hundreds of thousands of riders back to health, to another honoree who helped a fledgling
van-based service that caters to a hundred or so kids get off the ground, this year’s winners
reflect the theme "Excellence in Motion."
"Our hope is that the innovative ideas and techniques generated by this year’s winners will spark
similar efforts around the region," said MTC Executive Director Steve Heminger.
The Grand Award this year went to Michael T. Burns, who, as the new chief of the San
Francisco Municipal Railway, took on the enormous challenge of restoring riders’ confidence and
reclaiming pride for the agency. Burns, a 20-plus-year veteran of the transit industry, started at Muni
after the highly publicized "meltdown" of Muni’s new train control system left the popular Metro
light-rail lines in a two-week standstill. The proof of Burn’s management success is in the
numbers: Safety performance has improved by 20 percent since 2000, while on-time performance has gone
from 47 percent to over 70 percent. In a recent survey, 57 percent of riders rated Muni’s service
as good or excellent, a reversal of figures from two years earlier showing 58 percent rider
dissatisfaction.
State Senator Tom Torlakson is this year’s recipient of the John F. Foran
Legislative Award, which recognizes a legislator whose work has had a positive impact on
transportation. Throughout his career, Senator Torlakson, who represents the 7th state Senate district
in Alameda and Contra Costa counties, has exhibited a passionate interest in transportation issues and
regionalism, and an ability to turn that passion into concrete legislation with far-reaching impact.
This year’s Doris W. Kahn Accessible Transportation Award went to Senior
Action Network, a nonprofit, grassroots advocacy organization that mobilizes seniors and
others in San Francisco to improve the fate of pedestrians in the city. Senior Action Network has won a
commitment from San Francisco to expand the time allotted for pedestrians to cross at signaled
intersections and to replace traditional "walk" signals with countdown signals that indicate how many
seconds remain to cross.
Three individuals were honored with the Greta Ericson Distinguished Service Award for career
achievements in transportation. Arthur L. Lloyd, a dedicated advocate for Amtrak and
passenger rail in the country, was singled out for his leadership in driving transportation policy in
support of train service. Lloyd is currently a board member of the San Mateo County Transit Agency as
well as the Joint Powers Board that oversees Caltrain on the Peninsula.
John Ficarra also received the Ericson Award for his more than 40 years in the
transportation industry. He retired in 2002 as the chief operating officer at SamTrans, and had
previously spent the first half of his career with East Coast transportation organizations.
Norman Townsend provided information and assistance to transit riders as an
information service representative (ISR) at the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, despite
being visually impaired since the age of seven. Townsend, who recently retired after more than two
decades with VTA, received the Ericson Award for his ability and dedication in helping callers with
special needs.
The David Tannehill Special Employee Award was presented to Steve Fiala, trails
development program manager for the East Bay Regional Park District. He is an enthusiastic and
articulate advocate of trails, public access, parks and open space and has been instrumental in the
development of the 150-mile regional trail system in the East Bay. The Special Employee Award this year
was named in honor of David Tannehill, a longtime MTC planner who passed away in 2001.
Awards of Merit were presented to the following winners:
- Mary Ann and Joe Eddy McDonald were recognized as devoted parents who turned
the death of their daughter and niece due to a head-on crash on Highway 4 in Contra Costa County
into a crusade to speed up improvements to the roadway.
- The San Francisco Airport Commission Aviation Library Louis A. Turpen Aviation
Museum was recognized as the first cultural institution of its kind to be housed within a
major international airport.
- The Napa County Transportation Planning Agency has worked to improve transit
in the county -- from creating and funding an integrated, countywide public transit network to
sponsoring a team of ambassadors to help the public navigate that network.
- Mario Urtecho, an employee of Outreach Inc., Santa Clara County’s
paratransit provider, helped launch a program that provides transportation to after school
activities for children of low-income families. He is program coordinator for Give Kids a
LIFT!
- The city of Daly City and developer Summit Commercial/Mack-Cali Realty Corp.
were recognized for their partnership that resulted in a transit-friendly project — Pacific
Plaza adjacent to the Daly City BART station.
- Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce, Asian Health Services of Oakland, San Francisco
Chinatown Community Development Center and San Francisco Chinatown TRIP (Transportation
Research and Improvement Project) educated the public on how to navigate "pedestrian scramblers," a
method of crossing the street that gives pedestrians their own turn to cross an intersection in any
direction (even diagonally), with no competition from turning cars. Four intersections in San
Francisco’s Chinatown and one in Oakland’s Chinatown use the scramble system.
- KTVU Channel 2 was honored for the station’s coverage of transportation
issues, and producer Roland De Wolk was recognized for his efforts in making sure that in-depth
transportation stories get top billing at the station.
- Contra Costa Times reporters Lisa Vorderbrueggen and Thomas Peele
were recognized for a three-part series that chronicled the 12-year process leading up to the start
of construction of the new east span of the Bay Bridge.
MTC is the regional transportation planning, funding and coordinating agency for the nine-county San
Francisco Bay Area.
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