Leader of New York MTA resigns, vice chairman takes over

NEW YORK (AP) - Joe Lhota has resigned as chairman of New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Vice Chairman Fernando Ferrer has been named the acting chairman, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Friday.
Lhota, 64, was appointed chairman last year amid increasing problems on the city's aging subway system.
"Joe Lhota has dedicated decades of his life to public service culminating in two tours of duty at the helm of the MTA," Cuomo said in a statement. "He stabilized the subway system, appointed a new leadership structure to completely overhaul the MTA, and led with a steady hand during some of the agency's most challenging moments."
Lhota said that in September, the number of train delays fell to the lowest point since February 2016. "There is still a long way to go to achieve the performance that New Yorkers demand and deserve," he added.
Lhota previously headed the MTA from October 2011 to December 2012. He was praised for his handling of the recovery from Superstorm Sandy in October 2012, when the subway system sustained $5 billion in damage.
He resigned for an unsuccessful run for New York City mayor against Bill de Blasio.
Questions about potential conflicts were raised during his second MTA stint, when Lhota continued serving as chief of staff at the NYU Langone Medical Center, where his duties included lobbying, according to The Wall Street Journal . At the MTA, he had a token salary of $1.
"When I agreed to return to the MTA it was with the understanding that I would maintain my private sector positions and delegate day-to-day responsibility to a new team," Lhota said on Friday. "Accordingly, I created the Office of the Chairman for the purpose of managing the MTA."
Lhota said in October that he had not considered leaving the post. "My term ends on June 10, 2021," he said.
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