Selasa, 31 Juli 2012

End of the line: UTA boss quietly retires after career of success, controversy

General manager of UTA John Inglish speaks at the groundbreaking for FrontRunner South as the train is demonstrated behind him at the future Lehi station in Lehi, Utah Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2008.

Ashley Lowery, Deseret News archives

SALT LAKE CITY — The driving force behind Utah's nationally recognized transit system quietly retired this year, capping a career that saw its share of successes and controversy.

Those who watched John Inglish in action call him a visionary, big thinker and leader. They also describe him as tenacious, enthusiastic and thick-skinned in his ambitious plans to transform what was nothing more than a local bus company 35 years ago.

"Wayne Gretzky said good hockey players skate to the puck. Great hockey players skate to where the puck is going to be," said Utah Transit Authority board chairman Greg Hughes. "That's been a theme of John Inglish's service at UTA."

Inglish started at the transit agency in 1977 when its fleet consisted of 250 buses in Salt Lake County. The UTA board appointed him general manager in 1997, and he spent the last two years as chief executive officer, a role that focused his time on national transit initiatives and policy and seeking new federal funding sources for UTA.

Other than a small party with friends and elected officials at the Alta Club, Inglish left UTA without fanfare in April. He declined an interview request Tuesday through UTA spokesman Gerry Carpenter.

As he retired, the agency boasted more than 600 buses running in six counties, 38 miles of light rail and 44 miles of commuter rail. Both rail systems are currently in the midst of major expansions and a streetcar line is under construction as well.

"Without his ability to deal with Washington, to look at funding options and opportunities and to represent public transportation to the community, we would not have the transportation options we have today," said Midvale Mayor JoAnn Seghini.

Inglish received handsome pay for his work, earning more than $350,000 in salary and benefits annually the past five years.

Those figures generated controversy two years ago when it was revealed he made more than transit executives in a number of major cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver and Phoenix. Even Gov. Gary Herbert questioned Inglish's pay and suggested the state might have to look at how UTA is organized.

How much Inglish will take home in retirement is unclear. UTA denied a Deseret News request under the Government Records Access and Management for details of his retirement package. It pointed to the UTA website section describing the agency's employee pension plan.

Free Phone Sex