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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    6:43pm, EST

    The mayor of New York's Grand Central Terminal

    Friday marks the 100th anniversary of New York's Grand Central Terminal. The man who has watched over the place for 40 years gives us a guided tour.

    By Amber Payne, Producer, NBC News

    "This is my office. Who wouldn't want to stand here and take the sights in?" 

    Harry Kelly had never set foot inside Grand Central Terminal until the day he dropped off his application on Oct. 2, 1973. He was just 19, tired of the insurance business, and he hoped the gig would be a nice sidebar before joining the police department alongside his brother.  But an NYPD hiring freeze delayed his aspirations and Kelly just stayed on.

    Four decades later he is a fixture, constant as the clocks framing every corner of the terminal.


    Kelly worked his way up. From his start as a gate man, to the information booth, to lost-and-found, to the station master of the world's largest train terminal. He is responsible for all the information booth agents, customer service representatives, and cleaning crews. 

    "I'm going to have 40 years in October," he said. "I've always been here on this floor. It's going to be rough. But time moves on, what are you going to do?"

    Kelly blends in with the crowd. He roams the concourse sporting a leather bomber jacket with the GCT insignia, and jeans, in case he needs to hop down on the track and retrieve a cell phone. As Kelly always says, "We're here to help."

    I pried Kelly for some of his best party trivia. What is the significance of the acorns engraved in the marble? Are the iridescent faces of the info booth clock really made of opal? But Kelly didn't want to tick through a fact sheet. He wanted to tell tales of humanity, observations of the the people who drift through the terminal. After all, every day some 700,000 people pass through Grand Central Terminal. That's the entire population of Alaska.

    There was the homeless veteran who used to leave his leg at the parcel check and then go beg on 42nd Street. The old man who roller-skated through the terminal wearing a Zorro cape while cops chased after him. And then there was that time when Paul, aka "Tick Tock," almost clocked Kelly for accidentally setting the wrong time in the main clock one morning.  

    Kelly was here before the constellations lit the ceiling. It used to be a dingy black color because of smoke and grime built up over the years. He prefers the soothing rustle of the train placards changing to the automated LED boards. He believes strongly in live announcements and human interaction.

    Slideshow: Grand Central Terminal turns 100

    Hal Morey / Getty Images

    With hundreds of people moving through each day, Grand Central Terminal turns 100 on Feb. 2, 2013, and remains one of the most visited icons of New York City.

    Launch slideshow

    "You should hear a live person telling you that they're sorry for the inconvenience, not a computer. It's just totally different," he says.

    Kelly checked the arrival board, then checked his BlackBerry. The 5:18 p.m. train was eight minutes behind schedule. "It can still make up time," he said.    

    In his years watching over the concourse, Kelly has watched people age. He has befriended strangers, sometimes without ever exchanging more than a few words. His laundry list of celebrity encounters ranges from Lucille Ball, to John Madden, to Andre the Giant.

    But the people he talked most about, the people he cared most about, are his own.

    "They work hard. I respect them," he said.

    As the female announcer declared a track change in a strong, clear voice, Kelly beamed like a proud parent. "Beautiful. All my people sound good. It's not easy to do when you're in there yourself, and you think everyone's looking at you and they really aren't."

    We scurried alongside Kelly for his rush-hour rounds. It was like a scene out of the "Godfather." We paid respects to a Tommy and a Terrell. A framed black-and-white print hanging in the hallway honored old timers "Nugee" and Manning.

    "These were the two guys that broke me in," Kelly said. 

    On the concourse, we exchanged pleasantries with the likes of Frankie the Cat ("another bum from the Bronx") at the helm of a concession cart, and service agent Mike Ippolito ("call him 'Ippy'"), guarding track 29.

    It doesn't take long to see why he's known as "the mayor" around here.

    "You see me interact with all the departments. I know their business," he said. "There's always people who want to see me. I feel like Don Corleone... They can come in and know that I'll lend them an ear, I guess."

    Beyond the handshakes, hellos, and hangouts, it is evident that Kelly takes his role as manager seriously. He is both confidante and caretaker -- everyone's family.

    He paused to express his condolences and give a hug to an employee who had recently lost a loved one. He quietly shared the fact that a couple of guys that he played ball with in his old neighborhood wound up homeless in the terminal.

    "One is still here, he's been here about 25 years," he said. "Every time I see him I give him some money. Can't get him out, so that's sad."

    The electric feeling we had at rush hour was fading by 8:30 p.m. The terminal sounded hollow and airy once again. The hiccup on the New Haven line had corrected itself. Trains were back on time.

    Not that Kelly was ever worried.

    "You have 98 percent on time now. We run excellent service, we really do. It's sort of boring to me," he grinned. "It's too dull sometimes because we're so good, you know what I mean?" 

    Related:

    Grand Central Terminal: New York City icon turns 100

    5 comments

    Great job, Harry. We are all so proud of our brother! Happy birthday to Grand Central Terminal, and congratulations to Harry Kelly for a job well done!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, transport, grand-central, harry-kelly
  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    7:52am, EST

    Flight diverted after Alaska Airlines pilot passes out

    Alaska Airlines flight 473 was traveling from L.A. to Seattle when its pilot suddenly became unconscious. The first officer took over the controls and landed safely in Portland, Ore., where the pilot was taken to the hospital. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A flight from Los Angeles to Seattle was diverted to Portland late Thursday after one of the pilots lost consciousness.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Alaska Airlines said Flight 473's first officer flew the Boeing 737-700 to Portland International Airport after the captain became ill over Oregon.

    The plane landed safely at 9:05 p.m. local time (12:05 a.m. ET Friday) and paramedics took the pilot to the hospital, airline spokesman Paul McElroy said.

    The Seattle Times reported that a doctor on board was able to tend to the captain at the front of the plane.


    There were 116 passengers and five crew members on the flight, which had been due to arrive in Seattle at 9:30 p.m. local time (12.30 a.m. ET).

    The captain has been flying with Alaska Airlines for 28 years, while the first officer has been with the airline 11 years, McElroy said.

    NBC station KING5 said it was not known what caused the pilot to pass out.

    About 20 passengers were re-accommodated on other flights to Seattle, while the rest took a flight scheduled to land in Seattle at 1:15 a.m. local time Friday (4:15 a.m. ET).

    Related:

    Full travel coverage from NBC News

    144 comments

    "..paramedics took the pilot to the hospital," To the hospital? What is it?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, alaska, la, air, oregon, portland, seattle, aviation, us-news, transport, featured
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    5:57am, EST

    Barges stuck as oil spill jams Mississippi River

    Melanie Thortis / Vicksburg Evening Post via AP

    Barges wait for traffic to re-open along the Mississippi River near Vicksburg, Miss. on Monday.

    By Holbrook Mohr and Janet McConnaughey, The Associated Press

    VICKSBURG, Miss. -- With more than 50 vessels idled on the water for a fourth day Wednesday, authorities said they still did not know when they would be able to reopen a 16-mile stretch of the Mississippi River that was closed due to an oil spill.

    A plan to pump oil from a leaking barge onto another barge — a process known as lightering — had been approved, but it was unclear how long that would take, Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Jonathan Lally said Tuesday. He said the other barge was en route.

    Severe weather that was expected to sweep through the area could shut down cleanup operations for a time, prolonging the process further, authorities said.

    Crews have been working around the clock to contain and remove oil since the barge, owned by Corpus Christi, Texas-based Third Coast Towing LLC, struck a railroad bridge and began leaking early Sunday. The company has refused to comment on the incident.

    Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    Lally also noted that about 7,000 gallons of crude oil were unaccounted for aboard the barge. He said it was not clear whether all of it spilled into the river or some seeped into empty spaces inside the barge.

    At least 54 vessels, including towboats and barges, were idled on the river, one of the nation's vital commerce routes.

    More than 168 million tons of cargo a year moves along the Mississippi between Baton Rouge, La., and the mouth of the Ohio River, carried by nearly 22,300 cargo ships and 162,700 barges, according to the Army Corps of Engineers. About 3.6 million tons of cargo is handled annually by the port of Vicksburg.

    When low water threatened to close the river earlier in January, the tow industry trade group American Waterways Operators estimated that 7.2 million tons of commodities worth $2.8 billion might be sidelined over the last three weeks of the month.

    Salt destined for Northern roads moves upriver in January, said spokeswoman Ann McCulloch. "We're still moving corn, soybeans and grain, but also coal and petroleum ... stone, sand and gravel," she said Tuesday.

    Barges carry 20 percent of the nation's coal and more than 60 percent of its grain exports, according to the group.

    Ron Zornes, director of corporate operations for Canal Barge Co. of New Orleans, said each idled towboat could cost a company anywhere from $10,000 to $100,000 a day. The low end would be for a single boat with a couple of barges and the high end for one in "a system of towboats that acts sort of like a bus system."

    "So if one bus is stopped it gums up the whole system," he said. 

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    10 comments

    Drill baby Drill. Yep, just more oil spills waiting to happen. And the GOP wants to do away with the EPA. Lying Ryan mentioned that in one of his speeches. Hopefully lying Ryan and his ilk never get their way on that.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-orleans, weather, life, river, mississippi, environment, spill, transport, barge, featured
  • 18
    Dec
    2012
    7:25am, EST

    Single pothole damaged 25 vehicles in one day

    By NBCBayArea.com

    A single pothole in California damaged more than two dozen cars in one day during a recent storm.

    “It’s not safe for drivers out there. Everyone is getting into accidents,” Nisha Jethi, one of 25 drivers who had their car damaged by the crater on Highway 4 near Pittsburg, in the Bay Area.

    The massive crater on the road left her with a flat tire, two busted headlights, and a day of lost wages.

    Jethi said she intends to add her name to a list of roughly 1,500 local drivers who file damage claims with the state each year.

    Despite the high cost to the state, it can take several months before Caltrans, the agency responsible for highway maintenance, is able to repair a pothole after it has been reported, according to an investigation by NBC Bay Area.

    Caltrans estimates that it should take 10 days on average for maintenance crews to fill a pothole identified by drivers through a service request. But when NBC Bay Area filed its own request, Caltrans took more than six weeks to fill the potholes identified on Highway 101 in San Francisco.

    Other drivers are experiencing even longer delays.

    ‘A waste’
    Caltrans records show that the agency has paid more than a million dollars to Bay Area drivers filing claims since 2009.

    “Those are dollars that could be used for new roads and making sure the right kind of infrastructure is in place for safety,” said Contra Costa County Supervisor Federal Glover. “When you are paying out those types of claims, it is a waste.”

    Although Caltrans denied NBC Bay Area’s requests to speak with a maintenance manager, the agency reiterated the importance of safety in a statement: “Safety is our number one concern as we repair guardrail, median barriers, and potholes on California’s busy highways.”

    Records show that there had been several requests for service along Highway 4 in Pittsburg earlier this year. That was before Jethi’s car was damaged from a pothole, which was made worse by heavy rain the day the 25 cars were taken out.

    “It’s their problem. If something is messed up in your house, it’s your responsibility to fix it,” Jethi said.

    The pothole that damaged Jethi’s car has since been filled.   She says she’ll be sending the bill for her damages to Sacramento.

    111 comments

    Twenty five cars in one day? It must have been an assault pothole.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, california, road, cars, us-news, transport, motoring, nbcbayarea
  • 12
    Nov
    2012
    12:55pm, EST

    Texas highway with nation's fastest speed limit records first fatal crash

    By NBC News staff

    The central Texas road with the nation's fastest speed limit at 85 mph has recorded its first fatal accident, on the same day that it began charging drivers.

    The driver of a Honda Civic died after it collided with a Chevy Tahoe in the southbound lanes of state Highway 130 around 1:45 p.m. Sunday. The victim, Martha Melinda Harris, 60, of Lockhart, Texas, had just entered the toll road from the ramp, Mustang Ridge Police told NBC News.

    The driver and the passenger in the Chevy Tahoe suffered minor injuries, KXAN.com reported.

    Police are still investigating the cause of the accident and did not say how fast the cars were traveling.

    Wild hogs, however, were not a factor in the crash, police said. Four crashes between vehicles and hogs took place during the first night the toll road opened.

    Tolls had been waived for the 41-mile final leg of the roadway, which connects the Austin and San Antonio areas, so drivers could try it out after it opened Oct. 24.

    But on Sunday, the SH 130 Concession Co., which developed and manages the toll road through a contract with the Texas Transportation Commission, began charging on the new section.

    Tolls for the full stretch of road range from $6.17 for motorists with state electronic toll tags to $8.21 for those without, The Associated Press said. 

    85 mph! Texas to open toll highway with fastest speed limit in nation

    Since the repeal of the 55-mph national speed limit for U.S. highways in 1995, 34 states have individually raised their speed limits to 70 mph or higher on portions of their roads, according to the Governors Highway Safety Association.

    Other roads in the Lone Star State also have high speed limits: On some highways in rural West Texas, drivers can legally cruise as fast as 80 mph, the AP reported. Utah is the only other state in the country with posted speeds at 80 mph, with that as the limit on portions of Interstate 15, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

    The first 85-mile an hour speed limit signs are going up on a stretch of Route 130 outside of Austin, Texas. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

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    343 comments

    They ought to remove the speed limit entirely and turn these 41 miles into a pay-per-view death race reality show.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, highway, transport, 85-mph

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