Monday, June 18, 2012

Junkies at the docks


From the NY Post:

Scores of crane operators and other workers handling tons of heavy and sometimes hazardous cargo at Port Authority docks are high as kites, and at least two enforcement agencies are probing the drug use.

Heroin addict Lawrence Schmidt Jr. was driving a truck pulling giant containers at Port Newark when a foreman noticed him swerving and slowing down, legal papers obtained by The Post show.

Schmidt later admitted he was a heroin user and had been asleep at the wheel that day. His longshoreman registration with the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor was revoked last year.

The commission, a federal agency set up to combat corruption at New York and New Jersey ports, revealed to The Post that it launched 84 drug probes in the last two years, netting 33 workers who tested positive for drugs. Some were fired, and others suspended or sent to rehab.

“The fact is, they are very well paid and don’t have a lot of work to do. They are kids who are somebody’s nephew earning 130K to 140K a year,” another source said.

The 33 druggies are likely the tip of the iceberg among 5,300 dock workers. The commission investigates only when it learns of an arrest or gets a tip. Companies that run the ports can do their own testing and don’t have to report the results.

The commission has been stymied in its recent efforts to do drug testing.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What else is new? This is the long-shoreman union which has much more serious issues to investigate about it's membership. Assault, murder, extortion and theft of merchandise, services and fraudulent comp claims lead the way here for years. Good luck ridding yourself of this mafia - everyone else has tried it and now the PA supervises them?

Anonymous said...

The New York/New Jersey area has a long history of nepotism and corruption in its middle class jobs, that are passed down generation to generation and in its political dynasties.

Those people wont be getting fired anytime soon.

Anonymous said...

And they said if there were no unions, we'd have 6-year olds working double shifts in coal mines.

Anonymous said...

"And they said if there were no unions, we'd have 6-year olds working double shifts in coal mines. "

You are HILARIOUS. That made my day. Thank you.