The PATH to Stardom

By Abigail Goldring, Media Relations Staff

If it weren’t for the missing voices of Simon, Paula and Randy, you would have thought it was an American Idol audition going on in Jersey City last week.

While the William Brennan Courthouse is no fancy Los Angeles studio, 28 local musicians, singers, and poets still showed up to compete for the chance to perform in front of thousands of PATH commuters at five Hudson County stations: Hoboken, Journal Square, Harrison, Newport and Exchange Place. The initiative, PATH Performs!, is the first in-transit performance program in the country based on live auditions beforehand.

“The caliber of the performances blew me away!” marveled PATH’s Linda Doss, who organized the auditions. “This gifted and talented group of performers far exceeded my expectations.”

Among the performers on the first of two nights of auditions was Geyby Aguilar, who started performing with open mics to help her confront her stage fright. A year and a half later, she is singing and playing guitar everywhere she can – from subways to bridal showers. At this year’s auditions, she took the judges’ breaths away with her rendition of Alanis Morissette’s “Hand in My Pocket.”

“I’m proud of the feeling I get whenever I play in front of an audience, that I can make people smile with my music,” she said.

Auditions were judged by a 5-person panel from PATH and the Hudson County Office of Cultural & Heritage Affairs/Tourism Development. Because of the high quality of the performers, it is expected that most of them will be chosen to play, sing, dance or recite. They are likely to perform in the evenings a few nights a week, starting next month.

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Judges Joseph Gallucci of PATH, Matthew Caranante of Hudson County and Gretchin Noel, Donna Glaesener, and Philip Silvestro of PATH

“The performers we saw show what an amazing, culturally diverse community we have,” said Matt Caranante, Program Development Specialist at the Hudson County Office of Cultural & Heritage Affairs/Tourism Development. “PATH gives these performers a showcase and helps us to spread the word about our programs.”

Many who auditioned brought a sense of community pride to the courthouse stage.

“We were really excited about the idea of performing on the PATH because we could represent Jersey City and our local music scene,” said Gabrielle Richa, leader singer of the band Apollo Sonders. “We’d love to have all new ears hear our music.”

It sure seemed like the band convinced the judges to let them have a shot. When Richa hit the first note of their original song, ABE, audience members’ and judges’ mouths dropped open, and their eyes widened. They would never have guessed that the band had only been playing together for just one year.

About halfway through the auditions, as the judges were getting ready for a brief break, their ears perked up when they heard a young woman’s voice: “I’m going to start off with a poem about the PATH train.” An audible chuckle reverberated throughout the courthouse rotunda.

“Hot
Sweat
Dripping
Moving
Gripping
Staring
Surrounded… on the PATH train.”

The poet, local blogger Jenna Firshein, then shared two original poems, “Coffee” and “Forest” and an excerpt from a young adult science fiction book she’s writing. She said she creates her best work when she’s “really emotional or really ticked off.”

But leave it to high schooler Andrew Wholf to stun the judges with his deftness on the electric guitar. He opened his audition with the Beatles, and soon after had the judges clapping along to his rendition of Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back.”

0104Wholf knows a little something about performing in a transit hub – he has played previously at the Hoboken Terminal through NJ Transit’s Music in Motion series. “You see all the commuters coming home from work looking upset, but when they hear Led Zeppelin or something else I play, you see them get happier, and that makes me happy,” he said with a smile.

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For Five PAPD Recruits, Big Shoes to Fill

By Lenis Rodrigues, Media Relations Staff

During their formative years, many youngsters get their first ideas about careers from their parents. That tradition held true today, with the children of five officers who donned the Port Authority Police Department uniform for many years following in their fathers’ footsteps in joining the force.

Growing up, PAPD recruits Imani Brown, Brian Donovan, Michael Colona and Kristy Massaro saw their fathers putting on the PAPD uniform each day and wearing a prideful smile as they left for work. Recruit Gerard Ward saw pictures of his dad on the job; his father retired before he was born.

As they prepared for graduation from the Police Academy, the five “legacy” recruits reflected on lives growing up with fathers who came before them in the PAPD. They are part of a class of 124, which took part this morning in a ceremony at the World Trade Center where they received their badges. They will formally graduate tomorrow.

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PAPD legacy officers with their fathers and the PAPD Superintendent Ed Cetnar

Brown, daughter of current PAPD Deputy Chief Michael Brown, said her father had a big impact on her career choice.

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“I want to be just like my dad, cool and a go-getter,” said Brown, who graduated from East Stroudsburg University where she received a degree in criminal justice and also was a 1,000-point scorer on the women’s basketball team. “I can’t wait to go out in the field and make my own mark and make him proud.”

 

Colona said his father – active PAPD Officer Lenny Colona, with 26 years on the force — also influenced his career path.

“This job has definitely brought us closer together,” said Colona, who studied linguistics at the University of Miami and learned to speak Russian and Farsi.

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Colona recalled seeing a photo of his dad, who worked in the Port Authority’s Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting Unit at Newark Airport, during the recovery efforts after 9/11. It’s an image forever etched in his mind – his father was standing on top of a rubble with two of his colleagues, wearing a gas mask.

 

IMG_0942Massaro previously served as an New York City police officer. Her father, retired PAPD Officer Michael Massaro, has been her inspiration throughout the years and she said he’s definitely more excited about this graduation than her previous graduation from the NYPD.

“Seeing my father being a good person by helping people made me want to be that kind of person. I am so honored to wear his badge,” said Massaro, who received her degree in Business Administration from Saint Joseph’s College in Philadelphia. She previously served in the NYPD Anti-Crime Unit.

 

IMG_0940Donovan today became a third-generation PAPD officer, following in the footsteps of his father, retired PAPD Officer Patrick Donovan, and grandfather Patrick Donovan Sr., who started on the job in 1956.

“My family has been here for some important history and I am so humbled that I will get to be a part of it,” said the new recruit, a former corrections officer in New Jersey who graduated with a degree in Criminal Justice from Montclair State University. Donovan received a shield that has been in use for 48 years, encompassing his family’s PAPD service time.

The legacy recruits understand not only the good service they can provide as police officers, but the potential dangers they (and their fathers) face. Donovan vividly recalled crying when he saw the Twin Towers come down on 9/11, worried about his father’s safety. His father was not harmed during the attack.

img_0939-e1553792013930.jpgWard, a Manhattan College graduate, remembers dressing up in his retired father’s PAPD gear and playing cops and robbers with the neighbors’ children. Growing up, Gerard fell in love with the bagpipes and has been playing since the age of eight. His musical skills landed him a scholarship in 2013 from the Port Authority Police Pipes and Drums.

“It’s such an honor to follow my father’s footsteps after growing up hearing his stories,” said Ward. “I hope to become half the man he was.”

 

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Forging a PATH for Women

By Lenis Rodrigues, Media Relations Staff

Clarelle DeGraffe wanted to be an engineer since she was five years old. Little did the Haitian-born DeGraffe know that 29 years after she joined the Port Authority as a civil engineer, she would become the first woman to lead PATH in its 57-year history.

Clarelle

“Every Commissioner here is proud of your 29 years at the Port Authority,” said Port Authority Chairman Kevin O’Toole at the agency’s Board meeting last week. “There was a search that we did and we looked high and low for someone to lead this agency and we came back right here, to you. We have full faith you can get the job done.”

“We have enormous confidence in her,” said Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton at the same meeting. “She has 29 years with the Port Authority serving in a variety of roles, all of which she has discharged with great distinction. And she has been an excellent deputy director at PATH for the last four years. There is simply no one better equipped to take this leadership position at PATH than Clarelle DeGraffe.”

After immigrating to the United States and reuniting with her parents, DeGraffe drew strong encouragement from her mother, who believed DeGraffe could do anything she wanted to in life, including becoming an engineer, a traditionally male-dominated profession.

“Civil engineering is in my DNA,” said DeGraffe, whose father also was a civil engineer. “It always fascinated me seeing buildings, highway projects and bridges. I always dreamt of being a part of designing and constructing such massive projects.”

During her high school years at Brooklyn Technical High School, DeGraffe’s passion for engineering grew, and she graduated from Stevens Institute of Technology with a degree in Civil Engineering.

Her first assignment at the Port Authority was as a construction engineer at John F. Kennedy Airport, where she pioneered as the first woman in that office. Her career path led her to a major role as the Deputy Program Director of the Newark Liberty International Airport AirTrain project in1998. While DeGraffe was still in this role – and seven months pregnant – she watched the Twin Towers fall. On that day, she lost 13 of her colleagues and she honored their memories by joining the recovery efforts and by helping to rebuild the World Trade Center site.

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DeGraffe when she worked for World Trade Center Construction 

DeGraffe held project management roles in World Trade Center Construction, where she held a key role in overseeing major projects, including the World Trade Center Vehicle Security Center and redevelopment of the World Trade Center Transportation Hub.

“You were on every day,” DeGraffe said, describing working at the site after 9/11 as a “defining season” in her life. “This was a time for professional and emotional growth. You either blossomed or you broke down.”

Before she joined PATH in 2014, DeGraffe oversaw its $3.5 billion capital program and managed the development, funding and delivery of World Trade Center Construction’s Sandy Recovery Program. She served in various capacities within PATH, but when she was placed in Operations, she interacted directly with people as they moved on to trains, giving her a new sense of purpose. “It was like introducing color to my world,” she said.

One year later, DeGraffe was named the Deputy Director for PATH, a position she held until being named Director/General Manager.

In her new role, DeGraffe will carry out PATH’s mission of safely and efficiently moving nearly 300,000 passengers daily across the Hudson River. She will oversee implementation of PATH’s capital program, including the ongoing project to replace equipment and rebuild tunnels that were damaged during Superstorm Sandy in 2012, oversee the completion of the remaining phases of Communications-Based Train Control, and take on the challenge of continuing to improve PATH’s reliability and focus on customer experience initiatives.

When she’s not at work, DeGraffe serves as a Youth Pastor at Grace Gospel Tabernacle in Queens, where she mentors children by guiding them to make the right choices in life along with her husband, Senior Pastor Wilton. During their free time, the couple enjoys watching action films together and raising a 17-year-old son, who aspires to be just like his mother, a civil engineer.

DeGraffe is a recipient of the 2008 Harlem Black Achievers Award, a 2013 Honoree in Professional Women in Construction and a 2018 recipient of a Congressional Certificate of Merit for her community service in Southeast Queens.

As she embarks on her trailblazing role, DeGraffe vows to bring a new perspective to PATH and asks her staff to have an open mind as they collaborate together to move the railroad to best in class.

 

Posted in Construction, Engineering, EWR, Hudson River, Kennedy Airport, NY/NJ region, PATH, Port Authority, Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, The Oculus, Uncategorized, Women's History Month, World Trade Center, World Trade Center Redevelopment, World Trade Center Transportation Oculus, WTC, WTC PATH station | Comments Off on Forging a PATH for Women