She really flushed her career away.

A Metro-North employee was busted stealing rolls of toilet paper and other items from her Westchester workplace — after her coworkers accused her of hauling away beach bags full of taxpayer-funded property, the MTA’s inspector general said Tuesday.

Inventory control clerk File Gjidoda also swiped paint brushes, paint trays, tools and batteries from the Croton Yard in Westchester County where she worked for use at her family’s rental properties, MTA Inspector General Carolyn Pokorny’s office said in its report.

Gjidoda’s penchant for thievery was so prolific that it was a “running joke” among her coworkers, one colleague told investigators.

“It was common knowledge in the storeroom, and a running joke, that Gjidoda was stealing,” the report says.

“According to [another inventory control clerk], every day Gjidoda would come in with a white bag, similar to a tote or beach bag and walk out the back door, where the supervisors could not see her exit the building, with a full bag. Gjidoda would place the bag in her car and then return through the front door.”

Gjidoda’s supervisor, Helen Edwards, told investigators the woman was stockpiling toilet paper and paper towels under her desk — although she’d accepted her worker’s explanation that “it was to restock the women’s bathroom when needed.”

Edwards also said she’d seen Gjidoda carrying full bags to her car and returning with empty ones.

When confronted by investigators in August 2018, Gjidoda initially denied any wrongdoing — but copped to stealing the items after being showed photographs of them in a bag at her work station.

She admitted to taking paint brushes and trays to gussy up her rental properties, as well as walking off with a red tool set and a box of batteries — although she claimed the packet only contained “a couple.” She also claimed the toilet paper in the photo was “to use in her car,” the report says.

Gjidoda, who earned as much as $75,000 a year at the agency according to records on SeeThroughNY, quit before she could be disciplined internally.

The IG referred Gjidoda’s case to local prosecutors, who charged her with two misdemeanors for petit larceny and criminal possession of stolen property — but the was being considered for dismissal as of Nov. 21, 2018, the report says.

Reached for comment, the Croton-on-Hudson Village Court said it had no record of Gjidoda’s case.

The IG also recommended Edwards be disciplined for shoddy supervision of Gjidoda.

Gjidoda did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday. Edwards couldn’t immediately be reached.