NJ Transit engineers on strike after contract negotiations fail wreaking havoc on commuters

NJ Transit has failed to reach a contract agreement with locomotive engineers, resulting in the first major transit strike to hit New Jersey since 1983.The rail system had been warning commuters for days to expect major service disruptions across its network in the event of a strike, which could affect its 800,000 daily riders.“After 15 hours of non-stop contract talks today, no agreement on a wage increase was reached this evening,” the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen union said in a statement about 30 minutes before the 11:59 p.m.deadline.

BLET said that New Jersey Transit managers “walked out of the talks shortly before 10 pm and through their actions have forced a strike despite the transit agency having the funds for a raise.”“Trains that usually run 365 days a year will come to a stop.” BLET had been seeking its first pay increase since 2019 for 450 of its engineers, a source familiar with the negotiations told The Post, adding that NJ Transit could fully fund the sought increase with a seven-and-a-half year contract for less than $30 million.During a late-night press conference Thursday night, Gov.Phil Murphy was informed by a reporter that the union planned to steam ahead with strike early Friday.

“That’s the union’s decision, it sounds like they made that decision,” the Democrat said when asked about the walk-off.The rail service’s proposed operating budget for fiscal year 2026 came in at $3.2 billion.Negotiations were ongoing with mediators in Newark through the May 15 deadline, but the sides could not come to the bargaining table in time to avoid a work stoppage.The union said in a statement Thursday that its engineers are the “lowest paid locomotive engineers working for a commuter railroad in the nation” — claims NJ Transit has denied.With the strike on, its members will form picket lines across the system starting at 4 a.m.

Friday morning, at locations that include outside NJ Transit’s Headquarters in N...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles