New Jersey Transit Union Strike Disrupted Two Work Days To Get Long-Overdue Higher Wages – Tentative Agreement Reached, Service Resumes In Full This Morning

Share

New Jersey Transit Union Strike Disrupted Two Work Days To Get Long-Overdue Higher Wages – Tentative Agreement Reached, Service Resumes In Full This Morning

Editor’s note: There have been many strikes in the past year or so, including that by United Auto Workers, along with the historic SAG-AFTRA strike of workers in the TV and movie industries. Both of these strikes were resolved relatively quickly, with high public pressure on the employers to give their workers a fair contract.  

The following is New Jersey Transit’s announcement and schedule after the agreement restoring rail service was reached with the union:

TENTATIVE AGREEMENT REACHED – RAIL SERVICE RESTARTING TUESDAY MAY 20th

NJ TRANSIT and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers & Trainmen (BLET) have announced a tentative agreement. As a result, NJ TRANSIT train service will resume on Tuesday, May 20, as it takes approximately 24 hours to inspect and prepare tracks, rail cars, and other infrastructure before returning to full scheduled service.

Supplemental bus service from four regional Park & Rides will be in place and operating on Monday, May 19 only.  NJ TRANSIT will continue to deploy customer ambassadors at stations and Park & Ride locations to assist customers as train service restarts.

NJ TRANSIT strongly encourages all those who can work from home on Monday, May 19th to do so and limit traveling on the NJ TRANSIT system to essential purposes only.

First Scheduled Trains for Tuesday, May 20th 

See below for a list of the first trains departing on each rail line on Tuesday, May 20th.

 

Trip Planner

The Trip Planner on the njtransit.com homepage is available now for rail trip planning beginning on Tuesday, May 20.

Ticketing

Train tickets for travel on Tuesday, May 20th and beyond will be available for purchase on Monday evening, beginning around approximately 9pm, in the NJ TRANSIT Mobile App and at Ticket Vending Machines (TVM), though some TVM’s may take slightly longer to begin sales.

Contingency Bus Service from Park & Rides

NJ TRANSIT is no longer operating supplemental bus service from regional Park & Rides.

Customer Service

NJ TRANSIT Customer Service live operators are available until 5pm on Tuesday, May 20th for assistance at 973-275-5555. After closing at 5pm on Tuesday, NJ TRANSIT Customer Service will resume its normal call center hours of operation on Wednesday, from 8:30a-5pm.

Ticket Expirations & Refunds

Customers whose tickets expired during the strike will see the following:

  • For NJ TRANSIT train tickets and passes that expired between Friday, May 16th through Monday, May 19th, those tickets and passes will have their expiration dates extended through the end of service on Saturday, May 24th. Tickets that expired in the NJ TRANSIT Mobile App will be restored to the user’s wallet over the next 48 hours.
  • For May NJ TRANSIT train monthly pass holders, those passes will be valid for travel and honored through Wednesday, June 4th.

Ticket refund requests can be made per NJ TRANSIT’s refund policy by contacting NJ TRANSIT Customer Service.

Following is the union’s statement on the new agreement:

Strike ends as BLET, NJ Transit reach tentative agreement

NEWARK — This afternoon, May 18, the BLET and NJ Transit reached a tentative agreement, ending a strike that began Friday. Union members will return to work and trains will begin running on their regular schedules Tuesday, May 20. Terms of the agreement will be sent to the union’s 450 members who work as locomotive engineers or are trainees at the passenger railroad for their consideration. Contract language and dollar figures will be announced to the public later after BLET members have an opportunity to review. It was the first strike at NJ Transit in 42 years.

“While I won’t get into the exact details of the deal reached, I will say that the only real issue was wages, and we were able to reach an agreement that boosts hourly pay beyond the proposal rejected by our members last month and beyond where we were when NJ Transit’s managers walked away from the table Thursday evening,” said Tom Haas, BLET’s General Chairman at NJ Transit. “We also were able to show management ways to boost engineers’ wages that will help NJT with retention and recruitment, without causing any significant budget issue or requiring a fare increase.”


The national union will begin to conduct a ratification vote by electronic ballot for the 450 BLET members eligible to vote. The agreement also requires a vote by the NJ Transit board at their next regularly scheduled meeting on June 11.

“Our members at NJ Transit had the full support of our national union, as well as the Teamsters. We also appreciated the outpouring of support we received from NJ Transit passengers and the labor community who know that NJ Transit’s locomotive engineers keep the trains moving and went years without a raise,” said BLET National President Mark Wallace.

Under the rules of the Railway Labor Act, the United States Congress could have intervened to delay or block the NJ Transit strike, but chose not to intervene. “I want to thank members of Congress for allowing the process to work without interference. This should be a lesson for other railroad disputes. Nothing would have been gained by kicking the can down the road. Allowing strikes to happen encourages settlement rather than stonewalling,” Wallace added.

Before today, NJ Transit’s locomotive engineers were the lowest paid locomotive engineers working for a major commuter railroad in the nation, despite The New York City-Newark-Jersey City metro area being ranked among the least affordable areas in the United States. NJ Transit’s engineers have not had a new raise in the past five years, despite a significant rise in inflation.

 

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen represents 51,000 locomotive engineers and other train service workers at freight and passenger railroads across the United States. The union is a division of the Rail Conference of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT).

Banner Image:  An Amtrak ACS64 flies by Princeton Junction. Image Credit – Island Group Studios


Share

One Comment

  • Avatar Anonymouse says:

    Thank G-D for this.

    Transit strikes create chaos throughout the entire Metro NY-NJ region.

    I ma happy this has been resolved and everyone is settled.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

code