The Metropolitan Transportation Authority and five Long Island Rail Road unions ended a three-day walkout late Monday, after talks mediated by Governor Kathy Hochul produced an undisclosed pay deal for 3,500 workers. Service for nearly 300,000 stran…
As the Long Island Rail Road strike limps into its third day, New York State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli estimates regional losses at a brisk $61 million daily, with businesses from Manhattan to Jones Beach feeling the pinch. The work stoppage, sparked by an impasse between rail unions and the MTA, snarls the commutes of 275,000, and—just in time for tourist season—nudges even the stoic into carpool karaoke.
The Long Island Rail Road ground to a halt Monday as contract talks between the MTA and striking unions stalled, marooning the service’s usual 275,000 daily commuters and leaving shuttle buses and sunscreen in short supply from Jamaica to Hicksville. Federal mediators have hurried both sides to the table, but for now, working from home—or at creative alternative addresses—remains the order of the day.
After three days of paralysis on the Long Island Rail Road, MTA chief Janno Lieber claims trains could run as soon as a day after a deal with the unions materialises—"cautiously optimistic" is the official weather. Governor Kathy Hochul nudged both sides back to talks, while the agency insists it won’t grant LIRR workers fatter pensions than their peers—lest gilded rails become the new standard.
Commuters across Long Island, Queens, Brooklyn, and Manhattan faced a fourth day without Long Island Rail Road trains, as talks between the MTA and five unions—representing 3,500 striking workers—stalled over pay. With 300,000 riders sidelined and the MTA’s Gary Dellaverson lamenting the unions’ “no sense of urgency,” many are now recalculating the joys of summer in traffic, hoping history doesn’t repeat the drawn-out 1994 stoppage.
A strike by Long Island Rail Road unions, now in its third day, has consigned Nassau and Suffolk county commuters to labyrinthine bus-and-subway scrambles, with some pouring two extra hours into the daily grind to Manhattan. Negotiations between the MTA and five labor groups over pay remain stalled, though Governor Kathy Hochul’s assertion that things “went smoother than expected” may not quite resonate with crammed bus veterans.
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Commuters across New York reeled as a strike by Long Island Rail Road workers derailed weekday travel plans, while negotiations between unions and management trundled on without resolution. With thousands left scrambling for alternatives, each passing hour adds pressure to reach a deal—though, as any seasoned LIRR rider knows, patience is often the most reliable form of transportation on offer.
A walkout by Long Island Rail Road unions left some 300,000 suburbanites recalculating commutes with a mixture of buses, subways, and the odd spouse-chauffeured dash—a real test of metropolitan logistics. Talks between the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and unions staggered on amid mutual irritation, stalled over wage bumps and higher health costs, though both sides agree on one thing: normal service will resume just as soon as brinkmanship goes out of fashion.
Five unions representing Long Island Rail Road workers—a group earning an average of $136,000 last year, says the Metropolitan Transportation Authority—have hit the brakes, striking over stalled wages since 2022. While the headline pay turns heads, the lack of raises stings amidst rising costs; management and labour now must puzzle over how to split the pie before more commuters jump off the rail entirely.
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