LIRR Strike Ends with Tentative Deal, Service to Resume
TL;DR Summary
A three-day Long Island Rail Road strike ended with a tentative contract between the MTA and five unions, brokered by federal mediators from the National Mediation Board. Partial service is to restart by noon Tuesday and full service by Tuesday’s evening rush, as the system restores for about 300,000 daily riders. The deal Retroactively provides wage increases of 3%, 3%, and 3.5% over the contract years, with a fourth-year pay issue still under discussion. Unions must ratify the agreement, and Gov. Kathy Hochul framed the settlement as protecting riders and taxpayers while avoiding fare or tax increases.
- Deal reached to end Long Island Rail Road strike Politico
- Recap: Deal reached by MTA and unions to end LIRR strike, service to resume at noon NBC New York
- Deal reached to end strike at largest US commuter railroad CNN
- Payroll data exposes six-figure salaries behind transit strike grinding NYC travel to a halt Fox News
- LIRR strike travel: Here's when the Long Island Rail Road will resume story ABC7 New York
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