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New Jersey Transit rail strikes on Thursday night

New Jersey Transit train engineer plan to leave the job on Thursday at midnight if their wage demands have not been met. This will affect hundreds of thousands commuters from New Jersey and New York.

This would be the country's first strike in over 40 years for the third largest transit system. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen has been negotiating with them a new contract. The union represents 450 commuter train engineers at NJ Transit.

In anticipation of the strike, the agency has already cancelled trains and buses from MetLife Stadium to Shakira concerts at MetLife Stadium on Thursday and Friday evenings.

NJ Transit issued an advisory urging travelers to reach their destinations by 11:59 pm on Thursday. They also encouraged commuters, if they could, to start working from home on Friday.

In the event of a strike, the agency would increase bus services on existing routes and charter private buses that would operate from satellite lots. However, it warned that buses could only handle 20% of rail passengers.

Both sides met on Thursday for further talks. The two sides had reached an agreement on a possible deal in March. However, the union members rejected it overwhelmingly.

The union claims it simply wants to raise salaries for engineers to be on par with commuter trains in the area. NJ Transit says it can't afford to give the raises the union wants.

NJ Transit claims that engineers make an average of $135,000 and that the management offered a contract that would result in a salary average of $172,000. The union, however, has challenged these figures and said that the average salary for engineers is $113,000.

Both parties have accused each other of unfair bargaining.

Kris Kolluri said that last week, the agency’s chief executive was "playing chicken with the lives 350,000 riders."

Tom Haas said, "We've asked for nothing more than equal wages for equal work. But we have been continually rejected by New Jersey Transit," the union general chairman stated earlier this week. (Reporting and editing by Aurora Ellis; Joseph Ax)

(source: Reuters)