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New Jersey rail service resumes on Tuesday after the end of the strike

New Jersey Transit will resume its trains on Tuesday, after reaching a tentative agreement on Sunday with the striking rail engineers over wage increases. This ends a three-day strike that left tens and thousands of commuters in New York scrambling for alternative transportation.

Just after midnight, on Thursday, NJ Transit began its first statewide rail-strike in over 40 years. It is the third largest transit system in America, providing more than 700,000.00 passenger trips per day, on average, across its light rail, train and bus lines.

In the beginning, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET), which represents 450 NJ Transit commuter train engineers, said that its members would be returning to work on Monday. NJ Transit, however, said that service would resume on Tuesday only. This was to allow the agency to prepare and inspect tracks, railcars and other infrastructure.

NJ Transit's strike contingency will be implemented on Monday. The plan includes increasing bus service, and chartering private coaches to transport passengers from four satellite parking lots. Officials encouraged commuters to take advantage of the increased bus service, but noted that it can only accommodate a small fraction of the train riders.

Details of the agreement were not immediately disclosed. The agreement must still be approved by a majority vote of union members who rejected a previous deal last month.

At a press conference to announce this deal, Governor Phil Murphy stated that "this is a positive result for NJ Transit and for the taxpayers."

The only issue that was really at stake was the wages. We were able, in a joint statement, to come up with an agreement which increased the hourly wage beyond what our members had rejected last month, and also beyond where we stood when NJ Transit managers left the table on Thursday night," Tom Haas said.

After last-minute negotiations on Thursday ended without agreement, both sides blamed the other for their walkout.

Murphy and NJ Transit officials said that the agency couldn't afford to pay the union's demands. The union, however, said that it simply wanted to bring the salaries of its members in line with other commuter systems around the region. (Reporting and editing by Diane Craft, Rod Nickel and Joseph Ax)

(source: Reuters)