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New Jersey rail strike ends, union says

New Jersey Transit will resume its trains on Monday, after reaching a wage agreement with the striking rail engineers, said the engineers' union on Sunday. The deal ended a work stoppage which had affected approximately 350,000 passengers.

The strike was the first NJ Transit strike in over 40 years. It began just after midnight Thursday. Tens of thousands commuters were left scrambling for alternate transportation to New York.

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET), which represents 450 NJ Transit commuter train engineers, announced that it had reached a pay agreement with the agency over the weekend and that their members would be returning to work on Monday.

Details of the agreement were not immediately disclosed. The union members who rejected a previous deal last month will vote on the agreement.

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.

A news conference has been scheduled for Sunday night between Governor Phil Murphy and NJ Transit officials. (Reporting and editing by Diane Craft, Rod Nickel, and Joseph Ax)

(source: Reuters)