NEWARK, New Jersey --Negotiations between rail worker
unions and New Jersey Transit are scheduled to resume Friday as a strike
deadline looms in a little more than two weeks.
The two sides last met about a week ago, a union official
said Thursday. Since then, NJ Transit's interim executive director called a
federal labor board's recommendations "exorbitant" and
"excessive" in response to a Feb. 17 letter from nine members of New
Jersey's congressional delegation that urged an end to the impasse.
The unions have authorized a strike at 12:01 a.m. March
13 if no agreement is reached. The last NJ Transit strike was a 30-day job
action in 1983 by conductors belonging to the United Transit Union, during
which trains continued to run.
At issue are higher health insurance premiums and wage increases.
The federal labor board created to mediate the dispute recommended that NJ
Transit raise workers' pay by about 2.6 percent per year over the next 6 years.
The Presidential Emergency Board said its recommendation
would be consistent with wage increases at the other four large commuter rail
carriers - Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, Metropolitan
Transportation Authority, MetroNorth and PATH.
In his response to the congressional delegation last
Friday, NJ Transit interim executive director Dennis Martin said the agency's
"financial pressures are real, are immediate and are severe."
NJ Transit officials have said the pay raise plus rising
health care costs would cost the agency an additional $138 million between now
and 2018 and would force a fare hike. The agency raised fares by an average of
9 percent Oct. 1, the first hike in more than five years but the fifth since
2002.
An NJ Transit spokeswoman said Thursday the agency is
developing alternate service plans in the event of a strike, but didn't give
details.
"We remain focused on reaching an affordable
settlement with the rail unions for our customers," spokeswoman Nancy
Snyder said.
A union official involved in the negotiations said NJ
Transit hasn't made enough concessions so far.
"We are getting down to crunch time now," said
Stephen Burkert, general chairman of SMART-Transportation Division Local 60.
"We have been the moving party in acquiescing on items we've proposed. At
some point, we're negotiating against ourselves. We'd prefer to have NJ Transit
push some proposals to the middle of the table that we can look at."
NJ Transit operates 12 rail lines and more than 200 bus
routes, and provides more than 295,000 daily passenger trips on its trains.
Source: ABC
7 NY
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