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BLET-Philly Inquirer article

02/08/2023 By GCA

NJ Transit engineers could strike as talks  over higher wages have hit an impasse 

The union says the pay disparity between NJ Transit engineers and those at other  commuter lines has grown for decades. 

by Thomas Fitzgerald 

Published Feb. 7, 2023 

Bargaining on a new contract between NJ Transit and the agency’s locomotive  engineers has stalled, and union leaders say the dispute could require White House  intervention as soon as next month. If they two sides don’t reach agreement, the union  could strike. 

A lockout or strike on NJ Transit would be disruptive to the regional economy,  snarling traffic into and out of New York City and inconveniencing some  Philadelphia-area commuters who use the railroad’s Northeast Corridor service via  Trenton. NJ Transit also runs daily trains between 30th Street Station and Atlantic  City. 

NJ Transit trains carried an average 178,904 passengers daily in 2020. 

The impasse is over the union’s demand that NJ Transit increase the pay scale for its  engineers to catch up with their counterparts at other passenger railroads in the region,  said Jim Brown, general chairman of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and  Trainmen (BLE&T). 

“We just want equal pay,” Brown said in an interview. “We’re not asking for more,  but we certainly don’t want less.” 

NJ Transit locomotive engineers are paid 8% to 23% less than train operators with  similar qualifications and responsibilities at Amtrak, Metro-North, the Long Island  Rail Road and PATH, a bistate rapid transit service, said James Louis, a national vice  president of the BLE&T who oversees passenger rail locals in the northeast. 

NJ Transit officials have not responded to request for comment.

In December, Congress blocked 115,000 freight rail workers from going on strike and  forced them to accept a five-year contract that included 24% raises and $5,000 in  bonuses but didn’t address their biggest concern, onerous work rules. 

Many freight engineers, conductors and others are required to be on call 24/7 and  don’t receive paid time off for medical care. 

The deal was negotiated by a presidential emergency board appointed by the White  House under the Railway Labor Act. President Joe Biden and congressional leaders  said they had to act because a freight-railroad strike could have thrown the economy  into a deep recession. 

Commuter lines are also subject to the federal law, written with the intent to prevent  disruptions in critical rail service. NJ Transit and the engineers union have been  negotiating for three years, with the help of a mediator since October 2020. 

Relations have been contentious. Last summer, NJ Transit accused BLE&T of  an “illegal job action” on Juneteenth, when several hundred engineers called out,  forcing cancellations. Unlike the agency’s 14 other rail unions, who had agreed to  new contracts, engineers do not get a paid day off for the holiday. 

NJ Transit has proposed a contract that would pay the engineers $44.78 an hour this  year, while the union proposal would pay them $51.53, around average for its peer  railroads, Louis said. 

The problem is that management has offered percentage pay increases over the years,  BLE&T members at NJ Transit started from a lower base pay rate than on the other  commuter lines. 

“One of the reasons why it’s coming to a real head is the gap keeps increasing,”  Brown said. 

“The guys are firm. … They will not accept something subpar this time. They are  going to stand strong.” 

In 2016, an NJ Transit contract negotiations were settled hours before the strike  deadline. The last railroad strike against NJ Transit was in 1983. 

 

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