Some 350,000 commuters who work in New Jersey and New York City could soon be scrambling for other ways to reach their destinations if New Jersey Transit engineers walk off the job early Friday.
NJ Transit — the nation's third largest transit system — operates buses and rail in the state, providing nearly 1 million weekday trips, including into New York City. A walkout would halt all NJ Transit commuter trains, which provide heavily used public transit routes between New York City's Penn Station on one side of the Hudson River and communities in northern New Jersey on the other as well as the Newark airport, which has grappled with unrelated delays of its own recently.
Wages have been the main sticking point of the negotiations between the agency and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen. The union claims its members earn an average salary of $113,000 a year and says an agreement could be reached if agency CEO Kris Kolluri agrees to an average yearly salary of $170,000.
NJ Transit leadership, though, disputes the union's data, saying the engineers have average total earnings of $135,000 annually, with the highest earners exceeding $200,000.
''I cannot keep giving money left and right to solve a problem," Kolluri recently said. ''It all comes down to, who is going to pay for this? Money does not grow on trees.''
Tom Haas, the union's general chairman, has said NJ Transit has adopted a ''take it or leave it" approach to salaries during the negotiations.
''We have sought nothing more than equal pay for equal work, only to be continuously rebuffed by New Jersey Transit,'' Haas said during a news conference Friday. ''New Jersey Transit engineers want to keep the trains moving, but the simple fact is that trains do not run without engineers.''
If the walkout does happen, it would be the state's first transit strike in more than 40 years.