New Jersey Transit train engineers went on strike, leaving train terminals quiet for Friday's rush hour and an estimated 350,000 commuters in New Jersey and New York City to seek other means to reach their destinations or consider staying home.
Groups of picketers gathered in front of transit headquarters in Newark and at the Hoboken Terminal, carrying signs that said ''Locomotive Engineers on Strike'' and ''NJ Transit: Millions for Penthouse Views Nothing for Train Crews.''
Friday's rail commute into New York from New Jersey is typically the lightest of the week. In New York, some commuters from New Jersey said they could not work remotely and had to come in, taking buses to the Port Authority bus terminal in Manhattan.
David Milosevich, a fashion and advertising casting director, was on his way to a photo shoot in Brooklyn. At 1 a.m. he checked his phone and saw the strike was on.
''I left home very early because of it,'' he said, grabbing the bus in Montclair, New Jersey, and arriving in Manhattan at 7 a.m. ''I think a lot of people don't come in on Fridays since COVID. I don't know what's going to happen Monday.''
Strike comes after talks this week didn't result in a deal
The walkout comes after the latest round of negotiations on Thursday didn't produce an agreement. It is the state's first transit strike in more than 40 years and comes a month after union members overwhelmingly rejected a labor agreement with management.
''We presented them the last proposal; they rejected it and walked away with two hours left on the clock,'' said Tom Haas, general chairman of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen.