Talks aimed at settling a strike between train engineers and New Jersey's huge commuter railroad resumed Saturday and are set to continue Sunday, New Jersey Transit CEO Kris Kolluri said.
The locomotive engineers' strike began Friday at the rail system with 350,000 daily riders and left commuters either working from home or searching for other ways to travel across the state or over the Hudson River to New York City.
Kolluri spoke Saturday at Newark's Broad Street Station, saying the agency is preparing for the workweek commute by ''surging'' buses to help commuters at train stations. But he cautioned that the buses can't handle the entire volume of the commuter rail system.
Kolluri said he and Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen President Mark Wallace spoke and agreed to meet Saturday. It had been uncertain whether the two sides would meet ahead of a National Mediation Board meeting already set for Sunday.
Late Saturday afternoon, Kolluri said in a statement that the talks were constructive and had ended for the day.
''Today's discussions continued to be constructive. We've mutually agreed to adjourn formal discussions for the day but will continue talking and look forward to resuming discussions tomorrow," Kolluri said.
Wallace said he had hopes for a deal with the resumption of negotiations, which had ended shortly before the strike Thursday night.
''If we come out together, we'll have a deal,'' Wallace said.