by Railfan722 » Sat Jun 18, 2022 2:26 pm
Calling the Post journalism is being fairly generous. What they didn’t say in the article is that Juneteenth is a federal holiday, and that the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen were the only union out of 15 who haven’t reached a new contract yet with NJT. The other 14 had Friday as an extra pay day, while BLET members would have been paid the regular amount had they not called in sick. The holiday itself doesn’t really matter, it could’ve been Christmas for all anyone cared; BLET members were unhappy that they would be paid less than their coworkers on a federal holiday, so they decided to take action to try and force NJT’s hand. As for the predictions of a budget crisis, New York gives NJ Transit nothing because it’s not under the MTA’s purview. The most the state will be doing for them in the next decade is splitting the cost of the new Hudson River tunnels and the rehabilitation of the old ones with New Jersey and the Feds. The city itself is a very long way from another financial crisis, and the first thing to get dropped from the budget there will probably be the NYPD spy plane and late-night public transit service. So far, Adams has done a pretty good job of closing the budget shortcomings. De Blasio left him with a deficit of just over $5 billion, which he’s managed to get down to just under $3 billion in the past year. New York is a very long way from another financial crisis on the scale of the 1975 one, and I’d say it’s unlikely the city will ever get to that state again, particularly with the importance of tourism to the overall state’s economy.
Matt J.