Toll of Commuting
News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

Still no deal in LIRR contract talks as threat of historic strike looms

Workers could legally walk off the job as early as May 16 if a deal is not reached.

Kevin Vesey

Mar 23, 2026, 5:26 PM

Updated

Share:

The latest round of negotiations between the Long Island Rail Road and five of its unions has ended without an agreement, with less than two months until a potential systemwide strike that could disrupt hundreds of thousands of commuters.

According to a source close to the unions, representatives for the LIRR and union leaders met Friday for their first bargaining session of 2026. Workers could legally walk off the job as early as May 16 if a deal is not reached.

For riders, the uncertainty is already causing concern. Many commuters say a strike would upend their daily routines and make traveling to work significantly more difficult. The LIRR is the busiest commuter rail system in the country, and a shutdown would mark its first strike in more than 30 years.

Despite the looming deadline, the issue was not publicly addressed during the latest monthly meeting of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s LIRR Committee on Monday. Behind the scenes, however, officials say they are preparing contingency plans in the event of a work stoppage.

Those plans would likely include deploying buses to shuttle passengers between LIRR stations and subway stations in Queens, attempting to keep some commuters moving even if service halts on the railroad.

Gerard Bringmann, chairman of the LIRR Commuter Council and an MTA board member, warned that any alternative plan will be a headache for riders.

“No matter what, it’s going to be a tremendous inconvenience to our riders,” Bringmann said.

He is urging the MTA to expand its contingency strategy beyond an earlier proposal, which relied on just three LIRR stations — including only one in Suffolk County — to serve displaced riders. Bringmann expressed concern that such a limited plan would create parking shortages and fail to accommodate the region’s large commuting population, even with additional buses.

A central issue in the negotiations continues to be work rules governing train engineers, particularly provisions that grant additional pay for operating different types of trains within the same shift.

Top Stories

02:41
REChristinepwaystabbing_2026-04-15-22-15-53

2 guests stabbed in the face at Piscataway motel as officials move to enforce stay limit

01:53
Screenshot 2026-04-15 151000

Record-breaking warmth heading to New Jersey again to end the week

02:16
Chris Wright

U.S. energy secretary addresses rising gas prices and tri‑state energy challenges in exclusive interview

02:06
MTNJTickets0415_2026-04-15-22-20-11

Jury finds that Ticketmaster and Live Nation had an anticompetitive monopoly over big concert venues

01:49
REjenniwcresturant4415_2026-04-15-22-23-42

Bayonne restaurant goes all-in for World Cup with themed experience and specials

01:35
X Comet C2025

Rare comet visits our early morning sky this week

01:02
HRHUpdate8am_2026-04-15-09-03-19

Public hearing on Heights University Hospital closure canceled

02:02
BEACH EROSION TN 2

Privately funded $1M project aims to stop Bay Head beach erosion

00:38
REJP4152026_2026-04-15-22-20-22

Jersey Proud: Teeing off for a cause

00:15
EDISON FIRE TN

Firefighter injured after falling through roof while battling Edison apartment fire

00:23
AP26105587936686

Popular NYC SantaCon charity fundraiser was more con than Claus, authorities say

02:24
SumoWrestlingNJ_2026-04-15-17-18-28

Professional sumo tournament set for NJ as athletes train for historic event

00:23
Screenshot 2026-04-15 122748

Route 3 reopens after CSX freight train derailment in North Bergen

CLIFTON MAN ARRESTED

Clifton man arrested after threat at convenience store leads to discovery of ghost guns

00:24
GatewayUpdate12p_2026-04-15-12-28-31

New video shows progress on Gateway Tunnel Project construction in North Bergen

wawa

Free coffee available for app users on 'Wawa Day'

00:23
crane accident

Manahawkin father of four identified as victim in fatal construction accident at Clifton school site

00:58
Wright

Exclusive: Energy Secretary Chris Wright discusses the future of tri-state power, gas prices and the AI surge

Squirrelene Dion

‘Squirrellene Dion’ goes ‘nuts’ inside Gloucester Township home

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices