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Workers on New York commuter rail end their strike after wage deal

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 9:13 PM

NEW YORK, May 18 (Reuters) – Some 3,500 workers on New York’s Long Island Rail Road will end their strike, ​the first in more than ‌three decades which had brought disruption to the U.S.’s busiest commuter line, after a wage deal was reached, New York Governor Kathy Hochul said.

Rail ‌service ​will resume at noon (1600 ⁠GMT) on Tuesday, Hochul ⁠said.

The workers, represented by five labor unions, began their work stoppage on Saturday to force the state-controlled Metropolitan Transportation ​Authority to agree to a new contract at the bargaining table. The workers ⁠said they had not ⁠received any wage increases in three ​years.

“Tonight, the @MTA reached a fair deal with the ​five LIRR unions that delivers raises ‌for workers while protecting riders and taxpayers,” Hochul said on X.

More than a quarter of a million trips are taken on ⁠the LIRR between New York City and Long Island each weekday. During the strike, New York ⁠officials ‌urged people who could work ⁠remotely to do so, and arranged ​for ‌shuttle buses and other alternative ​methods of ⁠transport.

The last strike by LIRR workers was in 1994. It lasted two days after then Governor Mario Cuomo acceded to many of their demands.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by ​Edwina Gibbs)