London subway strike in 2nd day; union to talk
LONDON — For the second day in a row, millions of Londoners struggled to get to work and school and unlucky tourists found new ways to reach museums Thursday as a strike by subway workers shut down much of the city’s Underground network.
Nine of 11 subway lines were fully or partly suspended because of the walkout by members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union.
Transport for London said it had increased bus services and was running a limited schedule on half of the city’s subway lines. About 3.5 million people a day use London’s subway, known as the Tube.
Car traffic was heavy on roads into the city, and buses were crowded — although many were less packed than on Wednesday, apparently because more workers were simply staying home.
The London Chamber of Commerce has estimated the 48-hour strike could cost as much as 100 million pounds ($164 million) in lost productivity.
Management and city officials claimed many of the union’s 10,000 drivers, signalers, maintenance workers and station staff had crossed picket lines since the strike began Tuesday evening, although the union denied that claim.
“It is a certainty that there has never been such a badly supported strike by the RMT and its members,” said Mayor Boris Johnson. “The RMT have failed to produce the kind of mass disruption that they wanted and Londoners have got to work one way or another.”
The union rejected Johnson’s comments, saying support for the walkout was “solid.”
RMT chief Bob Crow said the union was willing to restart talks with management to resolve disputes over pay, disciplinary issues and job losses. There was no word on when negotiations would resume.
One commuter said the union shouldn’t have struck this time.
“I have worked for unions and I support them, but they picked the wrong battle this time,” said 64-year-old electrician Jeff Fhay. “I don’t know how you can go on strike without being sure that everyone in your union supports it.”
The strike is due to end at 7 p.m. (1800 GMT; 2 p.m. EDT), with service back to normal by Friday morning.
Related News
Union Pacific marketing rail shipping to used car dealersAugust 31st, 2009 Union Pacific trying to ship more used carsOMAHA, Neb. — Union Pacific wants used car dealers to start shipping more of their cars by train.
British rail operator plans new high speed train line linking London to ScotlandAugust 26th, 2009 Britain considers new high-speed rail to ScotlandLONDON — Britain's rail operator says it has plans for a new high-speed rail line that could get travelers from London to Scotland in two hours. Network Rail said on Wednesday it has developed proposals for a 34 billion pound ($55 billion) new line through cities in western Britain, including Manchester and Liverpool.
San Francisco Bay area commuter rail union voting on contract after deal averted strikeAugust 25th, 2009 SF Bay area rail union voting on contractSAN FRANCISCO — Members of a commuter rail union in the San Francisco Bay area are voting on a new contract aimed at averting a strike. Union president Jesse Hunt says he's confident the Bay Area Rapid Transit agency's train operators and station agents will ratify the agreement.
San Francisco-area rail system talking, hoping to avert Monday strikeAugust 16th, 2009 Negotiations on between SF rail union, managementOAKLAND, Calif. — Talks aimed at averting a commuter rail strike in the San Francisco Bay Area are ongoing, with negotiators intent on hammering out a deal before Monday's commute.
Union, management of San Francisco-area rail system to meet in hopes of averting Monday strikeAugust 15th, 2009 SF rail union, management to resume negotiationsOAKLAND, Calif. — The San Francisco Bay area's commuter rail system and the union representing its station agents and train operators are resuming negotiations to try to avert a strike Monday.
Rail union plans to strike Sunday, potentially crippling San Francisco Bay area commutesAugust 14th, 2009 California rail union plans to strike SundayOAKLAND, Calif. — The union representing train operators and station agents for the San Francisco Bay area's commuter rail system says it will go on strike Monday.
BART union plans to strike Sunday, potentially crippling San Francisco Bay-area commuteAugust 14th, 2009 Bay area's commuter rail system union plans strikeOAKLAND, Calif. — The union representing train operators and station agents for the San Francisco Bay area's commuter rail system says it's planning go on strike at the close of business Sunday.
Canada's national passenger rail service to resume serviceJuly 27th, 2009 Canada's rail service to resume serviceMONTREAL — Canada's national passenger rail service resumed after the company and the union representing engineers reached an agreement to end a strike that paralyzed passenger trains across the country. Via Rail and the union said Sunday they had agreed to go to binding arbitration to get a deal.
Canada's national passenger rail service shuts down after locomotive engineers walk off jobJuly 24th, 2009 Via Rail Canada on strikeTORONTO — Locomotive engineers at Via Rail Canada are on strike, shutting down the bulk of the national passenger-rail service across Canada. The union representing 340 engineers say workers walked off the job after contract talks failed.
Canada's national passenger rail service shuts down after engineers walk off the jobJuly 24th, 2009 Strike halts Canada's Via national rail serviceTORONTO — The majority of Canada's national passenger rail service across Canada effectively shut down on Friday after locomotive engineers at Via Rail Canada went on strike. Teamsters Canada Rail Conference, the union representing 340 engineers, said workers walked off the job after contract talks failed.
London subway strike ends, but disruption continuesJune 12th, 2009 London subway strike ends; but disruption goes onLONDON — A two-day subway strike that delayed millions of Londoners' journeys into work ended Thursday evening as the two sides agreed to restart talks. Nine of 11 subway lines were fully or partly suspended because of the walkout by members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union over pay, disciplinary issues and job losses.
British postal workers to strike next week in dispute over jobs and servicesJune 12th, 2009 British postal workers to strike next weekLONDON — A British union says thousands of postal workers will strike next week in a dispute over jobs and services. The Communication Workers Union says up to 10,000 mail sorters, letter carriers and other London employees will walk out June 19 for 24 hours.
Millions of Londoners take to boats, taxis and bikes as subway strike causes commuter chaosJune 10th, 2009 Londoners struggle to work amid subway strikeLONDON — Londoners squeezed onto overcrowded buses, boarded river boats, pedaled bikes or walked in the rain Wednesday — as thousands of subway workers went on strike and drove the capital to transportation chaos. Tempers frayed as buses struggled through heavier-than-normal rush-hour traffic.
Londoners face huge commuter headache as subway workers go on strikeJune 9th, 2009 London faces travel chaos as subway workers strikeLONDON — London's sprawling subway network started to shut down Tuesday evening as union workers walked off the job in a dispute over pay. The Rail, Maritime and Transport union said thousands of London Underground workers would stay away from their posts for the next 48 hours.
Tube strike looms in London after trade union voteMay 28th, 2009 LONDON - British trade unions Thursday threatened a two-day strike over pay and conditions on London's busy Underground (Tube) network next month. Members of the RMT Union voted overwhelmingly for strike action in their dispute with transport employers.