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NEW YORK, Dec. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- After resuming
contract talks Saturday morning, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA)
and the Transport Workers Union (TWU) had again broken off negotiations by later
afternoon, saying they were not making any progress toward reaching a deal.
On Friday, the MTA seemed done with negotiation when
its chairman Peter Kalikow said the contract offered at overnight talks was "the
final offer."
But MTA officials later announced that they were
willing to try again to hammer out a deal. However, the two sides now seem at an
impasse once again.
MTA officials went into talks Saturday maintaining
that they would not budge from the offer rejected by transit workers early
Friday morning.
Meanwhile, the TWU is still planning to organize its
first job action Monday morning. They say workers on two private bus lines in
Queens will walk off the job, leaving 50,000 riders looking for other ways to
get to and from work.
The union threatens with a systemwide strike slated
for 12:01 a.m. Tuesday if both sides fail to cut a deal midnight Monday.
The two private bus companies in Queens, Jamaica and
Tri-Borough bus lines, were recently acquired by the MTA. But their workers are
not yet under the MTA umbrella and therefore are not subject to stiff penalties
and fines imposed by the state's Taylor Law.
The MTA's contract proposal offers a 9-percent raise
over three years, but requires that new workers pay 1 percent into their health
plans, whereas under the current contract they pay nothing.
The MTA proposal also seeks to raise the retirement
age for new hires from 55 to 62, but the union wants it lowered to 50.
The MTA's chairman indicated that pension and benefit
changes for new hires were necessary to offset a projected budget deficit in
2008.
The TWU has rejected MTA's suggestion of an
arbitration, which by law would follow an impasse declaration.
Governor George Pataki, who appoints all MTA board
members and the agency's chairman, told reporters that he believes the union has
been presented with a fair offer, and warned the TWU not to stage a walkout.
New York City transit workers remained on the job
Saturday, providing at least temporary relief to the city's 7 million commuters.
If the job action proceeds as planned, it will be the
city's first transit strike since 1980. City officials say a full-fledged
transit strike would debilitate the city and cost billions of dollars. Enditem
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