Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
There is no train service on Long Island today. The Long Island Rail Road has stopped. The workers are on strike.
About 300,000 people use this train every day to go to work in New York. Now they cannot. Many people must stay home or drive.
The strike started early on Saturday, May 16, 2026. The workers want more money. They have not had a pay rise since 2022.
It is the first strike on this train line in 32 years. It is now Monday, May 18, and the trains are still not running.
- train
- a long line of carriages that runs on metal tracks and carries people or goods
- strike
- a time when workers stop working because they want better pay or conditions
- worker
- a person who has a job
- Long Island
- a long, narrow island next to New York City, where many people live
- passenger
- a person who travels in a train, bus, plane or car
- Monday
- the first day of the working week, after Sunday
- pay
- the money a worker receives for doing a job
- rise
- an increase, often used about pay or prices
Level 2 — Elementary
Workers at the Long Island Rail Road, in New York State, went on strike at 12:01 in the morning on Saturday, May 16, 2026. About 3,500 train drivers, signal workers, electricians and other staff have stopped working. The trains have not moved since.
The Long Island Rail Road, or LIRR, is the biggest commuter train system in the United States. On a normal weekday it carries 250,000 to 300,000 people, mostly between New York City and the towns of Long Island. Now those people must stay home, work from home, or try to drive into the city, which has caused long traffic jams.
Five different unions are on strike together. They have been talking with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the MTA, for more than a year. They want the first pay rise since 2022, when prices in New York started to rise very fast. They also want help with the cost of their healthcare.
It is the first walkout at the LIRR since 1994. On Sunday, Governor Kathy Hochul asked employers to let people work from home on Monday, May 18. By Monday morning the two sides were talking again in Manhattan, but service was still suspended.
- walkout
- a sudden strike, where workers leave their workplace at the same time
- commuter
- a person who travels regularly between home and work, often by train
- MTA
- the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the New York state agency that runs the subway, buses and commuter rail
- union
- an organisation of workers that negotiates pay and conditions with employers
- signal worker
- a railway employee who operates and maintains the trackside signals that control train movements
- healthcare
- the medical services people use when they are sick or want to stay healthy
- suspended
- stopped for a period of time, usually because of an emergency or special situation
- governor
- the head of the executive branch of a US state, elected by the people of the state
Level 3 — Intermediate
Five Long Island Rail Road unions representing about 3,500 of the railroad's roughly 7,000 employees began a strike at 12:01 a.m. on Saturday, May 16, 2026, shutting down North America's busiest commuter line after contract talks with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority collapsed over wages and healthcare premiums. The walkout, the first at the LIRR since 1994, has now entered its third day and is leaving nearly 300,000 weekday passengers without service for a Monday-morning commute.
The striking unions — the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the Transportation Communications Union — are seeking the first general pay rise on the railroad since 2022, a year in which inflation in the New York metropolitan area peaked above 6 per cent. They are also pushing back against an MTA proposal to raise workers' share of healthcare premiums, which the unions say would erase any cash gain from a modest wage offer.
Governor Kathy Hochul, who has emergency powers under the New York State Public Authorities Law to seek a temporary court injunction halting a strike, has declined to invoke them, saying on Sunday that 'the right answer here is a negotiated contract, not a court order.' She did, however, ask Long Island and New York City employers to let employees work from home on Monday, May 18, and activated additional MTA bus 'bus bridges' from Jamaica, Hicksville and Babylon to free subway connections at Penn Station and Grand Central Madison.
Talks resumed at MTA headquarters in Lower Manhattan early Monday morning under a federal mediator. Industry watchers note that the 1994 LIRR strike lasted only eleven days, partly because President Bill Clinton invoked the Railway Labor Act to refer it to Congress, but the current administration in Washington has so far stayed out of the negotiations. With the New York Stock Exchange, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and most large law and consulting firms on a normal Monday schedule, the financial cost of a prolonged disruption is being estimated by the New York State Comptroller's Office at roughly 50 to 80 million dollars per business day.
- commuter line
- a passenger railway that carries workers between residential suburbs and a central city
- contract talks
- negotiations between a union and an employer over the terms of a new collective-bargaining agreement
- healthcare premium
- the regular payment that an employee makes for their medical insurance coverage
- inflation
- the rate at which the general level of prices rises, eroding the purchasing power of money
- injunction
- a court order requiring a person, group or organisation to do something or to stop doing something
- bus bridge
Level 4 — Advanced
A coalition of five Long Island Rail Road unions — the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the Transportation Communications Union — walked out at 12:01 a.m. on Saturday, May 16, 2026, paralysing North America's busiest commuter railroad and exposing the operational fragility of New York City's white-collar economy. The action, which entered its third day on Monday morning, is the first general LIRR strike since the eleven-day stoppage of June 1994 and follows the lapse on Friday at 11:59 p.m. of a fifteen-month status-quo agreement under the federal Railway Labor Act.
The unions are seeking the first across-the-board wage increase on the railroad since 2022 — a vintage that has become totemic on Long Island, where the regional Consumer Price Index peaked at 6.4 per cent year-on-year in June of that year and remains roughly 18 per cent above its February 2020 level. They are also resisting a Metropolitan Transportation Authority demand that workers absorb a 4-percentage-point increase in their share of healthcare premiums, which the unions argue would more than offset the modest 8.5 per cent cumulative wage offer placed on the table by the MTA's chief labour relations officer, Lori Stillerman, late on Friday.
Governor Kathy Hochul, exercising restraint that has surprised both the carrier and the Public Authorities Law commentariat, has declined to seek a temporary restraining order in New York Supreme Court under Article 23-A of the State Labor Law — a step her predecessor George Pataki used to break the 2005 transit strike. Instead, she has activated MTA Bus contingency 'bridges' on twelve corridors radiating from Jamaica, Hicksville and Babylon, opened five additional NJ Transit reverse-commute slots into Penn Station, and asked private-sector employers to extend remote-work flexibility for the duration of the dispute. The New York State Comptroller's Office estimates the regional GDP loss at roughly 50 to 80 million dollars per business day, with knock-on hits to ride-share surge pricing, parking-garage capacity and Long Island Expressway congestion already evident on Sunday afternoon's I-495 webcams.
Federal mediation under the Presidential Emergency Board provisions of the Railway Labor Act has not yet been triggered, though both sides confirmed on Sunday evening that they would resume talks at MTA headquarters on 2 Broadway under National Mediation Board chair Anelyse Garcia. Industry analysts at Moody's Investors Service warned in a Monday morning client note that a strike lasting beyond Wednesday could compress Q2 ridership receipts by 4 to 6 per cent, complicate the MTA's planned May 30 issuance of 2.6 billion dollars in transportation revenue bonds, and accelerate the second-quarter rebenchmarking of the regional commuter-rail farebox-recovery ratio. Meanwhile, the LIRR's 191-year-old timetable — established when the line ran one return trip a day between Brooklyn and Greenport — is, for now, simply blank.