Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
LIRR President Phillip Eng, who made the most money last year, moved down on the list, ranking at 4. Edward Popolizio, who works as a track foremen, took home the most overall last year. However...
Twelve LIRR employees topped a $300,000 paycheck in 2017 compared to eight in 2016, data shows. In 2015, just four employees made that amount. In 2014, no employees made more than $300,000.
Check out the full list of LIRR employees who were paid more than $250,000 last year: Phillip Eng, LIRR President - $323,153 Robert Friscia, LIRR Foreman MW Mechanic - $319,046
The Long Island Rail Road (reporting mark LI), often abbreviated as the LIRR, is a railroad in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of New York, stretching from Manhattan to the eastern tip of Suffolk County on Long Island.
This list shows the western and eastern terminals of each LIRR service. There are 10 total services, plus one additional seasonal service (the Belmont Park Branch). Jamaica and the two employees-only stations are not included in the station counts below.
As of June 2022, 132 M9s have been delivered to the LIRR, and their procurement was nearly three years behind schedule. In summer 2017, the LIRR leased 8 single-level coaches from MARC in order to free up their C3 coaches for the Montauk Branch.
With the arrival of the first M7s to the LIRR in 2002 and the first M7As to Metro-North in 2004, both roads began to retire the M1 series. LIRR retired the last M1 cars in January 2007, while a small number of M1As remained in service on Metro-North until March 2009.
One of the region's most significant mass transit ventures, the $2.6 billion track will eventually run along an existing 9.8-mile segment of the Main Line, between Floral Park and Hicksville. The ...
The LIRR's history stretches back to the Brooklyn and Jamaica Rail Road, incorporated on April 25, 1832 to build a ten-mile line from the East River in Brooklyn through the communities of Brooklyn, Bedford, and East New York to Jamaica.
LIRR Won't Get OMNY Pay Until 2025, 4 Years Later Than Projected: MTA. The contactless payment system is already available on NYC subways and buses; the LIRR rollout will be delayed until 2024 ...