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The original livery for NYC Transit Authority buses in the 1950s. Interior view of one of the buses from 1958 Employees of the New York City Transit Authority assigned to the New York City Subway and in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and the Bronx are members of the Transport Workers Union of America Local 100, with Queens and Staten Island bus personnel ...
Number of vehicles. 2,429 commuter rail cars. 6,418 subway cars. 61 SIR cars. 5,725 buses [1] The Metropolitan Transportation Authority ( MTA) is a public benefit corporation responsible for public transportation in the New York City metropolitan area of the U.S. state of New York.
Sarah Feinberg. Sarah Elizabeth Feinberg (born October 3, 1977) is an American civic employee who previously served as the Interim President of the New York City Transit Authority from 2020 to 2021, and a former Administrator of the Federal Railroad Administration. She was nominated for the role of MTA Chairperson but was ultimately not ...
Featured at 107 of the MTA’s 472 subway stations, the memorial uses digital screens to share the names, photos and job titles of transit employees who lost their lives while keeping the city ...
All MTA employees have been ordered to wear face coverings since the beginnings of the new coronavirus outbreak in New York City, transit officials said. The transit agency has been encouraging ...
Updated Friday at 9:09 a.m. NEW YORK CITY — A Long Island Rail Road worker claimed 10 hours a day of overtime, earning $344,000 extra pay, while he actually went bowling. Another MTA worker ...
4 NYC Transit Workers Honored In The Bronx For Saving Passengers: MTA The workers saw a flipped yellow school bus, opened its emergency windows and doors and pulled 37 people out, according to the ...
Roger Toussaint. Roger Toussaint is an American worker who led the December 20th, 2005 New York City transit strike which lasted three days and shut down bus and subway service in the city. Toussaint was the president of the Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 100 in New York City (NYC) from January 2001 through December 2009.