Philly Transit Workers Go On Strike

Hours after the last World Series game to be played there, Philadelphia’s transit workers have gone on strike.

The strike by Transport Workers Union Local 234 will all but cripple a transit system that averages more than 928,0000 trips each weekday. The union represents more than 5,000 drivers, operators and mechanics of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. “There will be people waking up this morning needing to commute into work. And unfortunately, there’s not going to be service for them,” said SEPTA spokeswoman Jerri Williams. The union had threatened to go on strike during the World Series. But over the weekend Gov. Ed Rendell ordered the union and SEPTA to remain at the bargaining table or risk consequences.

Willie Brown, the local’s president, said they decided to strike after both sides agreed that they had gone as far as they could in negotiations. The announcement came just hours after the Phillies beat the Yankees in Game 5 of the World Series, the last game to be played at Citizens Bank Park. Brown said the strike was effective as of 3 a.m. Tuesday. The doors to subway stations were gated off Tuesday and no buses crawled the streets in the city’s downtown corridor. Commuters trying to get to work said they had to make last-minute accommodations when they awoke to word of a strike.

RELATED: The last major transit strike in the Northeast was 2005’s MTA strike in NYC which lasted only 36 hours.