NYC NOW - Morning Headlines: Potential NJ Transit Strike Nears, Lawmakers Demand Answers in Prison Deaths, and MTA Holds Subway Music Auditions
Episode Date: May 15, 2025A potential NJ Transit strike could begin if the agency and its engineers’ union fail to reach a contract agreement, marking what would be the region’s first major transit stoppage in two decades.... Meanwhile, Albany lawmakers are pressing prison officials for answers after corrections officers were charged with murder in the deaths of two incarcerated people. Plus, the MTA held live auditions Wednesday at Grand Central Madison for its Music Under New York program, with 54 performers vying to become official subway musicians.
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Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC.
It's Thursday, May 15th.
Here's the morning headlines from David First.
The clock is ticking on a New Jersey transit strike.
That's if the transit agency and engineers union don't come to an agreement on a new contract.
The strike would be the first major transit work stoppage in the region in 20 years.
Tom Haas is a commuter rail operator and general chairman of the union, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers.
We're a 24-hour-a-day, 365-day-a-year operation.
Usually what we tell people when they start is that things like weekends, holidays, your children's birthdays,
baseball games, things like that, you're going to miss them.
Haas says he's optimistic. The two sides will come to an agreement later today.
The union says its members haven't gotten a raise since 2019.
engineers walk off the job at which shut down commuter train service for hundreds of thousands of
commuters. Albany lawmakers are still looking for answers from prison officials after corrections
officers were charged with murder in the recent beating deaths of two incarcerated people.
WNYC's Jimmy Vielkind reports.
Corrections Commissioner Dan Marticello says body cameras will be implemented in all but one state
prison before the end of the summer. The recently adopted state budget requires corrections
officers to record all interactions with incarcerated people.
Marticello says that investment will help hold officers accountable.
In terms of our investments around fixed cameras, body-worn cameras, I think that that, again,
will help us capture evidentiary material critical in making sure we're getting it right.
Body cam footage showing the beating death of prisoner Robert Brooks shocked lawmakers and led to
murder charges against six corrections employees. Five officers have pleaded not guilty,
but one accepted a plea deal.
The MTA is on the hunt for some new musical talent.
The agency held auditions at Grand Central Madison yesterday for its music under New York program, now in its 35th year.
54 musicians performed everything from classical violin to South American pan flute in hopes of becoming official subway performers.
Juliette Michelson is interim director of the MTA Arts and Design.
She says the performers are joyful for New Yorkers and tourists alike.
visitors, it's often a very memorable experience, right? I mean, we've all seen friends coming to
visit New York, and that is actually what they remember most about the trip. The MTA will announce
the 20 new performers selected to join its transit music lineup next month. Fifty nine degrees right now,
fog and mist, cloudy this morning, a chance of showers today. Thunderstorm is also possible
this afternoon.
Thanks for listening. This is NYU.
Now from WMYC.
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