AC Transit, Unions Reach Tentative Agreement; Strike on Hold

AC Transit officials have reached a new tentative agreement with an employee union representing drivers and mechanics, forestalling a potential strike, officials announced this afternoon.

Amalgamated Transit Union Local 192 leaders plan to present the tentative agreement to members on Saturday and will recommend approval, according to a statement posted to the union's Facebook page.

The agreement means the union's more than 1,600 members will continue to work beyond the expiration of a 60-day cooling off period set to end Sunday at midnight, union officials said in the statement.

AC Transit spokesman Clarence Johnson said the district would now wait to see if the union's members ratify the contract. Union leaders have previously reached two tentative agreements
with management but union members have voted down both, the most recent on Oct. 1.

On Oct. 23 Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo granted the 60-day cooling-off period barring strikes at the request of AC Transit management and Gov. Jerry Brown. Brown sought the order after the union threatened to go on strike.

Grillo said he granted Brown's request because an AC Transit strike would significantly disrupt public transportation services in the Bay Area and would endanger the public's health, safety and welfare.

AC Transit provides about 181,000 daily trips and 52.6 million trips annually to riders, according to a report by the fact-finding panel.

The union, which represents nearly 2,000 operators and mechanics, will now present the tentative agreement to its members in the coming days.

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