London commuters struggle to work as strike over job cuts shuts much of subway system
By APTuesday, September 7, 2010
London commuters struggle as strike closes subway
LONDON — Millions of Londoners struggled to get to work by road, rail, boat and bicycle Tuesday as a strike by London Underground workers shut down much of the city’s subway system.
Thousands of maintenance workers, drivers and station staff walked off the job Monday evening for 24 hours in a dispute over 800 planned job cuts, mostly among station staff, that they say will hit service and safety.
Transport for London, which runs the Underground — known as the Tube — says there will be no compulsory layoffs.
More than 3.5 million people use the subway system daily. Transport for London said some services were operating on 10 of the city’s 11 subway lines, with 40 percent of trains running.
The Rail, Maritime and Transport Union said support for the strike was strong and only a skeleton service was operating.
Buses were packed, and thousands of people were expected to use extra boat services on the River Thames.
Mayor Boris Johnson, who cycled to a meeting Tuesday morning, said that “Londoners will face some disruption, but the city is not paralyzed — and people will still be able to get around.”
The strike is due to end Tuesday evening, but service will not be back to normal until Wednesday.
Tags: England, Europe, Labor Issues, London, Strikes, Transportation, United Kingdom, Western Europe