Legislation that requires a minimum two-person crew (2-PC) on Virginia’s freight trains passed the House on January 28 and now heads to the Senate.

Approved by a vote of 65-31 and supported by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, the bill now awaits its first hearing in the Senate Commerce & Labor Committee.

Act now to help ensure that it reaches the governor’s desk. Tell your state senator: support 2-PC requirements on Virginia’s freight trains ► 

Persistence Pays Off After 2024 Veto

If this feels like déjà vu, that’s because it is: the same bill passed in Virginia two years ago, but it never became law.

Unfortunately, former Governor Glenn Youngkin vetoed the previous version just weeks before the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) announced its federal 2-PC regulation.

Back in 2024, we called out Governor Youngkin for this irresponsible decision that went against public safety, common sense, and Virginia’s railroad workers, saying “Make no mistake: Gov. Youngkin and those who chose not to support the two-person crew bill in Virginia are acting AGAINST us!” Youngkin is no longer in office, providing a second chance to help Virginia do the right thing.

Virginia State Safety & Legislative Director Ronnie Hobbs refiled the 2-PC bill in December 2025 and has been pushing ever since. With Governor Abigail Spanberger now in office who supports 2-PC, Hobbs is hopeful. But getting the bill onto her desk can’t be taken for granted.  

“The Time to Act is Now”

As we gear up for the bill’s Senate journey, SLD Hobbs is calling on our Virginia brothers and sisters to act and make their voices heard.

“We know that Governor Spanberger is firmly ‘with us,’ but she doesn’t get to vote on the legislation,” Hobbs explained. “I encourage every member in Virginia to contact their state senator and explain our important this bill is, both for rail safety and our communities. The time to act is now.”

When Brother David Garringer (Local 1393, Buffalo, NY) suffered a devastating, on-the-job injury, his life was turned upside-down.

After five surgeries, doctors told him this past November that his leg would need to be amputated below the knee and prescribed a motorized wheelchair custom-built for his 6’8” frame. There was a major problem: his house wasn’t accessibility-friendly, and his amputation date was getting closer.

“I didn’t see any light at the end of the tunnel,” he reflected.

Enter the SMART Army, who built a wheelchair ramp at Brother Garringer’s house to ensure his independence after surgery. 

Described as a collective effort from members to give back to one another and their communities by using their skills and abilities, Brother Adam Kerr (Local 71, Buffalo, NY) explains how this effort emphasizes what it means to be a union member.

“The biggest value you can get out of a union is that collective membership that you can lean on. You’re not just co-workers. You are brothers and sisters,” he said.

For Brother Garringer, his experience with the SMART Army was the first time that he felt hopeful in two years.

“We’re not in a tunnel anymore, and we realized we’re not in this alone,” he explained. “I have relatives that are in unions all over…other parts of the country, and…they said ‘Dude, that union you’re a part of is amazing. My union would never do something like that for us.”” 

Metro Micro Operators have voted overwhelmingly to ratify their first collective bargaining agreement. SMART-TD congratulates the Metro Micro Operators on this important milestone achieved with Crosby Street Transit.

Crosby Street Transit assumed operations of the Metro Micro service in 2025. Productive negotiations on a new contract commenced shortly thereafter, allowing for a smooth transition and a collaborative process that resulted in key protections and benefits for our members.

“SMART GCA-875 is proud to represent these hardworking Operators who have been critical to the early success of this program,” said GCA 875 General Chairperson John M. Ellis. “Many of these Operators have been with the Metro Micro program since the initial pilot, and we admire their professional operation and dedication in providing transportation to the public.”

Vice General Chairperson and Local Chairperson of Local 1565 Quintin Wormley emphasized the critical role played by General Chairperson Ellis and Local Chairperson of Local 1564 Andy Carter throughout the negotiations. He also extended appreciation to SMART-TD Bus Vice President James Sandoval for his valuable contributions.

“This is a big day for our union,” added General Chairperson Ellis. “Our members stepped up, stuck together, and showed what working people can do when they take ownership of their future. That speaks volumes about the strength of SMART-TD and the work being done by GCA-875.”

Special recognition is also extended to the leadership team whose efforts supported this achievement, including Julio Mejia, GCA-875 Secretary and Local Chairperson of Local 1607, Edgar Menendez, Local Chairperson of Local 1608, Jamie Delgadillo, Local Chairperson of Local 1563, and Juan Gonzalez, Local Chairperson of Local 1605 (rail).

An upcoming documentary shines a spotlight on San Francisco’s School Bus Operators as they literally “took the wheel” of their union and made their mark on labor history.  
 
Set against the backdrop of the turbulent 1970s, “School Bus Movie” takes an in-depth look at the drivers’ fight to be paid their worth and treated with the dignity and respect that were rightfully theirs.  

Watch the trailer for “School Bus Movie” and learn more about the film. ► 

Family Connection to Bus Strikes in 1973, 1976 

For filmmaker and director Max Stein, it’s a story that’s personal to tell: his father, Paul, is a retired school bus driver and member of Local 1741 (San Francisco, Calif.) as well as a former General Chairperson of GCA-SFS.  
 
Growing up, Max knew that his dad did a lot more than drive a school bus.  
 
“I always looked up to him and saw him doing important work and helping people that got unfairly fired,” he explained. “Coming from a union family, I know the importance of organized labor in today’s economy and the world in general.”  
 
When the elder Stein was hired as a bus operator in 1971, Max said that he didn’t know anything about unions but learned very quickly, especially when strikes took place in 1973 and 1976.  
 
“During that time, he was part of turning the workplace into one where drivers had been getting starvation wages and no benefits to one where the San Francisco school bus drivers were the highest-paid private bus drivers in the country,” he said. “Even though he’s retired now, he still mentors some of [the current operators regarding] new contracts and other things.” 

A Lesson from California’s Past: People have the Power

Now in post-production after work began in 2015, Max notes that he feels a sense of urgency to share this story sooner rather than later, especially since some of the operators featured have passed away.  
 
“A large part of the story is from 50 years ago. It goes back and forth between more current day struggles that the union has been facing and the ones back in the 70s,” he said. “I know that people aren’t going to be around forever to see this.” 
 
It’s been particularly bittersweet for his father.  
 
“I think he was really moved to see a lot of old faces…that he hadn’t seen since he was in his 20s. I think he feels that having this story memorialized, the people in it memorialized, and the accomplishments of the local memorialized, that means a lot to him.”  
 
Whether viewers are familiar with organized labor or not, Max hopes that they’re able to come away with a new appreciation for unions. 
 
“I made [this film] for everyone, including people who know nothing about unions,” he explained. “I wanted to show that…these are actual school bus drivers who drive kids to and from school every day and are trying to feed their families.”  
 
“I want people to take away from the film that they do have power and if they stick together and they are organized, that people can make a difference, and hopefully it can empower people.” 

DISCLAIMER: School Bus Movie is an independent production currently in development. SMART-TD has no affiliation with, does not sponsor, endorse, finance, and/or fundraise for the film, and expressly disclaims any responsibility for or warranties related to the film, its content, production, financing, and/or distribution.

As a fourth-generation railroader who hired on with Union Pacific in 2002, Brother Chris Christianson (Local 1545, Monroe, LA) knows firsthand the threats rail workers face.

These dangers have been emphasized even more through his roles as the Louisiana Safety & Legislative Director and as a member of our union’s National Safety Team.

“I like to protect the members or help protect the members,” he said. “I’ve seen friends die out here. I’ve seen friends lose limbs. That’s one of the reasons why I’m in the position I’m in.”

Another of Brother Christianson’s many roles is serving as the is the Southwest Regional Insurance Manager for American Journey Financial Life (AJFL).

One of the most important benefits available to SMART-TD members and their families, AJFL provides insurance plans and products tailed to the needs of workers, from accidental death and dismemberment plans to Cancer Hospital Indemnity policies, and more.

Brother Christianson believes that it’s very important to have union members market these products to other union members, rather than just some run-of-the-mill insurance agent.

“As a state director, I deal with safety, and the railroad is very, very dangerous,” he explained. “With the products that I sell, I can help protect families from financial crisis in the event something happens.”

When people talk about how much they make “per hour,” they’re usually not just talking about what shows up on their paycheck. Most high dollar-per-hour numbers you hear in other industries include wages plus all fringe benefits: things like health care, retirement, and paid time off. Folks tend to use the number that puts their job in the best possible light. That is just human nature.  

That’s why comparing hourly pay across jobs can get confusing. Without knowing what’s included, it’s hard to tell if you’re really comparing apples to apples. Here is a breakdown of our full compensation in 2024, the most recent year with complete data: 

The $73.16 per hour figure for SMART-TD members under the National Freight Agreement in 2024 is a total compensation number, not just straight-time wages. It includes actual hours worked, paid time off, and the real cost of employer-paid benefits including what the railroad pays into Tier I and Tier II — all rolled into a per-hour-worked figure. 

This is a conservative and fair snapshot of what railroading paid at a Class I railroad in 2024. It doesn’t rely on overtime assumptions or best-case scenarios. It is just complete, verifiable data provided by Roth Labor Bureau Inc. 

This number doesn’t include our increases in 2025. We’ve had two raises since then, along with increased funding for benefits. That means the real value of compensation today is noticeably higher than $73.16. But since 2024 is the last full year where all the data is complete, it’s the right benchmark to use. 

Bottom line: when you hear big hourly numbers thrown around about what guys are making in other industries, they usually include everything. The $73.16 figure does the same, honestly and conservatively, and shows the real value of our work. So when you’re at the bar and hear the longshoremen bragging about the $65/per hour they are going to make in 2030, just know that you were pulling in $73.16 two years ago and have had two raises since.  

On second thought, it’s probably better to not bring that up. Just congratulate them on their “big win” and buy the next round.  

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 20, 2026

SMART-TD Celebrates as Governor Murphy Signs Historic Railroad Safety Law on Final Day in Office

Newark, NJ — As crowds gathered in Newark today to witness the swearing-in of Governor-Elect Mikie Sherrill, Governor Phil Murphy delivered one final, meaningful act of leadership for New Jersey’s working families by signing into law a landmark railroad safety bill that will bring significant new protections to railroaders, passengers, and communities across the state.

The legislation, A-4460/S-3389, was championed by members of the SMART Transportation Division (SMART-TD) and advanced with overwhelming bipartisan support in the State Legislature. It enacts enhanced safety reporting, strengthens oversight of railroad infrastructure, mandates modern detection technologies, and expands the role of labor representation in derailment and accident investigations. Its strict two-person crew (2-PC) requirements reflect real-world operating conditions and directly address long-standing safety concerns raised by rail workers.

SMART-TD celebrates the historic safety advancements achieved in this bill and the leadership shown by Governor Murphy in signing it into law as part of his final official acts as governor. This legislation stands as one of the most consequential rail safety victories in recent history and reinforces New Jersey’s role as a national leader in transportation safety and worker protections.

“This bill is yet another shining example of what New Jersey’s working families have come to expect from Governor Phil Murphy,” said SMART-TD President Jeremy Ferguson. “For eight years, Governor Murphy has consistently lifted up the middle class and stood shoulder-to-shoulder with working people across the state. From being the first governor in the nation to sign protections for bus and passenger rail members against assault on the job, to delivering this critical rail safety legislation on his final day in office, he has shown what it truly means to be ‘With Us.’ His leadership, friendship, and advocacy have never been taken for granted, and they are always deeply appreciated.”

SMART-TD’s National Safety & Legislative Director Jared Cassityemphasized the broader impact of the legislation.

“This law represents a historic step forward for rail safety, and it would not have happened without the unified efforts of our membership, legislative champions, and safety advocates across New Jersey,” Cassity said. “By institutionalizing modern safety practices and empowering workers and communities with stronger protections, this legislation will save lives and set a powerful example for other states to follow.”

Ron Sabol, SMART-TD’s longtime New Jersey State Safety and Legislative Directorwhose leadership was instrumental in guiding the bill through the legislature, reflected on both the safety gains achieved and Governor Murphy’s enduring support of the union.

“This is a proud day for railroaders, for our families, and for the communities we serve,” said Sabol. “This legislation delivers meaningful safety improvements for railroad employees, passengers, and communities across New Jersey. We are deeply grateful to Governor Murphy for his leadership and his unwavering commitment to making our state safer. From day one, he has understood that stronger safety standards protect workers and the public alike, and his consistent support for SMART-TD over two terms has made a lasting difference. That legacy will endure well beyond today.”

SMART-TD applauds Governor Murphy for his vision, leadership, and lifetime commitment to New Jersey’s working families, and looks forward to working with Governor-Elect Sherrill and incoming legislative leaders to continue advancing rail safety and worker protections in the years ahead.

# # #

For more information or to connect with SMART-TD President Jeremy Ferguson or a member of his leadership team, please contact:
Dan Banks
dbanks@smart-union.org 
(216) 227-5283 (Office) 
(330) 322-5949 (Cell) 

Alyssa Hansen
alyssa.hansen@smart-union.org

If there is a foundational principle that defines the only meaningful factor in transportation, it can be asked in this one simple question: Is it safe?

Whether referencing our country’s first significant mode of transportation – railroads – or the complexities of our modern-day air systems, the priority should always be safety. Unfortunately, profit margins, dividends, operating ratios, or whatever popular finance-related buzzword corporate America has created continue to seep in like a river of poison, tainting the well of common sense and decency by blinding those seeking to make money and allowing greed, rather than safety, to become their guiding light.

The irony is stark when it comes to how the agencies responsible for regulating those two modes of transportation prioritize their approach to safety, or, more specifically, safety programs. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has long recognized that employee participation and input are paramount to achieving the safest course, while the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) subscribes to or capitulates to the Class I rail carriers’ philosophy of discipline into compliance, where training and education are always secondary to harassment and intimidation[1].

As a conductor and locomotive engineer, I can speak firsthand to the omnipresent fear of the pressures placed on lower- and mid-level managers to meet or exceed their executives’ expected deliverables. That sentiment almost always translates into scare tactics that keep workers silent and the big bosses oblivious to reality. Victims of the protective bubbles they’ve created, the C-suite has made it illogical for any middle manager to ever be honest with them or give them negative feedback. Instead, they are incentivized to keep pushing while unaware of how the ramifications of their decisions affect the men and women in the shops or at the ballast level. Oblivious to reality, why would they not push for more with less, especially when their managers on the ground get ahead by placating their superiors and present false narratives that things are fine when nothing could be further from the truth?

The airline industry once fell into the same trap, but rather than stay on its own doomed path, it chose to break the cycle and push safety to the forefront.

Take the response to the 1974 TWA Flight 514 crash. The FAA recognized that its regulatory and enforcement role would deter unsafe-condition reporting. It began working with labor and the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to establish the Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS). The result was a program that would offer immunity from discipline for voluntary, confidential reporting to uncover systemic and unidentified flaws and generate the data needed for analysis to identify root causes and for course correction. Today, the ASRS is attributed (by many) to having the most significant and fundamental impact on improving aviation operations and procedures and serves as the gold standard for transportation safety.

Following suit was the FRA. Recognizing the achievements of the FAA and staring down its own stagnation in accident and incident rates, the agency began developing a similar program around late 2002/early 2003. By 2007, a pilot program known as C3RS (Confidential Close Call Reporting System) was launched, marking the railroad industry’s first confidential safety reporting program.

Since then, it has been touted as the country’s premier rail safety program and has been adopted by more than 25 different railroads, including Amtrak. But despite such a successful record, the FRA has yet to compel America’s Class I railroads to do the same. This includes a brief period when two Class I railroads, Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific, agreed to participate early on before canceling shortly thereafter.

Their justification was that they were unable to discipline workers for the most common events, but it doesn’t stop there.

Discipline is not limited to employees involved in incidents: it also extends to employees who report injuries or general unsafe conditions. Not only does this affect the worker but it also has a chilling effect on coworkers who are afraid to do the same. This is exactly why the railroad industry has more improperly terminated workers than most any other job field.

The result is a culture of silence and an industry left in the dark when it comes to safety.

This was on full display during the catastrophic Norfolk Southern derailment in East Palestine, OH, on February 3, 2023, when long-standing safety complaints regarding inspection practices and the use of defect detectors went largely unaddressed. Since that day, the entirety of this nation’s Class I railroads committed to joining the C3RS, fully aware of what that commitment entailed, as two of them had once participated in the program, and more than 25 other railroads benefit from its use. True to form, the railroads soon retracted their commitment and demanded concessions from the FRA that would allow the continuance of heavy-handed discipline and the blind approach to accident and incident causation.

These demands carried over to the FRA’s Railroad Safety Advisory Committee (RSAC), which collaboratively took up the task of creating a regulation that would require all of the major railroads to participate in the program. Without fail, the carriers refused to give an inch when it came to discipline or the other core principles of the C3RS, and the effort collapsed.

The timing could not be worse, as the realities of the industry are once again starting to set in. Workers are desperate for change. They’re tired of the harassment and intimidation, and they’re tired of the railroads turning a blind eye to safety, not just for themselves but for the public, too. They want to see meaningful improvements while leading the carriers to overall success, and they know that C3RS is the model to get them there.

On the contrary, it is the railroads and the powerful influence they have over the FRA that is pulling these hopes and expectations down.

Regardless of past commitments, the FRA has abdicated its commitment to C3RS, aligned itself with the railroads, and is poised to present labor with a watered-down, take-it-or-leave-it safety program under the C3RS banner without the core principles that give C3RS its strength. The necessary protections for workers are mostly gone, and harassment, intimidation, and excessive discipline will be free to continue.

Will it give the FRA some data they didn’t otherwise have? Perhaps. Will it foster a safety culture that encourages communication and reporting? Absolutely not.

The FAA and the applicable airlines have a 50-year history that has allowed their program to evolve into a relationship built on trust and a shared commitment that no one should be punished for taking the safest course. Now, their safety record is the envy of the world.

Juxtaposed with them is the FRA and its Class I railroads, which are unwilling to relinquish their flawed approach to safety despite the obvious faults. It should come as no surprise that other countries are invited to joint safety functions so that the industry can learn from them, rather than from us.

The fact that the FRA has conceded its most successful program ever and allowed it to suffer the fate it fought so long to prevent is a detriment to the railroad industry and the communities it intersects. The unfortunate reality is that a faction of labor will one day cede to the new watered-down program out of desperation for change and improvement. Should it not provide the results that ASRS or the original C3RS program has, it is not on them. I encourage the FRA and the railroads to be less concerned about checking the box and more concerned with doing something meaningful to improve the unsafe trajectory and stagnation of America’s railroads.


[1] For example: https://www.propublica.org/article/railroad-safety-union-pacific-csx-bnsf-trains-freight

On January 16, 2026, the Surface Transportation Board (STB) issued an update regarding the proposed Union Pacific–Norfolk Southern merger.  

The STB has rejected the merger due to an incomplete and deficient application

The STB determined that the railroads’ merger application was incomplete and lacked the details needed for approval. The decision is “without prejudice to refiling”. Consequently, any application refiling should aim to allow both the STB and the public to properly evaluate the merger. 

Click here to read the STB’s decision ►

SMART TD Jobs for Life agreement is still in effect

The Jobs for Life agreement with Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern is not rejected, cancelled, or weakened by this decision. The agreement remains tied to the merger process and stands as a critical safeguard for SMART-TD members as things move forward. As the merger faces increased scrutiny and delays, our agreement ensures that railroad workers are not left in limbo. It protects jobs, preserves seniority, and provides long-term security in an industry where consolidation has too often meant uncertainty for working families. 

An Agreement Worth Fighting For 

Major rail mergers are complex and take time. Those who keep the railroads operating should not bear the risk of that uncertainty. Thanks to the Jobs for Life agreement, SMART-TD members won’t. 

Job security is placed at the forefront, while regulators do their work and while railroads pursue their corporate goals. 

SMART-TD will continue to monitor the merger process closely. Our message remains simple: no merger should move forward without ironclad protections for the workers who keep this industry running. 

We will keep everyone informed as new developments occur. 

For many, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is viewed simply as a holiday: a long weekend, a break from work, a moment to pause. But for SMART-TD members who keep America moving no matter what the calendar says, it is something far more meaningful. 

It is a day to recommit to the work that lies ahead

The struggle for civil rights and the struggle for workers’ rights are inseparable. Racial justice cannot exist without economic justice, and that dignity on the job is a cornerstone of dignity in life. Fair wages, safe working conditions, and respect for our shared humanity were not side issues: they were central to Dr. King’s vision of a more just society. 

The labor movement stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the civil rights movement. Together they transformed despair into opportunity, securing protections like collective bargaining rights, workplace safety standards, unemployment insurance, and wage levels that allowed working families of all backgrounds to live with dignity.  

These gains were hard-won through solidarity, sacrifice, and collective action in the face of fierce resistance. This fight continues today. 

Every week, headlines document our relentless pursuit of safe jobs, fair schedules, and respect from our employers. Our communities still confront inequality, discrimination, and arbitrary barriers to opportunity.

For SMART-TD, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is a reminder that the responsibility to carry the fight forward now belongs to us. Our responsibility does not pause for a holiday. 

While much of the country enjoys a day off, SMART-TD members are doing what we’ve always done: showing up, standing together, and continuing the work. Recommit yourself, today and every day, to the unending pursuit of justice, solidarity, and dignity for us all.