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Business & Tech

SEPTA Police Go On Strike

SEPTA transit police officers went on strike during the early-afternoon of Wednesday, March 21

SEPTA transit police officers walked off the job around 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 21 after announcing a stalemate in contract talks, according to reports from NBC10 and the Inquirer.

The officers of the Fraternal Order of Transit Police, Local 30, provide security on subway platforms and on mass transit commuting routes throughout the region, according to Philly.com.

SEPTA officials told NBC10 that there is a contingency plan in place and that officials are currently meeting to discuss what the next step will be.  SEPTA will hold a news conference at 4 p.m. to discuss the plan. (Stream it live here.)

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Both news sources said the transit police have been working without a contract since April 2011, after the last contract expired on March 30 of last year.

"We haven't had a contract since," an Fraternal Order spokesman told Philly.com. "They won't give us anything.  They're insulting us when it comes to the stuff we're asking for.  Real basic things, a modest increase in the pension."

Find out what's happening in Montgomeryville-Lansdalefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Fraternal Order of Transit Police, which represents more than 200 transit police, is asking for a two-percent increase in the pension, according to Philly.com, but a SEPTA management spokeswoman, Jerri Williams, said that the Fraternal Order receive one of the most lucrative pensions.

SEPTA established a pattern of contract increases with its other unions, and what the Fraternal Order is asking for is higher than that pattern, according to Williams, and that is why SEPTA has rejected their requests.

Philadelphia police will be on hand to respond to any calls for service on SEPTA subways, buses and trolleys, according to a report from the Associated Press.

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