MILWAUKEE — Hundreds of Milwaukee County union bus drivers went on strike early Wednesday, leaving tens of thousands of commuters scrambling to make alternative plans to get to work and elsewhere.
The roughly 750 drivers walked off the job at 3 a.m. and began picketing at the Milwaukee County Transit System garages after contract negotiations between union leaders and transit officials broke down. The sides met with a federal mediator Tuesday in a last-ditch effort to avoid a strike.
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 998 leaders said the strike would last until Saturday. It is the first strike by MCTS drivers since 1978, when union members stayed off the job for 39 days.
Riders, including 20-year-old Tashanita McCall, of Milwaukee, were left without a low-cost transportation alternative.
"I'm used to taking the bus to school every morning," said McCall, who attends Bryant and Stratton College in downtown Milwaukee. She planned to ask neighbors or relatives for a ride to school.
At Planet Fitness in downtown Milwaukee, assistant manager Tess Elkins was worried how her employees would get to work.
"They don't have any other way to get here. They don't have rides," Elkins said.
Union President James Macon said drivers are getting support from the public, who waved or honked their horns at picketing drivers on a major Milwaukee street.