Commuters have crammed on to crowded Sydney trains amid delays and service cancellations as rail workers strike over the lack of progress on a new enterprise bargaining agreement.
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Sydney Trains on Wednesday warned travellers to allow extra time or make other arrangements, with the network to run fewer services.
Transport for NSW chief operating officer Howard Collins said travellers should "expect your trip to be impacted and longer than usual", with disruption throughout the day and only about 30 per cent of services running.
Crews are refusing to drive privately built trains, which include Waratah and Millennium trains.
The Rail Tram and Bus Union says it was forced to take industrial action after a continued refusal to meet with workers to negotiate fair wages and conditions.
State secretary Alex Claassens told AAP the union had hoped a four-hour stop work action last month would have been sufficient to bring senior management to the table to negotiate a new agreement, but that hadn't happened.
Negotiations have been stalled for months amid union concerns about the further privatisation of services and jobs, as well as the cleanliness of trains.
"Every time we turn around, the buses are being privatised, trains are privatised, the ferries are privatised," he said.
"There's a reason it's called public transport... It should be owned by the public."
The union also wants to negotiate a pay rise, which the government has currently capped at 2.5 per cent.
"When we've actually negotiated the core conditions of this agreement, and we lock away the protections, then we can talk about the money," Mr Claassens said.
Sydney Trains chief executive Matt Longland met with the union amid the strike on Wednesday, with Mr Claassens hopeful a resolution can be reached to avoid months of industrial action.
The union's next industrial action begins on Sunday, when overtime will be banned for two weeks.
Premier Dominic Perrottet on Wednesday said he was disappointed by Wednesday's strike, particularly given 250,000 people had lost their jobs during this state's recent COVID-19 outbreak and aren't getting paid at all.
"We believe as a government our public sector pay and wages policy is fair and reasonable," he said.
"It is more generous than other states around the country, particularly the Labor states."
TRAIN LINES WITH REDUCED FREQUENCY WILL STOP AT ALL STATIONS ON:
* T1 North Shore & Western
* T2 Inner West & Leppington
* T3 Bankstown
* T4 Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra
* T7 Olympic Park
*T8 Airport & South
* T9 Northern
* Blue Mountains
* Central Coast & Newcastle
* South Coast
BUSES WILL REPLACE TRAINS FROM
* Lidcombe to Bankstown
* Macarthur to Campbelltown
* Port Kembla to Thirroul
* Schofields to Tallawong
Australian Associated Press