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		Union urges shipping executives to enter 
		West Coast port talks 
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		[December 30, 2014] 
		By Steve Gorman
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Brushing aside 
		calls for federal mediation in prolonged contact talks with employers at 
		29 U.S. West Coast ports, the union for 20,000 dockworkers urged 
		shipping executives on management’s board of directors to take a more 
		active part in negotiations.
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			 The latest statement from the International Longshore and 
			Warehouse Union came as the two sides escalated finger-pointing over 
			chronic cargo backups at ports that handle nearly half of U.S. 
			maritime trade and more than 70 percent of imports from Asia. 
 The Pacific Maritime Association, representing shipping lines and 
			terminal operators at the ports, accused the union again of 
			instigating slowdowns since October to gain leverage at the 
			bargaining table.
 
 Cargo that normally takes two or three days to clear the ports has 
			faced lag times of up to two weeks, with productivity at some 
			waterfronts cut by at least half, industry analysts say.
 
 The union, which denies causing the bottle-necks, countered once 
			more that the shippers themselves were largely to blame for business 
			decisions that have disrupted port operations.
 
			
			 Chief among these has been shortages of tractor-trailer chassis used 
			for hauling cargo from ports to warehouses, a result of outsourcing 
			by shippers to third-party leasing companies. Another major factor, 
			union and port officials say, has been the advent of super-sized 
			freighters that have overwhelmed the capacity of terminals to unload 
			them.
 Among the ports hit hardest have been Los Angeles and Long Beach, 
			the two busiest U.S. container cargo hubs, as well as Oakland and 
			Seattle-Tacoma.
 
 The Pacific Maritime Association on Monday repeated its call for the 
			union to consent to federal mediation to help clinch a deal, saying 
			"significant issues remain unresolved" after seven months of 
			contract talks, including differences over wages, pensions and work 
			rules.
 
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			The union remained silent on outside intervention in negotiations 
			but instead urged greater "direct participation" of executives from 
			the PMA's 11-member board of directors.
 "Both sides need the right people in the room to get things 
			finalized," union president and negotiating committee chairman 
			Robert McEllrath said. "Indirect negotiations won't get us over the 
			finish line."
 
 The PMA insisted in its statement that its board had been 
			"intimately involved in these negotiations," since before bargaining 
			began in May.
 
 The two sides last met face to face on Dec. 22, capping a round of 
			bargaining that followed an exchange of proposals. There was no word 
			from either party on plans for further talks.
 
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
 
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