Dreaded U.S. West Coast port labor contract expiration ticks closer
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[July 01, 2022]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The contract
covering more than 22,000 workers at 29 U.S. West Coast ports expires
late on Friday, dialing up worries that labor disruption could roil the
nation's battered supply chains, stoke inflation and threaten a
weakening economy.
The International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and the Pacific
Maritime Association (PMA) employer group, which declined comment for
this report, said in a rare joint statement on June 14 that they were
not planning any work stoppages or lockouts that would worsen supply
chain logjams.
That matters because when the contract expires at 5 p.m. PDT(0000 GMT
Saturday), so does its "no strike" clause, said Peter Tirschwell, vice
president of maritime, trade & supply chain at S&P Global Market
Intelligence.
History suggests a last-minute extension is not likely. The union in
November rejected a one-year contract extension, saying its members had
already granted a three-year extension to the current contract.
The National Retail Federation, which represents companies like Walmart
and Target, and the Agriculture Transportation Coalition, which includes
citrus, hay and nut exporters, are among the industry groups pressing
for a quick agreement.
Meanwhile, wary shippers are not taking any chances. They are routing
cargo away from the West Coast to avoid potential labor-related
slowdowns, particularly at the nation's busiest seaport complex at Los
Angeles/Long Beach that handle nearly $500 billion in cargo annually.
That is driving up their costs and contributing to backups at ports in
New York/New Jersey, Savannah and Houston. [nL2N2WN1YT]
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Cargo containers are seen at the Port of Long Beach, California June
19, 2008. REUTERS/Fred Prouser/File Photo
Automating the movement of containers at the ports,
resulting in fewer jobs, appears to be a key issue in the talks,
which have been ongoing since May. While both sides have not
identified the issue specifically, they have released dueling
studies on the impact of automation and traded barbs in the media.
In an interview with Reuters this week, U.S. Labor Secretary Marty
Walsh said he checks in weekly with ILWU and the PMA. They
"continually tell me that we're in a good place. It's moving
forward," Walsh said.
The last West Coast port labor contract negotiation broke down in
2015 after nine months of talks. Dockworkers stopped work for eight
days, a move that gummed up U.S. supply chains and siphoned an
estimated $8 billion from the Southern California economy.
U.S. President Joe Biden met with the ILWU and the PMA in Los
Angeles on June 10.
Any disruptions at Pacific Coast ports that handle almost 40% of
imports to the United States could send transportation costs even
higher, exacerbating pressure on a softening economy that is sinking
Biden's approval ratings.
"We've never had a White House that is all over these negotiations
the way they are now," Tirschwell said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Marguerita
Choy)
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