U.S. West Coast port labor contract expires, raising stakes for talks
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[July 02, 2022]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -The union and
employers negotiating a new labor contract for more than 22,000 U.S.
West Coast port workers said high-stakes talks that are being closely
watched by industry and the White House would continue after the
agreement expired late on Friday.
The agreement covers 29 Pacific Coast ports stretching from California
to Washington State that handle almost 40% of U.S. imports. Any work
slowdowns or stoppages could roil the nation's already battered supply
chains, stoke inflation, and exacerbate pressure on a weakening economy
that is sinking President Joe Biden's approval ratings.
"While there will be no contract extension, cargo will keep moving, and
normal operations will continue at the ports until an agreement can be
reached," the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) employer group and the
International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) said in a joint
statement.
"Both sides understand the strategic importance of the ports to the
local, regional and U.S. economies, and are mindful of the need to
finalize a new coast-wide contract as soon as possible," PMA and ILWU
ahead of the contract expiration at 5 p.m. PDT Friday (0000 GMT
Saturday).
When the contract expired, so did its "no strike" clause, said Peter
Tirschwell, vice president of maritime, trade and supply chain at S&P
Global Market Intelligence.
Hours before the expiration, more than 150 business groups implored
Biden to push for a smooth and swift resolution.
Groups representing industries from agriculture and apparel to trucking
and toys asked the president to work with PMA and ILWU to extend the
contract, commit to ongoing good-faith negotiations, and avoid any
activity that would cause further disruptions.
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Shipping containers are unloaded from a ship at a container terminal
at the Port of Long Beach-Port of Los Angeles complex, in Los
Angeles, California, U.S., April 7, 2021. REUTERS/Lucy
Nicholson/File Photo
The labor faceoff has been on Biden's radar for months. He took the unusual step
of meeting with the ILWU and PMA in Los Angeles on June 10. His labor secretary
makes weekly check-ins with both sides, which kicked off talks in May.
"We've never had a White House that is all over these negotiations the way they
are now," Tirschwell said.
The last West Coast port labor contract negotiation broke down in 2015 after
nine months. Dockworkers stopped work for eight days, which gummed up trade
flows and siphoned an estimated $8 billion from the Southern California economy
alone. President Barack Obama dispatched his labor secretary to forge a deal.
Automating the movement of containers at the ports, resulting in fewer jobs,
appears to be a key issue in the current talks. Neither side has identified the
issue specifically, but the PMA and ILWU have released dueling studies on the
impact of automation and traded barbs in the media.
In a statement on June 14, PMA and ILWU said they were not planning any work
stoppages or lockouts that would worsen existing shipping logjams.
Still, 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 is driving
up costs and contributing to backups at ports in New York/New Jersey, Savannah
and Houston.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los AngelesEditing by Marguerita Choy, Alistair
Bell and Leslie Adler)
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