Truck blockade of major California seaport stretches into day three
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[July 23, 2022]
By Lisa Baertlein
(Reuters) -Independent truckers protesting
California's new "gig worker" law blockaded California's No. 3 seaport
for the third straight day on Friday, stranding cargo at the state's top
agricultural trade hub and adding to U.S. supply chain headaches.
Truck gates at all four Port of Oakland marine terminals remain closed
to truck traffic on Friday. Oakland International Container Terminal (OICT),
which handles about 70% of port cargo, restarted some work on ships, a
port spokesperson said.
Oakland port truckers began actions against the law formally known as
AB5 on Monday. They picketed and parked tractor-trailers to choke
terminal gate access, grinding trade through the eighth-busiest U.S.
container seaport to a virtual halt on Wednesday.
Idling the 2,100 trucks that ferry goods at the Northern California
seaport each day is hindering exports of fresh beef and pork, dairy
products and nuts as well as imports like green coffee, electronics and
construction materials.
Commodity traders told Reuters coffee and cocoa are stuck on ships at
the port, putting the quality of those imports in peril.
"Due to the strike, we have not been able to move cargoes from the
port," the director of one of the largest coffee importers in the United
States told Reuters.
Import container dwell time, one measure of port efficiency, has climbed
to 17.5 days, up 41% from July 11, according to supply chain data
provider Project44.
Trucking industry legal challenges have put enactment of the law on hold
for more than two years. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up a
lawsuit from California Trucking Association on June 30, clearing the
way for AB5 to go forward.
The law, which aims to clamp down on labor abuses, sets tougher
standards for classifying workers as independent contractors.
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Shipping containers are seen at a terminal inside the Port of
Oakland as independent truck driver continue protesting against
California's new law known as AB5, in Oakland, California, U.S.,
July 21, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Backers say it will stop companies from using those
workers to avoid paying minimum wage, workers' compensation and
other employee-related expenses. The independent drivers that AB5
aims to protect say the law would force them to shoulder hefty
rental equipment and insurance costs that were formerly borne by the
trucking companies that contract them for jobs.
Supporters of the law, including the Teamsters and the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), say AB5 would push companies
to hire drivers as employees. Those company drivers could then join
unions and collectively bargain for better pay and working
conditions.
Trucking organizations including the Harbor Trucking Association and
the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA) have
called on Governor Gavin Newsom to delay enforcement of the law.
Newsom's office has twice rebuffed those appeals.
Meanwhile, drivers like Carlos Flores say they will continue
protesting until Newsom exempts port truckers from AB5.
Flores, who uses his own tractor to haul port freight, told Reuters
the law would burden him with up to $30,000 per month in rental
costs for chassis and other port equipment.
"AB5 would shut me down. I don't have the resources to pay that kind
of money," said Flores, 42.
"I've invested too much into my business to go to a company and work
for hourly wages," he said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Marcelo Teixeira in
New York; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Marguerita Choy)
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