The
alliance approved the contract last month, and on Tuesday
rank-and-file members voted for it with nearly 99 percent in
favor, the union said in a statement.
The contract calls for a 62% pay hike over six years that would
lift hourly wages at the top of the union pay scale from $39 an
hour to $63 an hour.
ILA President Harold Daggett, who served as the union’s chief
negotiator, was quoted in the statement as saying the agreement
is “the ‘gold standard’ for dockworker unions globally.”
He remarked that it was a difficult contract to negotiate and
even required a three-day strike last fall, but “We now have
labor peace for the next six years.”
The union and the alliance also reached a truce on the most
contentious labor issue on America's docks: automation. The
union worries that machines — especially semi-automated cranes —
will replace human workers. Port operators and shipping
companies argue that U.S. ports are falling behind more
automated ones such as those in Rotterdam, Dubai and Singapore.
The new contract gives ports more leeway to introduce
modernizing technology. But they have to hire new workers when
they do, and full automation is off the table.
“The pending contract opens the door a little more for advanced
technology and automation,” Brian Lynch, leader of the
transportation sector at the consulting firm EY Americas, said
before the vote. “The door’s cracked a bit.”
The union went on the three-day strike in October but suspended
it to allow for more talks. A prolonged shutdown at 14 ports
stretching from Boston to Houston could have delayed shipments
to American factories and retailers and driven up costs.
The two sides are expected to meet the week of March 10 to sign
the agreement, after which it would go into effect.
Before his inauguration, President Donald Trump voiced support
for the union. Claiming to “know just about everything there is
to know” about automation, Trump wrote on social media, “The
amount of money saved is nowhere near the distress, hurt, and
harm it causes for American Workers, in this case, our
Longshoremen.”
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