Longshore workers at Western Canadian ports returning to work, for now

Longshore workers at Western Canadian ports are returning to work – for now — after a labor board ruled that strike action taken Tuesday night by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada was illegal because the union failed to provide the required 72-hour notice.

But with the union subsequently giving that notice after the ruling by the Canada Industrial Relations Board, dockworkers are now poised to go on strike again on Saturday morning. The board ordered ILWU Canada to review potential damage claims with marine terminals over the strike action that was taken illegally Tuesday night.

The whiplash developments were set in motion late Tuesday when a caucus of ILWU Canada rejected the tentative labor agreement that last week ended the 13-day strike at the ports of Prince Rupert and Vancouver. The rejection came just five days after the end of the strike and as ports had begun to restore cargo flow after the disruption.

“The term of the collective agreement that was given with today’s uncertain times is far too long,” ILWU Canada President Rob Ashton said in a statement, referring to the four-year length of the tentative agreement meant to replace the contract that expired at the end of the March. “We must be able to readdress the uncertainty in the world’s financial markets for our members.”

ILWU Canada said it was remaining steadfast in seeking increased jurisdiction of maintenance work at marine terminals, noting that after achieving record profits in 2021 and 2022, employers had the financial resources to appropriately compensate workers for higher living costs.

The British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) bemoaned that the full ILWU Canada rank-of-file wasn’t able to vote on the tentative agreement. In rejecting the deal, ILWU Canada was “choosing to further harm Canada’s economy, international reputation, and most importantly, to Canadians, their livelihood and all those that rely on the stable supply chain,” BCMEA said in a statement late Tuesday.

Government ministers ‘looking at all options’

Canada’s ministers of Labor and Transport on Wednesday expressed grave disappointment in the union’s rejection of the agreement, saying they “are looking at all options” and would have more to share publicly on Thursday. The joint statement from Labor Minister Seamus O’Regan and Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said the tentative agreement was a “fair and balanced deal,” and ports needed to be open.

Terms of the tentative deal were not disclosed.

Attention now turns to Canada’s Parliament to end the strike, as it did at the Port of Montreal in 2021.

When the strike began July 1, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and the Retail Council of Canada urged Parliament to order port workers back to work. But there is no guarantee of swift passage of the legislation Parliament must pass for that to happen. It will likely take a coalition from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party and the Conservative Party to overcome the Democratic Party’s objections to any back-to-work legislation.

Parliament is currently in recess, having begun its summer break in June.

Source:

Szakonyi, M. (2023, July 19). Longshore workers at Western Canadian ports returning to work, for now. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/longshore-workers-western-canadian-ports-returning-work-now_20230719.html

Canada port strike resumes after union members reject wage agreement

July 18 (Reuters) – Dock workers at ports along Canada’s Pacific coast rejected a tentative four-year wage deal agreed with their employers last week and returned to the picket line, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) said on Tuesday.

The ILWU represents some 7,500 dock workers, who walked off the job on July 1 after failing to reach a new work contract with the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA), which represents the companies involved.

In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, the ILWU said its members had voted down the recommended terms of settlement because they did not believe the terms would protect their jobs.

“With the record profits that the BCMEA’s member companies have earned over the last few years the employers have not addressed the cost of living issues that our workers have faced over the last couple of years as all workers have,” the ILWU said in its statement…

Detail please refer to the news.

Source:

Williams, N. (2023, July 19). Canada port strike resumes after union members reject wage agreement. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/canada-port-workers-return-picket-line-after-rejecting-wage-agreement-2023-07-18/

Post-strike recovery for western Canadian ports measured in weeks, not days: sources

It could take into September before the ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert fully recover from the 13-day dockworker strike that idled both western Canadian ports and disrupted trans-Pacific sailing schedules, industry observers told the Journal of Commerce Friday.

The strike ended Thursday when the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (Canada) and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association agreed on terms for a tentative four-year contract.

But forwarders, shipping lines and trucking interests say they are advising their customers it will take weeks — possibly into September — for operations at Prince Rupert and Vancouver — Canada’s largest port — to return to normal.

The rule of thumb in the port and marine terminal industry is that for each day a port is shut down, it takes three to five days to recover, Julia Kuzeljevich, director of policy and communications at the Canadian International Freight Forwarders Association, told the Journal of Commerce.

“Maybe end of summer, early September,” Kuzeljevich said when assessing the timeline for a full recovery of the ports.

Views on the recovery period vary, but it is clearly not a matter of days.

“We look at it in weeks — three weeks to recover for every week of [a] shutdown,” an executive at a carrier that calls at Vancouver said.

Given the fact that eastbound trans-Pacific volumes have been lighter than usual and Canada’s agricultural exports are not yet in high season, the time for recovery may be a bit shorter, the source said.

Still, David Bennett, chief commercial officer at Canadian forwarder Farrow, said he would be “surprised” if the recovery period is only four or five days per day of shutdown. Bennett said the actual recovery could take as long as 10 days per day of shutdown — more than four months — given how dependent Vancouver and Prince Rupert are on shipping containers via rail to their major hubs in Toronto, Montreal and Chicago.

He noted that Canadian railroads issued temporary bans on sending trains to the West Coast from day one of the dockworker strike, and it will take some time to reposition trains and cars to the ports.

“We anticipate it will be weeks before there is a return to normalcy,” Bennett said.

CPKC expects ‘prolonged’ recovery

Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railway (CPKC) said Friday it is working closely with customers and marine terminals to clear the traffic backlogs as quickly and efficiently as possible. However, “given the duration of this strike — nearly two weeks shutting down most terminals at Canada’s largest port — supply chain recovery is expected to be prolonged,” a CPKC spokesperson said.

A Canadian National Railway (CN) spokesperson said CN is “now focused on implementing its orderly resumption plans to resume its movements to and from the ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert.”

David Earle, president and CEO of the British Columbia Trucking Association (BCTA), said two-thirds of the containers moving through Vancouver leave by rail, and clearing that backlog while receiving new inbound containers will take “weeks and weeks.” According to the Port of Vancouver website, rail container dwell times at all four of its container terminals were more than seven days, a level that is normally not reached.

As for truck gate traffic, Earle said BCTA members did not report any serious bottlenecks early Friday, although Vancouver did not reopen until Thursday’s evening shift.

A spokesperson at the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority said the port will apply a priority-based anchorage allocation system to balance the needs of all business sectors and commodities. Fourteen container ships were backed up outside of Vancouver when the strike ended Thursday.

“Recovery measures include close collaboration and monitoring to ensure port resources are assigned to best support time-sensitive cargo movement and ensure equitable distribution of shared resources,” the spokesperson said.

A spokesperson for the Prince Rupert Port Authority said operations there resumed Thursday evening and continued on Friday’s day shift, with both berths at the Fairview Container Terminal expected to be occupied.

“Operations have ramped up,” the spokesperson said. “The terminal is expecting to depart additional trains to begin the process of clearing backlogged cargo.” In addition to the two vessels at berth, three additional container ships were holding offshore Prince Rupert.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, July 14). Post-strike recovery for Western Canadian ports measured in weeks, not days: Sources. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/post-strike-recovery-western-canadian-ports-measured-weeks-not-days-sources_20230714.html

Western Canada port strike ends after deal reached on tentative four-year contract

The 13-day longshore strike that hit the Western Canadian ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert ended Thursday after the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Canada and waterfront employers reached a deal on a tentative four-year contract.

The end of the strike came less than two days after Canada’s Minister of Labour ordered the federal mediator overseeing negotiations between the union and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association to provide recommendations for a settlement. Those recommendations were presented to both sides on Wednesday, and they had 24 hours, or late morning Pacific time Thursday, to accept or reject the proposed terms. Rejection by either side would have forced the matter into the hands of the Canadian Parliament.

“The tentative agreement is subject to ratification by both parties, and subsequently, details of the agreement will not be released at this time,” the BCMEA said in a statement.

It added that it was “working closely with ILWU Canada and their locals and supply chain partners to safely resume operations as soon as possible.”

Marine terminals at Vancouver and Prince Rupert were scheduled to reopen for Thursday’s evening shift.

ILWU Canada was not immediately available for comment.

Working to restore terminal operations

The strike caused multiple ships to divert from Western Canada to Seattle and Tacoma, while also prompting at least two blank sailings. It also created a vessel backlog off Vancouver and Prince Rupert. There were 14 container ships at anchor or offshore at the Port of Vancouver Wednesday, according to the port’s website.

The Prince Rupert Port Authority said in a statement Thursday two of its seven terminals — DP World Prince Rupert’s Fairview Container Terminal and Drax’s Westview Wood Pellet Terminal – were “directly impacted” by the strike. PRPA added that five vessels are waiting at anchor or at sea to discharge at those terminals.

“PRPA, its terminal and rail supply chain partners and local labor will be working closely to re-establish fluidity and productivity so that we can begin to swiftly and effectively recover operations at the Port of Prince Rupert,” it said.

BCMEA said it “regrets the significant impact” the strike had on workers, customers and the Canadian economy. Earlier this week, the group said an estimated C$800 million of cargo was being disrupted daily by the longshore strike, representing 25% of the country’s total traded goods each day.

“We must collectively work together to not only restore cargo operations as quickly and safely as possible but to also rebuild the reputation of Canada’s largest gateway and ensure supply chain stability and resilience for the future,” BCMEA said.

Source:

JOC Staff. (2023, July 13). Western Canada port strike ends after deal reached on tentative four-year contract. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/western-canada-port-strike-ends-after-deal-reached-tentative-four-year-contract_20230713.html

Trans-Pacific carriers altering port rotations to avoid strike-hit Vancouver

Trans-Pacific carriers are changing schedule rotations so that US-bound cargoes can be unloaded in Seattle-Tacoma rather than Vancouver and will divert even more vessels as the strike by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Canada enters its second week, sources said Monday.

Meanwhile, vessel backlogs are building outside of Vancouver and Seattle-Tacoma, although the backlog changes constantly because additional vessels are arriving in the Pacific Northwest almost every day. According to the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority website, 14 container ships were at anchor or offshore of Vancouver on Monday.

Forwarders and a terminal operator told the Journal of Commerce at least six container ships that had been scheduled to call in Vancouver had been diverted to Seattle-Tacoma as of Monday. The ocean carriers make the final decision as to where vessels will rest at anchor as they await resumption of cargo handling in Vancouver.

The National Retail Federation on Friday said the ongoing longshore strike at the ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert should not have a “major impact” in the United States, but could still affect some retailers that move merchandise through Western Canada.

Vessel rotations to the North American Pacific Northwest often have Vancouver as the first port of call before the ships proceed to Seattle-Tacoma, so Vancouver-bound containers are stowed on the top rows of the vessels, a terminal operator told the Journal of Commerce. Since the ILWU in the US announced last week that it will boycott Canadian-destined cargo in a show of support for ILWU Canada, longshoremen in Seattle and Tacoma must remove Canadian-destined containers first in order to access the US-bound boxes. Then they reload the Vancouver containers onto the vessels.

No face-to-face talks Monday

Meanwhile, contract negotiations between ILWU Canada and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) were not held on Monday, although the parties “continue to engage with the federal mediators,” according to a source familiar with the negotiations.

ILWU Canada launched its strike on July 1. Both sides remain far apart over two key issues — wages and a demand by ILWU Canada to extend its jurisdiction over maintenance work.

Employers offered a 14% wage hike over a four-year contract, while the union is seeking a 17% increase over a two-year contract, plus a lump sum payment of $8,000, according to a source familiar with the negotiations.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, July 10). Trans-Pacific carriers altering port rotations to avoid strike-hit Vancouver. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/trans-pacific-carriers-altering-port-rotations-avoid-strike-hit-vancouver_20230710.html

Shipping industry braced for extended strike at BC ports

The container shipping industry in Western Canada is bracing for the possibility of an extended strike at the ports of Prince Rupert and Vancouver after longshore workers went on strike Saturday morning as threatened over a contract dispute.

The ports are adjusting operations to mitigate cargo buildup as both sides remain far apart on how to best fill existing heavy-duty maintenance jobs and whether the union’s remit should expand to other types of maintenance jobs at facilities, according to two sources close to the matter.

The Canada affiliate of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and waterfront employers also face a wide divide on what they’ll accept in salary increases, paralleling the major stumbling block US West Coast employers and longshore labor finally overcame in announcing a tentative deal on June 15 after more than a year of negotiations.

Canadian shippers moving cargo through the British Columbia ports have few options for diversions. The US West Coast longshore union on Thursday signaled its solidarity in a letter to its Canadian counterpart. The International Longshoremen’s Association, which handles cargo on the US and East Coasts, went a step farther, pledging Wednesday to not handle any diverted cargo from Vancouver and Prince Rupert. Through connecting rail networks, US importers and exporters also ship goods through the British Columbia ports and have more alternative routing options.

After ILWU Canada workers began a strike at 8 a.m. Pacific time on Saturday, the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority said to mitigate backlogs it was adjusting how it directs and manages anchorage. For example, vessel anchorages in the inner harbor, where DP Centerm and GCT Vanterm operate, are now limited to 48 hours. Average rail dwell times at Vancouver marine terminals were under five days, according to port authority metrics, reflecting generally fluid cargo flow before containers stopped moving Saturday morning.

Late night bargaining sessions on Thursday and through Friday night between the Canada ILWU and employers, with from the assistance Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, failed to produce a contract agreement to replace the one that expired at the end of March. The ILWU filed a 72-hour strike notice with the federal government on Wednesday.

Canadian West Coast employers locked out the ILWU for less than 24 hours in May 2019 after an impasse in contract negotiations. Semi-automation, centered on the then new rail project at GCT Deltaport, frustrated negotiations, and now color current talks due to the prospect of some level of automation at a planned C$3 billion (US$ 2.2 billion) Vancouver terminal, Robert Bank Terminal 2.

Federal Labor Minister Seamus O’Regan on Saturday tweeted that mediators were still at the table, adding that the Trudeau government “cannot emphasize this enough — the best deals for both parties are reached at the table.”

All eyes on Ottawa

The government took a similar approach in 2021 to Montreal port strikes, signaling support for both sides to work out their differences through negotiation and praising the merits of collective bargaining.  Parliament passed back-to-work legislation after four weeks of sporadic port disruption at Montreal, ending the strike and forcing an arbitrated contract.

With Parliament out of session and unable to potentially pass back-to-work legislation, the pressure is on the Trudeau government to use its political capital to force a deal between ILWU Canada and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is generally viewed within the Canadian shipping industry as having acted too slowly — and weakly — when containerized supply chains were significantly disrupted over the last three years.

The stakes are high this time, given the size of Vancouver and Prince Rupert, the country’s largest and third-largest ports by volume, respectively. Vancouver and Prince Rupert handle more than C$800 million (US $604 million) in trade daily, equating to a quarter of all of Canada’s trade in goods, according to the BCMEA.

Canadian industry on Wednesday urged the government to act, though, it expressed its support for collective bargaining. Canada’s supply chains are already fragile and the strike will ripple through agriculture to manufacturing industries, while consumer and businesses grapple with inflation, wrote Robin Guy, vice-president and deputy leader of government relations at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and David van Hemmen is vice-president at the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.

“We are seeing signs that goods destined for Canada are already being routed to other ports, adding costs and increasing the environmental footprint of trade, all to Canadians’ detriment,” the duo wrote in the Globe and Mail.

Source:

Szakonyi, M. (2023, July 2). Shipping industry braced for extended strike at BC Ports. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/shipping-industry-braced-extended-strike-bc-ports_20230702.html

ILWU Canada plans to strike British Columbia ports on Saturday

Update with comments from OEC Chief Executive Marc Bibeau

Dockworkers on Canada’s West Coast plan to strike Saturday, saying they were “left with no choice” after failing to make progress during recent negotiations with maritime employers. The planned strike, which has no defined end date, would include Vancouver, Canada’s largest port and a gateway for goods landing in the US Midwest.

So far, there have been no operational slowdowns reported at British Columbia ports, and cargo is moving promptly, the head of one of Canada’s largest ocean forwarders said, who added that a strike would heap further economic pain on all port stakeholders who are already dealing with slower trade.

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada (ILWU Canada) and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) said in separate statements Wednesday that the union sent formal notice that its members will walk off the job as of 8 a.m. West Coast time on July 1.

ILWU Canada said it filed the 72-hour strike notice because the BCMEA has “refused to negotiate on the main issues, and we feel we are left with no choice but to take the next step in the process.” The union, though, urged maritime employers to negotiate in “good faith” on wages and automation during contract talks that will continue ahead of the planned strike.

ILWU Canada said in its statement that its main goals are higher wages, protections for workers against automation and restricting the use of nonunion labor at port-related operations.

“We call on the BCMEA to drop all concessions and get serious about negotiating with the union in good faith,” it said, without addressing the specific concessions requested by the BCMEA.

Grain vessels will still be served during a strike, the BCMEA said, adding it is still negotiating with ILWU Canada about serving passenger ships.

The BCMEA said talks with the union, facilitated by federal mediation, will resume Thursday. The talks have been under federal mediation since March 28 when ILWU Canada first asked for the intervention.

The employers’ group said its members have put forth multiple offers “in good faith, with the objective of making progress and achieving a fair deal at the table.” It said it is willing to submit to binding arbitration if ongoing talks fail to reach a deal.

“Despite today’s regrettable development, we remain ready to reengage with our labor partners through the federal mediation process, with the desire of reaching a fair and balanced deal at the table that keeps our ports stable and goods flowing for Canadians,” the BCMEA said.

The potential impact of a strike on container operations at Vancouver is unclear at this point. Only five container ships are at berth at the port currently, with two of those having arrived Wednesday. It was not clear when they are expected to depart.

Marc Bibeau, president and chief executive of OEC Group Canada, told the Journal of Commerce that the Vancouver and Prince Rupert container ports are currently “100% fluid with no congestion and no delays.”

He said that he is “cautiously optimistic” that a deal can be struck soon to shorten, if not completely avert a strike. The talks between the two sides in Canada have only gone on for three months compared with the protracted, 13-month negotiation period for a US West Coast labor deal. The federal government may also look to intervene more forcefully if a strike were to hit British Columbia ports, Bibeau said.

With a tentative deal at US West Coast ports all but assuring labor peace, Bibeau said Canadian ports risk losing more cargo amid an already soft market that has hurt all port stakeholders.

“The economy is already soft, so we can’t afford to lose more volume, which also affects the labor pool” Bibeau said. “Both sides have to come to a deal because volumes are already down double digits.”

The Canadian strike threat comes two weeks after the ILWU on the US West Coast and waterfront employers reached a tentative deal on a new six-year contract after 13 months of contentious talks.

Source:

Angell, M. (2023, June 28). ILWU Canada plans to strike British Columbia ports on Saturday. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ilwu-canada-plans-strike-british-columbia-ports-saturday_20230628.html

ILWU scores 32% wage increase, $70 million bonus in tentative new contract

Job actions stopped

This week began on a tense note, as sources said negotiators for the ILWU and PMA were working under a self-imposed 72-hour deadline to reach a deal before a possible coastwide employer lockout or strike. US Labor Secretary nominee Julie Su also arrived in San Francisco Monday, urging negotiators to reach an agreement and remaining in the Bay Area to offer further assistance until the tentative contract was agreed.

Terminal operators along the West Coast told the Journal of Commerce productivity was back to normal and dispatch orders were filled on the Thursday night shift and the Friday day shift at the Seattle-Tacoma, Oakland and Southern California gateways. “Things are running pretty well,” a source said.

ILWU locals last week resumed a series of on-again, off-again job actions up and down the coast that varied from terminal to terminal and were designed to pressure PMA negotiators to give into the union’s demands, according to press statements by the PMA.

Those actions included the insufficient dispatching of workers, including lashers who secure the top row of containers to the vessel for safety purposes. As a result, some vessels were delayed a day or longer from leaving port. Crane productivity in Seattle-Tacoma dropped from the normal 25 container moves per crane per hour into single digits, sources said.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, June 16). ILWU scores 32% wage increase, $70 million bonus in tentative new contract. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/ilwu-scores-32-wage-increase-70-million-bonus-tentative-new-contract_20230616.html

Tentative West Coast longshore deal triggers lengthy ratification process

The tentative West Coast longshore labor agreement that was reached late Wednesday will initiate a lengthy — but normal — process in which officers of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and waterfront employers over the next few months will explain details of the six-year contract to their respective membership and urge ratification of the agreement.

Based on past contracts negotiations, ILWU locals and local employers will finalize so-called side contracts for their regions that do not require approval at the coast level. The ILWU will then schedule a caucus with officers of the locals to go over details of the coastwide agreement, after which the local officers will hold meetings in their regions to discuss the agreement with their membership.

Finally, a date will be set for a coastwide vote by the ILWU membership. The Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), which has 70 members representing shipping lines and terminal operators, will also discuss and take a ratification vote on the agreement.

In past contract years, the entire process took about three months to complete, which means the ratification process this year may run into the early fall.

Still, Ed DeNike, president of SSA Containers, the largest terminal operator on the West Coast, said he is “almost 100% certain” the ILWU and PMA will ratify the contract. DeNike told the annual meeting of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition (AgTC) Thursday in Tacoma that the 13 months of negotiations were “hard,” and neither side feels particularly good about the tentative deal. But both sides felt pressure to reach an agreement this week to prevent the negotiations from completely unraveling, he said.

“When [the negotiating process] is over with, you have a sinking feeling that you screwed up,” DeNike said. “When both sides feel that way, it’s actually good.” SSA operates three container terminals in Seattle, three in Long Beach, and Oakland’s largest terminal.

Job actions by ILWU locals should be over

The tentative contract, which was reached late Wednesday with the assistance of US Labor Secretary nominee Julie Su, is expected to put an end to the on-again, off-again work disruptions by ILWU locals that began last fall and affected all major ports along the West Coast to one degree or another. Those labor tactics included failing to dispatch sufficient numbers of workers, the late dispatching of workers and operating cranes far below normal productivity levels.

Three sources told the Journal of Commerce that operations in Seattle-Tacoma, Oakland and Los Angeles-Long Beach went smoothly during the Wednesday night shift and were proceeding normally during Thursday’s day shift.

DeNike, though, expressed concern that the large volumes of discretionary cargo that retailers have diverted to East and Gulf coast ports this past year will not return quickly enough, or at a magnitude necessary to cover the increased labor costs in the new contract.

He noted that SSA accounts for about 25% of total ILWU worker-hours paid on the West Coast, adding SSA’s cargo volumes so far this year are down about 60% in Seattle, 30% in Oakland and 25% in Long Beach.

“This contract that we just agreed to yesterday is going to increase that cost,” DeNike said.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023b, June 15). Tentative west coast longshore deal triggers lengthy ratification process. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/tentative-west-coast-longshore-deal-triggers-lengthy-ratification-process_20230615.html

West Coast ports ‘stable’ after ILWU, PMA agree to cooling off period

Cargo handling at West Coast ports was largely normal Tuesday after the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and maritime employers agreed to a cooling off period late Monday during a joint meeting with Julie Su, the Biden administration’s nominee for Labor Secretary, sources said.

The two sides will attempt to use the apparent truce to reach agreement on the highly contentious issue of wages, which triggered disruptive job actions by ILWU locals over the past week and appeared to put the 13-month-long contract negotiations at a low point. Negotiations were due to resume Tuesday.

Su met with the ILWU and Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) in San Francisco in a bid to break the stalemate.

The job actions by ILWU locals in the Pacific Northwest and Southern California ceased for the night shift Monday, sources said, and West Coast ports began Tuesday’s day shift amid normal operations.

“We’re pretty stable here this morning,” a source with knowledge of Southern California port operations told the Journal of Commerce Tuesday. “There were no issues [Monday] night.”

A number of terminals in Los Angeles and Long Beach were shorted key workers last week by ILWU locals, causing a vessel backlog because ships could not leave port.

A spokesperson at the Port of Oakland said all terminals were open and operating normally for the Tuesday day shift following a quiet night shift Monday.

A source told the Journal of Commerce Tuesday that operations in Seattle and Tacoma, which had suffered the worst of the work slowdowns last week, were “kind of back to normal” on the second shift Monday and the day shift Tuesday.

Impatience within the PMA, in part due to months of delay in talks last year over automation matters and jurisdictional issues — but especially over the labor unrest up and down the West Coast — is growing. One source told the Journal of Commerce the possibility of a lockout by employers, which seemed remote just a few weeks ago, has risen and is now “50-50.”

Far apart on wages

The coastwide contract negotiations have yet to reach a conclusion after 13 months, and the current hangup over wages could be the most problematic issue of all. The ILWU is reportedly demanding an increase of $7.50 per hour in the straight-time wage for each year for the six-year life of the new contract, or a staggering $45 hike per hour. The current wage is $46.23 per hour, according to the PMA’s 2022 Annual Report, so the ILWU is seeking to essentially double the straight-time hourly wage for general longshore workers. But after two years of record profits for carriers in 2021 and 2022 that ran well into the tens of billions, longshore workers are looking to cash in.

The PMA and ILWU declined to comment. Sources told the Journal of Commerce the PMA is offering a wage package that is significantly less than what the ILWU seeks.

PMA members are keenly aware that any deal agreed to with the ILWU will serve as a floor for upcoming negotiations with the Office Clerical Union, which represents about 500 workers at roughly 15 marine terminals and ocean carriers in and around Los Angeles-Long Beach. A six-year contract with the OCU expires on July 1 and a scenario where there is simultaneously no ILWU contract and no OCU contract is a recipe for disruption that could be escalated to an entirely new level.

Compensation agreed to with the ILWU will also serve as a basis for upcoming talks with the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) on the East and Gulf coasts.

The ILWU’s wage demand will affect only the straight-time wage that is paid to all longshore workers regardless of their work categories. Under the coastwide contract that expired last July 1, ILWU marine clerks and foremen receive skill-differential pay on top of the base wage. Marine clerks earn 15%, 25% and 30% skill differential pay on top of the hourly wage, depending on their work categories. All foremen earn a 30% wage differential on top of the base hourly wage, according to the PMA Annual Report.

The report listed the earnings of longshore workers who worked 2,000 hours annually, or a 40-hour work week, in 2022 as $197,514 for general longshore workers, $220,042 for marine clerks and $306,291 for foremen.

Source:

Mongelluzzo, B. (2023, June 13). West Coast Ports “stable” after ILWU, PMA agree to cooling off period. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/west-coast-ports-stable-after-ilwu-pma-agree-cooling-period_20230613.html