NEGOTIATIONS between the International Longshore Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association have remained deadlocked due to jurisdictional disputes in Seattle’s terminal 5, Lloyd’s List understands.
The ILWU and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers are feuding over who performs certain work in the newly-reopened terminal, and the former is holding up the contract negotiations with the PMA until the situation is resolved, people familiar with the matter told Lloyd’s List.
The ILWU did not respond to a request for comment.
Talks ground to a halt in September when terminal operator and PMA member SSA filed a complaint with the National Labour Relations Board against the ILWU after its dockworkers refused to work a Mediterranean Shipping Company ship that called at the terminal.
The vessel was set to be the first to be plugged into the terminal’s shorepower, and the work of plugging it in — known as cold ironing — had been assigned to the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
While talks have resumed since the summer, little progress has been made since negotiations began, Lloyd’s List understands. The sides have not yet began discussing the key issues of wages, benefits, and automation.
The ILWU is trying to get the PMA to help resolve the jurisdictional dispute, one person familiar with the matter said, although the association has no influence on the NLRB, which is an independent federal agency.
The labour board is currently reviewing three different cases tied to the IAM-ILWU terminal 5 spat and will probably make a ruling on all of them around the same time, IAM assistant directing business representative Don Crosatto told Lloyd’s List. He estimated it could take up to six months for the board to decide the cases, but that any decision will likely get appealed by the losing side.
In addition to the cold ironing case, the ILWU has appealed the labour board’s 2020 ruling that assigned maintenance and repair works in the Seattle’s terminal 5 with the machinists’ union, Mr Crosatto said.
He estimated that cold-ironing work in the terminal is worth only about 12 weekly hours, and said that the ILWU’s dispute over it was merely a play to get the whole terminal, which currently employs about 25 mechanics.
Mr Crosatto said the work belongs with the machinists’ union because the terminal’s crane mechanics, who are the only workers suitable to perform it, are represented by them.
“[E]verywhere it’s done, it’s done by the crane mechanics. If they’re ILWU crane mechanics, they do it; if we have the crane mechanics, our guys do it. But its always done by crane mechanics.”
Documents obtained through a freedom of information request by Augusta Saraiva of Bloomberg News show that MSC filed a motion with the NLRB in October to intervene on the ILWU’s behalf in the cold-ironing case.
Mr Crosatto said the filing is an attempt by MSC to placate the ILWU and that several points made in it actually support the IAM’s claims.
“Whoever wrote the letter didn’t think about what they were actually saying,” he said.
According to the filing, MSC is the only carrier whose vessels called at the terminal since it reopened in January 2022.
The labour contract, which covers over 22,000 dockworkers in 29 west coast ports, expired in July, and negotiations on extending it began in May.
The prolonged, fruitless talks have led many shippers to divert their cargo to east and Gulf coast ports amid fears of industrial action. About 85% of the Port of New York and New Jersey’s gains in 2022 are estimated to be cargo diverted from the west coast.
Imports to the west coast declined substantially in the second half of 2022 compared with previous years as a result of the uncertainty.
The largest west coast ports – Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, Tacoma, and Seattle, saw imports drop by a combined 7.9% compared with the second half of 2019.
The port of Los Angeles — typically the nation’s largest port — lost the monthly title to the port of New York and New Jersey from August through November, although it has regained it in December.
From August through December, throughput at the port of Los Angeles dropped below its five-year monthly average. The same was true for Long Beach between October and December.
Source:
Raanan, T. (2023, February 1). West coast labour negotiations still stuck over Seattle strife. Lloyd’s List. Retrieved February 6, 2023, from https://lloydslist.maritimeintelligence.informa.com/LL1143788/West-coast-labour-negotiations-still-stuck-over-Seattle-strife