Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Port logjam’s victims? Neighbors and workers

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

California’s business community didn’t really have to put its proposed solutions to the epic logjam at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in writing, as it did in a recent letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Anyone familiar with how business leaders react to any purported crisis affecting them could have predicted that they would try to take advantage of the temporary backup at the port to push their long-term wish list: Cut regulation­s. Require workers to labor longer hours for lower pay and with fewer workplace protection­s. Drop environmen­tal quality concerns into the dumpster.

Never mind that most of these options would do little to relieve the backup at the ports. They would, however, undermine newly passed state labor laws and fulfill their enduring goal of eviscerati­ng the groundbrea­king California Environmen­tal Quality Act, known as CEQA.

The business community isn’t waging this war alone. It has the backing of anti-regulation libertaria­ns such as Virginia Postrel, who in a recent opinion column for Bloomberg attributed the port logjam to California “Nimbyism” (that is, the not-in-my-backyard syndrome).

Postrel concluded that “the main problem” causing the log jam was a lack of storage space for empty shipping containers at the port, which prevented full containers from being offloaded from ships. And that the main reason for the space constraint was a Long Beach ordinance preventing more than two containers from being stacked atop each other onshore.

This is “not a safety regulation but an aesthetic one,” she wrote: “City officials decided that stacks of containers more than eight feet high were too ugly to tolerate.”

Postrel drew her conclusion from a Twitter thread by Ryan Petersen, a portside business entreprene­ur who provided his diagnosis after touring the port Oct. 21, as my colleague Sam Dean reports.

Beyond rather overstatin­g Petersen’s own point, hers was manifestly ludicrous. The log jam is the product of a confluence of many factors, including but not limited to storage space on land.

Like the business leaders, Postrel drew a line from the port problems to, yes, CEQA, asserting that the law helps explain why “the formerly can-do state of California has become such a difficult place to build anything.”

Her implicit argument is that CEQA has put too much power in the hands of local residents, who are thus able to interfere with developmen­ts with more important, albeit nonlocal, benefits.

She called this “a classic example of a well-recognized issue in political economy .... The benefits of the policy [in this case, the battle against visual pollution in Long Beach] are concentrat­ed while the costs are dispersed.”

I’d put it another way. The benefits of lax environmen­tal and workforce policies at the ports and related businesses are dispersed (among consumers nationwide), but the costs are concentrat­ed (upon neighbors and workers).

So let’s take a look at how the transport industry in general and the port specifical­ly affect those who live and work in their proximity.

We’ll start with the port’s neighbors.

Air quality in the Los Angeles and Long Beach communitie­s ringing the port has long ranked among the worst in the country. Asthma and cancer rates are among the highest; the 710 Freeway corridor, the principal thoroughfa­re feeding the port, has been dubbed “asthma alley.”

“The health impacts have been overlooked and are really significan­t,” says Andrea Hricko, professor emerita in environmen­tal health at USC. For many residents, there’s no escaping the pollution.

On Oct. 17, Union Pacific Railroad expanded the hours of operation at its rail transfer facility at the Port of Los Angeles to 24 hours, seven days a week, adding 20 hours weekly to accommodat­e stepped-up port operations. The change won the railroad a note of thanks on LinkedIn from port officials, but no acknowledg­ment of how it would affect local residents.

“People are living hundreds of feet from there,” Hricko told me. “Kids there are going to be suffering asthma all the time.”

A study led by the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and published in April found that communitie­s exposed to worse air pollution also had elevated COVID-19 mortality rates. Make no mistake: The residents of the most severely affected communitie­s are disproport­ionately lowincome and people of color.

Those effects are sure to be exacerbate­d by the measures being taken to clear the port logjam, such as round-the-clock operations, as President Biden has advocated. “We should not have to bear the burden of that port’s poor planning,” says Theral Golden, a longtime community activist in west Long Beach. “All that 24/7 operation is going to do is create more negative health impacts on the community. Already we can’t have clean air in our own homes because of the port.”

Workers at the port and associated businesses such as warehouse complexes in the Inland Empire are also bearing the burden of the logjam. Port truckers have been abused by trucking companies for years. They’ve been consistent­ly misclassif­ied as independen­t contractor­s, and consequent­ly denied the workplace protection­s afforded employees.

AB 5, the California law designed to put an end to misclassif­ication in many industries, has been under fire by the trucking industry since its enactment in 2019. The California Trucking Assn., the companies’ lobbying arm, has sued to block its applicatio­n to truckers, though a federal appeals court has said it can continue to be enforced in that industry.

This month, the big port trucking company XPO Logistics agreed to pay $30 million to settle classactio­n lawsuits filed by nearly 800 drivers who said they earned less than minimum wage working from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

As my colleague Margot Roosevelt reported, the settlement­s addressed allegation­s that the company paid drivers less-than-legal wages, failed to pay them for missed meal and rest periods, and failed to reimburse them for business expenses or for waiting-time penalties.

On the warehouse front, Newsom in September signed a pioneering state law, AB 701, that gives workers at warehouses operated by Amazon and other companies the ability to fight quotas, which critics say produce dangerous conditions. The law prohibits penalties for stopping work to use the bathroom or other activities related to health and safety.

The business letter asked Newsom to “suspend implementa­tion of AB 701 until the supply chain has normalized and goods movement has been restored.”

It should be obvious that environmen­tal and workplace regulation­s like these are never as important as they are during a purported crisis, when management­s are inclined to increase productivi­ty as much as they can, health and welfare considerat­ions be damned.

Advocates of suspending or even overturnin­g regulation­s that benefit workers and communitie­s are seldom those who are directly affected by the consequenc­es. It’s all too easy to be condescend­ingly dismissive about ordinances that are aimed merely at “aesthetics,” as if any libertaria­n pundits would tolerate 20or 40-foot stacks of containers deposited in their neighborho­ods, or 24/7 operations of heavy equipment up their streets.

The business leaders who signed the Oct. 19 letter to Newsom were careful to place their concerns in the context of consumer welfare — nothing so crass as “to ensure there are toys in the shelves for Christmas,” they wrote. Rather, “we are asking for your leadership in order to ensure working families have access to affordable medical supplies, diapers, and other basic necessitie­s.”

They wrung their hands over the environmen­tal consequenc­es of allowing large cargo ships to idle for days offshore, waiting for a berth at the port; never mind the environmen­tal consequenc­es of bringing that pollution onshore, where its effects have been endemic for decades.

Their concerns are a dodge. Their real goal is to hamper the progress that has been made, halting as it is, in improving the health and welfare of the people who help get goods from port to market or who are collateral damage in the process. This is the worst time to shoulder their interests aside, yet again.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? EASING REGULATION­S would worsen conditions for port truckers, residents and workers who already suffer disproport­ionate effects on health and safety.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times EASING REGULATION­S would worsen conditions for port truckers, residents and workers who already suffer disproport­ionate effects on health and safety.
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