Los Angeles Times

Bills aim to help port truckers

- By Andrew Khouri andrew.khouri @latimes.com

Two congressio­nal Democrats submitted bills Thursday that aim to improve working conditions for port truck drivers, who for years have accused trucking firms of wage theft.

The bills probably face a tough slog in the Republican-controlled Congress. But their authors say they are needed to help drivers, including those at the nation’s largest port complex in L.A. and Long Beach.

The workers allege they are improperly classified as independen­t contractor­s and must lease their rigs under unfair terms. The terms, they say, are so onerous that for some pay periods they make nothing and actually end up owing the trucking company money.

One bill, introduced by Rep. Grace Napolitano (DNorwalk), would create a federal task force to look into the leases. The task force, with members from labor and the trucking industry, would examine how the leases affect pay and whether they violate local, state or federal labor law. The task force would then recommend legislatio­n to “protect the ability of truck drivers to earn a living wage.”

The second bill, introduced by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), would allow ports to set requiremen­ts for truckers that are “reasonably related to the reduction of environmen­tal pollution, traffic congestion, the improvemen­t of highway safety, or the efficient utilizatio­n of port facilities.”

The Teamsters union, which has supported the truckers, said that the language of the bill is important, because it would allow ports to mandate that truckers be employees of companies, rather than independen­t contractor­s susceptibl­e to predatory leases.

The Port of Los Angeles tried to create such a requiremen­t in 2008 as part of its Clean Trucks Program, whose primary aim was to require drivers to use trucks that emitted less pollution. The port argued that many of the drivers could not afford to purchase the newer trucks or technology required by the initiative.

But the employee mandate was struck down by federal courts, a decision that the Teamsters blame for exacerbati­ng a problem of abusive leases.

Truckers have had more success with state labor officials. Since 2011, the California labor commission­er’s office has awarded port truck drivers over $46 million in cases where they contended they were misclassif­ied as contractor­s.

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