Times Colonist

U.S. contract talks near for West Coast dockworker­s

- JOHN ANTCZAK

LOS ANGELES — Contract negotiatio­ns between 22,000 workers at 29 U.S. West Coast ports and representa­tives of shipping companies will begin next week with automation and its impact on jobs emerging as a major point of contention amid supply chain issues.

Talks between the Internatio­nal Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Associatio­n will take place against the backdrop of pandemic safety issues, surging imports that left backlogs of ships anchored offshore, and declining exports.

The current contract expires July 1.

Negotiatio­ns are expected to extend past that date, Pacific Maritime Associatio­n President and CEO Jim McKenna said Friday during an online briefing hosted by Port of Los Angeles executive director Gene Seroka.

“I think everybody is optimistic going into this one that we’re gonna get where we need,” McKenna said.

“Whether we go past July 1 or not is not the issue. It’s just we need to stay at the table and get an agreement without causing any further disruption­s.”

But with contract talks looming, the ILWU has reacted strongly to the release early this month of a report commission­ed by the Pacific Maritime Associatio­n that strongly supported automated cargo handling and found that it did not hurt jobs.

“It’s obvious that the PMA is issuing its report as posturing as we go into negotiatio­ns,” union official Frank Ponce De Leon said in a statement Friday.

“However, much of what their report claims is counter to numerous previous reports on automated terminals that cite job loss and weakened efficienci­es. The bottom line is that automation has killed jobs at the ports,” he wrote.

ILWU Internatio­nal President Willie Adams asserted in a separate letter that automation also poses a national security risk by placing ports at risk of being hacked.

Asked if he was concerned that the automation report would cause talks to begin with animosity, McKenna said there was nothing significan­t in the timing.

“We’ve had these discussion­s on an ongoing basis with the ILWU and they’re always difficult conversati­ons,” he said. “I would say the very simple [reason] why the report was released when it was it’s because it was finished. It wasn’t any special timing.”

West Coast ports are key links to trade with Asia. The 29 ports represent approximat­ely 12% of the nation’s gross domestic product, Seroka said.

The Port of Los Angeles and the neighborin­g Port of Long Beach, known as the San Pedro Bay port complex, collective­ly handle more than 30% of waterborne containeri­zed imports and exports in the U.S.

The surge of imports during the pandemic has led to logjams of ships anchored off Southern California waiting to be unloaded and difficulti­es in moving cargo off the docks fast enough.

Seroka said those problems persist, especially for cargo destined to move out by rail, but the backlog of waiting ships has improved.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Transport trucks cross the Vincent Thomas Bridge as shipping containers are seen stacked at the Evergreen terminal at the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro, California. Contract talks between workers at 29 U.S. West Coast ports and shipping companies are to begin next week.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Transport trucks cross the Vincent Thomas Bridge as shipping containers are seen stacked at the Evergreen terminal at the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro, California. Contract talks between workers at 29 U.S. West Coast ports and shipping companies are to begin next week.

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