Manila Bulletin

US West Coast port operations resume after partial shutdown

- By STEVE GORMAN

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – US West Coast port operations resumed in full on Monday after shipping companies halted loading and unloading of freighters for the weekend, citing chronic cargo backups that shippers and dockworker­s have blamed on each other during months of labor tensions.

But a planned resumption of federally mediated contract talks was pushed back until Wednesday without explanatio­n, even as the White House joined retailers and manufactur­ers in urging the sides to redouble efforts to settle a dispute that has rippled through the US commercial supply chain.

Shippers and terminal operators announced last week they would suspend cargo crane operations for container vessels at the ports on Saturday and Sunday because of mounting congestion that they said had brought the docks to virtual gridlock.

Still, work continued in the terminal yards through the weekend to clear cargo containers stacking up on the waterfront­s, at least at the five busiest ports – Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, Seattle and Tacoma, according to management spokesman Steve Getzug.

Both sides said full port operations were restored on Monday as planned. The 29 ports affected handle nearly half of all US maritime trade and more than 70 percent of Asian imports.

The companies have accused the Internatio­nal Longshore and Warehouse Union of instigatin­g work slowdowns since October to gain leverage for 20,000 dockworker­s whose contract talks with the Pacific Maritime Associatio­n have dragged on for nine months.

The union faults the carriers for worsening congestion, citing changes in shipping practices. Union officials have said a settlement is near, and characteri­zed the shippers' weekend move as posturing aimed at exaggerati­ng the magnitude of the crisis.

The companies have said they remained at odds with the union over several issues, including the system for binding arbitratio­n of contract disputes.

Ripple Effects

Port slowdowns have trickled through the US distributi­on chain, disrupting shipments of a wide range of goods affecting agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, transporta­tion and retail.

The Obama administra­tion is monitoring the situation and urged an expeditiou­s resolution, but the dispute "is up to the two parties to resolve at the bargaining table," White House spokesman Frank Benenati said.

The last time contract talks led to a full shutdown of the West Coast ports was in 2002, when the companies imposed a lockout that was lifted 10 days later under a court order sought by President George W. Bush, invoking the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act.

The shipping industry has estimated the 2002 lockout caused $15.6 billion in economic losses. When it ended, some 200 freighters were waiting at anchor to be unloaded up and down the coast.

By comparison, 23 vessels were anchored awaiting berths on Monday outside Los Angeles and Long Beach, down from 31 on Sunday, port authoritie­s said. Another 13 freighters were idled off the Puget Sound ports of Tacoma and Seattle.

Once a settlement is reached, it will take six to eight weeks to clear out the immediate backlog at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach – the nation's two busiest container cargo hubs – and possibly a few months more to restore freight traffic to normal, port representa­tives said.

The National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers and the National Retail Federation have projected that a new 10-day port shutdown could cost the US economy at least $2 billion a day. Both groups renewed their calls on Monday for the administra­tion to ratchet up pressure for a settlement.

 ??  ?? PORTS OF LOS ANGELES AND LONG BEACH – Ships gather off the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California February 6, 2015 in this aerial image. The chief labor negotiator for shippers and terminal operators at 29 US West Coast ports raised the ante...
PORTS OF LOS ANGELES AND LONG BEACH – Ships gather off the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California February 6, 2015 in this aerial image. The chief labor negotiator for shippers and terminal operators at 29 US West Coast ports raised the ante...

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