Las Vegas Review-Journal

Truckers may strike in California

- By STEVE GORMAN

LOS ANGELES — Truckers who haul freight from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will vote today whether to go on strike, organizers said, in a move that could revive labor tensions at the nation’s busiest cargo hub as it recovers from a crippling dockworker­s dispute.

Picket lines could go up as early as Monday at various terminal yards, rail yards and other locations around the twin ports, said Teamsters union spokeswoma­n Barb Maynard, whose group does not represent the drivers but backs their efforts.

The truckers demand to be treated as employees, not independen­t contractor­s, by the companies they drive for and be allowed to bargain collective­ly over wages and conditions.

The outcome has implicatio­ns for hundreds of companies and thousands of truckers in Southern California serving the twin ports, which handle 43 percent of containeri­zed goods entering the United States.

Roughly 500 port truckers have filed wage claims with the California Department of Industrial Relations, accusing the companies of illegally misclassif­ying them as freelancer­s and charging them to lease the trucks they drive.

The agency has ruled on at least 56 of those claims so far, siding in every case with drivers in collective­ly awarding them over $5.5 million in back wages and penalties, the Teamsters say.

Thousands more drivers have yet to file claims, and port trucking companies in California could be liable for wage and hour violations of up to nearly $1 billion each year, the labor-backed National Employment Law Project has estimated.

Several hundred truckers are expected to attend a meeting today to discuss strategies and to vote on whether to strike, Maynard said, adding she expected some form of a strike.

REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States