LOS ANGELES (AP) - Maritime companies locked in a
contract dispute with West Coast dockworkers took their case directly to
rank-and-file longshoremen on Wednesday, as negotiators struggled to reach a
deal and break the cargo gridlock that has stalled billions of dollars of
international trade.
In a move sure to upset union leaders, employers
distributed letters at major ports from Los Angeles to Washington state that
detailed their "last, best and final" contract offer.
Meanwhile, negotiators for the union and the Pacific
Maritime Association, which represents employers, met with U.S. Labor Secretary
Thomas Perez in San Francisco.
The involvement of the nation's top labor official
underscored rising political and economic pressure to reach a contract deal and
free cargo bottlenecks at 29 ports that handle about $1 trillion of trade
annually. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker also attended sessions Wednesday.
As negotiators met behind closed doors, with a media
blackout in effect, dockworkers read the letter signed by the president of the
association that represents companies that own, load and unload massive ships.
At a marine terminal in Tacoma, Washington, foremen
handed out letters to dockworkers. In Los Angeles, letters were put in lunch
rooms at many of the terminals.
The letter detailed a third, comprehensive contract offer
employers made Feb. 12 - more recently than has been publicly disclosed.
Employers appear to hope that union members will conclude
the offer - which the letter said includes wage and pension increases and the
maintenance of low-cost health benefits - is strong, and dockworkers will then
pressure their negotiators to accept it.
One labor expert questioned whether that would work,
especially with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, which has a
history of fighting employers and winning contracts that are the envy of other
blue-collar industries. Under the prior contract, which expired in July,
average wages exceed $50 an hour, according to the maritime association.
"Handing out the leaflets is a provocative move with
questionable gain," said Harley Shaiken, a professor and labor relations
expert at the University of California, Berkeley. "We're in the end game,
and you don't want to complicate things, and that is the risk."
The letter's "last, best and final offer"
language is significant because it could lay the groundwork for the declaration
of an impasse and therefore a full lockout of workers by employers.
To date, employers have done partial lockouts,
principally of crews that load and unload containers at the docks using massive
cranes. They cut night shifts last month and in recent weeks have not called
crane crews on weekends and holidays, saying they would not pay extra to
workers they believe are intentionally slowing down.
The union denies there is a coordinated slowdown and
instead blames problems moving cargo from ships to dockside yards to
distribution warehouses on factors including a shortage of trucks and drivers.
Problems on the waterfront have led to historically bad
cargo congestion.
Dozens of ships are anchored off the West Coast. Laden
with clothing, toys, televisions, auto parts and a big-box-store selection of
other goods, the vessels are waiting for dock space that is taking weeks to
become free. On Wednesday, the Port of Long Beach said container cargo was down
19 percent in January, compared to 2014.
The two sides already have reached tentative agreements
on key issues including health benefits and what jobs the union can retain in
the future.
The issue that brought talks to a stalemate is whether to
change the system for arbitrating allegations of work slowdowns, discrimination
and other conflicts.
Source: NJ
Herald
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