0 Comments 29
Jan

ILA Strike is Still Looming

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ILA-USMX Talks Reach Crucial Point

The International Longshoremen’s Association and United States Maritime Alliance resume
contract negotiations Tuesday amid the renewed possibility of a work stoppage at East and Gulf
Coast ports.
The latest ILA-USMX contract extension expires at 11:59 p.m., Feb. 6. The union and employers
have held a series of federally mediated bargaining sessions since agreeing to an extension
last month that averted a threatened Dec. 30 strike.
Last week’s negotiations between the ILA and the New York Shipping Association on a
supplemental local contract reportedly closed on a sour note Friday after ILA President Harold
Daggett reiterated his objection to the NYSA’s proposed changes in work rules.
Work rules at the high-cost Port of New York and New Jersey have been a top issue in this
year’s negotiations. Employers want changes to decades-old provisions that require excess staffing and pay for workers who aren’t on the job. The ILA says the proposed changes go too
far.
Both sides have said agreement on a Maine-to-Texas master contract hinges on settlement of
supplemental local contracts led by the one covering New York-New Jersey.
This week’s ILA-USMX meetings will be crucial in determining whether East and Gulf Coast
ports are hit by their first coastwide shutdown since 1977.

Complete coverage of ILA-USMX negotiations
Small committees representing the ILA and USMX will meet on Tuesday in Newark, N.J., to
discuss the coastwide contract, which covers container-handling wages, container royalties,
jurisdiction, and automation, and defines the 8-to-5 basic workday.
At the federal mediator’s request, negotiators have avoided comment on the negotiations.
Coastwide and local dockworker contracts were originally set to expire last Sept. 30, but were
extended to Dec. 29, and then again through Feb. 6.
The latest extension followed tentative agreement on carrier-paid container royalties that provide
annual cash payouts to ILA members. Negotiators had agreed earlier on issues including
automation and union jurisdiction over chassis repairs.
If negotiators can’t agree on a contract or a third extension by Feb. 6, the ILA could strike, or a
management could shut the ports by locking out union workers. Employers discussed a lockout
before they and the union agreed to the current contract extension last month.

This article was found at:http://www.agtrans.org/images/stories/ports/ila-usmx%20talks%20reach%20crucial%20point.pdf

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