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PORT WORKERS PROTEST POSSIBLE U.S. INTERVENTION
LABOR: The ILWU and Pacific Maritime Assn. have not been
able to agree on a contract which expired July 1.
With the federal government threatening to get involved in
contract talks between port workers and shipping firms, the
International Longshore and Warehouse Union on Monday decided it
was time to march. Carrying signs that said "Fight
Terrorism, Not American Workers," about 2,000 union members strode
through downtown Long Beach to protest federal plans for bringing
in federal troops to run the nation's busiest harbor complex
should the two sides fail to reach an agreement.
The contract, which covers more than 10,500 union members at 29
West Coast ports handling 7% of the U.S. gross domestic product,
expired July 1. Since then, the union and the
Pacific Maritime Assn., which represents shipping lines and
stevedoring companies, have been unable to reach a settlement.
Negotiation resume today in San Francisco, after a three-week
break called by the union after its members rejected an offer from
the shipping lines. The Bush administration's
threat to intervene has become a major point of contention.
The White House convened a working group to monitor port talks in
June, with representatives from the departments of Labor,
Commerce, Transportation and Homeland Security. A
Labor Department official who has been in touch with the union and
shipping lines confirmed last week that he had discussed four
options that might come into play if the union called a strike,
including forcing union members to work through an 80-day
cooling-off period or using Navy personnel to operate port
equipment. Speaking on condition that he not be
identified, the official insisted the administration has been
neutral but is worried that a port strike could cripple the
economy. The union responded Monday by sponsoring
rallies in five port communities from Portland, Oregon, to San
Diego, which drew half a dozen mayors, including Willie Brown of
San Francisco and Jerry Brown of Oakland, as well as Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D.S.D.), who spoke in Portland.
The march in Long Beach culminated in a demonstration at Lincoln
Park attended by supporters, who included Los Angeles City Council
woman Janice Hahn. "We cannot allow the heavy hand
of the Bush administration to come in here and in any way change
the outcome of the negotiations," Hahn told the appreciative
crowd. "There's only one reason they would want to
get involved at all," Hahn said, "and that's to break the
union. We will not let that happen." Union
officials and rank-and-file members agreed, saying that U.S.
intervention would give shippers and unfair advantage.
"Why should the PMA even want to settle with us if federal troops
are standing behind them?" said Roxanne Lawrence, an ILWU marine
clerk for 15 years. "It's not fair and it's not right."
Added Lawrence: "Dispatching the National Guard to the ports
in the name of national security would be an absolute mess."
From a stage erected in the shadow of PMA's Long Beach
headquarters, Dominic Maretti, a Los Angeles Harbor Commission
liaison for the union, said port workers would never endanger
national security and reminded the crowd that, even in times of
labor strife, longshore workers have done their part for the
nation. "This union has a long-standing policy," he
said. "During a strike, we move all military goods, troops
and passengers." Rhetoric has grown tense in the
last week, with each side claiming the other is not bargaining
seriously. Key differences are the introduction of
labor-saving technology and union concerns about outsourcing jobs.
The Pacific Maritime Assn. has called for professional mediation
unless it sees "hard bargaining" at the table today.
"If the union comes in with a proposal and I see any room at all
for us to begin to get into real serious negotiations, then we can
move forward," said PMA president Joseph Miniace.
Union spokesman Steven Stallone said members of the union
negotiation ream met Monday afternoon to discuss a new proposal.
However, he said they were unlikely to agree to mediation as long
as Busch administration officials hold out the prospect of
intervention in the event of a strike. The AFL-CIO
executive council last week pledged its support to the longshore
union and called for no intervention. The Los Angeles City
Council also voted to ask the Bush administration to remain
outside the negotiations. "Our contention is that
we've never yet had an opportunity to sit down with just the two
parties. We've always had a third party lurking in the
background," said Stallone, referring to administration officials.
"I think it's possible to come to an agreement if there's no
intervention." Meat Importers
Council of America Ph: (703) 522-1910
Fax: (703) 524-6039 By Louis Sahagun and Nancy
Cleeland, Times Staff Writers The LA Times,
Tuesday, August 13, 2002 |