A labor union is opposing seaports’ ability to quickly and efficiently move containers from ships to trucks, further compounding the supply chain crisis that is impacting American families and workers across the nation, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.
Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), a consortium of 70 companies that negotiates and administers labor agreements with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), has accused ILWU of refusing to allow upgrades in port technology to move “cargo productively,” PMA spokesman Randy James stated.
“With supply chain congestion expected to continue well into next year, we are hopeful this cooperation can extend to the contract negotiations to take place between the PMA and ILWU,” James continued.
The two organizations have ongoing negotiations about using technology to more easily move containers and clear the supply chain backlog. Those negotiations are to conclude in 2022. Yet ILWU has opposed changes in the past to other terminal facilities at ports.
Bloomberg reported ILWU has already lost a massive amount of membership over the course of the year nationwide. 8,000 members have left in 2021 (29,000 members compared to 37,000).
While the labor union shrinks in size, the supply chain crisis is metastasizing. Truck driver Carlos Rameriz told Yahoo News Monday the ports are having difficulty releasing containers to drivers.
“It’s been the worst month I ever had. There’s no work. They’re not releasing anything from [the port],” said Rameriz. “That’s what pays my bills.” The drivers are at the “mercy of longshoremen who operate on their own schedule,” Rameriz added.
Meanwhile, ships that have not unloaded containers quickly enough at the ports will be fined starting November 1 at Los Angeles and Long Beach ports, which are the busiest in the nation, doubling the volume of Port of New York and New Jersey at 17 million containers.
The fining of ships is sure to increase the price to ship goods past the price increases the industry is already experiencing. Last year, the price to ship a container from Asia to the west coast was $3,800. The price in October of 2021 is about $17,000. And what used to take 40 days under the Trump administration to ship items from Asia to the United States now takes 73 days.
As a result, American families may experience the most expensive Thanksgiving celebration in the history of the holiday, the New York Times wrote Monday.
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