Thursday, October 03, 2024

dockworkers’ strike over—huge wage increases agreed to—in six-year deal

By Grand Rapids Anonymous
thursday, october 3, 2024 at 8:46:00 p.m. edt

“(zh) if you just bought 10 years worth of toilet paper, you may want to check if you still have the receipt.

“late on thursday, 45,000 striking dockworkers at US east and gulf coast ports agreed to return to work after port operators sweetened their contract offer, ending a three-day strike that threatened to disrupt the American economy.

“the international longshoremen’s association and port operators, in a joint statement, said they had reached a tentative agreement on wages and union members would return to work. they said the agreement would extend the prior contract, which expired at the start of this week, through Jan. 15, 2025 while the two sides negotiate on other issues, including automation on the docks.

“the breakthrough came after port employers offered a 62% increase in wages over six years, the wsj reported citing people familiar with the matter. the new offer, up from an earlier proposed raise of 50%, came after the white house privately and publicly pressed the large shipping lines and cargo terminal operators who employ the longshore workers [sic; longshoremen] to make a new offer to the union.

“the agreement ends a strike that had closed container ports from maine to texas and threatened to disrupt everything from the supply of bananas in supermarkets to the flow of cars through America’s factories, and cost the U.S. economy billions each day in lost commerce.

“the latest offer would raise the base hourly rate for ila port workers to $63 from $39 over six years. one of the people said the offer is being made on the condition that dockworkers go back to work and agree to efficiency gains.

“the offer is less than the union demand for an increase of 77% over the term of the contract but a far larger increase than most major labor contracts, including a contract reached last year covering the separate union representing west coast longshore workers. many U.S. dockworkers currently earn more than a $100,000 a year, with baseline hourly wages boosted by work rules and overtime requirements.

--GRA



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

jerry pdx
Unions overall have declined in power but that dockworkers union doesn't seem to have lost any juice. That's because the workers are in control of the choke points of commerce, all the goods that keep everything humming flow through their hands, if they impede that flow in any way it would be disastrous to the national economy.

Anonymous said...

I used to be in a union and they did a good job,but $100,000 a year--minimum--with a 66% increase over 6 years,would seem to be a sure way to start an inflationary cycle--if costs are passed on to the consumer(and they will be).

--GRA

Anonymous said...

UPDATE:STRIKE CALLED OFF UNTIL JANUARY 15TH(TO HASH OUT OTHER ISSUES BESIDES WAGES)

GRA:A different outcome than reported by ZH.

(Breitbart)
Striking dockworkers agreed to go back to work Thursday evening after reaching a tentative agreement with port operators for a 62 percent wage increase that extends the current contract through Jan. 15, providing more time to bargain over remaining issues.

.
The deal — brokered with the apparent help of senior Biden administration officials, according to a person close to the talks — came on the third day of the strike, sparing the U.S. economy the worst of the disruptions. It also takes a difficult issue for the Biden administration out of play less than five weeks before the presidential election, in which the White House’s stewardship of the economy is a key issue.

“Effective immediately, all current job actions will cease and all work covered by the Master Contract will resume,” the parties said in a joint statement announcing the agreement.

--GRA