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Focus: Global Supply Chain and Logistics

Our Weekly Feature Article on Topics Related to Global Supply Chain & Logistics
 

From SCDigest's On-Target e-Magazine

- Feb. 22, 2015 -

 

Global Supply Chain News: West Coast Port Nightmare May Start to End, as Tentative Deal Reached with Dock Workers Union


Details Unclear, especially Around Automation Issue; Will We Just be Back here Again in Five Years?

 

SCDigest Editorial Staff

 

More than seven months after the previous contract expired June 20, and after more than three months of alleged work slowdowns by West Coast longshoremen that contributed huge delays in moving containers, a tentative deal between the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and the Pacific Maritime Association (PMI), which represents West Coast ports and terminal, was at last reached over the weekend.

"Normal" port operations were said to have started back up Saturday night.

SCDigest Says:

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Will we just be back in the same spot five years hence?

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The tentative agreement came just three days after US Labor Secretary Thomas Perez arrived in San Francisco to broker a deal with the help of a federal mediator who had joined the talks six weeks earlier. An agreement on the last remaining issue - a rather obscure one relating to use of arbitrators to settle disputes - was successfully resolved, leading to the agreement.

The contract, however, will still need to be ratified by rank and file union workers and all the companies and entities represented at the ports and terminals by the PMI. Reports are the union vote may not be held until sometime in April.

Terms of the deal were not yet announced. However, a couple of weeks earlier, PMI president James McKenna had outlined what he called the PMI's "last, best and final" offer. It included maintenance of generous, nearly no-cost health coverage, an $11,000 increase in the maximum pension benefit to $91,000 annually, and a $1-per-hour wage increase over each of the five years.

It is believed continuation of the current health plan will put the plan under "Cadillac" status as defined by the new Obamacare rules, and could subject the PMI to annual fines of more than $100 million under those rules, it was reported last summer. Many thought the PMI would fight hard to get the union to agree to a new healthcare arrangement that would change the plan's status under the new law.

Also unclear is how issues were resolved relative to automation at the West Coast ports. Again, in the summer this was said to be a major issue in the talks, as the ILWU worries additional automation will kill jobs at the ports. But the ports need more automation to keep up with port productivity in other countries and rising container volumes. The ILWU has been fairly passive in the face of recent automation projects, but was said to drawing a line to protect jobs moving forward. We'll report on this issue as soon as any news is released.

Also, the deal is for just five years, versus six years for the last contract.

While the tentative agreement and return to normal operations is welcome news to importers and exporters affected by the huge delays in container processing, the backlog and congestion is now so great that it will take many weeks to work it off, meaning supply chain disruptions will continue despite the agreement.

Last week, before news of the tentative deal, Honda US had said six of its North American manufacturing facilities that would see stopped or reduce product this week due to delays in getting manufacturing components here from Asia. Toyota and Subaru were also among those saying they would modify their operations.

The North American Meat Institute said its industry is losing $85 million every week while cuts of meat and poultry sit in freezers/ Washington's apple crop is the largest in state history, but farmers are needing to literally dump to apples into canyons because they can't get exports out of the country.


(Global Supply Chain Article Continued Below)

 
CATEGORY SPONSOR: SOFTEON

 
 

Calls for a New Approach

With the havoc at West Coast ports in recent months, and the supply chain and economic tensions that come from the brinkmanship on both sides relative to a strike or lockout, many are saying a new approach is needed to reduce the level of risk.

For example, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum think tank and former director of the Congressional Budget Office, recently wrote a column in the Wall Street Journal calling for bringing port operations under the Railway Labor Act.

A cornerstone of the RLA, first passed in 1926, is its goal to "avoid any interruption of commerce" while providing for "the prompt and orderly settlement of all disputes" that arise in labor matters. Labor contracts under the RLA do not expire. Instead, they become "amendable" and remain in force until a new agreement is reached.

When first passed, it was designed to reduce the chances of a strike crippling rail transportation. The act was amended in 1934 to also include airline operations.

The RLA provides a framework for mediation in the event of disputes between labor and management of the airline and railroad industries. The act created the National Mediation Board (NMB), an independent agency to oversee the reconciliation process, minimizing the disruption of transit points.

Holtz-Eakin wrote that "Ports are an essential part of modern commerce, yet there is no end in sight to the disruptions. As soon as these current negotiations are (finally) concluded, businesses will have a reprieve only until the next costly negotiation."

However, the Washington Post says that "The problem is, the threat of business interruption is the only thing that gives a union leverage, so it's unlikely workers would agree to significant changes" in the law or how the process works.

The paper also noted that unlike most unions in the US, the Longshoremen have actually become more powerful over the last few decades of increasing trade, since they now control the movement of a larger percentage of the economy.

It added that "indeed, when the east coast union leader Harold Daggett was asked last year whether he would be open to tweaking the negotiation process, the answer was a firm "No.""

Interestingly, SCDigest believes that to see a change like putting port operations under the Railway Labor Act probably would have required a costly strike or lockout in these negotiations, inflicting a level of pain that would push legislators to act. But while things got bad in terms of throughput, things obviously never reached that level of stoppage in this go round, reducing the likelihood of action.

So, will we just be back in the same spot five years hence? The status quo seems unlikely to change to us.

 

Any thoughts on this new tenative agreement? Do you think US ports should come under the Railway Labor Act, or some other change happening so that we don't go through this every 5-6 years? Let us know your thoughts at the Feedback button (email) or section (web form) below.


 

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